, 1953 MARCH Class Agents for 1953 1887-1902—Alumni Office 1903 —wWilliam J. Turner, 70 Pine Street, New York 5, New York 1904 —Dr. S. W. Schaefer, 178 East 70th Street, New York 21, New York 1905 —Dr. Robert A. Lapsley, Jr., 2115 Crystal Spring Avenue, Roanoke, Virginia 1906 —Dr. F. R. Crawford, Box 208, Farmville, Virginia 1907 —John D. Zentmyer, Marbern Road, Hagerstown, Maryland 1908-A—Abe Somerville, Box 387, Cleveland, Mississippi 1908-L—(Judge) Dozier A. DeVane, P. O. Box 546, Tallahas- see, Florida 1909-A—Carl Hinton, P. O. Box 58, Hinton, West Virginia 1909-L—Melvin E. Cruser, 409 Bank of Commerce Building, Norfolk 10, Virginia 1910-A—Frank Y. Conner, Box 240, Tuskegee, Alabama 1910-L—Hugh R. Hawthorne, Room 4800, 122 E. 42nd Street, New York 17, New York 1911-A—O. H. Breidenbach, (114 Mildred Street, Lafayette, Louisiana 1911-L—Daniel B. Straley, 530 Monadnock Building, 53 West Jackson Boulevard, Chicago, Illinois 1912-A—Tom Glasgow, P. O. Box 1997, Charlotte, North Carolina 1912-L—Lawrence E. Goldman, Broadway-Westport Build- ing, 4050 Broadway, Kansas City, Missouri 1913-A—Fred W. McWane, P. O. Box 411, Lynchburg, Vir- ginia 1913-L—S. W. Maytubby, Jr., 1712 N. W. 38th Street, Okla- homa City, Oklahoma 1914-A—Col. Paul J. B. Murphy, U. S. A. Ret’d, “Kolo- sandra,” College Park, Staunton, Virginia 1914-L—J. Carlton Hudson, 500 National Bank of Commerce Building, Norfolk Virginia 1915-A—Dr. S. E. Oglesby, 1102 Church Street, Lynchburg, Virginia 1915-L—Leon W. Harris, Box 251, Anderson, South Carolina 1916-A—Lorentz (L. T.) White, Box 2418, Raleigh, North Carolina 1916- L—Lycurgus Hyre, ginia 1917- A—William Olin Burtner, 2406 N. Upton Street, Ar- lington 7, Virginia 1917-L—J. Seybert Hansel, Box 392, Buckhannon, West Vir- Monterey, Virginia 1918 —Samuel E. Moreton, Jr., 706 South Jackson Street, Brookhaven, Mississippi 1919 —Samuel M. Peale, 39 South LaSalle Street, Chicago 3, Illinois 1920-A—Robert E. Baumgardner, State Inspection & Reg- ulatory Service, University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland 1920-L—Max R. Broudy, 821 Bank of Commerce Building, Norfolk, Virginia 1921-A—Frank M. Pollock, 370 Withers Building, Norfolk, 10, Virginia 1921-L—J. Edward Moyler, Box 116, Franklin, Virginia 1922-A—W. J. L. Patton, 55 Wall Street, New York 15, New York. 1922-L—R. Bleakley James, 930 N. Irving Street, Arlington, Virginia 1923-A—J. W. McDonald, 2845 DeSoto Station, Memphis, ‘Tennessee 1923-L—John Joseph Hudak, 133 Chestnut Street, Garfield, New Jersey 1924-A—Raleigh Jenkins, 4120 First Avenue, South, Birming- ham, Alabama 1924-L—Matthew P. Matheney, 314 East Elm Street, El Do- rado, Arkansas 1925-A—Charles S. Heilig, Drawer 1528, Salisbury, North Carolina 1925-L—George T. Clark, 1128 Ingraham Building, Miami, Florida 1926-A—George T. W. (Toby) Hendrix, Box 407, Olean, New York 1926-L—Earl L. Valentine, Box 908, Lexington, Virginia 1927-A—Kenneth A. Durham, Care of Chemical Bank & Trust Co., 320 Broadway, New York 7, New York 1927-L—Euchlin D. Reeves, 89 Benevolent Street, Providence, Rhode Island 1928-A—William C. Norman, P. O. Box 324, Crossett, Ar- kansas 1928-L—T. B. Bryant, Jr., South Carolina 1929-A—Earl A. Fitzpatrick, P. O. Box 1984, Roanoke, Vir- ginia 1929-L—S. a: Thompson, Rustburg, Virginia 1930-A—Robert E. Clapp, Jr., 117 North Court Street, Fred- erick, Maryland 1930-L—Morris C. Montgomery, Liberty, Kentucky 1931-A—Lawton M. Calhoun, P. O. Box 339, Savannah, Georgia 1931-L—Ethan *ATlen. 15 Broad Street, York eae A. Nesbitt, 916 Kirby Building, Dallas 1, exas 1932-L—Wayne H. Mathis, Jefferson Building, Peoria, Illi- nois 1933-A—Luther F. Violett, Box 803, Church St. Annex, New York 8, New York 1933-L—Copeland E. Adams, Blackstone, Virginia Bryant Building, Orangeburg, New York 5, New 1934-A—Everett Tucker, Jr., 231 Louisiana Street, Little Rock, Arkansas 1934-L—Taylor Jones, 500 Consolidated Building, Jackson- ville, Florida 1935-A—Norman 8. Fitzhugh, Jr., 14 Fern Road, Charleston 4, West Virginia 1935-L—William L. Wilson, 414 Masonic Building, Owens- boro, Kentucky 1936-A—Hugh J. Bonino, 2072 Smith Street, Centredale 11, Rhode Island 1936-L—William Lewis Martin, P. O. Box 1868, Roanoke, Virginia 1937-A—Clark B. Winter, American Express Co., 65 Broad- way, New York, New York 1937-L—Edwin M. Marks, Care of Goldsmith’s, Memphis 1, Tennessee 1938-A—Dr. A. C. Broders, Jr., The Scott and White Clinic, Temple, Texas 1938-L—-Cyrus V. Anderson, 26 Mt. Pittsburgh 28, Pennsylvania 1939-A—Charles G. Gilmore, Elm Tree Village Apartments, 676 Park Avenue, East Orange, New Jersey | 1939-L—Joseph C. Murphy, Second National Bank Building, Somerville, New Jersey 1940-A—James W. Hammett, Suite 222, Texas Eastern Build- ing, Shreveport, Louisiana 1940-L—William F. Saunders, 520 Fairway Road, Ridgewood, New Jersey 1941-A—J. B. Stombock, 421 Walnut Street, Waynesboro, Virginia 1941-L—John E. Perry, 1515 Park Building, Pittsburgh 19, Pennsylvania 1942-A—Bernie Levin, 474 Painter Street, Norfolk, Virginia 1942-L—John L. Campbell, Jr., Box 774, Lexington, Virginia Lebanon Boulevard, 1943 —Philip A. Sellers, Sellers, Doe & Company, P. O. Box 1533, Montgomery, Alabama 1944 —George T. Wood, Graybar Electric Company, Inc., 12th and Main Street, Jacksonville, Florida 1945 —Charles S. Rowe, The Free Lance-Star, Fredericks- burg, Virginia 1946 —T. Ryland Dodson, Masonic Building, Danville, Virginia 1947 —Robert B. McNeil, 6605 Park Avenue, Richmond, Virginia 1948-A—Fred L. Rush, Box 372, Grundy, Virginia 1948-L—T. Haller Jackson, Jr., 901 Commercial Building, Shreveport, Louisiana 1949-A—Walter H. Williams, Jr., 22 Malvern Avenue, Rich- mond 21, Virginia 1949-L—James L. Dow, Harris Building, Carlsbad, New Mexico 1950-A—George W. Whitehurst, 211 Thole Street, Apt. 1, Norfolk 5, Virginia 1950-L—William S. Todd, P. O. Box 2, Kingsport, Tennessee 1951-A—Upton Beall, P. O. Box 618, Helena, Arkansas 1951-L—David W. Foerster, Attorney at Law, 700 Atlantic National Bank Building, Jacksonville 2, Florida 1952-A—Robert E. Little, 308 E. Washington Street, Lexing- ton, Virginia 1952-L—Barkley J. Sturgill, Box 88, Prestonsburg, Kentucky Appalachian—Jerry F. Stone, ’26, Kingsport, Tennessee Augusta — Rockingham — Ed Moore. .'25 Waynesboro, Virginia Atlanta—Thomas E. Schneider, °’24, Box 178, Station C Baltimore—Frank C. Brooks, ’46, 1206 West Lake Avenue Birmingham—Clifford B. Beasley, Jr., '46, 2824 Overhill Road Charleston, W. Wa.—Ralph H. Smith, ’39, Dominion Building Chattanooga—Charles L. Claunch, °27, Chat- tanooga Bank Building Chicago—W. H. Hillier, ’38, 5521 Blackstone Avenue, Chicago 37 Cincinnati—Robert B. Shreve, '’40, 576 Howell Avenue Charlotte—Jack Crist, Jr., ’45, Box 1045 Cleveland—Dr. John Battle, Jr., ’34, Cleveland Clinic, Euclid Avenue ee Virginia—Neely Young, ’48, 309 Dud- ey Florida West Coast—W. E. Tucker, °48, Sto- vall Professional Building, Tampa Gulf Stream—L. L. Copley, ’25, Security Build- ing, Miami, Florida Houston—T. D. Anderson, ’34, Union National Bank Building Jacksonville—Rhydon Latham, ’28, Florida National Bank Building Louisville—Elbridge Barker, ’26, Avon Road, RR 6 Lynchburg,—J. C. Holloran, Jr., ’46, Peoples National Bank Building Mid-South—Benton Wakefield, Jr., °41, First National Bank, Memphis, Tennessee New York—Stuard Wurzburger, ’28, 10 East 40th Street New Orleans—William B. Wisdom, ’21, Ameri- can Bank Building New River and Greenbrier—Harry E. Moran, 718, Beckley, West Virginia Norfolk—Gilbert R. Swink, ’35, National Bank of Commerce Building Northwest Louisiana—James W. Hammett, ’40, Giddens-Lane Building, Shreveport North Texas—Harry Rand, ’27, Universal Mills, Fort Worth Peninsula—Judge Herbert G. Smith, ’17, Court House, Newport News, Virginia Philadelphia—Allen Snyder ’39, 201 south Easton Road, Glenside, Pennsylvania Piedmont—Dr. J. P. Davis, ’30, Winston- Salem, North Carolina Pittsburgh—Anthony E. D’Emilio, Jr., ’41, 401 Plaza Building Richmond—Adrian Benheim, Jr., ’42, 1013 East Main Street Reanoke—Barton W. Morris, Jr., '43, Times- World Corporation San Antonio—Carl C. Wurzbach, ’15, 505 Brady Building St. Louis—John L. Patterson, ’21, Pierce Bldg. Tri-State—H. Preston Henshaw, ’39, Hunting- ton, West Virginia Upper Potomac—William L. Wilson, Jr., ‘38, 525 Cumberland Street, Cumberland, Md. Washington, D. C.—B. C. Tolley, ’48, 3924 “Ww” Street, N. W. THE ALUMNI MAGAZINE Published quarterly by The Washington and Lee University Alumni, Incorporated Drawer 897, Lexington, Virginia Entered as Second Class Matter at the Post Office at Lexington, Virginia, September 15, 1924 Printed at the Journalism Laboratory Press of Washington and Lee University Editor... .......... Harry K. (Cy) Youne, 1917 Assistant Editor... ...J. W. BENJAMIN, JR., 1954 Vol. XXVIII MARCH, 1953 No. 2 THE WASHINGTON AND LEE ALUMNI, INC. President.......... PauL C. BurForp, 1913 Vice-President...... Hucu J. Bonino, 1936 Secretary...... Harry K. (Cy) Younec, 1917 Treasurer. . ARCHIBALD A. SPROUL, III, 1937 THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES KENNETH P. LANE, 1936 ARCHIBALD A. SPROUL, 1937 PauL C. BuForp, 1913 HuGu J. BonIno, 1936 EMMETT W. PoINDEXTER, 1920 WiLiiAM L. WEBsTER, 1912 J. STEWART Buxton, 1936 Wyatt C. Heprick, 1910 Architect’s Tentative Drawing of Fine Arts Building An Washington and Lee is sud- denly faced with a need for addi- tional class-room space, a need that must be described as critical. Alumni may recall that there has been no enlargement of our instructional facilities in the last seventeen years. From time to time, new courses have been offered— we think we have now a full and balanced curriculum—but routine arrangements were made. A notable development of the immediate past is the addition of an ROTC. At its full scope, it will en- list about three-fourths of our stu- dents. The other boys have made varying responses to the military obligation that seems now to be a part of every healthy boy’s plan- ning. This excellent military unit has not only sustained our enroll- ment; it has given us a sense of ful- filling the large mission of prepar- ing our boys for service to our country and our ideal, as they pre- pare for careers of greatness. Our ROTC includes a large vol- ume of curricular study as sepa- rate from mere exercises upon a parade ground. When the unit is in its full scope, it will comprehend, we estimate, about twenty-four sections, requiring seventy-two class room hours each week. Some other features of our ex- panded program, for example, the instruction in fine arts now widely appreciated by our students, call for a specialied type of class-room facility. Mr. Morris Cafritz, father of a recent graduate, has promised $25,000 to meet this need. It is not less than imperative that we have another class-room build- ing. At this moment we are liter- ally using attics and basements, and they are not enough. A picture of the new building accompanies this article. It will stand at the Emergency Need north end of the mall, matching the McCormick library. For the new structure we shall need $300,000. A bit of quiet requesting on the part of the T'rus- tee committee for the building (Trustees Chenery, Lykes, and Mc- Donald) has brought us, in cash or valid pledges, about $100,000. We do not purpose any kind of intensive solicitation of the general alumni group. We recall how gra- ciously that group responded to the Bicentennial campaign just four years ago; and we are mindful, as I have said in another part of this magazine, of the incalculable help represented by the annual Alumni Fund. I am, however, announcing this emergency that must be met. On behalf of the University officials, I invite aid from any alumnus, or any other friend, who can help us in this essential undertaking of the University. Puace hele hie. President THE ALUMNI MAGAZINE New Plan To Attract Southern Students Much of what is valuable in the Washington and Lee tradition de- rives from the fact that two-thirds of its students come from the South. Few would question that it is desirable to preserve that tradi- tion, and the Southern represen- tation in the student body which makes it possible. In recent years the state institu- tions, with their lower fees, have attracted many Southern boys. As population and high school atten- dance have increased, many South- ern students know of Washington and Lee only as one of many com- peting institutions, not as a college which makes its unique contribu- tion. The spread of attendance geo- graphically and other difficulties make it impossible to present Washington and Lee as effectively as we should like at the College Days in the high school themselves. A plan was consequently devised this fall whereby there would be direct contact with promising stu- dents in at least some of the South- ern centers. The first week in December Dean Frank J. Gilliam made visits to Charlotte, North Carolina; Greenville, South Carolina; At- lanta, Georgia; and Birmingham, Alabama; on successive nights. In each city a meeting was set up that was definitely not an alumni meet- By J. FRANK GILLIAM Dean of Students and Director of Admissions ing as such. A small nucleus of alumni formed a steering commit- tee, and this group secured a list of from ten to fifteen high school seniors who would be regarded as excellent prospects for Washington and Lee if they decided to make application. Suggestions for the guest list came from alumni and their families; high school student advisers; and boys from the area currently attending Washington and Lee. In order that the boys would receive the main focus of attention, no more alumni attended the dinner than one alumnus to each boy, in some instances a smal- ler proportion of alumni. After the dinner Dean Gilliam made a_ thirty-minute talk on Washington and Lee, directing the talk to the boys and not to the alumni. The Bicentennial movie was then shown. The alumni attending in the dif- ferent cities were as follows: Charlotte: Herbert Woodward, "4.1, Philip Howerton, ’25, George Wilkinson, 26, Jack Crist, Jr., "4.5; Greenville: Steve Stephenson, "40, Frank Morris, ’25, Bill Steph- enson, 749, Brad Dunson, 742, Andy White, ’39; Atlanta: Hal WASHINGTON AND LEE UNIVERSITY Clarke, ’38, Red Schneider, ’24, Tommy Schneider, ’49, Alex Hitz, Jr., 42, Frank Carter, ’49, Rodney Cook, °46; Birmingham: John Hendon, ’24, Henry Johnston, ’29, Ed Aull, ’23, Bestor Brown, 730, Jim Hendrix, ’26, Howard Leake, ’24., Raleigh Jenkins, ’24, Bill Rat- liff, ’47, Roy Hoffman, *50, and Bill Latture, °4.9. It is too early to evaluate the plan in terms of applications from the boys who attended the dinners, but the general reaction to the idea has been enthusiastic, and the plan will undoubtedly be tried out in other cities. After the account of the visit to the four cities named above had gone to press, dinner meetings were held on successive nights from January 12 to 15, at Mont- gomery, Mobile, Pensacola, and Jacksonville. At Montgomery Philip Sellers, 4.3, was in charge, with the fol- lowing alumni sponsoring the din- ner: Fred Bear, ’24, Carl Bear, ’33, Russell Carter, ’35, Withers Davis, "4.7, Bert Evans, ’33, Jack Hobbie, °35, Charlie Hubbard, °48, T. B. Hubbard, ’06, Luther McKinnon, "27, Ed Thompson, 749, Wm. A. Williamson, ’33. At Mobile, arrangements were headed by John Ladd, ’32, with the following as sponsors: Robert Ba- (Continued on page 22) Placement Service Helps Graduates Frank McCormick (left) and John Williamson, ’53, being interviewed by Mr. R. B. Pearsons of the Personnel Staff of Proctor and Gamble on December 9, 1952. Need a job? Are you coming out of the service and in need of help in obtaining a position? Do you wish to change positions? Do you need information, help of any sort pertaining to firms and_ possible positions? The Washington and Lee Uni- versity Counseling and Placement Service is attempting to extend its scope to include the alumni of the University. Operating as a clearing agency between business firms which desire college trained per- sonnel and Washington and Lee graduates, both experienced and in- experienced, the service attempts to aid both parties. The Placement Bureau will rec- ommend qualified graduates to business firms who send requests to the University for personnel, and also inform business firms on the availability of properly qualified graduates who desire employment. Founded in February 1947 un- der the direction of Psychology Professor William M. Hinton, ’29, the department has steadily in- creased in size and capacity to help. James D. Farrar, ’49, As- sistant Dean of Students, has re- 4 cently replaced Dr. Hinton as de- partment head. The service has been partially sustained by funds ear-marked for its purpose by alumni contributing to the Univer- sity. The opportunity to assist alumni desirous of obtaining positions is a result of the tremendous influx of firms to college campuses looking for trained graduates. Experts say the demand is higher now than it has been at any time since World War II. The firms are finding that most of the graduates are going di- rectly into the service, and as a re- sult the alumni files are being used more extensively than ever before. To maintain its function the placement service yearly sends statements to about 300 firms con- cerning the number of prospective graduates of the University and their respective fields of interest. Those who reply or who otherwise signify real interest are sent Uni- versity catalogues. Such firms as Armstrong Cork, Berkshire Life Insurance Com- pany, Brown and Williamson To- bacco Corporation, Chase National Bank of New York, Dan River By J. W. BENJAMIN, JR., 754 Mills, Eastman Kodak, Conneticut General Life Insurance, Gulf Oil Corporation, Industrial Rayon Corp., Kopper’s Company, Inc., and many others have been inter- ested in Washington and Lee grad- uates in the last few years. The service maintains a large file of business firms who are interested in college graduates. Information on chances for advancement, meth- ods of operation, nature of pro- ducts, etc., are available from the file. Similarly, the office maintains a comprehensive filing list of gradu- ates which includes interests, abil- ities, personal information, etc. Those alumni who have graduated since the inauguration of the place- ment service and made application to that office while in school will still have that information on file. During the year the placement service receives requests by letter, telephone, or personal visit from employers for recommendations of graduates for specific positions. In such cases the placement director selects the graduates from the placement registration records on the basis of their qualifications and experience, recommends to the em- ployer, and arranges for personal interviews. However, the graduate must complete the final step in the em- ployment procedure by convinc- ing the prospective employer that he has the necessary qualifications and interest to be of sufficient ser- vice to the employer to warrant his being on the payroll. The firms represented are essen- tially sales personnel, looking for people to be trained for particular positions. The office works side by side with the other departments in school such as journalism, law and (Continued on page 6) THE ALUMNI MAGAZINE Have You "Seen” Our Publicity? There’s a saying around the campus that if you don’t know what to do with him, just send him over to the News Bureau. That’s the principal reason why so many visiting newspaper and radio people, calendar and novelty agents, Yankees looking for Con- federate flags, and lovely old ladies hoping for a conducted tour of the grounds usually end up at our pris- tine quarters in old Reid Hall. Despite this constant flow of interruptions, the News Bureau manages to grind out an amazing quantity of news releases from its favorite antique mimeograph ma- chine. (It works, doesn’t it?) After all, our sole purpose in life is to get a “good press” for Washing- ton and Lee. Sometimes this “good press” fix- ation means working past 4 p.m. when most of the administrative personnel checks out for home and old Southern comfort. Most of the faculty has disappeared, too, and the students, if not drilling with the ROTC, have joined the 4 o’clock show team. Sometimes it means working all night. Take for instance a_ blustry Spring dawn. The time is 5 a.m. Thursday. A television camera stands in the grassy circle outside Doremus Gymnasium. Huddled around the big box with legs are a CBS cameraman, a producer, and the director of the University News Bureau in his thin, ragged coat. Everyone had run out of cigarettes long ago. On Monday before, two dozen newspaper and radio reporters had descended on the campus to cover the two-day Mock Republican Con- vention. Up in New York, Ed Mur- row dispatched a camera crew to film the event for his Sunday after- noon “See It Now” television show. For two days, “Little Chicago” By the NEws BuREAU bustled with make-believe politi- clans, campaign parades, and a maze of telephone and radio lines. A haze of cigar smoke hung over the valley floor like a swirling fog. Wednesday came—a half mil- lion words and a hundred pictures later. With Eisenhower nominated and the reporters gone, eleven hun- dred weary Minks began drifting away for a “long weekend.” In New York, Ed Murrow was viewing rushes of the film, just in by plane from Roanoke. We can’t quote Murrow exactly. But it must have gone something like this: “Zounds, men, terrific! Gotta make it the feature of my Sunday production! Send the crew back for background shots!” At 6 p.m. Wednesday, Murrow alerted the News Bureau by tele- phone. “Call back the Convention chairman, the roll clerk, the lad who had nominated Eisenhower, and other important figures! Hold the decorations in the gym! Gotta get closeups and background for atmosphere!” | The Bureau went to work. The Convention chairman was found after 34 telephone calls in Buena Vista at the home of a man he had met casually for the first time only an hour before. The roll clerk was in Maryland, driving to Con- necticut to see his girl. Located at the home of an uncle, he prom- ised to drive back to Lexington after CBS proposed flying him to Connecticut and return after the closeups were filmed. Shortly after midnight, the cam- era crew arrived. Thousand watt lights blazed against the famous colonnade while outside shots of “smoke-filled” caucus rooms were taken. Behind drawn shades in a classroom, the News Bureau staff puffed furiously on cigarettes and A STORY IN THE MAKING—the News Bureau staff checks copy for a picture story that will appear in several Hometown newspapers. Left to right, C. O. Voigt, associate professor of journalism and temporary director of the News Bureau; Jack Carper, director of sports publicity; and Miss Iris Tolley, assistant to the director and the girl who does all the work. WASHINGTON AND LEE UNIVERSITY cigars, casting shadows on the win- dow shades for “atmosphere.” At dawn, the group moved over to the gym to catch an outside “night” view of Convention Hall. A janitor was aroused to turn on the lights. As soon as the first rays of the sun were strong enough to outline the structure, the film was exposed. At 8:30, closeups of Convention officials were filmed inside the gym. Take after take was made as the sound man tried to recapture the acoustics of the original roll-call. All the while, 300 goggle-eyed ladies gathered for a District Home Demonstration meeting graciously postponed the opening of their ses- sion. At 10 a.m. the film was rushed to Roanoke and put on a plane for New York. At 11 a.m. the vanguard of 700 high school youngsters from 13 Southern States arrived for the 23rd annual Southern Interscholas- tic Press Association convention. At noon, the News Bureau staff retired for lunch. Fortunately, every week isn’t as nerve-wracking. Normally, the work of the News Bureau falls in- to two broad groups. The first con- cerns outsiders asking for infor- mation about the University. These include newspaper and magazine writers, agencies making regional or nation-wide surveys, and high school youngsters requesting bio- graphies of Washington or Lee for English themes. The second category is routine publicity work—the dissemination of news about the University, the faculty, and the students to news- papers and magazines. Taking a closer look we find: 1. News of University affairs— such as registration, convocations, public speakers, faculty promotions and achievement, gifts, and new courses. 2. News of Student Affairs— such as dances, elections, and sports (handled separately by the Director of Sports Publicity). 6 3. Hometown News—This is the least known but probably the most important phase of the News Bu- reau’s work. While stories about honor rolls, dean’s lists, initiations, and so on, are sent out as general releases to regional newspapers, individual stories are mailed to Hometown newspapers. If Joe Blow, as we like to call him, is elected Vice-President of his class, his Hometown newspaper gets a story and, if possible, a picture. The News Bureau operates on the principle that all “news 1s lo- cal news”; that mothers and fathers and their friends are more inter- ested in Joe than in general unt- versity news. In the course of a single year, close to one thousand Hometown stories are mailed to weekly and daily newspapers. This kind of publicity wears out a lot of typewriter ribbon. It’s the kind of job that is never done. One difficulty, however, is that the Bureau seldom sees these home- towners in print. Although editors always beg for them, they usually forget to send us a clipping. Alum- ni could perform a real morale- boosting service if they’d clip and mail to us any Washington and Lee item they come across. Placement Service (Continued from page 4) history, but doesn’t do as much of the actual placement. That 1s left up to the individual departments. However, those students or alumni interested in those fields may con- tact the placement service which will then work with the particular department concerned in placing the interested individual. Starting salaries for those aided by the service average $300 a month. They are essentially train- ing salaries with a good chance for advancement. One _ exceptionally capable graduate received $450 per month as a starting salary. Every man who truly wanted to be helped has been placed by the office. Any alumnus wishing informa- tion on job possibilities, or inter- ested in changing positions, or wishing to be put on record should future possibilities present them- selves, is invited to contact the placement office by mail or person. Dr. Hinton and Farrar repeat that they are swamped with requests from firms throughout the country for information on Washington and Lee alumni who would fit into their various needs. “It is our wish to fill all these positions with our men,” Dr. Hin- ton says, “but we need to know what alumni are interested.” Graduates may be certain that a complete record of their qualifica- tions may be given their employer. Where aptitude tests and inter- est inventories are desired a com- plete battery is available for admin- istering. Interviews for students and alumni are often arranged on the campus, and can be arranged in the proper office of the interested firm. Alumni writing the office are urged to give information on the type of job they are seeking, the particular organization with which they wish to affiliate, the location they desire, and the individual qual- ifications. The placement office re- minds all that they cannot be re- sponsible for obtaining the job, they merely act as a liaison. They will, if desired, do the actual con- tact work with the organiaztion, but the final work is up to the alumnus. Alumni are also urged to help future graduates and fellow class- mates by informing the office of possible firm openings and organ- iations which might be interested in Washington and Lee men. (The office is located in New- comb Hall 22. Office hours are from 8:30 to 4:00 p.m., Monday through Friday, and 8:30 to 1:00 p.m. on Saturday.) — ( The first annual meeting of } the Washington and Lee Law ’ Alumni Association will be held Tuesday, April 28 at 4:00 p.m. in Tucker Hall. 5 on Pe a THE ALUMNI MAGAZINE REPORT ot the ALUMNI FUND for 1952 ¢ NGTON AND LEE UNIVERSITY NIA TED l ce fs aah A Message irom President Gaines Once more I have the happy privilege of thanking thousands of alumni in a general way—I wish I could make it more personal—for a generous and an inspiring support. The statistics of this statement will suggest to you that alumni have given to us what is the rough equivalent of income for one year upon a million dol- lars. It could not have been the same successful, happy institution without this support. In my own heart there is something written that is even more important. It was recorded adequately by the author of the epistle to the Hebrews: “See- ing that we are encompassed with so great a cloud of witnesses...... we run with patience the race that is set before us.” From Florida to California, from Maine to Louisiana, these witnesses, far removed by geography but close to us in dedicated purpose, have sacrificed, have shared with us their earnings in life, that the ancient, honorable endeavor may continue. They have joined themselves with George Washington and Robert E. Lee in making the focus of their allegiance this college in the Valley, this prophecy of tomorrow. Sitting in General Lee’s home to write these brief lines, I can only pray that we sustain here an institution worthy of the great heritage of long centuries, worthy of the sympathetic support of 1952. Gratefully yours, Pent, foes THE ALUMNI President MAGAZINE To the Members of the Washington and Lee University Alumni, Incorporated It is a distinct honor to serve as your President, and my appreciation of the honor is sincere. This is a democratic organization. Each grad- uate of the University and each former student who attended one full term or semester and who honorably left the University is an active member. No dues are required to qualify for or to maintain membership. Its chief purpose in the language of its charter is “to keep the bond between Washington and Lee University and her alumni close and continuous.” The governing body is a board of seven trustees which has rather complete author- ity. Two or three trustees are elected each year for three-year terms at the an- nual meeting of the members during Finals week. You will note in this issue information about the Nominating Committee which will report at the next meeting of the members on June 4, 1953. I urge you to come to this meeting if you conveniently can. Cy Young and his staff and the class agents produced excellent results for the Alumni Fund in 1952. Both the number of contributors and the total amount received in any prior year were exceeded in 1952. Our active interest in Washington and Lee can easily be shown by replying to our class agent’s letter each spring and by sending a contribution to the Alumni Fund each year. I hope that more of you will do this in 1953 than ever before. The University needs your active interest and your support. After the budgeted expenses of this’ organization are met, the net amount of the contributions is turned over to the University Board of Trustees to use for such purposes as they determine best for the University. May each one of you resolve to keep the bond between you and the Uni- versity close and continuous. Take an active interest in this organization and in your local alumni association where one is near you. Visit the campus when- ever you can, and contribute what you conveniently can give each year to the Alumni Fund. President Washington and Lee Alumni, Inc. Yours sincerely, WASHINGTON AND LEE UNIVERSITY 9 Annual Giving Summary, 1952 Class Contributors Amount Class Contributors Amount Class Class Agent Roll No. % Given Class Class Agent Roll No. % Given 1887-02—Alumni Office... 276 47 17% $ 915.00 | 1928-L—T. B. Bryant, Jru., 23 8 35% $ 150.00 1903. —William J. Turner............ 33. 15 45% 890.00 | 1929-A—George H. Goodwin........ 273 49 18% 926.00 1904 —S. W. Schaefer........0.... 40 17 43% 200.00 | 1929-L—S. J. Thompson... 14 4 29% 45.00 1905 —J. D. Hobbie, Jr......0..... 41 12 30% 278.00 | 1930-A—Robert E. Clapp, Jr....... 257 37 = 14% 563.10 1906 —F. R. Crawford........00.. 66 21 32% 545.00 | 1930-L—M. J. Arnd..ecceeeee: 21 10 48% 110.00 1907 —W. B. Newell... 61 18 30% 176.00 | 1931-A—Lawton M. Calhoun........ 290 50 17% ~~ 2,549.00 1908-A—Abe Somerville.........000.. 79 = 23 29% 560.00 | 1931-L—R. J. Thrift, Jro 16 7 44% 155.00 1908-L—Martin B. O’Sullivan...... 18 7 39% 157.50 | 1932-A—Collas G. Harris... 271 45 16% 733.00 1909-A—Carl Hinton... 71 23 32% 845.00 | 1932-L—Martin P. Burks... 23 13 56% 190.00 1909-L— Melvin E.. Cruser.......000.... 18 10 56% 430.00 | 1933-A—Luther F. Violett... 259 50 19% 695.00 1910-A—Branson L. Wood%.......... 102 25 25% 1,413.92 | 1933-L—Donald K. Crawford...... 16 13 80% 170.00 1910-L—M. H. Myerson............0.. 25 8 32% 390.00 | 1934-A—Robert B. Shively............ 250 35 14% 565.00 1911-A—Henry W. Dew..........0.... 102. 28 27% 645.00 | 1934-L—Robert Bailey... 18 5 28% 105.00 1911-L—Daniel B. Straley........... 37, 13 35% 240.00 | 1935-A—Grier Wallace, Jr... 225 33 15% 448.00 1912-A—Tom Glasgow.....ccccceceeee 120 27 23% 1,435.00 | 1935-L—William L. Wilson.......... 21 8 40% 155.00 1912-L—Byron L, Ballard* .......... 34. 12 35% 305.00 | 1936-A—Hugh J. Bonino.... i. 224 40 18% 624.00 1913-A—Fred W. McWane.......... 101 30 30% 1,340.00 | 1936-L—William L. Martin.......... 12 3 25% 30.00 1913-L—S. L. Fellers.. 38 13 34% 260.00 | 1937-A—Clark B. Winter......0..00... 249 59 24% 849.00 1914-A—Paul J. B. Murphy.......... 114 60 53% 2,662.00 | 1937-L—Edwin M. Marks............ 24 15 63% 340.00 1914-L—J. Carlton Hudson.......... 29 10 26% 170.00 | 1938-A—Charles F. Clarke, Jr....... 244 45 18% — 1,029.00 1915-A—Madison P. Coe.............. 103 22 21% 557.00 | 1938-L—Hal Clarke... eeee 31 9 29% 100.00 1915-L—C. C. Chambers................ 27 12 44% 245.00 | 1939-A—Charles G. Gilmore........ 268 69 26% = 1,203.50 1916-A—E. B. Shultz... 83 19 23% 443.00 | 1939-L—Joseph C. Murphy.......... 40 20 50% 175.00 1916-L—Earl B. Rose... 34 23 68% 227.50 | 1940-A—Billy V. Ayers... 238 37 12% 523.00 1917-A—William O. Burtner........ 106 27 25% 1,165.00 | 1940-L—W. S&S. Burns... ee. 21 7 33% 95.00 1917-L—J. Seybert Hansel... 29 12 41% 205.00 | 1941-A—J. B. Stombock...........0... 260 48 15% 721.50 1918 —Adolph S. Marx... 124 29 23% 542.00 | 1941-L—John E. Perry.........00000. 32 8 25% 142.50 1919 —J. W. Cook, Jr... 130 27 20% 780.00 | 1942-A—Bernie Levin... 291 49 16% 858.00 1920-A—R. FE. Baumgardner...... 134 26 19% 377.00 | 1942-L,—C. F. Bagley... 29 9 31% 125.00 1920-L—Max R. Broudy.......... 24 6 25% 165.00 | 1943 —Philip A. Sellers... 283 58 21% 565.00 1921-A—John L,. Patterson............ 90 17 18% 200.00 } 1944 —George T. Wood.............. 235 46 11% 570.50 1921-L—J. Edward Moyler.......... 42 21 50% 280.00 | 1945 —Charles S. Rowe............. 215 29 13% 442.00 1922-A—W. J. L. Patton... 127 26 19% 623.00 | 1946 —Harry W. Wellford........ 208 21 10% 305.00 1922-L—R. Bleakley James............ 9 6 67% 65.00 | 1947 —Philip C. Braunschweig 96 6 6% 77.70 1923-A—Jay W. McDonald.......... 197. 21 11% 265.50 | 1948-A—Fred L. Rush... 113 14 12% 145.00 1923-L—John J. Hudak... 29 8 28% 130.00 | 1948-L—R. H. Pettus... ee. 63 22 35% 212.86 1924-A—William Hellier........000.. 238 35 15% = 1,273.11 | 1949-A—H. Glenn Chaffer............ 259 47 18% 479.00 1924-I—Charles A. Cohen............ 34. 14. 41% 270.00 | 1949-L—James L. Dow.......... 61 12 20% 101.50 1925-A—-Thomas M. Harman...... 229 39 17% ~ 1,216.00 | 1950-A—George W. Whitehurst.. 370 52 10% 931.50 1925-L—George T. Clark.......00.... 23 12 52% 175.00 | 1950-L—Jack A. Crowder.............. 40 7 18% 85.00 1926-A—Edward Felsenthal.......... 208 32 14% 751.00 | 1951-A—Upton Beall... 297. 42 11% 354.00 1926-L—J. K. Thomas... 14 8 57% 105.00 | 1951-L-—Jack Marsh... 72 12 16% 57.50 1927-A—Leigh D. Bulluck......0..... 242 29 12% 664.75 | 1952-53-54—Alumni Offfice........ 361 7 26.00 1927-L—Euchlin D. Reeves.......... 20 10 50% 230.00 1928-A—William C. Norman........ 229. 45 19% 980.75 | —_— Totals ccccccciccccccscccesseceeseeees 10,543 2105 20% $44,520.19 LO THE ALUMNI MAGAZINE An Analysis of The Washington and Lee Alumni Fund 1933 to 1952 1952 1952 Class Clase Roll Nooo oe nt Nuiiber S heeant Class Clase Roll yon Giving sé Nawties ee 1867-1902 .......... 276 47 $§ 915.00 358 $ 23,839.71 | 1928-L.. 23 8 $ 150.00 13 $ 1,092.00 1903 eee 33 15 890.00 33 5,278.07 | 1929-A... ee 273 49 926.00 140 6,513.91 1904 eee 40 17 200.00 40 2,393.00 | 1929-L)..... ee. 14 4 45.00 12 431.50 1905 Lecce 4] 12 278.00 36 1,597.68 | 1930-A............. 257 37 563.10 119 4,441.35 1906 wees 66 21 545.00 62 5,573.41 | 1930-L....... ee 21 10 110.00 16 709.50 1907 iccceceeeeeees 61 18 176.00 46 2,082.00 | 1931-A..... 290 50 2,549.00 151 8,285.19 1908-A....... eee 79 23 560.00 67 4925.25 | 1931-L.... ee. 16 7 155.00 12 1,161.00 1908-L..... eee 18 7 157.50 21 1,664.50 | 1932-A...... ee. 271 45 733.00 136 3,946.62 1909-A....... eee 71 23 845.00 48 8,648.15 | 1932-L... ee 23 13 190.00 22 1,307.01 1909-L.... eee 18 10 430.00 17 3,817.00 | 1933-A..... eee 259 50 695.00 130 5,001.50 1910-A........ ee 102 25 1,413.92 67 6,463.95 | 1933-L.... eee 16 13 170.00 15 821.50 1910-L...... eee 25 8 390.00 27 3,787.00 | 1934-A.. ee 250 35 565.00 144 3,324.82 1911-A..... 102 28 645.00 70 4,951.00 } 1934-L...... 18 5 105.00 11 901.00 1911-L.w ee. 37 13 240.00 34 2,242.00 | 1935-A...... 225 33 448.00 111 2,410.50 1912-A..... eee 120 27 1,435.00 71 5,187.12 | 1935-L.. 21 8. 155.00 12 592.00 1912-L.. 34 12 305.00 26 1,940.36 | 1936-A........ 224 40 624.00 110 2,649.35 1913-A,....scsecsenee 101 30 1,340.00 61 10,665.50 | 1936-L..... ee 12 3 30.00 9 136.00 1913-L.. ee 38 13 260.00 27 1,846.50 | 1937-A..... ee. 249 59 849.00 142 4,292.53 1914-A.. ee 114 60 2,662.00 7/7 15,365.88 | 1937-L,...... ee 24 15 340.00 21 1,535.50 1914-Ly. eee 29 10 170.00 21 4,280.60 | 1938-A.......... 244 45 1,029.00 123 3,993.94 1915-A.L eee 103 22 557.00 64 6,433.65 | 1938-L..... ee. 31 9 100.00 24 655.00 1915-L. eee 27 12 245.00 25 4,808.00 | 1939-A.. ee. 268 69 1,203.50 159 6,532.50 1916-A..... eee 83 19 443.00 43 2,885.50 | 1939-L... ee 40 20 175.00 27 757.00 1916-L.... eee 34 23 227.50 35 1,962.00 | 1940-A....... 238 37 523.00 152 3,809.67 1917-A.... eee 106 27 1,165.00 64 9,036.50 | 1940-L... ee. 21 7 95.00 14 448.50 1917 -L.n ee ceeeeeeeees 29 12 205.00 27 1,889.50 | 1941-A.. 260 48 721.50 155 5,226.58 1918 eee 124 29 542.00 73 3,729.50 | 1941-L... ee. 32 8 142.50 25 1,022.00 1919 ee 130 27 780.00 7/7 4,099.00 | 1942-A.... 291 49 858.00 182 5,429.50 1920-A.....cceceeeeeee 134 26 377.00 72 3,715.00 | 1942-L... ee. 29 9 125.00 22 594.00 1920-L....eeeeccceeeee 24 6 165.00 20 1,527.50 | 1943 woe. 283 58 565.00 178 4,462.00 1921-A.............06 90 17 200.00 68 2,827.50 | 1944 oe. 235 46 570.50 125 2,749.00 1921-L... ae. 42 21 280.00 32 1,871.00 | 1945 wo. 215 29 442.00 101 2,184.00 1922-A....eeeeeeeeee 127 26 623.00 68 4,701.58 | 1946 ee. 208 21 305.00 82 1,480.00 1922-Ly....cceecceeeeee 9 6 65.00 7 473.50 | 1947 eee 96 6 77.70 35 565.20 1923=A.s.......ssetees 197 21 265.50 83 2,658.50 | 1948-A. 113 14 145.00 29 473.00 1923-L....eeeecceeeeee 29 8 130.00 22 1,026.50 | 1948-L. 63 22 212.86 35 661.86 1924-A.. cece 238 35 1,273.11 118 5,625.40 | 1949-A.. 259 47 479.00 71 1,289.50 1924-L.. eee 34 14 270.00 25 1,686.00 | 1949-L.o 61 12 1015.0 14 201.00 1925-A..eeceeeeees 229 39 1,216.00 102 ~=—— 7,494.50 | 1950-A... 370 52 931.50 57 1,672.50 1925-Ly....eeceeeeees 23 12 175.00 20 1,346.00 | 1950-L..... 40 7 85.00 11 175.00 1926-A..........c000 208 32 751.00 99 4,091.00 | 1951-A. 297 42 354.00 19 399.00 1926-L..... eee eee 14 8 105.00 13 640.00 | 1951-L...... 72 12 57.50 7 57.50 1927-A.v.eecccccceeee: 242 29 664.75 110 4,504.56 | 1952-53-54 ...... 361 7 26.00 14 37.00 1927-Liveececeeeee 20 10 230.00 20 . .-. .1,236.00 | Honorary.......... | 3 1,965.00 1928-A vee 22945 980.75 111 9°. 4,990.50 | Special... | 2 123.45 Totals... 10,543 2,105 $44,520.19 5,590 $298,323.91 WASHINGTON AND LEE UNIVERSITY ll Report of the 1952 Alumni Fund Our annual Alumni Fund is one of the most significant elements in Washington and Lee’s financial operations. Each year the proceeds of this Annual Giving program be- come part of an expendable fund used to meet the most urgent needs in the discretion of the University Trustees—and the Alumni Fund has assumed the vital role of mak- ing it possible for Washington and Lee to maintain and improve her standards of education For the 20th consecutive year the Alumni Fund has topped the previous year’s record and broke into “new high ground.” And, for the first time (in 1952)), we have gone beyond the 2,000-mark in the number of contributors. This is encouraging but represents only 20% of our list of approximately 11,000 alumni. Our percentage of alumni participation is recogniz- ably inadequate, especially when we consider comparable schools (Princeton, Bowdoin, Amherst, Williams) average 50%-and-better participation in Annual Giving. And, further, when we consider that in the past 20 years, 5,585 alumni have contributed to our Fund at one time or another. % * % The Class Agent is the backbone of the Alumni Fund, and its suc- cess will always be in direct ratio to his loyalty, ingenuity, and perse- By Cy YOUNG Alumni Secretary verance. In an undertaking so vast and participated in by so many it it indeed difficult to single out ind1i- vidual accomplishments but I - would like to pay special tribute to some of our Agents who estab- lished new records. Under the leadership of Donald K. Crawford, ’33-L, 88% of the Class responded. This is a new per- centage high and has eclipsed all other records. (Dare we imagine what would happen of 80% of the entire alumni list responded? When 20% in ’52 contributed almost $45,000?) Headed by Class Agent Paul Murphy, 1914-A was again the “Dollars” leader ($2,662.00), as well as percentage leader among the Academic classes. Charlie Gil- more, ’39-A Agent, placed his Class on top in contribution “Numbers,” 69. Other special mention should go to Earl Rose, ’16-L—68% of his Class responded; and Lawton Cal- houn, ’31-A, runner-up for “Dol- lars” leader, ($2,549.00). Without listing them all here, there were 4.4 classes which broke all previous records for money re- ceived in a single year; and 21 classes had their best year in the number of contributors. We want to express our heart- felt thanks to each of last year’s 86 Class Agents—as well as to all who have served in this capacity in the years before—for the unstinted support given in our Alumni Fund effort. * * * Thinking ahead now to the 1953 Fund, to begin in April, here are some questions every alumnus should ask himself: 1. Is my name on the roster of contributors for 1952? 2. Will it surely be there this year? 3. Was my contribution what it should have been? Will my 1953 oift be thoughtfully made and pro- portionate to my ability to give? * + * The Alumni Fund is filling a crucial area in the University finan- cial picture. It must continue to do so if we want to preserve for our sons, and their sons, all that 1s good in Washington and Lee. Let us re- member that it has been said that we never stop paying for our edu- cation—and that we never stop using it, either! * + + During the month of April you will be receiving your Class Agent’s annual letter. His job is not an easy one. I hope you will answer him promptly. 1887-1902 E. P. Coles ; Ernest W. Ripy “ Charles Howard Freeman Randolph T. Shields Donors 47 Amount $915.00 William H. Keister .... C. W. F. Spencer C. J. Boppell G. B. Capito William McChesney Martin Scott M. Loftin plete 7 he E. A. Quarles on James A. McClure AK Bowles | Marion W. Ripy James Mullen E M. Hudson” Cabell C. Tutwiler Arthur M. Shipp John W. Davis John Mitchell Woods Isaac H. Kemper Harrington Waddell James Bell Bullitt George C. Martin * Deceased 12 ~ Leroy C. Barret David H. Leake W. J. Lindenberger ‘Thomas N. Webb Bordern H. Burr* Norman §%. Fitzhugh W. Ross McCain Edward A. O’Neal S. B. McPheeters J. Randolph Tucker Clarence C. Burns Hale M. Houston E. W. G. Boogher Volney M. Brown W. Dewey Cooke R. F. Cooper Richard P. Daniel W. T. Ellis J. Morrison Hutcheson Osman FE. Swartz John P. Wall 1903 William J. Turner Amount $890.00 Agent Donors 16 Cary R. Blain Stuart Chevalier Joseph D. Collins Robert Trigg Flanary J. M. B. Gill THE ALUMNI MAGAZINE Samuel McP. Glasgow David Vance Guthrie W. P. Lamar George H. Lee J. C. McPheeters D. R. Phelps Francis T. Reeves R. A. Ruff W. J. Turner Robert T. Wallace John F. Wysor 1904 Kelly W. Trimble George W. P. Whip S. W. Schaefer Amount $200.00 Agent Donors 17 J.B. Akers Julian F. Bouchelle W. Cole Davis John Henry Day R. J. Dillard John R. Handlan J. W. Harman George EK. Haw Robert L. Kolb M. T. McClure Lyle M. Moffett E. W. Poindexter S. W. Schaefer Arthur Tabb LeRoy Thompson John W. Conover W. Owen Wilson 1905 Agent J. D. Hobbie, Jr. Donors 12 Amount $278.00 E. S. Boice D. A. Bradham Haney B. Conner A. S. Hays J. D. Hobbie, Jr. Emerson W. Kelly Robert A. Lapsley, Jr. David T. Moore John A. Moore George W. Morris George W. Rader Walter G. Riddick 1907 Agent W.B. M. Newell Donors 18 Amount $176.00 T. O. Bagley Emory W. Bitzer Henry P. Burnett C. C. Crockett W. W. Hargrave E. Clyde Hoge A. R. Larrick W. Leland Lord Donald W. M. MacCluer Frank McCutchan Harry W. Miller John Strother Moore Waldo B. M. Newell Thomas F. Opie- Robert Stuart Sanders J. M. Sapp W. F. Semple John David Zentmyer 1908-A Abe Somerville Amount $560.00 Agent Donors 23 Fred Bartenstein Grover A. Batten John M. Bierer J. C. Carpenter Grover C. Gabriel Robert R. Gray J. P. Hobson Robert S. Keebler A. W. Lybrand J. W. Lykes Henry R. Mahler | George McP. Minetree J. M. Moore Philip P. Page Richard Lee Page Farle K. Paxton Horace W. Phillips William F. Riser A. T. Robinson Benjamin T. Smith A. D. Somerville ) 1906 Charles LeRoy Syron T Agent F. R. Crawford eae Donors 21 Amount $545.00 1908-L Courtney S. Carpenter Agent Martin B. O’Sullivan James R. Caskie Brent E. Clark Francis R. Crawford L. J. Desha Walter H. Dunlap J. W. Eggleston M. Milton Herman W.L. Hoge Claude P. Light B. J. Mayer David W. Pipes Henry Claude Pobst Ira T. Ritenour A. W. Rutan John E. Scott R. B. Spindle J. Robert Switzer Henry C. Tillman Donors 7 Amount $157.50 Dozier A. DeVane Hiram M. Dow A. B. McMullen John W. Newman Martin B. O’Sullivan George Ej. Penn, Jr. Roscoe B. Stephenson 1909-A C. T. Chenery John W. Claudy S. G. Coe Crowell T. Dawkins W. T. Delaplaine K. W. Denman Samuel D. Eggleston Samuel M. Engelhardt John J. Forrer Charles S. Glasgow Devall L. Gwathmey Amos Lee Harold Carl Hinton J. P. Irwin Sorsby Jemison Joseph T. Lykes W. E. Moreland Oscar Randolph Price Elliott Vawter Levi Thomas Wilson 1909-L Agent Melvin E. Cruser Donors 10 Amount $430.00 L. J. Boxley Charles Irving Carey Melvin E.. Cruser Henry Lester Hooker Morton L. Lazarus Guyte P. McCord Samuel R. Marks Reuben Ragland Daniel K. Sadler Beirne Stedman Walter McDonald M. H. Myerson Orange W. Richardson Wilber L,. Tilden 1911-A Agent Henry W. Dew Donors 28 Amount $645.00 1910-A Agent Branson L. Wood* Donors25 Amount $1413.92 Rayford W. Alley L. W. Baker James M. Bell Joseph R. Blackburn Lawrence M. Collins Frank Young Conner Hamilton A. Derr L. B. Dutrow Charles I. Dwiggins Wyatt C. Hedrick P. A. Herscher Robert S. Hutcheson Albert S. McCown James N. Montgomery Philip W. Murray Ryland T. Phelps Edward Lee Potter James W. Rader Charles P. Robinson Robert B. Stotler C. W. Streit John H. Tucker Elton Watkins Hugh M. Witt Branson L. Wood* James Paxton Barclay Cassius A. Boone O. H. Breidenbach E. E. Brown Michael Brown Owen Dyer Colaw Lewis G. Cooper Henry W. Dew John T. Gray, Jr. F. P. Guthrie Courtney S. Henley John G. Herndon, Jr. L. L. Humphreys Frederick Short Johnson James G. Johnston Holmer W. King Henry C. McGavack Clements M. McMullen Ulen G. Medford Henry Moncure A. M. Mutersbaugh W. Trent Neel Richard C. Overby Samuel O. Pruitt William A. Reid Elijah Rinehart C. W. Tharpe A. T. West 1911-L Daniel B. Straley Amount $240.00 Agent Donors 13 Benjamin P. Ainsworth George M. Alexander Emmett W. Barger Frank C. Bedinger James W. Bruce Rosser J. Coke Omer T. Kaylor Fitzhugh B. Richardson S. B. Schein* Donald T. Stant Daniel B. Straley J. Thomas Watson Roger M. Winborne 1912-A Agent Tom Glasgow Donors 27. =Amount $1435.00 Carl Hinton Amount $845.00 Agent Donors 23 L,. C. Caldwell John L. Campbell A. H. Chandler WASHINGTON AND LEE UNIVERSITY 1910-L Agent M. H. Myerson Donors 8 Amount $390.00 David W. Farman Hugh R. Hawthorne Walter M. Hood Harry J. Lemley John David Ankrom Harry Minor Butler George L,. Coyle Lloyd R. Craighill Burton F. Deaver Howard A. Doss Isadore Forman Thomas M. Glasgow Cecil Gray Arlos J. Harbert Freeman H. Hart Charles C. Henshaw James Orlando Hodgkin William Newton Hodgkin 13 Abner H. Hopkins J. Frank Key Edward Lyons William M. Miller C. Lee Ordeman Daniel B. Owen* Leonard B. Ranson Frank R. Ruff Otho Shuford James Somerville William L. Webster Wallace P. Willson W. Graham Wood 1912-L Byron L. Ballard* Amount $305.00 Agent Donors 12 Byron L. Ballard* John F. Chatfield Robert C. Dow R. Wayne Ely L. E. Goldman Francis J. Heazel Alonzo G. Lively Clare Harding Marstiller John Samuel Sherertz William J. Wilcox Clayton EF. Williams Russell B. Wine 1913-A Fred W. McWane Amount $1340.00 Agent Donors 30 Paul C. Buford Paul D.Converse George G. Craddock* John L,. Crist Herman P. Davidson Edward S. Delaplaine R. R. Witt W.H. Womeldorf Anonymous 1913-L S. L. Fellers Amount $260.00 Agent Donors 13 Thomas R. Bandy Beverley D. Causey Ryland G. Craft E,. C. Dickerson S. L. Fellers Charles E. Hunter Thurston L. Keister* Henry Wise Kelly Howard P. Macfarlane S. W. Maytubby Junius W. Pulley Howard L,. Robinson Thomas F. Walker 1914-A Agent Paul J. B. Murphy Donors 60 Amount $2662.00 Clarence R. Avery John L. Baber W. Houston Barclay Henry N. Barker Roger J. Bear Warren C. Brown William M. Brown Daniel C. Buchanan Buford S. Burks Henry P. Carrington Robert C. Colhoun Eugene B. Cooper L. Berkeley Cox Fred M. Davis Lewis ‘I’. Davis Egbert B. Doggett Classes Receiving Largest Amount of Money 1931-A Ln... ccecseeeeees Lawton M. Calhoun...............0.0..0... 2,549.00 1912-A Qn... ec cccceeeeeees Tom Glasgow. ..........ccccccsssessteeseeees 1,435.00 1910-A Qo. ees Branson L. Wo0d%.............cccccceees 1,413.92 1913-A. eee Fred W. McWan..............ccccsscceeeees 1,340.00 Benjamin F. Fiery Philip P. Gibson Carter Glass, Jr. William T. Hanzsche S. Bernie Harper William A. Hyman Edison C. Jalonick Thomas S. Kirkpatrick Fred W. McWane Carl C. Moore Harry EF. Moran Henry E. Peeples John P. Richardson Solon Clifton Rose Alexander Sloan Richard A. Smith Marion A. Stevenson W. Taylor Thom, Jr. Walter Lowrie Tucker Lewis Twyman Adrian Williamson 14, Walter H. Eager James M. Farrar Lee R. Grabill, Jr. Alex M. Hitz Robert P. Hobson Joseph Goodloe Jackson George Kerns Samuel O. Laughlin, Jr. | Nash LeGrand Wtf Arthur W. McCain Thomas C. McCallie R. S. McClintock R. B. McKnight Morris L,. Masinter Vann M. Matthews Francis P. Miller Paul J. B. Murphy M. F. Null, Jr. Leon O’ Quin John Oscar Prentiss Clarence L. Sager Julian W. Selig John Wesley Shiles W. H. Shirey Ray S. Smith John Edwin Wayland Walter J. Wilkins Davis B. Winfrey Walter Gray Womble In Memoriam Charles C. Riticor Joseph M. Bauserman William P. B. Bell William B. Snyder Thomas 8. White, Jr. Theodore G. Leap Bruce W. Rutrough Thomas M. Wood, Jr. Isham T. Bagley Walter R. Browder Edward M. Eutsler Charles B. Gates Herbert R. Hereford Daniel Mohler Ike Saks 1914-L Agent J. Carlton Hudson Donors 10 Amount $170.00 R. Lee Beuhring A. C. Buchanan Stephen F. Chadwick J. Carlton Hudson William T. Lovins Ernest S. Merrill C. H. Morrissett Junius L. Powell Kennon C. Whittle Samuel H. Williams 1915-A Agent Madison P. Coe Donors 22 Amount $557.00 Robert P. Adams Leslie S. Anderson Charles R. Beall James E.. Bear John G. Boatwright J. A. Burke Madison P. Coe Richard W. Fowlkes Woodson P. Houghton Morgan Keaton Samuel G. Keller Rupert N. Latture Charles T. Lile Samuel Earl Oglesby George R. Shaw | William H. Smith Taylor H. Stukes Charles M. Switzer Atwood M. Wash Francis A. Weatherford Ki Williams Clarence E. Womble William FE. Crank Leon W. Harris Loring C. Kackley W. A. Keleher William C. Little W. Guy Laughon William Henry Oast K. L. Shirk Isaac D. Smith Herman Ulmer 1916-A E. B. Shultz Amount $443.00 Agent Donors 19 A. L. Bennett L. B. Bagley C. Lynch Christian David A. Falk Horner C. Fisher Wiley D. Forbus R. P. Hawkins H. P. Magruder John G. C. Myers Emory G. Nusz William C. Raughley Russell S. Rhodes Maurice B. Ridenour J. C. Rivers H. M. Rowan Edwin B. Shultz Lorentz T. White Bruce F. Woodruff C. Edmund Worth 1916-L Agent Earl B. Rose Donors 23 Amount $227.00 Clarence J. Brown J. E. Buckley Parker W. Buhrman W. Henderson Estes Norvin C. Evans Grady H. Forgy Howard C. Hicks Lycurgus Hyre Robert S. Kime H. J. Kiser Samuel P. Kohen Seldon S. McNeer John Rives Manning E.. 5. Marshall Clyde H. Miller Thomas A. Myles James A. Oast V.L. Page Earl B. Rose Paul R. Scott George D. Shore, Jr. Hunter M. Shumate G. S. Watson 1917-A Agent William O. Burtner Donors 27. Amount $1165.00 1915-L Agent C. C. Chambers Donors 12 Amount $245.00 Arthur M. Birdsall C. C. Chambers Paul Dryden Barns Henry J. Blackford W.H. Brandon William O. Burtner Robert M. Campbell THE ALUMNI MAGAZINE Jackson R. Collins William J. Cox R. Glenn Craig John Levering Early Frank J. Gilliam Edward Lee Hix Homer A. Jones James A. Lee Robert B. McDougle R. Bruce Morrison A. G. Paxton Paul D. Pickens Milton B. Rogers Marion $. Sanders Edward S. Smith Charles R. Stribling, Jr. Marshall G. Twyman T. C. Waters W. Calvin Wells T. Preston White John L. Williams H. K. Young 1917-L Agent John Seybert Hansel Donors 12 Amount $205.00 Emory Powell Barrow Harry V. Campbell Gabriel de la Haba John S. Hansel Claude R. Hill Robert R. Kane Gus Ottenheimer Charles G. Peters Clarence B. Robertson Herbert Grooms Smith S. Steiner Smith William B. Yancey 1918 Agent Adolph Sim Marx Donors 29 Amount $542.00 Harry Mitchum Adams James C. Ambler Raymond M. Bear A. B. Bowman E. V. Bowyer Edwin T. Boyd Lyon Wright Brandon Edmund D. Campbell A. Carter Crymble John Morton Eggleston George M. Hearne, Jr. Fulton Wright Hoge Homer A. Holt James Lewis Howe, Jr. Robert Victor Ignico James J. Izard Ray H. Jarvis John L. McChord George P. Macatee, Jr. Adolph S. Marx Samuel E. Moreton, Jr. Matthew W. Paxton Homer Powell Lewis A. Raulerson Robert W. S. Schulz Murray C. Shoun Otto M. Stumpf Francis H. Styles Virgil J. Trotter, Jr. 1919 1921-A Agent J. W. Cook, Jr. Agent John L. Patterson Donors 27 Amount $780.00 Donors 17 Amount $200.00 Samuel A. Anderson, Jr. Samuel H. Baker Willie F. Barron John T. Bate Leonard T. Brown Barry N. Buford W. Roy Campbell J. W. Cook, Jr. Arthur M. Cromwell T. Dewey Davis T. H. Evans James R. Fain W.M. Farrar, Jr. Henry P. Forker, Jr. Gus A. Fritchie Thomas W. Gilliam, II Irving May Lynn Henry King McCormick George T. Madison Norman P. Miller James Edward Moore Ralph EF. Moore C. Houston Patterson ‘Clifford McC. Peale M. Porter Sutton Giles S. Terry Reid White* 1920-A Agent Robert E. Baumgardner Donors 26 Amount $377.00 Daniel Blain Albert D. Burk Jack M. Darden, Jr. Morton Felsenthal H. Gray Funkhouser William A. Gibbons Homer F,. Henderson David D. Johnson Robert G. Kelly John L. Patterson Frank M. Pollock Samuel L. Raines David C. Storey J. H. T. Sutherland Franklin M. Thompson Joseph P. Treccase Edward L. Westbrooke, Jr. James P. Mattox L. W. Milbourne Charles H. Miller Troy C. Musselwhite J. Lindsey Patton W.J.L. Patton W. Frank Portlock Dewey A. Reynolds Bennett F. Roberts Samuel E. Rogers Huston St. Clair F. A. Sutherland W.H. Trotter Wilford B. Webb W. Albert Williams, Jr. 1922-L Agent R. Bleakley James Donors 6 Amount $65.00 Edgar Jackson Classes Receiving Largest Number of Contributors John Baxter Atkins Edward Gee Bailey R. FE. Baumgardner John C. Blocker Cecil B. Burns Randolph M. Cabell James W. Callison Willis M. Everett, Jr. John Glen Evins, Jr. James P. Hill, Jr. William Erskine Johnston Charles Edgar Kievlan C. Howard McCain* James W. McKown Ott R. Magruder Harry L. Moore George S. Mueller William Franklin Parker Kenneth C. Patty E. W. Poindexter Herbert $. Powell Shirley J. Robbins Randolph T. Smith Thomas M. Stubbs Henry Ford Trotter Robert Hence Young 1920-L Agent Donors 6 Max R. Broudy Amount $165.00 Max R. Broudy John W. Drye, Jr. Joseph T. Engleby, Jr. Joseph M. Glickstein Pinkney Grissom Eldon P. King WASHINGTON AND LEE UNIVERSITY 1939-A Lo... eccccceceeeeees Charles G. Gilmore................cccccceeeeeeeeees 69 1914-A. occ cceeeeees Paul J. B. Murphy............ccccccceeeeeeeeees 60 1937-A..... cece Clark B. Winter... ccccccccesseeeeeneees 59 1931-A..... ee Lawton M. Calhoun.................ccccceseeseeeeeees 50 1933-A.Q... ee cceecccegeeeeeees Luther F. Violett... cccccceceeseeeeeees 50 1921-L R. Bleakley James A. J. Lubliner Agent J. Edward Moyler W. E. Neblett Donors 21 Amount $280.00 Love Bonham Rouse John Franklin Bain Beverly Hunter Barrow John Bell James W. Blanks Philo Coco Daniel Boone Dawson Joe Witcher Dingess James William Dupree Howard Kemper Gibbons Carl E. L. Gill Roy J. Grimley Benjamin F. Howard Carlton E. Jewett J. Edward Moyler Fred C. Parks James L,. Shaver Austin B. Taylor Daniel A. Taylor William M. Tuck Torrence Wolford R. C. Wood, Jr. 1922-A W. J. L. Patton Amount $623.00 Agent Donors 26 Andrew E. Amick Carter N. Bealer Robert M. Bear Charles M. Campbell Guy Campbell John Ward Child James A. Cranford Garland Gray Charles O. Handley Robert Spencer Leonard William F. McCann George W. Taliaferro 1923-A Agent Jay W. McDonald Donors 21 Amount $265.50 Edward Aull, Jr. John H. Bonner Thomas J. Ellis Robert M. Frew George E.. Harris F. B. Hurt Weldon T. Kilmon A. J. Lester Joseph R. Long William W. Lynn Jay W. McDonald French R. McKnight K. D. McMillan George C. Mason David H. Matson L,. S. Meriwether Douglas S. Perry F. Lyle Sattes D. Raymond Snively T. M. Wade Frank L. Wall 1923-L Agent Donors 8 John J. Hudak Amount $130.00 Robert H. Carr Barron O. Faulconer George T. Holbrook Homer A. Holt John J. Hudak 15 Bernard R. Kennedy Alfred L. McCarthy John G. Ragsdale 1924-A Agent William Hellier Donors 35 Amount $1273.11 E. Almer Ames Carl Fred Carlson Thomas Henry Clay, III John T. Collins Walter A. Flick James Wyatt French Edward D. Gibson Edwin J. Gibson John G. Guerrant William Hellier J. F. Hendon Edwin H. Howard Otis W. Howe James Blanchard Huff, Jr. Raleigh M. Jenkins, Jr. Henry W. Jones William P. Kirkman Howard D. Leake James V. Logan, Jr. Joe S. McMath George S. Mercke, Jr. R. Turner Merritt Edward R. Mitchell P. W. Peden Charles H. Phillips James B. Price James F. Riley, Jr. H. O. Shropshire Charles S. Stone Frank C. Switzer John N. Thomas Norfleet Turner James W. Wilkinson John Higgins Williams Charles H. Wilson 1924-L Charles A. Cohen Amount $270.00 Agent Donors 14 Charles A. Cohen William Clyde Dennis John W. Greene Alfred Hundley Griffith J. Melvin Lovelace Baynard L. Malone, Jr. M. P. Matheney Edward L. Oast Sinclair Phillips Ira M. Quillen Thomas E,. Schneider Harry Lysle Shuey Louis H. Towbes Charles A. Tutwiler 1925-A Thomas M. Harman Amount $1216.00 Agent Donors 39 C. T. Altfather Newton Reid Black Robert Floyd Bolling, Jr. W.E. Brock, Jr. Calvin T. Burton R. L. Claterbaugh Ollinger Crenshaw 16 W. J. Driver, Jr. Richard Fritz Charles L. Gaines, Jr. Bruce F. Gannaway Abe Goodman, Jr. R. F. Goodrich Thomas M. Harman Archie R. Hawkins Charles S. Heilig Joseph M. Holt Marvin F. Hummer Murrel D. Klein V.J. Kreienbaum Henry F. McMillan E. S. Mattingly Edward Matz W. Carroll Mead Frank Taylor Mitchell Byron Chauncy Mohler Herbert Pollack Charles W. Rex H. Edward Rietze, Jr. Wilson M. Roach William A. Robertson R. W. Rochette Andrew T. Roy Allen Rushton Greenberry Simmons Harold St. John Allan P. Sloan William L. Woolfolk In Memoriam William Nevyn Rankin 1925-L Agent George T. Clark Donors 12 Amount $175.00 M. F. Baugher Sam Bucholtz George T. Clark, Jr. Luther L. Copley Dimitri G. Eristoff Linsay R. Henry Clarence E. Hinkle Dorsey O. Mitchell William Edward Moore John C. Morrison Perry A. Norman George 8. Wilson 1926-A John T. Martin Thomas T. Moore E. A. Morris Marshall A. Mott Eugene A. Nabors Thomas R. Nichols Paul M. Schuchart Ernest L. Smith Carl J. Wallin Louis FE. Wice George B. Wilkinson W. Burke Williamson Henry M. Wilson 1926-L J. Kay Thomas Amount $105.00 Agent Donors 8 William H. Boyer W. Hill Brown, Jr. Nelson Lake Ralph Masinter Andrew A. Payne J. Kay Thomas W. E. Tilson Karl L. Valentine 1927-A Leigh D. Bulluck Amount $664.75 Agent Donors 29 Edward Felsenthal Amount $751.00 Agent Donors 32 Fred C. Bear James T’. Bernheim Henry Martin Brown, Jr. Nelson W. Burris A. R. Coleman Ralph I. Daves John M. Dozier, Jr. Lee O. Fagan Edward Felsenthal Thomas P. Foley Rufus A. Fulton George T. W. Hendrix Walk Claridge Jones, Jr. Carl B. Knight C. Carter Lee Henry Lee Charles W. Lowery Richard W. Livingston Emmett W. MacCorkle Richard S. Barnett, Jr. Joseph FE. Birnie Leigh D. Bulluck George FE. Burks Clay B. Carr Garland T. Davis Kenneth A. Durham George T. Ellis Robert T. Foree, Jr. Isadore Ginsburg Allen Harris, Jr. Thomas L. Harris Fanning M. Hearon Zeb H. Herndon Wilmot H. Kidd Joe L. Lanier Gossett W. McRae J. Preston Moore Roy G. Nichols William M. Pope Harry C. Rand Luther H. Redcay Zack B. Rogers, Jr. Robert Taylor Herbert W. Virgin, Jr. H. D. Voorhees J. P. White, Jr. David H. Wice J. C. Wilbourn 1927-L Euchlin D. Reeves Amount $230.00 Agent Donors 10 John S. Letcher Charles W. Lewis George F. Maynard Euchlin D. Reeves L. S. Stemmons John Strickler George D. Varney G. Carlton Walters Rhea Whitley Gibson Witherspoon 1928-A Agent William C. Norman Donors 45 Amount $980.25 . J. W. Alderson, Jr. Walter D. Bach R. Alexander Bate, Jr. Samuel A. Bloch A. C. Boisseau A. P. Bondurant Charles FE. Branham Lester A. Brown Bern K. Bullard, Jr. G. H. Carr, Jr. Ernest S. Clarke, Jr. Percy Cohen David P. Comegys Lovejoy Comegys J. B. Copper John Q. Dickinson G. Waldo Dunnington Virgil A. Fisher Wilton M. Garrison Julius Goldstein Wilmot L. Harris Charles J. Holland Virginius V. Hollomon Gerald F. Horine Reed Johnston Joseph J. Kaplan W. J. Luria W.C. Magruder, Jr. John McKimmy John G. McClure John Maher Harry Bryan Neel William C. Norman A. W. Pierpont J. Davis Reed, Jr. Frontis W. Sherrill Philip D. Sprouse Charles A. Strahorn Edward M. Streit H. K. Tayloe Burnell B. Tips Thomas Fuller Torrey, IT G. E. Wainscott Thomas A. Wilkins Stuard A. Wurzburger 1928-L Agent T. B. Bryant Donors 8 Amount $150.00 T. B. Bryant George O. Clarke Irvin W. Cubine Paul FE. Daugherty R. W. Jordon, Jr. J. L, Lancaster Rhydon C. Latham William P. Woodley 1929-A Agent George H. Goodwin Donors 49 Amount $926.00 Robert S. Bacon W. J.D. Bell J. Garnett Berry Worthington Brown THE ALUMNI MAGAZINE James A. Castner W. F. Chandler Benjamin C. Eastwood Hugh David Ebert Earl A. Fitzpatrick E. Lee Gamble H. FE. Godwin George H. Goodwin William M. Hinton Henry P. Johnston G. R. Ladd, Jr. George H. Lanier, Jr. Robert B. Lee J. E. Lewis, Jr. Joe L. Lockett, Jr. W.B. Lott Graham N. Lowdon A. L. McCardell, Jr. William A. MacDonough E. F. Madison Charles D. Mercke Allen B. Morgan Harry H. Newberry E. H. Ould William W. Pace J. J. Phillips Lewis F. Powell, Jr. Fred C. Proctor John S. Ragland James J. Salinger Earnest E. Saunders Irwin T. Sanders A. A. Schlossberg James M. Shackelford J. Miller Sherwood O. Norris Smith J. W. Tankard | Finley Waddell William C. Watson Perry C. Whitlock Walter H. Wilcox Robert H. Williams Clyde H. Wilson George M. Wright Thomas P. Wright 1929-L Agent S. J. Thompson Donors 4 Amount $45.00 Philip R. Becker Charles L. Claunch Samuel J. Thompson John Bell Towill 1930-A Howerton Gowen Gerard E.. Grashorn Edward S. Graves Stanley F. Hampton Abner M. Harvey W.H. Hawkins Herbert G. Jahncke Murrel H. Kaplan Kenneth L. Keil Gregg Kurth Charles Irving Lewis John P. Lynch James W. McDill Robert V. May James B. Merrick Gus Edward Mitchell, Jr. H. Graham Morison Russell O. Morrow S. R. Nichols G. D. Vermilya Merle Suter Claude Edgar White H. L. Williams, Jr. 1930-L Agent Maurice J. Arnd Donors 10 Amount $110.00 Maurice J. Arnd E.. I. Bostwick Leonard H. Davis Hubert L. Echols M. E. Padgett, Jr. William Watts Palmer B. L. Rawlins, Jr. Thomas D. Shumate F. L. Shipman W. A. Ward, Jr. 1931-A Agent Lawton M. Calhoun Donors 50 Amount $2549.00 Robert E. Clapp, Jr. Amount $563.10 Agent Donors 37 W. T. Alsop George F. Ashworth V.J. Barnett Julian H. Black Joe C. Broadus L. P. Brown, III Henry F. Bullard Robert E.. Clapp, Jr. George B. Craddock J. W. Davis R. W. Davis, Jr. Frank O. Evans I. D. Felder, Jr. I. L. Flory Benjamin M. Ayars William Pierce Ballard Frederick M. Barron Leonard C. Borland Watson A. Bowes Frank T. Bready Charles L. Brooks Lawton M. Calhoun Sidney W. Clay David N. Conn Harris J. Cox Robert B. Fangboner Bernard B. Gottlieb Elbert E. Hall Huger T. Hall J. J. Henderson, Jr. O. Kenneth Hickman Paul Allen Hornor George H. Jenkins Eugene Johnson William L. Jones George Junkin W. B. Laing T. C. Lancaster Herbert B. Luria, III E. E. McCarthy Duncan McConnell John O. McNeel Henry R. Mahler John Kell Martin, Jr. William T. Martin, Jr. WASHINGTON AND LEE UNIVERSITY Houston M. Minniece Lloyd A. Myers, Jr. John W. Myrose Gilmore N. Nunn W. V. Rucker Stuart Sanders, II Myron A. Schrantz Daniel Sherby George H. Snyder John M. Stemmons John Hansford Thomas Wallace N. Tiffany L,. Alexander Vance R. M. D. Wagers John Overby Watkins, Jr. Harold Mayer Weston Addison T. Whitt, Jr. Walter F. Williams Charles Edward Wright 1931-L Agent R. J. Thrift, Jr. Donors 7 Amount $155.00 Ethan Allen Horace Gooch, Jr. Walter E. Hoffman James B. Martin John C. Smith Robert J. Thrift Manuel M. Weinberg 1932-A Collas G. Harris Amount $730.00 Agent Donors 45 Bernard Spector Jack J. Stark Harold J. Sullivan Earle Freeman Wicke Sherwood Willing Wise Paul H. Wofford, Jr. John W. Zimmerman 1932-L Agent Martin P. Burks Donors 13 Amount $190.00 Martin P. Burks Paul Holstein Hannibal Neal Joyce Henry W. MacKenzie, Jr. Rosser L. Malone Wayne H. Mathis Jack M. Matthews Albert G. Peery, Jr. Lloyd H. Richmond James Surget Shields James D. Sparks George A. Speer Charles A. Wood, Jr. Morris W. Adelson C. Edmonds Allen, Jr. John Willis Ball Samuel Barasch Frank H. Brady Malcolm D. Campbell, Jr. Everett N. Cross Frank H. Cunningham Charles H. Davidson Paul O. Dickey William C. Edwards Eli Fink Hunter B. Frischkorn, Jr. John Goadby Hamilton Collas G. Harris John C. Harris Robert K. Hoadley John Robert Hornor | William D. Hoyt, Jri; ~ W. Kemper Jennings ~ Z. V. Johnson, Jr. F William C. Kimbrell Thomas N. Layne James E.. Leslie John Surles Lewis Charles E. Long, Jr. Charles C. Love Harry L. McCarthy Roy L. McKinney James Walter McLaurin Jack G. Marks George W. Morse Edwin A. Nesbitt Henry William Northup David George Price Robert William Reinhold Charles F. Richardson Randolph T. Shields, Jr. 1933-A Agent Luther F. Violett Donors 50 Amount $695.00 Harold B.Abramson Henry F. Arnold Edwin Henry Bacon Joe F. Bear T. Deale Blanchard Shelby W. Blatterman J. Vernon Brantley Irving Buck Bricken William J. Brooks, Jr. Frank EF. Calhoun Edwin Wilson Chittum James Fred Cook John Alexander Culley Theodore Morrison Curtis Jeb $. Darby, Jr. William Todd DeVan Richard T. Edwards Burton A. Farber William H. Flowers H. D. Foote,Jr. L. M. Garrison John Griffiths Ralph O. Harvey, Jr. Paul EF. Holbrook Eben Jackson Robert Kaplan Howell Arthur Lamar Claude A. LaVarre Ernest F. Leathem, Jr. Robert G. Livengood William Franklin Methvin Ed Miller Robert A. Morris, Jr. E. Marshall Nuckols, Jr. Edmund Blaine Rannells, Jr. Homer Gene Ray J. Rucker Ryland Ira H. Samelson Robert R. Smith Charles F. Suter Allen Dale Symonds William Fowler Symonds Walter E. Vermilya Luther F. Violett John F. Watlington Stanley Daum Waxberg 17 Wallace Werble William H. H. Wertz Joseph B. Wharton Allen Wofford 1933-L Agent Donald K. Crawford Donors 13 Amount $170.00 Copeland E. Adams Henry M. Bandy, Jr. Donald K. Crawford Raymond Cundiff Bernard B. Davis John L. Ericson Joseph Jerome Framptom George Joseph H. Cavett Robert William F. Stone George H. Strouse, Jr. James Hoge Tyler Clifton A. Woodrum, Jr. 1934-A Agent Robert B. Shively Donors 35 Amount $565.00 Norwood E.. Band John D. Battle, Jr. Robert L. Buffington J. Duncan Burn John H. Cooke Rugeley P. DeVan, Jr. Walter J. Dixon Holmes M. Dyer Robert C. Dyer Malcolm G. O. Forsyth George H. Foster Joseph Marcus Friedman Fred O. Funkhouser Richard W. Grafton Claude Harrison, Jr. 1934-L 1936-A Agent Robert Bailey Agent Hugh J. Bonino Donors 5 Amount $105.00 Donors40 = Amount $624.00 Thomas D. Anderson Robert D. Bailey Thornton G. Berry, Jr. Henry Taylor Jones Clarence S. Worrell 1935-A Agent Grier Wallace, Jr. Donors 33 Amount $448.00 Clarence Ogden Carmen Edward W. Chappell, Jr. Joseph A. Clemmer Thomas Luther Coley, Jr. Robert F. Cooper, Jr. William Purnell Diggs Mecislaus Richard Dunaj Norman S. Fitzhugh, Jr. William R. Fox Clifford Jerome Freund William Borton Gabb George R. Glenn Thomas Clayton Horsey, Jr. Sidney Lyons William Duncan McDavid George J. McGeary Thomas Walker Mehler Gus Morgan Robert Sylvester Munger Henry L. Ravenhorst Harry Moore Rhett, Jr. William Schuhle, Jr. George Edward Short Charles C. Smith W. Chamberlain Smith William Rogers Sphar, Jr. Academic Classes Having Largest Percent of Contributors 1914-A... ee Paul J. B. Murphy........ cc eeeeeeees 53% 1903 aoceecceeesseteees William J. Turner... eee 45% 1904 i eeeeeeeees S. W. Schaefer... cece cccceeesssneeeeeees 43% 1906 - ooeccceccccescceevceedes FB. R. Crawford. ccccccccccccceeeeees 32% 1909-A.Q.... eee Carl Hinton... cececssccccesseceees 32% William Tousey Homberg Joseph Carl Muller, Jr. Foster M. Palmer Neil Campbell Pascoe George William Pedigo, Jr. George Washington Price Harvey Pride George L. Reynolds Rowan S. Robinson Robert W. Ruth William R. Schildknecht Robert Bruce Shively John Ford Shroder Joel S. Snyder George Marvin Spaulding William S. Stern John H. Thomas Arthur C. Tonsmeire, Jr. Everette Tucker, Jr. Joseph Walker W. Charles Walkinshaw 18 John D. Spohr Frederick de Rossett Strong I. Grier Wallace, Jr. Donald Reiter Wallis Evan L. Watkins Karl P. Willard James S. Woods, Jr. 1935-L Agent William L. Wilson Donors 8 Amount $155.00 John W. Ball Rudolph Bumgardner Early C. Clements Edwin T. Coulbourn James D. Finley, II John Meredith Graham, Jr. Thomas C. Smith William Louis Wilson Leigh Brisco Allen, Jr. Hugh J. Bonino Edward S. Boze James Stewart Buxton Donald Clark, Jr. W. Magruder Drake John Godolphin Fry, Jr. Harry George, Jr. William W. Gerber Richard M. Gumm Joseph H. Harding George W. Harrison Paul G. Hervey Omar L,. Hirst William Bailey Hoofstitler Kenneth P. Lane John D. Locke Kenneth G. MacDonald Edward Lee Markham Robert Fulton Middlekauff Joseph John Pette E. Angus Powell Alfred Marvin Pullen, Jr. John H. Renken, Jr. Louis Albert Samstag, Jr. Richard Thomas Scully Jacob $. Seligman Isaac Glenn Shively Charles A. Sweet, Jr. Ben Anderson Thirkield Joe Burghard Thomas Charles Awdry Thompson Edward A. Turville Tyree Francis Wilson James Warren Wright In Memoriam Ralph John Bishop Barclay Hugh Dillon, Jr.» Robert Edward Holland, Jr. Oscar Richard Fletcher, Jr. Charles Willis Wilkerson Kent Forster Robert Edwin Graham Charles Kelsey Hauke Norman P. Iler Earle W. Jennings Robert Percy Kingsbury Sidney Kirsch William Alvin Landreth Walter G. Lehr, Jr. William T. Long George W. Lowry Albert Lustbader John Malcolm McCardell Harold C. Magoon Frederick Arell Marsteller Everett A. Martin C. Arnold Matthews Robert Marsteller Peek, Jr. Jack Bradley Pierce Theodore McFaddin Plowden Robert Ricketts Radcliff Albert Atlee Radcliffe Lamar C. Rau Edward Gordon Rawls Kelley E. Reed, Jr. James H. Rice, Jr. Maurice Cowl Rider Howell Watkin Roberts, Jr. Charles Edwin Roth Parke S. Rouse, Jr. Norman Cutler Smith A. Erskine Sproul Archibald A. Sproul, ITI Walter G. Thomas Souther F. Tompkins Latham Burrows Weber Philip Weinsier William C. Wilbur, Jr. Charles M. Williams Frank Jefferson Williams, Jr. Lewis Daniel Williams, Jr. Fillmore Gilkeson Wilson Laurence White Wilson, Jr. Clark B. Winter 1937-L Agent Edwin M. Marks Donors 15 Amount $340.00 1936-L Agent William Lewis Martin Donors 3 Amount $30.00 William Lewis Martin John McKnight Miller William Hervey Seaton, Jr. 1937-A Agent Clark B. Winter Donors 59 Amount $849.00 Lynne Morris Atmar Ernest Clifford Barrett, Jr. Stanley Barrows Andrew Herman Baur, Jr. Porter Duane Berry Douglas FE. Brady, Jr. James King Butler Charles A. Butterworth, Jr. Eugene G. Clayton Harley Ernest Cluxton, Jr. Francis D. Crew Emerson Dickman, Jr. Kenneth Gordon Dustin William Clay Dwiggins Paul Fish Joseph L. Arnold James P. Baker, Jr. James Allen Blalock Amos A. Bolen Richard N. Brooke Stanley C. Higgins William P. Higgins, Jr. James A. McClure, Jr. Edwin M. Marks Harry T. Moreland William H. Robinson Isadore M. Scott Edward E. Stover John A. Wagner David B. Wharton 1938-A Agent Charles F. Clarke, Jr. Donors 45 Amount $1029.00 Arthur H. Alexander Robert M.Basile Thomas Newan Berry Chandler Price Berryman Charles P. Blackledge Albert Compton Borders, Jr. THE ALUMNI MAGAZINE John M. Capito Charles F. Clarke, Jr. Herbert C. Clendening Gurley Newton Cox William Henry Daniel Paul Harold Darsie James M. Davidson, Jr. William Herbert Hillier Robert William Hilton, Jr. William Henry Hudgins Frank Jones, Jr. Landon Y. Jones George S. Kemp, Jr. Frank McClintock Kubler GeraldM. Lively Sam Parker McChesney, Jr. Floyd R. Mays, Jr. Gilbert Simrall Meem John Willis Merritt, II Paul M. Miller Fred Murray Moran Alfred Milton Morrison Harry M. Philpott H. Ashton Powell Charles Alvin Prater John Wesley Ray Ted Hayes Riggs Emmett A. Sartor, Jr. Jacob Chester Shively Charles R. Skinner William Saxby Tavel Calvert Thomas Everett Sidney Vaughn, Jr. Robert Cosmo Walker Paul Rhodes Whipp Chester Patchen White Victor Herbert Witten In Memoriam John Southgate Y. Hoyt Robert Harry Thomas 1938-L Hal Clarke Amount $100.00 Agent Donors 9 Cyrus Victor Anderson Thomas Hal Clarke Joseph T. Drake, Jr. Charles W. Karraker Leonard Leight Samuel A. Martin Waldo Garland Miles Frank Leib Price William L. Wilson, Jr. 1939-A Agent Charles G. Gilmore Donors 69 Amount $1203.50 Robert S. Allen Luther N. Bagnal, Jr. William Henry Baldock Arthur E. Basile Edgar A. Basse, Jr. Alexander W. Blain, III Thomas William Bradley, Jr. Robert A. Brower | Thomas Richard Bryant Thornton Ritenour Cleek Richard E. Clements Joseph Scott Crowder John J. Davis, Jr. Randolph Marshall Duncan Robert R. Dodderidge Robert Lee Early, Jr. Andrew M. Eastwick, Jr. Warren Hardin Edwards James Wilson Fishel Sherwin B. French John Bryce Furr John F. Ganong Charles G. Gilmore Frank Oliver Glenn, Jr. Frank M. Hankins Waller Cecil Hardy, Jr. Charles R. Hart Harold Edward Harvey Harry Preston Henshaw, Jr. Oliver William Hickel, Jr. William Roy Hogan, Jr. Richard F. Holden Henry Ruffin Horne Donald Bruce Houghton Robert Stephens Hoyt Robert Palmer Ingram, Jr. Christoph Keller, Jr. William H. Kibler, Jr. Alfred R. Kreimer Charles K. Latus John Reynolds LeBus William L. Leopold Charles P. Lykes Ferdinand P. Maupai John S. Mehler Arthur W. Meyer Robert Earle Milligan, Jr. John Marvine Moore Thomas William Moses George Thomas Myers Craig Walton Newman Frank Breen O’Conner James C. Paera James Waddill Perkinson Victor F. Radcliffe Roland Rowe Remmel Murray Rippe Randolph D. Rouse Richard S. Rude James A. Saltsman, Jr. Ross Pelton Schlabach, Jr. Charles H. Semple, Jr. Edgar Finley Shannon Ellison Adger Smith Ralph Hargraves Smith Edgar Wall Stuart John Hardin Ward, III Saul R. Weinsier Philip K. Yonge 1939-L Fielden Woodward Clifford J. Yudkoff 1940-A Billy V. Ayers Amount $523.00 Agent Donors 37 Joseph C. Murphy Amount $175.00 Agent Donors 20 William S. Ammerman John William Beaire James Vaughan Beale Emil Timmons Cannon Leonard J. DeVita John D. Goodwin Philip M. Grabill John L. Hawkins, II Richard Layman Howell John C. A. MacKenzie Joseph Charles Murphy Martin Vincent Partenope John Bently Pearson Ambrose Alexander Rucker Edgar Lewis Smith Goulding William Swift, Jr. Edward T. Whitehead Thomas A. Williams, Jr. WASHINGTON AND LEE UNIVERSITY Jackson Grover Akin Billy V. Ayers J. A. Billingsley, Jr. Charles E.. Blair Charles Terry Blandford Richard W. Boisseau A. Lea Booth John Spoor Broome Edward Emerson Brown, Jr. Donald Gordon Buck Donald T. Burton George White Chaney, Jr. Uriah F. Coulbourn Paul D. Brown Theodore A. Bruinsma Francis C. Bryan William Buchanan Thomas C. Buford Stephen E. Campbell, Jr. Henry T. Crocker George Richard Day Ernest V. Echols Alvin T. Fleishman Eduard F. Franze N. C. Gilbert Richard M. Herndon Charles Lee Hobson Robert M. Jeter, Jr. Willard Hampton Keland Guy Otis Keller, Jr. Ralph E. Lehr Roger Lewis Levering William J. Longan Joseph T. Lykes, Jr. Law Classes Having Largest Percent of Contributors L9B3]]i....csecsecesceseees deans Donald K. Crawford.............0.0cccccccseeeeeeee 80% 1916 Lye secsdeccsic ick: Hat l -Bi TROSC). occcc.cdiscscccopessececansessetestecesvets 68 % 192264) i.ccsesccscisverdsdece R. Bleakley James.............ccccccecceeeeeeees 67 % 1937s Lisicccccibsiadsisscescsets Edwin M. Mark5...............cccccccccccessceceees 63% 19262122. is ccccvicssecennss James K. Thomae.................0cccccccessssseeeeees 57% Charles C. Curl, Jr. Robert A. Dementi Gilbert Gardner Robert L.Gayle George M. Grasty Charles L. Green, Jr. James Collins Green James W. Hammett Robert C. Hobson Curg H. Hogan Robert S. Hutcheson, Jr. Lee M. Kenna Eugene M. Kramer Charles S. Leonard, Jr. Mervin H. Luria David Kelley McNish, Jr. Franklin A. Nichols George C. Nielsen Charles Orville Turner Charles G. Walker LouisM. Walker William FE. Whaley, Jr. Ernest Woodward, II Latimer G. Young 1940-L Agent W.S. Burns Donors 7 Amount $95.00 Richard A. Mehler Thomas G. Morris James F. Norton Robert C. Peery John T. Perry, Jr. James Hubert Price, Jr. Emil C. Rassman James B. Richardson, Jr. Henry L. Roediger Macey Herschel Rosenthal Frederick Ahrens Rusch Bertram Raymond Schewel William Lee Shannon Arthur C. Smith, Jr. Richard W. Smith William Curtis Soule J.B. Stombock Joseph Gray Street G. S. Suppiger, Jr. Charles G. Thalhimer Latham L. Thigpen, Jr. Clinton Van Vliet Herbert VanVoast Benton M. Wakefield, Jr. Claude Moore Walker Horace W. Bittenbender William S. Burns Edwin J. Foltz John N. Harman, III Leslie D. Price Stanford L. Schewel H. R. Stephenson, Jr. 1941-A 1941-L Agent John E. Perry Donors 8 Amount $142.50 J. B. Stombock Amount $721.50 Agent Donors 48 Alfred T. Bishop, Jr. Thomas W. Brockenbrough Frederick Bartenstein, Jr. Frank C. Bedinger, Jr. Haskell Tyndall Dickinson Charles F. Heiner Ralph Edward Keehn John FE. Perry George Murray Smith, Jr. Allen Thomas Snyder 1942-A Agent Bernie Levin Donors 49 Amount $858.00 19 Colin T. Baxter Adrian L,. Bendheim, Jr. George M. Brooke, Jr. Ned H. Brower Preston Rice Brown Russell G. Browning Robert F. Campbell, Jr. Evan A. Chriss William John Daniel Lanson B. Ditto, Jr. John L. Dorsey Walter G. Downie John A. Embry, Jr. Gustave A. Essig Charlton Thomas Fuller Robert Douglas Gage, III Louis C. Greentree Wilbur B. Hager William B. Hopkins Sidney Isenberg Benjamin Evans Jasper Horace H. Jeter Gene Ray Johnston James L,. Jordan, Jr. Frank L. La Motte Andrew S. Lanier Robert Allison Lawton Beverley W. Lee, Jr. Bernard Levin Giles Connell McCrary J. Aubrey Matthews Dougald McD. Monroe, Jr. Lee D. Parker George Frederick Parton, Jr. Frederick H. Pitzer, Jr. Carter Lee Refo Frederick K. Rippetoe Green Rives, Jr. Robert W. Root Raymond R. Russell Charles Lane Sartor Robert Paul Schellenberg M. T. Simon Richard B. Spindle, IIT Richard H. Turner Robert T. Vaughan Robert C. Walker Leon James Warms, Jr. Robert Wersel 1942-L C. F. Bagley Amount $125.00 Agent Donors 9 Billie Bert Armstrong Charles Frank Bagley, Jr. Elliot Wilson Butts Howard Wesley Dobbins Homer A. Jones, Jr. James Alexander Pine Edmund Schaefer, ITI Clifford Logan Walters Howard W. Wilson 1943 Agent Philip A. Sellers Donors 58 Frank R. Bell Calhoun Bond Robert Bidwell Brainard, Jr. Walter Reese Browder Abe Leon Cahn Theodore R. Ciesla Ralph I. Cohen 20 Amount $565.00. Adelbert B. Conley, Jr. Jay D. Cook, Jr. Louis R. Coulling, Jr. Albert D. Darby, Jr. James Herman Daves, Jr. Ben W. Ditto L. Preston Eager, Jr. Joseph F. Ellis, Jr. Beverly Fitzpatrick Lawrence W. Galloway John W. Goode, Jr. John Bruce Handy, Jr. Hinman Brown Hawks James M. Hutcheson, Jr. Conrad L. Inman, Jr. Robert Francis Johnson S. L. Kopald, Jr. Joseph Edgar Lee Raymond Gordon Long Robert F. MacCachran James Earl McCausland Carl J. McLeod Alexander M. Maish Robert C. Mehorter Fred Thomas Miller Stanley R. Mitchell Barton W. Morris, Jr. Corneal B. Myers Morrison Ray Nelson William Joseph Noonan, Jr. James S. Parsons John N. Peeples George W. Priest William K. Privett Donald lL. Richardson Edwin F. Robb, Jr. I. V. Runyan Paul Eugene Sanders Philip A. Sellers William K. Sevier Kenelm L,. Shirk, Jr. Leo J. Signaigo, Jr. Jay A. Silverstein John W. Stanley Roscoe B. Stephenson, Jr. Lawrence C. Sullivan Ralph S. Taggart Arthur Thompson, Jr. James William Wheater Thomas C. Wilson, Jr. M. Neely Young 1944 Harrison B. Kinney Edward P. Lyons, Jr. James Douglas McLean, Jr. William M. Manger William R. Miller, III Robert H. Moore, Jr. Howard Bell Peabody, Jr. Donald H. Putman, Jr. Byron P. Redman, Jr. Richard Rockwell John Francis Roehl, Jr. Frederick B. Rowe Charles E. Savedge Everett J. Schneider John D. Schofield, ITI Robert H. Seal Gordon Locke Sibley, Jr. Thomas William Sommer James C. Stanfield Neil Ewing Tasher John Wilmot Taylor William B. Van Buren, Jr. W. 8B. Van Gelder Edward C. Waddington, Jr. Lloyd L. Ward, Jr. George T. Wood James Gordon Kincheloe David Lewis George W. St. Clair Moore James A. Ottignon Hugh E. Reams Frederick C. Sage Philip J. Silverstein William E. Triplett Kenneth Henry Wacker Harry W. Wellford Albert H. Woodruff 1947 Agent Philip C. Braunschweig Donors 6. Amount $77.70 Philip C. Braunschweig Robert A. Mosbacher Joseph G. Patrick Joe Lee Silverstein, Jr. William Young Smith Robert Alan Worms 1948-A Fred L. Rush Amount $145.00 Agent Donors 14 1945 Agent Charles S. Rowe Donors 29 Amount $442.00 George T. Wood Amount $570.50 Agent Donors 46 Alvin D. Aisenberg Clarence F.. Ballenger, Jr. E. Lovell Becker William B. Brown William B. Bryan George E.. Calvert C. Lynch Christian, Jr. Edmund A. Donnan, Jr. David R. Embry Robert Ewing James:C. Evans George A. Frehling James P. Gilman Alexander M. Harman, Jr. James William Harman, Jr. Leon W. Harris, Jr. Richard L. Heard Ewing S. Humphreys, Jr. John Pearson Jordon Joseph S. Keelty John B. Atkins, Jr. Robert K. Billingslea, Jr. Don Monroe Casto, Jr. John H. Churchwell, Jr. John L,. Crist, Jr. FE. Dean Finney Walter F.. Frye William B. Geise, Jr. Neal Norton Herndon, Jr. Robert Edward Jackson Roy Johnson, Jr. David L. Jones Henry Wise Kelly, Jr. Myron J. McKee, Jr. Frank Markoe, Jr. Charles Rodman Martin William C. Mowris Ethelbert Graham Norton James Alvin Philpott William V. Richards, Jr. Charles S. Rowe Elliot S. Schewel Willard F. Searle, Jr. Milton H. Smith Charles C. Stieff, IT William W. Tatgenhorst, Jr. Guy Edwin Yaste Henry E. Young Joseph M. Zamoiski, ITI 1946 Agent Donors 21 Harry W. Wellford Amount $305.00 J. H. Baldwin, Jr. Frank C. Brooks Benjamin M. Brown,Jr. John Henry Cheatham, Jr. William Lawrence Garvin Louis R. Hahn, Jr. Guy E. Hairston, Jr. Robert Charles Harter Donald S. Hillman John J. Kelly, III James F. Booker William W. Burton Frederick B. M. Hollyday Irving Joel James F. Kay William F. Leffen Peter C. Lufburrow Selden S. McNeer, Jr. Walter B. Potter Josiah P. Rowe John R. Rugel Fred L. Rush Robert Silverstein George Bruce West 1948-L Agent R. H. Pettus Donors 22 Amount $212.86 Carter R. Allen Paul G. Cavaliere David B. Cofer, Jr. George L. Cowan, ITI Frank J. DiLoreto Howard M. Fender Henry J. Foresman Raymond E.. Freed Jack L. Grossman William McAllum Harrelson Thomas H. Jackson, Jr. Floyd Richard Kuhn James Robinson Lyle Robert Melvin Patterson Reginald H. Pettus Enos Roger Pleasants Andrew Jackson Power, Jr. John Edward Scheifly Robert Kent Smith Benton C. Tolley, Jr. John Randolph Tucker, Jr. Matthew Williamson Watts 1949-A Agent H. Glenn Chaffer Donors 47 Amount $479.00 Henry M. Barker THE ALUMNI MAGAZINE Edward P. Berlin, Jr. Donald M. Bertram Edward L,. Bowie Samuel Marks Boykin, Jr. Dudley Earl Brown, Jr. Robert Gordon Brown David Keller Caldwell Edmund Piper Cancelmo Harvey Glenn Chaffer Richard S. Cooley Paul B. Cromelin, Jr. Peter D. DeBoer Emmett Stuart Epley James Rhea Fain, Jr. F,. McGruder Faris, Jr. James DuBois Farrar William L. Flanagan William Hamilton Harry Harding Henry Houston Hicks Thomas Shepherd Hook, Jr. J. Dale Johnson Edward William King William Edward Latture C. Harold Lauck, Jr. William Hudson Leedy Jack Pendleton Leigh Kenneth Kopf Lindell Daniel James Little Perry Earl Mann, Jr. Harry Thorp Minister, Jr. Paul J. B. Murphy, Jr. Matthew W. Paxton, Jr. Ulysses Bryan Puckett, Jr. Robert Raymond Reid, Jr. Mark Whitney Saurs John Short R. Schoenfeld William Cheney Smith Everette Lester Taylor, Jr. Richard Horton Turrell John William Warner, Jr. Connie Kearfoot Warren, Jr. Stafford Gorman Whittle, III Walter Hodges Williams, Jr. Kenton Anton Williams Ellis Nathaniel Zuckerman In Memoriam Francis Thomas Glasgow, II 1949-L James L. Dow Amount $101.50 Agent Donors 12 William Donald Bain Jack Bertram Coulter Daniel Ward Doggett, Jr. James Leslie Dow Charles Daniel Forrer, Jr. Stanley A. Kamen J. Randolph Larrick Jack Berry Porterfield, Jr. John Champe Raftery John Harlan Reed, Jr. Sam Silverstein Hugh Tabor Verano 1950-A Agent George W. Whitehurst Donors 52 Amount $931.50 Joseph C. Auer ~ Donald Overton Albin Stuart Shyrock Bailey V.O. Barnard John Stephen Chapman Allen Harris Chappel Carl Grammer Croyder David Stonestreet Croyder George Hutcheson Denny Jerry Joseph Donovan, Jr. Atwell Dugger John Clinton Earle George Samuel Engle John Philip French Gus Alexander Fritchie Andrew J. Gallagher Claiborne Watts Gooch, III William Arthur Gregory, Jr. Albert Henry Hamel Houston Harriman Harte, Jr. Walter Farl Hunter Richard Allen Hurxthal Gordon Kennedy, Jr. Frederick H. Klostermeyer Richard H. Lipscomb Ernest T. Love, Jr. Herbert A. Lubs, Jr. Arthur Marenstein Robert Hutcheson Mauck Oliver Manley Mendell Christopher Stephen Moore Harrison Paxton Moore, II Roger Harrison Mudd John Peter G. Muhlenberg Francis Alden Murray, Jr. Franklin Stuart Pease, Jr. Arthur M. Roberts Lee F. Roberts Roger Norman Scatchard Augustine John Signaigo Howard Loucks Steele Gerry Underwood Stephens James Paul Sunderland Clifford C. Thomas, Jr. Edward P. Thomas, Jr. James Thomas Trundle Edward Felix Turner, Jr. William Paul Walther George William Whitehurst Robert Arthur Williams, Jr. Wallace Elijah Wing, Jr. James Arthur Wood, Jr. 1950-L Agent Jack A. Crowder Donors 7 Amount $85.00 Jack Andrew Crowder Cannon Hobson Goddin Eugene Bruce Harvey Philip McCart Lanier Neal Edward McNeill, Jr. Ray Sammons Smith, Jr. William Stephenson Todd 1951-A Upton Beall Amount $354.00 Agent Donors 42 Merritt Abrash Frederick J. Ahern George F. Arata, Jr. John F. Baldwin Edward Powers Bassett Upton Beall | William G. Bean, Jr. Wesley Gregory Brown Earl Roy Campbell, Jr. Richard P. Cancelmo Lewis Preston Collins, ITI Eric G. Curry, Jr. Richard Dolman Davis Joseph Thomas E;ngleby, III Donald Mayo Fergusson Peter E. Forkgen Fontaine J. Gilliam John F. Hall, Jr. Arthur Hollins, III Sam B. Hollis Hugh Norman Jacobson Alan L,. Kaplan John F. Kay, Jr. Everett M. McClintock _ . Joseph B. McCutcheon ~~ James Edward Moyler, Jr. James Harvey Patton, IV Herbert G. Peters, III Richard Pizitz E. C. Robbins Richard Dreyfuss Rosenfeld David Eugene Ryer Robert H. Salisbury, Jr. James Z. Shanks Park Bowie Smith Richard Blackburn Taylor Norfleet R. Turner Frederick Godfrey Uhlmann Maurice Theodore Van Leer John Clark Warfield Thomas A. Wash James Jones White, III 1951-L Jack Marsh Amount $57.00 Agent Donors 12 William Howard Adams Robert Clayton Carey E. McGruder Faris, Jr. John James Flood Blair Jerome Harkett Albert Francis Knight John O. Marsh, Jr. Donald Willard Mason H. Harvey Oakley, Jr. Robert Wilburforce Kime Franklin Burt Pulley Derwood Hall Rusher 1952-A Donors 1 John Prewitt Nelgon, Jr. 1953-A Donors 2 Amount $10.00 Frank Richard MacFElvain Rodney F. Stock 1954 Donors 4 Amount $16.00 Herwig Rudolph Brandstetter William M. Gunderson J. Ira Laird, Jr. Charles Mixson Chapter Meetings NEW YORK The New York alumni held their annual dinner meeting at the Uni- versity Club on November 21, 1952, with Rayford W. Alley, 710, president of the chapter, presiding. Dr. Lewis A. Adams, Dean of the School of Commerce, represented the University and was the princi- pal speaker of the evening. The following officers were elected to serve for the ensuing year: Stuard. Wurzburger, 728, President; and _ Vice-Presidents, Richard Sandstrom, 7°41, New York City; William F. Saunders, "40, New Jersey; Clark B. Winter, 37, Long Island; Leonard T. Brown, 7°19, Connecticut; W. L. Webster, ’28, Upstate New York. + + + LYNCHBURG The Lynchburg alumni held WASHINGTON AND LEE UNIVERSITY their mid-winter meeting at the Boonsboro Country Club on Janu- ary 28, with a social hour preced- ing dinner, and Ed Schaefer, *42, presiding. R. A. Smith, Athletic Director, Cy Young, Alumni Secre- tary, and Tom Lothery, of the faculty, represented the University. The only business scheduled for the meeting was the reports of committees and election of the following officers for the coming year: J. C. Holloran, Jr., ’46, Pres- 21 ident; Elliot Schewel, °45, Vice- President, and C. Lynch Christian, Jr., 44, Secretary-Treasurer. A football film of the Washing- ton and Lee-VPI game was shown by Mr. Lothery and enjoyed by all present. + + + NEW ORLEANS The New Orleans alumni chap- ter held its annual dinner meeting on January 19, with twenty-five alumni and their guests present. Preceding the dinner a social hour was held. Among the out-of-town guests was Mrs. Kaplan, from Louisville, Kentucky, mother of five Washington and Lee alumni. One son, Dr. Murrell Kaplan, ’30, lives in New Orleans. The film of the Washington and Lee-VPI foot- ball game, which was shown dur- ing the evening, was greatly en- joyed by everyone present. Charles L. (Pie) Dufour was the principal speaker. He is a columnist for the States newspaper and is a local historian and editorial writer. His father, Albert John Dufour, was a graduate (LL.B. ’81) of Washington and Lee. A New Plan (Continued from page 3) con, ’29, Jack Campbell, ’41, J. R. Mighell, Jr., 13, J. H. Mighell, ITT, °40, Guy Oswalt, ’40, Ogden Shropshire, 24, Banky Taylor, ’32. Frontis Sherrill, ’28, was in charge at Pensacola, with the din- ner sponsored by the following alumni: Duncan McDavid, 735, Churchill Mellen, ’28, Bill Noonan, 4.3, Bill Rosasco, 751, John Sher- rill, "39, Ted Shoemaker, ’55, Dick Turner, 42, Guy Yaste, °45, and Henry Yonge, 42. At Jacksonville Dick Foerster was chairman, with the following alumni attending the dinner: Jack Ball, ’35, Bob Cleveland, ’35, Jim- my Cranford, ’22, Robert L. Hutchinson, 712, Rhydon Latham, 28, Lee Powell, 7°50, Charlie Smith, ’35, Damon Yerkes, ’50, and Russell Frink, ’10. 22 Tom Sugrue, ‘29, Passes On THomas SuGrRuE, B.A. 729, M.A. ’30, honorary degree, Litt.D. 49, Phi Beta Kappa, honorary fraternity, and Phi Kappa Psi, so- cial fraternity, died January 6, 1953, in a New York Hospital, of complications following an opera- tion. He lived at 56 E. 80th Street, New York, New York. After leaving school Mr. Sugrue returned to his home in Nauga- tuck, Conn., worked a year on the staff of the The Naugatuck Daily News, and then became a member of the city staff of The New York Herald Tribune. In the next three years he also wrote magazine ar- ticles, including a profile for The New Yorker on Cardinal Hayes. © His work caught the eye of Sumner Blossom, editor of The American magazine and from 1934 to 1936 Mr. Sugrue was on the staff of that magazine, contributing articles from various parts of the United States and from Europe, the Near East, Cuba, Mexico and Hawaii. In 1937 Mr. Sugrue was stricken with a crippling disease, the nature of which remained ob- scure. He never walked again but got about in a wheel chair. At this time he became interested in the phenomenal Edgar Cayce who, it was said, could diagnose while in a trance the ailments of persons at great distances from him and advise them as to the proper pro- cedure. Mr. Cayce was instrumen- tal in helping Mr. Sugrue to live with his ailment. In 1943 he wrote There Is a River: The Story of Edgar Cayce. Mr. Cayce, the mys- tical diagnostician, and Mr. Sugrue had been neighbors at Virginia Beach from 1939 to 1941. Mr. Cayce died in 1945. Limited to an hour a day at the typewriter, Mr. Sugrue could compose and edit in his mind 1,000 words of copy and then write it within the time allotted. In quick succession he wrote and published Starling of the White House, in col- laboration with Edmund William Starling, Secret Service Agent, who was for thirty years a member of the permanent staff of the White House, a book which told of the vigil kept over five presidents. Fol- lowing this he published We Call it Music, in collaboration with Ed- die Condon, a book on the develop- ment and significance of jazz; an autobiography, Stranger in the Earth: the Story of a Search, cover- ing his long period of hospitaliza- tion. He went to Israel in his wheel chair in 1949 to study the Jews and the development of their home- land, where he stayed for five months and then wrote Watch for the Morning, published in 1950. In 1952 he published A Catholic Speaks His Mind, a controversial book which has received much pub- licity. Mr. Sugrue, while saying he was eager to have his church take the lead in a unified religious movement in the United States, was of the opinion that it had been somewhat limited in its views as had also the Protestants and Jews. Quoting from an editorial in the New York Times, January 8, of which he had been a staff mem- ber—“Tom Sugrue leaves behind him many books and many mem- ories, but perhaps none so ever- THE ALUMNI MAGAZINE lasting as the story of a man to whom tragedy and even disaster were only a spur to greater achieve- ment.” Mr. Sugrue married Miss Mary Margaret Ganey in 1935. Also sur- viving are a daughter, Patricia, and a brother Francis Sugrue, ’4.0, and a sister, Mrs. Margaret Hall. The Tucker Lectures, 1949-1952, Published The John Randolph Tucker Lectures, 1949-1952, $3.00 a copy. Order from: School of Law, Washington and Lee University, Lexington, Virginia. The first volume of The John Randolph Tucker Lectures, includ- ing the four annual series delivered before the School of Law in the period 1949 to 1952, has been published by the University. This volume may be ordered directly from the Law School at $3.00 a copy, and contains the following series: 1949—“John Randolph Tucker: The Man and His Work,” by John W. Davis, of the New York Bar; 1950—“Forensic Persuasion,” by Arthur T. Vanderbilt, Chief Jus- tice, Supreme Court of Appeals of New Jersey; 1951—“The Signifi- cance of the Nurnberg Trials in Establishing a World Order Based on Law,” by John J. Parker, Chief Judge, United States Court of Ap- peals for the Fourth Circuit; 1952—“Changing Aspects of Free- dom,” by John Lord O'Brian, of the Washington, D. C., Bar. The John Randolph Tucker Lec- tures were established by the Board of Trustees of the University, and were Inaugurated by the Honorable John W. Davis, who delivered the initial series in 1949 as a part of the Bicentennial Celebration of the of the University, and the Centen- nial Celebration of the School of Law. The 1953 Lectures will be de- livered by the Honorable Joseph C. Hutcheson, Jr., of Houston, Texas, Chief of the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Judicial Circuit, on April 28 and 29. The subject of Judge Hutcheson’s series of three lectures will be: “Law and Liberty Reconciled, the Principle and Paradox of a Free Society—the Spirit of Its Laws.” While the Lectures are primar- ily for the Law School, they are attended by interested students and faculty from the College, and all of the Lectures have been on topics of general interest to alumni and friends of the school. It is hoped that alumni will consider this a worthwhile occasion on which to visit the campus. Revised ChemistryText Written by Dr. Desha The Chemistry of the Com- pounds of Carbon. Lucius JUNIUS DesuHa, Professor of Chemistry, Washington and Lee University. New Second Edition. McGraw- Hill Book Company, New York, 1952. 595 pages. Price $6.50. The field of organic chemistry, as its name indicates, had its origin in the study of substances sup- posedly derived from life processes. When this artificial distinction was broken down about a century ago, the demonstration that many of the products and constituents of living organisms could be duplicated in the chemical laboratory led the or- ganic chemist to a field day in the art of organic synthesis of the compounds of carbon. Today the volumes of Beilstein that merely list these compounds with the min- imum of properties necessary for their identification number more than 65, occupy many feet of li- brary shelves, and describe briefly more than half a million com- pounds. To make a logical selection from this vast array of material that would be suitable to introduce the subject to the student in a one-year course of organic chemistry is no mean task. The skill with which this has been accomplished by Prof. Desha will bear some closer an- alysis from the didactic point of WASHINGTON AND LEE UNIVERSITY view. The principles which guided Prof. Desha were several, ade- quately comprehensive. He sought an order of presentation that would not only be logical in developing the subject at hand, but would at the same time lead the student to an insight into the basic principles of scienec and of general chemis- try. The clarity with which the author has accomplished this is aided in no small degree by the excellence of the figures and draw- ings in which the text abounds. Interspersed with the develop- ment of the structure and character of organic compounds are chapters on their application in technology and therapy. For example, the chapters on the chemistry of the hydrocarbons are followed by one on the products of petroleum and coal giving their properties, abun- dance and numerous applications. A chapter on color, dyes and dyeing is introduced in appropriate se- quence with explanation of the physical and chemical concepts in- volved. A chapter entitled “Organic Chemistry and Life” suitably treats such subjects of perennial interest as food, enzymes, fermentation, vi- tamins, and introduces the modern newcomers, hormones and _anti- biotics. In this thoroughly and soundly revised Second Edition, the author has amply demonstrated that in the intervening sixteen years since the appearance of the First Edition, he has kept abreast of the remarkable developments in theory, technique and application of organic chemis- try. His years of experience have enabled him to develop and apply a stimulating philosophy in his teaching, reflected in the present text which crowns his efforts in the field to which he has devoted himself. He is not content to pre- sent bare facts, but relates them to the underlying causes and reasons in an interlocking framework of theory and observation. This meth- od not only enlists the student’s de- sire but gives him a mnemonic sys- 23 tem into which new facts and re- lationships can be readily intro- duced and retained. Of course the use of this text book will be extended far beyond the lecture halls of Washington and Lee. The students of many other institutions will supplement their first lectures in organic chem- istry through perusal of its pages and will profit from the excellence of its style and the clarity of its logical presentation. As an alumnus of Washington and Lee and for- mer student of that master of in- organic chemistry, James Lewis Howe, I hope it is not inappro- priate for me to congratulate the students of Washington and Lee on their association with Prof. De- sha and the opportunity to sit un- der his inspiring tutelage. From this review I should not omit an apology. It has been a pleasure to read Prof. Desha’s text, to review my inadequate know- ledge of organic chemistry and to learn some of the newer facts un- known to me as a physical chem- ist. Doubtless appreciation of Prof. Desha’s accomplishment could and will be better expressed in other publications by more informed col- leagues. To me, an outsider, or- ganic chemistry appears as a great tidal wave of science which extends its powerful influence to many fields of human interest and en- deavor. Its vastness is stupendous, its new creations have no limits. For the organic chemist is also an architect and builder. If a com- pound in its existing form does not fit a given need, medical or tech- nological, he adds or removes com- ponents until the right structure is found. Merely the volume of his productivity at times threatens to flood the chemical literature. To bridle this force, to keep it within bounds of human comprehension and of useful application is primar- ily the responsibility of its teachers and their texts. Prof. Desha’s Or- ganic Chemistry will be a stalwart pillar of that undertaking. S. C. Linn, ’99 24, Jim Lowry, ’29 Jim Lowry, B.S. ‘29 With Bell Telephone Jim Lowry, B.S. 729, in Civil Engineering has had nineteen years of experience in the Engineering Department of the Bell Telephone Company in the Western Area. He started as an engineering assistant in the Buildings Section, working on planning and designing of Tele- phone Company buildings. His ser- vice with the Company was inter- rupted by World War II, from 1942 to 194.5. He served his coun- try with great distinction in the United States Naval Civil Engi- neering Corps, generally known as the “Sea Bees.” While in the sery- ice, he was given command of a company in a Construction Battal- ion, during which period he led a reconnaisance in force on an enemy held island in the Pacific. The com- pletion of this mission, in the face of an attack by a Japanese patrol and return to their ship through heavy seas, won for Jim the Silver Star Medal and the Navy’s commenda- tion. He spent approximately twenty months in the South Pacific Area and later attained the rank of Lieutenant Commander. Jim returned to the Bell Tele- phone Company late in 1945 and in 1947 was promoted to Senior Staff Engineer handling building inspec- tion matters for the Company. In this connection he has had many contacts with architects and con- tractors who have a high opinion of his knowledge and integrity. In 1952, he was promoted to a higher level of management with the title of Buildings Engineer. While at Washington and Lee Jim was a member of Sigma Nu, played Varsity basketball, ’26, °27 and ’28—Captain in 28. Address: 779 Shady Drive East, Pittsburgh 16, Pennsylvania. versity Athletic Committee. NAME YOUR CANDIDATE In compliance with Article 9 of the By-Laws of the Wash- ington and Lee Alumni, Inc., we are listing below the names of the Nominating Committee for the coming year. | Under the By-Laws any member of the Association may submit the names of alumni to fill the vacncies on the Alumni Board of Trustees and for the alumni representatives on the Uni- There are two vacancies to be filled on the Alumni Board of Trustees, and two on the Athletic Committee at the June, 1953, meeting of the Alumni Association. Members of the Association are urged to submit names of their candidates for these offices. The Nominating Committee will close its report on May 21. The Committee is as follows: John L. Crist, 713, Chairman, Box 1045, Charlotte, North Carolina; Howard D. Leake, ’24, 1631 Third Avenue, North, Birmingham, Alabama; George S. Wilson, Jr., 725, 414 Masonic Building, Owensboro, Kentucky. THE ALUMNI MAGAZINE Class O35 224s Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Herbert Kemp- ner were honor guests at a reception given by their children at 1502 Broad- way, Galveston, Texas, on December 17, 1952, the fiftieth anniversary of their marriage. O50 as A. S. Hayes is Vice-President and General Counsel of Dardanelle & Rus- sellville Railroad Company, Russell- ville, Arkansas. O9 . ik. Judge Daniel K. Sadler, who has been a member of the Supreme Court of New Mexico since 1930 began serv- ing his fourth term as Chief Justice of the Court on January 1, 1953. Judge Sadler’s term expires January 1, 1955. CU. 3. Jim Montgomery and his wife, Pres- byterian missionaries in China but more recently situated on Formosa, have re- turned to this country and are at Mis- sion Haven, 235 Inman Drive, De- catur, Georgia. £2 eG Graham Wood is minister of the Presbyterian Church, Low Moor, Vir- ginia. His second daughter, Ruth King, was married to Mr. Charles MacDon- ald, now a senior at Union Theological Seminary, Richmond, Virginia. Wayne Ely is senior member of the law firm of Ely and Ely, Commerce Building, St. Louis, Missouri. Robert C. Dow is General Counsel of Federal Land Bank, Federal Inter- mediate Credit Bank, Production Credit Corporation and Wichita Bank for Co- Operatives for the states of Kansas, Colorado, Oklahoma and New Mexico. Address: Central Building Wichita, Kansas. Alonzo G. Lively of Lebanon, Vir- ginia, practiced law there until June 1930, when he was appointed Judge of the 27th Judicial Circuit of Virginia, and held this position until June 1937, when he resigned and resumed the general practice of law under the firm name of Burns and Lively, 1-2-3 Burns Building, Lebanon, Virginia. His part- ner, Clarence C. Burns, is LL.B. ’01. Francis J. Heazel, after receiving his law license in Virginia in 1912, stayed aa On) Se A li ern ran “ edit a ee Let us remind you again that the ma- terial from which these notes was compiled consists of letters received by the class agents during the spring and summer and from questionnaires returned by alumni during that period. If notes are not up-to-date, we would appreciate any further information you can let us have. in his home town, Roanoke, Virginia, for four years and then moved to Kings- port, Tennessee, where he practiced un- til 1922, when he started practicing in Asheville, North Carolina. In 1932 he was employed by several surety com- panies to assist in working out adjust- ment plans for their Mortgage Guar- anty obligations. During the next ten years he put in most of his time in this work, with offices in Newark, New Jersey, and New York City, but at the same time keeping a connection with his law firm in Asheville and never giving up his residence there. Since 1945 he has spent most of his time in Asheville. John F. Chatfield, following World War I, “hung out his shingle” in Bridgeport, Connecticut. His offices are at 1115 Main Sreet. He writes that he has been married “to the same delight- ful girl” for forty years and they have three children, all happily married, and are proud grandparents of four girls and three boys, ranging in age from one to ten years. Lawrence E. Goldman is practicing law at 314-18 Temple Building, Kan- sas City, Missouri. From 1928 to 1935 he also maintained an office association in New York City where he spent a good portion of his time, but decided to concentrate on his work in Kansas City, where he maintained his prin- cipal office and residence. He was married to Lillian Eisen of Leaven- worth, Kansas, and they have one son, Dr. Stanley L. Goldman, specializing in allergy. He is a Fellow of the Amer- ican College of Allergists. J. Samuel Sherertz had received his A.B. and M.A. degrees from Roanoke College before entering the law school at Washington and Lee. After gradua- tion here he returned to his home in Roanoke and after working for three years with W. W. Boxley & Company, WASHINGTON AND LEE UNIVERSITY Notes joined the law firm of Hall, Woods, & Cox, and upon dissolution of that firm in 1916, began the practice of law alone, with offices in the Shenandoah Building. He was married to Mamie Owen Jennings in 1921 and they have one son, Carl, who after three and one- half years service with the Marines in the Atlantic area was discharged and is now a Major USMCR. He is now an officer of Airheart-Kirk Clothing Co... of Roanoke. be sas Fred W. McWane is chairman of the newly created Virginia State Ports Authority, as an independent State agency rather than as a division of an- other agency as formerly. The members were appointed by Governor Battle for varying terms, the officers of the Authority being elected by its mem- bership. All members live in port cities except Mr. McWane. Address: P. O. Box 411, Lynchburg, Virginia. — ee Fred M. Davis, Davis, Childs & Co., Inc., insurance, is still active in Scout work. Fred has taken up playing the viola as a pleasant hobby. Both his daughters (12 and 9) play the violin, the older one was concert mistress in her school orchestra. Address: 510 Krise Building, Lynchburg, Virginia. Roger Bear writes that the only re- cent news about his family is that both his sons have “flew the coop,’—R. J., Jr., (Cub) ’°45, is married and J. C. (Jim) is in the Marine Corps, headed for Korea. Address: Executive Of- fices, Kroger Company, Cincinnati, Ohio. Eugene B. Cooper is with Cooper Brokerage Company, food brokers, 22 North Braddock Street, Winchester, Virginia. J. Goodloe Jackson says he has noth- ing to report other than the birth of a third grand-daughter. No prospects for Washington and Lee. Goodloe was general chairman of the Industrial Ex- position held in Cumberland, October 16, 17 and 18. The grand climax of this event was when Washington and Lee and West Virginia University played their annual game. Rev. J. E. Wayland has resigned the pastorate at the historic Hopewell (1762) ‘Church, Hopewell, Virginia, to accept a call to the Unity Presbyterian Church, Fort Mill, South Carolina. 25 Dr. and Mrs. Vann M. Matthews continue to operate ‘““Redbud Crescent Farm,” within the city limits of Char- lotte, North Carolina, where they raise polled Herefords. Mr. Rollo Domino 1s the head sire. He weighs a ton. John O. Prentiss is practicing law in San Benito, Texas. He has been mar- ried for 28 years and has raised three fine children. He lives on a farm sur- rounded with palm trees 50 feet high. In addition to being a lawyer and a farmer, he is an all-around sportsman, has taught Sunday school class for 35 years and was a Scoutmaster for 25 years. Addres: Box 1727, San Benito, Texas. Robert P. (Bob) Hobson is a mem- ber of the law firm of Woodward, Hob- son and Fulton, Suite 1805-26 Kentucky Home Life Building, Louisville, Ky. Clarence R. Avery, president of the Chattanooga Glass Company and mem- ber of the University Board of Trus- tees, has been elected president of the Tennessee Manufacturers Association. Lee R. Grabill, Jr., is with the legal department of E. I. du Pont de Nemours and Company, Wilmington, Delaware. John W. Shiles has recently moved to his place at Edgewater, Maryland, having a couple of hundred feet of waterfront just off South River. He now commutes to his work in a govern- ment position in Washington. Robert C. Colhoun is a cotton mer- chant in Yazoo City, Mississippi, and has a farm in Holmes County. Berkeley Cox has recently completed twenty-seven years in the law depart- ment of the Aetna Life Affiliated com- panies in Hartford, Connecticut. He and Mrs. Cox have a daughter who gradu- ated from Sweet Briar in 1949, now in Japan helping to run a serviceman’s club; a son in the Navy, another son at Yale, and two more daughters in college. Address: 682 Prospect Avenue, Hartford 5, Connecticut. Walter H. Eager, Life Insurance broker of San Diego, California, writes of a delightful trip last spring, to Arizona, and later 425 miles into Mex- ico, to a ghost silver-mining town, Alamos Sonora, founded about 1584. Home address: P. O. Box 265, Lemon- grove, California. Walter J. Wilkins writes that all of his family are now back in Pine Bluff. Walter, Jr., 41, graduated from Johns- Hopkins in ’44, and after serving his in- ternship, went on active duty in. the Army Medical Corps and after his re- turn from the Pacific, had further post graduate work in surgery. He is now. practicing general surgery in Pine Bluff. The younger son, Howard, 47, after serving in the Pacific for eighteen months, was sent back to the States from Guam. His only daughter, Lelia, 26 Elliot Schewel, ’45 EvLxtiot SCHEWEL, B.S. 745, has received the 1952 Distin- guished Service Award (Young Man of the Year) of the Lynch- burg Junior Chamber of Com- merce. Cited for his work as chair- man of the Red Cross blood pro- gram and as a member of the board of directors of the Red Cress, Com- munity Chest and Family Service- Travelers Aid, he is also president of Lynchburg Art Club. In addition he is senior warden of the Scottish Rite, Vice-President of the Lynchburg chapter of the Washington and Lee Alumni As- sociation, a member of the Kiwanis Club and B’nai B’rith, and a five- year member of the Jaycees. He is employed by his father, A. M. Schewel, in the family furniture company. While at Washington and Lee he was a member of Phi Epsilon Pi, social fraternity and member of the Interfraternity Council. He is mar- ried and has a son, Stephen Mat- thew, born March 11, 1951. was married in ’51, and her husband is now at Okinawa with the Air Force. Walter, Sr.., has developed into a very good baby sitter as he now has three grandchildren. Warren Brown is with the Equitable Life Assurance Society in Nashville, Tennessee at 905-909 Warner Building. He now has two grandsons, both named Warren, who are with their parents, one in Germany and one in El Paso Texas. 16.... Lacy Lambert Shirey, formerly as- sistant bridge engineer for the Chesa- peake & Ohio Railway Company, with headquarters in Richmond, Virginia, has been elevated to the post of bridge engineer. He was graduated in civil engineering from Washington and Lee in 1916, and from Cornell University in 1920. He went with the C&O in 1925 after six years with the Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago and St. Louis Rail- way. He was made assistant bridge en- gineer in 1946. He is married and has one daughter. Their home is at 6011 Chamberlayne Road, Richmond, Vir- ginia. 20.... Norman Malek Yonan is the owner of a Syriac manuscript of the New Testa- ment, written between 380 and 420 A.D. The manuscript was exhibited in the Grace Covenant Presbyterian Church in Richmond, Virginia, on Sun- day, January 18, to several hundred people who heard Mr. Yonan tell the story of its history. He explained that it has been in the Yonan family since the time of the Crusades when his an- cestors were one of a group of fami- lies—maleks—designated to care for the church’s property in what we now know as Iran. Mr. Yonan said the manuscript will be sold to a group from the South-Central part of the country, and repose in a nationally known insti- tution of higher learning available to the public in general and to scholars in particular. Address: 2813 M Street, N. W., Washington, D. C. 25 40a Melville I. Dunn, Jr., on January 17, 1953, was named assistant vice-presi- dent of the Chesapeake and Ohio Rail- way Company in charge of construc- tion and maintenance of the whole sys- tem. He took his first job with the C&O as a rodman in 1916. In 1919 he left to attend Washington and Lee, graduating in 1923 with the Civil En- gineering degree. After graduation he rejoined the C&O, serving with the company in various positions until his present appointment. He is married and lives at 3306 Gloucester Road, Rich- mond, Virginia, but will move to Hunt- ington, West Virginia, which will be his new headquarters. 24.55. Irwin Stolz has been in the whole- sale produce business in Atlanta, Geor- gia, for several years. He is connected THE ALUMNI MAGAZINE with the Charles R. Allen Company, Food Brokers. Address: 225 Moore Street, S. E., Atlanta, Georgia. Jimmie Huff still lives in Columbus, Georgia, where he is actively engaged in the general insurance and real es- tate business. Except for some time in the service of his “Uncle,” he has been there continuously since graduating from Washington and Lee. Address: 1131 16th Avenue, Columbus, Georgia. E. Almer Ames, Jr., has set his roots deep at Onancock, Virginia, having practiced law there since leaving Wash- ington and Lee. For the last nine years he has been Commonwealth Attorney for Accomac County. Shorty and Mrs. Ames have one son, Edward A. III, age 13, who is reported to be looking forward to spending his winters in Lexington. Edwin J. Gibson is living in Garrett, Kentucky. His son, William E., is at VPI learning to be an Engineer; and while he failed to tell the name of his daughter, there was no question about the fact that because of her he was a grandad. Address: Box 133, Garrett, Kentucky. J. Davis Kerr, who transferred to the University of South Carolina for his law work after his sojourn in Lexing- ton, has been practicing in Spartan- burg, South Carolina since 1926. “ J. D.” manages to take in some of the football games and to work in an occasional visit to Lexington. Wyatt French is Merchandise Man- ager, Home Furnishing Division, Muil- ler and Rhodes, Richmond, Virginia. He is living at 6419 Three Chopt Road, Richmond, and feels that it is such schools as Washington and Lee that hold the hope for the future of our country through the training of our youth. Raleigh Jenkins is still engaged in his first love, the lumber business, in Birmingham, Alabama. He and his wife have two daughters; Katherine, who graduated from Vassar in 1947, and Eulalie, who completed her course at Sweet Briar last spring. Address: 920 North 19th St., Birmingham, Alabama. Dr. John Newton Thomas is still Professor at Union Theological Sem- inary in Richmond. He finds time to carry on his responsibilities as Trustee of Washington and Lee, and to be a much sought after and very highly re- garded substitute minister in many of the leading southern Presbyterian churches. Jack Collins writes from Lewisburg, West Virginia, that he celebrated his twenty-third wedding anniversary the day before his letter was written. He is an optometrist in Lewisburg and a Fel- low in the American Academy of Op- tometry. One daughter, Patty, gradu- ated from the University of West Vir- ginia in June. ZS ss Frank T. (Pete) Mitchell was re- cently made a Vice-President of the National City Bank of New York, 55 Wall Street, New York 15, New York. Af ee Euclin D. Reeves and his wife have engaged passage on the Queen Eliza- beth for the coronation. Later they plan an extensive tour of the Continent including Florence where they will visit Lady Borgianni, Mrs. Reeves’ sister. Address: 93 Benevolent Street, Provi- dence, R. I. George E. Burks has been elected Vice-Chairman of the Louisville, Ken- tucky, and Jefferson County Board of Zoning Adjustment and Appeals. Ad- dress: 405-406 Washington Building, Louisville, Kentucky. Dr. Marion Junkin, Professor of Art at Washington and Lee, painted the 10x11-foot mural, which together with a group of portraits of state police, was unveiled recently at the police head- quarters near Richmond, Virginia. The portraits and mural honor state troop- ers who have died in the line of duty. Dr. Francis P. Gaines, speaker of the occasion, based his address on the “Trooper’s Pledge,” which is also the theme of Dr. Junkin’s mural, depicting a trooper leaning over a child who has been injured in an accident, while an- other trooper holds up his hand to halt traffic. Dr. Gaines contrasted the police in a democracy with the police of a totalitarian state, and paid tribute to the artists who painted the portraits and the mural. Governor Battle and other high ranking state officials and members of the State Art Commission were present at the ceremony. Eddy Gilmore is still chief of the Moscow Bureau of the Associated Press. On his last trip to the States he was elected to membership in Sigma Delta Chi, Journalism fraternity. ZO wai Julius Goldstein, of 3800 Massachus- etts Avenue, N. W., Washington, D. C., has been promoted to the rank of Colo- nel in the U. S. Air Force. At the time of his recall to duty he was an active partner in the building firm known as Evans, Goldstein and Valentine, and an officer in Capital View Realty Com- pany. In World War II, Col. Gold- stein was overseas as the Senior Con- trol Officer with the 46th Fighter Wing. He is the holder of the Legion of Merit, the Bronze Star, the European Theater of Operations Ribbon with five Battle Stars, the French Croix de Guerre with Silver Star. ba) Beare H. Graham Morrison, formerly As- sistant U.S. Attorney General, and WASHINGTON AND LEE UNIVERSITY Samuel K. Abrams have announced that Newell A. Clapp, formerly First As- sistant and acting Assistant Attorney General of the United States in charge of the Claims Division and more re- cently in charge of the Antitrust Divi- sion has become a partner in the law firm of Morrison & Abrams, and that the firm name has been changed to Morrison, Clapp & Abrams. Address: 839 Seventeenth Street, N. W., Wash- ington, D.C. SA Joe Magee, who has been with the William Morris Agency, Rockefeller Center, New York, is now with Radio Free Europe, APO 407-A, care of Post- master, New York. Rev. Henry Richard Mahler, Jr., pas- tor of the Presbyterian Church in Nor- ton, Virginia, is the author of “Christ- mas Reflections,” a long and interesting poem, published in the December issue of Presbyterian Survey, the official magazine of the Presbyterian Church, U.S. The poem was read to his congre- gation as his Christmas sermon, and was copyrighted by the John Knox Press in 1952. He received his B.A. from Washington and Lee in 731, and M.A. in ’32, and is a member of Phi Beta Kappa. Charles Pratt Brown, at 41, is one of the youngest generals in the Army. He is now a brigadier in command at Wright-Patterson Air Base at Dayton, Ohio. Eugene Johnson has been with the duPont Company since leaving Wash- ington and Lee. With the exception of two years during the War he has been at the Waynesboro works engaged in the manufacture of acetate yarn. He has been married 18 years and he and his wife have three children, Eugene, IIT, 13, Lucile, 10, and Van, 6. Address: 816 14th Street, Waynesboro, Va. S20. John C. Harris has been with the Scottsboro Wholesale Grocery Com- pany, Scottsboro, Alabama, since 1933. In the last several years he has served as a Vice-President and as a member of the Board of Directors of the United States Wholesale Grocers’ Association, also he has served in the same capaci- ties in the Alabama Association. He does some farming and serves as a bank director. His family has been growing and they now have three daughters and one son. Donald S. Hostetter, Boston F.B.I. head, has been designated special agent in charge of the Newark, New Jersey office. He has served as agent in charge in St. Louis for less than a year, in Memphis for. eight years, in Indianap- olis and also in Juneau, Alaska. Hos- tetter entered the F.B.I. on April 23, 1934. While at Washington and Lee 21 he was a varsity football player and served as assistant football coach fol- lowing his graduation from the Law School. He is a member of Pi Kappa Phi, social fraternity; is married and has two daughters, ages 21 and 14. He is a member of the bar in Virginia and also in Alaska. C. Edmonds Allen is still with the UP, 220 East 42nd Street, New York 17, New York, and lives at 405 East 54th Street. He is married and has three children. He reports a hectic summer attending political conventions, a month in Chicago at the Conventions there, and getting caught up on work after a vacation. 33 woe W. S. Farmer of Louisville, Ken- tucky, has been named as Executive Vice-President of the Kingsport Na- tional Bank, Kingsport, Tennessee. He came to Kingsport on January 5 from Louisville Trust Company where he had served as a Vice-President of that concern. Mr. and Mrs. Farmer have two sons, John, 14, and William, Jr., 11. At present Mrs. Farmer and the boys are still in Louisville, while Bill searches for a place to live in Kingsport. Claude LaVarre, ’33, and family Claude A. LaVarre is managing the Singer Sewing Machine business in Columbia, South America. He and his family, wife and three children, were in this country on vacation at Christmas time but were sailing on January 23. Address: Singer Sewing Machine Com- pany, Apartado, Aereo 829, Medillin, Columbia, South America. William Hawkins, Jr., dramatic critic of the New York World Telegram, gave an address in Lee Chapel on De- cember 9, his subject being ‘““The Broad- way Stage, 1952.” He received his B.A. degree here in 1933 and LL.B. in 1935. While on the campus he was prominent in publication, dramatic, and social or- ganizations. He is a member of Beta Theta Pi social fraterinty. Since 1946 he has been the head dramatic critic of the World-Telegram, and is generally recognized as one of the two or three most outstanding men in the field today. 35 1.6. Edward W. Chappell is Area Super- visor in Polymer and Spinning, du Pont 28 Co., and is now doing special work at the plant following several expansion projects, and is enjoying the change. He is a Deacon in his church, teaching a class of High School boys and girls in the Sunday School and is interested in Boy Scouts and serving on a Neigh- borhood Commission. Address: 303 Laurel Street, Signal Mountain, Ten- nesee. Don R. Wallis is now a member of the firm of the Madison Courier, Inc., a newspaper publishing company, pub- lishing two papers. Address: Second at Plum, Madison, Indiana. Thomas C. Horsey, after leaving Washington and Lee, took further col- lege work at the Universities of Mary- land and Wisconsin, receiving his jour- nalism degree from Wisconsin. He is married and has two children, a girl 7, and a boy 1 year old. Says he would enjoy hearing from any member of his class or any other friends of Washing- ton and Lee vintage who might be in- terested in dropping him a line. Ad- dress: 434 Milton Avenue, Janesville, Wisconsin. Duncan McDavid has been living in Pensacola, Florida, since 1935 with the exception of two and one-half years in the Navy in ’43-’45. He has been work- ing at Newport Industries since 1935, starting out in the plant operation de- partment and since the war doing re- search work. 36.006» Dr. Kenneth G. MacDonald is prac- ticing general surgery in Charleston, West Virginia. He is a Fellow of the American College of Surgeons and Dip- lomatic American Board of Surgery. Edward A. Turville is practicing law with Jim McClure, ’35, in St. Peters- burg, Florida. Jacob H. Seligman has a chain of department stores in Louisiana. He sponsored a baseball team of Little Leaguers. He has a son, Jeff, 8 years old, who is interested in the Class of 1966 at Washington and Lee. Philip H. Millner is Assistant Vice- President of Manufacturers Trust Co., in New York. He travels a lot in the South on business and sees quite a few Washington and Lee men. Dick Gum is working for Frankfort Distillers Corporation in California. He played some pro football after school and claims he is now 260 pounds of bone and muscle. Robert F. Corrigan is stationed in Heidelberg in the Headquarters Euro- pean Command. Donald Clark, Jr., is Editor of a newspaper, The Shoppers’ Guide, in Columbia, South Carolina. Paul Hervey has been Superintendent of Public Schools in Enloe, Texas, for 10 years. He did graduate work at the University of Texas. He is the proud father of two sons, one, Richard Mor- ton, 12 years old, and the other, Robert Michael, 2. Anders R. Lofstrand, Jr., Rockville, Maryland, maufacturer, has been named State Senator by the Republican State Central Committee to fill the unex- pired term of DeWitt S. Hyde, recent- ly elected Congressional Representative from Maryland’s Sixth District. He has served as a member of the House of Delegates since 1946. Last year he was minority floor leader. He is a member of the Legislative Council and formerly was chairman of the County delegation in the House. He is married and has an 8-year-old son. Address: Southlawn Farm, Honers Lane, Rockville, Mary- land. Tyree F. Wilson is still in the auto- mobile business in Lexington, Ken- tucky, with lLexington-Lincoln-Mer- cury, Inc., 473 East Main Street. He is married and has a boy, aged ten, and a girl, six. DT acess Dr. Harley E. Cluxton, Jr., 701 Cen- ter Avenue, Lake Bluff, Illinois, has re- cently accepted the position as Director of the clinics of Northwestern Univer- sity Medical School. His _ principal duties will be in reorganizing the clinics and supervising teaching and research as well as improving patient care. 38.... Lieutenant Commander Victor H. Tucker has been designated as “law of- ficer”’ for Navy general courts martial. A law officer holds the same position in the military courts as a judge in civil- ian courts. He is on duty in the legal office Headquarters, Sixth Naval Dis- trict, Charleston, South Carolina. 39.... Edgar Finley Shannon, Jr., is the author of “Tennyson and the Review- ers” recently published by The Har- vard University Press. It is Tennyson’s response to the challenge of his critics. Mr. Shannon’s discovery and analysis of much new material including 52 new reviews, gives the lie to the popular myth that Tennyson had a “bad press.” Mr. Shannon is the son of the late Dr. Edgar F. Shannon, professor and head of the department of English at Wash- ington and Lee. His mother lives in Lexington, Virginia. Mr. Shannon is now teaching English at Harvard Uni- versity. Stanley J. Nastri, Jr., now lives at 522 Euclid Avenue, Rockville Center, New York, and is purchasing agent of Sperry-Farragut Corporation. The cor- THE ALUMNI MAGAZINE poration is engaged in the construction of a guided missile plant for the Navy. 40 es Earl Morgan, Jr., has been made Vice-President of D’Arcy Advertising Agency. He is the youngest man to at- tain that office. His wife is the former Mary Carroll Engleman of Lexington, Virginia. Address: 9 Nimitz Place, Old Greenwich, Connecticut. le 6s Charles L. Hobson has been practic- ing law in Frankfort, Kentucky, for the past six years and since 1948 the firm has been Ardery and Hobson. He has frequent contacts with other Washing- ton and Lee lawyers located in Ken- tucky. Francis C. (Tyke) Bryan has prac- ticed law in Mt. Sterling, Kentucky, for the past ten years and enjoys being a country lawyer. He is married and has two little girls who will be Sweet Briar candidates. Thomas Martin has been appointed resident manager of the Greensboro, North Carolina, territory of the R. S. - Dickson Company. Prior to his affilia- tion with the Dickson firm, a banking service, Martin was assistant sales manager for the American Brockerage Co., of Roanoke, Virginia. He is a na- tive of Roanoke, a former president of the Roanoke Junior Chamber of Com- merce and Vice-President of the Vir- ginia Junior Chamber. Ralph E. (Tex) Lehr and _ brother Walter G., Jr., compose the firm of Lehr Bros., Real Estate—Mortgage Loans, Alamo National Bank Building, San Antonio, Texas. Tex was married to Lillian Ann Porter in 1949 and their “Jr.” who was born August 27, 1951, is beginning to run them a merry chase. James H. Price is with the Hopper Paper Company, Inc., 8th and Everett Streets, Richmond, Virginia. AD nd es Rev. Coit R. Troutman, Jr., is pastor of Westover Baptist Church at 1243 W. Boulevard, Charlotte, North Carolina. His wife is the former Louise Fletcher of Charlotte and they have one daugh- ter. Linda...) ie: Horace H. Jeter is a member of the recently formed partnership of Jeter and Schober, Certified Public Account- ants, 1106 Shelby Building, Shreveport, Louisiana. 7 Robert A. Lawton is the third gen- eration of the Lawtons of Central City, Kentucky, in a successful insurance business in that city. The firm was founded by his grandfather in 1910. Graduating here in 1942 with the B.S. degree, and from the Aetna Casualty and Training School in 1945, he served as a lieutenant, USNR in South and Central Pacific in World War II. He joined the firm in 1945. Address: C. A. Lawton & Son, Central City, Kentucky. Russell Browning is with Gregg, Storer & Co., Inc., Investment Secur- ities, New Bedford Office, Merchants Bank Building, New Bedford, Massa- chusetts. Beverley Lee is associated with J. A. Daniels’ C.P.A. firm in Newport News, Virginia, and his home is at 13 Earl Street, Hampton, Virginia. His family has grown and now consists of two boys and two girls. AD is. Bob MacCachran is now in New York with Owen-Corning Fiberglass Corporation, as assistant export sales manager. Address: 121 East 80th Street, Apartment 4A, New York, New York. AD. ey David V. Guthrie is teaching politi- cal science at the University of the South, Sewanee, Tennessee. He is tak- ing classes in St. Luke’s Seminary lead- ing to a Divinity degree. He is a candi- didate for the Episcopal Ministry in the diocese of North Carolina. Dr. David Lewis, Dentist, has an- nounced the removal of his office to 11506 Newport Mill Road (Corner Viers Mill Road), Wheaton, Maryland. 4S ne os Bernard D. Kaplan is joint author of a big article on Japan in Think (the IBM Magazine) for December. The chatter about the authors says he is Tokyo coorrespondent for The London Daily News and the Canadian Broad- casting Company. AD is William H. Leedy has been called to active duty in the Air Force and in December was assigned at Laugh- lin Air Force Base, Del Rio, Texas, as legal officer. Shortly after the first of the year, he expected to be sent to Maxwell Field, Montgomery, Alabama, to attend the Judge Advocate’s School and thereafter to be due for reassign- ment. Home address: 506 East Miller Street, Jefferson City, Missouri. Lieutenant Paul J. B. Murphy, Jr., is Assistant Professor of Military Science and Tactics, Staunton Military Academy, Staunton, Virginia. Resi- dence address: 232 East Frederick Street, Staunton, Virginia. Everett L. Tucker, Jr., is now in his second year of Medical School at Duke University. Address: Box 2857, Duke Hospital, Durham, North Caro- lina. Edward Franklin Franze, Jr., has been appointed instructor in English at Emory University, Georgia. WASHINGTON AND LEE UNIVERSITY Tom Mansel, 49 THOMAS H. MANSEL, 749, has been named secretary-treasurer and director of L. L. Stearns & Sons department store, Williamsport, Pennsylvania. He has been with L. L. Stearns since March, 1950, when he joined the firm as assistant comptroller. He graduated from Haverford School, Haverford, Pennsylvania, in June, 1942, and entered Wash- ington and Lee in September of that year. He was able to complete only one semester, however, before being called into the service. He served throughout the war as a second lieutenant in the Air Corps and saw action in Germany. He was discharged as a first lieuten- ant. He returned to Washington and Lee after the war to complete his studies and received a B.S. degree in Commerce. While on campus he was a member of Sigma Alpha Ep- silon fraternity. After graduation he worked for a short time with Jim Godwin, B.S48, in a coal testing business in Bluefield, West Viginia. He was married in August, 1944, to Ann Crooks Stearns and they have a three-year-old daugh- ter, Eleanor Whitehead. First Lieutenant Kenneth Wallace Hovermale has been assigned to the ag Eastern Air Procurement District, Ne- wark, New Jersey, Regional Office. He will be assistant to the Air Regional Representative at Newark. A B-25 pi- lot with 51 missions in the Mediter- ranean Theater during World War II, Lieutenant Hovermale holds the Dis- tinguished Flying Cross in addition to the Air Medal with five clusters. Home address: Cheriton, Virginia. Jack B. Coulter is now a member of the law firm of Dodson and Pence, State & City Building, Roanoke, Vir- ginia, with which he has been asso- ciated. Richard H. Turrell, effective Janu- ary 1, 1953, was made assistant to the Vice-President of sales for the Dela- ware, Lackawanna and Western Coal Company. Address: 120 Broadway, New York 5, New York. 50.... Harold L. Steele received his Mas- ter of Science degree in Agricultural Economics from the Pennsylvania State College in June, was married and ac- cepted the job of sales manager for the Greenville Dairy Company of Greenville, Pennsylvania. Address: 113 North Erie Street, Mercer, Pennsyl- vania. Lieutenant Robert Newton Mackey has been asisgned to the U.S. Em- bassy in Madrid, Spain, as director of all finance activities of the Joint Muli- tary group in Spain. Graduating from Washington and Lee in 1950 with the B.S. degree, he also attended the Uni- versity of Mexico in Mexico City. He was drafted in November and after six weeks training he entered officers can- didate school and was commissioned at Fort Riley, Kansas. He attended the School of Finance in Indianapolis, In- diana, before assignment to Europe. Gerry U. Stephens has received the Third Army’s Certificate of Achieve- ment award for “outstanding service as a lieutenant while serving as assistant to the chief manpower branch, manage- ment division, office of the comptroller, Headquarters Third Army.” Stephens first entered the Army as a private in July 1943, and went overseas the fol- lowing February. As a member of the 863 AAA Battalion he participated in the Normandy, Northern France, Ar- dennes-Alsace, Rhineland and Central European campaigns. Home address: 904 Avon Place, Chattanooga, Tennes- see. Second Lieutenant John C. Carmi- chael, United States Air Force, has been awarded the Air Medal, having dis- tinguished himself by extraordinary achievement while participating in aerial flight as a pilot of F-51 aircraft. Home address: 1532 Chestnut Street, Bowling Green, Kentucky. Billy Maynard, Jr., is off-shore Korea on a destroyer, shelling commie com- 30 munications. Home address: Box 670, Route No. 1, Clarksdale, Mississippi. D1 G6 ss Abe D. Jones is working as a gen- eral assignment reporter for The Greensboro Record, Greensboro, North Carolina, after a year at the University of North Carolina’s History Graduate School, and a serious operation during the summer. Ensign Park Bowie Smith, USNR, is taking a Ship-to-Shore Fire Control Party course in the Gunfire Support School at the U.S. Naval Amphibious Base, Little Creek, Virginia. He 1s regularly stationed on the destroyer U.S.S. Putnam, first naval vessel to fly the United Nations flag. Home ad- dress: 22 South Battery, Charleston, South Carolina. John C. Warfield, since leaving Washington and Lee, has been serving in the Air Force, and when his letter was written in July was flying in Korea as Navigator Bombardier. Home ad- dress: R.F.D. 2, Frederick, Maryland. Robert Lee Hopkins, Jr., reported for duty to the Navy Supply School at Bayonne, New Jersey, in October. In March he was flown to Istanbul to serve as assistant supply and disburs- ing officer on an oiler in the Mediter- ranean, where he spent two months. He is now the Supply and Disbursing Officer on the U.S.S. Peterson (DE 152). Home address: Horseshoe Drive, Alexandria, Lousiania. = © | History of Rockbridge ~ County Published The late Dr. Edmund Pendle- ton Tompkins, 788, is the author of Rockbridge County Virginia: An Informal History, now being sold under the auspices of the Rockbridge Historical Society. The book, which was authorized before Dr. Tompkins’ death in the spring, and completed this fall, tells the story of Rockbridge County from the time when it was a part of Borden’s Grant to the twentieth century. In addition to political and military history, the volume contains accounts of society, per- sonalities, and legends. of. one of the most famous of all American counties. The work was edited and com- piled by Dr. Marshall W. Fish- wick, Assistant Professor of Amer- ican Studies at Washington and Lee University. | Ed Moyler, Jr., received his commis- sion in the U. S. Coast Guard last No- vember, and since then has been sta- tioned on a ship in Norfolk, Virginia. He spent a good part of last winter up and around Greenland and Labrador, and reports that the winds that swept off House Mountain seem like tropical zephyrs compared to the cold up there. Ed expects to return to Washington and Lee and finish in the Law School. Home address: 307 Clay Street, Frank- lin, Virginia. Alfred W. Powell, Jr., graduated from AAA-OCS at Ft. Bliss on July 3, and had received orders to proceed to Camp Hanford, Washington, on that date. Home address: R.F.D. 3, Box 102, Salem, Virginia. J. Alan Cross, Jr.. was an Ensign in the Navy, stationed at Key West, Florida, on a Destroyer Escort, when his letter was written in July. He ex- pected to be shortly in Anti-Subma- rine Warfare. Home address: 305 S. W. 23rd Avenue, Miami, Florida. Jim Shanks is now in the sophomore class, Medical College of Georgia, Au- gusta, Georgia. He will be living at Phi Chi Medical Fraternity house, 2242 Pickens Road, Augusta, from Septem- ber to June, and would be glad to have any alumni who are stationed at Camp Gordon (just outside of Au- gusta) drop by. Home address: 1431 Fairview Roard, N. E., Atlanta, Ga. Joe T. Engleby, III, is on active duty as a Seaman and is stationed in Washington. He gets home for week- ends to R. F. D. No. 4, Roanoke, Vir- ginia. He hopes to get back to school in the fall of 753. Richard B. (Dick) Taylor, after leav- ing school went to the University of Hawaii, where he received his draft papers shortly after the Korean war broke out. He was inducted in Louis- iana, sent to Fort Benning, and later, in 1951, was sent to Frankfurt, Ger- many. First bought a motorcycle and later a car, and has spent all leave time covering interesting European spots. In July he had just returned from a 20-day leave with his parents, who visited him in Frankfurt, taking a wonderful Eu- ropean trip with them. Home address: 926 Hillcroft Road, Glendale 7, Calif. Arthur Hollins, III, was drafted in October, 1951, and is now working in the reception center at Ft. Sill, Lawton, Oklahoma. He was married to Gloria Guerry in May, 1951, and they have a daughter, Elizabeth, born June 21, 1952. Address: 1404 A Street, Lawton, Okla- homa. Don Fergusson has been with Sand- ers Brothers Co., wholesale paint busi- ness for over a year. Stuart Sanders, B.A. 731, is an official of this company. Address: Box 615, Richmond 5, Vir- ginia. THE ALUMNI MAGAZINE Jim Patton is employed with the Crown Cotton Mills of Dalton, Georgia. Kevin M. (Chip) Miller arrived in Korea in the spring of 1952 after being stationed at Ocean City, New Jersey, for over a year. He is with a Bom- bardment Wing, flying B-26’s. Home address: 473 North Potomac Street, Hagerstown, Maryland. W. T. (Bill) Capers graduated from pilot training in May, 1951, and is now flying an S.A.-16 German Amphibian for Flight “A” 7th Rescue in French Morocco. Home address: Tryon, North Carolina. Samuel B. Hollis is stationed in Washington after getting his commis- sion in the Navy. Home address: 3971 Walnut Grove Road, Memphis, ‘Ten- nessee. John F. Kay, Jr., is now a Second Lieutenant, First Marine Division, and has been in Korea since last March. Home address: 1621 Loudon Heights Road, Charleston, West Virginia. David E. Ryer was married on Oc- tober 20 and on the 30th, joined USMC. After a series of training routine he had received his orders to go to Korea in February. Home address: Glydon, Maryland. Hugh Jacobson has been in the Air Force since April 16, 1951, but expected to be released from active duty in Oc- tober or November. He married Lois Wexner of Memphis, and they have a young son, Scott Alan. Home address: 2948 Iroquois, Memphis, Tennessee. W. K. Vance Rucker is with Burl- ington Mills Corporation, Burlington, North Carolina, living at 27-A Brook- wood Gardens, Burlington, North Caro- lina. Wesley Brown is working with the Penn Mutual Life in Chattanooga, Ten- nessee. He was married March 29 to Pocahontas Whitaker of Kinston, North Carolina. Address: 1115 Hamil- ton Bank Building, Chattanooga, Ten- nessee. Dr. Reid White, ‘19, Succumbs Dr. Rein WhuireE, JrR., 719, died in Memorial Hospital in New York on Thursday afternoon, No- vember 29, 1952, after an illness of six months. He was born in Lexington, Virginia, October 8, 1900, in the home of his great grandfather, Col. Samuel Mc- Dowell Reid, which continued to be his home until his death. His erandfather was James Jones White, professor of Greek at Washington and Lee, 1852-1894, and his father, Dr. Reid White, Sr., ’87, was university physician for many years. Dr. White’s roots went deep into the history and tradition of Rockbridge County and Washington and Lee Univer- sity, leaving Lexington only for his medical training and war ser- vice. After attending the Lexington public schools, Dr. White entered Washington and Lee University in the fall of 1916, and completed the academic course in three years, graduating in 1919. After work- ing for several years, he matricu- lated at the University of Pennsyl- vania, from which he graduated with the degree of Medicine in 1926. He continued his internship in Philadelphia at the Pennsylva- nia Hospital, and in 1928 returned to Lexington to engage in the prac- tice of medicine with his father. After his father’s death on Novem- ber 29, 1931, he practiced alone. Dr. White became Washington and Lee University physician in 1932, and continued as such until ill health forced his retirement last summer. Although he devoted more and more time to his medical work at college, he continued to do a general practice among: his many patients in Lexington and Rock- bridge County. His work at the University was interrupted for the duration of World War II. Almost immedi- ately after Pearl Harbor he volun- teered for service and was commis- sioned a Captain in the Medical Corps and went overseas to the South Pacific with the 52nd Evacu- WASHINGTON AND LEE UNIVERSITY ation Hospital Unit, participating in the New Guinea Campaign, where he served from January 1942 to December 1944. From that time until he was separated from the service with rank of lieu- tenant-colonel in 1946, he was at Camp Lee. He was a member of the Washington and Lee Alumni Association board of trustees for several years and for a time its treasurer. He took great interest in the manifold activities of both students and faculty at the uni- versity. In addition to his busy practice he took time to give his attention and support to many insti- tutions in Lexington. Dr. White was married August 28, 1930, to Miss Alice Martin Miller of Montclair, New Jersey, who survives him with two chil- dren, Miss Edith Canning White, a student at Smith College, and Reid White, II, now attending E;piscopal High School, Alexan- dria, Virginia. In Memoriam 1879 William Meek McElwee, one of Washington and Lee’s oldest alumni, died February 19, in Jackson Memorial Hospital in Lexington, Virginia. The 93 year old banker, until two weeks be- fore his death, was active in the Peoples National Bank, an organization which he was instrumental in founding and in 31 which he served as President for many vears. While at Washington and Lee he was a member of the baseball team and was catcher for a pitcher named George Sykes who threw the first curve ball to be known on a college team. Por- traits of both McElwee and Sykes are hung in the Alumni Office. He was a member of the S.A.E. fraternity. 1896 William Nicholas Briscoe died Sep- tember 23, 1952, at his home, Forest Hills Village. Longview Road, Apt. 1-602, Knoxville, Tennessee. 1897 Edward S. Zollman died January 3, 1953, in Tacoma, Washington. 1899 James G. Waddell died at his home in Gulfport, Mississippi, January 28, 1953, after a protracted illness. Col. Arthur Morson Shipp, U.S.A. Retired, died February 17, 1953, in Lex- ington, Virginia. 1904 Dr. Templeton Adair died December 12, 1952, at his home in Mount Hope, West Virginia. 1906 Daniel W. Alexander died January 28, 1953, following a heart attack suf- fered at West Palm Beach, Florida, where he was spending the winter. For- merly a commodity specialist and assist- ant chief of the U.S. Tariff Commis- sion’s Textile division, he had retired in 1952, on account of ill health. He is sur- vived by his widow and three sons, one of whom, William H. Alexander, is a B.S. of the class of 735. 1908 Samuel McElroy Ray died December 21, 1952. His home was in Belton, Texas. 1910 Reverend Branson LeHew Wood died January 17, 1953, in Burlington, North Carolina. He was the pastor of Stony Creek Presbyterian Church near Burlington. He served as Class Agent for the Class of 1910 during the past year. 1911 Samuel Bernard Schein, former Judge of Superior Court of Wisconsin, died December 12, 1952, following a heart attack at his home in Madison, Wis- consin. 1915 John D. Trimble died February 10, 1953, at his home in FE] Dorado, Arkan- sas. 1917 James Miles Faulkner died December 18, 1952, at his home in Dallas, Texas, after a long illness. 1922 Dr. Richard Ellis Sherrill died No- 32 vember 24, 1952, in Haskell, Texas. Dr. Sherrill had been head of the depart- ment of geology at the University of Pittsburgh since 1943, but was granted a leave of absence last fall on account of ill health, and retired to his native home in Haskell last March. Receiving the degree of B.S. from Washington and Lee in 1922, he was a member of Phi Beta Kappa. Later he received his doctorate from Cornell University. 1954 Omar L. Bedsaul, Jr., died at his home in Jenkinjones, West Virginia, after an illness of a year. He attended Washington and Lee 1950-52, until ill- ness forced his withdrawal. Births 1932 Mr. and Mrs. Edwin A. Nesbitt are the parents of twin daughters, Lucy Durrett and Sally Durrett Nesbitt, born January 11, 1953. 1934 Mr. and Mrs. Everett Tucker, Jr., are the parents of a daughter, Marion Clarke, born December 28, 1952. 1936 Mr. and Mrs. J. P. (Chip) Jones now have an adopted son, John Philip Jones, III, born March 21, 1952, who came to their home on July 11, 1952. 1940 Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Gardner are the parents of a second child, a daughter, Suellyn Westwood, born December 31, 1952. 1941 Mr. and Mrs. James B. Richardson, Jr., are the parents of a daughter, Anne McKay, born October 13, 1952. Mrs. McKay was the former Donna Haley of Bennington, Kansas. 1942 Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Levin are the parents of a daughter, Margaret Keith, born December 1, 1952. 1944 Mr. and Mrs. James Clifford Evans are the parents of a second daughter, Priscilla Clower Evans, born November 13, 1952. 1945 Mr. and Mrs. David Wendel Foerster are the parents of a son, David Wendel, Jr., born January 7, 1953. Mr. and Mrs. Lee R. Redmond, Jr., are the parents of a son, Lee Rudolph, III, born September 27, 1952. 1946 Mr. and Mrs. Robert Reid Agnor are the parents of a son, David 5., born January 21, 1953. 1948 Capt. and Mrs. Nate L. Adams are the parents of a second son, Robert Knox Adams, born November 28, 1952. 1951 Mr. and Mrs. James A. OKeefe are the parents of a daughter, Mary Kath- ryn, born November 16, 1952. Mr. and Mrs. Frederic J. Ahern are the parents of a son, Frederic John, III, born February 9, 1953. Mr. and Mrs. William W. Terry are the parents of a son, William Worth- ington, III, born February 9, 1953. They have a daughter, Lynn Margaret, born May 23, 1950. 1952 Mr. and Mrs. Emmett E. Tucker, Jr., are the parents of a son, Emmett Ran- dolph, born February, 1953. Marriages 1936 Lewis Archer McMurran, Jr., was married to Edith Margaret Lea on January 17, 1953, in New York City, New York. 1939 Jim Perkinson was married to Alma Seagle Courtney of Lenoir, North Car- olina, on May 3, 1952. He is now a C.P.A. in Charlotte and they live at 240 Sedgefield Road, Charlotte, North Carolina. 1940 James Miles Faulkner, Jr., was mar- ried to Mary Matney Munger on No- vember 22, 1952, in Houston, Texas. They will make their home at 4422 Uni- versity Boulevard, Dallas, Texas. 1942 - Dr. Michael Lau was married to Mar- jorie Hernandez on July 3, 1952. He is serving in Bellevue Hospital in New York City, New York. 1944 Abner Linwood Holton was married to Virginia Harrison Rogers on January 10, 1953, in Roanoke, Virginia. They will make their home at 1835 Carter Road, S.W., Roanoke, Virginia. 1948 David Thomas Lauderdale was mar- ried to Mary Alpha Shehan on Decem- ber 27, 1952. | 1949 John Champe Raftery was married to Glendale Jones on February 12, 1953, in Phoenix, Arizona. 1951 Donald Mayo Fergusson was mar- ried to Mary Louise Matthews on No- vember, 29, 1952, in Richmond, Virginia. THE ALUMNI MAGAZINE WASHINGTON AND LEE UNIVERSITY ALUMNI, INCORPORATED STATEMENT OF INCOME AND EXPENSES For the Fiscal Year Ended June 30, 1952 OPERATING INCOME: ee ee a $35,074.80 DESIGNATED INCOME: ee a ee a ee eS $ 2,320.00 i ee Ra 517.92 fees Operating IMCOME. ... 6 ee 95.00 2,932.92 Oe ea a $38,007.72 OPERATING EXPENSES: ee ee $ 8,104.72 Oe GE ee es 3,201.91 Pee ee. ee Ue ee ee 4,222.40 a ee Pe. 336.62 i ee 1,274.84 Ea ye a ee a, 1,478.20 es a 879.73 ee ek 465.96 [We rponete and telecraph..... 2 ss oe ee ee. 152.79 ee oe es 364.05 Pete oerotine Expenses... ... 0. i ee $20,556.82 EXPENDED FOR DESIGNATED PURPOSES: Bicentennial Fund.......... Pir a $2,320.00 ee ee 517.92 University operating income................... 95.00 2,932.92 et ee 23,489.74 Poeeeee Oc 1icoie Over ixpenses........ 0.2... ee ee $14,517.98 $38,007.72 CasH BALANCE, JUNE 30, 1952—ReEvoLvinc Funp (Advanced by University ‘Vreasiiver tor Guitent Olice Expenses... . . 2. 8 ee 800.00 Casu BALANGE, JUNe 30 1992—Plate Fund...... 2 2... ee ees el. $ 748.68 WASHINGTON AND LEE Commemorative Plates Wedgwood Sold only in sets of eight different scenes Price, $18.00 per set Express Charges Collect WASHINGTON AND LEE ALUMNI, INC. Lexington, Virginia