the alumni magazine of washington and lee university SEPTEMBER 1982 JOHN D. WILSON, PRESIDENT-ELECT He the alumni magazine of washington and lee (USPS 667-040) Volume 57, Number 5, September 1982 William C. Washburn, ’40 .................cccccccccceeeeees Editor Romulus T. Weatherman ....................... Managing Editor Jeffery G. Hanna ...................c cece cece eee Associate Editor Robert Fure .................c cece eeeeeeeeeeeees Contributing Editor Joyce Carter 2.00.0... cece cece cece cece eeeees Editorial Assistant W. Patrick Hinely, °73 ..............c cece eee ee eee Photographer TABLE OF CONTENTS Wilson Named New President ....................0..008. 1 Alumni College Gets Rave Reviews .................... 4 Washburn Gets New Post ................ccccceseeeeeeeees 8 Noell Named to Development Staff ..................... 9 WEL Gazette 22... ccc ccc cee ee cece ceeeeeaeeaeees 10 New Annual Fund Records ...................0..0.c0ceee. 16 Chapter NewS .............cccccececeeeeseccecusesueeacuenees 18 Class Notes ..............cccccccececceccseccaccucueeaeueeens 19 W&L Gifts from the Supply Store ....................... 31 Published in January, March, May, July, September, October, and November by Washington and Lee University Alumni, Inc., Lexington, Virginia 24450. All communications and POD Forms 3579 should be sent to Washington and Lee Alumni, Inc., Lexington, Va. 24450. Second class postage paid at Lexington, Va. 24450 and additional offices. Officers and Directors Washington and Lee Alumni, Inc. G. RUSSELL LADD III, ’57, Mobile Ala. President EDGAR M. Boyp, ’42, Baltimore, Md. Vice President WILLIAM E. LaTTuRE, ’49, Greensboro, N.C. Treasurer WILLIAM C. WASHBURN, ’40, Lexington, Va. Secretary LeRoy C. ATKINS, 68, Lexington, Va. Assistant Secretary PETER A. AGELASTO III, ’62, Norfolk, Va. CHARLES R. BEALL, ’56, Martinsburg, W.Va. ANDREW N. Baur, ’66, St. Louis, Mo. WILLIAM N. CLEMENTS, ’50, Baltimore, Md. OweEN H. HARPER, 759, Pasadena, Calif. CHARLES D. Hurt Jr., 59, Atlanta, Ga. SIDMON J. KAPLAN, °56, Cleveland, Ohio J. WILLIAM MCCLINTOCK III, ’53, Tunica, Miss. OLIVER M. MENDELL, 50, New York City WILLIAM C. NoRMAN Jr., ’56, Crossett, Ark. RICE M. TILLEY Jr., 58, Fort Worth, Tex. S. MAYNARD TuRK, 752, Wilmington, Del. CVU v ON THE COVER: Dr. John D. Wilson stands in front of The Colonnade at Washington and Lee shortly after the University’s Board of Trustees elected him the 21st presi- dent of W&L. His election came on Sept. |. He plans to assume Office on Feb. 1, 1983. Photograph by W. Patrick Hinely, ’73. WILSON ELECTED PRESIDENT As a high school student in his hometown of Lapeer, Mich., Dr. John D. Wilson’s ambition in life was to become a sports writer for the Detroit Free Press. That was, Wilson says in retrospect, a reasonable and an honorable professional aspiration. But he never achieved that goal. Instead, Wilson studied history at Michigan State, won a Rhodes Scholarship, earned an M.A. from Oxford and a Ph.D. from Michigan State, and eventually came to be regarded as one of the most effective college administrators in the United States. On Sept. 1, the Detroit Free Press’ loss became Washington and Lee’s gain when the University’s Board of Trustees elected Wilson the 21st president of W&L. Wilson, 51, comes to Washington and Lee from Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, where he has been provost since 1975 and executive vice president since 1981. Prior to that, he served for seven years as president of Wells College, a 500-student, liberal arts college for women in Aurora, N.Y. The election of Wilson at a called meeting of the trustees came seven weeks to the day after Robert E. R. Huntley had announced his plans to retire from the office he has held since 1968. ‘*T know many people will wonder who would dare follow in Bob Huntley’s footsteps. Everyone in higher education appreciates what a task that will be,’’ said Wilson, who will assume his duties on Feb. 1, 1983. ‘‘T deeply appreciate the opportunity to be associated with a first-class institution of its kind, which Washington and Lee clearly is. Washington and Lee is strong; obviously it can be stronger. The future is uncertain. And I would like to be part of trying to secure Washington and Lee’s future, because it is important to Virginia, indeed to America, that it happen. ‘‘T do not come to this University with a blueprint in my back pocket. It would be presumptuous to suppose that I can today predict the future of this University. I think we have here the great resource of 200 years and more of tradition, of a sense of quality, of a sense of style. The first obligation will be to protect that, to make sure that does not erode.”’ Wilson was nominated for the presidency by the executive committee of the Board of Trustees, acting as a presidential search committee. James M. Ballengee, ’42L, rector of the board, was chairman of the committee. ‘‘Dr. Wilson has excelled both as a scholar and as an administrator throughout his impressive career in higher education,’’ said Ballengee. ‘‘We are indeed fortunate that he has accepted the presidency of Washington and Lee.”’ Wilson was chosen from among more than 200 candidates. A 14-member Presidential Search Advisory Committee, headed by William J. Watt, dean of the College, reviewed all applicants and submitted the applicants’ names to the trustees’ search committee, which conducted interviews and made the final decision. Although he was not an active participant in the search process, Huntley was quick to commend the board for its selection. ‘‘Dr. Wilson is one of the most able educators I have known,’’ said Huntley. “‘I could not be more pleased with the selection. It is a tribute to him that our board and faculty want him to be president here, and a tribute to Washington and Lee that he has accepted the appointment. ”’ Virginia Tech President William Lavery praised Wilson’s ‘vision and clarity of thought, as well as his superb ability to articulate the academic needs of the university and of the Commonwealth. . . .’” Added Lavery: ‘‘I am delighted for John that he has this opportunity to give leadership to such an outstanding private institution of higher learning in the Commonwealth; he and Washington and Lee will do well together, and I am happy for both.”’ Wilson received the B.A. degree in history with high honor from Michigan State in 1953. He compiled impressive academic credentials and was elected to both Phi Kappa Phi and Phi Alpha Theta while an undergraduate. (He was elected to Phi Beta Kappa in 1967.) Moreover, Wilson was a campus leader, serving as president of his senior class, and was a much-honored athlete. 2 Rector Ballengee (left) and President-Elect Wilson at news conference A star defensive halfback, he played on the 1952 Michigan State football team which won the national championship. He was a participant in the North-South All-Star Game in 1952 and a member of the first Academic All-America team ever chosen (1952). As a Rhodes Scholar, Wilson studied English literature at Oxford and received his M.A. in 1955. After two years as an intelligence officer in the U.S. Air Force, Wilson began his remarkable career in higher education when he became assistant to Dr. Thomas Hamilton, vice president of academic affairs at Michigan State, in 1958. When Hamilton assumed the presidency of the State University of New York in 1959, Wilson accompanied him to Albany as assistant to the president and served in that position for four years before returning to Michigan State in 1963 as associate director of the Honors College. Wilson was subsequently appointed director of the Honors College (1965) and then director of undergraduate education and assistant provost at Michigan State (1967). In 1965, he received the Ph.D. in English literature from Michigan State, where he held the rank of assistant professor in the department of English and taught courses in Elizabethan literature, particularly Shakespeare. In 1968, at the age of 37, Wilson was elected president of Wells College, a position he held for seven years before he pee President-Elect Wilson (left) chats with President Huntley. was appointed vice president of academic affairs and university provost at Virginia Tech. His position at VPI was further enhanced in 1981 when he was given the additional title of executive vice president. While at Tech, Wilson was instrumental in orchestrating several important and successful changes. But, as he explained in a recent interview, “‘the funny thing about an academic officer is that he cannot, with any clarity, look out a window to see what he has accomplished. I could point to a host of legislative bits and pieces that I think have made a difference. But they are not edifices you can look out the window and see; they are not brick and mortar you can touch. ‘‘The most significant role of an academic officer—and I leave it to others to say how well this may have been accomplished—involves the task of calling people to their best selves. The faculty and the student body must take with utmost seriousness what it is we are doing here in this unique social institution that is a university.’ Wilson added that he considers it ‘‘the first obligation of the university administration to remove impediments from scholars and their young apprentice-scholars. . . . If you Cannot get satisfaction from that peripheral, yet necessary, role, then you ought not be in that sort of position; you should stay in the classroom. I happen to take great pleasure in the successes of others.’’ Although the largest part of his career has been spent in large research universities, Wilson emphasized that he ‘‘takes very, very seriously the four undergraduate years. ‘‘T was not the same person at 22 that I was at 18—by a very long way. I think you do grow, and potentially you grow enormously, during those four undergraduate years.’”’ Further, Wilson suggested that ‘‘it is harder in a research university with graduate and professional schools to ensure . the integrity of that undergraduate experience. ‘*T think every 50-minute contact between a student and a faculty member is precious. Both the student and the faculty member must realize that. Their time together is absolutely vital.”’ Shortly after his election by the board, Wilson was introduced to the news media and fielded questions in a wide- ranging news conference. Predictably enough, one of the questions he was asked to address concerned coeducation. Not so predictably, that question did not arise until midway through the 45-minute session. That prompted Wilson, known for a keen wit and a warm, infectious smile, to quip: ‘‘[ had been wondering when we were going to get around to that.’’ Once the subject was broached, Wilson responded by first observing that Washington and Lee ‘‘has been able to attract and continues to be able to attract first-rate students and to retain them and to educate them to become successful citizens of the larger world. That seems to me to be a useful mission. ‘‘T do not know enough about the ‘Washington and Lee experience’ to know how much of it comes out of its gender or how much of it might change if women were admitted in equal numbers. Obviously, I want to wait a time and get a better sense of that experience before I offer firm opinions on it.” For the moment, however, Wilson said that ‘‘we will not be in a position of advocating a change . . . I will not argue with the board (of trustees) that we ought to contradict success.”’ In a more personal vein, Wilson is married to Anne Veronica Yeomans, an English citizen whom he met while living in England. Dr. and Mrs. Wilson have four children: Stephen, 22, who attended Emory and Henry College and currently lives in California; Anthony, a 20-year-old sophomore at the University of Kentucky; Patrick, an 18- year-old freshman at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro; and, Sara, a 14-year-old high school freshman. Stull an avid sportsman, Wilson professes to be ‘‘quite fond of golf, although it is not often fond of me’’ and does ‘‘a tiny bit of jogging, but not to the point where it is an addiction.”’ The Wilsons will live in the Lee House on the campus. The Perfect Recipe For Summer W&L’s First Alumni College Receives Rave Reviews Washington and Lee’s Alumni College Class of ’82 4 | co.tece © : ALUMN ' REGISTRATION INGREDIENTS 30 Washington and Lee alumni and 25 wives of the alumni 20 Children of alumni W&L professors Textbooks Evening with author/alumnus Tom Wolfe 1 Piano concert by Dean Emeritus James Leyburn A dash of photography A pinch of aerobic dancing — (nN ~] Place all ingredients in the incomparable surroundings of Washington and Lee’s in- comparable campus. Season liberally with provocative lectures and lively discussion sessions. Stir in a demonstration of Chinese brush painting, a Frank Capra film, and a Gilbert and Sullivan operetta. Add recrea- tional opportunities and relaxation as needed. Simmer for seven days. The recipe for Washington and Lee’s first Alumni College was an unqualified success! By all accounts, the week that had been cooked up for alumni and their families was delectable—and satisfying, too. For weeks (literally) after the inaugural session ended in early July, the cards and letters kept coming in: ‘‘Never has a week been so totally filled with the ‘Right Stuff ...’’ ‘‘Even after a cooling off period, (we) are still on a high from the exhilarating experience of the Alumni College.’’ ‘‘AII five of us have agreed it’s the best family vacation we have ever had.’’ ‘‘I had set pretty high expectations and, damn, if they were not all met.”’ Those unsoliciated testimonials from participants left little doubt of the program’s success. But perhaps an even better gauge was the reaction of the Alumni College faculty, some of whom had been frankly skeptical whether the concept could work, let alone work well. One of those self-professed skeptics was Sidney Coulling, professor of English and academic director of the Alumni College. Confessed Coulling: “‘I was rather doubtful it could succeed. I wondered whether there were enough alumni who wanted this type of program. And I wondered whether the faculty could pull it off, could sustain the participants’ interest for a week.”’ When it ended, Coulling was happy to admit that his doubts had been proven unfounded. Not only were there plenty of alumni interested in such a program, many were eager for it. That was evident from the flood of responses to a preliminary letter announcing the Alumni College. That letter One of the many lighter moments dur The Alumni College participants foun Dr. Sidney M _ Coulling, left, leads a discussion group. ing the daily lecture d the material stimulatin 8. resulted in 600 alumni expressing interest in attending the program; all the places had been taken and there was a waiting list of 40 even before the brochures announcing the Alumni College were off the press. ‘*We had at least two participants who had not been on the campus in 25 or 30 years and who told us that they had been waiting for the university to offer this kind of program,’’ said Robert Fure, director of summer programs at W&L and program coordinator of the Alumni College. So the interest was there. The trick was translating that interest and apparent enthusiasm into a successful week that would provide what Fure termed *‘a significant growth experience.’’ This would have to be more than a week of fun and games. And that it was. It all began with a theme, ‘‘Changing View in Changing Times,’’ and an exceptional faculty: Coulling, Leonard Jarrard (psychology), John Handelman (politics), William Jenks (history) Thomas Nye (biology), John Jennings (journalism), and L. H. LaRue (law). The next step was developing a daily schedule that allowed for just the right blend of the intellectual and the recreational. That was Fure’s task. And he made it work. Mornings were devoted to a general lecture followed by a general discussion followed by small group discussions. From the first full day when Jarrard lectured on **Stress and Reactions to Change,”’ it was obvious to the faculty that the participants had not come back to Lexington just for the fun of it. ‘*The participants were bright, alert, alive, vigorous,’’ said Coulling. ‘‘A key element was that these people were as much interested in making the program a success as we on the faculty were. ‘“They listened to what we had to say, but they also raised intelligent questions. It was clear we were talking to people who were expecting just the sort of experience we had planned for them.’”’ Added Nye: ‘‘There was a really splendid interchange of ideas going on throughout the week. These people were not afraid to say what was on their mind. With many college students, it is often necessary to pull the information from them because they are reluctant to speak up among their peers. These people had none of that reluctance. They said what they thought.’”’ And what they thought and what they said showed considerable insight into the material, which ranged from Coulling’s lecture on Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness to Handelman’s presentation on ‘*The Developed and the Developing Tom Wolfe, ’51, at the podium A mountaintop croquet match at Skylark 6 Prof. Ju on Chinese brush painting World’’ to Jenks’ talk on understanding the Muslim world. ‘*We had assigned five textbooks to be read before the participants arrived in Lexington,’’ explained Coulling. ‘‘These were not easy books by any means. I would venture to say that all the participants were reading material well out of their own fields of specialization. That, in itself, is no easy task. But they had done their reading. And they had perceptive things to say. During one discussion session, someone leaned over to me and remarked, ‘Isn’t it amazing that there has not been a single unintelligent comment made in this entire session?’ That was true. There had not been.’’ For Nye, one of the most remarkable developments was how quickly the participants overcame any inhibitions that would have been natural under the circumstances. This, after all, was a diverse group on several counts. In terms of occupations, there were doctors and lawyers and businessmen and journalists. In terms of age, the range was between an 82-year-old member of the Class of ’22, Dr. Harry Lyons, and a member of the Class of ’74, Doug Chase, who is in his late 20s. ‘*None of those differences seemed to matter,’’ said Nye. ‘‘Everyone realized the program lasted only a week. For it to be successful, it was imperative that the barriers be knocked down quickly. And they were. It was an incredibly good mix.”’ Afternoons offered a variety of activities, all on an optional basis. Participants could choose photography clinics or cooking demonstrations, aerobic dancing or a session on computers. There were tours of the area, a hike along a nature trail, and a picnic at Skylark, W&L’s retreat on the Blue Ridge Parkway. ‘*The participants certainly had many activities to choose from,’’ said Fure. ‘‘If anything, there were so many opportunities— so many good opportunities—that they were forced to make choices they would rather not have had to make.”’ Each evening was devoted to a special event. Tom Wolfe returned to the campus to present a lecture entitled ‘“The Anatomy of Courage’’ during one evening session. Wolfe’s book, The Right Stuff, was one of the texts used by the Alumni College. Art profesor Pamela Simpson discussed modern art another evening, while a Henry Street Playhouse production of Pirates of Penzance provided yet another evening’s activity. For many of the alumni, the week may have reached its climax on Thursday evening when everyone gathered in Lee Chapel for what was billed on the schedule as the appearance of a special ‘mystery guest.”’ Out of the classroom, on top of the mountain at Skylark For families, the Alumni College proved an ideal vacation. The audience was then treated to a command performance of piano selections by Dr. Leyburn, who had been dean of the college and a professor of sociology while many Alumni College participants were students at WL. A crucial element for the Alumni College involved the availability of activities for children of alumni, which allowed many of the participants to make the experience a family vacation. The junior program was directed by Laura de Maria, who with the help of four counselors managed to keep 20 young people, ranging in age from 6 to 17, busy with everything from computers to psychology experiments to nature hikes. All in all, though, the most surprising aspect of the week had to be how earnestly the participants approached their morning sessions. ‘During the entire week there was only one instance of a class being cut,’’ said Coulling. ‘“That, to me, was particularly amazing. ‘*We made some mistakes along the way, too, but no one seemed to mind that much. [I think, for instance, we probably talked too’ much and did not allow enough time or opportunities for the participants to talk back. Our choice of texts was not always as good as it might have been, either.”’ And on their evaluation sheets, the participants cited other minor problems, ranging from the lack of adequate reading lamps in the Woods Creek Apartments to their preference of iced tea rather than fruit punch in the dining hall. “Most of the participants realized they were on a shakedown cruise and appreciated that,’’ said Fure. ‘‘I had been a bit concerned about our housing situation. I was afraid most of the people would expect the Hilton. But Woods Creek seemed more than satisfactory.”’ The minor irritants hardly detracted from the essence of the week. ‘*Let me put it in perspective for you,”’ Nye said a month later. ‘‘The Alumni College was the most stimulating intellectual experience I’ve had in my 16 years at Washington and Lee. And during the session I saw some of the best teaching that I’ve seen done here. Rarely have I had as great a letdown as I had when the week ended.’’ Nye was not alone in his assessment. Nor in his disappointment that it seemed to end so quickly. There is some consolation to that disappointment. The day after the Alumni College concluded Fure began planning for not one but three Alumni Colleges for the summer of ’83. Details will be forthcoming. Rest assured, though, the iced tea has already been ordered. Washburn To Join Development Office Alumni Secretary Will Work With Estate-Planning William C. Washburn, executive secretary of Washington and Lee Alumni, Inc., will become an associate director of development following his retirement from his current position, according to Farris P. Hotchkiss, director of university relations and development at Washington and Lee. ‘“We are extremely pleased that Bill will begin a new chapter of service to the University,’ said Hotchkiss, who indicated that Washburn’s duties would involve a new direction in W&L’s development activities. According to Hotchkiss, Washburn will help form a group that will direct its attention to Washington and Lee alumni and friends interested in making the University part of their long-range giving and estate plans. The effort will be particularly concerned with the creation of income-retained, charitable- remainder gifts and with the inclusion of Washington and Lee in wills. Commenting on Washburn’s new appointment, Washington and Lee president Robert E. R. Huntley said: ‘‘I know of no one who has devoted himself more fully to the Washington and Lee ideal or to the disinterested service of Washington and Lee’s alumni and friends than Bill Washburn. Through his knowledge of the W&L family, Bill will bring an enormous capacity to help those who are interested in making this University a part of their financial and estate plans. We will always be deeply grateful to Bill for his tireless efforts as alumni secretary over the past 24 years. And now we rejoice in his willingness to take on this new, challenging assignment for is to be filled by December 31, 1982. Lexington, VA 24450. ALUMNI SECRETARY APPLICATIONS SOUGHT Washington and Lee University and the Board of Directors of Washington and Lee Alumni, Inc., announce that applications and recommendations for the position of executive secretary of the Alumni Association are now being sought. The position requires skills and experience in design and management of communications programs, records systems, public events, and volunteer activities. As one of the major spokesmen for Washington and Lee, the alumni secretary should be able to describe articulately the University’s educational program in situations ranging from private conversations to large gatherings. Frequent travel is required. Although not essential, previous experience in secondary or higher education is desirable. The position Applications and recommendations should be made by writing to Farris P. Hotchkiss, Director of University Relations and Development, Washington and Lee University, William C. Washburn the University.’’ Washburn, who turned 64 in September, is a 1940 graduate of W&L. He returned to his alma mater in 1958, succeeding Cy Young as executive secretary of the W&L Alumni Association. Under Washburn’s guidance, the number of alumni chapters has more than doubled and reunion programs have been tremendously expanded. In addition, the University’s Special Alumni Conference, the Distinguished Alumnus Award, and the Summer Alumni College were all created during Washburn’s tenure, which also saw construction of the Alumni House and the institution of travel opportunities for alumni. The number of alumni for whom records must be kept has increased dramatically since Washburn took over. Russell Ladd, ’57, president of the Alumni board of directors, noted that ‘‘Bill Washburn ranks with the best professionals in the field of alumni administration. The alumni programs at Washington and Lee have improved in quality and quantity during a time when such efforts have been less successful at many other fine colleges and universities. Washington and Lee is indeed fortunate that Bill Washburn will continue to Noell Named Associate Development Director To Specialize In Area Of Deferred Gifts Milburn K. Noell Jr. has been appointed to the new position of associate director of development for deferred giving at Washington and Lee. Announcement of Noell’s appointment was made by Farris P. Hotchkiss, director of university relations and development. A resident of Memphis, Tenn., Noell was formerly with the trust and legal departments for First Tennessee Bank of Memphis and for First Tennessee National Corporation. He has had substantial experience in Washington and Lee’s development efforts, having been a development associate of the Board of Trustees from 1978 to the present. Development associates served the board and Washington and Lee as key members of the professional staff for the University’s recently completed development program. ‘‘Mr. Noell brings to W&L an unusual and helpful blend of legal, estate planning, and fund raising experience which we are most fortunate to gain,’’ said S L Kopald, chairman of the development committee of the Board of Trustees. ‘‘Deferred giving is a critically important activity for the philanthropic financing of Washington and Lee’s future. Mr. Noell’s skills will be invaluable in assisting those who wish to make the University a part of their financial and estate plans, particularly in those trust and estate areas where tax and income considerations are important.”’ Noell will continue to live and have his office in Memphis. A 1951 graduate of Washington and Lee, Noell received his law degree from the W&L School of Law in 1954. After serving in the U.S. Army from 1954 to 1956, Noell was a law clerk to Marion Boyd, United States District Judge for the Western District of Tennessee from 1956 to 1958. He entered private law practice in 1958 with the Milburn K. Noell Memphis firm of Waring, Walker, & Lewis. He joined the First Tennessee Bank of Memphis in 1963 and served as vice president & trust officer and secretary of the board of directors until 1973 when he became bank counsel of the First Tennessee National Corporation, a position he held until 1978. Noell is a member of the Memphis & Shelby County, Tennessee, and American Bar Associations. ‘*With Milburn Noell’s appointment to the development staff, we are now in a strong position to bring to Washington and Lee much needed gift resources in the form of deferred and estate planned gifts. We will be better able to assist alumni and friends who are interested in these advantageous philanthropic methods,’’ said Hotchkiss. ‘“We are fortunate to have Milburn on board.’”’ serve the University following his retirement from the executive secretary’s post.”’ The University has benefited over virtually its entire history from the generous provisions that alumni and friends make in their estate plans. With Washburn’s assistance, the efforts of the group he will join will be directed toward a new program of communications and discussions with alumni and friends interested in estate planned, or deferred, gifts. Particular emphasis will be placed on the notable tax and financial advantages of income retained gifts such as unitrusts, annuity trusts, and gifts to the Washington and Lee Pooled Income Fund. Initially, the group will be composed of Washburn, Milburn K. Noell, whose appointment is announced in the columns above, and Carter V. McNeese, who will lend his communications skills to the deferred giving effort while continuing his current. duties as associate director of development for annual giving. Wy. & Gazette Law scholarship honors Malone Washington and-Lee University has received a $25,000 gift from Shuford R. Nichols, ’30, of Little Rock, Ark., and the Nichols Foundation for the creation of an endowed scholarship in memory of the late Ross L. Malone. The Malone Scholarship will be awarded annually to either an entering or upperclass student in the W&L School of Law. Malone received both his undergraduate and law education at Washington and Lee, earning the LL.B. degree in 1932. He held honorary doctorates from seven colleges and universities, including Washington and Lee. He was president of the American Bar Association in 1958-59 and had been deputy attorney general of the United States in 1952- 53. He was general counsel of General Motors Corp. until shortly before his death on August 14, 1967. Malone had been elected rector of the Washington and Lee Board of Trustees in May of 1967. Nichols, whose generous gift has created the Malone Scholarship, is the president and director of Southern Compress, a cotton compressing and warehousing company in Little Rock. A native of Des Arc, Ark., Nichols received the B.A. degree from Washington and Lee in 1930 and pursued graduate studies at the Harvard Business School. He is chairman of the board of Farmers and Merchants Bank and is past president of the Arkansas-Missouri Cotton Association. He is a trustee of Arkansas College and the Presbyterian Foundation and is a director of the Arkansas Orchestra. In establishing the scholarship, Nichols expressed the hope that others would wish to make gifts to enlarge the Malone Scholarship so that more than one scholarship could be awarded in an academic year. Admissions improve in several categories With a record number of students (1,605) making application to Washington and Lee 10 The late Ross L. Malone last year, the University’s Class of 1986 entered with impressive credentials. According to figures compiled by the Office of Admissions, the University offered admission to 794 (or 49 percent) of the 1,605 applicants. Of those offered admission, 369 (or 46 percent) indicated their intention to enroll. The group comes from 35 states (Virginia leads the way with 63 students) and 301 secondary schools. Fifty-seven percent matriculated from public secondary schools while 43 percent came from private secondary schools. The mean College Board scores improved from a year ago. The scores (excluding students in special categories) are 565 verbal and 610 math, up from 551 verbal and 583 math. The average English Achievement score increased 17 points to 546. The mean rank moved from the 78th to the 79th percentile. The class includes 19 valedictorians and salutatorians and 24 National Merit Finalists and Scholars. As William M. Hartog, director of admissions, noted, the only discouraging element in the admissions effort involved financial aid. Cutbacks in several federally- funded student aid programs shifted much of the responsibility for funding to the University. While W&L had been able to award all accepted students with demonstrated need some financial aid, this year the University could only reach 79 percent of those students. Still, the University has awarded 95 scholarships to members of the Class of ’86. Shannon-Clark lectures established by gift A Washington and Lee alumnus who wishes to remain anonymous has made a gift to the University to support an annual lecture in English or American literature by a distinguished visiting scholar. To be named The Shannon-Clark Lectures in English, the series will honor the memories of Edgar Finley Shannon, a former Washington and Lee faculty member, and Harriet Mabel Fishburn Clark, a grandmother of the donor. The first lecture in the series will be delivered this fall. Shannon, a native of Kentucky who was educated at Centre College, the University of Leipzig, and Harvard University, was head of Washington and Lee’s English department from 1914 until his death in 1938. Before coming to Washington and Lee he taught ancient and modern languages as well as English at the University of Arkansas, where he also served for one year as dean of the College of Arts and Sciences. He was a recognized authority on Chaucer and the author of a standard work on the subject, Chaucer and the Roman Poets, and was in frequent demand as a summer lecturer at other universities. In addition he was an able administrator who strengthened the English department at Washington and Lee and exerted a lasting influence on its program, and as chairman of the library committee for many years he was a significant force in the development of the university’s holdings. His son, Edgar Finley Shannon Jr., a former president of the University of Virginia and now Commonwealth Professor of English at Virginia, is a trustee of Washington and Lee and a noted authority on Tennyson. The Shannon name will be linked in the lectureship with that of Mrs. Clark, a daughter of native Virginian Samuel Allen Fishburn. Mrs. Clark’s father owned and published one of the early newspapers in Texas, The Mexia Weekly Ledger, and it was perhaps the investigative and reporting instincts of her father that gave Mrs. Clark such an inquisitive and interesting intellect. Educated in Texas, Mrs. Clark spent most of her married life in Evanston, Illinois, and later as a widow traveled extensively before her death in 1971. It was her often expressed desire that her grandchildren receive a sound education that inspired one of them to endow a lectureship in her memory. Library receives Graham. Bible A family Bible that records the birth of William Graham, the first rector of Washington and Lee, has been given to the University Library by some of Graham’s descendants. Mr. and Mrs. Anderson Hughes Scott along with their son, Dr. Charles K. Scott, and their grandson, Anderson Scott, all of Burlington, N.C., presented the gift to Maurice D. Leach Jr., the University’s librarian. Published in Edinburgh in 1752, the Graham family Bible contains notations by Michael Graham, who came to America from Ireland in the 1720s. The notations include the birthdates of Michael Graham’s 10 children, including William, who achieved prominence as a Presbyterian minister and educator. William Graham began teaching at Augusta Academy and was appointed the school’s first permanent rector when it was renamed Liberty Hall Academy in 1776. As the academy’s first executive, Graham was responsible for raising money and purchasing the books for its original library. Liberty Hall Academy later became Washington Academy, then Washington College, and finally Washington and Lee University. Graham, who resigned as rector in 1796, is buried on the W&L campus. The Graham family Bible subsequently passed into the hands of the Scott family, descendants of William Graham, of Hawfields Plantation near Mebane, N.C. In presenting the Bible to Washington and Lee, Anderson Scott said the family was particularly delighted to have the Bible at the University because his aunt, Mamie White Scott, had often expressed the hope that the tis University librarian Maurice D. Leach Jr. (second from left) receives the Graham Family Bible from . members of the Scott family. From left, Richard W. Oram, reference and public services librarian at W&L; Leach; Anderson Hughes Scott, Dr. Charles K. Scott, and Anderson Scott. Bible would one day be put on display at the institution with which Graham had been associated. ‘“The University owns very few artifacts associated with Mr. Graham, our first rector,’’ Leach noted. **Consequently, this volume has unusual historical significance for us.”’ The Graham family Bible will be displayed in the Boatwright Room of the University Library this fall. Minority student aid from Hearst Foundation Washington and Lee has received a $15,000 grant from the Hearst Foundation, Inc., of New York to be used for financial aid for minority students. | The Hearst Foundation was established in 1935 by the late William Randolph Hearst with assets valued at more than $42 million. Each year the foundation awards grants of about $2 million to a wide range of charitable organizations. | “The Hearst Foundation’s generous grant is One more step—and a very important one—in the minority recruitment program that we have been building component-by- component at Washington and Lee,”’ said John L. White, director of minority affairs at the University. The Hearst Foundation grant is the third such grant Washington and Lee has received to support minority student aid in the last 15 months. Earlier, the Gannett Foundation of Rochester, N.Y., made a $10,000 grant and the Hillsdale Foundation of Greensboro, N.C., made a $24,000 grant. ‘*The financial aid program has been greatly supported by the additional revenue these three grants have supplied,’’ said White. ‘‘We are going to be able to reduce or, in certain cases, eliminate student loans incurred by next year’s freshman class. Our : ability to attract students who might otherwise find the price tag too steep has been helped immeasurably.’’ The improvement in the area of financial aid opportunities for minority students is part of an overall effort in the area of minority student recruitment, says White. According to White, one of the most important elements in the increased minority recruitment effort has been the establishment of a group of black alumni who have joined forces to assist the University on several fronts. ‘*This group, which is extremely active, does a superb job in the crucial areas of recruitment and fund-raising as well as by supplying the University with names of candidates for academic and administrative openings as they occur,’’ said White. The black alumni group is headed by William B. Hill, 74, ’77L, of Atlanta. ° ‘“Mr. Hill has selected several key alumni to work in important areas,’’ said I] & Gazette White. ‘‘Matthew Towns, ’74, of Winston- Salem, N.C., for instance, heads up our alumni recruitment program and has written or called every prospect for the past three years. Eugene C. Perry Jr., ’75, 78L, of New York was instrumental in our receiving the Hearst Foundation Grant. Derrick Abney, °78, of Roanoke is in charge of our faculty recruitment committee. ‘*The loyal alumni support—as well as the strong support from parents of students— has been at the heart of the vast improvements we have experienced in student recruiting and in the financial resources necessary to recruit minority students,’’ White said. Diehl-Zink collection given to library Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Zink of Rockbridge County have given the University Library at Washington and Lee an important collection of books, manuscripts, and research files relating to the history of Rockbridge County. The collection was begun by Zink’s foster father, the late Dr. George West Diehl, who was pastor of the Old Oxford Presbyterian Church near Lexington. To be known as the Diehl-Zink Collection, the material includes Dr. Diehl’s personal papers, manuscripts and notes from Diehl-Zink Collection. 12 Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Zink show Washington and Lee student Daniel Einstein one of the volumes in the his books, articles on local history, and Mr. and Mrs. Zink’s genealogical research papers. The Diehl-Zink Collection will add approximately 1,400 volumes to the University Library’s extensive holdings of Virginia county histories, genealogies, and biographies. Most importantly, according to Richard W. Oram, reference and public services librarian at W&L, ‘‘the collection preserves the results of 25 years of research conducted by Dr. Diehl and by the Zinks into the history of the Valley of Virginia and its families.’’ Included in the collection are more than 1,000 file folders of material on Rockbridge County genealogy and history. Added Oram: ‘‘Dr. Diehl was especially interested in local churches, in the conflicts between Indians and settlers, and in the participation by local residents in the Revolutionary War.”’ A 1913 graduate of Washington and Lee, Dr. Diehl died in 1975 at the age of 87. He had moved to Rockbridge County from Texas in 1949 and was president of the Rockbridge Historical Society, serving later as the society’s genealogist. Letters contained in the collection indicate that Dr. Diehl invariably refused to accept payment for his services to those correspondents interested in tracing their Rockbridge County roots. The materials in the collection, noted Oram, include the ‘‘Rockbridge Notebook’’ series from The News-Gazette of Lexington. Maurice D. Leach Jr., the University’s librarian, said that ‘‘Dr. Diehl’s lifetime labors and the generosity of Mr. and Mrs. Zink have considerably enriched our rare books and manuscript resources in Valley of Virginia history.”’ Added Leach: ‘‘We believe that we now have one of the most important genealogical collections in Western Virginia, and we invite researchers from Rockbridge County and around the country to use the collection.’’ Materials in the Diehl-Zink Collection are available to interested researchers and are found in the Special Collections department of the University Library. Woolfolk wins VAB scholarship William Woolfolk, a Washington and Lee junior from Orange, Va., has been awarded the annual Virginia Association of Broadcasters Merit Scholarship for 1982-83. The scholarship is awarded on the basis of academic excellence and leadership qualities to a student at a Virginia college or university which offers courses in journalism. Woolfolk, a graduate of Orange County High School, is active in WLUR-FM, Washington and Lee’s student-operated campus radio station. A journalism and English major, he is a member of the W&L Glee Club and is active in the University Theatre. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas L. Woolfolk of Orange. Workshop for lawyers Twenty-four practicing attorneys from throughout Virginia sharpened their courtroom skills this week in a nine-day workshop during June at the Washington and Lee School of Law. During the Virginia Continuing Legal Education/National Institute for Trial Advocacy program the participants worked on individual parts of a trial—from techniques of introducing material into evidence to methods of examining witnesses. The final two days of the program were used to conduct mock trials in front of juries composed of volunteers from the Lexington area. Practicing attorneys found the law school’s Moot Courtroom the perfect setting for mock trials during the National Institute for Trial Advocacy program. This was the fourth summer that W&L’s law school was the host for the program. As in the past, the instruction was given by both practicing trial lawyers and judges, all of whom volunteered their time to work in the program. The workshop made extensive use of the W&L law school’s extensive video equipment, which permitted the participants to examine and critique their own presentations. Law center sponsors uranium meeting The uranium subcommittee of the Virginia Coal and Energy Commission heard expert testimony on a variety of topics associated with uranium mining and milling during a two-day conference sponsored by Washington and Lee University’s Frances Lewis Law Center in June. In addition to the nine-member subcommittee, which includes five state senators, the conference was attended by parties on both sides of the controversial issue of whether to allow uranium mining and milling in Virginia. The uranium subcommittee previously had visited uranium mining operations in New Mexico and Colorado and had interviewed state uranium regulations officials in those states as part of its decision- making process. The W&L conference was the last phase of the subcommittee’s information gathering. The Virginia General Assembly enacted a moratorium on uranium mining in Virginia while the subcommittee made its study. That moratorium expires on July 1, 1983. Chief among the topics discussed by the speakers at the conference was the question of health hazards associated with the disposal of radioactive uranium byproducts, known as ‘‘tailings.”’ Frederic L. Kirgis Jr., director of the Lewis Law Center, said the conference had been extremely successful. ‘*Everyone seemed to feel that the conference was informative, and that is what it was meant to be,’’ Kirgis said. ‘‘It was, I thought, informative in two important ways. One, we had the expertise of those who had actually confronted the problems associated with uranium mining in such Western states as Utah and Wyoming. And two, we had valuable information from Virginia groundwater geology experts who could speak to the problems that are peculiar to this area of the country.”’ Woodson awarded Sears Internship Darryl K. Woodson, a Washington and Lee junior from Natural Bridge, Va., has been selected for a Sears Congressional Internship. Woodson is one of 15 college and university students from throughout the country to be awarded one of the internships sponsored by Sears, Roebuck and Company. Under the Sears program, students majoring in journalism are placed in Congressional offices where they serve as working members of a legislator’s staff. Woodson, who will receive a stipend from Sears for the internship, will spend the 1983 winter term in Washington, D.C. A graduate of Natural Bridge High School, Woodson is the third W&L student to be awarded a Sears Congressional Internship in the past six years. New faculty members Eight undergraduate teachers and three in law joined the Washington and Lee faculty in September. New teachers on the undergraduate faculty are: Peter W. Bergstrom, assistant professor of biology, who received his B.S. and Ph.D. degrees from the University of Chicago. Douglas A. Burns, instructor in geology, who received his M.S. from the University of Virginia, where he has served as a teaching assistant. Burns takes the place this year of Frederic L. Schwab, professor of geology, who will be on leave. John David Parker, assistant professor of history, who received the M.A. from the University of Texas and the Ph.D. from the University of Washington, where he was a teaching assistant. Robert Lee Pour, instructor in mathematics, who received the M.A. from the University of Virginia and who has been an instructor at Piedmont Virginia Community College. Pour’s appointment is for one year. E. Wyatt Prunty, visiting assistant professor of English, who is assistant professor of English at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University. He takes the place of Dabney Stuart, professor of English, who will be on leave. Debora Ann Rindge, instructor in fine arts, who has been an instructor at the University of Alabama in Birmingham. She received the M.A. from Ohio State University. Robert Richard Ripple, assistant professor of military science, who is a 13 Ye Gazette captain in the Army and has served as a platoon leader and a company commander. He received the B.S. from the University of Maryland. Larry M. Stene, assistant professor of fine arts, who received the M.F.A. in Sculpture from the University of Illinois and has been assistant professor at Bemidji State University. The new law school teachers are: John W. Larson, visiting associate professor of law, who is associate professor of law at Florida State University. Toni M. Massaro, assistant professor of law, who received her law degree from the College of William and Mary and was previously an associate with the Chicago law firm of Vedder, Price, Kaufman and Kammholz. Brian C. Murchison, assistant professor of law, who received both his B.A. and law degrees from Yale University and was previously an associate with the Washington, D.C., law firm of Hamel, Park, McCabe and Saunders. Historian Cecil appointed, comes from Chapel Hill Lamar Cecil Jr., an award-winning teacher and author of two books on German history, has been appointed professor of history at Washington and Lee. Cecil previously served as professor of history at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where he was a 1977 winner of the Tanner Award for “‘excellent and inspirational teaching’’ at the undergraduate level. The Tanner Award at UNC-Chapel Hill is made on the basis of a campus-wide vote of students and faculty. A native of Beaumont, Tex., Cecil received the B.A. from Rice University and the Ph.D. from Johns Hopkins. He was an instructor in history at Johns Hopkins in 1962-63 and an instructor and an assistant professor of history at Princeton University from 1963 to 1968. He joined the faculty at UNC-Chapel Hill as an associate professor in 1968 and was named professor of history in 1973. The author of numerous articles in scholarly journals, Cecil is the author of a 1967 book, Albert Ballin: Business and Politics in Imperial Germany, which was published by the Princeton University Press with a German edition published in Hamburg in 1969. He is also the author of The German 14 Seven W&L alumni and one current student were members of the 26-man staff for head lacrosse coach BE TB: Jack Emmer’s eighth annual boys’ lacrosse camp. From left, Geoff Brent, ’81; Eric Kemp, W&L assistant coach; Emmer; Ken Miller, ’75; Stu Kiehne, ’83 ; John Sancilio, ’82; Jack Dudley, ’77; Dave Nickels, ’82; Rob Staugaitis, ’82; and, Jeff Fritz, ’79. The staff, working with Emmer and assistants Kemp and Chuck O'Connell, honed the skills of 250 participants, aged 10 to 17. Diplomatic Service, 1871-1914 and is currently working on a biography of Wilhelm Il. His major research fields are 19th century Europe and Germany. He has received research grants from the American Council of Learned Societies, the German Academic Exchange Service, and the Research Council of the University of North Carolina. Jarvis named Jeannette Ann Jarvis has been named assistant registrar at Washington and Lee University. A native of Timber Ridge and a resident of Buena Vista, Jarvis joined the staff of the registrar at Washington and Lee in 1965 after previously being employed by Lees Carpets. Faculty activities —Washington and Lee geology professor Frederic L. Schwab is the editor of a new volume on geosynclines published by the Hutchinson Ross Publishing Company. The volume, entitled ‘‘Geosynclines: Concept and Place with Plate Tetonics,’’ is part of the Benchmark Series in Geology. Composed of 44 papers dating from as far back as 1853, the volume attempts to update the theories of how mountains are formed. Schwab has also been awarded a Basic Research Grant from the American Philosophical Society in partial support of ongoing research projects he will be pursuing in Europe during the 1982-83 academic year while on sabbatical leave from W&L. He will study deep water sedimentary rocks in the northern Appenine Mountains of Italy and will also be conducting research on the Isle of Corsica and in the Swiss Alps. Schwab has been a member of the W&L faculty since 1967. —James Boatwright, editor of Shenandoah, the Washington and Lee Literary Review, is the judge for a prize in fiction currently being sponsored by The Missouri Review. The first annual $500 William Peden Prize in Fiction will be awarded later this summer to the author of ‘‘the best piece of short fiction in The Missouri Review during a given volume year.’’ Boatwright, professor of English at Washington and Lee, has been editor of Shenandoah since 1962. He has served on the Coordinating Council of Literary Magazines and the Literature Panel of the National Endowment for the Arts, and has been a fiction judge for the National Book Awards. —A geology textbook written by Washington and Lee professor Edgar W. Spencer has been translated into Russian. Spencer’s book, Introduction to the Structure of the Earth, will be printed by a Russian publishing house. Originally published by McGraw-Hill in 1969 with a second edition released in 1977, the text is designed for use in college-level courses that deal with the structural features of the earth’s crust. A 1953 graduate of Washington and Lee with a Ph.D. in geology from Columbia University, Spencer joined the W&L faculty in 1957 and was named head of the geology department in 1959. He is the author of four other college textbooks in geology. —Roger D. Groot, professor of law at Washington and Lee University, has published an article in a recent issue of the American Journal of Legal History. Groot’s article is entitled ‘‘The Jury of Presentment Before 1215’ and examines the origins of jury trials. According to Groot, English juries before the year 1215 both accused (like a grand jury) and issued a verdict (like a petty jury). Before 1215, a verdict of guilty caused the accused to be tried further by ordeal. Trials by ordeal were abolished by the church in 1215, and in England the jury’s verdict on guilt or innocence became final. Groot’s article further indicates that on the Continent, where there were no juries, abolition of trial by ordeal left no alternative form of trial; thus, the French resorted to judicial torture to obtain confessions. The existence of the verdict jury in England before 1215 spared the English that development. A graduate of the University of North Carolina School of Law, Groot joined the faculty at Washington and Lee in 1973. —Miuinor L. Rogers, associate professor of religion at Washington and Lee, presented a paper at a conference on **Buddhism in Japanese History and Society’’ in June. The conference, held at Harvard University, was the sixth and final meeting in a three-year group research project, ‘“Buddhism in Japanese Civilization: Humanistic Inquiries.’’ The project was funded by the National Endowment for the Humanities and sponsored by the John King Fairbank Center for East Asian Research of Harvard University. The fourth conference, ‘*Buddhism in Japanese Art,’’ was held last June at Skylark, Washington and Lee’s retreat on the Blue Ridge Parkway. —The third edition of a textbook on the economic development of low-income countries, co-authored by Washington and Lee economics professor Bruce Herrick, has recently appeared in a Japanese translation. McGraw-Hill is the publisher of both the English and Japanese versions of the text, which Herrick wrote with Charles Kindleberger of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. A further revision, the fourth edition, is now being printed. Herrick is head of the economics department at Washington and Lee. Davidson Park disappears The Davidson Park apartments, the college home of several generations of Washington and Lee students as well as a number of faculty members, are no more. The five apartment buildings were razed this summer after the University determined that the facility was costing more in maintenance and repairs than it could realistically charge the student tenants. Built in 1946 along with another set of apartments known as Hillside Terrace, the Davidson Park complex was to be ‘‘temporary’’ housing for World War II veterans and their families. The Hillside Terrace apartments were torn down in 1975. The barracks-like buildings were constructed from surplus government installations and were known originally as the University’s ‘‘pre-fabs.’’ Designed and used primarily as married student housing, Davidson Park did serve as the first Lexington home for several members of the faculty and staff, including William J. Watt and Edward C. Atwood, deans of the College and the School of Commerce, Economics, and Politics, respectively. Davidson Park consisted of five separate buildings, each of which contained five apartments. Two of the apartments had been used for storage in recent years while the University was renting 23 units. The buildings stood on land given to the University by Clara Davidson Estill. The University has no immediate plans for use of the site. Workmen dismantle one of the Davidson Park buildings. 1) Another Record Annual Fund Unrestricted Gifts Toward Operating Expenses Amount To $1,279,983 Washington and Lee’s 1981-82 Annual Fund enjoyed yet another record-setting year, establishing new highs in virtually every category. : Unrestricted gifts toward the University’s day-to-day operating expenses amounted to a record net of $1,279,983. That figure represents an increase of 9.3 percent over last year’s total of $1,170,941. It marks the third time in the past three years that the Annual Fund at W&L has exceeded $1 million. Other 1981-82 records: —Total number of contributions: 6,437, up from last year’s 6,266; —Average gift: $201, up from last year’s $189; —Number and total amount of gifts at the Lee Associates level ($1,000 or more): 397 gifts totaling $677,808, up from 367 and $615,767 last year; —Number and total amount of gifts at the Colonnade Club level ($100 to $999): 2,898 gifts totaling $516,831, up from 2,591 and $500,018 last year. The average Lee Associate gift was $1,707. The average Colonnade Club gift was $178. Together members of the Lee Associates and the Colonnade Club gave $1,194,639—92.2 percent of the fund total—and made up 51.2 percent of all fund donors. The University had set a goal of $1,250,000 for the 1981-82 Annual Fund. The final total exceeded that goal by $29,983 and provided almost 10 percent of the University’s operating budget. The University counts toward its annual fund only gifts actually received by June 30, the close of the fund year, and does not include restricted or capital gifts. (The 1981- 82 net total was reached by deducting $14,805 in unpaid pledges at the end of the fund year; many of those pledges have been paid since June 30 and will be applied to the 1981-82 fund.) William F. Ford, ’61L, of Atlanta was the chairman of the 1981-82 Annual Fund. Milton T. Herndon, ’56L, of Huntington, W.Va., was Law Alumni chairman; Peter A. Agelasto III, ’62, of Norfolk, Va., was Academic Alumni chairman; G. T. Alfano of Butler, Pa., was Current Parents chairman; W. Martin Kempe of Orange, Va., was Past Parents chairman; and, Guy T. Steuart II, °53, was Robert E. Lee Associates chairman. REPORT OF THE ANNUAL FUND June 30, 1981 Donors Dollars Academic Alumni 81-82 4,908 $ 994,400 80-8 1 4.790 903,050 Law Alumni 81-82 1,007 166,275 80-8 1 972 151,687 Current Parents 81-82 248 49,361 80-8 | 80-8 | 283 58,979 Past Parents 81-82 188 61,788 80-8 | 166 62,516 Friends 81-82 86 22,964 80-8 | 89 0,727 TOTALS 81-82 6,437 $1,294,788 80-8 | 6,266 $1,186,959 CURRENT PARENTS—.G. T. Alfano, Chairman % Jo Avg. Area Area Chairman Donors Dollars Fart, Part. Gift I H. A. Baumgaertner ao oO.925 are 37 $203 II R. E. Hanks 29 4,500 20.1 37.0 $190 Ill F. K. Turner 28 3,365 23.0 42.3 $165 IV J. C. Kendrick 29 2,983 15.9 42.4 $156 V G. C. Finly 16 3,770 12.8 VI R. H. Park 28 5,115 3 i oe Vil J. D. LeBlanc 11 7,563 12.6 Vill R. G. Sheldon 30 6,565 23.6 28.0 $329 IX T.B. Rentschler 25 8,575 26.0 a7 2 $377 ore eae oe -“ oo —_ $267 Total 248 $49,361 “19.8 oy $121 a7 $201 PAST PARENTS—W. M. Kempe, Chairman 36.9 $189 W. M. Kempe 188 $61,788 28.0 16 THE ANNUAL FUND BY CLASSES—1981-82 ACADEMIC CLASSES—Peter A. Agelasto III, Chairman Class Class Agent Donors Group IA-W. C. Washburn, Vice Chairman* All Other W.C. Washburn* 14A A. W. McCain* ISA R. N. Latture* 16A E. B. Shultz 17A W. J. Cox — 18A A. Beall* 21A S. L. Raines 23A F. B. Hurt 24A R. M. Jenkins TOTAL* GROUP II-A—H. G. Jahncke, Vice Chairman* 25A E. T. Andrews* 26A T. T. Moore* 27A G. E. Burks* 28A P. Cohen* 29A T. G. Gibson 30A L. P. Brown* 31A H. M. Minniece* 32A E. P. Martin* TOTAL* 33 GROUP III-A—J. E. Neill, Vice Chairman 33A C. J. Longacre* 34A S. Mosovich 35A G. J. McGeory* 36A G. W. Harrison* 37A R. K. Stuart 38A J. H. Reid* 39A V. F. Radcliffe TOTAL GROUP IV-A—E. R. Marable, Vice Chairman 40A R. V. Hersey 41A A. T. Fleishman* 42A N. H. Brower 43A A. D. Darby 44A G. T. Wood 45A M. M. Hirsh 46A E. S. Willis 4TA W. G. Merrin* 48A W. B. Potter 49A M. W. Saurs TOTAL GROUP V-A—C. D. Hurt Jr., 50A W.N. Clements* SIA J. B. McCutcheon 52A W. D. McGrew 53A L. A. Putney* 54A F. A. Parsons 55A J. H. Marion* 56A J. R. O’Connell STA J. B. Howard 58A V. W. Holleman S59A T. B. Bryant* TOTAL GROUP VI-A—J. W. Jennings, Vice Chairman 60A M. Lassman 61A E. B. Olds 62A W.D. Outman © 63A G. O. Thornhill 64A C. H. Sheild* 65A J. W. Rutter 66A R. A. Tyler 67A W. H. Jeffress* 68A C. H. Capito 69A M. L. Halford TOTAL GROUP VII-A—G. A. Frierson III, Vice Chairman T0A J. A. Meriwether* TIA R. E. Minor Tans S. W. Robinson 7T3A G. A. Frierson Vice Chairman 91 87 106 104 lai 102 108 124 110 140 1,099 119 99 111 105 Dollars $ 14,447 511 2,420 635 3,370 8,545 380 2,090 5,246 $ 37,644 $ 8,006 8,141 7,216 20,274 87s 28,182 23,585 17,500 $121,699 $ 17,562 12,379 Told 16,531 14,908 31,750 19,427 $120,072 $ 80,768 16,003 23,905 19,357 15,124 16,455 10,180 8,045 8,104 19,523 $217,464 $ 25,656 Zonta 20,643 23,940 22,822 23,880 15,036 17,453 20,452 20,428 $216,031 $ 18,130 14,295 20,388 11,365 18,012 14,661 10,480 12,566 16,744 19,869 $156,510 $ 18,557 12,122 14,050 11,298 % Part. 31.4 ao 50.0 42.9 66.7 47.6 42.9 38.0 are 38.4 42.9 59.6 48.8 42.0 45.8 49.0 36.6 45.8 57.4 45.0 47.6 47.7 40.2 3n3 42.2 43.5 on 48.1 45.1 33.3 47.4 36.5 28.5 33.3 41.2 38.1 3352 38.0 38.2 22.0 39.8 37.8 38.1 35.1 43.4 36.5 39.7 Sous 31.1 33.4 eo.2 T4A W. P. Wallace 98 T5A J. V. Baird* 109 76A C. T. Jackson* 124 TTA T. Atwood 85 7T8A J. L. Bruch 111 TOA C. S. Jones 106 80A C. Cornett* 120 81A C. Gammon* 119 TOTAL 1,306 LAW CLASSES—Milton T. Herndon, Chairman Class Class Agent Donors GROUP I-L—W. C. Washburn, Vice Chairman* All Other* 2G 23L W. W. Ogden* - 26L R. O. Bentley* 5 29L S. C. Strite* 5 TOTAL* 35 GROUP II-L—O. B. McEwan 30L L. H. Davis* 6 31L M. M. Weinberg 10 321. M. P. Burks* 11 33L F. R. Bigham ie 34L S. W. Wise 7 DOL No Agent 6 36L W. L. Martin 5 SIL J. Arnold 12 38L No Agent 5 39L E. L. Smith* 21 40L O. B. McEwan 11 41L J_E. ‘Peérry* 13 42L R. O. McDonald* 11 TOTAL 130 GROUP III-L—J. B. Porterfield, Vice Chairman 48L C. R. Allen* 37 49L J. B. Porterfield 24 50L W. J. Ledbetter* 23 SIL S. H. Shott* 28 52k. J. ©. Reed* 26 53L R. L. Banse 11 54L D. R. Klenk 14 55L R. W. Hudgins 13 56L R. S. Harp 9 57L O. P. Pollard Ey 58L R. E. Stroud* 12 59L J. F. Richards 10 TOTAL 226 GROUP IV-L—H. M. Bates, Vice Chairman 60L J. L. Lyle 17 61L R. E. Shepherd 16 62L R. R. Robrecht 11 63L L. Sargeant 13 64L R. K. Morton 19 65L L. G. Griffiths 22 66L G. W. Wooten nt 67L J. C. Treadway 15 68L M. L. Lowry* 29 69L D. D. Redmond* 30 TOTAL 193 GROUP V-L—J. D. Kline, Vice Chairman* 70L D. W. Thornton* 20 TIL H. W. Walker : 20 72L J. A. Philpott* os 73L M. H. Squires* 58 74L L. H. Framme 30 ISL C. J. Habenicht 32 76L Hal & Nan Clarke* 41 Tih D. M. Thomas 35 78L D. Swope 33 T9L J. F. Murphy* 46 80L J. K. Boyden 30 81L D. G. Weaver 43 TOTAL* 420 *Met or exceeded goal 9,290 24,082 9, fal 5,420 6,028 5,026 5,336 3,948 $124,878 Dollars $ 7,880 1,250 650 475 $10,255 $ 1,320 8,200 7,842 1,350 4,675 3,350 450 oO oue 3,115 2,075 3,000 3,590 L203 $43,794 $ 5,412 4,020 5,380 5,610 3,725 1,185 2,625 1,430 1,860 9,638 2,962 2,780 $48 627 $ 2,112 6,595 1,675 Lilie 1,885 1,770 2,705 2,680 4,160 2,590 $27,884 $ 3,036 1,740 5,395 4,454 2,916 1,895 7,580 1,585 1,891 2,652 1,265 1,163 $35,572 26.9 31.8 g2.5 toe 29,7 28.2 29.1 33.8 30.1 % Part. 33.8 42.9 100.0 41.7 39.3 66.7 71.4 61.1 75.0 41.1 42.9 50.0 70.6 D1 67.7 37.9 54.2 34.4 54.9 50.7 30.8 54.3 318 52.0 33.3 50.0 37.1 42.9 a3 46.2 30.3 43.6 44.7 40.0 28.9 36.1 38.8 48.9 42.0 208 40.3 41.7 39.0 50.0 34.5 38.0 58.6 34.5 40.0 52.6 43.4 aO.4 25.6 35.8 40.2 17 Chapter News EASTERN KENTUCKY. An enthusiastic group of alumni, wives, and guests were entertained royally at the Headley-Whitney Museum in Lexington, Ky., on May 15, 1982. Cocktails and hors d’oeuvres were served while the guests toured the museum to view the exquisite exhibitions of jewels and porcelain. George Headley was in attendance to greet the guests. Arrangements were made by Mr. and Mrs. John Bagby, ’73, with able assistance from W. Gay Reading Jr., ’65. In attendance to the delight of all was Charles M. Landrum, ’41, the newly elected president of the Kentucky Bar Association. Alumni secretary Bill Washburn, ’40, and his wife, Libby, were on hand and made a few remarks about Washington and Lee. After announcing future plans for chapter activities, President Bagby adjourned the meeting with a stirring rendition of the Washington and Lee Swing. EASTERN NORTH CAROLINA. The chapter held its first alumni meeting/beach party on May 1, 1982. Enjoying ideal weather, the group gathered on Emerald Island at the oceanfront cottage of chapter president Walter Lockhart, ’69. Though a George Headley was there to greet the guests. and W. Henry Graddy, ’69. 18 ASTERN KENTUCKY—Enjoying the entertainment at the Headley-Whitne Museum are Fred G. Francis, ’39; John R. Bagby, ’73L; and Joyce Craft. EASTERN KENTUCKY—Among those at the museum gathering to see the jewels and porcelain were Beverly Youmans; David Bissett III, ’70; Walter May, ’71; long way from the bluegrass of Kentucky, the guests did get into the spirit of the day when Jack Daughtrey, ’65, organized a Derby Day pool before the dinner. Following the delightful meal, Lockhart reported on his impressions from the Special Alumni Conference which he attended on the campus last October. Greg Crampton, ’69, of Raleigh was elected the new chapter president in elections held later in the evening. Dr. Charles Duffy, ’27, of New Bern, closed the evening by sharing with the group his Calyx. RICHMOND. A highlight of the chapter’s program this year was a cocktail-dinner party held June 10 at the Commonwealth Club. Ross Millhiser, vice chairman of Philip Morris, Inc., and a trustee of Washington and Lee, was the special guest and speaker for the occasion. In his remarks, Millhiser extolled the role of liberal education, citing specifically Washington and Lee’s role in the education of students pursuing business- related studies. After opening remarks of welcome by chapter president Lee Keiger III, °76, Millhiser was introduced by William E. (Bill) Garrison, ’76. Before adjourning the meeting, Keiger announced some of the chapter’s plans for the summer, including the annual golf match against Hampden-Sydney. He expressed special thanks to William C. French, ’73, vice president of the chapter, through whose membership the dinner was arranged at the Commonwealth Club. As a token of its appreciation and in recognition of his outstanding service to Washington and Lee, the chapter presented Millhiser with a copy of the book, Lee—The Last Years. SAN DIEGO. Bruce Herrick, professor of economics and head of the economics department at Washington and Lee, was a special guest at a cocktail party held on April 29, 1982, at the Cuyamaca Club in the Executive Hotel in San Diego. Herrick, formerly on the faculty at UCLA, made interesting comparisons between W&L and UCLA as well as providing the alumni and their wives with up-to-date reports on the University. Arrangements at the Cuyamaca Club were made through the good offices of L. Hunter Tracht, ’60. John D. Klinedinst, "71, °78L, president of the chapter, announced plans for future activities scheduled for the summer. EASTERN NORTH CAROLINA—At the beach party were Charles Duffy, ’27; Jack Daughtrey, ’65; Wes Murfin, ’68; John Heard, ’53; Lewis Hannah, ’74; Greg Crampton, ’69; and Walter Lockhart, ’69. NORTHERN CALIFORNIA—Economics Professor Bruce Herrick (right) at a San Francisco alumni reception arranged by Nat Baker, ’67. Herrick met again the next day with San Diego alumni (see story above). Class Notes WASHINGTON AND LEE ARM CHAIRS AND ROCKERS With Crest in Five Colors The chairs are made of birch and rock maple, hand-rubbed in black lacquer (also available by special order in dark pine stain; see note below). They are attractive and sturdy pieces of furniture and are welcome gifts for all occasions—Christmas, birthdays, graduation, anniversaries, or weddings. All profits from sales of the chair goes to the scholarship fund in memory of John Graham, ’14. Now Available: A child’s Boston Rocker in natural dark pine stain, with the crest in gold. Price $55.00. By Special Order Only: The Arm Chair and Boston Rocker are also available by special order in natural dark pine stain, with crest in five colors, at the same price as the black arm chair and rocker. Allow at least 12 weeks for delivery. ARM CHAIR, Black Lacquer with Cherry Arms, $125.00 f.0.b. Lexington, Va. BOSTON ROCKER, All Black Lacquer, $110.00 f.0.b. Lexington, Va. CHILD’S BOSTON ROCKER, Natural Dark Pine Stain, $55.00 f.o.b. Lexington, Va. Mail your order to WASHINGTON AND LEE ALUMNI, INC. Lexington, Virginia 24450 Shipment from available stock will be made upon receipt of your check. Freight charges and delivery delays can often be minimized by having the shipment made to an office or business address. Please include you name, address, and telephone number, and a telephone number, if known, for the delivery location. J. M. Wisdom, ’25 1928 FRANK BENJAMIN Hurt, professor emeritus of Ferrum College, received an honorary Doctor of Humanities degree from that college during their commencement exercises on May 16. The honorary degree medallion and citation were presented in recognition of Professor Hurt’s ‘‘distinguished con- tributions to society, to education, and to the college as well as his outstanding accomplishments in the field of education.’ Professor Hurt served on the faculty at Ferrum from 1927 to 1929, joined the political science department at Western Maryland College in 1930 and remained there until 1965 when he was named professor emeritus. He returned to Ferrum in 1965 as head of the division of social sciences and in 1970 became professor emeritus. He also taught at the Hun School of Princeton, the Uni- versity of Maryland and the University of North Carolina. In 1970 the Ferrum board of trustees com- missioned Professor Hurt to write the first official history of the college and in June 1977 A History of Ferrum College—An Uncommon Challenge 1914- 1974 was published. His professional memberships are many ranging from the American Political Science Association to the American Historical Association and the American Academy of Social Sciences. Pro- fessor Hurt is listed in numerous publications and his most recent honor was selection last fall to the Western Maryland Sports Hall of Fame. Professor Hurt is active in the Franklin County Historical Society and is currently chairman of the board of directors of the First National Bank of Ferrum. He recently completed work on a book entitled The Eighteenth Century Heritage of the German People of Franklin County, Virginia. 1925 JOHN MINoR Wispoo, Judge of the U.S. Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans, La., and a vital influence in the progress of civil rights through land- mark desegregation decisions in the 1960s, was prin- cipal speaker at commencement exercises at Haver- ford College on May 17, 1982. Haverford College conferred an honorary degree upon Judge Wisdom along with three other individuals, one of whom was Nomzamo Winnie Mandela, wife of Nelson Mandela, the imprisoned leader of the African National Con- gress in South Africa. HERMAN J. WoMELDORF of Raleigh, N.C., is retired after 51 years as an active minister in the Presbyterian Church USA. In his work he has seen the organizing and building of four churches and six educational buildings. 1927 THE Rev. R. WILBUR SIMMONS retired in 1969 and lives in Claremont, Calif. He has served eight interim pastorates. [ae Harry E. Gopwin, after 30 years as a manufacturer’s representative for automotive parts, is now semi-re- tired and lives in Memphis, Tenn. Godwin had also 19 Class Notes had an outstanding career in jazz music. He is still active as a musicologist and is currently on the Mem- phis Music Commission. He is also a board member of Tulane University Jazz Archive in New Orleans. HENRY POELLNITZ JOHNSTON Sr. has retired from the Jefferson County (Alabama) Personnel Board after 24 years of service. Johnston has been widely recog- nized for his service to the public. While he may be more widely recognized for his work before he retired as chief executive and manager of WSGN radio and WAPI television, he served on numerous boards and commissions as well as supported and led campaigns for charitable enterprises. 1930 L. PALMER BROwN, president emeritus of the Mem- phis-based L. P. Brown Co. and a recipient of the Washington and Lee Distinguished Alumnus Award, was presented the Distinguished Service Medal by Southwestern at Memphis University during their graduation exercises on June 5. Brown has been a member of Southwestern’s board of trustees since 1967. He additionally chaired the board’s finance committee and served as president of the Charles E. Diehl Society (a club for special donors) and as treas- urer of the college. In 1960 Brown was named ‘‘Mem- phis’ Outstanding Citizen’’ by the Civitan Club. He is a past president of the Downtown Association, the Family Service Organization, Future Memphis Inc., the board of trustees of Methodist Hospital and the Memphis Cotton Carnival Association. On a broader scale, Brown has served as national president of the National Multiple Sclerosis Society and as chairman of the American Red Cross’ national convention. THE REV. LEON R. ROBISON JR. is retired and lives in St. Louis, Mo. He is minister emeritus of the Second Baptist Church of St. Louis which he served for 20 years. Harry E. TRAIL retired in 1961 from the Army and from the insurance business in 1974. He lives in Montgomery, Ala., where he is busily engaged in church work, mental health, and working with crippled children. 1931 Dr. EDWARD M. RILEY retired in 1977 as director of research of Colonial Williamsburg Foundation and as a lecturer in history at the College of William and Mary. He edited 21 booklets on Virginia in the American Revolution for the Virginia Independence Bicentennial Commission. 1932 HERBERT G. DOLLAHITE II retired in 1972 after over 40 years in resort hotel management primarily with the Royal Hawaiian Hotel on Waikiki Beach in Honolulu. He operated 36 resort hotels in 1946-47. For the past year, Dollahite has served as assistant to the president of the Hawaiian Vacation Council as liaison officer, Waikiki Trade Center, in Honolulu. 20 D. GEORGE PRICE is an example of his own axiom that retirement is worthwhile only if you have a hobby, an avocation, or an interest. Working at a nursery school in Chevy Chase has given him all three. The publication 50 Plus bestowed upon him the 1982 Bridging of the Generation Gap award. Price, a widower and a retired Navy commander, goes every Thursday to the St. Paul Nursery School where he conducts ‘‘shops’’ in which he has devised ingenious and original techniques for teaching small children to manufacture their own toys, games, and home decorations out of articles like milk containers, and egg cartons, as well as to use their imaginations in other constructive ways. The whole purpose, says Price, is to make the children ‘‘feel confident and self-reliant.”’ 1933 ETHELBERT (BERT) EVANS of Montgomery, Ala., has been awarded a Paul Harris Fellowship by Rotary International. 1935 David J. BENNETT Jr., an information specialist with Fox Chase Cancer Center in Philadelphia, has received his Accredited Business Communicator designation (ABC) from the International Association of Business Communications. Bennett has been with Fox Chase Cancer Center for 10 years. During his career he also spent many years with the Radio and Television Division of Triangle Publications, and he has worked as an independent communications con- sultant. 1936 WILLIAM C. (BILL) BARBEE of Washington, D.C., recently took a two week tour with the Johns Hopkins Alumni College group to Istanbul and Western Asia Minor to see the old as well as the more recent archaeological digs. 1938 THOMAS A. MALLoy JR. is a retired professor emeri- tus of Ferris State College. He is a member of the West Michigan Advisory Council for the Area Agency on Aging, and is chairman of the VFW post 4102 building committee. He currently is working on a manuscript Iceland: The Cooperative Society. JOHN H. SHOAF of The Woodlands, Texas, has been appointed senior representative of the government of New Brunswick in Texas. New Brunswick is located on the east coast of Canada, close to offshore oil and gas activity. The province shares a common border with Maine. Shoaf will promote New Brunswick to potential investors in the southeast United States. He has 35 years experience in trade development and promotion, 15 of those years were with the U.S. Department of Commerce. ROBERT M. WHITE II, editor and publisher of the Mexico Ledger in Mexico, Mo., and a former member of the Alumni Board of Directors, continues to serve his state and community in exceedingly fine ways. Recently he was elected president of the Missouri Public Expenditure Survey, a research organization on state and local finances. The International Press Institute elected White as chairman of the American Committee. The organization, dedicated to a free press, is helping editors, publishers and reporters around the world who have been imprisoned or exiled. White was instrumental in establishing a scholarship at the Mexico High School known as the Ledgerland Scholarship and sponsored by the Ledger. The Mis- souri Military Academy also received a personal gift from White for “‘endowed scholarships.’’ On an even broader scale, White was recently elected president of the Douglas MacArthur Memorial Foundation which is headquartered in Norfolk, Va. [939 Dr. JOHN T. Fey, formerly chairman of the board of the Equitable Life Assurance Society of the U.S., has been named chairman of the board of National Bank of North America. Fey joined Equitable in 1974 following his presidency of the National Life Insur- ance Co. Earlier in his career he served as president of the University of Wyoming and as president of the University of Vermont. Fey also had an earlier period as dean of George Washington University Law School and as a clerk in the United States Supreme Court. 1940 RALPH P. BAKER, a prominent surgeon in Newberry, S.C., has been elected to the 1982 board of visitors of the Medical University of South Carolina in Charles- ton. Baker received his M.D. degree from Duke University’s School of Medicine. He was a Fellow in Pathology at George Washington University School of Medicine, Washington, D.C., and a resident in surgery at the new George Washington Hospital in Washington, D.C. He is a Fellow in the American College of Surgeons and the American Society of Abdominal Surgeons. He is a member of the American Medical Association and the South Carolina Medical Society, and is currently secretary-treasurer of both organizations. Baker is married to the former Eliza- beth Renwick and they have five children. HAL B. WATTERSON of Signal Mountain, Tenn., has retired after 41 years of service with E. I. duPont de Nemours & Co. Inc. 194] THEODORE A. BRUINSMA of Rancho Palos Verdes is a republican candidate for the senate from California. Bruinsma is a former dean of Loyola Law School and a former major corporation president. RICHARD W. SMITH, an attorney in Staunton, Va., has recently moved from his position as senior partner to that of counsel for the law firm. Smith now spends a portion of his time raising angus cattle. He was recently elected president of the board of trustees of The King’s Daughters’ Hospital in Staunton. 1942 EARLE PALMER Brown and his advertising agency F.C. Brooks, ’46 won the most awards in the Advertising Club of Washington’s annual Addy Awards competition. Brown won eight of 28 Addys, including three for newspaper ads, two for consumer magazines and a business publications award for advertisements pro- moting the agency itself. He also won awards in the category for television advertisements. 1943 ALBERT D. Darby has been named city editor of the Cumberland (Md.) News. Darby, has been with the Times and Alleganian Co., parent company of the News, in various reportorial and editorial positions since joining the company 32 years ago. BARTON W. Morris, president of Times-World Corp. in Roanoke, has been appointed chairman of the board. The announcement was made by the president of Landmark Communications Inc., the parent com- pany. Morris joined the Roanoke newspaper in 1945 as a general assignment reporter. In the next five years he became city hall reporter, police writer, and legislative correspondent. After a brief tenure as assistant to the general manager and promotion man- ager, he was made executive editor and served until becoming publisher in 1973. He was made president in 1978. Morris, active in civic affairs, is a former chairman and president of United Way. He has served on the boards of Virginia Western Community Col- lege, Red Cross, Family Service, and the Roanoke Museum of Fine Arts. He is currently a director of the Roanoke Symphony Society. 1944 HOWARD GREENBLATT, an attorney and real estate consultant in Chicago, took a trip last winter on the Orinoco River in Venezuela. 1946 FRANK C. BROOKS, a trustee of Washington and Lee University, has been named president of the board of trustees of Boys’ Latin School in Baltimore, Md. 1949 RICHARD S. COOLEY is chairman of the mathematics department at Buckley School in New York City. He lives in Peapack, N.J. HENRY H. Hicks has been named press secretary to U.S. Senator Paula Hawkins of Florida. Hicks lives in Arlington, Va. 1950 F. ALDEN Murray Jr. is the first member of the Washington Board of Realtors to be awarded the coveted Certified-Commercial Investment Member (CCIM) designation by the Realtors National Mar- keting Institute, an affiliate of the National Associa- tion of Realtors. The CCIM designation is awarded only to highly educated specialists who draw from market experience and intensive study to help clients analyze and meet investment objectives. Murray is president of Alden Inc. Realtors in Bethesda, Md. He F. A. Murray Jr., ’50 is also past president of the Washington chapter of the American Society of Appraisers and is designated senior member, Urban Real Estate (ASA) by that society, and senior member (CRA) of the National Association of Review Appraisers and Senior Mem- ber (SCV) of the International Institute of Valuers, Geneva, Switzerland. Dr. GEORGE H. PIERSON Jr. will celebrate his 10th anniversary, on July 1, 1982, as radiologist with Greensboro Radiology Associates at the Moses H. Cone Memorial Hospital in Greensboro, N.C. He and his wife, Betty, have one son and two daughters. JOSEPH H. REESE Jr., CLU, has been elected presi- dent, chief operating officer and a member of the board of directors of Provident Indemnity Life Insur- ance Co. of Norristown, Pa. 1951 BIRTH: Mr. and Mrs. WILLIAM L. DAVIDSON, a daughter, Ashley Margaret, on March 9, 1982. The family lives in Valencia, Calif. NORMAN R. LEMCKE JR. is now director of admis- sions at the University School in Milwaukee. He lives in Mequon, Wisc. 1952 JOHN J. (JOE) KINDRED III is vice president at Manu- facturer Hanover Trust Co. in New York City and in charge of the estates and trusts and tax departments. DEROY Scott Jr. is currently associated with Paul Semonin Co., a real estate firm in Louisville, Ky. 1953 THE REv. CHARLES F. MCNutTT JR., who has served as coadjutor since 1980, was invested as bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Central Pennsylvania on June 12 at the Annual Diocesan Convention held at Buck- nell University. McNutt was a former clergyman and city council member in Martinsburg, W.Va. He has served dioceses in Florida and West Virginia. JOHN A. WILLIAMSON II finished second place in the recently run Long Beach to LaPaz yacht race. He resides in Santa Clara, Calif., and is the chairman of the United Republican Finance Committee. 1954 RAYMOND F. BEE has been transferred by U.S. Steel Co. to their plant in Gary, Ind., as a stock foreman. THE REv. DANIEL D. DICKENSON is serving as ad- ministrator of Westminster-Cantebury in Virginia Beach, a Presbyterian-Episcopal life core community which opened March 29, 1982, after five years of preparation and construction. Dickenson also serves as chairman of the Advisory Committee to the Pres- byterian Office on Aging of the Presbyterian Church in the U.S., and the United Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A. Dr. W. BARLOW INABET has been elected president of the North Carolina Society of otolaryngology and maxillofacial surgery. The society held its annual meeting in August 1982 at the World’s Fair in Knox- ville, Tenn. NICHOLAS G. MAHDAK of Clifton, N.J., has been elevated to judge of the Superior Court of New Jersey as of December 21, 1981, after nomination by the governor and confirmation by the New Jersey Senate. SEDGWICK L. Moss of Arlington, Va., is president of the Washington, D.C., Volvo Club. JUDGE WILEY R. WRIGHT Jr. has recently been ap- pointed by Chief Justice Harry L. Carrico of the Virginia Supreme Court to the Judicial Council of Virginia. 1955 BEAUREGARD A. REDMOND, who resigned in De- cember 1980 as president of the Commercial Bank in Metarie, La., has followed his life-long dream to paint. He has become an accomplished artist and has had showings in various cities including New Orleans and his first of several exhibitions was at the annual Virginia Regional Show sponsored by Washington. and Lee. In June, Redmond had an exhibition of his paintings and drawings at the Collier-Boone House in Tuscaloosa, Ala. 1956 OLIVER T. COOK, a practicing attorney in Peabody, Mass., is also actively involved in playing golf and in the administration of the game of golf. An executive committeeman of the Massachusetts Golf Association for the past five years, he is presently serving as chairman of the championship committee which con- ducts a number of state championships including the Massachusetts Open and Massachusetts State Amateur. He recently completed two years as presi- dent of Salem Country Club and was selected to be general chairman of the United States Golf Associa- tion Women’s Open which is to be held at Salem Country Club in 1984. He had previously served as general chairman of the 1977 Senior Amateur Cham- pionship which was also held at Salem Country Club. JOHN A. WILLIAMSON II (See 1953.) WILEY R. WRIGHT JR. (See 1954.) 1957 THOMAS C. BROYLES, an attorney in Virginia Beach, has been elected to the Virginia Wesleyan College board of trustees. JAN C. KOONTz has been appointed district manager for Wang Laboratories Inc., in their new sales district headquartered in Cincinnati, Ohio. The new area encompasses Kentucky, central and southern Indiana, southern and central Ohio, with branch offices in Columbus and Dayton, Ohio, Louisville, and Lex- ington, Ky., and Indianapolis, Ind., as well as Cin- 21 cinnati. Koontz’ duties will include planning and support for the growth of corporate business in these areas. Before joining Wang, Koontz was associated with International Business Machines. He held a variety of management positions in marketing in New York City, Raleigh, N.C., and as a branch manager in Cincinnati. He is active in community affairs, currently serving as chairman of the board of directors for Junior Achievement in greater Cincinnati. Wang is a supplier of computer-based office automation systems comprising data processing, word process- ing, electronic mail, and voice store and forward capabilities. DONALD S. LurRIA lives on aranch in Tucson, Ariz., where he owns a small cooking school and has opened a gourmet take-out business. 1958 JAMES J. CRAWFORD Jr., beginning in October 1981, became general manager exploration, international for the Ladd Petroleum Corp. located in Denver, Colo. PHILLIPPE C. LABRO’S book entitled Des bateaux dans la nuit has been published in Paris by Gallimard. During the week of April 4, it was third on the French best-seller list. HUGH B. SprROUL of Staunton, Va., is owner and operator of Air Land Real Estate. He was president of Staunton-Augusta Board of Realtors in 1980 and was recently elected to the Staunton City Council. He and his wife, Ann, have two children. FREDERICK H. Tarr III, an insurance executive in Rockport, Maine, and a member of the board of selectman, has just been chosen as chairman of that board. Dr. NELSON S. TEAGUE; a physician in Roanoke, Va., has been named president of the Virginia Uro- logical Society. S. ScoTT WHIPPLE has written a video script which will be shot on location this summer in Massachusetts. The script, a dramatization of a supervisory problem- solving situation, is being produced by Xerox Learn- ing Systems. Whipple’s other productions include video presentations for such clients as the Bank of New York, Colgate-Palmolive Co., and Xerox Corp. 1959 RICHARD A. POWELL, formerly in Bermuda, has accepted a transfer with the Department of Defense Overseas Dependent Schools to Northern Japan. Since 1964 he has enjoyed assignments in Germany and England. He and his wife, Carol, have a son, David. CHARLES E. Toomy III completed dental school at the University of Maryland in 1964 and his ortho- dontic residency at Columbia University in 1970. He and his wife, the former Joyce Cooper, have four children and the family lives in Annapolis, Md. a2 William J. (Bill) Russell Jr., ’57, makes a save in the Alumni-Varsity Soccer Game held during Reunion Weekend last May. The varsity won 4-1. Bill was on campus for his 25th class reunion. Toomy is active in St. Anne’s church having served two terms on the vestry. In 1980-81 he served as president of the Maryland State Orthodontic Society. 1960 On June 4, 1982, CoL. WILLIAM T. WILLIAMS IV became commander of the Air Force’s TUSLOG Detachment 10 at Incirlik, Turkey. He is responsible for NATO flight training programs and military pre- paredness of the only American tactical air operation between Italy and the Far East. Williams graduated from the Air Force Academy in 1961 and earned an M.S. degree in business systems analysis from the University of Rochester in 1971. He had served as vice commander at Incirlik since February 1981. 1961 JACK H. BREARD Jr. of Dallas has recently been promoted to director of marketing of EBSCO In- dustries Inc., a diversified corporation headquartered in Birmingham, Ala. For the past 16 years Breard has been vice president and general manager of three of the corporation’s divisions. In preparation for those responsibilities of his new position he just completed a two-week strategic marketing course at Harvard Business School. He and his family expect to move to Birmingham shortly. JAMES B. CONE is owner of Coffee & Tea Ltd. Inc. of Minneapolis, Minn. His four retail stores specialize in over 50 varieties of coffee and over 150 kinds of tea. In addition to the retail stores, he also operates a large mail order business. 1962 Dr. ROBERT P. CARROLL JR. is on the Texas State Health Coordinating Council, and on the executive boards of the Greater East Texas Health Systems Agency and the Texas Medical Association Health Planning Committee. He is in family practice in Nacogdoches, Texas. Dr. JOSEPH L. GOLDSTEIN, a professor at the Univer- sity of Texas Southwestern Medical School in Dallas, was awarded an honorary Doctor of Science degree at the May 21 commencement of the Rensselaer Poly- technic Institute in Troy, N.Y. Goldstein had colla- borated with another professor named Michael Brown on medical research at the frontier of genetic research. He has earned many research prizes and awards. The team of Brown and Goldstein were cited for their teamwork and the way in which they ‘‘blend brilliant minds, innovative techniques and extraordinary dedication to search areas of medical science where no others have gone before.’’ 1963 WILLIAM H. (BILL) CANDLER, former sales and mar- keting director for the Donning Co./Publishers (1976- 1978) and the former editor of Metro, the Magazine of Southeastern Virginia (1978-1981), has become manager of a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Donning Co./Publishers of Norfolk, known as Donning Pro- J. H. Breard Jr., ’’61 ductions. The new subsidiary is a full-service pro- duction house specializing in marketing an extensive line of creative services to area corporations and businesses, including copywriting, design, typesetting and printing, transfer lettering, film, audio-visual presentations, direct mail capabilities and manage- ment seminars. Candler will have the title of vice president with the new company during a varied career, he has gained experience in law, university administration, newspaper and magazine journalism, freelance writing and advertising. He is a regular columnist for the Tidewater Virginian, the business magazine of Southeastern Virginia. SAMUEL W. CHANNELL is associate director of the West Virginia Office of Emergency Medical Services. He lives in Charleston with his wife, Mary, and son, Russell. DavibD GROGAN is vice president and general manager of Rubbermaid Applied Products Division of Rubbermaid Inc. He and his wife and two children live in Statesville, N.C. RoBERT G. HOLLAND, associate editor of the Rich- mond Times-Dispatch, has been appointed by Gov- ernor Charles Robb to Virginia’s first Governor’s Council on Physical Fitness and Sports, a20-member group that will promote fitness programs in schools, business, industry, senior citizens groups and gov- ernment. 1964 BIRTH: Mk. and Mrs. JAMES H. (HOBBY) MORRISON JR., ason, James Scott, on Nov. 12, 1981. Morrison, who is with Morrison Productions Inc. of New York City, is a director and cameraman of television com- mercials. He recently did an introductory campaign for Budweiser Light beer featuring one of the famous Clydesdale horses running through some of the scenic areas in the United States. Davip C. BLAck III addressed a forestry seminar sponsored by the Swedish Trade Office in Stockholm on June 2, 1982. He is head of Merrill Lynch Realty’s Timberland Division in Atlanta. THOMAS (MIKE) BRUMBy IV and family live in Tifton, Ga. Brumby is growing Christmas trees and is also teaching tennis to youths and adults. He and his wife have a daughter who is 3% years old. President Reagan designated ALFRED E. EcKES JR. as chairman of the United States International Trade Commission for a term to expire in June 1984. Eckes is an economic historian and former executive director of the House Republican Conference prior to joining the U.S.I.T.C. in September 1981. He was a Ful- bright Fellow at Christ’s College, Cambridge, in 1965; earned an M.A. in international relations from Tufts University in 1966; and, received his doctorate in American history from the University of Texas at Austin in 1969. From 1969 to 1978, Eckes was a history professor and earned tenure at Ohio State University before beginning a two year assignment as editorial page editor for the Columbus Dispatch in 1977. He went to Washington in July 1979 as execu- tive director of the House Republican Conference. Eckes lives in Alexandria. Dr. WARREN HOPKINS is a licensed clinical psy- chologist and currently is director of the Center for Psychological Services at the University of Rich- mond. This year he was awarded the ODK ‘‘Professor of the Year’’ and the ‘‘Outstanding Administrator Award’’ by the Student Government Association. Hopkins also received the IFC Faculty Award. His wife, Jane, is also a doctor and is director of the Women’s Resource Center in Richmond. Jay F. Jacor has been promoted to the rank of Commander, Supply Corps, USNR. He is also project engineer for integrated logistic support with Northrop Services Inc. in Orlando, Fla. He lives in Fern Park. CHARLES (KIM) KIMBELL is a partner in the law firm of Allen & Kimbell in Santa Barbara, Calif. He and his wife, Teresa, have three sons. THOMAS S. Pace Jr. practices psychotherapy in Seattle. On June 20, 1981, SAMUEL J. SMITH resigned as chief administrative appeals judge for the benefits review board of the U.S. Department of Labor to become a partner in the San Francisco law firm of Parrish, Moriarty and Smith. 1965 BIRTH: Dr. and Mrs. CHARLES A. SWEET JR., a son, Robert Ransom, on Dec. 17, 1981, in Richmond, Ky. Sweet is an English professor at Eastern Kentucky University. He has had some short stories published in Mike Shayne Mystery Magazine under the pseu- donym Hal Charles. Dr. BLAINE A. BROWNELL is professor of urban studies and history, dean and co-director of the gra- duate school, and director of the Center for Interna- tional Programs at the University of Alabama, Bir- mingham. He continues to serve as editor of the Journal of Urban History. His most recent book, co- authored with George E. Mowry, is The Urban Nation 1920-1980 (2nd ed.). For the 1981-82 year, Brownell is serving as chairman of the Alabama Council of Graduate Deans. ALFRED J. T. BYRNE has returned to the private practice of law as a partner of the firm of O’Connor, Cavanagh, Anderson, Westover, Killingsworth & Beshears in Phoenix, Ariz. He heads up the firm’s corporate and business section. Previously, Byrne was senior vice president and general counsel of the investment group of INA Corporation in Philadelphia. Dr. MARK G. HAEBERLE has joined his brother in the private practice of obstetrics and gynecology in Ash- land, Ky. He and his wife, Noel, have two sons, Andrew, 6, and Will, 4. LARRY M. MEEKS is a partner in the Los Angeles law firm of Lawler, Felix and Hall. Woopwarp D. OPENO is currently directing an architectural survey of the historic district of Ports- mouth, N.H. He continues his interest in running and this year participated in the Boston Marathon. 1966 BIRTH: Dr. and Mrs. Davip E. FLEISCHER, a daughter, Mara, on Dec. 8, 1981, in Washington. Fleischer is an associate professor of medicine at George Washington University. In April 1982 he delivered a paper on ‘‘Laser Therapy of Cancer’’ to the Belgian Digestive Disease Society. BIRTH: Mr. and Mrs. GAVIN ROBERT GARRETT, a daughter, Julia Bonilee, on Dec. 4, 1981. The young lady joins an older sister, Oleta, and the family lives in Fort Worth, Texas. BIRTH: Dr. and Mrs. CHARLES F. SUTER JR., ason, Frank Krauss, on May 12, 1982. Suter, after receiving a degree in electrical engineering from M.I.T. in 1967, was awarded his M.D. degree from the Uni- versity of Virginia in 1975. He currently is on the faculty of the Medical College of Virginia in Rich- mond. Dr. F. ScoTT KENNEDY JR. was elected assistant secretary of A. D. Kennedy and Co., an Oklahoma oil, gas, coal and land firm. He is an associate pro- fessor of biochemistry at the Louisiana State Univer- sity Medical School in Shreveport where he lives with his wife and four children. Dr. PHILLIP D. MOLLERE has been promoted to the position of manager of Chemical Process Develop- ment, Freeport-Minerals Research and Development in New Orleans, La. In April, Dr. Mollere visited the chemistry department at Washington and Lee where he presented a series of lectures. ; WILLIAM H. CANDLER (See 1963.) 1967 CHRISTOPHER F. ARMSTRONG is a professor of sociology at Bloomsburg State College in Catawissa, Pa. He and his wife, Merry, and daughter Rebecca, spent July 1981 in Salzburg, Austria, where he taught a course on the history and architecture of Salzburg to students in the Pennsylvania Consortium for Interna- tional Education. Armstrong also coaches the lacrosse team at Bloomsburg. Mas. WILLIAM T. CUNNINGHAM has been transferred from Germany to the judge advocates office at Ft. Benning, Ga. BENJAMIN D. GAMBILL JR., president of Braid Elec- tric in Nashville, Tenn., has been elected to the board of trustees of Montgomery Bell Academy. Gambill attended Montgomery Bell Academy before coming to Washington and Lee. While at M.B.A., he was president of both his junior and senior classes and was captain of the football team. Gambill now serves on the boards of the Nashville area Chamber of Com- merce, St. Thomas Hospital, Nashville City Bank and Trust Co. and the Salvation Army. MARK S. PISARRA is a marketing administrator with IBM’s National Marketing Division in Tulsa. He earned an M.S. degree in student personnel admini- stration from Oklahoma State University. Pisarra and his wife, Susan, live in Tulsa with their children, Charles, 5, and Paige, 2. ANDREW M. RaRING was promoted April 1981 to district manager of Placid Oil Co.’s San Antonio office. He and his wife, Sue Ann, have three sons and the family lives in New Braunfels, Texas. BIRTH: Mk. and Mrs. JOSEPH A. MATTHEWS JR., a daughter, Bradley Elizabeth, on Sept. 10, 1981. Matthews is a practicing attorney in Roanoke, Va. BIRTH: Mr. and Mrs. J. JEFFREY THISTLE, a son, Joseph Henry, on April 18, 1982. Thistle has opened his own law practice in Delray Beach, Fla. BIRTH: Mr. and Mrs. WENDALL L. WINN Jr., a daughter, Ashley, on July 22, 1981, in Charlottes- ville, Va. Winn is in private law practice there with the firm of Richmond and Fishburne. CHARLES M. BERGER is an assoctate counsel for NCNB Corp. in Charlotte, N.C. He is responsible for SEC and corporate work for the bank holding com- pany. Berger’s son, Jamie, is now a freshman at W&L. PHILIP G. COTTELL JR. earned his doctor of business administration degree from the University of Ken- tucky. He is now an assistant professor of accounting at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio. NELSON H. HEAD, president of Hill Realty, a long- time family business in Birmingham, Ala., has formed a partnership with architect Pedro Costa, for the pur- pose of a major development project involving three downtown blocks of Birmingham’s business district. ‘‘The concept is to change the area’s appearance immediately and drastically,’’ said Head. The plan calls for a mass infusion of roof top gardens, plaza type landscaping, condominiums and numerous small specialty shops. The first phase of the project calls for renovation of the major buildings on the three blocks and is estimated to cost approximately $25 million. The partnership includes classmates S. Gates Shaw of Shaw Warehouse Co. and Tom Howard, a Wash- ington, D.C., attorney. Dr. JAMES W. LARGE has moved to Vero Beach, Fla., to join the Doctors Clinic, a 23-member multi- specialty group. On Jan. 3, 1982, BARRY J. LEVIN joined the Philadel- phia law firm of Braemer and Kessler as a partner. He specializes in estate planning and estate and trust administration. pis, Class Notes J.L. Slattery, ’68 JAMES L. SLATTERY has been named assistant general counsel of Lukens Inc. and general counsel of the Lukens Steel Co. Division. Slattery joined Lukens Steel as counsel in the law department in 1974 and was promoted to general attorney in 1977. He was named to management council in 1978. Prior to going to Lukens, he was associate general counsel for Itek Corp. in Lexington, Mass. An officer in the United States Naval Reserve Slattery is also a member of the Rhode Island, Pennsylvania, Chester County and American Bar Associations. CHARLES B. TomM earned his LL.M. degree in Taxa- tion from New York University in June 1981. In addition to serving as vice president and general counsel for Arkansas Best Corp. of Ft. Smith, Ark., he is also an adjunct professor of law at the University of Arkansas. ALFRED J. T. BYRNE (See 1965.) 1969 BIRTH: Mr. and Mrs. Mayo M. (GILL) FirzHUGH Ill, a son, Mayo McGill IV, on June 18, 1981. Fitzhugh is an auditor with the U.S. General Ac- counting Office (GAO) in Washington, D.C. He also is active as a college basketball referee. BIRTH: Mk. and Mrs. GLEN P. MatTTOox, a daughter, Josephine Brooke, on Jan. 20, 1982, in Atco, N.J. BIRTH: Mr. and Mrs. Davi L. Ross, a daughter, Alice Cathryn, on Dec. 22, 1981, in Richmond, Va. Ross is counsel to the Virginia Commonwealth Uni- versity’s Medical College of Virginia. BIRTH: Mr. and Mrs. Marc A. SCHEWEL, a son, Matthew Adam, on Jan. 30, 1982, in Lynchburg, Va. He has an older brother, David, 6, and sister, Sara, 3. Schewel is secretary of the Schewel Furniture Co. Inc. He completed the Shamrock Marathon at Virginia Beach in March 1982 with a time of three hours 13 minutes. He took up running four years ago and ran about 2,000 miles in 1981. BIRTH: Mr. and Mrs. GILBERT C. TURNER JR., a daughter, Dawn Renee, on Dec. 17, 1981. Turner is project manager for Bessemer Properties Inc. in Stuart, Fla. Dr. R. GILLIs CAMPBELL is coordinator for analytical services of Ciba Geigy Corp.’s plastics and additives division in Mobile, Ala. W. LAWRENCE GILMER has moved to Richmond as manager of compensation and benefits for Blue Cross/ Blue Shield of Virginia. On April 1, 1982 Ray V. HARTWELL III became a partner in the law firm of Hunton and Williams. He specializes in antitrust litigation and counseling in the firm’s Richmond office. Hartwell and his wife, Kathy, live in Richmond with their three sons, ages 5, 4, and 2. 24 J. Grey HESSON has been elected president of the Colonial Heights, Va., Bar Association. He has his own law practice there and also serves as assistant public defender for Petersburg. Hesson and his wife, Lynne, have three children, Lauren, 10, Brandon, 6, and Diana, 1. DANIEL R. LYNN is assistant county administrator for James City County, Virginia. He is responsible for development planning, public works and community development. H. DANIEL ROGERS JR. has joined Ryan-Biggs Engi- neering in Troy, N.Y., as senior engineer for design and production of bridge projects. He had held various structural engineering positions for the past 11 years with the New York State Department of Transporta- tion. With a master’s degree in civil engineering from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, he also serves as an adjunct assistant professor in the evening division of Union College. Rogers is president of the Mohawk- Hudson section of the American Society of Civil Engineers and is treasurer of the New York State Council of that organization. He lives in Latham, N.Y. WILLIAM H. WEBBER JR. is a vice president of Mit- chell Hutchins, an investment advisory firm in New York. He has been with the firm for nine years. Webber and his wife, Mary Ann, live in Pelham, N.Y., with two children, Brian, 12, and Courtney, 9. 1970 BIRTH: Dr. and Mrs. LAwson CANNON, a son, Chesley Chalmers, in Honolulu, Hawaii, on Jan. 12, 1982. After receiving his Doctor of Chiropractic degree from Western States Chiropractic College in Portland, Ore., Cannon and his wife, the former Cathryn Jennings, moved to Honolulu where Cannon opened the Rainbow’s End Health Center. BIRTH: THE Rev. and Mrs. RICHARD CAPRON adopted a daughter, Joanna Marie, who was born April 12, 1982. The family lives in Succasunna, N.J. BIRTH: Mr. and Mrs. W. ALVIN CHILDs JR., ason, William James, on Dec. 4, 1981. Childs is involved in real estate development in the Shreveport, La., area and recently took part in the renovation of downtown buildings for office use. BIRTH: Mr. and Mrs. W. Foster GAILLARD, a daughter, Mary Leize Simons, on Dec. 3, 1981. Gaillard is a partner in the Charleston, S.C., law firm of Bibbs Gaillard & Roswell. He is also a member of the Charleston city council, Dr. ROBERT L. ENTZMINGER was promoted to associate professor of English on Sept. 1, 1982, at Virginia Tech. On July 1, he was appointed assistant director of the Virginia Tech Center for Programs in the-Humanities. GEORGE HAMLIN has recently been involved in a market development tour to assess airline interest ina new Lockheed-Georgia aircraft, Hercules. He was one of two members of the team making presentations to each airline. In addition to the U.S. carriers, the team visited five European airlines as well as three in the Far East. Radio Adios, a film by HENRY L. HILLS JR. premiered on May 1, 1982, in New York. On May 10, Hills delivered a lecture on ‘‘Sound Film’’ to the Collective for Living Cinema in conjunction with the premiere. BRUCE R. MACQUEEN has moved from Seoul, Korea, to Sydney, Australia, where he is vice president and representative in charge of the Sydney office for Manufacturers Hanover Trust. He oversees the bank’s business in Australia, New Zealand, Papua, New Guinea and the South Pacific. STEVEN P. MASLANSKY recently started his own firm, Geo-Environmental Consultants Inc. which special- izes in hazardous materials management and ground- water resources. He has also completed his master’s degree in civil engineering. Maslansky, a major in the Army Reserves, is assigned to the Chief of Engi- neers in Washington, D.C. He and his family lives in Port Chester, N.Y. MICHAEL T. McVay lives in Huntington, W.Va., where he is associated with The Bunch Co. Realtors as a Sales associate. Dr. ROBERT T. SCHOOLEY is a member of the infec- tious disease unit at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston. He divides his time between interferon research, teaching and patient care. Schooley, his wife, Pam, and two daughters live in Hingham, Mass. JOHN E. WETSEL Jr. is a partner in the Winchester, Va., law firm of Kuykendall, Wetsel and Kuyken- dall. BIRTH: Mr. and Mrs. RAYMOND D. CoartEs JR., a daughter, Lindsey Crozier, on Nov. 20, 1981, in Berlin, Md. BIRTH: Mr. and Mrs. JOHN G. CROMMELIN, identi- cal twin daughters, Mary Vasser and Lillian Eliza- beth, on May 21, 1981. The family lives in Atlanta. BIRTH: Mr. and Mrs. SIDNEY H. KELSEY Jr., a daughter, Anne Calvert, on Aug. 12, 1981, in Virginia Beach. Kelsey is a partner in the Norfolk law firm of Moss, Sizemore, Kelsey and Callahan. BIRTH: Mk. and Mrs. FRANcis McQ. LAWRENCE, a daughter, Meredith Catlin, on May 3, 1982, in Char- lottesville. She has a 4-year old sister, Jenna. Law- rence is a partner in the law firm of St. John, Bowling, Payne and Lawrence. BIRTH: Mr. and Mrs. J. GREGORY TINAGLIA, ason, John William, on June 3, 1982, in Roanoke. BIRTH: Mr. and Mrs. ANDREW J. WHITE Jr., a second daughter, Katherine Layton, on March 4, 1982. White is a practicing attorney in Greenville, a. HENRY J. BLACKFORD III is vice president of the Citizens & Southern National Bank in Charleston, S.C. He has just graduated from the Stonier Graduate School of Banking at Rutgers University. The Black- fords have a 2-year old daughter. CHARLES G. HOusTON III is with Carter and Associ- ates, the largest real estate development and brokerage firm in Atlanta. He oversees the development of office buildings in the area market for his firm and corporate clients. EDWARD F. JuDT spent two months of intensive study of German at the Goethe Institute in Vienna during the summer. HENRY (SKIP) NOTTBERG is vice president of U.S. Engineering Co. in Kansas City, Mo. He was recently elected to the board of directors of Dodson Insurance Co. and to the board of trustees of the Research Medical Center. JOSEPH B. TOMPKINS Jr., effective April 1, 1982, became a partner in the Washington, D.C., office of the law firm of Sidley and Austin. The firm, based in Chicago, has offices in Washington, D.C., Los An- geles, London, Cairo, and in Oman and the United Arab Emirates. 1972 MARRIAGE: JOHN B. WooDLIEF and M. Cynthia McGrady on June 27, 1981, in Columbia, S.C. Woodlief is with the Columbia office of Price Water- house. BIRTH: Dr. and Mrs. JOHN B. BLALOCK JR., a son, John Butler IV, on June 15, 1981, in Birmingham. Blalock is a general surgeon in practice there. BIRTH: Mr. and Mrs. LEx O. MCMILLAN III, a daughter, Flannery Elizabeth, on Dec. 29, 1981, in Richmond. They live in Ashland, Va., along with her 3-year old brother, Justin. McMillan is director of public relations at Randolph Macon College. JAMES W. M. CARSON was recently made manager of Corporate and U.S. Treasury Service for the Coca- Cola Co. He lives in Atlanta, Ga. ROBERT H. LOCKHART is a shift supervisor at Wood- chips Export Corp., a division of Peebles Industries Inc. in Savannah. He continues his photographic work as well. MILLARD S. YOUNTS works in Richmond for Chap- man Associates, nationwide business brokers, as a specialist in sales of media properties, radio and television stations, newspapers and cable television systems. bo hs MARRIAGE: WILLIAM B. FOWLER and Eleanor M. iWon. 73 Merrill on May 8, 1982, in Jacksonville, Fla. They live in Atlanta where Fowler is with Smith Barney, Harris Upham and Co. Inc. BIRTH: JupGE and Mrs. WILLIAM E. Woop, a son, William McKinnie, on Jan. 25, 1982, in Wilmington, N.C. They live in Whiteville, N.C., where Wood is a state district court judge. RICHARD C. CRITTENDEN Spent the summer studying infectious diseases at the University of Edinburgh in Scotland. He is a senior at the University of Alabama College of Medicine in Birmingham. WILLIAM D. EmMa is a Supervisor for Central Hard- ware stores in St. Louis. He and his wife, Carolyn, live in Arnold, Mo., with their three children, ages 2, 5, and 7. LAWRENCE E. EVANS Jr. has been elected a partner in the Houston law firm of Gunn Lee and Jackson. JOHN W. FOoLsom has been elected executive vice president and chief operating officer of South Carolina Federal in Columbia, S.C. His areas of responsibility are mortgage banking, finance, operations, and sub- sidiary companies. He joined South Carolina Federal in 1974. Folsom is presently involved as director for the Greater Chamber of Commerce, director of the Columbia Rotary Club, president and director of the Richland County Heart Association, board of visitors of Columbia College and a member of the Governor’s Task Force on Aging. In addition, he was honored as one of the Outstanding Young Men in America by the United States Jaycees. W. LEE HARRISS is vice president of Planters National Bank in Rocky Mount, N.C. ROBERT W. SHERWOOD was promoted to vice presi- dent and manager of the Martinsville, Va., office of — Virginia National Bank in March 1982. In April he ran in his third-consecutive Boston Marathon. Dr. ROBERT A. SILVERMAN is completing his train- ing in dermatology at Case Western Reserve Univer- sity Hospitals in Cleveland. W. GARETH TUCKER is practicing law in Deep River, Conn. In February 1982, FREDERICK W. Woopwarp III was named an assistant vice president of Marsh and McLennan Inc. in New York. He has been in the firm’s aviation aerospace group for four years. : 1974 MARRIAGE: STUART RAGLAND III and Lisa Renee Flexer of Huntingdon, Pa., on April 24, 1982. Among those in attendance were classmates James M. Mar- tinez Jr. , Patrick J. McCarty, and Eric D. White, ’75. The couple resides in Richmond, Va. BIRTH: Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. DOLL, a daughter, Virginia Mandlehr, on Jan. 26, 1982, in Louisville, Ky. Doll is assistant treasurer for the Creasey Co., wholesale grocers with headquarters in Louisville. The company supplies over 1,500 independent supermarkets in an eight state area. BIRTH: Mr. and Mrs. JAMES W. STIEFF, a daughter, Emily Von Maries, on May 3, 1982. The family lives in Baltimore where Stieff is associated with Kirk- Stieff Co. BIRTH: Dr. and Mrs. EDwin O. WILEY, a daughter, Julia Rose, on May 25, 1982, in Hewitt, N.J. COURTNEY CLARK BROOKS JR., was awarded an M.D. degree from the Medical College of Georgia in Augusta, on June 5, 1982. He began a residency at Georgia Baptist Hospital in Atlanta in July. JEFFREY D. BURKE has been promoted to audit man- ager with Price Waterhouse Co. in Richmond, Va. WILLIAM D. ELLIOT left his law partnership on July 1, 1982, after eight years of private practice to become vice president for sales and development and counsel for the Davis H. Elliot Co. Inc., an electrical con- tracting firm in Roanoke. T. CALDER EZZELL Jr. has become a partner in the Roswell, N.M., office for the law firm of Hinkle, Cox, Eaton, Coffield and Hensley. His practice con- centrates on oil and gas law. MICHAEL GUROIAN is Owner-manager of two self- service laundromats and one apartment house laundry room. He lives in Stamford, Conn., and has been elected to a three-year term on the Stamford Board of Education. ROBERT W. KONWINSKI is district sales manager for the Kendall Motor Oil Division of Witco Chemical Corp. He lives in Liverpool, N.Y., with his wife, Sharon, and daughter, Michele. Larry N. NAu has been promoted to vice president by Bank of Virginia in Richmond. He is responsible for product development in the marketing division. DRAYTON N. SMITH is a professional artist and illustrator with a studio in Baltimore, Md. MICHAEL E. YOUNG is layout-copy editor with the Miami Herald. He was formerly regional editor with Atlantic City Press. He and his wife, Dianne, live in Plantation, Fla. 1975 MARRIAGE: ROBERT S. BONNEY Jr. and Maureen P. Hinchcliffe on Jan. 23, 1982. They live in Me- tuchen, N.J. Bonney is associated with the law firm of Evans, Koelzer, Marriott, Osborne and Kreizman with offices in Red Bank, N.J., and New York. He had served four years with the U.S. Attorney’s office in New Jersey. MARRIAGE: KENNETH C. MILLER III and Suzanne E. McNeese on June 12, 1982, in Lexington, Va. William E. Thompson IV was in the wedding while eS Class Notes guests included Mark Derbyshire, ’78, Richard Romenelli, ’73, Jack Wheeler, 53, Rob Mish, ’76, and Bob Ferguson, ’84. The bride is the daughter of W&L’s associate director of development, Carter McNeese. They live in Baltimore where Miller teaches at the Gilman School. BIRTH: Mr. and Mrs. WILLIAM E. ALLAUN III, a son, William Edwin IV, on Feb. 13, 1982, in Newport News, Va. BIRTH: Mk. and Mrs. WILLIAM B. HAMILTON JR., a son, William Bruce III, on Dec. 3, 1981, in Hanover, N.H. Hamilton heads the trust department of Dart- mouth National Bank. BIRTH: Mr. and Mrs. DOUGLAS HERBERT HUNT, a second son, Casey Herbert, on Dec. 18, 1981. The family lives in Dallas where Hunt is employed by the Hunt Energy Corp. BIRTH: Mr. and Mrs. ROBERT M. LANDER II, a daughter, Candice Kay, on June 20, 1981. Lander is a partner in the law firm of Schneider, Levy, Stieh & Lander in Milford, Pa. BIRTH: Mk. and Mrs. JOHN S. ORTON, a daughter, Elizabeth Fleming, on May 8, 1982, in Houston. BIRTH: Mk. and Mrs. JOHN R. PICCIOTTI, a daugh- ter, Jacqueline Ann, on Sept. 4, 1981, in Wilmington, Del. BIRTH: Mk. and Mrs. MARK B. PINSON, a daughter, Sarah Elizabeth, on June 13, 1982, in Marston Mills, Mass. BIRTH: Mr. and Mrs. W. KENNEDY SIMPSON, a daughter, Ann Tierney, on Nov. 24, 1981, in Louis- ville, Ky. After clerking for Judge Thomas A. Bal- lantine of the U.S. District Court for Western Ken- tucky, Simpson joined the Louisville law firm of Stites, McElwain and Fowler. SAMUEL M. BELL is a financial associate with General Foods Corp. in White Plains, N.Y. He earned his M.B.A. at Columbia University in 1981. Bell lives in New York. RICHARD R. COUNCILL is marine manager for the Roanoke International Insurance Agency of Balti- more. DaAvID F. Howarb joined the commercial real estate firm of Ackerman and Co. in Atlanta during February 1982. The firm has interest in the American and European markets. LT. KARL KLINGER is stationed at the Naval Air Station Oceana at Virginia Beach as an aircraft wea- pons delivery instructor and bombardier/navigator. He expects his next assignment to be as the Carrier Air Traffic Control Center officer aboard the aircraft carrier USS NIMITZ. OLIVER H. Timmins III is a partner in the newly formed Houston law firm of Timmins and Magids. 26 Ray V. HARTWELL (See 1969.) J. GREY HESSON (See 1969.) FRANCIS McQ. LAWRENCE (See 1971.) CHARLES B. Tom (See 1968.) 1976 MARRIAGE: Dr. Carey D. CHISHOLM and Robin Lynn Bolstad of Huntington Beach, Calif., on June 19, 1982, in Lee Chapel. Peter Adler, ’76, Keith Crocker, ’76, Gary Adams, ’77, Rogers Fred, ’77, Todd Chisholm, ’81, and Frank Merkel, ’78, attended the wedding. The couple lives in Tacoma, Wash. BIRTH: Mr. and Mrs. G. DONALD Bryant III, a son, Gerald Don Nelson IV, on Nov. 30, 1981. Bryant is a CPA in Tallahassee, Fla. BIRTH: Mk. and Mrs. JAMES A. MERCY, a daughter, Nikki Rogers, on June 28, 1982, in Decatur, Ga. Mercy earned his doctorate in sociology from Emory University in August 1982. He is employed by the Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta. BIRTH: Mk. and Mrs. Cary E. PATRICK JR., a son, Cary Eldridge III, on Oct. 10, 1981, in Hampton, Va. Patrick is a partner in the retail hardware firm of W. T. Patrick and Sons. He completed his second marathon in the spring finishing at Cleveland in two hours 56 minutes. R. STEWART BARROLL is an associate with the law firm of Clarke and Associates in Salisbury, Md. He earned his law degree at Wake Forest University in 1979. DANIEL E. DRENNEN is a tax attorney with the firm of Lyons, Pipes and Cook in Mobile, Ala. He and his wife, Mollie, have two children, Glen, 4, and Katha- rine, 2. EVANGALOS P. GEEKER received the master of law and taxation degree from the Marshall-Wythe School of Law at the College of William and Mary in May 1982. He is an associate with the law firm of Ausley, McMullen, McGehee, Carothers and Proctor in Tallahassee, Fla. Capt. MALCOLM R. HASTINGs has written a book for the military that formulates doctrine for the world- wide employment of Pershing II and cruise missile systems. He is now in command of a battery at Ft. Sill, Okla. ANDREW Murray HeEMmM, after four years of teaching English and studying Chinese in Taiwan and two subsequent years pursuing an M.B.A. degree at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, is now a loan officer trainee in their Asian division of Security Pacific National Bank in Los Angeles, Calif. On Aug. 1, 1982, RICHARD A. HOOKER became a partner in the law firm of Schmidt, Howlett, Van’t Hof, Snell and Vana in Grand Rapids, Mich. His specialty is labor relations law. DAVIS JACKSON is a partner in a newly formed CPA firm, Matthews & Jackson. He and his wife, Sheila, live in New Braunfels, Texas. MarK MAvrRaIs has been promoted to sales manager of Tortuga Beach Club, a resort on Sanibel Island, Fla. ROBIN M. MorGAN is an associate in the Richmond law firm of Bowlman T. Bowles Jr. On Sept. 21, 1980, ROBERT F. SEARLES was promoted to captain in the U.S. Army Chemical Corps. He is commander of the 278th Chemical Detachment, Ist Armored Division in Ansbach, West Germany. WILLARD C. (BILL) THOMPSON III has completed his internship in internal medicine at the Roanoke Memorial Hospital. He and his wife, Laura, live in Roanoke. PAUL L. VAVALA earned his M.B.A. from the Colgate Darden Graduate School of Business at the University of Virginia on May 23, 1982. He is a financial analyst for R. J. Reynolds Industries in Winston-Salem, NLC: HARRY W. WELLFORD JR. is a clerk for Chief Judge H. Kenneth Wangelin of the U.S. District Court Eastern District in St. Louis. He graduated from law school with honors at the University of Tennessee in 1981. 1977 MARRIAGE: CaPtT. WILLIAM J. CoPLe III and Beth- anne Katherine Kinsella on May 29, 1982, in Smith- town, N.Y. They live in Alexandria, Va. Cople is stationed at the Pentagon as a U.S. Army JAG Corps attorney in the Secretary of Defense’s Office of the General Counsel. MARRIAGE: Makk A. KRIEGER III] and Ruth Patricia Dunne on June 6, 1981, in Livingston, N.J. Daniel W. Aston, ’77, was in the wedding. They live in Timonium, Md., where Krieger is plant manager of John D. Lucas Printing Co. Inc. BIRTH: Dr. and Mrs. H. CoBB ALEXANDER JR., a son, Austin, in September 1981. Alexander began a residency in orthopedics on July 1 in Greenville, S.C., while his wife, Eloise, began a pediatric resi- dency at the same time. BIRTH: Mr. and Mrs. WAYNE G. EDWARDS, a daughter, Dana Rachel, on May 29, 1982, in Union- dale, N.Y. MICHAEL D. ARMSTRONG will complete his M.B.A. at the College of William and Mary in December 1982. He serves also as president of the graduate business school student body. JAMES R. Brooks, formerly with Marsh and Mc- Lennan Inc., has joined the firm of Johnson and Higgins in New Orleans. He is working with the oil and gas department of the National Energy Group. DaviD C. (RADAR) DAvis received his law degree from St. Louis University School of Law in May. DouGLass W. DEWING, after graduating from Washington University School of Law, has passed the Virginia Bar effective May 1982. JOHN R. DOWNEY earned an M.B.A. degree from the University of Richmond. Dr. JOEL C. EVERETT is a resident in pediatrics at the Medical College of Virginia Hospitals. JAMES N. FALK moved to Houston in January 1982 to join the professional management training program at First City National Bank. DaviD B. JOHNSTON lives in Grosse Pointe, Mich., and works for Ford Motor Co. in the car pricing division. LEON F. JOYNER JR. is an actuarial assistant with Martin E. Segal Co. He is also director of youth ministries at the First Church of the Nazarene in Marietta, Ga. Dr. NEIL LUTINS is at the University of North Caro- lina in the department of periodontics on a Morehead Fellowship. He expects to enter the practice of perio- dontics in June 1983. FRED REUNING, after a year in Germany with Bayer AG, is now marketing manager with Chase-Walton Elastomers. He lives in Hudson, Mass. JOHN D. ROSEN is a brand manager for the Adolph Coors Co. in Golden, Colo. Dr. W. KIRKLAND RUFFIN is completing a general surgery internship at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston. ANGELO B. SANTELLA Is attending the Infantry Of- ficer Advance Course at Ft. Benning, Ga. Dr. JAMES U. Scott has completed his first year of a pediatric residency at the Rainbow Babies and Chil- drens Hospital in Cleveland. ISAAC (TRIP) WORNOM III has completed his first year of surgical residency at the University of Alabama at Birmingham. T. CALDER EZZELL Jr. (See 1974.) 1978 MARRIAGE: WALTER P. BENDA and Yoko Mizuno on Jan. 24, 1982, in Hawaii. They live in Tokyo where Benda is manager of market planning for the Orient region of Northwest Airlines. Mrs. Benda was an exchange student at Washington and Lee from Rikkyo University in 1978-1979. MARRIAGE: GeorcE M. (SCOOTER) SMITH and Clare Leslie Ward on March 14, 1981, in Houston, Texas. Classmates attending the wedding were Tom Tift, Jay Shaffer, Rob Sult, Doug Johnston, Greer Bar- riault, John Gorden and David Franklin. Also attend- ing were August Lander, ’74, Bill Harmon, ’74, Thad Grundy, ’75, Mike Jarboe, ’75, Scott Stephen- son, 76, Bill Clemons, ’77, Clark Thompson, ’77, George Ballantyne, ’79, Ben Butts, ’80, Bill Pritch- ard, ’80, Kelly Ryan, ’80, Mitch Wynne, ’80, Phillip Mangum, ’80, David McCubbin, ’80, and Jim Hin- son, 81. FRANK F. Barr is director of labor relations for Dow Jones and Co. Inc. He lives in Hamilton Square, N.J. MarRK E. BENNETT graduated from the John Mar- shall Law School of Chicago in January 1982 and passed the Illinois Bar. He is interviewing in Chicago and planning to take the New Jersey Bar also. DaviD G. CARPENTER was made a division manager in March 1982 and transferred to the Atlanta head- quarters of Lucas Associates Inc. He supervises a team of recruiters who specialize in sales and market- ing placement. MICHAEL T. CLEARY is a surgical products repre- sentative for Proctor and Gamble in the Los Angeles area. He lives in Anaheim. RODNEY M. Cook Jr. has formed a corporation, Georgia Historic Properties Inc., in Atlanta. He also designs houses and often engages Professor I. Hsiung Ju of Washington and Lee to do murals on the walls of these houses. REYNOLDS Dops has moved to Dallas where he works for Arthur Andersen and Co. Still active in soccer, he played on the Division II championship team of the Dallas adult league. Dr. DOUGLAS R. DORSEY is a resident in internal medicine at the University of Kentucky. He and his wife, Susan, live in Lexington. GEORGE W. FAISON Jr. is general manager of Pates & Quiches Inc., a manufacturer and distributor of French style patés. He lives in New York City. JOHN H. FOLLANSBEE III was admitted to the Penn- sylvania Bar on May 26, 1982. He is with the Equi- mark Corp. in Pittsburgh. DAvID G. FRANKLIN has joined Texas Capital Corp. as investment manager. The Houston investment company provides venture capital to high growth technology, energy and manufacturing companies. JULIAN H. Goop Jr. is a registered life insurance agent and provides other financial services for Crea- tive Financial Services Inc. in New Orleans. His firm serves also as the general agency for Mutual Benefit Life in the Gulf South region. WALTER GRANRUTH III was an associate in corporate finance at Shearson/American Express for the sum- mer between terms at the Colgate Darden Graduate School of Business at the University of Virginia. G. R. Triplett, ’78 G. CARTER GREER, after a summer of employment, has returned to law school at the University of Rich- mond. GEORGE F. GriFFIN IV is selling commercial real estate in Maryland, Virginia and Washington, D.C., for Maloney Associates Inc. of Bethesda, Md. THOMAS D. HELDMAN joined the tax department of Price Waterhouse in Cincinnati after three years with Ernst and Whinney’s audit staff there. Capt. H. ALLEN IRISH is the brigade staff judge advocate for the Ist Brigade of the 1st/Armored Divi- sion in Illesheim, West Germany. He had been the senior defense counsel for the U.S. Army at Ansbach, West Germany. Irish and his wife, Nancy, live in Katterbach. CralG B. KENDALL is a computer systems consultant with the Audyxx Corp. He recently passed the CPA and CDP examinations. Kendall lives in Gaithers- burg, Md. JOHN H. KINGSTON is a staff writer for American Metal Market, a daily trade newspaper for the steel and metal industries. Kingston and his wife, Nancy, live in Williston Park, N.Y., and recently completed the Long Island Marathon together. MarK E. MENDEL graduated from law school in 1981 and now is a tax and corporate attorney with Kemp, Smith, Duncan and Hammond in El Paso, Texas. MICHAEL J. MISSAL graduated from the Catholic University School of Law in May 1982. He is now a clerk for Chief Judge H. Cart Moultrie in Washington. ROBERT C. PEERY JR. is a CPA with Arthur Young and Co. in Richmond. MARK PUTNEY, formerly engaged in the securities business in Richmond, Va., has recently moved to Shreveport, La., where he is associated with a newly formed real estate firm, Vintage Development Co. The firm will initially put emphasis on the revitaliza- tion of buildings in Shreveport designated as Down- town Historic District. One of the partners in the firm is Alvin Childs Jr., W&L class of ’70. Putney and his wife, Lila, have a son, Scott. RICHARD W. STEWART is an assistant vice president with Manufacturers Hanover Trust Co. in New York City. In June 1982, GEORGE R. TRIPLETT JR. earned his doctor of osteopathy degree from the West Virginia School of Osteopathic Medicine in Lewisburg, W.Va. He began practice as a family physician with a one- year rotating internship at Cuyahoga Falls General Hospital in Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio. i Mi MARRIAGE: Joun C. Bovay and Leslie Ann Barber ay ALAN L. BUTTON, after finishing a clerkship with Judge Donald Russell, U.S. Court of Appeals for Fourth Circuit in Spartanburg, S.C., will become associated with the law firm of Nixon, Hargrave, Devans & Doyle in Rochester, N.Y., effective Oc- tober 1982. JOHN S. HASTINGS works on the news desk for the Charleston Gazette. He and John Sadd, ’81, share an apartment in Charleston, W.Va. ALFRED R. HINTZ is attending St. John’s University Law School. DaviD H. JOHNSON attends the University of Georgia School of Law. MArK LOCKHART is a second lieutenant in the U.S. Army Medical Service Corps at Ft. Lewis, Wash. KevIN M. McGuirk is attending the University of Kentucky School of Law in Lexington, Ky. M. VicTOR MCLAUGHLIN Jr. is a second-year student at the University of Alabama School of Medicine in Birmingham. THOMAS E. MARTIN has been appointed executive director of the Providence, R.I., Human Relations Commission. He also has been admitted to the Rhode Island State Bar. JOHN A. PRITCHETT is a geophysicist with Amoco Production Co. in New Orleans. CAROLYN R. SAFFOLD-HEYWARD is an associate with the Atlanta law firm of McCauley, Owen and Sweeney. MARK W. SCULLY is studying at the University of Wurzburg in West Germany as a Fulbright Scholar. CHARLES J. VAN Horn works in the machine tool department of Oliver H. Van Horn Co., distributors of machine tools and industrial supplies in New Or- leans. CHARLES H. WARNER is a first-year medical student at Duke University. DOUGLAS T. WEBB is production manager for Webb and Sons Inc. in Dallas. 1982 DANIEL E. SCHOTT is working in New York as an actor in daytime television and commercials. He has signed with an agent and has hopes for a broadway and film career. In Memoriam 1912 WILLIAM LEONIDAS WEBSTER, longtime automobile dealer in Schenectady, N.Y., died May 31, 1982. After graduating from Washington and Lee, he taught and coached baseball and football at Bingham Military School in Asheville, N.C., before going to Schenec- tady in 1916 when he founded Webster Motor Sales Co. Inc. Webster operated the company as a Ford dealership until October 1966 when he sold the fran- chise. He also established Van Curler Motors in 1946, later selling the company, and was president of the. Lowell Operating Corp., a Schenectady-based realty firm. Webster was awarded a doctorate of laws degree from Union College in 1959 and was named New York State Auto Dealer of the Year by the state Automobile Dealer’s Association in 1961. The same year, he was designated ‘‘Patron’’ by the city of Schenectady. Webster was president and chairman of the board for Van Curler Hotel for many years which is now used by Schenectady County Community Col- lege. He also served on the board for Schenectady Trust Co. and was director emeritus of that bank. Webster was a member of the board of directors at Sunnyview Hospital, served as a trustee at Albany Medical College, St. Clare’s Hospital, Eastern New York Orthopaedic Hospital-School and was a former member of the board of directors of the Schenectady Community Chest. He served in both World War I and World War II. During World War II he served as assistant chief of the Air Staff Intelligence as top secret control officer. 1914 JOHN EDWIN WAYLAND, former Presbyterian mis- sionary and pastor, died May 31, 1982. In his more than 60 years as pastor and Bible teacher, Wayland faithfully served as a missionary on the mainland of China and in churches in Georgia, Virginia, West Virginia, and the Carolinas. Wayland died in Char- lotte, N.C., where he had been a supply minister at the Chalmers Memorial Associate Reformed Presby- terian Church. He was widely known as a Bible teacher and for his work among youth. LOTS THE REV. EDWARD LEYBURN JUNKIN, a native of Rockbridge County and a long-time Presbyterian minister, died May 18, 1982. Junkin had held churches in many places including New Rochelle, N.Y., and Lewisburg, Pa. He was a veteran of World War I. [922 ROBERT Murray BEAR, a professor emeritus at Dart- mouth College and a former professor at Centre Col- lege, died June 8, 1982, in Danville, Ky. Bear was in Dartmouth’s psychology department from 1929 until his retirement in 1966. He taught at Centre from 1925 to, 1929. 1923 FRED THOMAS PEEBLES, who had been in the practice of law in Florida since 1925, died June 7, 1982. He saw active duty during World War II with the U.S. Navy. LOvE BONHAM ROUSE, prominent attorney in Bristol, Tenn., died May 8, 1982. Rouse moved to Bristol in 1923 following his graduation from the Washington and Lee Law School. He was Commonwealth’s At- torney from 1929 to 1941. Rouse was a long-time director of the Bank of Virginia and served as the bank’s attorney since 1930. He was a member of the Virginia State Bar Association and the Bristol Bar Association. Rouse was well known for his interest in show horses, both as a trainer and judge. 1924 EDMUND PENDLETON REVERCOMB, a prominent law- yer in Covington, Va., died June 1, 1982. Following his graduation from law school at the University of Virginia in 1924, he returned to Covington to practice law in the firm of Revercomb and Revercomb. He was commissioned a captain in the Judge Advocate Generals Department and was stationed in the Euro- pean theatre for three years of active duty during World War II. He then returned to the law firm in Covington. 1925 MEREDITH FLETCHER BAUGHER, noted Palm Beach lawyer and sportsman, died March 31, 1982, in Houston, Texas, following an extended illness. Baugher started in the practice of law in Miami, Fla., moved to Palm Beach in 1929 to be counsel to the Palm Beach Co., owned by the Phipps family, and then practiced in Palm Beach County for over 50 years. At the time of his death, he was senior partner of Baugher, Mettler and Shelton of Palm Beach, Fla. He was an active rancher in recent years, owning and operating cattle ranches in Florida and Virginia. An active sportsman, Baugher won the Silver Sailfish Derby in 1941, co-founded the Master’s Sailfish Tournament, and was a member of the Sailfish Club of Palm Beach, Fla. HARVEY BROWN MILLER, a retired executive and general manager of U.S. Plywood-Champion Paper Inc., died in Redding, Calif., June 4, 1982. He was a past member and president of the Western Wooden Box Association, the Western Wood Products As- sociation, the National Lumber Manufacturers’ As- sociation, the Ponderosa Pine Woodwork Associa- tion, and the Western Forestry and Conservation As- sociation. Prior to his move to the West Coast, Miller owned and operated a storage garage in Staunton, Va., from 1939 to 1940 and was an assistant plant accountant for American Viscose Corp. in Front Royal, Va. HOWARD CLINTON TRAYWICK, formerly an invest- ment counselor and banker with William E. Pollock & Co. in Atlanta, Ga., died in October 1981 in Montgomery, Ala. Prior to his association with Wil- liam E. Pollock & Co. he was connected with the Trust Company of Georgia. 29 Class Notes on May 8, 1982, in Gainesville, Fla. Among the groomsmen were: J. Michael Watson, ’79, Henry Y. Hamilton, ’79, Wendell Stockdale, ’80, and Robert R. Nichols, ’79. The couple will live in the Washing- ton, D.C., area where Bovay is to be associated with the law firm of Holland and Knight. MARRIAGE: CLEMENT DEAN CaRTER III and Geor- gia Kay Branscom on May 22, 1982, in Fincastle, Va. Both bride and groom are graduates of the Mar- shall-Wythe School of Law at the College of William and Mary. Carter will join a law firm in Clarksburg, W.Va. Mrs. Carter will join the legal staff of a corporation. MARRIAGE: Micuaet C. McComas and Peggy Pine in February 1982 in Baltimore. The bride’s brother, Jon Pine, ’79, was best man. Other alumni attending included George Santos, ’81, Ted Campbell, ’80, Tom Hodges, ’78, Bob Brewer, ’79, Fritz Fischer, "79, Frank Turner, ’77, and Bill Turner, ’78. They live in Baltimore where McComas is an interior design specialist for Carpet Land Inc. J. I. VANCE Berry Jr. is an associate with the law firm of Mahoney, Hadlow and Adanss in Jacksonville, Fla. DARRELL G. CAMPBELL is a communications mar- keting representative in San Antonio for Datapoint Corp. He specializes in marketing computerized tele- communications equipment and private branch ex- changes. JOHN E. CorFey is an attorney in Alexandria, Va. He ran in the Boston Marathon in April 1982 and placed 72nd, with a time of 2:24:53. JOSEPH F. Cox has been made vice president and general manager of James Cox and Son Inc., a general contracting firm in Baltimore. J. O. (Jim) Davis Ill recently graduated from the University of Florida School of Law and is associated with Emanuel, Carlton, Fields, Ward, Emanuel, Cutter and Smith in Tampa, Fla. CHARLES C. HABLISTON IV, after receiving a degree in Actuarial Science from Georgia State University, is currently employed by the Wyatt Company in Washington, D.C., an_ international attuarial consulting firm. He resides in Bryantown, Md. He recently was named an associate of the Society of Actuaries. The Society of Actuaries is an international organization of professional actuaries which performs research in actuarial science and provides continuing education for its members and maintains high stand- ards of competence and conduct. Ist Lt. RICHARD D. HUGHES is an executive officer with the 82nd Airborne Division at Ft. Bragg, N.C. C. STEPHEN JONES JR. was promoted to employee relations manager at the Erwin, N.C., plant of Bur- lington Industries. 28 JAMES E. MOYLER III is the Virginia representative for the Delmark Co. , a Swiss producer of pharmaceu- tical and food products. He lives on a farm near Courtland, Va. STANLEY E. PACKER is an associate officer in the dealer services division of the First National Bank of Louisville. He also is serving a second term on the board of directors of the National Remodelers Asso- ciation, Kentucky and Indiana chapters. Gary J. PODESTA is a second-year student working on his M.S. degree in physical therapy at Columbia University. He will graduate in May 1983. THOMAS A. PRICE is the in-house counsel at Chatau- qua Abstract Company in Mayville, N.Y. ANDREW T. SANDERS JR. is a second-year law student at Washington and Lee. ROBERT L. WHITENER III is commander of the ‘‘C’’ Battery of the 3rd Battalion, 79th Field Artillery, a Lance firing battery deployed in Germany. RICHARD B. WILEs is a structural engineer for the design engineering department of Duke Power Co. in Charlotte, N.C. He earned his master’s degree in civil engineering from the University of Virginia. LANDON R. Wyatt III earned an M.B.A. on May 23, 1982, from the Colgate Darden Graduate School of Business Administration at the University of Vir- ginia. At the Darden School he received the William Michael Shermet Award and the Faculty Award for Academic Excellence. Wyatt is with the Trammell Crow Co. in Charlotte, N.C. 1980 MARRIAGE: DouGLas H. BARTON and Barbara Lynne Miller on Jan. 23, 1982, in Arlington, Va. Classmates Mark Broughton and Scott Van Dyke were in the wedding while Harry Wright, Will Sher- man and Frank Williams were guests. They live in Colorado Springs, Colo., where Barton is an execu- tive and motor officer with the 124th Signal Battalion at Ft. Carson. MARRIAGE: G. Topp Hopces and Lisa Catron on June 28, 1980. They live in Gainesville, Fla., where Hodges will graduate from law school at the Univer- sity of Florida in December 1982. He plans to practice in Florida. Guy S. Brossy is currently assistant treasurer and corporate lending officer at the Chase Manhattan Bank in New York. Beginning in the summer of 1982 he entered the M.B.A. program at the Colgate Darden School of Business at the University of Virginia. Grecory B. Dyer works for the accounting firm of Frantz and Co. in Washington. Much of his spare time is spent coaching Catholic Youth Organization basketball. Goetz B. EATON has completed his master’s degree in international business studies at the University of South Carolina which included a six-month internship in Frankfurt, West Germany. He joined Polaroid Corp. in Cambridge, Mass., in July as an analyst in its finance division. JOHN D. Fire JR. is conducting a tenant revitalization program at Crabtree Valley Mall in Raleigh, N.C. Davip L. GARNER is completing his master’s degree in theoretical geophysics and plans to start work in the fall for Chevron Geosciences in Houston. STEVEN C. HEROLD is working in sales for First Jersey Securities in Cherry Hill, N.J. STEPHEN R. KERN is in his final year of law school at Georgetown University Law Center. He is working as a research assistant dealing with various changes in estate planning and investment strategies since ERTA. THEODORE B. (BIFF) MARTIN Jr., formerly on the admissions staff at Washington and Lee, is now pur- suing an M.B.A. degree at Northwestern University in Evanston, III. EDWARD C. Morrison has finished his second year at the South Carolina Medical School in Charleston. F. WILL SHERMAN is a staff accountant in the Wil- liamsburg office of Eggleston Smith and Co., a regional public accounting firm with offices in New- port News, Hampton and Smithfield, Va., as well. Mark R. SmITH, formerly with the Denver law firm of Moseley, Wells, & Spence, has joined the legal department of Chevron U.S.A. Inc. in their Denver office. ROBERT C. SHLLMAN is enrolled full time in the M.B.A. program at James Madison University and works part time as an accountant for a local trucking firm. Scott A. WILLIAMS is a loan officer with the retail lending division for the Bank of New Orleans. He attends Tulane University in the evenings and plays for the New Orleans Lacrosse Club. 1981 MARRIAGE: RICHARD ROCHE SAYERS and Elizabeth Yates Grove on June 12, 1982, in Roanoke, Va. Sayers is associated with the law firm of Manier, White, Herod, Hallabaugh and Smith in Nashville, Tenn. BIRTH: Mr. and Mrs. THOMAS M. MILLHISER, a son, Neil McGue, on April 13, 1982. Millhiser is a practicing attorney in Richmond, Va. ROBERT L. BROOKE is a second-year law student at the University of Virginia where he is rooming with W&L and Virginia Law classmates, Chip Nunley and Scott Cardozo. ALAN L. BUTTON, after finishing a clerkship with Judge Donald Russell, U.S. Court of Appeals for Fourth Circuit in Spartanburg, S.C., will become associated with the law firm of Nixon, Hargrave, Devans & Doyle in Rochester, N.Y., effective Oc- tober 1982. JOHN S. HASTINGS works on the news desk for the Charleston Gazette. He and John Sadd, ’81, share an apartment in Charleston, W.Va. ALFRED R. HINTZ is attending St. John’s University Law School. DAVID H. JOHNSON attends the University of Georgia School of Law. MarkK LOCKHART is a Second lieutenant in the U.S. Army Medical Service Corps at Ft. Lewis, Wash. KevIN M. McGuire is attending the University of Kentucky School of Law in Lexington, Ky. M. VicTOR MCLAUGHLIN JR. is a second-year student at the University of Alabama School of Medicine in Birmingham. THOMAS E. MARTIN has been appointed executive director of the Providence, R.I., Human Relations Commission. He also has been admitted to the Rhode Island State Bar. JOHN A. PRITCHETT is a geophysicist with Amoco Production Co. in New Orleans. CAROLYN R. SAFFOLD-HEYWARD is an associate with the Atlanta law firm of McCauley, Owen and Sweeney. Mark W. SCULLY is studying at the University of Wurzburg in West Germany as a Fulbright Scholar. CHARLES J. VAN Horn works in the machine tool department of Oliver H. Van Horn Co., distributors of machine tools and industrial supplies in New Or- leans. CHARLES H. WARNER is a first-year medical student at Duke University. DouG as T. WEBB is production manager for Webb and Sons Inc. in Dallas. 1982 DANIEL E. SCHOTT is working in New York as an actor in daytime television and commercials. He has signed with an agent and has hopes for a broadway and film career. In Memoriam 1912 WILLIAM LEONIDAS WEBSTER, longtime automobile dealer in Schenectady, N.Y., died May 31, 1982. After graduating from Washington and Lee, he taught and coached baseball and football at Bingham Military School in Asheville, N.C., before going to Schenec- tady in 1916 when he founded Webster Motor Sales Co. Inc. Webster operated the company as a Ford dealership until October 1966 when he sold the fran- chise. He also established Van Curler Motors in 1946, later selling the company, and was president of the. Lowell Operating Corp., a Schenectady-based realty firm. Webster was awarded a doctorate of laws degree from Union College in 1959 and was named New York State Auto Dealer of the Year by the state Automobile Dealer’s Association in 1961. The same year, he was designated ‘‘Patron’’ by the city of Schenectady. Webster was president and chairman of the board for Van Curler Hotel for many years which is now used by Schenectady County Community Col- lege. He also served on the board for Schenectady Trust Co. and was director emeritus of that bank. Webster was a member of the board of directors at Sunnyview Hospital, served as a trustee at Albany Medical College, St. Clare’s Hospital, Eastern New York Orthopaedic Hospital-School and was a former member of the board of directors of the Schenectady Community Chest. He served in both World War I and World War II. During World War II he served as assistant chief of the Air Staff Intelligence as top secret control officer. 1914 JOHN EDWIN WAYLAND, former Presbyterian mis- sionary and pastor, died May 31, 1982. In his more than 60 years as pastor and Bible teacher, Wayland faithfully served as a missionary on the mainland of China and in churches in Georgia, Virginia, West Virginia, and the Carolinas. Wayland died in Char- lotte, N.C., where he had been a supply minister at the Chalmers Memorial Associate Reformed Presby- terian Church. He was widely known as a Bible teacher and for his work among youth. 1915 THE REV. EDWARD LEYBURN JUNKIN, a native of Rockbridge County and a long-time Presbyterian minister, died May 18, 1982. Junkin had held churches in many places including New Rochelle, N.Y., and Lewisburg, Pa. He was a veteran of World War I. 1922 ROBERT Murray BEAR, a professor emeritus at Dart- mouth College and a former professor at Centre Col- lege, died June 8, 1982, in Danville, Ky. Bear was in Dartmouth’s psychology department from 1929 until his retirement in 1966. He taught at Centre from 1925 to, 1929. L923 FRED THOMAS PEEBLES, who had been in the practice of law in Florida since 1925, died June 7, 1982. He saw active duty during World War II with the U.S. Navy. LovE BONHAM ROUSE, prominent attorney in Bristol, Tenn., died May 8, 1982. Rouse moved to Bristol in 1923 following his graduation from the Washington and Lee Law School. He was Commonwealth’s At- torney from 1929 to 1941. Rouse was a long-time director of the Bank of Virginia and served as the bank’s attorney since 1930. He was a member of the Virginia State Bar Association and the Bristol Bar Association. Rouse was well known for his interest in show horses, both as a trainer and judge. 1924 EDMUND PENDLETON REVERCOMB, a prominent law- yer in Covington, Va., died June 1, 1982. Following his graduation from law school at the University of Virginia in 1924, he returned to Covington to practice law in the firm of Revercomb and Revercomb. He was commissioned a captain in the Judge Advocate Generals Department and was stationed in the Euro- pean theatre for three years of active duty during World War II. He then returned to the law firm in Covington. 1925 MEREDITH FLETCHER BAUGHER, noted Palm Beach lawyer and sportsman, died March 31, 1982, in Houston, Texas, following an extended illness. Baugher started in the practice of law in Miami, Fla., moved to Palm Beach in 1929 to be counsel to the Palm Beach Co., owned by the Phipps family, and then practiced in Palm Beach County for over 50 years. At the time of his death, he was senior partner of Baugher, Mettler and Shelton of Palm Beach, Fla. He was an active rancher in recent years, owning and operating cattle ranches in Florida and Virginia. An active sportsman, Baugher won the Silver Sailfish Derby in 1941, co-founded the Master’s Sailfish Tournament, and was a member of the Sailfish Club of Palm Beach, Fla. HARVEY BROWN MILLER, a retired executive and general manager of U.S. Plywood-Champion Paper Inc., died in Redding, Calif., June 4, 1982. He was a past member and president of the Western Wooden Box Association, the Western Wood Products As- sociation, the National Lumber Manufacturers’ As- sociation, the Ponderosa Pine Woodwork Associa- tion, and the Western Forestry and Conservation As- sociation. Prior to his move to the West Coast, Miller owned and operated a storage garage in Staunton, Va., from 1939 to 1940 and was an assistant plant accountant for American Viscose Corp. in Front Royal, Va. HOWARD CLINTON TRAYWICK, formerly an invest- ment counselor and banker with William E. Pollock & Co. in Atlanta, Ga., died in October 1981 in Montgomery, Ala. Prior to his association with Wil- liam E. Pollock & Co. he was connected with the Trust Company of Georgia. 29 In Memoriam 1926 CHARLES WALLACE THOMAS LOCKARD, owner, operator and editor of the Grafton News in Grafton, W.Va., until 1956 and manager of the Grafton Daily Sentinel from 1956 until 1963, died in Grafton June 2, 1982. Before coming to Grafton, Lockard was affiliated with newspapers in Martinsburg, W.Va., White Sulphur Springs, W.Va., Covington, Va., Lexington, Va., and Long Branch, N.J. He also owned and operated the Luther S. Day Printing Co. in Clarksburg, W.Va., for five years prior to his retire- ment. (o27 ELDRED CAYCE, a retired manufacturers’ representa- tive in Nashville, Tenn., died May 26, 1982. Prior to his becoming a manufacturers’ agent, Cayce was an executive with the former Tennessee Products and Chemical Corporation and a manager of the former Tennessee Electric Power Co. in Columbia, Tenn. He was a past president and a former member of the National Mineral Wool Association. GARLAND THOMAS DAVIS, a retired branch manager for IBM Corp. died April 19, 1982, in Las Vegas, Nev. During World War II Davis was an officer in the ordnance department of the U.S. Army with the rank of major. He was a member and former president of the Rotary Club and was active in many charitable organizations such as Red Cross, Salvation Army and Shriners hospitals. MARION MOISE, a prominent attorney in Sumter, S.C., died June 20, 1982. Moise had practiced law in Sumter since 1929 as amember of the law firm of Lee and Moise which was founded 110 years ago by his grandfather and Mr. Lee. Moise was active in a number of local civic and service organizations and served for six years as a member of the Sumter County Commission which is now known as the Sumter County Council. He also served for six years as a member of the Sumter County Development Board and has served two terms as a county magis- trate. Moise was former board member of the Ameri- can Red Cross and the U.S.O. 1929) CHARLES JESSE HOLLAND, who practiced law in Miami for many years before retirement, died April 30, 1982, in San Diego, Calif. He began practice in Miami in 1930. WILLIAM BICKNELL JACOBS, retired senior vice president and senior trust officer of Central National Bank, died May 15, 1982, in Richmond, Va. Jacobs was a member of numerous civic and community organizations. He joined Central National Bank, now Central Fidelity Bank, in 1933 and was named assist- ant cashier in 1937. In 1942 he was made assistant trust officer and in 1965 became vice president and senior trust officer of the bank. Jacobs became senior vice president of the trust department in 1967 and retir- ed from the bank in 1971. He served as a consultant. Jacobs was a former member and president of the 30 Robert E. Lee Council of the Boy Scouts of America, a member of the board of directors of A. H. Robins Co. and served on the city personnel board of the city council from 1955 to 1959. He was a past president of the State Planning Council of Richmond and a former member of the committee on trusts of the Virginia Bankers Association. He was a member of the execu- tive committee of the Richmond Area Community Council and was president of the Life Insurance and Trust Council of Virginia. 1930 JOHN CAMPBELL BANKS, a prominent hardware mer- | chant, died April 30, 1982, in Columbus, Miss. Dur- ing World War II he served in the Navy in both the American and the Pacific Theatres. 1935 Dr. CARL EDWARD LISCHER, a prominent physician in St. Louis, Mo., died May 17, 1982. After receiving his medical degree from Washington University in 1937, Lischer did his internship and residency in surgery at Barnes Hospital in St. Louis, Mo. During World War II he was a major in the Medical Corp and for 17 years between 1951 and 1967 served as chief of surgery at St. Luke’s Hospital in St. Louis. He was a past member of the board of trustees of John Bur- roughs School. He was a past president of the St. Louis Surgical Society, the Missouri Chapter Ameri- can College of Surgeons, and the Central Surgical Association. Lischer retired from active practice in January 1972. He then became associate professor of surgery at Washington University. 1934 PATRICK HAROLD MITCHELL, a long-time and prom- inent educator in Portsmouth, Ohio, died June 17, 1982. For more than 20 years, Mitchell served as principal of the Garfield Elementary School. He was also on the executive board of the Ohio Department of Elementary Principals. £935 HERBERT MERIWETHER GRIFFITH JR., a retired newspaper, radio, advertising and television busi- nessman died Nov. 8, 1981, in Salisbury, Md. Griffith retired several years ago as owner of a radio station. At one time, he was with the Washington Daily News and the Washington Post. During World War II he served in the U.S. Army. Dr. E. LLoyD WATKINS, former chief of staff of Chestnut Hill Hospital, Philadelphia, Pa., died March 2, 1982. A graduate of Thomas Jefferson Medical College, Watkins specialized in obstetrics and gyne- cology. He was a member of the staff of Chestnut Hill Hospital, where he served as president from 1959- 1961 and director of obstetrics and gynecology from 1960 to 1970. He was formerly affiliated with the Newcomb Hospital in Vineland, N.J., and more re- cently with Family Planning Services in Bridgeton, N.J. He also served as city physician for Ocean City from 1973 to 1979. Watkins was a member of the American Medical Association, the American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology, the College of Phy- sicians of Philadelphia, the Phi Beta Kappa Associa- tion of Philadelphia and the Pennsylvania and New Jersey Medical Societies. 1936 CHARLES PRESTON ANDERSON Jr., formerly of Oak Hill, W.Va., died in Gatlinburg, Tenn., April 7, 1982. He was retired from the coal business. At one time, he had been with the Princess Coal Sales Co. and later was president of his own firm, Anderson Coal Co. JAMES HAROLD DUNCAN, a practicing attorney, died May 6, 1982, in Somerset, Pa. fon CHESTER PATCHEN WHITE, former chairman of the board of the Blake and Johnson Co. of Waterville, Conn., a manufacturer of metal fasteners, died March 17, 1981. White had retired to Beauford, S.C., where he was a director of the Peoples Bank. 1940 ALFRED CHARLES KRIEGER JR., a practicing attorney in Louisville, Ky., is deceased. Krieger received his law degree from the University of Louisville in 1942 and served with the Army during World War II. He returned to active practice in Louisville in 1945. Krieger had been ill for several years. 1943 Dr. CARROLL VINCENT HERRON of Daytona Beach, Fla., and medical director at the Daytona International Speedway, died June 12, 1982, after a brief illness. Herron moved from Pennsylvania to Daytona Beach in 1950. He served as a lieutenant in the Navy during World War II and was stationed at Veteran’s Admini- stration offices in Philadelphia and Coatesville, Pa. Herron became assistant medical director at the Day- tona International Speedway in 1959 and was named medical director in 1976. He was also medical director at the Florida Council for the Blind, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University and General Electric Co. 1963 ROBERT WEEKS BRIDEWELL of Highland Park, Dallas, Texas, and the president of Bridewell Hotels Inc., died May 9, 1982. Bridewell began an 18-year business career in Dallas as a mortgage loan officer for Prudential Life Insurance Co. He later worked as a real estate broker for Henry Miller Co. before founding the Metro Companies, a major hotel de- velopment company, in 1970. Since 1978, Bridewell had been an independent hotel financial and develop- ment consultant. He began the Mansion on Turtle Creek and was actively involved in its development. His most current project in the Oak Lawn area was the renovation of the Melrose Hotel. He was an active member in many of the civic clubs in Dallas and was involved in horse racing in the Southwest and was a member of the Texas Thoroughbred Breeders As- sociation. Gifts rom the WEL Oe ein $200 0. 0) agai ee ply Store 4 ir petehes . ose ou i ee B-15° "WG Baseball Hat’ 2 2 2° S's. $6.49 ule. Wee er) ee e326 B-18 W&L White Striped Jersey ... $10.79 re nn te es vie ee LO BS YOvurmocepa oot. ..... .. 9.309 B-3 Youth V-Neck Jersey ....... $4.89 B-9 White Hooded Sweatshirt ... . $15.29 < B-4 Ad | G cl hi Se fe .6 6. 76 @ se 66 i B-13 Reversible Navy and Tan Jacket, B-4 Poiaa Be moe Shirt a pet XL) eee .. Sees C-1. Sal: @ Pepper Shakers ...... ...96 29 C-3 Wl Mug i2e7.,... ... 23819 C-2 Beer Stein, w/gold trim, 20 oz. . . $9.69 C-5 Grandad Wg fo... 0 C-4:....Coffes' Mug, ieee 1 ase D-1, Higtiall Glass, 120z. ... .. ..2$2.69 C-9 Miniature Beer Stein. ...... . $3.69 So ee Oe. 83:08 B-11 Navy and White General T-Shirt . $8.59 0-4 Single Old Fashioned, 7 oz... . . $2.09 B-12 Cockpit Long Sleeve Shirt... . $11.89 D-7 Brandy Snifter, 3 oz, $3.89 . 6 oz. $5.89 Be Weer Tohitews Crest’ © o'o) 2 G660, D-5. Shot Glass, 20z.°.7 SS . $1.89 é — E-3 Pewter Tankard, w/W&L seal . . $45.79 E-2 Pewter Glass-bottom Tankard, A-13 Matching Bookends ........ $3.99 Mee ee. OO ; aeeAshtey iat . we . ace... SA.99 At Waliwt Ven Seis...) Fo 79, $6149 Bay) Adu Baseball Shima 6... |. ah. $7.99 Aaa Matching GlassMug ... $4, 29 A-2 Walnut Bookends. . 2: .: . 2). $4399 B-4 ‘Adult becrosse T-Shirt: ¢.. . . . $6.99 and Ashtray... . eee $2.19 Be ie INET epee oi cgmar rinacamnes Ge OO. ..BrdG Acuna Velour Sweating 5 ean A-15. W&L Flask,8oz... . : er $3.49 SSR ea SN ae Oe UP DE SR AIS SN a CRIT rR ENOTES 3] A. HOME OR OFFICE 1. Solid Walnut Penstand (tt. oan Foe $51.79, $61.49 2. Solid Walnut Bookends oe) ok a ee $43.29 3. Marble Paper Weight (8 0z.)..... $5.99 4. Letter Openers (4 0z.) ... . $2.99, $6.89 5. W&L Playing Cards (10 0z.)..... $7.59 6. Stationery (2lb.)....... $3.59, $6.09 7. Pennants (6 0z.) 8%in. ....... $0.89 96 ine. i tt 30 in. $5.79 8. W&L Blankets Twin Size 905 — wool w/rayon trim and emblem (51b.)....... $53.59 Twin Size — 100% wool w/white wool edging and emblem (4 Ib.) . . . $96.09 9. Walnut Paperweight (8 oz.) .... $16.29 10. Solid Walnut Ashtray (2 Ib. 5 oz.) . $23.99 11. Leather Ashtray (1 Ib. 20z.) ... . $7.50 12. Zippo Lighter (5 oz.) — regular. . . $8.29 Be a a a a a kg $9.59 13. Matching Bookends (2I!b.) ..... $3.99 and Ashtray (3 Ibs.) ....... $4.99 14. Matching Glass Mug (3 Ibs.)..... $4.29 and Ashtray (11lb.).......-. $2.19 45. W&l. Flask: @ 027). 01 18.) «1.6 eee. $3.49 TO DETERMINE ZONE, TAKE FIRST THREE DIGITS OF ZIP CODE TO WHICH PARCEL IS ADDRESSED AND REFER TO CHART BELOW ZIP CODE ZIP CODE ZIP CODE PREFIXES ZONE PREFIXES ZONE PREFIXES ZONE 016-041... 2 4 ne eae. 6 049-049 .... 5 382 S88 04 680-687 .... 5 G5a-069 .... 4 306-36]... 5 es8003 ,... 6 o7vense 6663 Cee 4 Oe | 3g9.396..... 5 jag 720. 5 ae 2 4A oa 4 es... .& 40448... 3 —————— | 740749 ....5 aie 24 ato4a2 ... 4 Joo 1g2 .-.. & “47 8 40240... 3 Jolie]... 8 1BO1Se 2 AAA A te. 6 7ice 5400 2 gees 5 oe 2 Aa a 4 760-775 6 met 3 430-433 oe 776-777 5 oie... 2 434-436 4 778-797 6 Jiien . 4. 8 437-438 ae ee a ee 2 So 200047... Ae saiaee... 3 800-810 6 eae G HeGaee 4 811-816 7 SOG 2 oe ee 3 Bi tee 6 935 cu 2 ige, |. 4 ee 7 eet 498-499 .... 5 PS) ga | 6 OF ss 3 ——_—_——— | 823.826 7 Ma24 a pGa57e |. 5 ie 6 T5288 2. 8 Baneee .... 4 828-832 7 ee Geom... 5 ea 8 90008 .... 2 oa 6 Ce. . ., ; 7 ie 4 So 835-838 sg 995.097... 8 572-588 .... 6 840-847 — ogg 00 a gone? 7 850-853 Ce ——_—_——— | 598599... 8 855-860 7 g00-992 .. 5. 4 ——————— | 963-864 8 325306. 5 600-611 oa 865-880 7 se. 4 ee: 5 ee 6 ate 6g 613-622 a 882-883 7 tepbe a oo. 5 Se 6 984-366 ca B 624-633 a 890-898 .... 8 ol ae 634-636 5 —- ---— Oa 5 ies 4 gonobT 8 BIG S74. cds € 640675... 5 670-086... ... 8 iG. te 988-994 .... 8 4 ANY FRACTION OF A POUND OVER THE WEIGHT SHOWN TAKES THE NEXT HIGHER RATE WEIGHT RATE CHART TO GROUND ZONES NOT TO EXCEED 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 1Ib. | $2.19| $2.21 | $2.25] $2.29] $2.35] $2.40] $ 2.47 a” 9991 934) 2401 248! 259} 2.71 2.84 4° 238| 245| 255| 267| 2.84] 3.91 3.22 4 O47 287] “O7hl 2ae| see] Sao) a6e 5” ee | 2660} $65| 305) 3331 362 3.96 6" Bae} 2811 20)| 325) S571 382) 493 7" O76} 864) 316) 348) Bee) 444) 4 8 564} goa} 9421 3621 406) 464 5.07 g° 993| 316, 3.47). 3827] 437] 455 5.45 10" 4621. 328) 3.62, 400| 455| S45 5.82 W" 3.12| 340| 3.78| 4.20] 4.81| 5.45| 6.20 12" 3.22| 3.52| 3.93] 439| 505] 5.76 6.56 ae 3311 3.63| 4.08| 458| 530| 606] 6.94 14" 3401 3.76| 4.24| 4.77} 5.54| 6.37 731 15" 3.49| 3.87] 439] 499| 5.79| 668| 7.69 16" 3.58] 3.99| 454| 5.16| 603/ 698] 8.06 17" 3681 4111-470) 634} 6.28! 7.201..842 18” 3771, 423| 4561.86045 6624-200) 6:00 19" $661 42551 500] 5.731 677} 7861 946 20” 3.95| 446] 5.16] 5.91| 7.01] 8.20| 9.55 1" 4081 .458|. 6911.804- 7297; e850) 992 22" 4i4\ 4.71] 56461540. 751! Berl” 1629 23" 4241 492| 561). 6494 “7.761 9.12). 10.67 24" 4.33| 4.94| 5.77| 668] 8.00! 9.42| 11.04 25" 4491 505} 692) 6.97} 825! 973) 41.41 1 ee >» 0. CLOTHING W&L Tie (6 oz.) Baby Bib (2 Ib.) Youth T-Shirts, sizes 2-16 (2 Ib.) $4.49, $9.39 Adult T-Shirts, sizesS ML XL (2 Ib.) $5.39, $14.99 Youth Gym Shorts, sizesS ML (7 oz.) Adult Gym Shorts, cotton polyester (13 oz.) Sweatshirts, child (1 Ib.) Sweatshirts, adult (1 Ib. 5 oz.) $6.29, $8.59 $9.59 $12.19 Sweatshirts, hooded (3 Ib.) $15.29, $16.59 W&L Nightshirts, sizesS ML (1 Ib.) Navy and White General T-Shirt (2 Ib.) $8.59 Cockpit Long Sleeve Shirt (2 Ib.) . $11.89 Reversible Navy and Tan Jacket, Sivan MOL XLS 1) 1. bn $30.69 Wark Vigor {10 az... ...s. 1+. $3.29 W&L Baseball Hat (10 0z.) ..... $6.49 W&L Velour Sweater (1 lb. 6 oz.) $18.69 W&L Sew-on Patch (2 0z.) ..... $1.49 W&L White Striped Jersey ell ea $10.79 CERAMICS W&L Salt & Pepper Shakers, pair tee) ee $6.29 W&L Beer Stein, 20 oz. (215 2 ae) oe a ee A $9.69 W&L Mug, 12 oz. (1 Ib. 4 oz.) . $8.19 W&L Coffee Mug, 7 oz. (1 !b.) ... $4.89 W&L Grandad Mug, 10 oz. Pe ey we $7.29 Ashtray (1 ie. 262)... eid. . $6.59 Heart-shaped Box (8 oz.) ...... $5.39 You may order from the listed items, many of which are pictured. A check or money order including the item(s) price, tax (if applicable), and the shipping charges, computed by use of charts, must accompany your order before it can be processed. Feel free to call the W&L Supply Store (703-463-9111 ext. 312) to discuss any details. Miniature Creamer (6 0z.)...... $2.59 Miniature Beer Stein (8 oz.)..... $3.69 GLASSWARE Highball, 12 oz., w/red and blue crest (15 oz.) $2.69 Highball, 12 oz., w/red and blue crest, gold rim (15 oz.) $3.39 Old Fashioned, double, 15 0z., w/red and blue crest (15 02.) 62, : =. >: $3.09 Old Fashioned, single, 7 oz., w/red and Mig Gre iio ot | kk a $2.09 Shot Glass, 2 oz., w/red and blue crest (8 0z.) $1.89 Ashtray, 6 in. square (1 Ib. 14 0z.) . $3.19 Brandy Snifter, 3 oz. (11 0z.). ... $3.89 Brandy Snifter, 6 oz. (11 0z.)... . $5.89 Glass Tankard, 16 oz., w/red and blue Brace 7 ib Gaze)... we wes $4.29 PEWTER Tankard, w/W&L crest Re i a i $13.99 Glass-bottom Tankard, w/lid (Ti 3 i te es $58.69 Tankard, w/W&L seal (14 oz.) $45.79 JEWELRY Charms, gold and silver, w/W&L seal (3 oz.) $6.50, $7.10 Key Rings, gold and silver, w/W&L charm (068)... 3 $5.29, $7.19, $7.49 Blazer Buttons, 18 ct. gold filled, blue and white enamel (5 oz.) $29.19 Lapel Pin, gold, w/seal (3 oz.) $13.29 eee a we Add 50¢ Handling Charge Per Order All Prices Subject to Change Without Notice. Item Letter/No. Description Total Price Weight ID. 02, Unit ‘ Size } Oty. Price Send your order to: Washington and Lee University Supply Store Lexington, Va. 24450 *Shipping Charges: After compiling total weight, refer to Zip Chart to find your zone, then Rate Chart using appropriate zone and poundage. Total Weight Sub Total Total Shipping Charges * (refer to charts) 4% Tax (Va. residents only) Enclose check or money order for: Name Address SHIPPING Zip INFORMATION Telephone No. & Area Code ED A ES ES CS AS A AS AS SS SS SS AS SS AS SS CS CAS SY CS CD CS SY SNS CANES CRN CLD CEUEIED CLERED GERD GHEUD- 32 Winter Sports Schedules Nov. Nov. Dec. Dec. Dec. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Mar. BASKETBALL 26- W&L Tip-Off 27— Tournament 30—Hampden-Sydney 2—Shenandoah 6—Averett 8—Catholic 5—New Paltz 7-8—W&L Invitational Tournament HOME Away HOME HOME HOME HOME HOME 13—Emory & Henry HOME 15—Bridgewater Away 18—Mary Washington HOME 20—Roanoke HOME 22—Lynchburg Away 25—Eastern Mennonite HOME 27—Catholic Away 29—Hampden-Sydney HOME 3 1—Maryville HOME 3—Emory & Henry Away 5—Lynchburg HOME 8—Bridgewater HOME 10—Shenandoah Away 12—Roanoke Away 15—Eastern Mennonite Away 18—Maryville Away 24- 27—ODAC Tournament T.B.A. 4-5—NCAA Regionals T.B.A. INDOOR TRACK 5—V.M.I. Relays Away 12—Lynchburg, Bridgewater, Roanoke Lynchburg 26—ODAC Championships T.B.A. Dec. Deéc. Dec. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Nov. Nov. Nov. Dec. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Feb. Feb. WRESTLING 1—Hampden-Sydney 4—W&L Invitational 8—Lynchburg 8—Duke 15—Georgia Tech Invitational 22—W&L College Invitational 29—W&L Quadrangular S—W&L Quadrangular 9—Lynchburg 1 1—Catawba 12—Pfeiffer 16—Longwood 19—NCAA Division III Eastern Regionals 25-26—NCAA Division III National Championships SWIMMING 17—V.M.I., University of Richmond 19—Johns Hopkins 20- W&lL Senior 21— Invitational 2-4—-Virginia State Collegiate Championships 8—S.U.N.Y.—Fredonia State 14—James Madison 15—Towson State 2 1—-Shepherd 22—Georgetown 29—William and Mary Away HOME HOME HOME Away HOME HOME HOME Away Away Away Away HOME T.B.A. HOME HOME HOME Richmond HOME Away V.M.I. Away HOME Away 12—Virginia Commonwealth Sweet Briar 17-19—UNC-Wilmington Invitational Feb. 26-28—Virginia Senior Mar. Championships 17- NCAA Division III 19— Championships Away V4. Away The Alumni Magazine of WASHINGTON AND LEE UNIVERSITY (USPS 667-040) Lexington, Virginia 24450 | ate Second Class Postage Paid At Lexington, Virginia 24450 And Additional Mailing Offices 037556 RD VA ANIEL T BALFOUR RALSTON = i, LCHMOND 23229 goes xe =n