ue << * % ETS WCET V4 l November/December 1985 UOT ~~ of Washington and Lee ‘ ei 7 - P . {; f ea i: . ~ Py 3 is 5 = , : i a - ~ 4 . L = — 7 . = = . = . = ” , a - an . ae _ = » ; se By ts 3 2 si aad a taal in Go — ee eet a al iia ik 4 ashington and Lee has received a $2.75 million bequest from the estate of Mr. and Mrs. John H. Tucker jr. Tucker, a 1910 graduate of the University, died May 22, 1984. His wife, Hortense Rigby Tucker, died Jan. 16, 1984. To honor the bequest, the University has designated the faculty library in the School of Law the Hortense Rigby and John H. Tucker jr. Faculty Law Library. In addition, the Tuckers’ names have been inscribed on the Benefactors’ Wall in Washington Hall, where donors who have made gifts of $1 million or more to the University are recogniz- ed. Robert Parker Doremus was Washington and Lee’s first million-dollar donor. With the addition of the Tuckers’ gift, 17 such benefactions have now been made to the University. ‘‘Mr. and Mrs. Tucker’s lifelong devotion to Washington and Lee and their abiding interest in education will be per- manently memorialized through their magnificent gift,’’ Presi- dent John D. Wilson said of the bequest. ‘‘We are grateful beyond measure for their lives and for the benefit their bequest will bring for future generations of students and teachers.’’ Tucker was born Feb. 25, 1891, in Pine Bluff, Ark. At Washington and Lee he was a member of the Albert Sidney Boat Club, the Student Committee, and Sigma Nu. He received the bachelor of arts degree from the University. He served with the U.S. Army on the Mexican border in 1916 and served during World War I as aide-de-camp to Gen. W.P. Richardson in France and northern Russia. He was recall- ed to service in World War II, when he earned the mark of col- onel. He retired from the Army in 1951. After receiving his law degree from Louisiana State Univer- sity in 1920, he began practicing law with the firm of Smither- man and Tucker. At the time of his death he was the senior partner of Tucker, Jeter & Jackson in Shreveport. Tucker married Hortense Rigby, a native of Mansfield, Ohio, in 1924. One of Tucker’s greatest contributions was founding the Louisiana State Law Institute in 1938. The institute made possi- ble modernization of the state’s civil code and served as a model for law reform throughout the United States. It worked to modernize civil procedure and codify criminal law. Tucker served as president of the institute from its found ing until 1965 when he became its first chairman. At the time of his death he had been named ‘‘Animateur’”’ of the institute, an office that had been designed specifically for him. T. Haller Jackson Jr., ’48, president of the institute and one of Tucker’s law partners, explained that the French term referred to ‘‘a per- son who animates an enterprise or an organization by his ar- dor and his spirit.’’ Tucker was also known for a variety of other contributions to the law, including several important cases he handled. He was considered one of the world’s authorities on the Napoleonic Code, the body of French civil law enacted in 1804, which was a model for the civil codes of many countries. He was a member of the Supreme Court Committee on Pro- fessional Ethics and Grievances from 1934 to 1937. He was the author of Source Books of Louisiana Law. He addressed many groups and was a visiting lecturer at Tulane University from 1959 through 1961. Hortense Rigby Tucker John H. Tucker jr. He served on numerous civic boards in Shreveport and was a trustee of the First Presbyterian Church of Shreveport. He was a member of Omicron Delta Kappa, the Order of the Coif, Phi Beta Kappa, and Phi Delta Phi. Tucker was awarded an honorary doctor of laws degree from Washington and Lee in 1958. He also received honorary degrees from Louisiana State University, Tulane University, Loyola University, and Centenary College of Louisiana. He was award- ed the French Legion of Honor in 1956. He received the Hat- ton W. Sumners Award in 1958 for outstanding service. On the occasion of his 80th birthday, the annual Tucker Civil Law Lecture was established in his honor at the Louisiana State University law school. During memorial exercises for Tucker in the Supreme Court of Louisiana, Haller Jackson said of his colleague: ‘‘Col. Tucker’s participation in the (Louisiana State Law) Institute and its work was prompted by his desire to improve and moder- nize the civil law of Louisiana. His ambitions were supported by a foundation of religious faith, unshakeable integrity, in- quisitiveness, scholarship, perseverance, physical energy, all il- luminated by an unusual intellect and perception.”’ Jackson continued: ‘‘Out of his inquisitiveness came his use and love of books and a resulting scholarship that contributed to the success of the institute. . . When he began the practice of law, he began collecting a personal law library which (came to be) recognized as one of the finest private collections in the United States. He was not a mere book collector. He was a serious scholar of the law, he loved his civil law library, and he used it almost daily.”’ Tucker donated his personal library, which came to number some 12,000 volumes, to the law school at Louisiana State University, where it is designated the Tucker Civil Law Collection. Another of Tucker’s partners, Robert McLean Jeter, ’41, noted that the naming of Washington and Lee’s law faculty library in the Tuckers’ honor was a particularly appropriate memorial. ‘‘I am certain that Mr. and Mrs. Tucker would be gratified and complimented by this action on the part of the University,’’ said Jeter. ‘Mr. Tucker was extremely interested in books and the development of libraries. . . . The dedication of the law school faculty library is a fitting tribute to their memory.”’ - . - - - : . . - 7 . - . . - an . - = . - - oe . - - ’ . ~ - = so : - . + : . - . . - : - - . : . s 7 a a 7 — . : - : - 7. a . 2 - 7s - i wo - - 7 eS Re Nobel Prize Dr. Joseph Goldstein, 63, Honored For Medical Research by Jeffery G. Hanna ALLAS—A late afternoon rainstorm was poised on the Dallas horizon by the time Dr. Joseph L. Goldstein, ’62, ap- peared in the doorway of the auditorium at the University of Texas Health Science Center. Goldstein had barely set foot in the room when the army of photographers spotted him and began snapping and flashing away, creating a dazzling display of man-made lightning. Moments later Goldstein’s colleague, Dr. Michael Brown, entered the room, and the firestorm of flashes intensified. The photographers pressed forward, and Goldstein and Brown retreated to the steps leading to the stage. As the two doctors stood there, patiently posing and stead- fastly smiling for the photographers, the audience of about 500—an odd assortment of media and medical students, doc- tors and medical school professors—rose together to applaud. It had been more than 11 hours since the phone had rung shortly before 7 a.m. in Goldstein’s Boston hotel room. Half a world away the Nobel Assembly at Stockholm’s Karolinska Institute had announced that the 1985 Nobel Prize for Medicine had been awarded to Goldstein and Brown for their revolutionary research on the role of cholesterol in heart disease—research that has allowed scientists to understand what Goldstein describes as ‘‘the mechanism through which diet and exercise can help prevent a heart attack.’’ When the Nobel Assembly’s decision was announced, the two doctors were attending a conference at Massachusetts In- stitute of Technology. Fittingly, their research had provided the keynote speech for that conference the night before. Back in front of the same audience the next morning, they uncork- ed champagne and held a news conference with the Boston media before hurrying to the airport to board a plane back home to Dallas and the University of Texas Health Science Center where they had made the first in their series of remarkable discoveries 13 years ago. 2 W&L Now they were seated side by side on the stage, listening to a series of speakers—from the medical center’s president to the mayor of Dallas—heap praise upon them and their work. Once those preliminaries were over, Goldstein and Brown stepped to the lectern and received another standing ovation. A beaming Goldstein began: ‘‘I’d like to say that I think Dallas is known to the outside world for the Dallas Cowboys, Neiman Marcus, and the television program Dallas. And I think now we should add the University of Texas Health Science Center at Dallas.’’ Then Brown and Goldstein took turns at the microphone. They shared credit with their colleagues. They explained how they had managed to work together so productively and har- moniously. And they tried to sum up 13 years of landmark research in five minutes while using language laymen might comprehend. When the formal news conference ended, Goldstein was cornered by reporters and asked to recreate his initial reaction to the early morning telephone call. “‘It was,’’ he said, ‘‘exciting and thrilling and very surprising.’’ Exciting and thrilling? Certainly. Surprising? ‘‘The only really surprising part,’’ says Daniel Markstein III, °63, who roomed with Goldstein at Washington and Lee, ‘‘was that it took the Nobel Committee so long to confirm what all of us have known for about 25 years.”’ hen Joseph Leonard Goldstein of Kingstree, S.C., ap- plied for admission to Washington and Lee in 1958, one of his references, John F. McFadden, ’36, concluded a glowing letter of recommendation with this prophetic pronouncement: ‘I, personally, feel that this young man will someday be a credit to Washington and Lee if he is admitted.’’ Twenty-seven years later that prediction, accurate though it might be, seems a woefully inadequate way to describe Washington and Lee’s first Nobel laureate. To be sure, Goldstein immediately assumes a special place in the University’s history. And yet, it seems clear that he had already occupied a fairly prominent place long before the Nobel Committee recognized the Goldstein-Brown collaboration this October. Consider this thumbnail sketch of Goldstein’s W&L career: he compiled a perfect 4.0 average as a premed student and was the valedictorian of his class; he was Phi Beta Kappa, Omicron Delta Kappa, Who’s Who, and Phi Eta Sigma; he was a member of Alpha Epsilon Delta, secretary of the Publica- tions Board, secretary of the Zeta Beta Tau social fraternity, and secretary-treasurer of the Student Library Committee; he won the freshman chemistry award and the Phi Beta Kappa sophomore award; he was editor-in-chief of The Calyx. Perhaps that explains why so many of his W&L professors and classmates, like Markstein, have not been terribly surprised by Goldstein’s success. ‘‘T had no inkling that a former student of ours was about to win a Nobel Prize,’’ says James Starling, retired former head of the department of biology. ‘‘But when it did happen, it didn’t surprise me in the least that it was Joe.”’ Adds Edward Holmes, ’63, himself a professor of medicine at Duke University and one who has kept abreast of the work of Goldstein and Brown: ‘‘I think it is fairly easy to say that Joe had the potential even back then [as an undergraduate] to do something special. I haven’t been surprised at anything that he has accomplished. As someone else has suggested, Joe’s synapses open and close faster than those of most other people.’’ In the immediate aftermath of the Nobel announcement, stories of Goldstein’s undergraduate days were making the rounds—the time he got a 99 on an organic chemistry test and the next highest grade was 66, for instance; the way he jug- gled a full schedule of academic and extracurricular respon- sibilities and still managed to organize a nightly bridge game, for another; the fact that the only B on his transcript came in a physical education class, which did not count in his grade- point average. All the stories and all the storytellers are consistent in the picture they paint of a student who clearly excelled in the demanding premedical regimen but still managed to take full advantage of everything a college education offered. ‘‘The one impression that I want to convey about Joe Goldstein,’’ says Markstein, ‘‘is that here is a fellow who is obviously very gifted, but he is certainly not a one- dimensional person. He enjoyed the arts. He enjoyed good food, good wine, and good times. It really is a great delight to see someone like that succeed the way he has.”’ Goldstein addresses Dallas news conference. By today’s standards, Gold- stein’s ability to participate in so many diverse activities and still make straight A’s as a premed student would be rare, indeed. And yet, measured against the premed students of his era, it is clear that Goldstein was more the rule than the exception. ‘*T don’t know how it is for premed students there now,”’ says Holmes. ‘‘But when we were in school at W&L, most of the premed students were involv- ed in a number of other ac- tivities. The difference in Joe’s case was not that he was involv- ed in so many things, but that he did them all so much better than anybody else.’’ Adds Markstein: ‘‘The most remarkable thing about Joe was his ability to organize, whether it was his work on the Calyx or preparation for an examination. He was always able to order his obligations and his time so that he was able to complete his tasks efficiently, get enormously well-prepared, and leave a lot of time for the things he really enjoyed—playing duplicate bridge in Buena Vista, for in- stance, or the nightly midnight bridge games that he held in his apartment.”’ The diversity of his interests and his talents, say Gold- stein’s professors, was not limited to his extracurricular ac- tivities, either. He took numerous liberal arts courses and was as successful in those as he was in the laboratories. Naturally, that is a particular source of pride to professors who are dedicated to the value of a liberal arts background. ‘‘You must remember that in those days the curriculum was different from what it is now in that there were more general education courses required,’’ says William J. Watt, professor of chemistry. ‘‘One of the ideas that was current at that time was that premed students ought to be given the broadest possible curriculum. It is an idea that is coming back into vogue now.”’ One of Watt’s colleagues in the chemistry department, Keith Shillington, seconds the notion that a liberal arts background is a vital component in a solid premed prepara- tion: ‘‘The imagination is trained in a great many ways and not necessarily in the ways you’re ultimately going to use it. You may well train your imagination in some other way com- pletely, but the ideas ooze over.”’ Those ideas that trigger the imagination of a premed stu- dent can, Shillington would argue, ooze from such an unlikely source as, say, Victorian poetry. Sidney M. B. Coulling, the S. Blount Mason Professor of English, remembers having Goldstein in just such a class. ‘‘It was the spring semester of his junior year,’’ says Coulling, ‘‘and I have looked back in my records to find that his work all across the board was A work. This was an upper division course in Victorian poetry, and I think we ought to > W&L 3 og “He was a serious- minded student, but he was not a pedant. He was not a person who isolated himself. ’’ Goldstein in 1962 keep in mind that there was no pass/fail option in those days. He took the course for credit and was competing with senior English majors on a graded basis. ‘*There was no challenge that was too great for Joe. He was a Serious-minded student, but he was not a pedant. He was not a person who isolated himself. He was a good all- around student.’’ Shillington, who has taught premed students organic chemistry for more than 30 years, remembers Goldstein as ‘‘very bright and intense.’’ Adds Markstein: ‘‘He was always not obviously com- petitive, but he was bound and determined that nobody was going to be ahead of him. Particularly did that trait manifest itself in organic chemistry.’’ Other of Goldstein’s professors and classmates have similar stories to tell about his undergraduate career. One of those stories has particular meaning to the Nobel Prize, though. It is told by L. Randlett Emmons, professor of biology. ‘“*Joe Goldstein’s last year here as a student was my first year,’’ recalls Emmons. ‘‘In the fall of that year Scientific American devoted an entire issue to reporting new research that had been conducted about the cell. *‘Not long after that magazine came out, Joe and Herb Salomon, a classmate and close friend, appeared in my office one day and asked whether I would be willing to sit down with the two of them once a week and discuss the material that had been in that article. So we arranged a special seminar, just the three of us. Something like that has never happened to me since, two students asking for such a class. ‘‘Joe was extraordinary. I was just out of graduate school myself, so I tended to look upon him and Herb more as peers than as an old professor looking down on these young kids. Joe made a profound impression on me and has been on the tip of my tongue in the 25 years since he left here since I am constantly using him as an example of the ‘good old days.’ I know they were excited down in Dallas when the Nobel was announced, but they wouldn’t have been much more thrilled than I was or we were.”’ oe Goldstein remembers that his interest in the University was initiated by ‘‘a friend who had relatives who had gone to Washington and Lee.’’ 4 W&L —Dr. Sidney M. B. Coulling Professor of English Goldstein in 1985 ‘*T was interested in premed, and the premed program was pretty strong, so I interviewed there and thought it was a good place to go.”’ Looking back on his undergraduate career from the heights of a Nobel Prize in Medicine, Goldstein finds that his memories of the courses he took in English and history and economics and French and German are as vivid as his memories of the strictly premed courses. ‘‘There are a lot of people that I remember as being outstanding in the liberal arts at Washington and Lee. Three who come to mind most quickly are professors Coulling in English, (William) Jenks in history, and (Charles) Phillips in economics,’’ Goldstein said in an interview following the Nobel Prize announcement. ‘**T probably took as many of the traditional liberal arts courses as I did premed courses. They were especially stimulating. Had I gone to another institution that was not oriented so strongly toward the liberal arts, I think I probably still would have tended to take such courses. I think it is very important to have a blend. Premedical students should, I think, have as liberal an education as possible.’’ It is interesting to note that the 1962 Calyx, the edition that Goldstein edited, was dedicated to Coulling and Phillips and that the dedication begins: ‘‘Just as the Washington and Lee Swing has represented the progressive course that our University has pursued during the past few years, so have two of the younger members of the Faculty become symbolic of this pervading attitude.”’ As for the premed curriculum, Goldstein recognizes how much different it was in comparison with the kind of courses that are included now. **In those days biochemistry wasn’t taught, and there was not a lot in genetics,’’ he said. ‘‘There were the traditional courses in organic and inorganic chemistry, and I remember those as being very solid. Today things are so different. We have high school students working in our laboratories during the summers.”’ By constrast, Goldstein did not participate in research dur- ing his undergraduate days. ‘‘Those opportunities simply were not available at that time,’’ he said. In fact, the Robert E. Lee Undergraduate Research Pro- gram at W&L began a year after Goldstein graduated. @ into this interns ip. = then I _ io. oo iin of fai no great orking together in their Dallas laboratory in 1972, Drs. Joseph L. Gold- stein, 63, and Michael Brown discovered a complex molecule that has been describ- ed variously as ‘‘gatekeeper,’’ ‘‘door- man,’’ and ‘‘border patrol’’ which acts to recognize and admit cholesterol into the body’s cells. Cholesterol has received considerable publicity in recent years—none of it positive. A waxy alcohol that is soluble in fat but not water, cholesterol is actually essential to life since it is the primary in- gredient of cell membranes, steroid hor- mones, and bile acids. There are two main sources of cholesterol for the body: it is produced in the liver and it enters the body through fat in food. Once in the body, cholesterol is transported through the blood and lymphatic fluid in lipopro- teins, a combination of fat and protein. One particular lipoprotein, LDL or low- density lipoprotein, is chiefly responsible for carrying cholesterol. While they were studying tissue cultures of human skin cells called fibroblasts, Goldstein and Brown iden- tified the presence of highly specific pro- tein molecules on the surface of cells— cell-surface receptors—that recognize the LDL particles in the blood, bind to those particles, and admit them to the cells. Once in the cell, the lipoproteins are broken down and the cholesterol is freed for the cell’s use. Cholesterol becomes a problem when the receptors do not do their work ade- quately, either because of an inherited genetic condition in which the body has too few LDL receptors or when a person’s diet contains too many saturated fats and thereby causes the liver cells to produce too few LDL receptors. With an inadequate number of LDL receptors, cells are not able to collect the LDL particles which remain in the blood stream and collect to create a plaque on artery walls, eventually clogging the artery and causing a heart attack or a stroke. **The first thing our work has done,”’ explained Goldstein at the Nobel Prize news conference in October, ‘‘is identify a single molecule, one protein, that you can actually isolate in a test tube and you can clone the gene, and one knows it ex- ists. It is that single molecule that is ac- tually very important in determining whether one has low cholesterol levels (which would be good) or high cholesterol levels (which would be bad). *‘Once one knows that one has this molecule, then one can begin to study the W&L Living To Enjoy Your Steak (And Eggs) factors that make it go up and down, whether that is drugs, diet, hormones, any number of things. That will be the long- term practical effects of this work.’’ The work has already had practical ef- fects. The most famous of those involves a young Texas girl who suffered from familial hypercholesterolemia (FH), the genetic defect in which one is born with fewer LDL receptors than normal. Stormie Jones was six years old when she was diagnosed as suffering from the severest form of FH, which had left her arteries clogged and caused her to have two major heart attacks. On the advice of Goldstein, Brown, and their colleagues at the University of Texas Health Science Center in Dallas, the child was given a new heart and liver in an operation conducted in Pittsburgh. Unlike Stormie’s liver which was in- capable because of her genetic deficien- cy to produce LDL receptors, the donor liver provided her with 60 to 65 percent of the necessary receptors. When the Nobel Prize was announced in October, Stormie Jones, now 8, came from her home in Cumby, Texas, to Dallas to pro- vide a living testimony to the scientists’ work. Stormie Jones, whose blood cholesterol level was 1,200 before her new liver and medication cut it to a normal level of between 180 to 200, is a classic genetic case. But in recent writings, Brown has pointed out that ‘‘more than half of all people in Western, industrializ- ed countries, including the United States, have levels of circulating LDL that are above the threshold at which atherosclerosis (the gradual clogging of arteries and other blood vessels with cholesterol) is accelerated.’’ And the cholesterol problem for most Americans is not genetic but has more to do with dietary habits. In a lecture given not long before the Nobel Prize, Brown suggested that Stor- mie Jones and James Fixx, the author of best-selling books on running who died of a heart attack, suffered from the same problem—i.e., a deficiency in the number of LDL receptors. The difference between Stormie Jones and James Fixx, Brown noted, was that the former’s problem was genetic while the latter acquired the deficiency through life style and eating habits. ‘“‘The beauty of this research,”’ says Edward Holmes, ’63, a professor of medicine at Duke University, ‘‘is that it involves one of the most common hereditary diseases in the world—familial hypercholesterolemia. It is not an inciden- tal abnormality. *“What they have done is define how a complex system works by using pa- tients. In addition to identifying the way in which cholesterol is carried in the blood, they have opened up a brand new area of receptor biology in which we are learning how cells communicate. They are the movers and shakers in that whole field.”’ But it is still their study of cholesterol that has put Goldstein and Brown in the fore. A year ago the two scientists wrote an article about their work for Scientific American. In it they endorsed as ‘‘pru- dent’’ a diet ‘‘moderately low in animal fats.’ But they also suggested that ‘“‘therapy with drugs that increase the number of LDL receptors may turn out to be appropriate for some people who do not have FH but in whom the number of receptors is reduced by diet or other factors.’”’ If they are shown to be effective and safe, such drugs, wrote Goldstein and Brown, ‘‘may one day make it possible for many people to have their steak and live to enjoy it too.’’ context which was difficult: they made rounds; they saw pa- tients; they taught students. And at the same time, the work developed.’’ As the research unfolded and began to have ever wider implications, not just to their study of FH but to the very nature of how cells work, the two scien- tists were dubbed **the gold dust twins’’—they clearly had the Midas touch. The list of awards given for their research was as lengthy as it was im- pressive even before the Nobel Prize—the scientific communi- ty’s most prestigious honor and one that carries with it a gold medal, a diploma, and 1.8 million Swedish kronor (about $225,000). As remarkable as the scope and im- portance of the Goldstein-Brown research is the way in which the two scien- tists have worked so closely and productively for the past 13 years. It is, one colleague has suggested, a synergistic relation- ship. ‘‘It’s like Gilbert and Sullivan, Lerner and Lowe,”’ Fenley, the medical information director, told a Dallas newspaper. ‘‘They precisely complement one another.’’ Explained Goldstein of the relationship: ‘‘We have tremen- dous respect for each other’s opinion and intellect. Although we argue about how to do an experiment, whether you add a tris buffer or a phosphate buffer, those things turn out to be trivial. We made this discovery simultaneously, and it was an exciting discovery, and we’ve been sort of committed to work- ing it out—an intellectual dessert, so to speak.’’ A feature article in the Dallas Times-Herald in 1978 pro- vided this analysis of the relationship: ‘‘Goldstein, the geneticist, is described as a walking encyclopedia, a vacuum cleaner scooping up scientific information as fast as he finds it. He’s always buzzing with ideas. Brown, the biochemist, is more focused and analytical, able to select the best way to solve a problem.”’ Whenever his colleagues talk about Goldstein, they never fail to mention his dedication to his work. Holmes, the Duke medical school professor who was a year behind Goldstein at W&L, says that ‘‘by everybody’s account, Joe is the most committed scientist around. He lives and breathes his work. In addition, he brings the very highest aptitude to that. He ab- solutely has excelled at every point in his career.’’ Goldstein (right) and research partner Michael Brown That helps to ex- plain why all the honors and awards that the team has received, including the Nobel Prize, have been something of a mixed blessing. Both Goldstein and Brown are, by nature, private peo- ple. The notoriety of their work has re- quired them to be more visible in the scientific community than they probably would prefer. ‘We feel an obligation to the school to use this (the Nobel Prize) for publicity purposes,”’ said Goldstein. ‘‘But if we were to permit it, we would literally be run to death. Everybody would like you to speak here and there. Even before this it has been difficult to maintain the intensi- ty of our research and still deliver lec- tures and speeches. This means we’ll have to say ‘No’ more often.’’ Whatever the underlying source of the effectiveness that Brown and Goldstein have as a team, it is clearly the sort of collaboration that you would expect to produce Nobel Prize work. And it’s clear that, even after they have officially received the Nobel Prize on Dec. 10 in Stockholm, the two scientists will certainly not be willing to rest on their lofty laurels. ‘“‘We’re only at the stage now where we know that a molecule called a receptor exists and controls the blood cholesterol level,’’ explained Goldstein. ‘‘We have been able to study the molecule in animals. We know how to make it go up and down in animals. ‘*The future will be to try to understand how one can regulate or make this molecule go up and down in humans with the ultimate hope that by learning more about the factors that regulate this molecule, one would be able ultimately to delay the onset of atherosclerosis or heart attack.’’ Back in October as the Nobel news conference was ending and the rainstorm was beginning to dampen a darkening Dallas, someone asked Goldstein what he planned to do tomorrow, the day after the Nobel Prize had been won. Said Goldstein: ‘‘Tomorrow should be a day like any other day. We’ll get back to the laboratory, back to what we’re doing.’’ Then he paused, smiled, and added: ‘‘Actually, I suppose tomorrow will be a bit different.”’ W&L 7 1e Outermost 7 7 altitude of about 50 degrees. The comet will move with the stars to the western horizon at about 15 degrees per hour and will set about midnight in the direction west-southwest. The tail of the comet will be quite short. While you are freezing in the dark, you might also note Jupiter, which sets at about 8:30 p.m. and will be a brilliant ‘‘star’’ in the southwest. With steady binoculars you should be able to see the famous four Galilean moons of Jupiter, discovered by Galileo when he first turned a telescope to the sky about 1610. These moons change their position rapidly about the planet from night to night. A second object to look for is the lovely open cluster of stars known as the Pleiades, located due south at about 10 p.m. (south-southeast before then). Through a pair of binoculars, the Pleiades form what has been called ‘‘the littlest dipper’’ to distinguish them from the more well-known Big and Little Dippers in the very nor- thern sky (Ursa Major and Ursa Minor). The conspicuous winter constellation Orion will appear to the southeast. JANUARY (New Moon—January 10) Probably the best chance for those of us located in the northern hemisphere to see the comet with the naked eye will occur during the first two weeks of this month. Look southwest at the end of twilight or about 6:30 p.m. The comet will be at an altitude of about 30 degrees in the constellation Aquarius. The comet sets at 9:30 on the first of the month but sets at 7:30 by Jan. 15. The tail of the comet will be short and pointing up as twilight ends. Jupiter will be low in the southwest with the Pleiades toward the south. In the early evening of Jan. 12, both Halley and Jupiter will be near the Physics pro- fessor Ronald Reese (left) and Robert E. Lee Research Scholars Barry Miller (center) and David Vaughn prepare to photograph Comet Halley in the W&L observatory. waxing crescent moon. Orion will be to the left of the Pleiades. FEBRUARY Throughout this month, the comet will be too close to the sun to be seen. MARCH (New Moon—March 10) Prepare to get up before the birds—the comet will now be visible in the early morning. Look low in the southeast before 5 a.m. when morning twilight begins. The comet will be at on- ly a 10-degree altitude but the tail may be longer than it was in January. By March 7, look left of the Teapot of Sagit- tarius. Saturn will be visible in the east-southeast above the comet and the reddish, bright star Antares in Scorpius. Mars will be below and to the east of Saturn and will be reddish in color. APRIL (New Moon—April 9) Unless the tail of the comet is very long and bright, it will be difficult to see the comet this month. But if it is visible, it will again be an early morning object. Look between 2 a.m. and 4 a.m. very low in the southern sky. The head of the comet may even be below the horizon with just the tail streaming up for you to glimpse. Unobstructed southern horizons are a must, with clear skies and little ground haze. Both Saturn and Mars will again be visible. Saturn will be almost due south at an altitude of about 30 degrees with Mars to the southeast and at a lower altitude. W&L 9 Conference participants (from left) Harlan Beckley of Washington and Lee; Robert N. Bellah of California-Berkeley; John P. Reeder Jr. of Brown University; Elmer Johnson of General Motors Corp.; Gordon Kaufman of Harvard University Divinity School; John Howard Yoder of Notre Dame; James M. Gustafson of the University of Chicago; Mary Midgley of the University of Newcastle; Edward Farley of Vanderbilt Divinity School; Robert Audi of the University of Nebraska; and John Elrod of Washington and Lee. Theocentric Ethics W&L Hosts Major Conference on a New Theory of Theological Ethics by Anne Coulling ore than 180 theologians, philosophers, ministers, sociologists, and other interested individuals from throughout the United States, Canada, and abroad descended on the Washington and Lee campus in late September to discuss what is likely to be regarded as one of the most important works on theological ethics in this century. During the three-day symposium, eminent scholars from a variety of disciplines presented their particular assessments of Ethics from a Theocentric Perspective, a two-volume work by University of Chicago theological ethicist James M. Gustafson. According to Harlan Beckley, associate professor of religion at Washington and Lee and a principal organizer of the conference, Gustafson’s proposal represents ‘‘a radical departure from the dominant theologies and ethics of our time. He calls for a reorientation of human life away from a human-centered religious and moral life to a way of life that consents to the larger purposes of God.’’ The topic was important; the speakers represented the very best in their respective fields. But what made the conference at 10 W&L least uncommon, if not unique, was that the author himself was in the audience to hear assessments of his work, which came in the form of both prepared lectures and lively discus- sions that followed those lectures. One of the speakers, Robert N. Bellah, Ford Professor of Sociology and Comparative Studies at the University of California at Berkeley, put the unusual nature of the sym- posium in perspective when he began his lecture in the Moot Court Room of Lewis Hall by saying: ‘fAs the sessions and days begin to accumulate, I can’t help thinking what it must be like to be Jim Gustafson. On the one hand, it is an enormous honor to have so large and distinguished a group of people gathered together to discuss one’s work. On the other hand, we sit in a quasi-courtroom with three spectral judges [occupying the empty judges’ chairs]. Or, to switch metaphors, I cannot help but think that Jim is some kind of sacrificial victim at a high and extended academic ritual.’’ On the third and final day, however, Gustafson had his say. He responded to the speeches that had gone before, defending and explaining his positions on some points but also pointing to the directions theology and ethics might take after his book. Following his formal presentation, Gustafson participated in a panel discussion that concluded in an electric moment when Paul Ramsey of Princeton University, himself a theological ethicist of note, directed a pointed and quite per- sonal question to Gustafson—asking him, in effect, why his theology had abandoned so much that is central to the Chris- tian tradition. Gustafson then delivered one of the most moving sermons many in the audience had ever heard, explaining with obvious emotion what had led him to reject those traditional Christian beliefs that characterize God as serving human interests. Said Gustafson: ‘‘I think the tradition has sold people short. It has led them to expect things in the primary language of the tradition that fail over and over again. [T]here are experiences of suffering in the world, and the traditional religious language has a way of just putting syrup over that stuff and not suffering with the suffering and not being in pain with those who are in pain.”’ Gustafson, for whom God’s purposes are larger than fulfilling human interests, concluded: ‘‘I am not only concerned with the re- symbolization of Christianity, so that these traditional symbols can be made more meaningful. I am concerned that we recognize a cer- tain kind of authenticity of religious sensibility and moral pro- fundity and sensitivity [among those who do not consent to the tradition]. And [I am concerned] that at least some of us [theologians] find a way of talking to that, of nurturing that. . . and of not building bar- riers which are not essential, in my judgment, to the ultimate thing that life is about, which is not preserving the tradition, but is the service of God.”’ Rarely does a scholarly symposium attain such a moment of high drama. It was, in part, that emotional exchange that led the sym- posium’s final speaker, Elmer W. Johnson, a vice president of the General Motors Company and a close friend of Gustafson, to describe the proceedings as ‘‘the most exhilarating, intellec- tual stretching symposium I have ever attended. . .”’ Certainly the dramatic conclusion was a high point. But it was the combination of the symposium’s format and the quality of the speakers that led so many of the participants to praise it as one of the most meaningful events they had ever attended. Beckley had conceived of such a conference three years earlier while he was on sabbatical leave at the University of Chicago. ig Gustafson presents his response. ‘‘The first volume of Ethics from a Theocentric Perspec- tive had just been published when I was at Chicago,”’’ said Beckley, ‘‘and it seemed to me that this was the first com- prehensive work in theological ethics by a mature scholar since Reinhold Niebuhr’s The Nature and Destiny of Man in the mid-1940s. Since this is the sort of work that comes along on- ly every fourth decade or so and has the potential for lasting significance, it clearly requires careful scrutiny.”’ Gustafson’s work is so sweeping in scope that it touches several other disciplines. Consequently, Beckley designed the conference to be interdisciplinary in nature, incorporating the fields of ethics, theology, philosophy of religion, philosophy of science, and sociology. ‘‘We wanted to bring represen- tatives of these fields together to get their perspectives,’’ said Beckley. ‘‘But we also wanted to use Gustafson’s book as a ‘ben- chmark’ or base from which scholars could study and discuss the entire subject of theological ethics.”’ The speakers were all leading scholars in their respective fields. In addition to Bellah and Johnson, papers were presented by Robert Audi, professor of philosophy at the University of Nebraska; Ed- ward Farley, professor of theology at Vanderbilt University Divinity School; Robert O. Johann, chair- man of the department of philosophy at Fordham University; Gordon O. Kaufman, professor of theology at the Harvard University Divinity School; Mary Midgley, retired senior lecturer in philosophy at the University of Newcastle in Great Britain; John P. Reeder Jr., chairman of the department of religious studies at Brown Universi- ty; and John Howard Yoder, who teaches theology and ethics at the University of Notre Dame. Much of the funding for the symposium was provided by the Philip Fullerton Howerton Fund for Special Programs in the Department of Religion. The Howerton Fund was established in 1973 by Mrs. Philip Howerton in memory of her late husband. The conference was co-sponsored by The Institute for the Advanced Study of Religion at the University of Chicago Divinity School. ‘‘The project was a major success from every standpoint,’’ said Beckley. ‘‘Important people in ethics and theology came to Lexington to talk with each other about an important book, and I think they left not only with a positive experience about the conference but, we hope, with some appreciation for Washington and Lee as a place where an event such as this can be undertaken with considerable success.’’ Beckley and Charles M. Swezey, ’57, a professor of ethics at Union Theological Seminary in Richmond, are currently in- volved in negotiations to have the papers from the symposium published. WkL ii of one of the | learning—h woe Saeet rd oS a ett tee wmes Oo CA AY, l/l In the forefront of planning Washington and Lee’s cognitive studies program are (from left) David G. Elmes of the psychology department, Ramsey Martin of the philosophy department, and Kenneth Lambert of the computer science department. studies, for instance, Jarrard’s continuing research into the function of the hippocampus—a primitive brain structure implicated in memory function—could be related to Elmes’ research into the effect of moods on student study habits or to Pemberton’s studies of Plato’s dialogues. In addition to the obvious intellectual benefits of the program, cognitive studies carries a practical application. ‘‘The ‘life of the mind’ serves as a metaphor for liberal learning,’’ the two professors say, *‘but just as important, the life of the mind governs our mundane affairs. ‘‘Disorders of language, memory, or reading are devastating because they can disrupt leisure and work as well as in- tellectual pursuits. Many aspects of cognitive studies address such problems, and many students of a practical bent, such as budding clinical psychologists and premedical students, find them of par- ticular interest.”’ Another area in which cognitive studies will have practical application is artificial intelligence. Elmes and Martin say ‘‘expert systems’’—such as MYCIN, the computer program that assists physi- cians in diagnosing diseases—are a facet of artificial intelligence that represent ‘fan important contribution to society. These applications of cognitive science have worked in a synergistic way with basic cognitive studies.”’ The importance of the new field was underscored recently in an article in The Chronicle of Higher Education in which psychologist Robert Perloff wrote: ‘‘One area that has turned departments of psychology around 180 degrees is cognitive science and artificial in- telligence. Cognitive science has put the mind and head back into the legitimate purview of psychology: How do we analyze problems? Which solutions are effective? Which are ineffective? That has tremendous implications for how children learn, how to prepare textbooks, how to correct learning disabilities.’’ At the outset, the cognitive studies program will be made up of relevant courses that are currently available to students. The departments of psychology, computer science, classics, and perhaps sociology/anthropology will identify the cognitive studies courses in both the lower and upper levels. The first year will be ‘‘one of natural evolution, both deliberate and resulting from the mixing of disparate interests,’’? Elmes and Martin Say. Beginning in the 1986-87 academic year, students will be able to construct an independent major in cognitive studies, although no formal department or major requirements will be made. Growth and development in cognitive studies will be predicated upon interest shown by both students and faculty. With the founding of the program in cognitive studies, Washington and Lee will join such institutions as Brandeis, Brown, Hampshire, MIT, Rochester, Vassar, Wellesley, Gustavus Adolphus, and Tulane that have either formal or coordinate undergraduate majors in the field. *‘Ultimately,’’ say Elmes and Martin, ‘‘the goal may be a major program in cognitive studies, but in the meantime we see cognitive studies serving as a medium for attracting students and faculty in- terested in studying the mind.”’ W&L 13 Homecoming Sampler E = “sees S Robert Vienneau, ’87, at the piano, accompanies Bruin Richardson, 86, and Cathleen Tiernan, ’89, in a Homecoming Day concert in Lee Chapel. tl Alumni enjoy the pre-game picnic. Kevin Weaver dives for yardage in the Generals’ 42-17 Homecoming victory over Maryville. Weaver emerged as one of the na- tion’s leading Division IIT rushers and had an average of 141 yards per game with 14 touchdowns through W&L’s first seven games. \ Ellen Satterwhite of Mary Baldwin College is crowned Homecoming queen by chemistry pro- fessor Keith Shillington. 14 W&L The ~ University - Report — 1984-85 A Message From the Rector To Alumni, Parents, members of the business community, and other friends and supporters of Washington and Lee University: Each year we include our annual report of gifts in this issue of the Alumni Magazine. This year it is my privilege as the Rec- tor of the Board of Trustees to express to each of you our heartfelt thanks for the generous support we received this past | year. We thank you also for your continuing commitment to helping Washington and Lee as it makes further progress in its achievement of excellence. To me and to your Board of Trustees it is particularly noteworthy that our total gifts for the past year 1984-85 were the highest since the completion of the Development Program in 1982. As you will note elsewhere in this report, our total gift support amounted to $7.8 million, just under the $7.82 million achieved in 1981-82 when we ended the Development Program. The total gift support from alumni added up to $3.74 million, also the highest total received since the end of the Development Program. We must always remind ourselves that philanthropy has maintained this sixth-oldest institution of higher learning in the United States for nearly a quarter of a millennium, all in accor- i dance with what we might call a basic plan to which George i Washington himself subscribed and which Robert E. Lee : strengthened by the gifts he developed as a result of the fact that so many in both North and South held him in such high esteem. Even as we express our gratitude, we must be reminded of our need to do more. Each generation has been the beneficiary of those who came before, and each generation is obligated to pay its dues. While we can take pride in our accomplishment, we must strive to do more to further the influence of this great institution that has meant so much to us and can mean even more to those who follow after us at Washington and Lee. Sincerely, ray JAMES M. BALLENGEE 16 W&L GIFT SUPPORT TOTAL NEW GIFT SUPPORT FOR 1984-85 The figures below represent cash only for the 1984-85 Annual Fund. Pledges, in addi- tion to cash and securities, are included for all other gifts. 1. BY SOURCE Current* Capital * * Total The Annual Fund Alumni $1,227,873 oe $1,227,873 Parents 73,825 —-— 73,825 Friends 10,789 a 10,789 Other Gifts Alumni 87,446 $1,481,569 1,569,015 Parents 12,599 5,058 17,657 Friends 69,609 2,192,600 2,262,209 Foundations 412,000 165,892 577,892 Business 107,578 10,274 117,852 The Virginia Foundation for Independent Colleges 178,625 —— 178,625 Remainder Value of Deferred Gifts a 112,712 112,712 Totals $2,180,344 $3,968,105 $6,148,449 ll. BY PURPOSE For annual operating expenses (current gifts) $2,180,344 For Endowment (capital gifts) . Student Aid $ 748,168 1 NOR General & Special Endowment 2,900,780 3,648,948 i For Plant Fund (capital gifts) .- General Building 63,657 Ye Restoration 255,500 | 319,157 GRAND TOTAL $6,148,449 “Current gifts are completely expended during the academic year. **Capital gifts are designated as additions to endowment and physical plant. A. Total voluntary support during the past five years. Cash only (no pledges) as reported to the Council for Financial Aid to Education. Includes payments on pledges recorded in previous years. Year 1980-81 1981-82 1982-83 1983-84 1984-85 Current $1,721,111 2,180,185 2,293,858 met tT 2,155,050 Capital Total $3,946,933 $5,668,044 5,639,118 7,819,303 2,458,601 4,752,459 3,519,657 5,729,774 5,645,551 7,800,601 D. Alumni support for addition to endowment and improvement of physical plant per student (capital gifts). 1980-81 1981-82 1982-83 1983-84 1984-85 1,634 students 1,679 students 1,714 students 1,719 students 1,714 students $1,459 per student 1,998 per student 649 per student 1,086 per student 1,408 per student E. Total voluntary support (all sources) per student. B. Total alumni support during the past five years. Cash only (no 1980-81 1,634 students $3,468 per student pledges) as reported to the council for Financial Aid to 1981-82 1,679 students 4,657 per student Education. 1982-83 1,714 students 2,772 per student Year Current Capital Total 1983-84 1,719 students 3,333 per student 1980-81 $1,219,384 $2,384,378 $3,603,762 1984-85 1,714 students 4,551 per student 1981-82 1,584,475 3,355,448 4,939,923 1982-83 1,631,948 1,113,370 2,745,318 F. Total voluntary alumni support per student. 1983-84 1,467,853 1,866,365 3,334,218 1980-81 1,634 students $2,205 per student 190-80 \ ad iy rennin Bahr 1981-82 1,679 students 2,942 per student 1982-83 1,714 students 1,601 per student C. Alumni support for current operations per student (annual fund 1983-84 1,719 students 1,939 per student plus other current gifts). 1984-85 1,714 students 2,184 per student 1980-81 1981-82 1982-83 1983-84 1984-85 1,634 students 1,679 students 1,714 students 1,719 students 1,714 students $746 per student 944 per student 952 per student 853 per student 776 per student W&L_ 17 The Robert E. Lee Associates The Board of Trustees established the Robert E. Lee Associates in 1967 to identify and recognize leadership in support of the University’s educational program through the Annual Fund. Alumni and friends are cor- dially invited to join this fellowship. Qualification for membership: An alumnus, parent, or friend may join the Robert E. Lee Associates by con- tributing $1,000 or more to the University through its Annual Fund for support of current operations in the educational and general budget. This gift may be paid in One or more installments during the fiscal year—July 1 to June 30. The General’s Council Edward B. Addison ’45 James C. Ambler ’18 Frank S. Anderson Jr. ’70 Thomas D. Anderson ’34L Earle T. Andrews ‘25 Billy V. Ayers '40 James M. Ballengee ’48L William F. Barron Jr. '52 Frederick Bartenstein Jr. ’39, ’41L Edgar A. Basse Jr. '39 F. Fox Benton Jr. 60 Richard H. Berry °57 Harry Lee Bowman ’36 Edgar M. Boyd ’42 Thomas B. Branch Ill 58, ’60L Frank C. Brooks '46 Frank C. Brooks Jr. '71 L. Palmer Brown Ill ’30 Robert G. Brown ’49 Russell G. Browning '42 Martin P. Burks Ill '32L William O. Burtner ‘17, 721L J. Stewart Buxton ’36 Cadaver F Benjamin L. Chapman ’64 William N. Clements ’50 Noel P. Copen '57L Dr. George B. Craddock '30 Rogers L. Crain ’75 H. Tyndall Dickinson ’39, °41L Rush S. Dickson Family Foundation, Inc. P E. Waller Dudley '43, '47L Mr. & Mrs. Lynn P. Durham P Joseph F. Ellis Jr. '43 Jorge E. Estrada ’69 James D. Farquhar 63 David B. Favrot Jr. 82 Thomas C. Frost Jr. '50 Fred O. Funkhouser ’34 Harry G. Goodheart Ill 66 Floyd D. Gottwald Jr. P Gerard E. Grashorn '30 Robert S. Griffith Jr. 52 Houston H. Harte 50 Robert E. Hill '40 Hon. Omer L. Hirst ’36 Douglas H. Hunt ’75 Robert E. R. Huntley 50, ’57L Herbert G. Jahncke ’30 Raleigh M. Jenkins '24 David T. Johnson Sr. P H. Reed Johnston '28 Willlam R. Johnston ’61 Earl T. Jones ’30 Stanley A. Kamen ’49L Joseph S. Keelty 44 Rt. Rev. Christoph Keller Jr. ’39 Walton W. Kingsbery Jr. ’48 S L Kopald Jr. 43 Eugene M. Kramer '40 Kenneth P. Lane Sr. ’36 18 = W&L H. Gordon Leggett Jr. ‘54 Charles R. Lemon '49 William J. Lemon ’55, ’59L Sydney Lewis ‘40 Alfred L. McCarthy '23L Samuel P. McChesney Jr. '38 Joseph B. McCutcheon ’51 Lewis A. McMurran Jr. ’36 Robert H. Mann Jr. '55, ’57L J. Hardin Marion Ill ’55, ‘58L James Bland Martin '31L Oliver M. Mendell '50 Mr. & Mrs. Ross R. Millhiser P Houston M. Minniece ‘31 Julian B. Mohr ‘52 Robert J. Moody ’49 James P. Morefield '52L Edwin A. Morris '26 John E. Neill 38 Milburn K. Noell 51, ’54L E. Marshall Nuckols Jr. ’33, °35L Howard B. Peabody Jr. '44 Reginald H. Pettus '48L J. Alvin Philpott ’45 James A. Philpott Jr. 69, '72L Dr. George H. Pierson Jr. ‘50 Hon. Lewis F. Powell Jr. '29, ’31L Donald H. Putnam Jr. '44 Lee A. Putney '53 W. Bryce Rea Jr. 39, ‘41L William M. Read '40 Patterson H. Robertson ‘65 Robert W. Root '42 Charles S. Rowe ’45 Mr. & Mrs. A. T. Sanders P John E. Scheifly '48L LM SCon. S7t Richard T. Scruggs P Franklin H. Simmons 751 Richard T. Sloan ’42 Stephen S. Sloan ’54 Otis H. Smith °31 William H. Smith °15 Jerry G. South '54 James D. Sparks Sr. '32L George M. Spaulding '34 Gen. A. A. Sproul Ill °37 John W. Stackhouse ‘55 John M. Stemmons '31 Guy T. Steuart Il ‘53 Charles C. Stieff Il ’45 Calvert Thomas '38 Dr. John N. Thomas ‘24 J. Thomas Touchton ‘60 Richard H. Turrell '49 John H. Van Amburgh P M. Theodore Van Leer ’51 David N. Walker ’38 Jonathan W. Warner ’41 W. Emory Waters Jr. ‘68 John A. Webber ’'35 Herbert M. Weed .'42 David S. Weinberg '55 J. Albert Weinberg ’31 William E. Whaley Jr. ’40 General’s Council: A Lee Associate becomes a member of the General’s Council for cumulative gifts totaling $10,000 or more in 12 consecutive years or less, or for a pledge to accomplish this result. Thus, a donor may fulfill this requirement by giving—or pledging to give—$1,000 in any 10 years out of 12, by making larger gifts at less frequent intervals, or by a single gift | of $10,000 or more. Listed are members of the General’s Council and those Lee Associates who made a gift to the Annual Fund of $1,000 or more during 1984-85. Walter H. Wilcox '29 Ernest Williams Il '38 William |. Winchester ’58 William P. Woodley ’28L Herbert M. Woodward ’41 Raymond E. Wooldridge ’60 Frank G. Young ’66 George M. Young ’54 William K. Young ’58 Lee Associates Edward B. Addison ’45 Peter A.Agelasto Ill ‘62 Dr. & Mrs. Bobby R. Alford P A. Lewis Allen '58 James C. Ambler '18 F. Sheldon Anderson Jr. '’70 Thomas D. Anderson '34L Earle T. Andrews ‘25 Randall W. Atkins ’76L Mr. & Mrs. William J. Atkins P C. DuBose Ausley '59 Billy V. Ayers '40 Seth N. Baker ’38 William N. Baker ’67 William H. Baldock III ’39 James M. Ballengee '48L Norwood E. Band ‘34 Virginius J. Barnett ’30 William F. Barron Jr. '52 Frederick Bartenstein Jr. ’39,'41L Edgar A. Basse Jr. '39 Ralph W. Baucum Jr. '58 Andrew H. Baur ’37 Andrew N. Baur ’66 William G. Bean Jr. ’51 F. Fox Benton Jr. ‘60 Richard H. Berry '57 Mr. & Mrs. Judah Best P Alfred T. Bishop Jr. ’41 Joseph J. Blake Jr. ‘72 John K. Boardman Jr. ’51 Thomas T. Bond ’51 A. Lea Booth '40 Harry L. Bowman '36 Edgar M. Boyd ’'42 Thomas B. Branch Ill '58,’60L Thomas H. Broadus Jr. '59 Paul K. Brock ’54 Charles D. Broll '59,’'62L Frank C. Brooks '46 Frank C. Brooks Jr. ‘71 L. Palmer Brown III ‘30 Robert G. Brown ‘49 Willlam E. Brown ‘30 Russell G. Browning ‘42 Thomas B. Bryant III ’59,’61L Joseph R. Burkart '64 Martin P. Burks Ill ’382L William O. Burtner °17,'21L Calvin T. Burton ’25 J. Stewart Buxton '36 Cadaver F John R. Calvert '54 C. Howard Capito '68 David D. Carothers '61 Leigh Carter '49 Gray C. Castle '53,’55L Frederick A. Casto '65L Benjamin L. Chapman ’64 Hal S. Chase '65 Laurence G. Christie Jr. '53 Robert E. Clapp Jr. ’30 John K. Clark ’33 William N. Clements II ’50 Malcolm A. Clinger Jr. ‘58 John A. Cocklereece Jr. '76,’79L John A. Cooper '28 Noel P. Copen ’57L William J. Cox '17 George B. Craddock '30 Rogers L. Crain '75 Joseph L. Craycroft Jr. '59 J. Robert Cross ’54 Richard F. Cummins ’59 John J. Cuomo '34 Marvin P. Daniel '74 Joseph H. Davenport Ill '69 Mr. Richard M. Davis P Calvert G. DeColigny Jr. ’61 Jacquelin H. De Jarnette '65 Richard A. Denny Jr. '52, 54L Dudley W. Denton ‘30 Haskell T. Dickinson ’39,’41L Rush S. Dickson Family Fdn., Inc., F Ben W. Ditto ’43 Beverly M. DuBose Ill '62 John M. Duckworth ‘71 E. Waller Dudley '43, 47L Mrs. Thomas P Duncan F James E. Dunn ur. '82 Mr. & Mrs. Lynn D. Durham P Robert C. Dyer ’35 George E. Eagle ’52 Ernest V. Echols ’41 Joseph F. Ellis Jr. °43 Jorge E Estrada M '69 W. Gilbert Faulk Jr. ’68L David B. Favrot Jr. '82 Mark R. Ferdinand '67L John T. Fey '39 Christopher D. Friend ‘71 G. Archer Frierson Il °73 Frigid Freeze Foods Inc F Thomas C. Frost Jr. ’50 Fred Q. Funkhouser '34 James F. Gallivan ’51 Benjamin D S Gambill Jr. ’67 Harold A. Gleason '70L Harry G. Goodheart Ill 66 Mr. Floyd D. Gottwald Jr. P Gerard E. Grashorn ’30 S. Graves '30 John L. Griffith Jr. °72L Robert S. Griffith Jr. '52 Lee Halford Jr. '69 W. Cecil Hardy Jr. ’39 Charles F. Harris Jr. '71 W. Allen Harrison ’54 Houston H. Harte '50 Mrs. Oliver H. Havens P Kazimierz J. Herchold '68 Milton T. Herndon '56L Robert E. Hill '40 Clarence E. Hinkle '25L W. Hayne Hipp '62 Malcolm M. Hirsh '45 Omer L. Hirst ’36 Vernon W. Holleman Jr. '58 Arthur Hollins Ill '51 Samuel B. Hollis '51 William M. Hollis Jr. °53 A. Linwood Holton Jr. '44 William B. Hoofstitler '36 Farris P. Hotchkiss ’58 C. Royce Hough Ill ’59 Albert C. Hubbard Jr. ’59,’62L Forrest E. Huffman '36 Douglas H. Hunt '75 J. Ward Hunt '69 Robert E. R. Huntley '50, '57L Charles D. Hurt Jr. 59 Richard A. Hurxthal ’50 Robert F. Hutcheson Jr. '39L Clay T. Jackson '76 R. Edward Jackson ’°45 Howard E. Jacobs '58 Herbert G. Jahncke '30 Raleigh M. Jenkins '24 James W. Jennings Jr. '65,’72L Carlton D. Johnson '49 Mr. David T. Johnson Sr. P Rupert H. Johnson Jr. '62 H. Reed Johnston '28 William R. Johnston 61 A. Alling Jones '68L Earl T. Jones ’30 Hoyle C. Jones '60 J. Luther Jordan Jr. °42 Stanley A. Kamen '49L Sidmon J. Kaplan '56 Joseph S. Keelty '44 Christoph Keller Jr. ’39 _ Walton W. Kingsbery Jr. '48 Walter F. Kirk Jr. '37 John D. Klinedinst '71,'78L Mr. & Mrs. Paul Knight P Donald H. Koontz ’71 S L Kopald ur. '43 Eugene M. Kramer '40 Richard R. Kreitler ’65 E. Ross Kyger Ill ’63 Gilbert R. Ladd Ill '57 John L. Lancaster II] 58 Robert P. Lancaster '62 Allie H. Lane °43, 47L Kenneth P. Lane '36 Malcolm Lassman '60,'’63L Thomas O. Lawson ’'56 Howard D. Leake '24 H. Drake Leddy ‘71 James A. Lee '17 H. Gordon Leggett Jr. ’54 Charles R. Lemon '49 William J. Lemon '55,’59L Harold F. Lenfest ’53 Lester |. Levine '51 Sydney Lewis '40 Stephen F. Lichtenstein '53 Joseph D. Logan Ill ’67L Michael R. Long '72 Mr. & Mrs. S. Mark Lovell P John P. Lynch ’30 Emmett W. MacCorkle Jr. '26 Robert H. Mann Jr. '55,’57L J. Hardin Marion '55,’58L Edwin M. Marks ’35,’37L J. Stephen Marks Ill ’59 James B. Martin '31L Paul M. Maslansky '54 Thomas A. Mattesky '74 J. Jason Matthews ‘73 Courtney R. Mauzy dr. ’61 John D. Mayhew '26 Floyd R. Mays Jr. '38 Alfred L. McCarthy ’23L Samuel P. McChesney Jr. '38 Hayes C. McClerkin Jr. '53 Donald H. McClure '62 Charles T. McCord Ill '63 Joseph B. McCutcheon '51 Joseph S. McDaniel Ill ’65 Douglas McDowell '64 James C. McElroy '70 Oswald B. McEwan '40L Thomas N. McJunkin ’70,'74L Lewis A. McMurran ’36 Charles A. Mead, Jr. '44 Frederick A. Meiser Jr. '68 Oliver M. Mendell ’50 Joseph Mendelsohn Ill ‘52 James E. Mendoza ‘80 James A. Meriwether '70 R. L. Miller °28 Stuart T. Miller ’36 Mr. & Mrs. Ross R. Millhiser P Mrs. Dorothy S. Milling F H. Thorp Minister Jr. ’49 Houston M. Minniece °31 Julian B. Mohr °52 Phillip D. Mollere '66 Robert J. Moody '49 William W. Moore ’62L James P. Morefield ’52L J. Marvin Moreland Jr. '56 John S. Moremen '57L Edwin A. Morris '26 George C. Morris Jr. ’46 Lawrence H. Morrison ’70 A. Payne Morrow '28 Robert A. Mosbacher '47 John H. Mullin Ill 63 David M. Murray '52,’55L John E. Neill 38 Milburn K. Noell Jr. '51,’54L William C. Norman Jr. ’56 Henry Nottberg Ill ‘71 E. Marshall Nuckols Jr. ’33,’35L J. Richard O’Connell ’56 Mr. & Mrs. Elliott M. Ogden Jr. P E. Staman Ogilvie ’71 W. Buckner Ogilvie Jr. ’64 Howard B. Peabody Jr. '44 Markham L. Peacock Jr. '24,’26L Albert G. Peery ’31,’32L John T. Perry Jr. '41 Reginald H. Pettus ’48L Harry M. Philpott '38 J. Alvin Philpott '45 J. Alvin Philpott Jr. '69,’72L George H. Pierson Jr. '50 Edward F. Pilley ‘30 Frederick H. Pitzer Jr. ’42 Dr. & Mrs. Daniel W. Platt P Daniel E. Popovich '53 Lewis F. Powell Jr. '29,’31L Maurice E. Purnell Jr. '61 Donald H. Putnam Jr. '44 Louis R. Putnam '52 Lee A. Putney ’53 E. Stuart Quarngesser ’55 Miss Mary R Quinlan F Harold J. Quinn Jr. '54 William E. Rawlings ’53 Mrs. Oscar G. Rawls F W. Bryce Rea Jr. '39,'41L William M. Read '40 Kelley E. Reed Jr. '37 Neil W. Riley '26 Patterson H. Robertson '65 Mr. T. Lee Robinson P Henry L. Roediger III '69 Robert W. Root '42 Charles S. Rowe '45 Mr. & Mrs. A. T. Sanders P William W. Schaefer ’60 John E. Scheifly ’48L Mr. & Mrs. Bertram R. Schewel '41 Mr. & Mrs. Elliot S. Schewel '45 Mr. & Mrs. Marc A. Schewel '69 Stanford L. Schewel ’40L Francis E. Schmitt '30 Charles C. Schock Jr. °43L Isadore M. Scott '37L Mr. Richard T. Scruggs P Jacob S. Seligman '36 Bernard M. Shapiro '64 Richard S. Sharlin '61 Isham M. Sheffield III '53 Conway H. Sheild Ill '64,’67L Charles C. Sherrill 60 Frontis W. Sherrill ’28 Franklin H. Simmons '51 Sam P. Simpson IV ’65 Dr. Sanford R. Singer P Richard T. Sloan '42 Stephen S. Sloan '54 Chester T. Smith Jr. °53 Davis P. Smith Ill °71 Donald C. Smith '39 Hatton C. V. Smith '73 H. Gilbert Smith Jr. '68 Herbert F. Smith '64,’67L James W. Smith '62 Otis H. Smith ’31 Richard W. Smith '41 William H. Smith °15 W. Currin Snipes Jr. '81 Jerry G. South '54 Jason B. Sowell Jr. '54 James D. Sparks Sr. ’32L George M. Spaulding '34 Archibald A. Sproul Ill '37 John W. Stackhouse ’55 Martin E. Stein Jr. '74 John M. Stemmons '31 Hon. Roscoe B. Stephenson '43 Guy T. Steuart Il °53 Charles C. Stieff Il '45 Edward E. Stover '37L Robert E. Stroud '58L Charles A. Sweet '36 Robert W. Swinarton '50 Calvert Thomas ’38 John N. Thomas '24 Robert G. Thomas '65 Roland E. Thompson '52 Glenn O. Thornhill Jr. ’63 J. Thomas Touchton ‘60 Mr. & Mrs. W. Bryan Trammell P S. Maynard Turk ’52L Richard H. Turrell '49 J. Hoge Tyler Ill ’31, ’33L Mr. John H. Van Amburgh P Kenneth Van de Water Jr. '41 M. Theodore Van Leer '51 John W. Vardaman Jr. ’62 E. Darracott Vaughan Jr. '61 David N. Walker '38 |. Grier Wallace Jr. ’35 Thomas R. Warfield '52 W. Emory Waters '68 John A. Webber '35 W. Temple Webber Jr. '53 Herbert M. Weed '42 David S. Weinberg ’55 J. Albert Weinberg Jr. '31 John L. Wellford Jr. '57 Robert F. Wersel '42 Mercer E. West IV ’75 William E. Whaley Jr. ’40 Robert M. White II ’38 Bryan B. Whitehurst '74 Walter H. Wilcox '29 William M. Wilcox Jr. '47 Maxwell P. Wilkinson ’28 Charles M. Williams '38 Ernest Williams ’38 Lewis D. Williams Jr. ’37 John D. Wilson F William |. Winchester '58 Sherwood W. Wise ’32,’34L John A. Wolf ’69,’72L Frank B. Wolfe Ill 61 John F. Wolfe ’65 Thomas K. Wolfe Jr. °51 James A. Wood '59 William P. Woodley '28L Herbert M. Woodward Jr. '41 Raymond E. Wooldridge '60 William L. Woolfolk '25 Robert H. Yevich ’70 Frank G. Young '66 George M. Young ‘54 Mr. & Mrs. Robert J. Young Jr. P W. Kelly Young ‘58 2 anonymous donors W&L 19 The Annual Fund: Academic Classes The Annual Fund is Washington and Lee’s _most vital source of gift income. Listed here are the names of alumni who contributed to the An- nual Fund in 1984-85. Their gifts helped Washington and Lee continue the high quality of its educational program. Those whose names are printed in bold face type are members of the Lee Associates and made gifts of $1,000 or more in 1984-85; those whose names are in italics are Col- onnade Club members and made gifts of $100-$999 in 1984-85. CLASS OF 1912-A William M. Miller CLASS OF 1913-A Edward S. Delaplaine Carroll B. Wiltshire CLASS OF 1914-A J. Goodloe Jackson Jr. Julian W. Selig CLASS OF 1915-A Leslie S. Anderson Judge M. F. Hays Rupert N. Latture William H. Smith CLASS OF 1916-A Lawrence B. Bagley C. Lynch Christian Edwin B. Shultz CLASS OF 1917-A J. Withers Blake William O. Burtner Joseph R. Campbell William J. Cox Morris H. Hester Curtis C. Humphris James A. Lee W. Calvin Wells CLASS OF 1918-A James C. Ambler Edmund D. Campbell Sr. A. Carter Crymble James L. Howe Jr. Adolph S. Marx Matthew W. Paxton Sr. Virgil J. Trotter Jr. Samuel W. Winebrenner CLASS OF 1919-A Theodore H. Evans Irving M. Lynn Craig H. Patterson Tiley H. Scovell Jr. Allen Wescott CLASS OF 1920-A Eric B. Hallman H. Douglas Jones Emmett W. Poindexter Henry F. Trotter CLASS OF 1921-A H. Gray Funkhouser William A. Gibbons Jr. Samuel L. Raines David C. Storey CLASS OF 1922-A Benjamin J. Broach Robert S. Cherry Jr. W. Franklin Portlock 20 W&L W. Ashton Powell Dewey A. Reynolds W. Henry Trotter Jr. CLASS OF 1923-A George H. Bowers Jr. Melville 1. Dunn Jr. Judson B. Holloway Frank B. Hurt Weldon T. Kilmon Ainsley J. Lester Jr. George C. Mason Jr. Joseph W. McDonald Jr. J. Vaughn Penn R. Winter Royston Kenneth R. Smith D. Raymond Snively Thomas M. Wade Jr. Raymond G. Wickersham CLASS OF 1924-A E. Almer Ames Jr. Percy D. Ayres Edmund M. Cameron John A. Cummins J. G. Guerrant Andrew H. Harriss dr. Raleigh M. Jenkins Henry W. Jones Robert L. King Will P. Kirkman Howard D. Leake Robert T. Merritt Albert Newman Markham L. Peacock Jr. Francis W. Plowman Turner Rice H. Ogden Shropshire ‘Glenn R. Stoutt John N. Thomas Norfleet Turner CLASS OF 1925-A Earle T. Andrews Robert F. Bolling Jr. Calvin T. Burton Bruce F. Gannaway Robert F. Goodrich Murrel D. Klein Edgar T. McHenry Andrew T. Roy Joe Shuman Allan P. Sloan Edgar J. Spady William L. Woolfolk CLASS OF 1926-A Jack G. Chapman Almand R. Coleman Wilton W. Conner Ralph |. Daves William W. Davis Fred W. Dismuke Charles H. Hamilton Kenneth C. Kimbrough Charles W. Lowry dr. Emmett W. MacCorkle Jr. John D. Mayhew Thomas T. Moore Edwin A. Morris Neil W. Riley Paul M. Schuchart Thomas L. Seehorn Ernest L. Smith William F. Smith Digby C. West James N. Williams W. Burke Williamson Henry M. Wilson CLASS OF 1927-A Walter R. Bishop George E. Burks H. Reese Coleman George T. Ellis Allen Harris Jr. Thomas L. Harris William M. Jennings Joseph L. Lanier Sr. Zed C. Layson Robert P. London Jr. Reginald V. Milbank Russell G. Miller Alexander S. Moffett J. Preston Moore William W. Morgan John B. Perry Jr. C. W. Clark Poole Burchard S. Pruett R. Wilbur Simmons Thomas P. Stearns Robert E. Stevenson George W. Summerson Alfred F. Taylor Israel |. Weinstein David H. Wice CLASS OF 1928-A John W. Alderson Jr. Joseph B. Clower Jr. Percy Cohen John A. Cooper William C. Drewry Frank R. Dupuy John B. Ecker Wilton M. Garrison Julius Goldstein Roger J. Haller John S. Hanckel Van A. Hollomon Sr. Gerald F. Horine H. Reed Johnston Joseph J. Kaplan William J. Luria Willett C. Magruder Jr. R. L. Miller A. Payne Morrow Frontis W. Sherrill Howard K. Tayloe Maxwell P. Wilkinson Stuard A. Wurzburger John M. Yarbrough CLASS OF 1929-A Charles V. Amole James E. Bane James A. Castner William F. Chandler Benjamin C. Eastwood E. Lee Gamble T. Graham Gibson Harry E. Godwin George H. Goodwin Gale B. Haley Louis A. Haskell Asa M. Janney Franklin P. Johnson II Benjamin P. Knight Jr. Robert B. Lee John M. Luft Adolphus L. Lunsford William A. MacDonough Adrian L. McCardell Jr. Allen B. Morgan Francis T. Parker Jr. Robert W. Pharr Walter N. Pharr Lewis F. Powell Jr. Vernon R. Preston John S. Ragland James J. Salinger Irwin T. Sanders William G. Sargent Alfred |. Schlossberg James M. Shackelford Arthur D. Simmons O. Norris Smith Walter H. Wilcox Clyde H. Wilson Thomas P. Wright CLASS OF 1930-A William T. Alsop Virginius J. Barnett Franklin R. Bigham John B. Bowen Jr. L. Palmer Brown Ill W. Bestor Brown William E. Brown Henry F. Bullard Robert E. Clapp Jr. Charles W. Cocke George B. Craddock John P. Davis Robert W. Davis Jr. Dudley W. Denton Frank O. Evans Sr. Justin E. Farrell Idus D. Felder Jr. Lawrence Y. Foote Gerard E. Grashorn Edward S. Graves Stanley F. Hampton Abbot A. Harman James N. Hess Herbert G. Jahncke Earl T. Jones Virgil C. Jones Murrel H. Kaplan Fred B. King Jr. Charles |, Lewis Martin P. Lindsey John P. Lynch Robert V. May J. B. Merrick Gus E. Mitchell Jr. John A. Mitchell John H. Nelson Shuford R. Nichols Edward F. Pilley Alexander L. Roberson Jr. James R. Roberts Rev. Leon R. Robison Jr. Gilbert V. Rosenberg Francis E. Schmitt Mark Sperry George A. Sprinkel III William T. Stuchell Jr. Merle Suter James W. Tankard William G. Tarrant Jr. Harry E. Trail Alfred S. Wagner Jr. C. E. White Jack A. Williamson Gustave B. Wiltshire Jr. CLASS OF 1931-A John H. Beury Leonard C. Borland Charles A. Bowes Watson A. Bowes Lawton M. Calhoun Sidney W. Clay Walter E. Coe Grafton E. Cost Thomas S. Fox Frank E. Freeman Redmond B. Gautier Jr. Elbert E. Hall Julius Halpern John H. Hardwick A. McGehee Harvey Okey K. Hickman Paul A. Hornor Eugene Johnson W. L. Jones George Junkin Luther W. King Beverly J. Lambert Jr. Talcott C. Lancaster A. Bernard Levin Morton P. Levy Herbert B. Luria III James L. Lytle Ur. Henry R. Mahler ur. Duncan McConnell Houston M. Minniece William C. Morris Gilmore N. Nunn James K. Osterman Charles Peeper Arthur W. Phelps Reno R. Porter James C. Rash Jr. John T. Raymond James L. Rimler William V. Rucker Stuart Sanders || Myron A. Schrantz Otis H. Smith George H. Snyder Jr. John M. Stemmons John A. Stuart Jr. John H. Thomas dr. Lewis A. Vance Stanley D. Waxberg J. Albert Weinberg Jr. Harold M. Weston Walter F. Williams CLASS OF 1932-A Erwin J. Ade John D. Clothier Jr. Richard M. Coe Robert C. Conner Everett N. Cross David F. Crossen Allan S. DeLand Irving E. Dobbs Charles E. Duncan Eli H. Fink Sollace M. Freeman Hunter B. Frischkorn John G. Hamilton John C. Harris Horace A. Hartgrove William D. Hoyt Jr. Isaac F. Hudson Leonard W. Johnson Thomas N. Layne Julian A. Levy Charles E. Long Jr. M. Robert Louis Charles C. Love E. Carlyle Lynch Jr. Eugene P. Martin Jr. Harry L. McCarthy James M. McKnight James W. McLaurin Keith L. Meyer Robert W. Phillips James S. Pollak ~ K. R. Routon Arthur B. Scharff J. Bernard Spector Jack J. Stark Haven Walton Sherwood W. Wise -Samuel S. Woody Jr. Joseph L. Wright John W. Zimmerman CLASS OF 1933-A Harold B. Abramson Reuben B. Armistead William S. Barker T. Deale Blanchard Irving B. Bricken William J. Brooks Jr. Frank E. Calhoun John K. Clark James F. Cook John D. Copenhaver M. Hoge Crighton Jr. John A. Culley Theodore M. Curtis Jeb S. Darby Jr. William T. DeVan Ralph S. Emerson William H. Flowers Jr. John Griffiths George H. Hagadorn Jr. Gray W. Hume Jr. Cary F. Irons Jr. C. Robert Kaplan William C. Kimbrell Leroy M. Lee Jr. Charles J. Longacre William F. Methvin dr. Frank B. Mooers Jr. Stanley S. Mundy Thomas O. Murphey G. William Musser E. Marshall Nuckols Jr. Alvin B. Ortner Walter J. Pound Homer. G. Ray Jr. lra H. Samelson Henry V. Saunders James W A Smith Jr. Robert R. Smith Emil L. Stevens George L. Stout Charles F. Suter Allen D. Symonds Cromwell E. Thomas William A. Williamson John A. Womeldorf CLASS OF 1934-A Norwood E. Band John D. Battle Jr. Darby W. Betts James A. Black Robert L. Buffington Frank J. Burkart J. Duncan Burn Joseph A. Burton Kenneth R. Cole John J. Cuomo Isadore E. Dattel Dan T. Dunn Sr. James D. Dye Holmes M. Dyer R. C. Dyer Samuel M. Engelhardt Jr. Leslie A. Faudree Robert E. Field Everette E. Fisher Fred Q. Funkhouser Hunter E. Gaylor F. Hadley Hamilton Jr. Bernard G. Harless Milton L. Harris Claude Harrison Jr. Louis B. Hess ur. Maxwell B. Hostetter Edward S. Jacobs John T. Jarrett Clyde A. Johnson M. Alexander Jones Henry L. King Jr. William O. Leffell Donald S. Levinson Victor F. Marshall George D. McClure Gilbert C. McKown Olin K. Miller William J. Moran Jr. Scott Mosovich Joseph C. Muller Foster McCrum Palmer Neil C. Pascoe George W. Pedigo Jr. Edwin H. Pewett James O. Phelps Jr. George W. Price Harvey Pride Charles A. Pritchard George L. Reynolds Herbert Rudlin Robert W. Ruth James T. Rutherford Jr. Claude E. Sanford Philip J. Seraphine Jr. Robert B. Shively John F. Shroder George M. Spaulding Daniel B. Startsman John H. Thomas Arthur C. Tonsmeire Jr. Everett Tucker Jr. Robert K. Turney William B. Tyree Henry Waller Jr. James M. White CLASS OF 1935-A Claude H. Barrick David J. Bennett Jr. Bruce T. Bullion Edward W. Chappell Jr. Thomas L. Coley Jr. Robert F. Cooper Jr. George E. Crisp William P. Diggs Jr. Arthur M. Doty Robert C. Dyer Leighton P. Everhart Joseph W. Fairlie Norman S. Fitzhugh Jr. William R. Fox James M. Franklin Clifford J. Freund Beardsley A. Gammel Jr. Loyal P. Gassman Ferdinand A. Hauslein L. Leslie Helmer Leroy Hodges ur. Benjamin B. Hope H. Harrison Huster James P. Jordan D. Lyle Kinnear Carney G. Laslie Jr. Sidney Lyons Edwin M. Marks Lewis W. Martin Samuel C. Mattox William D. McDavid George J. McGeory John S. Mitchell Gus Morgan Albert W. Moss John B. Nicholson Jr. Charles F. Porzig N. Joe Rahall Henry L. Ravenhorst Harry M. Rhett Jr. Thomas T. Richards Jr. George E. Short Winthrope C. Smith John D. Spohr Frederick D. Strong Gilbert R. Swink Jr. Jo M. Van Zandt Charles L. Walker Jr. 1. Grier Wallace Jr. Donald R. Wallis Sr. John A. Webber Thomas K. Williams Peyton B. Winfree Jr. James S. Woods Jr. Anonymous CLASS OF 1936-A William M. Allen Thomas H. Alphin William C. Barbee J. Vaughan Beale Walter R. Beales Jr. Harry L. Bowman J. Stewart Buxton Ernest L. Childs Jr. Duncan Corbett Robert F. Corrigan Harold O. Danielson John W. Davies Joseph T. Drake Jr. W. Magruder Drake Walter B. Eager Edgar E. Eaton Jr. Julius E. Garber Harry George Jr. William W. Gerber Joel Grayson III Joseph J. Harding Jr. George W. Harrison Arthur E. Hauck Charles W. Hawks John T. Herwick Omer L. Hirst Edward W. Hiserman William B. Hoofstitler Forrest E. Huffman William S. Johnson Alfred Kahn Jr. Martin Z. Kaplan John S. Kirkpatrick Kenneth P. Lane Bruce N. Lanier Leonard Leight Kenneth G. MacDonald Gregory S. Maury Jr. Lewis A. McMurran Stuart T. Miller William B. Miller Charles J. Mower George R. Myers Frank L. Price James L. Price Jr. Frederick D. Pultz William A. Rawak Alfred L. Reeser William T. Riley James A. Robertson Richard T. Scully Edward L. Seitz Jacob S. Seligman I. Glenn Shively Charles A. Sweet Joe B. Thomas Thomas R. Thomas Edward A. Turville Robert P. Van Voast S. Adrian Whiteside Tyree F. Wilson CLASS OF 1937-A William H. Armentrout Ernest C. Barrett Jr. Stanley Barrows Andrew H. Baur Douglas E. Brady Jr. Morton A. Brown James S. Bruce C. A. Butterworth Jr. James A. Byers William A. Clary Eugene G. Clayton Given W. Cleek Robert V. Cole William H. Daniel Raymond F. Dustin Herbert E. Fenner dr. Robert V. Flint Robert E. Graham Randolph V. Hall Charles K. Hauke Robert C. Hoff Norman P. Iler Phillip S. Jones Walter F. Kirk Jr. Victor R. LaVolpe Stephen B. Lee William T. Long C. Arnold Matthews Angus A. McDonald Alexander McIntosh Donald R. Moore Stuart B. Over Jr. Michael A. Perna Theodore M. Plowden Albert A. Radcliffe John W. Ray Donald C. Redfield Jr. Kelley E. Reed Jr. James H. Rice Jr. Edwin Rich Thomas B. Ripy Howell W. Roberts Jr. Charles E. Roth Parke S. Rouse Jr. Richard E. Simon Archibald A. Sproul Ill Richard K. Stuart Walter G. Thomas John J. Vandale William T. Watkins Charles R. Watt Latham B. Weber John D. Wiggins William C. Wilbur Jr. Frank J. Williams Jr. Lewis D. Williams Jr. Fillmore G. Wilson Laurence W. Wilson Jr. Clark B. Winter Frank H. Yaffe CLASS OF 1938-A Arthur H. Alexander _R. Tate Alexander Ben L. Anderson William B. Bagbey Seth N. Baker William C. Baker Jr. Robert M. Basile George F. Bauer Jr. C. Price Berryman A. Compton Broders Jr. William S. Burns William H. Byrn Charles F. Clarke Jr. Frank W. Comer John C. Cook Thomas B. Cottingham Paul H. Darsie James M. Davidson ur. Robert R. Finn J. Oliver Gluyas David W. Heath Frank Jones Jr. Landon Y. Jones Edward F. Kaczka Gerald M. Lively Thomas A. Malloy Jr. Donald N. Maloy M. Hepburn Many Floyd R. Mays Jr. Samuel P. McChesney Jr. Gilbert S. Meem Paul M. Miller John E. Neill J. George Ostertag James R. Parkey Jr. John E. Perry John S. Petot Jr. Harry M. Philpott Charles A. Prater Sidney N. Repplier T. H. Riggs William M. Rogers Jr. E. Alton Sartor Jr. Chester Schept Alphonse J. Sherman J. Chester Shively John H. Shoaf Courtland N. Smith Jr. J. Hiram Smith Wendell R. Stoops Robert E. Surles W. Saxby Tavel Calvert Thomas E. Sidney Vaughn Jr. ‘David N. Walker Robert C. Walker Fred E. Waters Jr. Robert M. White Il Charles M. Williams Ernest Williams CLASS OF 1939-A A. Ward Archer Hugh P. Avery Luther N. Bagnal dr. William H. Baldock Ill Frederick Bartenstein Jr. Arthur E. Basile Edgar A. Basse Jr. William A. Beeton Alexander W. Blain III David H. Boals Philip R. Brooks Robert A. Brower Edward F. Burrows Martin C. Cassett Thomas W. Christopher Rogers M. Cox Allen B. Craig Jr. Melvin E. Cruser Jr. Haskell T. Dickinson James S. Dudley Jr. Randolph M. Duncan J. Donald Eackles Andrew M. Eastwick Jr. Warren H. Edwards Harold L. Fenton Jr. John T. Fey James W. Fishel Sherwin B. French John B. Furr Zalmon H. Garfield Charles G. Gilmore George E. Goodwin George C. Graff Charles L. Guthrie Jr. H. L. Handley Jr. Frank M. Hankins Jr. W. Cecil Hardy Jr. Charles R. Hart Garret Hiers Jr. Robert W. Hilton Jr. Henry R. Horne Neil T. Houston William A. Jenks Christoph Keller Jr. George C. Kerr Joe W. Lydick Charles P. Lykes Cass A. Mayo Jr. Frank X. McNicol Gwynn W. Merritt Robert E. Milligan Jr. Patrick S. Mullins Jr. James E. Murphy George T. Myers James C. Paera John A. Parkins James W. Perkinson Victor F. Radcliffe W. Bryce Rea Jr. Harry E. Redenbaugh Wilfred J. Ritz John R. Robinson Richard S. Rude James A. Saltsman Jr. Charles H. Semple Jr. Wilbert T. Shafer: © Edgar F. Shannon Jr. John H. Sherrill Jr. Herbert C. Sigvartsen Donald C. Smith Edgar W. Stuart Maurice J. Swan Jr. Stockton H. Tyler Jr. George H. Vanta Charles M. Wall John H. Ward III J. Warren White Jr. Richard H. Wolfe CLASS OF 1940-A Jackson G. Akin John G. Alnutt Billy V. Ayers Ralph P. Baker Grover C. Baldwin Jr. Frank S. Beazlie Jr. James H. Bierer C. Edward Blair Richard W. Boisseau A. Lea Booth Edward E. Brown Jr. W&L 21 Thomas E. Bruce Jr. Donald T. Burton William E. Buxton Lawrence E. Carson John B. Cleveland Uriah F. Coulbourn Michael P. Crocker Charles C. Curl Jr. John J. Dangler Robert A. Dementi Solomon Diamond Hamilton G. Disbrow ur. Charles R. Disharoon Temple J. English Jr. Brent H. Farber Jr. Sion A. Faulk George M. Foote Roland S. Freeman James P. Fristoe Robert A. Fuller Robert L. Gayle Howard B. Gist Jr. George M. Grasty James C. Green Matthews A. Griffith Jerome A. Heldman T. Kennedy Helm dr. Ross V. Hersey Hamilton Hertz Robert E. Hill Robert C. Hobson Curg H. Hogan Joseph Hunter Robert S. Hutcheson Jr. G. Watson James III John W. Johnston Homer D. Jones Jr. William W. Kastner Jr. Lee M. Kenna Eugene M. Kramer Charles P. Lewis dr. Lorenzo C. Lewis Sydney Lewis Mervin H. Luria Arthur W. Mann Jr. Harry C. Mason Melvin R. McCaskill Matthew T. McClure Thomas H. McCutcheon Wilbur S. Metcalf Jr. Joseph R. Mighell III Earl B. Morgan Jr. George C. Nielsen Louis F. Plummer Richard M. Radcliffe William M. Read Peyton E. Rice Jerome A. Sacks Hans A. Schmitt Fred D. Shellabarger Howard T. Shepherd F. Scott Smither D. Lee Spaulding A. Ronald Thompson Charles O. Turner Louis M. Walker W. Blakey Walker Jr. William C. Washburn William E. Whaley Jr. Lloyd E. Worner Jr. CLASS OF 1941-A Robert H. Adams William P. Ames dr. Hugh G. Ashcraft Jr. Benjamin F. Ashcroft Arthur W. Avent Lupton Avery Alfred T. Bishop Jr. Gale C. Boxill Thomas S. Brizendine Thomas W. Brockenbrough Paul D. Brown Theodore A. Bruinsma Wiliam Buchanan James R. Burkholder III Henry T. Crocker Jr. Lecompte K. Davis G. Richard Day 22 =6OWeL Chester Eccleston Ernest V. Echols William L. Evans Jr. Otis C. Ferrell Jr. Alvin T. Fleishman N. Charlton Gilbert Donald J. Godehn Harry G. Goodheart Jr. Walter D. Harrod Richard M. Herndon Charles L. Hobson Edward E. Hunter Jr. Franklin W. Hynson Robert McLean Jeter Jr. F. Sydnor Kirkpatrick John H. Lawrence Robert E. Lee Ralph E. Lehr James R. McConnell G. Keith McMurran Thomas G. Morris James F. Norton Robert C. Peery John T. Perry Jr. Robert C. Petrey Robert H. Porter Jr. James H. Price Jr. Henry L. Roediger Jr. Macey H. Rosenthal John H. Rozelle James A. Russell Jr. H. Richard Sandstrom Jr. Bertram R. Schewel William L. Shannon Arthur C. Smith Jr. Richard W. Smith James B. Snobble Morry W. Spitz ur. Robert E. Steele II/ Robert L. Stein F Thornton Strang Joseph G. Street James D. Taylor Charles G. Thalhimer Edward H. Trice Jr. Thomas S. Tuley Jr. Kenneth Van de Water Jr. Clinton Van Vliet Herbert Van Voast Carl L. Varner Benton M. Wakefield Jr. Claude M. Walker John W. Weathers ur. Henry B. Wilder Marvin S. Winter Herbert M. Woodward Jr. CLASS OF 1942-A Walter C. Aberg Jur. Edgar M. Boyd Edward W. Brockman Jr. Frederick T. Bromm Ned H. Brower Russell G. Browning Richard A. Brunn Richard F. Burke III Donald S. Carnahan Jr. Evan Alevizatos Chriss Kenneth S. Clendaniel Thomas M. Cox Edwin C. Cuttino W. John Daniel Charles P. Didier John L. Dorsey Gustave A. Essig Lawrence J. Fisher Jr. James E. Foard Robert D. Gage II/ W. Scott Gilmer Louis C. Greentree Joseph H. Grubbs dr. William B. Gunn James S. Hill Sidney Isenberg Horace H. Jeter W. Marshall Johnson J. Luther Jordan Jr. William R. Kiser Andrew S. Lanier Robert A. Lawton Robert S. Leake Beverley W. Lee Jr. Daniel C. Lewis Jr. Gordon R. Lloyd Robert S. Loeb Joseph A. Matthews Hugh N. McClure John H. McMillan Walter L. Monroe Harrell F. Morris Lee D. Parker Robert L. Pinck Frederick H. Pitzer Jr. Archer C. Puddington Carter L. Refo Louis S. Rehr Green Rives dr. Robert W. Root Robert S. Rosenfeld C Lane Sartor Stanley L. Sater Raymond A. Searfoss Jr. Richard T. Sloan Clyde E. Smith Jr. James R. Sterrett John W. Stowers Glen F. Toalson Robert T. Vaughan Robert C. Walker Leon J. Warms Herbert M. Weed Robert F. Wersel Philip A. Wilhite Jr. Gibson M. Wolfe George A. Woolfenden James H. Woosley Richard T. Wright Floyd K. Yeomans Paul R. Zumkeller CLASS OF 1943-A&L Charles C. Adams Donald H. Adams D. R. Andrews C. Westbrook Barritt Richard E. Basile Calhoun Bond J. Tyler Bowie Robert B. Brainard Jr. Richard J. Bromley A. Leon Cahn Jay D. Cook Jr. Richard E. Cooke William R. Cory Louis R. Coulling Jr. Donald J. Crawford Henry B. Crockett Jr. Albert D. Darby Jr. Ben W. Ditto Emmett T. Drake E. Waller Dudley Leonard P. Eager ur. William M. Easterlin Joseph F. Ellis Jr. Beverly T. Fitzpatrick U. Grey Flowers Robert L. Garges Donald E. Garretson John W. Goode Ur. Franklin Gruesser William C. Hamilton Conrad L. Inman dr. R. Francis Johnson Harry C. Keller Houston M. Kimbrough S L Kopald Jr. Robert S. Lambert Jr. Allie H. Lane James G. LaPlante Stuart E. Lawrence Joseph E. Lee R. Gordon Long Robert F. MacCachran Alexander M. Maish Douglas W. McCammish James E. McCausland William McCoy Jr. John W. McGehee Jr. Stanley R. Mitchell Barton W. Morris Jr. Corneal B. Myers Russell H. Neilson Morrison R. Nelson William J. Noonan Jr. Charles G. Orsinger James S. Parsons John N. Peeples James W. Priest Donald L. Richardson Richard M. Roberts Paul E. Sanders Edward H. Scherr Charles C. Schock Jr. Marrion U. Scott John P. Scully Jr. Philip A. Sellers William K. Sevier Allen J. Sharitz John C. Sherrard Kenelm L. Shirk Jr. Paul M. Shuford Philip K. Shute Leo J. Signaigo Jr. Jay A. Silverstein William G. Sizemore Charles H. Smith Jr. Ernest E. Smith Roscoe B. Stephenson Lawrence C. Sullivan dr. Ralph S. Taggart Horace K. Tenney III Arthur Thompson Jr. William A. Webster Jr. William J. Wilcox dr. Edwin A. Zelnicker Jr. CLASS OF 1944-A&L Alvin D. Aisenberg Paul D. Barns Jr. John L. Barrett Frederick W. Bauer Baird Brown Earle P. Brown William B. Bryan G. Edward Calvert C. Lynch Christian Jr. Thomas D. Crittenden G. Richard Cronin Edward F. Devol Jr. Edmund A. Donnan Jr. Richard L. Duchossois Richard C. Eglin David R. Embry Robert Ewing Stuart M. Faison Robbins L. Gates William B. Geise Jr. Robert R. Giebel Howard Greenblatt A. M. Harman dr. Leon Harris dr. George E. Haw Jr. Richard L. Heard G. Edward Heinecke Alfred L. Heldman Jr. John C. Hempel Jr. E. Mason Hendrickson A. Linwood Holton Jr. Ewing S. Humphreys Jr. Frank N. Jarvis John P. Jordan Joseph S. Keelty Paul T. Kohr William S. Latz Edward P. Lyons ur. William R. Malloy William M. Manger Haven W. Mankin Edmund W. Marx William Mclndoe Jr. William P. McKelway James M. McKinney Charles A. Mead Jr. Robert C. Mehorter William R. Miller Il Norvelle W. Moses Grant E. Mouser /I// William F. Noll dr. William H. Oast Jr. William F. Parkerson Jr. Howard B. Peabody Jr. William P. Peak Donald H. Putnam Jr. Richard Rockwell Frederick B. Rowe ~John W. Runyan ur. Everett J. Schneider Jr. ~ John Schuber Jr. Robert H. Seal John H. Sherman Lloyd H. Smith dr. Roger M. Soth James C. Stanfield John H. Stansfield William M. Sterrett William R. Talbott Robert B. Taylor John C. Theurer Thomas B. Ulam Fred M. Valz Jr. William B. Van Buren III Samuel C. Williams Cullen F. Wimmer George T. Wood CLASS OF 1945-A&L Edward B. Addison Richard E. Bartlebaugh Robert K. Billingslea Jr. Robert Boucher John H. Brooks Harry F. Brown Jr. John F. Burger Paul R. Byrd John H. Churchwell Jr. Cortlandt S. Dietler Owen R. Easley Jr Edward B. Evans Peter M. Fetterolf E. Dean Finney David W. Foerster Walter E. Frye Arthur J. Hack Jr. Edwin H. W. Harlan dr. Malcolm M. Hirsh R. Edward Jackson David L. Jones Benjamin M. Kaplan Omer T. Kaylor Jr. Erwin D. Latimer III Charles E. Lewis Jur. Frank Markoe dr. Myron McKee Jr. Floyd W. McRae Jr. L. Gordon Miller Jr. Joseph P. Mingioli Ellis O. Moore G. Kinsley Noble Harry H. Orgain Jr. Philip P. Page Jr. J. A. Philpott Kenneth G. Puller Charles S. Rowe Elliot S. Schewel John H. Sorrells Jr. Charles C. Stieff Il Collier Wenderoth Jr. Joseph M. Zamoiski II CLASS OF 1946-A&L Hugh C. Allen Daniel H. Ball James F. Brewster Frank C. Brooks Robert S. Brown Jr. John H. Cheatham Jr. Fielder Cook Rodney M. Cook Sr. Sidney M. Coulling III L. Rex Criminale Patrick C. Devine T. Ryland Dodson Roy J. Fahl Jr. Clarence N. Frierson John Gately Eugene E. Griese Jr. David V. Guthrie Jr. Louis R. Hahn Jr. Robert C. Harter Donald S. Hillman John J. Kelly Il J. Gordon Kincheloe W. Hanes Lancaster Jr. Thomas C. Lee William A. Magee Harold T. Mankin Don R. Marsh Jr. Theodore B. Martin M. Pressly Mead Robert W. H. Mish Jr. George C. Morris Jr. Donald R. Moxham William C. Olendorf James A. Ottignon Dan C. Pinck Barton P. Quaintance Hugh E. Reams Robert S. Richardson Frederick C. Sage John C. Short ur. Philip J. Silverstein Sherman J. Smith Charles B. Tome Charles M. Weeks Harry W. Wellford Charles J. Williamson III Edmund S. Willis Kenneth B. Wilson Roger M. Winborne Jr. Sheppard W. Zinovoy CLASS OF 1947-A&L James H. Baldwin William T. Brotherton Jr. Harold T. Chittum Jr. Henry C. Clark Mitchell L. Harris Jr. Bernard F. Judy Harrison B. Kinney Warren G. Merrin Jr. Robert A. Mosbacher Joseph G. Patrick William H. Pifer William T. Ratliff Jr. James H. Sammons L. Roper Shamhart Charles H. Shook Robert A. Warms Thomas R. Watkins William M. Wilcox Jr. Eugene B. Wright Jr. CLASS OF 1948-A Nate L. Adams I! Julian C. Anderson William M. Bernard James F. Booker William W. Burton Donald E. Campbell James A. Cranford Jr. Marvin L. Daves Francis A. Davis Jr. Rutledge H. Deas Jr. Gordon A. Fox Elmer H. French Jr. B. Stanley Gill Jr. Frederick B. Gillette Hardin M. Goodman William L. Hopkins Charles C. Hubbard Walton W. Kingsbery Jr. William F. Leffen Andrew H. McCutcheon Charles R. McDowell Jr. Andrew C. McFall Jr. James T. McKinstry Selden S. McNeer Jr. Johnson McRee Jr. John E. Miller Jr. Neilson November Walter B. Potter William H. Rattner Fred L. Rush Sr. Thomas A. Scott Jr. Louis W. Shroyer Ill John P. Stewart Jesse W. Turner Gilbert H. Wilson Sterling W. Winn Paul R. S. Yates CLASS OF 1949-A James A. Anderson III Henry M. Barker Michael J. Barrett Jr. Brian Bell Edward P. Berlin Jr. Donald M. Bertram Granville S. Bouldin David M. Bower Jr. Edward L. Bowie Philip C. Braunschweig D. Earl Brown Jr. Robert G. Brown David K. Caldwell Leigh Carter H. Glenn Chaffer Warren L. Choate Richard S. Cooley Peter D. DeBoer Bruce H. Donald Frank C. Dorman Jr. Norman Fischer Jr. Roger M. Fritchie William W. Graham III James T. Graybeal John C. Green ur. Ben E. Grimm H. Dana Grindy John M. Guthrie Henry H. Hicks Harry H. Hill Jr. Ray Hill Jr. Thomas S. Hook Jr. Carlton D. Johnson Albert S. Kyle III John T. Lanier Jr. William E. Latture Charles R. Lemon Daniel J. Little Burr W. Miller H. Thorp Minister Jr. Robert J. Moody Paul J. B. Murphy dr. Matthew W. Paxton Jr. Robert T. Pickett III Robert R. Reid Jr. William R. Rice Mark W. Saurs Thomas E. Schneider Jr. John S. R. Schoenfeld Horace L. Smith Ill William C. Smith Jr. L. Vernon Snyder Alan W. Spearman Jr. Everette L. Taylor Jr. Charles R. Treadgold C. Tait Trussell Richard H. Turrell Kenneth H. Wacker Connie K. Warren Jr. Richard H. Whiteman Walter H. Williams Richard M. Yankee dr. CLASS OF 1950-A James Q. Agnew John R. Baldwin W. Hale Barrett William P. Bennett Richard F. Bidwell Arthur A. Birney W. Gill Brooks Richard T. Brown William L. Brown Jr. Douglas |. Buck Gerard A. Burchell Jr. William S. Cale John |. Carper John S. Chapman R. Dabney Chapman William N. Clements II John R. Cole A. Christian Compton W. Randolph Cosby Jr. David S. Croyder Rodolph B. Davenport III Maurice Dick Atwell Dugger John C. Earle Alfred H. Ebert Jr. P. James Fahey Joseph J. French ur. Richard R. French Gus A. Fritchie Jr. Thomas C. Frost Jr. George W. Ginn Claiborne W. Gooch II// Byron W. Graves Thomas L. Guthrie Albert H. Hamel John F. Hardesty Francis A. Hare Houston H. Harte Robert T. Helmen Alexander R. Hill Richard E. Hodges W. Roy Hoffman Jr. Curtis C. Humphris Jr. Robert E. R. Huntley Richard A. Hurxthal Lawrence E. Jarchow Bruce R. King Jr. Clifford B. Latta Lester H. Lewis Jr. Ernest T. Love Jr. Frank Love Jr. Herbert A. Lubs Jr. Francis W. Lynn Donald A. Malmo Robert H. Mauck William H. Maynard Jr. Charles F. A. McCluer dr. John H. McCormack Jr. Andrew W. McCulloch James R. McDonald Joseph H. McGee John B. McKee Jr. Oliver M. Mendell Robert S. Mendelsohn Clovis W. Moomaw Roger H. Mudd J. Peter G. Muhlenberg F. Alden Murray Jr. C. William Pacy II Bruce S. Parkinson Franklin S. Pease Jr. George H. Pierson Jr. Charles S. Plumb Joseph H. Reese Jr. Charles H. Robertson Barnett Robinson Jr. Paul B. ‘Root dr. Isaac M. Scher Robert F. Silverstein Albert F. Sisk Jr. Kenneth R. Stark Jr. Howard L. Steele Gerry U. Stephens J. Glenwood Strickler Robert W. Swinarton James E. Taylor James S. Taylor W. Clay Thomson Thomas T. Tongue II C. Dwight Townes Jr. William H. Townsend James T. Trundle Steve Ulaki Jr. Allan M. Warner William N. Weaver dr. Lawrence V. Wheater Millar B. White Jr. George W. Whitehurst Irvin H. Wicknick John F. Wilhelm Robert A. Williams Jr. Wallace E. Wing Jr. George R. Young CLASS OF 1951-A Merritt Abrash Charles W. Agnor Jr. George F. Arata Jr. Thomas O. Bagley Edward P. Bassett William G. Bean Jr. John K. Boardman Jr. Thomas T. Bond Donald W. Bourne John L. Bowles Howard Bratches Robert H. Brown Wesley G. Brown Richard P. Cancelmo James P. Carpenter Stephen P. Coco William R. Cogar Wilby C. Coleman Lewis P. Collins III Marcus A. Cook III Thomas A. Courtenay III Waddy G. Currin Eric G. Curry Jr. William E. Daniel Jr. Richard D. Davis William R. Davis Samuel D. Eggleston Jr. Andrew J. Ellis Jr. James C. Fenhagen II Donald M. Fergusson Peter E. Forkgen Eugene E. Freeman Jr. James F. Gallivan Robert E. Glenn John A. F. Hall Jr. Pike Hall Jr. Guy B. Hammond John E. Hamrick Arthur Hollins Ill Samuel B. Hollis William G. Her II Robert J. Ingram Jr J. Willis Johnson III Alan L. Kaplan John F. Kay dr. John W. Kay David C. G. Kerr Joseph E. Kling O. David Kulman Peyton S. Kulman William H. Kyle dr. Lester |. Levine Burton L. Litwin Barton MacDonald Kirby W. Malone Joseph B. McCutcheon Richard R. McDonald A. Stevens Miles Jr. Berryman V. Neal A. Parker Neff J. Prewitt Nelson Barry T. Newbery Milburn K. Noell Jr. Townsend Oast James N. Paradies Herbert G. Peters /I/ Ferdinand Phillips Jr. Robert T. Pittman James W. Roberts Jr. Richard D. Rosenfeld W. Vance Rucker Jr. David E. Ryer Robert H. Salisbury Jr. Richard W. Salmons Franklin H. Simmons Douglas M. Smith Park B. Smith Robert L. Smith dr. Henry B. Stern Richard B. Taylor John |..Thompson ur. Landon W. Trigg Charles F. Tucker Norfleet R. Turner Frederick G. Uhimann M. Theodore Van Leer So! Wachtler John C. Warfield Thomas A. Wash Henry J. Waters III S. Ray West Jr. William G. White Richard E. Whitson Jr. John R. Wittpenn Thomas K. Wolfe Jr. Anthony H. Woodson Daniel S. Wooldridge Jur. CLASS OF 1952-A Russell K. Adams John H. Allen Eugene M. Anderson Jr. T. S. Armistead Frank A. Baer II Richard G. Ballard William F. Barron Jr. Robert E. L. Batts Jr. Robert M. Bayler Perry L. Borom George S. Boswell Frank H. Callaham dr. William M. Canby Charles B. Castner Jr. Ernest H. Clarke Samuel E. E. Conklin Grafton H. Cook Jr. Joel B. Cooper Edward C. Darling Charles O. Dean Jr. Richard A. Denny Jr. Phillips M. Dowding George E. Eagle Henry G. Edmonds Jr. Joseph J. Eisler William G. Fuqua Edward E. Gardiner Thomas G. Gardner Paul R. Giordani James T. Gray Robert S. Griffith Jr. John B. Handlan I! Thomas N. Harris Harold N. Hill Jr. William E. Hines Henry L. Hopkins William L. Horner Jr. Alan S. Horowitz Otis W. Howe Jr. Helmut H. Huber H. Marshall Jarrett Henry W. Jones Jr. Thomas W. Joynes Jr. James W. Kidd John J. Kindred III Boyd H. Leyburn dr. Lynn F. Lummus William H. Lyon Preston C. Manning Jr. Robert A. Maslansky Edward D. Matz Jr. William R. Mauck Wayne D. McGrew Jr. Joseph Mendelsohn Ii Thomas S. Miller Julian B. Mohr | David M. Murray Orest Neimanis — Cephas T. Patch II George W. H. Pierson Louis R. Putnam Walter R. Randall Frazier Reams Jr. Kent Rigg Philip Robbins W. J. Kenneth Rockwell Edwin F. Schaeffer Jr. Robert D. Schenkel Jr. George W. Seger Thomas R. Shepherd Donald L. Shuck William C. Shuck II Gideon N. Stieff Jr. Robert W. Storey Edwin Streuli Jr. Roland E. Thompson W. Yates Trotter Jr. C. Byron Waites James J. Walsh Thomas R. Warfield David L. Waters W&L = 23 Dudley A. White dr. John W. Willcoxon III Henry |. Willett Jr. Charles M. Williams Donald K. Williams Henry W. Williamson Elisha W. Winfrey III Lester E. Zittrain CLASS OF 1953-A Cecil R. Adams Jr. William E. Baggs Robert B. Bell Hugh H. Bond John |. Bowman Jr. C. Randall Bradley William D. Bruce Ferd E. Carter Gray C. Castle Laurence G. Christie Jr. Roy A. Craig Jr. Crowell T. Dawkins Jr. John R. Delahunty Lewis Deschler |! Leonard C. Dill Ill John W. Dodd Jr. — Samuel S. M. DuBois Jr. Robert F. Duguay M. Alton Evans Jr. Herbert S. Falk Jr. William H. Foster Jr. Wyatt French C. Craighead Fritsche Owen B. Fuqua Jr. James M. Gabler Simon H. Galperin Jr. Clark P. Garrecht Hugh S. Glickstein Herbert F. Gordon Henry W. Grady Jr. John D. Heard Malcolm L. Holekamp William M. Hollis Jr. Sam B. Hulsey Jay W. Jackson William C. Jackson Tyson L. Janney John B. Kinkead John R. Kremer Jr. Peter J. Kurapka Jr. Robert W. Latimer John R. Lawson Jr. Harold F. Lenfest Stephen F. Lichtenstein Charles R. Lovegrove Robert J. Maccubbin John D. Maguire C. Scott May George F. Maynard Clyde S. McCall Jr. Hayes C. McClerkin Jr. John L. S. Northrop John R. O'Connell Jr. Samuel K. Patton Alden M. Pitard Daniel E. Popovich Lee A. Putney Leonard B. Ranson William E. Rawlings Melville P. Roberts Jr. Mark H. Schaul dr. Jan J. Schilthuis Jr. Ellis B. Schulist John M. Shaw Isham M. Sheffield III Barrett C. Shelton Jr. Kenneth B. Sizer Chester T. Smith Jr. Kenneth F. Spence dr. Edgar W. Spencer George W. St. Clair Clayton A. Stallworth Guy T. Steuart Il Webb E. Stevenson Daniel C. Stickley Jr. Rodney F. Stock ur. S. A. Thayer Robert H. Thomas 24 W&L William V. Trollinger Ruel W. Tyson W. Temple Webber Jr. John B. Wheeler J. Edward Wise CLASS OF 1954-A © James B. Andrews I/ Thomas E. Aschenbrener Don P. Barbe Earle S. Bates Raymond F. Bee Hugh L. Berryman Creswell G. Blakeney Jr. John M. Blume James D. Bonebrake Stuart J. Bracken Paul K. Brock Richard A. Busch John R. Calvert James C. Conner J. Ellis Crosby Jr. J. Robert Cross Joseph H. Crute Samuel L. Davidson George S. Denning Jr. Daniel D. Dickenson Walter W. Diggs Stanton E. Dossett |! Horace D. Douty J. S. Frantz George H. Greer Ehrick K. Haight Richard T. Harbison W. Allen Harrison Daniel G. Hartshorn Kent C. Horner Frank T. Hundley Ii/ William B. Inabnet Jr. Farris Jackson William R. C. Jones Thomas J. Kenny Friedrich G. Lackmann Jr. H. Gordon Leggett Jr. Theodore V. R. Lenihan J. Fletcher Lowe Jr. Nicholas G. Mandak Paul M. Maslansky John Etchison McDonald William D. McHenry H. Victor Millner Jr. George H. Mitchell Jr. Sedgwick L. Moss David R. Murphey III Laurence C. Palmer Ralph S. Park dr. Frank A. Parsons Robert O. Paxton Overton P. Pollard Harold J. Quinn Jr. Newton H. Ray Laurier T. Raymond Jr. James C. Rich Wilson H. Rider Richard P. Ross Howard V. Sanden Richard H. Sherrill Franklin L. Shipman Jr. Jacob A. Sites Stephen S. Sloan Robert P. Smith Jr. Walter E. Smith Stephen H. Snow Jerry G. South Jason B. Sowell Jr. Gordon M. Taylor William B. Thompson James R. Trimm Henry A. Turner Jr. Anthony Valen Dirken T. Voelker George B. Werthan Donald E. West William C. Williams James R. Wingert Jr. Wiley R. Wright Jr. George M. Young CLASS OF 1955-A Kenneth L. Abernathy H. Christopher Alexander |. Thomas Baker Charles J. Baldree David M. Berlinghof William D. Blake Frederick F. Brace Jr. Scott B. Clinton M. Lewis Cope Jr. William E. Cornelius W. Andrew R. Dalton Roland C. Davies Jr. James D. Deacon Ray B. Dinkel John W. Englishman William W. Farrar Harry M. Ford Jr. Anthony F. Gerike Frank G. Gibson Jr. Lowell D. Hamric John T. Huddle Walk C. Jones III Richard Kops William J. Lemon Laurence Levitan Richard G. Littlejohn Robert H. Mann Jr. J. Hardin Marion David W. McCain Conrad H. McEachern Jr. Marvin P. Meadors Jr. William S. Merrick Jr. Guy P. Metcalfe Jr. William E. Moore Jr. Charles M. Patrick Jr. M. Raymond Piland III E. Stuart Quarngesser O. Bertrand Ramsay James A. Reeder William R. Ritter Jr. Anthony H. Sargent Francis O. Schaefer Jr. Eugene B. Sieminski Jr. E. Naudain Simons II Charles K. Slick Raymond D. Smith Jr. Harrison Somerville Jr. John W. Stackhouse William J. Stober II Jerry F. Stone dr. Rudolph J. Stutzmann John M. Walbridge David S. Weinberg CLASS OF 1956-A Arnold M. Applefeld Charles R. Beall Byron Berman Sam H. Berry Oscar H. L. Bing Victor R. Bond Philip H. Brasfield Jr. Mark B. Davis Jr. Charles E. Dobbs Filis B. Drew Jr. Michael R. Dubin Henry H. Fisher Dudley D. Flanders Don E. Fryburger Charles S. Gay Earl S. Gillespie Robert G. Gooch Jean M. G. Grandpierre Leonard C. Greenebaum William T. M. Grigg Edgar L. Grove Richard B. Gwathmey Allen Harberg James H. Harvell III William A. Henley Theodore L. Hill Jr. William H. Houston III Peter J. Jacobs Richard M. Johnston Alfred O. Jones Jr. John K. Kane Il Sidmon J. Kaplan Paul H. J. Krogh Thomas O. Lawson William D. Manning James W. Marvin Jr. Sanford R. Maslansky Arthur W. McCain Jr. J. Robert McHenry Donald G. McKaba John S. Meloy Gunnar Miller George F. Milligan J. Marvin Moreland Jr. William C. Norman Jr. William B. Northrop J. Richard O’Connell G. Dewey Oxner Jr. A. Bert Pruitt Jr. James L. Pullen James D. Ritter C. Dudley Rodgers Jr. Keith Rogers Thomas D. Sale Jur. George |. Smith Jr. Kingswood Sprott Jr. Hugh W. Stephens Robert E. Stroud Samuel A. Syme Jr. Daniel B. Thompson II William M. Turner dr. Dederick C. W. Ward Ill G. Carter Werth Headley S. White Jr. Thomas A. S. Wilson CLASS OF 1957-A Joseph M. Alanis John R. Alford Joseph A. Amato Jr. Robert D. Ballantine Ross H. Bayard Sam Bendheim III Richard H. Berry John T. Boone Jr. James M. Boswell James R. Creel Jr. H. Greig Cummings Jr. Lloyd A. Dobyns Jr. Charles M. Drum Stanley M. Erdreich Jr. Donald V. Farriss Jon J. Fox Jr John M. Garner George S. Gee Ur. John A. Gold Leonard E. Goodman Warren H. Goodwyn John M. Ham Donald W. Harper Robert P. Hawkins III Benjamin N. Hoover John B. Howard Morton P. ller Joseph M. Jones Jr. Kendall C. Jones Charles C. Kannapell William L. Kauffman Charles W. King Jan C. Koontz Gilbert R. Ladd III Robert H. Large C. Peter Leininger III Thomas V. Litzenburg George M. Lupton Jr. Alfred J. Magoline Jr. A. Jackson Mason Jesse N. McLane Jr. Loren A. Mintz Richard A. Moore Robert |. Peeples H. Merrill Plaisted III Alexander B. Platt Charles B. Richardson Jeb J. Rosebrook William J. Russell Jr. Charles L. Sherman IV William O. Shropshire John W. Sinwell Isaac N. Smith dr. John M. Smith Jordan M. Smith Marquis M. Smith Jr. Donald C. Spann Thomas A. Speer Harold A. Tarrant Jr. John L. Wellford Jr. Warren E. Wilcox Jr. CLASS OF 1958-A A. Lewis Allen William B. Barnett Ralph W. Baucum Jr. Irwin R. Berman J. Bayard Boyle Jr. Thomas B. Branch Il Kaj M. Brent Manley P. Caldwell Jr. Irvin N. Caplan Robert W. Carney Jr. Kenneth W. Chandler Roger G. Clark Sheldon Clark II Malcolm A. Clinger Jr. Page D. Cranford Charles G. Crawford James J. Crawford Jr. Richard A. Davis David M. Dawson W. Rowland Denman Rodger P. Doyle Samuel C. Dudley Glenn R. Fahrenthold Donald R. Fowler William M. France Thomas C. Friedman Edward M. George Jr. Allan R. Gitter John R. Hanson Edward L. Harlow Fred L. Heina Charles M. Helzberg Nixon C. Henley Caton N. Hill Jr. John G. Holland Vernon W. Holleman Jr. Farris P. Hotchkiss John C. Huffard Campbell Hutchinson III Howard E. Jacobs Archie O. Jenkins II Avery B. Juhring Thomas F. King Jur. Wilfred M. Kullman Jr. John L. Lancaster Ill Henry F. LeBrun Jr. Ainsley J. Lester II/ Joseph S. Lewis IV James E. Lipscomb III Edgar H. MacKinlay E. Michael Masinter Charles P. Mays Jr. C. L. McCormick III Allan J. Mead Charles H. Miller Jr. W. C. Miller Charles E. Mochwart John P. Moyer Lee Mullins David G. Noble Charles E. Nolte Il Warren Nuessle Thomas P. O’Brien Jr. Robert C. Pearson O. Brooks Pollock Jr. Harry L. Pressley Jr. James W. Reid Theodore G. Rich ur. Robert A. Richards J. Kenneth Sadler Jr. ~ Rufus L. Safford R. Lawrence Smith Charles R. Spencer Jr. Nelson S. Teague George S. Thompson Rice M. Tilley Jr. John L. Tucker James W. Van Cleave Ill Richard S. Vedder Edgar A. Wallace K. William Waterson Jr. ——s) ig lea eaeleaalaniaimas iittala | Hal C. Whitaker James L. Whitlock Charlton M. Wilder William |. Winchester Madison B. Wright Jr. W. Kelly Young CLASS OF 1959-A Walter L. Ansell C. DuBose Ausley Edgar M. Baber Robert D. Bohan Thomas H. Broadus Jr. Charles D. Broll Thomas B. Bryant III Richard C. Butler III Salvatore R. Casella Charles W. Cole Jr. Joseph L. Craycroft Jr. James M. Crews Jr. Richard F. Cummins Clinton M. Early Irvin Ebaugh III John H. Esperian Ralph M. Evans John C. Fay Jr. Anthony J. Frank John P. Freeman David G. Glendy James C. Goar Arthur |. Gottsegen Arthur S. Grove Jr. Dwight L. Guy Edward F. Halsell Jr. Owen H. Harper Edward B. Harris Jr. William S. Harrison John D. Hattendorf C. Royce Hough Ill Albert C. Hubbard Jr. Bertrand R. Hudnall II William K. Hughes Charles D. Hurt Jr. Phillip A. Insley Robert G. Jacob Don K. Joffrion Thomas G. Johnson Robert R. Kane Evan J. Kemp Jr. Robert C. Ketcham Daniel W. Kling Paul G. Knox John G. Koedel Ur. John C. Kotz Tom L. Larimore Lewis H. LaRue L. Geoffrey Lawrence Junius M. Lemmon Edward D. Levy Jr. Robert B. Levy Edward R. Lilly Jr. George N. Lockie James R. Loutit Bruce Macgowan J. Stephen Marks III John K. Matthews John W. McCallum Jr. Samuel S. Merrick Peyton G. Middleton Jr. M. Daniel Miller III Thomas M. Moore H. Donald Morine H. Gary Pannell Dennis W. Patton John A. Paul William H. Pixton David C. Poteet Richard A. Powell Edward M. Reaves David B. Root Edwin P. Sapinsley Jr. Robert E. Shepherd Jr. Donald W. Sigmund William F. Simpson Jr. Jerald H. Sklar Laurence M. Smail H. Holden Smith L. Voigh Smith Arnold L. Steiner Andrew T. Treadway Francis B. Van Nuys Murray M. Wadsworth Jesse H. Webb Jr. Charles E. Wellman Raymond P. White Jere H. Williams James A. Wood CLASS OF 1960-A Leigh B. Allen III Michael D. Applefeld Douglas E. Barnard F. James Barnes III John J. Barnes Jr. Frederick H. Belden Jr. Edward Bell Jr. F. Fox Benton Jr. Louis R. Bloodworth Jr. William B. Blundin Rockwell S. Boyle Jr. Daniel F. Bridges Robert A. Broh James H. Brown Jr. Charles G. Buffum III Malcolm B. Burton Edward E. Calhoun Hugh L. Campbell Charles S. Chamberlin John W. Clark dr. William H. Clark dr. Richard W. Cohen Oliver T. Cook Edward A. Corcoran John T. Crone V Robert R. Davidson John C. Dawson Jr. Barton A. DePalma Robert L. Elder Max L. Elliott Allen M. Ferguson Barry M. Fox William M. Gibson Thomas W. Gilliam dr. Frank S. Glaser Edward F. Good James |. Greene W. Preston Greene Jr. Jack C. Groner Philip G. Grose Jr. John J. Haun Joseph E. Hess Robert C. Hinkel John B. Hoke ur. John S. Hopewell Louis Horst dr. Harley B. Howcott Jr. Hoyle C. Jones Julian C. Josey Jr. Carter S. Kaufmann Stephen K. Kent Jr. David N. Keys Randolph B. Kilmon John M. Kirk Malcolm Lassman Robert G. Lathrop Peter J. Lee Daniel B. Leonard Harvey R. Levine William G. Loeffler Jr. Rayman R. Lovelace Henry M. Marks III Sandy C. Marks Jr. William G. McKenzie Jr. Richard E. Miller Stephen D. Miller Clifton D. Mitchell Charles N. Monsted Jr. Charles T. Morse John A. Morton Willoughby Newton III Arthur E. O’Dell Jr. Thornton W. Owen Jr. David D. Pitard J. Davis Reed III John L. Reynolds Jr. Joseph E. Ringland Gordon E. Rountree A. Prescott Rowe William W. Schaefer Charles C. Sherrill Mervyn F. Silverman Joseph J. Smith II Charles W. Springer Walter R. Staub Jr. J. Frank Surface Jr. W. Jere Tolton Jr. J. Thomas Touchton David K. Weaver J. Walter Weingart James M. White III John C. White Richard K. White Jr. Raymond E. Wooldridge CLASS OF 1961-A J. Harvey Allen Jr. Raleigh R. Archer Haywood M. Ball Charles W. Baucum Kenneth S. Beall Jr. George Y. Birdsong Roy E. Bowen William M. Bowen Charles C. Bowie Jr. Jack H. Breard Jr. J. Alfred Broaddus Jr. J. Malcolm Brownlee Jr. A. Clayton Bryan Jr. Thomas W. Budd William T. Buice III Louis H. Burford David D. Carothers Dwight R. Chamberlain George N. Chandler |! Philip W. Conaway David F. Cook Stanley A. Cook Richard A. Cowles Jr. Walter J. Crater Jr. Drew P. Danko Stephen |. Danzansky William W. Davis Calvert G. DeColigny Jr. E. John Dinkel III C. Howard Drexel Joseph C. Elgin dr. John R. Farmer William J. Fidler Jr. J. Carter Fox Graham D. S. Fulton Robert J. Funkhouser Jr. Edward J. Gay III William V. Giles Jr. Perry L. Gordon Marshal |. Gottsegen James H. Hamersley Russell E. Harner William H. Heald Roger D. Holden Richard W. Hoover Norbert W. Irvine William R. Johnston John H. Karrh III Fleming Keefe Kenneth Kleeman Richard L. Kuersteiner Richard W. Lacy Edward B. Ladd Courtney R. Mauzy Jr. William B. McWilliams Edward F. Meyers Jr. Edson B. Olds IV Robert K. Park || Donald H. Partington William S. Proctor Maurice E. Purnell Jr. William L. Quillen Ronald L. Randel | Robert G. Rappel Howard Rosenbloom A. Douglas Salmon III Milford F. Schwartz Jr. Richard S. Sharlin J. Walter Shugart III Nathan P. B. Simpson Charles H. Smith Reginald M. Smith Jr. [ W. Latimer Snowdon Jr. Albert J. Storey Jr. Peter T. Straub Bob A. Street Jr. Samuel C. Strite Jr. Stephen L. Thompson Marshall Timberlake E. Darracott Vaughan Jr. Brian H. Vitsky Edgar B. Wertheimer Ill Jerry S. Wilbourn Frank B. Wolfe Ill CLASS OF 1962-A Peter A. Agelasto Ill Ronald H. Alenstein William R. Anderson Jr. Stanley P. Atwood William C. Boyd III John W. Boyle Jr. Wayne A. Bradshaw L. David Callaway III Aubrey B. Calvin James W. Carty Jr. Stephen R. Chernay Paul B. Clemenceau Peter G. Conrad ‘ Charles S. Cook Alan M. Corwin Thorns Craven H. Allen Curran Hayward F. Day Jr. W. Barton Dick Robert S. Doenges Beverly M. DuBose III G. T. Dunlop Ecker John O. Edmunds Jr. Robert E. Eikel Ralph L. Elias Jr. N. Rickard Frisbie Steven A. Galef Charles E Gay IV Joseph L. Goldstein R. Roy Goodwin II Thompson W. Goodwin Guy N. Graham Jay C. Green James A. Gwinn Jr. Pearce D. Hardwick Henry C. Hawthorne Jr. Samuel |. Hellman Michael N. Herndon James C. Hickey Jr. W. Hayne Hipp James K. Hitch I/ Edward P. Hobbs Henry D. Holland George E. Honts III Rupert H. Johnson Jr. Richard S. Jones Harry F. Kurz Jr. Ernest F. Ladd III Robert P. Lancaster Jeffery D. Lasher Vincent T. Lathbury III Robert D. Lewis John A. Martin Donald H. McClure Alan M. McLeod Thomas L. Melgaard Jr. Gene Melton Benjamin P. Michel Russell B. Miller R. King Milling E. Warren Mills Barton S. Mitchell Michael H. Monier J. Leyburn Mosby Jr. William G. Moseley Mason T. New Charles J. Niemeyer Theodore L. Oldham Robert J. Osborne Wesley R. Ostergren William D. Outman II Rosewell Page III Hugh K. Paton Jr. John L. Payne Leslie H. Peard III George M. Peters John W. Poynor Venable B. Proctor Bruce A. Ratcliff Kerry E. Reynolds William L. Roberts Jr. James A. Russ James S. Sagner Philip D. Sharp Jr. James W. Smith John H. Soper !/ James H. Starkey III Robert L. Stone Stephen H. Suttle Willard S. Taylor Harry Teter Jr. David K. Tharp Walfred B. Thulin Jr. John R. Trible II E. Monty Tucker David C. Tyrrell Jr. George H. Van Sciver John W. Vardaman Jr. Charles W. Via John P. White Robert C. Wood !I/ CLASS OF 1963-A A. J. Alexander Jr. Thomas G. Andrew Jr. Daniel T. Balfour Rufus K. Barton III Daniel Blain dr. Thomas E. Bower Charles R. Brandt |/ Robert M. Briede Robert C. Browne Thomas M. Brownlee Thomas A. Bunkley Jr. Landon V. Butler Jr. C. Vance Campbell ur. James M. Campbell Keith A. Carr George M. Chapman Jr R. Meade Christian Jr. D. Randolph Cole Jr. John P. Cover Walter E. Cox A. Neil Crawford Jr. John O. Culley Ruge P. DeVan Ill Theodore A. Doremus Jr. Matthew T. Douglass William M. Durrett R.Thomas Edwards I|// Rodger W. Fauber Henry A. Fenn Jr. John M. Fowler Edwin P. Garretson Jr. Joel L. Goozh Stephen E. Guild Wilmot L. Harris Jr. Charles C. Hart Robert D. Hart Jr. . George W. Harvey Jr. James M. Henderson H. Kirkland Henry dr. Edward W. Holmes Jr. Joseph P. Howson Warren B. Hughes Jr. J. Winston Ivey D. Eldredge Jackson III Omer L. Jeter Jr. Allan H. Johnston Watkins C. Johnston Jr. John A. Kiely Ronald L. King Walter E. Klaas dr. Henry H. Knight II E. Ross Kyger Ill Eugene A. Leonard J. G. McGiffin III William B. MacKenney III R. Hunter Manson III Edwin P. McCaleb Charles T. McCord Ill Thomas P. McDavid John T. Mills Thomas T. Moore Jr. W&L 25 J. Holmes Morrison John H. Mullin Ill G. Andrew Nea Jr. Hamlet T. Newsom Lewis G. Noe Jr. W. Allen Northcutt III Edward B. Ostroff John M. Owen David F. Peters Lee G. Price Thomas P. Rideout Bruce H. Roberson Walker Y. Ronaldson Jr. Louis A. Rosenstock III Michael J. Shank Andrew A. Smith Jr. Nicholas S. Smith David T. H. Spencer Stephen H. Stull James L. Surface Michael D. Sussman David C. Swann J. Brantley Sydnor Samuel D. Tankard III Glenn O. Thornhill Jr. John C. Thurmond G. McNeir Tilman John E. Tipton Joseph L. Topinka Hugh H. Trout Ill J. Richard Uhlig || Robert M. M. Van Rensselaer H. Michael Walker N. Dudley Warwick Jr. Peter M. Weimer Sherwood W. Wise ur. Donald A. Wyly Frank M. Young III Robert A. Young III CLASS OF 1964-A Alonzo Atkins Jr. John F. Bartlett Peter D. Blakeslee Frederic W. Boye III Kenneth E. Brandenburgh Arthur E. Broadus Thomas M. Brumby IV Joseph R. Burkart F. William Burke Jay M. Caplan Benjamin L. Chapman Bruce T. Chosney John W. Clark Jr. Paul R. Cockshutt Jr. Richard C. Colton Jr. Frederick E. Cooper Richard A. Coplan Edward S. Croft III John M. Dixon John Duncan Il! Alfred E. Eckes Jr. . 26 W&L Johnny P. Edwards Jr. Philip R. Farnsworth Robert C. Farrar Jr. Charlie C. Flippen dr. Robert O. Foerster III Lester M. Foote Martin E. Galt III Brice R. Gamber Thomas Robbins Green Barry A. Greene Kenneth E. Greer Smith Hickenlooper I// John E. Hilker H. W. Holden Warren P. Hopkins Matthew H. Hulbert Alvin B. Hutzler II J. Michael Jenkins III Charles G. Johnson Robert A. Kell Wilmot H. Kidd III Charles D. Kimbell John H. Kirkley Frederick J. Krall Arthur G. Kroos III Kenneth P. Lane Jr. Michael E. Levin Thomas C. Lewis Bruce R. MacDonald John M. Madison Jr. James S. Maffitt 1V Howard W. Martin Jr. James B. McCeney John M. McDaniel III Douglas McDowell Richard W. McEnally Floyd W. McKinnon Lewis B. McNeace Jr. Dennis R. Morgan J. Hobson Morrison Jr. William A. Noell Jr. John C. Norman Jr. W. Buckner Ogilvie Jr. Henry D. Ormsby III Charles C. Owens Robert A. Paddock Donald Palmer Harry L. Parlette III John Y. Pearson Jr. Samuel W. Pipes IV Cotton Rawls Jr. Judson P. Reis Consider W. Ross Leslie C. Rucker Jr. Henry M. Sackett III John M. Samet Charles B. Savage Bernard M. Shapiro Conway H. Sheild Ill Nicholas R. Simmons George T. Sisler Herbert F. Smith Burton B. Staniar Spencer R. Stouffer Matthew G. Thompson Peter S. Trager C. Fox Urquhart III E. Stephen Walsh Gus B. Walton Jr. John W. Wescoat J. Bruce Whelihan George C. Wick Jr. Eric H. Wilson John T. Winebrenner Rex H. Wooldridge E. Randolph Wootton Jr. Jack Yarbrough CLASS OF 1965-A David H. Adams C. Edmonds Allen |I/ G. Ashley Allen Mark M. Applefeld Gordon L. Archer Joe F. Bear Jr. Walter H. Bennett Jr. James R. Boardman Warren K. Bolton William G. Broaddus Brooks G. Brown III Joel W. Brown: Blaine A. Brownell James C. Bussart Howard W. Busse Alfred J. T. Byrne Richard N. Carrell Hal S. Chase Jeffrey G. Conrad A. Craig Cotton William S. David Jaquelin H. De Jarnette James W. DeYoung Gustave R. Dubus III Broughton M. Earnest E. Robert Elicker || David M. Ellis Gregory E. Euston Adam J. Fiedler George M. Fisher IV Kiah T. Ford III Jean S. Friedberg Jr. Dan J. Friedman Jr. Victor R. Galef Jolyon P. Girard Kirk A. Griffin John E. Griggs III Baird S. Grimson Douglas D. Hagestad C. Tracy Harrington Richard C. Hartgrove John W. Hunt Stewart M. Hurtt Stephen G. Hussey William H. Jamison James W. Jennings Jr. John E. Jennings H. Daniel Jones III James D. Kannapell Robin S. Kent Andrew C. Kilpatrick Richard R. Kreitler William P. Lancaster Jr. Melvyn J. Lapes Robert E. Lee III William D. S. Lee John R. Lewis III Richard M. Livingston George F. Madison Alan L. Marx Michael S. McCord Joseph S. McDaniel Ill Larry M. Meeks Michael J. Michaeles Hullihnen W. Moore Ronald W. Moore J. Malcolm Morris Paul S. Murphy Woodard D. Openo Louie A. Paterno Jr. Robert B. Patton S. Reed Paynter Eugene L. Pearce II/ Peter M. Preston George W. Price Ill William L. Price III Alexander P. Rasin III Patterson H. Robertson ! John T. Roettger George M. Sanders Max L. Shaoira Arthur B. Sher Sam P. Simpson IV Robert F. Stauffer Frederick A. Stone Thomas E. Stover Chris Sturm Royal Terrell Jr. Robert G. Thomas David W. Trussell Timothy A. Vanderver Jr. John D. Wallace Joseph G. Wheeler Jesse F. Williams [I] John F. Wolfe M. Lanier Woodrum Norman Yoerg Ur. CLASS OF 1966-A John D. Anderson John L. Baber III Robert J. Bailey Andrew N. Baur Charles N. Bensinger Jr. Kenneth L. Bernhardt James K. Bruton Jr. Stephen S. Case Robert E. Chambers Jr. Mercer K. Clarke Charles F. Clement Edward B. Crosland Jr James A. Crothers // T. Todd Dabney Jr. Harry Dennery William T. Deyo Jr. Thomas M. Edwards Maurice R. Fliess Samuel H. Frazier Harry G. Goodheart Ill Charles N. Griffin II S. Birnie Harper W. David Hasfurther Eugene A. Hatfield Lawrence K. Hellman Thornton M. Henry Robert B. Hudson III James D. Humphries III J. Pegram Johnson III _Charles W. Jones John E. Kelly Iil Thomas R. Kelsey Michael E. Lawrence Randy H. Lee Donald J. Lineback Hendrick W. Manley J. Michel Marcoux Harris J. Maslansky David J. Mathewson Jr. Charles B. Mayer Kenneth O. McGraw John C. McMurry Val S. McWhorter Lewis N. Miller Jr. Phillip D. Mollere John C. Moore Jon R. Neergaard Wallace Niedringhaus Jr. Tabor R. Novak dr. Lawrence E. Orme Robert Orr Jr. Duncan E. Osborne John A B Palmer David D. Redmond Charles W. Reese Jr. Joseph W. Richmond Jr. Bruce W. Rider John H. Rutherford Paul R. Schlesinger Alfred L. Shapleigh II Eric L. Sisler Walter W. Stelle James C. Sumner E. Starke Sydnor Gerard T. Taylor Robert C. Vaughan III C. Ganahl Walker III William C. Washburn Jr. Kemble White |il William R. Wilson dr. Frank G. Young M. Neely Young II CLASS OF 1967-A lra R. Adams Richard D. Allen Christopher F. Armstrong William N. Baker Edward E. Bates Jr. Edward N. Beachum David P. Bendann Jr. S. Bryan Benedict Robert G. Bigham Robert R. Black Roger A. Blair Richard D. Bradford William J. Bridges III Ward W. Briggs Jr. Gregory E. Brooks Jr. Roger S. Brown Logan M. Bullitt IV Nathaniel E. Clement Philip L. Cline Alan G. Cohen Ernest |. Cornbrooks III Thomas C. Davis III R. Tracy Duggan III Howard S. Epstein — J. G. Blaine Ewing III W. Lawrence Fellman Stuart Finestone William M. Flatau Marshall K. Follo Benjamin D. S. Gambill Jr. Guy M. Glenn John S. Graham III Kenneth M. Greene P. Rowland Greenwade Thomas J. Hardin Il Tyree B. Harris IV Charles C. Hart William A. Hartman James R. Hickam J. Aldwin Hight Jr. Thomas J. Holden Ill J. McDaniel Holladay John K. Hopkins William S. Hulse William H. Jeffress Jr. S. Bryant Kendrick Jr. SF ve LeRoy W. Krumperman Jr. J. Howard Luck H. Davis Mayfield III Thomas J. McCarthy Jr. Guyte P. McCord III Stephen T. McElhaney John R. McGill Bruce B. McKeithen John R. Miller Douglas C. Morrison Clinton S. Morse John T. Morse Harold W. Nase Michael K. Nation Theodore K. Oates || David W. Ogilvy James W. Oram Jr. Robert |. Ostroff Lee Parsons James H Price Ill Robert B. Priddy Randall L. Prior Edward B. Robertson Jr. Bradford A. Rochester Robert B. Scott Jr. Bradford Shinkle IV Frederic P. Skinner William H. Sledge John C. B. Smith Jr. Wood T. Sparks Jamie A. Stalnaker Paul R. Stanton Charles T. Staples Henry P. B. Staunton Guy M. Sterling Jr. Warren E. Stewart Aron L. Suna Edward A. Supplee Jr. James A. Tyler Jr. William L. Walker dr. William L. Want Robert E. Watkins John J. Werst III William S. Wildrick John H. Zink III CLASS OF 1968-A Robert F. Aldrich J. Devon Allen John H. Anthony Jack J. Applefeld Edmund H. Armentrout L. C. Atkins II John W. Ballantine James W. Bartlett III James B. Batterson James L. Beckner Jr. Edward L. Bishop Ill Andrew L. Blair Jr. A. Rodney Boren Jr. James M. Boyd Jr. M. Ray Bradford Jr. Jeffrey T. Briggs Randolph W. Brinton Paul A. Brower William D. Brown Corbet F. Bryant Jr. Russell V. L. Buxton Jr. C. Howard Capito N. Taylor Carlson John M. Carson Robert B. Carter Robert A. Cashill Carlile M. Chambers Christopher B. Chandor Richard T. Clapp Harold E. Clark Jr. Andrew B. Cleverly R. Noel Clinard Dudley D. Cocke Jr. William A. Colom dr. Patrick B. Costello W. Reid Cox Jr. Theodore J. Craddock Allen B. Craig Ill John R. Crigler James J. Dawson James D. Desouza Richard T. Doughtie III George J. Dover Donald R. Ellis Jr. F. Strait Fairey Jr. Robert C. Gastrock Martin R. Glickstein Henry R. Gonzalez Jr. F. Cary Green Jr. Frank R. Greer Charles C. Harrold III W. Christopher Hart Malcolm T. Hartman Nelson H. Head Kazimierz J. Herchold Jon T. Hulsizer Donovan D. Husat Robert D. Hutchens Edward |. Hutchins Jr. McClanahan Ingles W. Thomas Ingold Frank A. Jackson Rolly W. Jacobs Eugene R. Jacobsen III Benjamin H. Johnson Ill Alexander S. Jones Robert S. Keefe Mavis P. Kelsey Jr. Houston M. Kimbrough Jr. Roane M. Lacy Jr. John H. Lawrence Jr. Jeffrey G. Lawson John M. Lee William M. Lee Jr. Barry J. Levin Charles C. Lewis Leslie D. Locke Robert R. Logan David B. Long James R. Madison Clarence B. Manning Kirk R. Manning Eric P. Mantz Joseph A. Matthews Jr. Robert V. May Jr. Frederick A. Meiser Jr. Mike E. Miles Newton B. Miller Robert T. Miller Robert H. Moll Michael G. Morgan Wesley W. Murfin Richard H. Nash Jr. John R. Nazzaro Corydon C. Nicholson II William H. Norcross Thomas W. Pettyjohn Jr. Tom L. Pittman Jr. Samuel B. Preston L. Holmes Raker John R. Reynolds John W. Rice Jr. William P. Ridley III William C. Schaefer ~ Ralph W. Schenkel Joseph G. Seay J. Oakley Seibert S. Gates Shaw Stephen K. Shepherd H. Gilbert Smith Jr. Robert J. Smith Michael J. Spector Lane B. Steinger Geoffrey L. Stone William F. Stone Jr. Harold C. Stowe Peter R. Strohm John B. Swihart Howard K. Tayloe Jr. J. Jeffrey Thistle D. Whitney Thornton I! Charles B. Tomm Peter W. Tooker Wilson F. Vellines Jr. H. William Walker Jr. John H. Ward IV W. Emory Waters Stephen H. Watts // Robert M. Wein James W. Whitehead Jr. Gary P. Wilkinson Fielding L. Wilson Jr. Richard W. Wilson Wendall L. Winn Jr. E. Ellis Zahra Jr. CLASS OF 1969-A Patrick K. Arey Robert G. Armstrong Thomas P. Atkins Willis M. Ball ill J. McFerran Barr II Michael C. Barr Richard H. Bassett Morris C. Benners Jr. Anthony F. Berliner Leonard A. Blanchard H. Laurent Boetsch Jr. Michael L. Bramley J. Gillum Burke R. Gillis Campbell Hugh A. Carithers Jr. John F. Carrere Jr. Clark H. Carter Allen R. Caskie Joseph T. Chadwick Jr. Burnet H. Chalmers James M. Chance Charles R. Chittum William J. Cook Alan H. Cooper Gregory B. Crampton Joseph H. Davenport Ill H. Ward Dorer | David L. Dowler Bruce E. Downing ~ Dennis S. Drexler Dan T. Dunn Jr. Mark R. Eaker Douglas R. Engle David C. Ennis Jorge E Estrada M William D. Falvey John S. Fechnay Reinhard W. Fischer Harold F. Gallivan III William L. Gilmer J. Barton Goodwin David G. Gordon Lee Halford Jr. James C. Hamill Jr. David W. Hardee I// Ray V. Hartwell II/ Samuel D. Hinkle IV J. Ward Hunt David D. Jackson Walter S. Jones Leon D. Katz Neil S. Kessler William J. Kimmel III Rufus D. Kinney Michael J. Kline Richard E. Kramer Alan W. Lee Alan M. LeVine James J. Livesay Walter S. Lockhart III Glen P. Mattox Fletcher F. Maynard Jr. Donald C. McClure Jr. William T. McCutchen Brittain McJunkin William J. McLeod Jr. L. Richards McMillan II Christopher P. Meyer Thomas P. Mitchell Thomas W. Mullenix Geoffrey C. Orth R. Stephens Pannill Gregory E. Parker Ralph E. Pearcy I/ Jerald L. Perlman J Alvin Philpott Jr. Richard M. Preston Robert E. Price Michael W. Pustay Thomas E. Robinson Henry L. Roediger Ill H. Daniel Rogers Jr. L. Phillips Runyon Ill Marc A. Schewel Peveril O. Settle III Donald A. Sharpe David T. Shufflebarger Gary D. Silverfield John G. Simmons Thomas K. Slabaugh Michael C. Stevens Alexis Tarumianz Jr. R. Alan Tomlin James A. Truss Garland S. Tucker III William C. Tyler Edwin B. Vaden Jr. Tinkham Veale III Julian W. Walthall Robert F. Wersel Jr. John T. Whetstone III Joseph C. Wich Jr. William R. Wilkerson II Harry M. Wilson III Robert W. Wipfler John A. Wolf Kirk Woodward Harry J. Zeliff CLASS OF 1970-A F. Sheldon Anderson Jr. Richard H. Antell C. T. Armstrong Richard B. Armstrong John D. Baizley Bryan Baldwin H. Walter Barre I! George Z. Bateh Gordon W. Beall Bruce O. Beckman John M. Bernard Scot A. Brower Charles C. Cahn Jr. Richard W. Capron William A. Childs Jr. Douglas E. Clarke Kenneth M. Clayton Edward W. Coslett /// _ Christopher D. Coursen Gregory J. Digel Philip D. Douglass Richard F. Dunlap Jr. Gilbert J. Eaton Robert L. Entzminger Mark S. Evans Stuart C. Fauber Albert T. Fechtel Jr. J. David Field Frank E. Fisher Jr. Henry A. Fleishman Thomas O. Fleming Jr. W. John Francisco Jr. C. Gilbert Frank David R. Frankstone William W. Goodrich Thomas C. Groton Ill Hugh B. Guill George W. Hamlin Brent G. Hankins David P. Haydu Marvin C. Henberg Christopher R. Herchold Gary D. Herman David K. Higgins Gregory L. Holmes Charles A. Holt Jr. Lawrence E. Honig David L. Hull Curt B. Jamison L. Clarke Jones Ill David R. Katz John M. Kefauver Jr. Reeve W. Kelsey Dan M. Leonard F. Miles Little Bruce R. MacQueen Lee B. Madinger James H. Maloney Jr. Christopher R. Martin Roger S. Martin Steven P. Maslansky James O. Mathews Jr. Daniel C. McDavitt James C. McElroy Thomas N. McJunkin Michael T. McVay James A. Meriwether Bruce A. Meyers John E. Miller Sheldon J. Miller Homer L. Mixson Jr. Lawrence H. Morrison Norwood O. Morrison John D. Muncks ur. Gary L. Murphy Michael R. Murphy Michael C. G. Neer Benjamin C. Paden Clinton B. Palmer III E. Owen Perry Iil John A. Phillips Jr. William R. Phillips William F. Rector Jr. Hal S. Rhea Thomas D. Robson Robert W. Root dr. Bruce S. Samuels Martin F. Schmidt Jr. Byron R. Seward Donald C. Smith Douglas W. Smith Michael J. Spoor Daniel B. Startsman Jr. Charles M. Stone Paul S. Sugar Andrew B. Thomas Philip J. Tissue Robert P. Trout Willard B. Wagner III Kennon C. Walden Jr. Gerald W. Weedon John E. Wetsel Jr. William A. Wilson Jr. W. Whitlow Wyatt Robert H. Yevich CLASS OF 1971-A H. John Ackerman James R. Allen Thomas H. Alphin Jr. Charles D. Andrews William H. Arvin William C. Bauer Thomas M. Beazlie Philip W. Beckwith ur. John F. M. Bowie II Craig A. Bowlus Nelson F. Brinckerhoff Marcus E. Bromley Marvin M. Brooke Frank C. Brooks Jr. William E. Brumback William P. Canby Michael L. Carrere Kenneth P. Carter Charles J. Cartwright Harold H. Catlin David P. Christovich Lucius D. Clay _ Stephen Clement Arthur F. Cleveland |! Raymond D. Coates Jr. Madison F. Cole Jr. John D. Copenhaver John G. Crommelin IV Thomas C. Daniel Jeffrey A. Davis Bruce W. Derrick Christopher C. Dove Sanford Doxey III John M. Duckworth James F. Easterlin S. Stacy Eastland John O. Ellis Jr. Michael G. Florence Christopher D. Friend Joel A. Fulmer IV W&L = 27 David B. Galt Jr. Alan B. GaNun G. Carr Garnett William A. Gatlin III Charles W. Glasgow Jr. Henry A. Harkey C. Miner Harrell Charles F. Harris Jr. Steven L. Hawley John R. Heath Charles G. Houston /// E. Wren Hudgins Thomas B. Hudson Jr. William S. Ingersoll Richard C. Ivey William M. Jacobs Kelly C. Jones Edward F. Judt William A. Kahn Patrick L. Keen Stephen H. Kerkam Richard O. Kimball John H. King Michael W. Kirshbaum John D. Klinedinst Donald H. Koontz Andrew G. Kumpuris Francis M. Lawrence H. Drake Leddy Bruce C. Lee Harry D. LeTourneau Jr. D. Downs Little Gordon S. Macrae Walter W. May John M. McCardell Jr. Philip D. McFarlane G. Lee Millar III Barry W. Mitchell James A. Moses Kenneth W. Newman Henry Nottberg III William H. Oast III E. Staman Ogilvie Van H. Pate Walter G. Pettey III Joseph B. Philips III Donald C. Poppke Wesley E. Pullman Richard W. Regan Thomas E. Reynolds Franklin R. Rich Louis W. Rieder II/ Stephen D. Rosenthal Jackson H. Ross T. Jeffrey Salb Peter F. San Miguel R. Balfour Sartor Allen C. Shepard Jr. Davis P. Smith Ill J. Connor Smith S. Russell Smith dr. Jeffrey B. Spence Frank W. Stearns Henry W. Stephenson Jr. John L. P. Sullivan dr. Ben P. Tatum J. Gregory Tinaglia Joseph B. Tompkins dr. Claude M. Walker dr. Clifford L. Walters III Thomas H. Watts Andrew J. White dr. David P. White Calvert S. Whitehurst George H. Widener III Paul D. Wilber Donald E. Woodard Jr. Robert G. Woodward Bradfield F. Wright Peter F. Zimmermann CLASS OF 1972-A Edward H. Achorn dr. Thomas E. Addison III J. Hudson Allender Daniel W. Armstrong William G. Arnot III Glenn M. Azuma James M. Ballengee Jr. 28 W&L Thomas O. Barton Frank B. Bazzel David M. Bernard Joseph J. Blake Jr. Max F. Brantley Robert G. Brookby Allen C. Brown — Robert L. Burns Beach M. Clark Jr. Robert C. Coleman Bruce W. Cusson Peter F. Davidson James S. Davis T. Jeffrey Driscoll Lynn D. Durham Jr. Lee N. Eisen J. Hagood Ellison Jr. C. Grayson FitzHugh Robert P. Foley Wade K. Forbes Alan D. Frazer Thomas J. Friedman David C. Fulton Arthur N. Furhman William A. Garrett Jr. John M. Glace Carter Glass IV Robert L. Goehring Jr. Lloyd M. Goodman D. Randoloh Graham Charles L. Gregory Robert S. Griffith || Bernard C. Grigsby II Bruce R. Hankins C. James Harland Jr. William S. Harris James F. Heatwole David L. Holland Marshall T. Irving Ill George H. Jones III Thomas G. Keefe Edward W. Lane III Landon B. Lane Jr. Scott E. Lebensburger Michael R. Long Bruce P. Madison Douglas H. Madison Lawson H. Marshall Douglas F. Martin P. Hale Mast Jr. Donald T. McMillan Lex O. McMillan III John P. Mello William H. Miller III Edward G. Moore Meryl D. Moore David T. Moulton David R. Munsick Jr. Kenneth B. Murov A. Scott Neese Jarvis E. Newman lll Jeffrey M. O’Dell John C. O’Neal David W. Olson Steven J. Ory Frederick M. Paone W. Wade Peery Joe D. Pippin Charles W. Pride Michael E. Riley John W. Robinson |IV Stephen W. Robinson Lester W. Sanders IIl Fredrick H. Sands M. J. Schoenberger Peter M. Somerville Richard J. Splittorf E. George Stook Jr. Peter D. Swart Stephen B. Thompson John G. Tucker Robert M. Turnbull Terry W. Tyler Robert C. Walker Jr. John F. Watlington III William H. West Jr. E. Bruce Wilsie Jr. Lloyd S. Wolf M. Scott Wood Jr. John B. Woodlief William M. Woodward Millard S. Younts CLASS OF 1973-A Paul C. Archer Jeffrey K. Baugher W. Christopher Beeler Jr. George W. Blackford Jr. L. Price Blackford Robert P. Boyd FE. Marshall Braden Mills A. Bradshaw Gates G. Brelsford Robert O. Brennan Robert J. Brumback Jeffrey C. Burris James H. Clapp William C. Clark T. Hal Clarke Jr. James E. Creamer Jr. Joffre J. Cross II Michael S. Davis John C. Dovel John H. Dumas I! Charles W. Dunn Donald D. Eavenson dr. Robert N. Farrar James A. Fernald II| N. Reed Finney John W. Folsom William B. Fowler William C. French G. Archer Frierson Il Jerrod L. Godin W. D. Gowl Richard H. Graham Robert B. Graham Richard E. Gray Ill Timothy F. Haley Thornton Hardie III James G. Hardwick W. Lee Harriss Robert L. Hillman Andrew G. Hollinger James F. Hudec Conway W. Hunter Ill T. H. Jackson Craig B. Jones George R. Jones Jr. Paul D. Jones T. M. Kampfmueller Jr. Jay H. Kern John R. Kessling W. Revell Lewis III Nimrod W. E. Long Jr. Gary L. Martin J. Jason Matthews Wilson C. Merchant III William D. Miller Philip H. Milner Jr. Robert L. Munt Jr. Thomas J. Murray William P. Peak Jr. Charles R. Pennington Bruce C. Perkins Charles D. Perry dr. Robert J. Popp E. Bryson Powell Russell C. Powell // Lat W. Purser II// John J. Reid Scott E. Rickoff Gregory B. Robertson Richard Romanelli John S. Runge Michael C. Schaeffer R. Keith Shaner Robert A. Silverman Mark E. Skellenger Henry M. Slauson Ill Hatton C. V. Smith John F. Smith Ralph H. Smith | James F. Spaulding Andrew D. Staniar J. Griffith Steel Charles M. Strain Stephen T. Swenson J. Stanley Taylor Robert J. Taylor IV Lee S. Thalheimer Daniel L. Topping William G. Tucker John A. Wade III Dorsey M. Ward Jr.~ Jack V. H. Whipple I! Craig R. Williams George B. Wolfe Frederick W. Woodward III Mark R. Young James B. Zeppieri CLASS OF 1974-A William D. Adams IV Jack E. Altman II Gary M. Arthur Virgil O. Barnard III Gary C. Bingham Wilson E. Blain Robert N. Brand Chester F. Burgess III Jeffrey D. Burke Douglas C. Chase Jr. P. Bryan Chasney Andrew J. Chriss Timothy C. Conner Gerald F. Costello Francis J. Crilley Ill Marvin P. Daniel Raymond P. Davidson I! |. Langston Donkle III William L. Downing Waller T. Dudley Leonard P. Eager III F. Harrison Evatt James D. Farrar Jr. David V. Finnell Fred W. Frick Ralph E. Garner Stephen M. Hagey Averill C. Harkey William T. Harmon E. Phifer Helms Russell L. Hewit Bliss Y. Hicky Lewis J. Hixson Paul R. Holland Ill Walter J. Hoyt Robert E. Johnson ur. Kenneth D. Julian Warren T. Kent dr. William D. Kientz II Duncan S. Klinedinst Edward M. Kowal Jr. John S. Lalley Jr. Matthew B. LaMotte William R. LaRosa Jr. Joseph C. Leary III Edward H. Leonard lll T. Berry Long Ill Bradford N. Martin Thomas A. Mattesky Gary W. McAuliffe Donald McBride III Richard S. McCain Charles L. McCardell Bryan E. McNeill William R. Melton IV Richard H. Metcalf David L. Moore Jr. W. Perrin Nicolson IV Thomas W. Peard Michael D. Peppler Paul W. Perkins Gerard D. Porath Lewis F. Powell III Mark W. Preston Stuart Ragland Ill Robert M. Rainey William F. Rienhoff lV James G. Rogers William H. Sanders Jr. Kenneth R. Seal Wright D. Shields Martin E. Stein Jr. Richard K. Stuart Jr. Thomas D. Swann G. Watson Tebo Jr. Alfred C. Thullbery Jr. Hannes F. VanWagenberg John S. Wallace William P. Wallace Jr. Jonathan H. Weigle John C. Weitnauer Bryan B. Whitehurst John P. Woodley Jr. CLASS OF 1975-A Thomas G. Armstrong Benjamin L. Bailey James V. Baird James T. Becker Samuel M. Bell William H. Biesel Jr. William T. W. Brotherton II/ ~ Lawrence B. Cahoon Matthew J. Calvert David A. Canto Francis C. Carter John R. Clapp Michael F. Colpoys Robert A. Cook Richard R. Councill Rogers L. Crain James A. Cranford III Charles M. Cushing Jr. William C. Datz T. Barry Davis Duncan B. DeGraff Mark X. Diverio David G. Dowell S. Lawrence Dumville John R. Embree Paul G. Firth Carl P. Flanagan Ill Robert C. Floyd William E. Forland Jr. John F. Garth John W. Getz Edmond B. Gregory III Thad Grundy Jr. B. Spencer Heddens I// Murray T. Holland James J. Howard Douglas H. Hunt Richard D. Jones Richard D. Judson Robert A. Keatley Guy H. Kerr John D. Killpack Kim B. Kirk Karl E. Klinger Gary R. Knick Richard M. Koch Matthew R. Krafft Kim D. Kuehner Paul J. Lancaster Thomas D. Lancaster Robert M. Lander II J. William Lassetter Samuel R. Lewis Warren L. Look Alexander H. Mackintosh Channing J. Martin David H. Mathews Turner J. J. McGehee Michael W. McLane Mark J. Mennel Kenneth C. Miller III Carter H. Moore Daniel K. Moore Robert G. Morecock David A. Mycoff Stuart B. Nibley Vernon F. Ottenritter James N. Overton Benjamin G. Philpott John R. Picciotti David R. Pittman Thomas O. Rainey III Thomas B. Ramey III J. Edwards Ramsey Jack W. Ray Jr. P. Bowman Root III Mitchel J. Seleznick Philip L. Sellers David E. Shaffner Benjamin M. Sherman Preston R. Simpson W. Kennedy Simpson David H. Slater Lamar R. Spencer Charles A. Stein Kim Stenson William H. Sturges William W. Terry III Stephen C. Thienel Jeffery W. Thompson James E. Toler Jr. B. Harrison Turnbull Thomas H. Wall IV William A. Wallace William L. Warren Jr. Thomas R. Watkins Jr. Joseph E. Welden Jr. Mercer E. West IV J. Bowman Williams Joel A. Williams C. Berkeley Wilson || James Wilson Duncan F. Winter CLASS OF 1976-A Peter H. Adler Robert L. Amsler Jr. R. Stewart Barroll Frederick L. Bates Jeffrey A. Baum Thomas H. Baumann Robert M. Bender John G. Berry David R. Braun Richard P. Briggs II Samuel R. Brown |I G. Don N. Bryant Ill John J. Burns III Peter R. Cavalier John A. Cocklereece Jr. William R. Cogar Craig H. Coller William L. Cooper III L. L. Craighill Jr. Paul B. Cromelin III Lawrence R. Daniel John C. Darwin III David W. Denny James D. Doyle III Alan P. Dozier Daniel E. Drennen II Luther H. Dudley I! J. Glenn Dulken David K. Eubank H. Sprague Eustis Jr. Douglas M. Faris D. Scott Farrar Jay R. Fries William E. Garrison III H. Mynders Glover James C. Gould R. Craig Graham John L. Gray Jr. T. Hunt Hardinge III William E. Hoatson Jr. Laurence P. Hobbes Kenneth J. Holda Harold R. Howe Jr. Michael B. Hubbard B. Davis Jackson Clay T. Jackson Neilson L. Johnson J. Lee Keiger II Robert C. Kelly Donald R. Kempton Jr. Stephen C. LaRosa Marc S. Levin Brian M. Levine R. Brooke Lewis David S. Martin Mark R. Maurais Michael J. McDonough Robert W. H. Mish III Henry M. Montague M. Reed Morgan Robin M. Morgan Spencer W. Morten III Douglas R. Muir Gregory J. Muldoon James F. Norton Jr. Vernon E. O’Berry Jr. Dennis Oakley Michael A. Okin B. Craig Owens Cary E. Patrick Jr. William B. Peard James D. Pearson Alan W. Pettigrew A. Dickinson B. Phillips John G. Podgajny Gerard R. Quinlan J. Kimble Ratliff Jr. Walter S. Robertson II/ Kenneth P. Ruscio Roderick R. Scott Gary W. Seldomridge John F. Shettle Frederick L. Silbernagel Paul A. Simpson Courtland N. Smith III Robert J. Smith dr. Paul K. Stillwagon Stephen R. Strawsburg Thomas M. Stritch Jr. Richard L. Thieringer Willard C. Thompson William E. Thompson IV Peter B. Thomson Walter E. Veghte III Peyton A. Via Joseph Walker || David C. Warren Lawrence T. Washington Scott E. Watson Richard O. Whitaker CLASS OF 1977-A H. Cobb Alexander Jr. Michael D. Armstrong Camillus L. Avent Barry O. Barlow William F. Beauchamp Richard O. Bolden Jr. William M. Broders James R. Brooks Solomon G. Brotman John R. Buckthal Michael J. Burns Robert R. Campbell Jr. William D. Cantler II Robert A. Carpentier Joseph L. Carrere Robert M. Chiaviello Jr. Michael H. Clary William H. Clemons M. Calhoun Colvin Jr. William E. Craver III David C. Davis Douglass W. Dewing Christian G. Dietz III John R. Downey Roger B. Durham Edward M. Duvall James N. Falk William J. Flesher Michael E. Forry Clarence N. Frierson Jr. Landon W. Garland Jr. Brian L. Garr Edward B. Gerhardt Stephen Q. Giblin T. Nicholas Gill Stephen D. Good John D. Gottwald Reid H. Griffin Louis B. Hackerman Craig F. Hamilton E. Bruce Harvey Jr. Carlton M. Henson Mark E. Hoffman Michael B. Hollinger James G. Houston Thomas H. Hunter II// E. Claiborne Irby Jr. Randall L. Irvine David B. Johnston James A. Jones IV Thomas N. Keigler Walter D. Kelley Jr. James E. Koch Mark A. Krieger III Rand J. Krikorian L. James Lawson I// John A. Magee V James B. Mallory Ill W. Randall Mann Thomas H. McBride III Charles D. |. Powell Vaughan M. Pultz Richard F. Rathbone W. Charles Rogers II/ John D. Rosen W. Kirkland Ruffin William H. Sands Angelo B. Santella James U. Scott Douglas A. Scovanner Stuart W. Serenbetz Howard R. Sklaroff Marshall K. Snyder Earl W. Stradtman Jr. John L. Strock D. Lowell Sullivan G. Scott Thomas Clark G. Thompson Jr. Samuel E. Thompson Paul H. Thomson Theodore L. Uhiman Theodore J. Van Leer Dries M. Van Wagenberg James C. Vardell III Timothy R. Vaughan Kenneth S. Voelker Ludwig C. Von Gohren Greg S. Walden Marshall G. Weaver Steven D. White Lewis R. Windham II James N. Wobhlfarth Richard S. Wolf Isaac L. Wornom III Thomas H. Yancey Stephen C. Yevich CLASS OF 1978-A Maurice G. Adams David A. Addison A. Michael Airheart Jerry M. Baird M. Daniel Becque Mark E. Bennett Kenneth J. Bewick Arthur A. Birney Jr. Alexander H. Bishop IV Darnall W. Boyd Jr. Parke L. Bradley Paul K. Brock Jr. Charles V. Brown III William D. Brown John L. Bruch III William K. Burton David G. Carpenter Brian P. Carroll George L. Carson Jr. David W. Chester H. Barton Clark Michael T. Cleary Richard S. Cleary John H. Collmus Rodney M. Cook Jr. Stuart L. Craig Jr. William O. Cranshaw Reynolds Dods Tupper H. Dorsey Alexius A. Dyer III William M. Ewing Jr. George W. Faison Jr. Peter L. Farren Craig B. Forry R. B. Nash Francis Jr. David G. Franklin William O. Frear Jr. Gustave A. Fritchie III Thomas K. Galvin III Theodore H. Ghiz dr. Julian H. Good Jr. Walter Granruth III Erik S. Greenbaum G. Carter Greer George F. Griffin IV Mark W. Hampton Henry Hauptfuhrer IV Steven B. Heird Charles E. Hinkle Thomas R. Hodges Christopher N. Hoover E. Brewington Houston Jr. K. Lee Howard I! John S. Hudson Robert H. Jackson Benjamin |. Johns Jr. Douglas E. Johnston Jr. Harry T. Jones III Robert Q. Jones Jr. William H. Joost Peter C. Keefe Karl N. Koon James K. Ladky Alexis B. LaMotte Jeffrey K. Lee George D. Low John C. Martin III Robert J. Marvin Jr. Richard B. McDaniel R. Boice McGrew Henry S. McKelway David J. McLean Michael J. Missal Robert W. Moorhead III Robert N. Mucciola Rex D. Nyquist Ryland R. Owen Robert C. Peery ur. Marcus M. Pennell III H. Heartsill Ragon III Stephen P. Rodgers D. Stowe Rose W. Gordon Ross || Howard A. Rubel John F. Sacco William S. Sands Jr. L. Scott Shelton James G. Sheridan Jr. Gregory C. Sieminski Donald G. Smith Jr. George M. Smith Jeffrey M. Sone Richard W. Stewart W&L 29 Benjamin B. Swan Richard C. Taylor Keith A. Teel : John F. Tompkins III Robert B. Tremblay David A. Tumen James M. Underhill James H. Veghte Michael M. Wallis James N. Walter Jr. Roland B. Walters Edmund V. Wick Brice B. Williams Thomas A. Williams Richard T. Zink CLASS OF 1979-A Douglas H. Adams William R. Alpaugh Robert E. Atkinson Jr. Marshall M. Barroll Robert H. Benfield Jr. John C. Boutiette John C. Bovay Robert M. Burkholder Jr. J-J Landers Carnal Clement D. Carter III O. Lee Cave Ill Robert L. Clement III R. Christopher Collins Joseph F. Cox John A. Craig R. E. Lee Davies James O. Davis Ill Luis De Hechavarria Jr. Robert H. Devilbiss Michael J. Doody Frank R. Ellerbe III Shawn W. Ellsworth John H. Ferguson Frederick S. Fischer Ill Paul W. Gerharat Robert S. Gibb III Alan S. Guyes Charles C. Habliston IV Ferdinand B. Harrington Palmer T. Heenan Jr. Philip A. Heldrich Harry F. Hoke Ill Richard F. Huck Ill John S. Hyslop Ill Douglas M. Jackson M. Tucker Laffitte III James C. Lancaster Douglas B. Lane Grant E. Leister Russell L. Martin Ill John E. McDonald Jr. Stephen Y. McGehee J. William Pierce Jr. Jonathan W. Pine Jr. John S. Plowden Thomas M. Pritchard William T. Ramsey William F. Reighley Thomas B. Rentschler Jr. John F. Resen Robert C. Rogers William N. Roper J. Randolph Sacks Andrew T. Sanders Jr. John V. C. Saylor James R. Shoemaker Kenneth W. Sledd Jr. Arthur J. Somers Clifford B. Sondock John P. Stafford Mark S. Travers J. Michael Watson Neil J. Welch Jr. Tracy A. White John W. Wilcox III Richard B. Wiles Douglas K. Willis Landon R. Wyatt III CLASS OF 1980-A Stephen H. Abraham Michael M. Adams 30 =W&L R. J. Allen Jr. Stewart Atkinson Jr. H. Holcombe Baird III G. Brian Bauer Paul C. Becht Robert J. Berghe! Jr. — David P. Blackwood Cary G. Booth George L. Booth Martin F. Bowers Edward L. Bowie Jr. Abney S. Boxley III David A. Bryant Richard P. Cancelmo Jr. David L. Church Walton V. Clark David E. Constine III P. Craig Cornett Leslie A. Cotter Jr. "J. Clay Crumbliss Hamilton C. Davis Ill Michael F. Deighan Douglas C. Dorsey Thomas E. Dutton Gregory B. Dyer Robert B. Earle Goetz B. Eaton Sydney D. Farrar Eben D. Finney III Walter M. Frankenberger Covert J. Geary Thomas E. Goss Jr. Homer D. Graham Ill David A. Greer Lawrence K. Gumprich Stephen D. Hallowell Albin B. Hammond Ill David H. Harpole ur. Steven C. Johnson Stephen R. Kern Mark A. Kinniburgh Michael D. O. Lavitt Richard M. Lewis Mark E. Lockhart Richard A. Makepeace Jr. Theodore B. Martin Jr. William H. Matthai Jr. John W. McAlister Stephen J. McCabe Murry G. McClintock Kevin F. McGowan Scott G. McLam _ Barksdale W. McNider James E. Mendoza Robert M. Merriman Jr. David E. Meyers Edward C. Morrison Joseph E. Olive ‘James H. Parker Howard T. Parks Russell B. Parmele Jr. William W. Paxton Robert W. Pearce Jr. Douglas A. Peckham Christopher T. Porter William E. Pritchard William S. Ridge Hugh L. Robinson II John K. Ryan Jonathan B. Schewel Peter J. Schott Jesse M. Shaver Ill Charles H. Shuford Jr. Sidney S. Simmons || Reid M. Slaughter Herbert G. Smith Il John R. Stagmaier Guy T. Steuart III Jesse F. Suber Donald E. Swagart Jr. Vail T. Thorne Mark G. Walker Joseph K. Wallace Scott A. Williams Thomas A. Wornom Mitchell S. Wynne Scott W. Zackowski CLASS OF 1981-A Charles O. Adler Peter H. Benda John G. Billmyre Robert D. Binder John G. P. Boatwright Jr. Jerry L. Broccoll Edward G. Brooks Winston W. Burks I// W. Craig Burns Samuel H. Campbell 1V J. Scott Cardozo Kevin P. Carney W. Tobin Cassels III Marshall A. Clark William R. Cole III Vincent Coviello Lawrence J. Davis Stanley K. Doobin Richard H. Drennen David M. Dudka Kevin B. Dwyer Peter D. Eliades James K. Falk Christopher J. Fay David G. Finley John J. Fox Ill R. Christopher Gammon Randolph B. George J. Ross Germano Gerrald A. Giblin Jr. Brian M. Ginsburg Robert P. Gordon Ill Christopher H. Greatwood Stephen M. Handy Douglas L. Hassinger John S. Hastings Jonathan M. Hendler N. Jeffrey Herdelin Alfred R. Hintz David B. Irvin Aric W. Johnson Edward A. Johnson Frank S. Jones Jr. W. Powell Jones Warren P. Kean Ben W. Keesee John M. Kemp Craig W. Kennelly Richard P. Kenney Ted M. Kerr Jr. Edward A. Kramer Richard G. Latture Kevin K. Leonard Bradley A. Lewis David A. Lewis A. William Mackie Stuart A. Mason Kevin M. McGuire M. Victor McLaughlin Jr. Scott B. Michaels Edward L. Mintz Ronald S. Moore W. Cope Moyers Robert J. Mullican Robert B. Neely J. R. Newell Bishop B. Norris John W. Northington Christopher S. O’Connor C. Penn Owen III John P. Pigue Russell Z. Plowden George A. Polizos John A. Pritchett David W. Proctor John P. Purcell Daniel J. Raskin Mac E. Rein Jr. Jefferson J. Reiter Alexis V. Richards Stuart S. Rienhoff Ralph D. Rigger Jr. William J. Roberts Edwin S. Ryan ur. Daryl A. Sakol Richard W. Salmons Jr. Joseph C. Savage John K. Schmidt Mark W. Scully Joel E. Segall Richard B. Silberstein Robert V. Sisk Jr. James R. Small Michael C. Smith W. Currin Snipes Jr. James Wm H Stewart Jr. Mark M. Suber John R. Sult William B. Taylor J. Kirby Tompkins IV Charles J. Van Horn James Kay Vines Edward J. Vorwerk Douglas T. Webb Douglas W. Werth Robert H. Willis Jr. Jonathan R. Yale CLASS OF 1982-A Frank D. Agnew Mark T. Altermatt Gordon E. Atkins James V. Bent Jr. William W. Bourne Elmer T. Brockman Frank W. Brower Ill William F. L. Brown Philip M. Browne Stephen P. Burrington Ricardo F. Casellas Thomas Coleman Michael J. Collier Preston S. Copenhaver || David R. Cordell J. Preston Covington Ill Thomas K. Creson Ill E. Bradley Crosby Earle W. David M. B. Dennen A. Robert Dementi Barry R. Dunn James E. Dunn Jr. William A. Dupre IV J. Thad Ellis II David B. Favrot Jr. Michael W. Fogarty Heyward H. Fouche Jr. John E. Fowler Il Clifford T. Gordon Earle S. Greene Jr. Herbert C. Gresens R. Gordon Grubb Jeffrey W. Gustafson Ehrick K. Haight ur. Channing M. Hall Ill John D. Harris dr. Stewart A. Hinckley Anthony R. lerardi Bruce C. Jones James S. Kaplan Alan S. Kendrick Michael F. Kennedy Eric W. Kolts Glen F. Koontz Kenneth A. Lang Jonathan A. Lebovitz Timothy D. Lobach Kenneth S. Lucas Jr. Michael J. Malesardi John W. Martin Alexander W. McAlister Robert D. McLean Jr. John E. Monroe J. Stratton Moore Christopher L. Muller Robert B. Muskin Eric T. Myers Kelly J. Niernberger Nelson E. Ould William R. Parks Jr. Edmund P. Perry Thomas A. Pizzano Charles H. Prioleau S. Braxton Puryear Charles F. Randolph J. Burruss Riis Parker Roberts W. Phillip Rockecharlie Henry F. Sattlethight Daniel E. Schott Karl R. Sening Douglas G. Sheldon Christopher L. Sisto Russell H. Stall Robert M. Staugaitis Timothy J. Stuart Timothy C. Taylor David C. Tyler Robert S. Van Buren John T. Warmath III Robert H. Warren III Robert M. Waymouth Daniel L. Weiss John Anderson Wells III James P. Wenke » W. Lawrence Wescott II William L. Whalen Usher T. Winslett III R. Blake Witherington Robert K. Wittpenn Bruce K. Young CLASS OF 1983-A James E. Averett Richard A. Baer _ Seng-Kah Baey James L. Baldwin William M. Bell III Thomas J. Bronner John K. Butler James H. Campbell Robert S. Carpenter Christopher L. Cavalline Ejay Clark Stephen J. Conboy Kraig A. Conn Steven D. Corbeille George E. Crady Robert A. Crawford David A. Curtiss James A. Cusick Bruce E. Damark Steven A. Daub William F. Devine Robert W. Donahey Michael D. Drinkwater Daniel M. Einstein Frank G. English IV Frank L. Eppes Philip O. Farr Vincent J. Fechtel III Harry A. Feuerstein Arthur F. Fulmer Ill Theodore Mathew Galanides Stephen P. Geary Howard E. Gill Ill Keith E. Goretzka David C. Graham Stephen K. Greene Michael M. Gregory Robert S. Griffith Ill George M. Grimball Jr. David W. Haddock David M. Hagigh Scott W. Hall Clifford T. Hanks Deane A. Hennett Samuel B. Hollis Jr. John T. Huskin Jr. W. Richard Jones Jr. Patrick C. Jordan Donald W. Kellerman Jr. Newton P. Kendrick Thomas F. King Ill W. Henry Langhorne III Joseph D. LeBlanc III George A. LeCuyer Michael H. Lewers Michael D. Mahoney Robert W. Marshall Clifton |. Morrissette Gerald |. Moyer Jr. Fredrik E. Nelson dr. Raymond L. Nichols Jr. Townsend Oast Jr. Richard W. Ordway Richard G. Owen John W. Perkinson Jr. David E. Perlitz Herbert M. Ponder III Joseph P. Potente C. Blair Pritchett III |. Kay Redd Ill David P. Ridlon Bennett L. Ross John A. Ross John B. Rudder Christopher D. Schram Michael G. Schuler Joseph N. Seifert III William M. Self Ill C. Wood Selig Scott A. Slade Christopher P. Smith Frank M. Smith II Robert R. Smith Jr. Todd C. Smith Michael B. Streiff Nicholas W. Teare Charles E. Thompson Stephen B. Vaughan Jr. John C. Viahoplus Stephen C. Warren Thomas H. Webb Bruce E. Wennerholm Gilles C. Wheeler Thomas A. Wilson Anthony J. Zaccagnini CLASS OF 1984-A David C. Adams Charles W. Alcorn III Lewis M. Allen David W. Ames Kenneth J. Andsager David B. Arnold Todd W. Barstow Martin J. Bechtold Edwin V. Bell Kevin Y. Berger Robert G. Buchanan Jr. Patrick J.Buttarazzi || Eric J. Campbell Geoffrey R. B. Carey Paul F. Chapman James C. Clark John M. Cleghorn Thomas L. Cover Peter Cronin Edwin J. Curran Ill James W. Davis David H. Denby ur. Spencer K. Dickinson Louis M. Dubin Richard M. Dunn III Mark H. Eastham Emory A. Edwards II Dwight H. Emanuelson Jr. James M. Faulkner Ill Lee R. Feldman Gregory L. Flentje Theodore G. Fletcher Elbert T. Ford Herbert O. Funsten III George R. Grainger Jr. John Lee Graves Jeffrey B. Gwynn Richard A. Haight David R. Harcus Richard K. Hardage John E. Harrison III Joshua M. Heltzer David R. Herr Jr. James D. Higgason Jr. John V. Howard Jr. James C. Hudson James N. L. Humphreys Anthony J. Interrante Donald E. Jeffrey Ill Louis C. Jehl Jr. Robert C. Jenevein Gunnar K. Jordan - Willard W. Kelly Jeffrey W. Knapp David W. Lee Jr. Stephen W. Lemon Paul E. Levy Christopher C. Lykes Martin E. Manassco Kirk R. Mancer Charles W. Mason Scott C. Mason Jr. Hiram H. Maxim Il Craig H. McArn Angus M. McBryde III Alan E. McQuiston Jr. Wade M. Meadows James E. Messer Jr. Duane L. Miller Mark C. Mitschow Peter M. Muller Christopher M. Murphy Daniel L. Murphy Charles M. Plumly Il Markham Shaw Pyle Donald W. Richardson Tori C. A. Richardson Timothy G. Schurr James T. Seidule Charles C. Sherrill Jr. Stewart T. Shettle Roland J. Simon Stephen J. A. Smith Charles R. Spencer Ill George Leighton Stradtman Matthew G. Thompson Jr. James B. Trimble Thomas M. T. Turk Barry P. Waterman Warren B. Watkins III William M. Wilson Marion E. Wood II! William D. Woolfolk Michael S. Wyatt George E. Youmans Jr. Paul C. Ziebert Law Classes CLASS OF 1921-L William O. Burtner CLASS OF 1922-L George W. Taliaferro CLASS OF 1923-L Alfred L. McCarthy William W. Ogden Emmett W. Poindexter CLASS OF 1924-L | W. Clyde Dennis Douglass P. Wingo CLASS OF 1925-L E. Almer Ames Jr. Clarence E. Hinkle CLASS OF 1926-L Robert O. Bentley Jr. William R. Cosby CLASS OF 1927-L James P. Bumgardner John S. Letcher Charles W. Lewis Charles T. Smith CLASS OF 1928-L John G. Koedel Bernard J. Wagner William P. Woodley CLASS OF 1929-L Philip R. Becker William G. Gault Samuel C. Strite John Bell Towill CLASS OF 1930-L Maurice J. Arnd Leonard H. Davis N. Dawson Hall Jr. Benjamin L. Rawlins dr. CLASS OF 1931-L Horace Gooch Jr. Walter E. Hoffman James B. Martin Gus E. Mitchell Jr. Lewis F. Powell Jr. CLASS OF 1932-L Martin P. Burks Ill Paul A. Holstein Henry W. MacKenzie Jr. William E. Malone Alfred D. Noyes Albert G. Peery Gilbert V. Rosenberg James D. Sparks Sr. CLASS OF 1933-L Copeland E. Adams Franklin R. Bigham Howard W. Carson O. Raymond Cundiff John L. Ericson Thomas S. Fox J. Jerome Framptom Jr. Alfred R. Jones John W. Rice Henry C. Robert George H. Strouse Jr. J. Hoge Tyler Ill CLASS OF 1934-L Thomas D. Anderson Robert D. Bailey Thornton G. Berry Jr. John H. Cooke Albert M. Fowler Francis M. Hoge Sherwood W. Wise CLASS OF 1935-L Winston W. Brown John D. Copenhaver Eli H. Fink James D. Finley II William W. Fowlkes E. Marshall Nuckols Jr. Thomas E. Sparks Sr. William L. Wilson CLASS OF 1936-L John S. Beagle Charles B. Cross Jr. William L. Martin John H. Thomas CLASS OF 1937-L David R. Dillon Edwin M. Marks Harry T. Moreland S. Tilford Payne Jr. Isadore M. Scott Edward E. Stover CLASS OF 1938-L Joseph T. Drake Jr. Edward W. Hiserman Leonard Leight Frank L. Price J. McLain Stewart CLASS OF 1939-L William S. Ammerman Jr. J. Vaughan Beale Philip M. Grabill Robert E. Graham Robert F. Hutcheson Jr. Samuel G. Jones Jr. John A. MacKenzie Joseph C. Murphy Martin V. Partenope Ambrose A. Rucker Edgar L. Smith Thomas A. Williams Jr. CLASS OF 1940-L William S. Burns Edwin J. Foltz Oswald B. McEwan John F. O'Connor Ethelbert S. Roby Jr. Stanford L. Schewel John C. Snidow ur. Wendell R. Stoops CLASS OF 1941-L Frederick Bartenstein Jr. Frank C. Bedinger Jr. Clifford B. Curtis Jr. Haskell T. Dickinson John A. Gurkin Jr. Charles F. Heiner George F. McInerney John E. Perry W. Bryce Rea Jr. Rufus H. Shumate Lynell G. Skarda CLASS OF 1942-L Charles F. Bagley Jr. Howard W. Dobbins Carter Glass III Homer A. Jones Jr. - Charles M. Landrum Jr. E. Austin McCaskill Sr. Robert O. McDonald Joseph A. Overton Jr. Samuel B. Read Clifford L. Walters CLASS OF 1948-L Charles C. Adams Carter R. Allen’ James M. Ballengee Joseph E. Blackburn Henry C. Clark Lloyd Cowan Henry B. Crockett Jr. Beverly T. Fitzpatrick Henry J. Foresman George E. Haw Jr. Warden S. Lee Joseph A. Matthews James E. McNeer Wilbur S. Metcalf Jr. H. Maurice Mitchell Grant E. Mouser III James H. Murphy Robert M. Patterson Reginald H. Pettus E. Rogers Pleasants James O. Porter John E. Scheifly Paul M. Shuford Trent D. Siple James C. Stanfield Claude E. Taylor Jr. J. Randolph Tucker Jr. Wm Earle Tucker M. Williamson Watts CLASS OF 1949-L Bonva C. Allen dr. Hayden D. Austin Charles F. Blackburn Carter C. Chinnis Louis R. Coulling Jr. Jack B. Coulter William C. Eickhof Jr. Maurice J. Flynn J. Willard Greer William C. Hamilton Wesley H. Jolly Stanley A. Kamen Omer T. Kaylor Jr. J. Gordon Kincheloe John J. Koehler II L. Addison Lanier J. Randolph Larrick Robert C. Mehorter Jack B. Porterfield Jr. Robert H. Ramsey John Schuber Jr. Sam Silverstein Jr. Hugh T. Verano Benjamin L. Wesson Gilbert H. Wilson CLASS OF 1950-L Kenneth P. Asbury William T. Brotherton Jr. Hugh C. Castle Jr. Thomas D. Crittenden Jack A. Crowder C. Hobson Goddin George H. Gray Rufus B. Hailey Walter L. Hannah Leon Harris Jr. John L. Hopkins William S. Hubard John S. Lane Philip M. Lanier J. Stanley Livesay Jr. Selden S. McNeer Jr. Neal E. McNeill Jr. William H. Oast Jr. Barton P. Quaintance William E. Quisenberry Fred L. Rush Sr. Milton H. Smith II William S. Todd Thomas R. Watkins Samuel |. White |. Leake Wornom Jr. CLASS OF 1951-L John S. Bailey Jr. Michael J. Barrett Jr. William H. Bender Virgil M. Bowles Marvin C. Bowling Jr. John J. Flood James T. Graybeal Jack E. Greer Samuel M. Hairston Blair J. Harkett Ernest M. Holdaway Frank Love Jr. Donald W. Mason Leslie L. Mason Jr. Grover C. Outland Jr. Robert L. Powell F. Bert Pulley William R. Rogers Nicholas S. Saraceno _Mark W. Saurs J. Donald Shannon Scott H. Shott Benjamin B. White Jr. Gibson M. Wolfe CLASS OF 1952-L Willis M. Anderson William C. Beatty Arthur A. Birney Harry G. Camper Jr. Gerald H. Coulson Raymond W. Haman Earl L. Hargrove Jr. Jackson L. Kiser | F. Nelson Light — Joseph H. McGee James P. Morefield Robert B. Murdock Andrew D. Owens Harold J. Powell James C. Reed Jr. Benjamin M. Richardson J. Glenwood Strickler J. Penrod Toles James C. Turk S. Maynard Turk Sol Wachtler Robert F. Ward B. Lamar Winegeart Jr. Joseph B. Yanity Jr. CLASS OF 1953-L Thomas O. Bagley Robert L. Banse Howard Bratches James P. Carpenter A. Christian Compton Robert E. Glenn W&L 31 Robert S. Goldsmith Jr. Robert J. Ingram Jr Cheaville L. Martin Jr. E. Allan Skinner Douglas M. Smith Charles F. Tucker William W. Vogel Willis A. Woods CLASS OF 1954-L Richard A. Denny Harry J. Grim Robert B. Jacobi Donald R. Klenk Donald S. Latourette Lewis C. Markel Jr. Lawrence C. Musgrove Milburn K. Noell Jr. Roger J. Perry Elias Richards III John P. Ward CLASS OF 1955-L Gray C. Castle William R. Cogar Lewis Deschler |! Hugh S. Glickstein Richard E. Hill Richard W. Hudgins Jay W. Jackson John F. Kay dr. Peter J. Kurapka Jr. John R. Lawson Jr. David M. Murray Kent Rigg CLASS OF 1956-L Douglas |. Buck Reno S. Harp III Milton T. Herndon William H. Hodges Laurier T. Raymond Jr. Thomas W. Turner George J. Tzangas Willard |. Walker Wiley R. Wright Jr. CLASS OF 1957-L Jack K. Agee Charles J. Baldree Thomas C. Broyles Noel P. Copen G. Wesley Eason Douglas K. Frith Robert E. R. Huntley Lewis S. Lee Gavin G. K. Letts Robert H. Mann Jr. William E. Moore Jr. John S. Moremen Townsend Oast Overton P. Pollard Stephen M. Quillen John S. Stump III CLASS OF 1958-L Ernest H. Clarke Mark B. Davis dr. Charles S. Gay Leonard C. Greenebaum J. Hardin Marion William O. Roberts Jr. Norman C. Roettger Jr. Robert E. Stroud Patrick D. Sullivan CLASS OF 1959-L John R. Alford J. Colin Campbell Claude D. Carter Thomas D. Frith Jr. Richard H. Horn William J. Lemon Gunnar Miller John F. Richards Charles E. Swope CLASS OF 1960-L N. William Bath Frank C. Bozeman Thomas B. Branch III Manley P. Caldwell Jr. 32. W&L Gerald O. Clemens William E. Crowell Jr. Neal P. Lavelle H. Victor Millner Jr. . Thomas P. O’Brien dr. James D. Ritter Paul R. Robertson Isaac N. Smith dr. Jordan M. Smith CLASS OF 1961-L Harold M. Bates Robert J. Berghel Thomas B. Bryant Ill Robert L. Gilliam III Warren H. Goodwyn Junius M. Lemmon E. Michael Masinter W. C. Miller Nicholas H. Rodriguez Robert E. Shepherd Jr. Michael K. Smeltzer Emil J. Sulzberger Jr. Warren R. Welsh Hugh V. White Jr. CLASS OF 1962-L Edward Bell Jr. Charles D. Broll Henry L. Carter Thomas L. Feazell Davis W. Ganim Osie H. Gay Jr. Allan Getson Robert C. Ketcham John M. Kirk William R. Moore dr. William W. Moore John A. Paul Richard A. Radis Laurence M. Smail Joseph M. Spivey III Francis B. Van Nuys CLASS OF 1963-L — Paul H. Boswell Malcolm B. Burton William H. Clark dr. Joseph E. Hess James L. Howe II/ Gerald L. Kesten R. Larry Lambert Edward F. Meyers Jr. Thornton W. Owen dr. Leonard Sargeant III CLASS OF 1964-L William T. Braithwaite Britain H. Bryant Thomas W. Budd William T. Euwer Stanley A. Fink James A. Gorry III Joseph W. Kozlik Richard L. Lawrence Benjamin P. Lynch Edgar H. MacKinlay Richard V. Mattingly dr. Benjamin L. Meluskey Jr. Benjamin P. Michel Robert K. Morton III Donald H. Partington Samuel T. Patterson Jr. Charles B. Rowe Weldon J. Smith Peter T. Straub Richard J. Tavss David K. Tharp W. Jere Tolton Jr. Billy N. Utz CLASS OF 1965-L William D. Anderson Stanley P. Atwood Daniel T. Balfour Frederick A. Casto William M. Garrison L. Gene Griffiths Paul W. Hammack Jr. William P. Harris Ronald J. Kaye Roger D. Kelsey James E. Kulp William B. McWilliams Robert T. Mitchell Jr. J. Leyburn Mosby Jr. Robert S. Pless Robert L. Stone James L. Surface Stephen L. Willson CLASS OF 1966-L Henry Angel Robert R. Baldwin Charles D. Bennett Jr. Daniel W. Bird Jr. Rudolph Bumgardner III S. W. Coleman III A. Henry Counts ur. Walter E. Cox Baxter L. Davis Charles E. Hamilton III Charles E. Hubbard Charles G. Johnson James S. Maffitt IV Bruce C. Miller J. Holmes Morrison Alton B. Prillaman William A. Schroeder III Paul R. Thomson Robert M. M. Van Rensselaer Raymond H. Vizethann Jr. George |. Vogel Kent S. Wilson George W. Wooten CLASS OF 1967-L John F. Bartlett Charles C. Bowie Jr. F. William Burke Malcolm G. Crawford John O. Culley James F. Douthat James W. Elliott Jr. Mark R. Ferdinand Benjamin R. Gardner Richard E. Israel Ronald D. Jacobs Jon A. Kerr Raymond J. Lajeunesse Jr. Joseph D. Logan IIl Peter W. Martone J. Thomas Meadows Jr. Richard L. Mitchell Ronald W. Moore William R. Reynolds C. Edward Russell Jr. Conway H. Sheild Ill Herbert F. Smith Jeffrey L. Ward CLASS OF 1968-L David H. Adams C. Edmonds Allen III Robert P. Brooks Joseph W. Brown Alfred J. T. Byrne Hayward F. Day dr. Parker A. Denaco Robert E. Duvall W. Gilbert Faulk Jr. George M. Fisher IV Vance A. Funk III Larry E. Hepler George E. Honts III A. Alling Jones John R. Lewis Ill James L. Linebarger Richard M. Livingston Ronald H. Marks Michael J. Michaeles Paul M. Neville Louie A. Paterno dr. A. John Peck Jr. George A. Ragland Robert F. Rutschow Harvey B. Savitt Andrew T. Still Ill W. Jay Tims CLASS OF 1969-L John B. Adams Jr. Charles F. Bagley III Robert G. Bigham Terrence D. Brooks Stephen S. Case Thomas M. Edwards Roy G. Harrell Jr. Robert E. Harrison Thornton M. Henry Frederick W. Hudson James D. Humphries III Hugh J. M. Jones III John E. Kelly III Randy H. Lee Jack L. Lintner Val S. McWhorter Tabor R. Novak Jr. David D. Redmond Jeffrey R. Reider Harry C. Roberts ur. Eric L. Sisler William W. Stuart Dean K. Vegosen Kemble White III Hubert H. Young Jr. CLASS OF 1970-L Wayne L. Bell Richard D. Bradford Edward B. Crosland Jr. Richard DeFronzo Harold A. Gleason Richard P. Lasko William F. Stone dr. Aron L. Suna D. Whitney Thornton I! E. Monty Tucker C. Fox Urquhart III William A. Vaughan James J. Winn Jr. John H. Zink III CLASS OF 1971-L William D. Allen II! David L. Baird Jr. Walter J. Borda Albert V. Carr Jr. Frank G. Davidson lll James J. Dawson ~ Reinhard W. Fischer Robin P. Hartmann Walter C. Jacob Walton M. Jeffress Jr. David J. Kantor Charles C. Lewis Albert M. Orgain IV Beverly C. Read J. Oakley Seibert Paul R. Stanton Stephen A. Strickler Paul S. Trible Jr. H. William Walker Jr. Joseph H. Webb Jr. McDonald Wellford Jr. John P. White Benjamin A. Williams III CLASS OF 1972-L William T. Anderson Stephen D. Annand Roger A. Grayson John L. Griffith Jr. Stewart M. Hurtt James W. Jennings Jr. Thomas W. Pettyjohn Jr. J. Alvin Philpott Jr. Alexis Tarumianz Jr. Robert A. White John A. Wolf CLASS OF 1973-L Richard V. Anderson John C. Baldwin Frederick W. Batten E. Patrick Burke Walter Butcka Michael C. Bynane Michael Campilongo Lawrence M. Croft Jesse C. Crumbley III Charles W. Davis Jeffrey M. Diamond Gregory J. Digel Philip B. Dundas Jr. H. Watkins Ellerson Ill Thomas G. Ferguson Jr. Larry W. Fifer Ronald T. Gold Thomas A. Gosse Clyde M. Henkel Richard S. Mandelson Peter C. Manson Jr. William R. McCall J. Jeffries Miles John P. Miller John C. Moore James F. Pascal James E. Patterson Bruce L. Phillips Dickey P. Rabun Theodore H. Ritter Elbert W. Robinson Jr. S. Kennon Scott Gary P. Shannon A. Richard Sotelo Jamie A. Stalnaker Charles M. Stone Stephen B. Sutton E. Starke Sydnor Kenneth J. Wernick Robert J. Westerman William E. Wood Timothy S. Wright. CLASS OF 1974-L Thomas H. Alphin dr. Arthur P. Bolton III David M. Bradt Jr. Peter B. Brittin John R. Broadway Jr. T. Lee Brown Jr. Quentin R. Corrie James M. Costan Morgan O. Doolittle III Stephen G. Elkins James C. Fitter Jr. M. Craig Garner Jr. Dennis C. E. Gilchrist Andrew C. Goresh W. Bradney Griffin James J. Kelley |! Thomas R. King Jr. Rex M. Lamb III ; Thomas N. McJunkin William H. Oast III Gregory N. Stillman William E. Walsh Paul D. Wilber Joseph P. Wise CLASS OF 1975-L Stephen E. Arey Michael P. Bagley Richard F. Biribauer Robert S. Bonney Jr. R. Noel Clinard Grady C. Frank Jr. Paul R. Garlock Virginia B. Garrison Fred K. Granade Christopher J. Habenicht Ray V. Hartwell III David K. Higgins John F. Hoffman Peter R. Kolyer Francis M. Lawrence Jonathan S. Lynn John |. McClurkin III Donald T. McMillan John S. Orton Joe D. Pippin M. Pierce Rucker II A. Terrance Smith Daniel T. Stacey Perry R. Thompson B. Caruthers Tolley III Charles B. Tomm Caroline Watts Jeffrey L. Willis Thomas K. Wotring CLASS OF 1976-L Robert H. Anderson III Patrick K. Arey Randall W. Atkins E. Marshall Braden James P. Carmody Alan Chipperfield C. Lynch Christian III Francis C. Clark Nan Robertson Clarke T. Hal Clarke Jr. Deborah Susman Dowd Frank L. Duemmler Jeff B. Dusek Hiram Ely Ill Judith M. Herndon Robert L. Hillman Richard A. Hooker Killis T. Howard Blair A. Kooi Mark M. Lawson Clendon H. Lee Jr. James H. Maloney Jr. Stephen D. McGraw Lawrence C. Melton Thomas J. Murray John S. Norris Jr. Gary T. Pope Richard M. Preston Marinus Quist Stephen D. Rosenthal John M. Sarikas Thomas A. Schmutz Bayard J. Snyder Gregory M. Sorg Jonathan L. Spear Lucy D. Strickland R. John Taylor Scott T. Vaughn Clifford L. Walters III William A. Worthington III Michael L. Zimmerman CLASS OF 1977-L Katherine L. Bishop William J. Braaksma Bruce E. Brennan David W. Cranshaw William L. Downing Wayne G. Edwards William S. Gee Robert W. Goodlatte Ted D. Grosser Elizabeth T. Guarino Russell L. Hewit Deborah A. Johnson Gary H. Jones Edward M. Kowal Jr. Robert M. Lawrence Jr. Osborne P. Mackie Bradford N. Martin E. Morgan Maxwell III James E. Nicholson Jeffrey W. Parker Michael J. Rowan Jerry L. Short Alfred C. Thullbery Jr. Randall J. Trost William P. Wallace Jr. Samuel J. Webster Pamela J. White Chauncey C. Williams John P. Woodley Jr. CLASS OF 1978-L Keith D. Boyette Jean L. Byassee Berthenia S. Crocker Charles M. Cushing Jr. Mark L. Dicken Dennis M. Dougherty Jill E. Dougherty E. Townes Duncan David P. Falck Maryellen F. Goodlatte Jeff D. Harris Mary DePoy Harris John D. Klinedinst Jack D. Kopald Raymond F. Leven Pamela Rogers Melton Mark Jay Mennel Robert G. Morecock John C. Parker Kenneth F. Parks Benjamin G. Philpott Richard A. Rogers Jonathan W. Sager Derek C. Swope Sarah K. Wiant CLASS OF 1979-L John A. Agostini S. Richard Arnold Stanley G. Brading Jr. William D. Broadhurst Douglas C. Broeker Frederick W. Bromm John C. Bruton Jr. Matthew J. Calvert John A. Cocklereece Jr. K. Joseph Cosgrove Waller T. Dudley Stetson W. Eddy Charles E. Falk Richard P. Goddard David L. Heilberg Michael B. Hubbard David W. Johnson Channing J. Martin Gary S. Marx J. Scott McCandless Louis P. McFadden John F. Mcintyre Jr. David W. Meldman John F. Murphy Stuart B. Nibley Barry J. Plunkett III Thomas A. Price W. Riker Purcell Gerard R. Quinlan J. Peter Richardson Mark E. Sharp Lynne P. Vollmer Peter C. Williams Robert B. Womble CLASS OF 1980-L Jacquelyn K. Boyden Edward H. Brown John R. Clark III John P. Corrado Powell L. Duggan John J. Eklund Sally P. Falck John D. Fife Jr. John A. Fraser Ill Joan M. Gardner Betsy Callicott Goodell William R. Goodell Llewellyn H. Hedgbeth Thomas B. Henson Robert A. Irons James R. Pritchett Dianne G. Ringer M. Wayne Ringer Thomas H. Romer Kevin J. Ross Michele K. Skarvelis Elizabeth Turley Patricia A. Van Allan Cheryl Harris Wolfe M. Lanier Woodrum John B. Yellott Jr. Mary A. S. Young CLASS OF 1981-L C. Cleveland Abbe William L. Abernathy Jr. Nate L. Adams III Blas P. Arroyo Charles F. Bahn Jr. James F. Berl Jonathan S. Berman Michael E. Bongiorno Patricia M. Brown Sara A. Burford Alan L. Button Margaret H. Campbell Ann B. Campfield Malinda E. Dunn John L. File Samuel A. Flax Shawn P. George Jeffrey H. Gray Nicholas H. Hantzes Robert W. Hyde Jr. Steven M. Johnson Walter D. Kelley Jr. Henry D. Lewis Robert W. Ludwig Jr. Gene A. Marsh Jenelle Mims Marsh Melisssa Warner McClenahan Thomas M. Millhiser Robert W. Moorhead III Stephen M. Piper Samuel P. Price George S. Rayson Richard P. Rodgers Tracy G. Savage Steven W. Schneider Clara S. Smith Nancy J. Spritzer John M. Sullivan Dawn E. Warfield David G. Weaver Mark A. Williams Carolyn S. Wilson Kerry M. Wilson Elizabeth Devine Wiseman CLASS OF 1982-L Mary D. Allen Eric A. Anderson Larry A. Barden Edward J. Bedford Thomas R. Bender David W. Black Johnathan W. Bryan Richard L. Burger William J. Calore Christine C. Chapman James L. Chapman IV Douglas J. Chumbley Dana S. Connell Robert M. Couch Craig S. Davis Susan M. Dern Susan May Eckman F. Matlock Elliott Edward O. Falkowski Linda Davis Frith Thomas D. Frith III Thomas Gearen Catharine M. Gilliam Charles D. Griffith Jr. Bruce A. Hahn William D. Johnston Kirkland Molloy Kelley John E. Lanier J. Andrew Lark D. Kevin McCorkindale Joseph P. Mentor Jr. Craig K. Morris Richard B. Myers Jr. Patrick D. O'Hare Jeffrey C. Palkovitz John K. Pearson Jr. Dana C. Petersen Kevin W. Ryan Thomas Y. Savage James R. Shoemaker Patricia E. Sinskey Nathan H. Smith Allen T. Snyder Jr. Julia G. Thigpen Tony A. Trujillo Jr. Caroline Wannamaker Catherine S. Ward Eric J. Ward Kenneth X. Warren Rand D. Weinberg Neil J. Welch Jr. CLASS OF 1983-L W. Rodney Clement Jr. Thomas J. Egan Jr. Michael J. Farr John P. Fishwick Jr. Millard L. Fretland David K. Friedfeld H. Morgan Griffith Christopher T. Hale Carol L. Hoshall Thomas H. Hunter I/II Matthew L. Kimball R. Brooke Lewis Daniel H. Mason John M. McGarry W. Price Morrison Jr. Alan B. Munro Mary G. O’Brien Robert J. Onda John W. Person Terry McKenney Person David P. Phippen William A. Powel III William V. Pura Melvin T. Rattray D. Stowe Rose Gordon W. Stewart Paul H. Thomson CLASS OF 1984-L W. Thomas Booher James William Christian Canup Lawrence S. Crowther Ellis B. Drew III Paul W. Gerhardt James L. Green David J. Hansen James M. Hicks Jr. Mary Miller Johnston Peter W. Leberman Benton J. Mathis Jr. J. Grant McGuire Warren E. Nowlin Robert S. Parker Laurie A. Rachford Joy M. Rattray Daniel E. Riley Gordon P. Robertson Andrew T. Sanders Jr. Dolores M. Schmitt THE ANNUAL FUND BY CLASSES—1984-85 UNDERGRADUATE CLASSES Class Agent R. N. Latture E. B. Shultz W. J. Cox No Agent No Agent No Agent S. L. Raines No Agent No Agent No Agent E. T. Andrews T. T. Moore No Agent No Agent T. G. Gibson H. G. Jahncke H. M. Minniece No Agent C. J. Longacre S. Mosovich L. P. Gassman G. W. Harrison . K. Stuart . N. Walker F. Radcliffe . V. Hersey J. Warms . D. Darby Jr. . T. Wood . D. Finney . P. Mead . G. Merrin . W. Burton . W. Saurs . N. Clements “e Gallivan . E. Eagle . C. McClerkin . E. Smith . H. Marion . G. Gooch . R. Warren . A. Clinger . B. Bryant . Lassman . M. Bowen . L. Roberts . R. Cole Jr. . M. Schildt . H. DeJarnette . E. Lawrence . S. Graham . Atkins _F. Carrere . B. Wagner B. Tompkins . W. Robinson . D. Eavenson . C. Chase . A. Keatley . T. Jackson L. Carrere _V. Brown . S. Jones . C. Cornett . Gammon . B. Puryear . L. Ross M. Cleghorn eee Ree STOW SESE EM OPT PROF: W&L . T. Fleishman | Donors OF WAMWAWANA 7,703 22,581 3, 631 LAW CLASSES Class Class Agent Donors 00-21 No Agent 22 No Agent 23 No Agent 24 No Agent 25 No Agent 26 No Agent 27 No Agent 28 No Agent 29 No Agent 30 No Agent 31 No Agent 32 No Agent 33 F. R. Bigham 1 34 S. W. Wise 35 T. E. Sparks 36 W. L. Martin 37 J. Arnold 38 No Agent 39 T. A. Williams 1 40 No Agent 41 H. T. Dickinson 12 42 C. L. Walters 9 48 C. R. Allen 29 49 J. R. Larrick 25 50 R. B. Hailey 26 51 E. M. Holdaway 24 52 J. C. Reed Jr. 24 53 R. L. Banse 14 54 D. R. Klenk 11 55 R. W. Hudgins 12 56 R. S. Harp Ill 9 57 O. P. Pollard 16 58 R. E. Stroud 9 59 R. H. Horn 9 60 N. W. Bath 13 61 R. E. Shepherd 14 62 R. R. Robrecht 16 63 P. H. Boswell 10 64 T. W. Budd 23 65 J. E. Kulp 18 66 J. S. Maffitt 23 67 J. D. Logan 23 68 A. A. Jones 27 69 D. D. Redmond 25 70 E. B. Crosland 14 71 D. L. Baird 24 72 J. A. Philpott 11 73 J. C. Moore 42 74 S. G. Elkins 24 75 T. K. Wotring 29 76 S. D. Rosenthal 41 77 D. M. Thomas 30 78 D. Swope 25 79 J. F. Murphy 33 80 J. J. Eklund 28 81 D. G. Weaver 45 82 R. M. Couch 51 83 M. L. Kimball 25 84 P. W. Leberman 20 2,758 1,175 2,510 6,395 2,640 3,268 4,030 4,640 3,699 3,725 4,910 1,880 2,261 2,972 2,310 3,154 3,632 1,728 945 The Annual Fund: Parents Gifts by parents are especially significant because they represent a generous ‘‘extra’’ investment in the quality of education offered by Washington and Lee. The University is especially grateful for this demonstration of confidence. Listed here are the names of parents who contributed to the Annual Fund in 1984-85. Those whose names are printed in bold face type are members of the Lee Associates and made gifts of $1,000 or more in 1984-85; those whose names are in italics are members of the Colonnade Club and made gifts of $100-$999 in 1984-85. Mr. Alden R. Adams Mr. & Mrs. James F. Adams Mr. Richard B. Adams Mrs. Sally A. Adams Mrs. Charlotte Adler Mr. S. E. Alexander Dr. & Mrs. Bobby R. Alford Mr. & Mrs. Fred Amico Mrs. Laura Anderson Mr. Richard D. Anderson Mr. & Mrs. Fred L. Anker Mr. & Mrs. Jack G. Armstrong Mr. & Mrs. Tobin Armstrong Mr. & Mrs. Pasquale J. Arpaia Mr. & Mrs. William J. Atkins Dr. & Mrs. Stewart Atkinson Mr. & Mrs. James M. Auch ur. Mr. & Mrs. Hugh H. Baird Jr. Mr. & Mrs. R. S. Baizley Mr. & Mrs. Stanley Baker Mr. & Mrs. Thomas E. Baker Mr. & Mrs. William R. Baldwin Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Charles M. Barger Mr.& Mrs. William W. Barnes Mr. & Mrs. Perry W. Bartsch Mr. & Mrs. John H. Bauhan Mr. & Mrs. Edward L. Beauchamp Mrs. A. C. Bedford Mr. Francis D. Bell Mr. & Mrs. Charles L. Benedict Mr. C. N. Berents Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Judah Best Mr. & Mrs. John Bingham Mr. & Mrs. Brad J. Bissinger Dr. & Mrs. Thomas J. Blackwood Mr. & Mrs. John G. P. Boatwright Mr. & Mrs. George M. Boswell Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth Braden Mr. & Mrs. Wendell T. Breithaupt Mr. & Mrs. Raleigh Brent Dr. & Mrs. Earl J. Brewer Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Robert H. Britton Mr. & Mrs. H. D. Brookby Mr. & Mrs. Russell J. Brooke Dr. & Mrs. Charles H. Brooks Mr. & Mrs. Fitzhugh L. Brown Mr. & Mrs. Robert E. Brown Rev. & Mrs. H. R. Bucey Mr. & Mrs. James Burlingame III Mr. & Mrs. J. C. Burris Dr. & Mrs. Thomas W. Butler Mr. & Mrs. Patrick Buttarazzi Mr. & Mrs. William Byers Dr. & Mrs. Millard Byrd Mr. & Mrs. Calvin B. Cameron Mr. & Mrs. Samuel H. Campbell III Mr. Michael M. Canon Mr. Louis H. Carl Mrs. Katharine Caruthers Dr. Rodolfo Celis Mr. Harry M. Chapman Mr. & Mrs. Herbert B. Chisholm Mr. & Mrs. Dale Clark Mr. & Mrs. John D. Clark Mr. & Mrs. Harvey A. Clarke Mr. James M. Clifton Mr. & Mrs. Norman B. Cobb Mr. & Mrs. Howard |. J. Collier Mr. Edmund J. Conway Mr. & Mrs. Charles N. Cooper Mr. & Mrs. George T. Corrigan Mr. & Mrs. Richard W. Couch Mr. Victor R. Coudert Jr. Dr. & Mrs. Joseph W. Coxe Ill Mrs. George Craig Mr. & Mrs. Lloyd L. Craighill Ms. Caroline A. Crawford Mrs. Edward J. Crawford Mr. & Mrs. John B. Cregan Mr. & Mrs. Thomas E. Davey Mr. & Mrs. Ralph P. Davidson Mr. & Mrs. Richard M. Davis Mr. & Mrs. Seymour Davis Mr. & Mrs. William D. Davis Mr. & Mrs. Frank R. Dawson Dr. & Mrs. David DeHoll Mr. & Mrs. Francis T. Deighan Mr. & Mrs. Charles Denny Rush S. Dickson Family Fdn., Inc. Mr. & Mrs. Joseph DiDuro Mr. & Mrs. Robert S. Diehl Mr. & Mrs. Harry J. Donahue Mr. & Mrs. Joseph K. Donovan Dr. & Mrs. Theodore J. Dubuque Mr. & Mrs. Joseph D. Dulaney Mr. & Mrs. John F. Dulken Mr. A. Baker Duncan Mr. & Mrs. P. L. Duncan Mr. & Mrs. T. J. Duncan Jr. Dr. & Mrs. Robert T. Dunn Mr. & Mrs. Paul A. DuPre Mr. & Mrs. Lynn D. Durham - Mrs. Patricia M. Edelstein Mrs. John B. Elliott Ii! Mr. & Mrs. Aubrey J. Ellis Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth E. Enney Lt. Col. & Mrs. O. H. Entwistle Jr. Mr. & Mrs. William E. Esham Jr. Mr. & Mrs. J. Thomas Eubank Mr. & Mrs. Albert A. Eustis Mr. & Mrs. Thomas E. Farrell Dr. Sam Fason Mr. & Mrs. Robert A. Fearey Mr. & Mrs. Lewis M. Fetterman Mr. & Mrs. Sidney Finkelstein Mr. & Mrs. Eben D. Finney Mr. & Mrs. Elmer A. Fitzgerald Mr. & Mrs. Gale R. Fletcher Mr. & Mrs. Samuel J. Foley dr. Dr. & Mrs. James L. Frey Mr. & Mrs. Robert H. Gammon Mr. & Mrs. Richard S. Gatti Jr. Dr. & Mrs. Edwin A. Gee Mr. & Mrs. C. Meade Geisel Sr. Mr. & Mrs. Sandy Giacobbe Mr. William M. Gibson Mr. & Mrs. Robert J. Giguere Mr. Peter Gilbert Mr. & Mrs. William M. Ginder Mr. & Mrs. Herman E. Glassman Mr. & Mrs. Howard G. Gold Mr. & Mrs. Floyd D. Gottwald Jr. Mr. Harry C. Gottwals Mr. & Mrs. Fred W. Goundry Mr. Richard B. Graves Dr. William Graham Guerriero Mr. & Mrs. Roger Gutowski Mr. H. G. Hager Mr. & Mrs. Charles Haggerty Jr. Dr. & Mrs. M. Reza Hagigh Mr. & Mrs. Channing M. Hall ur. Dr. & Mrs. Arthur E. Halprin Mr. James T. Hamlin Mr. Gordon L. Hammock Mr. & Mrs. John T. Hammond Mr. Louis J. Hansen Mr. & Mrs. Sinclair J. Harcus Mr. & Mrs. Martin C. Harmon ur. Mr. & Mrs. John J. Hartigan Mr. & Mrs. William Y. Harvey Mrs. Oliver H. Havens Mr. Donald F. Hayden Mr. & Mrs. James L. Hayne Mrs. Frances Watt Haynes Dr. & Mrs. A. E. Heimert Mr. & Mrs. Charles C. Helscher Mr. & Mrs. Robert A. Hemm Mrs. Floylee H. Hemphill Mr. & Mrs. B. K. Herman Dr. & Mrs. John W. Herndon Mr. & Mrs. Donald A. Holden Mr. & Mrs. James F. Holmes Dr. & Mrs. William Holmes Mr. & Mrs. Frederick W. Hope Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Harold Y. Hoppes Mr. Robert E. Hornik Mr. & Mrs. R. D. Houlihan Jr. Mr. Harold R. Howe Mr. & Mrs. J. N. Humphreys Dr. John A. Hunt Mr. & Mrs. Charles S. Hunter Mr. & Mrs. Richard W. Hurley Mr. & Mrs. Peter M. Husting Mr. Raymond E. Hutchinson Mr. & Mrs. John Ineson Mr. & Mrs. Ross J. Interrante Mr. & Mrs. James P. Jackson Mr. & Mrs. Ronald Jakubek Mr. Clarke B. Johnson Mr. David T. Johnson Sr. Mrs. Helen Johnson Dr. Norman J. Johnson Dr. & Mrs. Fred F. Johnston Mrs. Barry Johnstone Mr. Rudolph G. Johnstone Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Jimmy C. Jones Mrs. Jonzennie M. Jones Mr. Lloyd H. Jones Mr. Thomas H. Jones Mr. Lee Roy Jordan Mr. & Mrs. Raymond S. Jordan Dr. & Mrs. Samuel Kampf Mr. and Mrs. Abe Kaplan Mr. E. J. Kendall Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Whitney E. Kerr Mr. & Mrs. James Killpack Mr. & Mrs. John T. King III Mr. & Mrs. H. B. Knight Mr. & Mrs. Paul Knight Mr. & Mrs. W. W. Knobloch Mr. & Mrs. Robert V. Krikorian Mr. & Mrs. Howard A. C. Kuehner Mr. & Mrs. Vaden Lackey Lalley Charitable Fund Mr. & Mrs. Edward J. Lane Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth L. Lawing Mrs. Nancy P. Lawson Dr. Francis E. LeJeune Jr. Dr. & Mrs. Donald R. Lewis Mr. Harvey J. Lewis Mr. & Mrs. Harry V. Lewis Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Lisi Mr. & Mrs. J. Logan Look Mr. & Mrs. John Lord Mr. & Mrs. Victor Losquadro Mr. & Mrs. S. Mark Lovell Mrs. Lucille C. Lundy Mr. Albert W. Lyle Mr. & Mrs. Gerard R. Lynch Mr. & Mrs. Albert J. Mara Mr. & Mrs. Robert J. Marvin Mr. William McKinnon Massie Mr. & Mrs. Karl J Matzdorf Mr. & Mrs. Robert F. Mausser Mr. Hiram P. Maxim Mr. & Mrs. Dennis D. Maxwell Mr. & Mrs. Joseph P. McAllister Mr. & Mrs. D. W. McCarthy Mr. & Mrs. R. B. McClatchy Mr. & Mrs. Robert S. McCoy Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Harold J. McCulloch Mr. Patrick T. McMahon Mr. & Mrs. William H. McNair Dr. Sreedhara K. G. Menon Mr. & Mrs. C. Irvin Messner Mr. & Mrs. David L. Metz Mr. & Mrs. Arnold F. Meyer Mrs. Miranda B. Miles Mr. & Mrs. Leo A. Militello Dr. & Mrs. John W. Miller Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Ross R. Millhiser Mrs. Florence G. Mintz Mr. & Mrs. John G. Mitchell Jr. Mr. Louis Mondello Mrs. William L. Monroe Mr. & Mrs. John L. Montgomery Mrs. Robert H. Monyek Mrs. Lucille Moore Dr. & Mrs. William L. Moore Dr. Jose F. Morelos . Mr. & Mrs. Walter K. Morris Mr. John Morrow Mr. & Mrs. Oliver H. Mowry Dr. & Mrs. James J. Mulreany Mr. & Mrs. Daniel L. Murphy Sr. Mr. & Mrs. Thomas R. Murray Dr. & Mrs. James L. Nave Mrs. Alice Harvey Newman Mrs. Madeleine B. Newman Mr. Kadir R. Noor Mr. & Mrs. Robert H. Nutt dr. Mr. & Mrs. Elliott M. Ogden Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Raymond S. Oliger Mr. & Mrs. N. D. Osella Mr. & Mrs. P. D. Pakula Mrs. Leonard J. Paletta Mrs. Prudence M. Palmer Mr. & Mrs. James A. Paone Capt. & Mrs. Jefferson D. Parker Mr. & Mrs. Richard G. Parkhurst Mr. & Mrs. Dean Patterson Mr. & Mrs. George W. Peck Ms. Eve S. Phoenix Mr. & Mrs. William R. Pierce Dr. & Mrs. Daniel W. Platt Mr. & Mrs. F. C. Plitt-Jr: Mr. & Mrs. Arlen S. Pockrass Mr. & Mrs. David K. Poole Mr. & Mrs. John L. Powers Mr. & Mrs. Townes G. Pressler Mr. & Mrs. James M. Quinlan Mr. & Mrs. Carl Raichle Mr. & Mrs. William P. Raines Dr. & Mrs. Monroe J. Rathbone Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Alfred A. Reed Mr. & Mrs. H. Ward Reighley Mr. & Mrs. Rollin S. Reiter Dr. & Mrs. Frank M. Rembert Mr. & Mrs. Bruin S. Richardson Mr. Reuben F. Richardson Mr. & Mrs. Charles H. Rideout Sr. Mr. & Mrs. T. Lee Robinson Mr. & Mrs. Frank W. Rogers Jr. Mr. & Mrs. William C. Rogers Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Michael J. Romanelli Mr. & Mrs. Arthur M. Rose Mr. & Mrs. John J. Ross Mr. Jay A. Rothenberger Mr. & Mrs. H. L. Boyer Royal W&L == 35 Mr. & Mrs. A. T. Sanders Mr. & Mrs. John R. Sanders Mr. & Mrs. Lowell L. Sanders Mr. & Mrs. Leslie T. Schakenback Mrs. Mary Ruth Scott Mr. & Mrs. Richard T. Scruggs Mr. & Mrs. Donald H. Seid Mr. & Mrs. John R. Seifert Mr. & Mrs. Morris L. Seleznick Mr. & Mrs. John S. Shannon Mrs. Virginia A. Sharp Mr & Mrs William A. Shearer Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Richard C. Sheldon Mrs. Martha Shelton-Wolf Dr. Thomas B. Shepherd Jr. Mr. & Mrs. H. Reese Shoemaker Ur. Dr. & Mrs. Sanford R. Singer Mr. & Mrs. John M. Slack III Dr. & Mrs. James B. Sloan Mr. & Mrs. James G. Small Mr. & Mrs. Leland R. Speed Mr. & Mrs. William R. Spofford Jr. Mr. David W. Sprunt Mr. & Mrs. John F. Stachura Mr. & Mrs. John M. Stack Mr. & Mrs. S. T. Stackhouse Mr. and Mrs. Robert Steilberg Mr. & Mrs. Warren L. Stern Mr. Frank K. Stillwagon Mr. & Mrs. Robert L. Strickland Mr. & Mrs. Eugene Stuart Mrs. Marcelline Sullivan Mr. & Mrs. John C. Szczecinski Dr. John E. Tartaglione Col. & Mrs. Harold T. Taylor Dr. & Mrs. F. B. Teague Jr. Mr. Fred Thieringer Jr. Mr. & Mrs. James R. Thompson Mr. R. F. Thornton Mr. & Mrs. W. Bryan Trammell Mr. & Mrs. R. H. Trumbo Mr. & Mrs. W. Warren Upton Mrs. Majorie H. Valliere Mr Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Dr. Mr. Mr Mr Mr Mr. Dr. Mr Mr. Mr. Mr. . & Mrs. John H. Van Amburgh & Mrs. Robert N. Van Son & Mrs. Joseph C. Vawter Walter E. Veghte Jr. & Mrs. James E. Vesper & Mrs. Edgardo P. Villamater & Mrs. James M. Vines . & Mrs. Karl E. Vogt . Hans H. Walter . & Mrs. Edward T. Walters & Mrs. John T. Warmath Jr. & Mrs. Charles E. Warner . & Mrs. John W. Weaver Vernon A. Webster & Mrs. James Weiss & Mrs. Robert J. Whann Ill Mr. & Mrs. Charles C. White Jr. Mr Dr. Mr s. Joanna White & Mrs. Stanley White . & Mrs. Russell W. Whitman Mr. & Mrs. Louis L. Wilbanks Mr . & Mrs. F. M. Wiley Mrs. Margaret Wilkerson Mr. & Mrs. W. R. Wilkerson Mr. & Mrs. Donald M. Wilkinson Jr. Mr _E. M. Wilkinson Jr. Mrs. Victoria T. Willett Mr Mr. Dr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Dr. Mr. Mr. . & Mrs. Cranston Williams & Mrs. James B. Williams & Mrs. James Williamson & Mrs. Robert H. Willis & Mrs. Conrad Wilmar & Mrs. Anthony M. Wilson & Mrs. Grover Winstead Jr. & Mrs. Walter |. Wolfson & Mrs. Robert K. Woltz & Mrs. W. K. Woodward & Mrs. Landon R. Wyatt Jr. & Mrs. Kenneth E. Young & Mrs. Robert J. Young Jr. & Mrs. Richard W. Zahn Sr. The Annual Fund: Friends Washington and Lee is deeply grateful for the gifts receiv- ed in support of current operations from persons who are neither alumni nor parents. Most of the gifts from these ‘‘friends’’ are unrestricted and are given in the form of direct grants or in the form of memorials. Those whose names are printed in bold face type are members of the Lee Associates and made gifts of $1,000 or more in 1984-85; those whose names are in italics are members of the Colonnade Club and made gifts of $100-$999 in 1984-85. Mr. & Mrs. Sanford E. Abelson Mrs. Ann Rawls Adams Mrs. Joan K. Armstrong Mr. & Mrs. Jack W. Blair Mrs. Jeanne N. Breitung Cadaver Mrs. Anne Scott Carr Mr. Lowry M. Close Mr. Howard E. Cobb Mrs. Parker S. Crosland Mrs. M. F. N. Cummings Mr. J. Sanford Doughty Mrs. Thomas P. Duncan Flaberg Corporation Frigid Freeze Foods inc. Mr. Stephen H. Greene Mrs. H. M. Hayne Dr. Virginia Huffer 36 W&L Mr. & Mrs. Samuel Jones Mrs. Elinor H. McKee Carter V. McNeese Mrs. Dorothy S. Milling Mrs. A. Milton Morrison Northwestern National Bank Mrs. William C. Orth ss Mary R. Quinlan Mrs. Oscar G. Rawls Ms. Mildred C. Richmond Mrs. William H. Robinson Mr. J. Samuel Slicer Mrs. James G. Smith Mrs. Carl B. Stone Rev. Baker J. Turner Mrs. Romulus Weatherman Dr. John D. Wilson Mrs. Roberta G. Woodell Memorials To honor fellow alumni, relatives, or friends, many donors _make gifts to Washington and Lee for capital or current sup- port in the form of memorials. Donors of such gifts in 1984-85 are listed elsewhere in this report in the appropriate places based on the purpose of their gifts. Listed here are the names of those honored by such gifts. William H. Armstrong ’43 John W. Ball ’32, ’35L Joseph Gilbert Barkley ’59 John S. Beagle ’65 Adrian L. Bendheim Jr. '42 Harry A. Berry Jr. '49, 51L John Roser Bestor '82 John Beury ‘31 Melissa Boyd Albert Breitung '44 Julian Broome '32 Deverton Carpenter '36 Thomas H. Carter '54 William W. Chaffin 1891 Mrs. Maurice Kistler Chappius James H. Clark ‘31 James T. Cook Jr. 54+ Lloyd Cowan ’48L Rugeley P. DeVan Jr. '34 Gary H. Dobbs III '70+ Thomas E. Ennis + E. McGruder Faris Jr. ’49, '51L Benjamin F. Fiery °13 James V. Freeman ’32 Edward S. Graves '30 + Mrs. Margaret R. Harkey George M. B. Hawley II '36 Henry H. Hecht '59 William Baylis Hightower ‘32 William F. Hirschmann IV ‘76 J. Christopher Hunter '86 Lewis K. Johnson + W. Courtney King Sr. John B. King Jr. °71L Charles V. Laughlin + Gerald M. Malmo Jr. '49 David J. McGarry ’81 William C. Orth '35 John Howard Perkins Marjorie Poindexter + Thomas Smith Purdie 1874 William H. Robinson '34, ’37L Rae and Ben Schewel Leon F. Sensabaugh + George R. Shaw '15 James G. Smith ’25 Richard A. Smith °13 Mrs. Celia Starkman Leslie Storey Stemmons '27L Carl B. Stone '23 Jay W. Stull 60 James W. Stump ’53, ’59L C. Bancroft Taylor '32 Fred M. Vinson Jr. ’48, ’51L Romulus T. Weatherman + Felix P. Welch + Donald A. Willis °75L Thomas C. Wilson Jr. '43 Francis Beverley Whiting Maxwell Penrose Wilkinson '28 Walter White Wood '25L William L. Woodall ’32 +a member of the W&L faculty or staff Virginia Foundation for Independent Colleges A record $2,758,707 was contributed by business and in- dustry to 14 private Virginia colleges through the VFIC during 1984-85. Washington and Lee’s share was $210,624. This magnificent total was beneficially influenced by a $100,000 challenge offered by Ethyl Corporation of Richmond, Virginia. The challenge was fully met. Under the direction of a board that includes 40 business leaders and the presidents of the 14 independent colleges, the VFIC enlisted nearly 1,000 supporters, primarily corporations doing business in Virginia who are concerned with strengthen- ing private higher education. Because of space limitations, the full listing of donor sources published annually in the VFIC annual report is not repeated here. Washington and Lee acknowledges with gratitude the concern and leadership of the companies, foundations and individuals who made generous contributions for private higher education through the VFIC. Business and Industry Washington and Lee University was assisted in large measure during 1984-85 by direct grants for current expen- ditures from corporations in addition to corporate assistance received through the Virginia Foundation for Independent Colleges (VFIC). Investments by private business in private education take on special meaning and importance. The total of these gifts during the 1984-85 year was $48,449. American Broadcasting Companies, Inc. Amoco Foundation, Inc. Berkley Machine Works & Foundry Co. Boothe, Prichard & Dudley Brinkman Associates Buquet Distributing Company, Inc. Canon Safety & Health Co., Inc. CityScape Tours Coudert Associates, Inc. The Decatur Daily DeJarnette Investment Advisors Dibrell Brothers, Inc. Fujitsu Microelectronics, Inc. Hall Frederick N., Haring, D.D.S., Inc. Hunton & Williams Ice Cream Works, Inc. Kaufman & Canoles Luster & Conine Lykes Brothers, Inc. Martin, Taylor, Fralin, Freeman & Perrow Mays, Valentine, Davenport & Moore Metal Distributors, Inc. Noble, Glen & Associates, Inc. Palmetto Builders Q-tronics Company Reader's Digest Foundation, Inc. Research Corporation The Roanoke Times and World-News John H. Rozelle Company The Sears-Roebuck Foundation Stonereath Farms Town & Country Veterinary Clinic Valley Center Florist Virginia Environmental Endowment The Virginian-Pilot and The Ledger-Star Matching Gifts 3M Company A-SPS Incorporated Abex Corp Aetna Life Casualty Air Products Chemicals Inc. Alcoa Foundation Allied Chemical Corporation Allstate Ins. Co. Amax Foundation American Airlines American Bell Inc. American Broadcasting Co. American Cyanamid Co. American Enka Corp. American Express Co. American Hospital Supply Corp. American International Group American Maize Products Co. American Standard Inc. AMF Foundation Amoco Foundation Inc. Analog Devices Inc. Arco Corporation Armco Inc. Armstrong World Industries Inc. Arthur Andersen Co. Ashland Oil Inc. AT&T Foundation Atlantic Richfield Co. Automatic Data Processing B. F. Goodrich Bank of New York Bank South BankAmerica Foundation Bankers Trust Co., N.Y. Barclays American Corp. Becton Dickinson Co. Bell Of Pennsylvania Bellcore Communications Berkshire Hathaway Best Products Co. Bethlehem Steel Corp. Black Decker Mfg Co. Blue Bell Inc. BOC Group Boise Cascade Corp. BrownForman Distillers Co. Burroughs Corp. C. P. C. International Inc. Cahill, Gordon & Reindel Campbell Soup Co. Celanese Centel Corporation Certainteed Corporation Chase Manhattan Bank Chemical Bank Chesapeake & Potomac Telephone Chevron USA Inc Chicago Title Trust Co. Chubb & Son Inc. CIBA Geigy Chemical Corp CIGNA Corp Citicorp Citizens Southern National Bank CNA Foundation Coca Cola Co. Columbia Gas Transmission Combustion Engineering Inc. Commercial Union Assurance Co. Conn Bank Trust Co. Connecticut Mutual Life Ins. Co. Consolidated Foods Corp. Constellation Reinsurance Co. Continental Carbon Co. Continental Telecomm. Inc. Cooper Industries Foundation Coopers Lybrand Corning Glass Works Cowles Media Co. Crocker National Bank Crum Forster Group Ins. Dana Corporation Dennison Mfg. Co. Digital Equipment Corporation Dominion Bankshares Inc. Donaldson Lufkin Jenrette Dow Jones Co. Dravo Corp. Duke Power Co. Dunn & Bradstreet Inc. Elis Olsson Chesapeake Fdn. Emerson Electric Company ENSERCH Corporation Equitable Life Assurance Society Ernest Whinney Esmark Inc. Foundation Ethyl Corp. Exxon Education Foundation Faegre Benson Fairchild Industries Fdn, Inc. Fairfax Inc. Federated Investors Inc. Fidelity Bank Firemans Fund Insurance Co. First Atlanta Corp. First Kentucky National Corp. First Maryland Foundation First Nat'l Bank Of St. Louis: First National Bank of Chicago First Union National Bank First VA Banks Inc. FMC Corp. Ford Motor Co. Freeport McMoran Inc. Fruehauf Corp. Gannett Company Inc. GATAX Corporation General Dynamics Corp. General Electric Foundation General Foods Corp. General Mills General Reinsurance Co. Georgia Pacific Corporation Goldman Sachs Co. Goodyear Tire Co. Grace Foundation, Inc. Great Lakes Rubber Co. GTE Corporation Gulf Oil Corp. Gulf States Utilities H&R Block Foundation Halliburton Education Fdn. Hammermill Foundation Harris Corp. Harte-Hanks Communications Hartford Insurance Group HCA Foundation Hercules Inc. Hershey Fund Hewlett Packard Hoffmann La Roche Inc. Home Life Insurance Co. Household International IC| Americas Inc. Industrial Indemnity Co. Ingersoll Rand Co. IBM Internat’l Minerals & Chemical International Telephone & Telegraph J. Paul Getty Trust J. P. Stevens Co., Inc. Fdn. James River Corp. Jefferson Pilot Corporation John Deere Co. Johnson Higgins of VA Johnson Higgins of PA Inc. Johnson Higgins Of Kentucky Johnson & Higgins Of NJ Johnson & Higgins of Ga Inc. Johnson Johnson Jones Group Inc. Kaiser Cement Corp. Kentucky Power Co. Kidder Peabody Co. KimberlyClark K-Mart Corp. The Koppers Company Inc. Kraft Incorporated Lenox Inc. Leo Burnett Co., Inc. Lone Star Industries Lukens Steel Co., PA Mac Panel Co. Manufacturers Hanover Trust Marathon Oil Marley Fund Marsh McLennan Inc. Martin Marietta Corp. Massachusetts Mutual Life May Stores Foundation Inc. McDonalds Corp. McDonnell Douglas Corp. McGraw Edison Co. McGuire, Woods & Battle McKesson Educational Fdn., Inc. Mead Corporation Foundation Merck Co. Merrill Lynch Co. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. Milliken Co. Mitre Corporation Mobil Oil Corp. Monsanto Co. Montgomery Ward Co. Mony New York City Morgan Guaranty Trust Co. Morgan Lewis Bockius Morgan Stanley Co. Inc. Nabisco -N C R Foundation National City Bank National Gypsum Company National Life Insurance Of VT National Steel Corporation National Westminster Bank USA Nationwide Mutual Ins. Co. New England Life Ins. Co. New Jersey Bell Telephone Co. New York Life Foundation Norfolk Southern Fdn. North American Phillips Corp. Northern States Power Co. Northern Telecom., Inc. Northern Trust Co., Intl. Dept. Northwestern Mutual Life Northwestern National Life Ins. Norwest Bank Minneapolis NA Occidental Petroleum Olin Corporation Peat Marwick Mitchell Co. J. C. Penney, Inc. Pennsylvania Power Light Peoples Bank Phelps Dodge Corp. Phillip Morris Inc. Phillips Petroleum Co. Piedmont Aviation, Inc. Pittsburgh National Bank Polaroid Foundation Inc. Price Waterhouse Proctor Gamble Fund Provident Life Accident Prudential Ins. Co. of America Quaker Oats Foundation R. H. Macy, Inc. R. J. Reynolds Industries, Inc. Reynolds Metals Co. Rockwell International Rohm Haas Royal Cup, Inc. San Diego Gas Electric Co. Scripps-Howard Inc. Seaboard System Railroad Seattle Trust and Savings Shell Oil Co. Shenandoah Life Ins. Co. Sidley & Austin Signode Corp. Smith, Kline, Beckman Fdn. Standard Oil Co. Of Ohio Sonat Incorporated South Carolina National Bank South Central Bell Tel. Co. Southeast Electronics, Inc. Southeast Banking Corporation Southland Financial Corp. Southside Animal Clinic. Southwestern Bell Tel. Sovran Financial Corporation Sperry Corp. Sprague Electric Co. Springs Industries, Inc. Stanadyne, Inc. State Farm Companies Fdn. State Mutual of Amercica Ins. Sun Refining & Marketing Co. Suna Brothers Superior Oil Co. Sybron Corporation Syntex Corp. Syva Co. T. Rowe Price Assoc. Fdn., Inc. Tandy Corp./Radio Shack Tanner Companies Tektronix Corp. Tenneco Texaco Philanthropic Fdn. Texas Commerce Bank Texas Instruments, Inc. Texasgulf, Inc. Textron Charitable Trust W&L 37 The Continental Group The Liberty Corporation The New York Times The Philadelphia National Bank Third National Bank Thomas & Fiske Thomas & Betts Corp. Time, Inc. Times Publishing Company Tops Business Service Tracor, Inc. Travelers Ins. Co. Trust Co., Georgia TRW, Inc. Turner Constr. Co. Tydings Rosenberg U. S. Engineering Co. U. S. Fidelity Guaranty U. S. Tobacco Co. UGI Corporation Union Camp Corp. Union Carbide Corp. Union Oil Co. of California Union Trust Co. United Engineers & Construction United States Leasing Intl., Inc. U. S. Fidelity and Guaranty Co. United VA Bank United Brands Foundation United States Trust Co. Of NY United Technologies Corp. Universal Leaf Tobacco Co. Upper Valley Transport System Valley National Bank Vanguard Group Vulcan Materials Co. W. W. Norton & Company Wachovia Corp. Warner-Lambert Co. Washington Post News Wausau Intl. WDVMTV Welch Foods Wells Fargo Bank Na West Point Pepperell, Inc. Western Electric Co. Westinghouse Educational Fdn. Westvaco Corp. Whirlpool Corporation Winston-Salem Health Care The Wiremold Foundation, Inc. Xerox Corp Zapata Corporation Foundations Because a foundation’s grant to an educational institution is a highly respected public endorsement of the institution’s leadership and educational program, Washington and Lee acknowledges with special gratitude the new commitments it received from foundations in support of current operations in 1984-85. (Other foundation gifts in fulfillment of prior pledges are listed in the section describing gifts for capital purposes.) George |. Alden Trust D. S. Blount Educational Foundation George Newton Bullard Foundation Cloverland Farms Foundation, Inc. The Westmoreland Davis Memorial Foundation, Inc. The Eisenman Foundation Mamie F. Martel Trust The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation E. A. Morris Charitable Foundation National Newspaper Foundation Mary Moody Northen, Inc. The Richard Nelson Ryan Foundation Telford Foundation, Inc. Whitehall Foundation, Inc. Capital Gifts Listed below are the names of 823 alumni, friends, parents, corporations, and foundations who made gifts either for some form of endowment, for enlargement or improve- ment of the physical plant or for a restricted purpose during the 1984-85 year. The total of new commitments, not in- cluding payments on pledges reported in prior years, is $4,723,250. Dr. Andrew H. Abernathy Ill P Mr. & Mrs. Cecil E. Abernethy F William R. Acquavella '59 Dr. Edward M. Adler '79 John A. Agostini '79L Alcoa Foundation J. W. Alderson Jr. '28 Dr. Aristides C. Alevizatos '56 Dr. & Mrs. H. C. Alexander III P Dr. & Mrs. Bobby R. Alford P Mrs. Barbara J. Allen P Ethan Allen ’31L The American League of Professional Baseball Clubs Frederick F. Amico P Mr. & Mrs. C. H. Anderson F Mrs. Judy B. Anderson P Ms. Susan M. Andrus P Mrs. Patricia K. Arey F Stephen E. Arey ’75L George S. Arnold ’28L Pasquale J. Arpaia P Mrs. Rosemary Arthur P Randall W. Atkins ’76L Thomas P. Atkins ‘69 John K. Aurell '56 Cdr. William B. Bagbey '38 Frank A. Bailey Ill '66 Dr. David M. Baker ’59 Mrs. Paula Baker P Richard T. Baker F James M. Ballengee '48L Mr. & Mrs. Emerson Banack Jr. P Dr. Douglas E. Barnard ’60 Mr. & Mrs. Norman M. Barnard F R. B. Barnes Jr. P Mr. & Mrs. Watson Barnes P Arthur E. W. Barrett Jr. °55 Col. Michael J. Barrett Jr. ’49, °51L A. Greer Barriault '78 Frank Barron '52 Mr. & Mrs. James A. Barry P John D. Bassett Ill '59 Mrs. Patricia E. Bassett P Dr. John T. Bate '19 Mr. & Mrs. Richard Baylor F Robert P. Beakley '72L Mr. & Mrs. John F. Beckert P Beckett Charitable Foundation Mrs. Louise S. Behrman F Sam Bendheim Ill '57 Mr. & Mrs. Norman J. Benford P Erik Bennorth P Mr. & Mrs. F. Fox Benton Jr. 60 Dr. Peter W. Bergstrom F Mrs. Constance H. Bernstein P Dr. William J. Berry '47 Best Products Foundation Andrew Bestor F Mrs. Nancy Bestor P Arthur A. Birney ’50, ’52L John K. Boardman ’51 Calhoun Bond °43 T. Talbott Bond ‘51 James D. Bonebrake '54 G. Michael Boswell P James M. Boswell '57 Granville S. R. Bouldin '49, ’51L Ms. Diane Bowen F Edward L. Bowie '49 Cpt. Edward L. Bowie Jr. '80 Dr. Robert S. Boyd P J. Bayard Boyle Jr. '58 David M. Bradt Jr. °74L Frank H. Brady '32 Estate Mr. & Mrs. Wendell T. Breithaupt P Dr. Earl J. Brewer Jr. F Randolph W. Brinton '68 Mr. & Mrs. Robert H. Britton P Thomas H. Broadus Jr. ‘59 Amb. & Mrs. William E. Brock III °53 Dr. Charles H. Brooks P John H. Brooks '45 Dr. Paul A. Brower ’68 Dr. D. Earl Brown Jr. ’49 Dr. S. K. Brown P Mrs. Jean C. Brown P Robert G. Brown '49 Hon. James T. Broyhill F Corbet F. Bryant Jr. 68 Thomas W. Budd ’61, '64L N. Gregory Buis F Martin P. Burks '32L George E. Burks '27 James M. Burlingame P Mrs. Ruth W. Bussiere F Mrs. Elizabeth B. Butler P William E. Buxton ’40 Cadaver Prof. Samuel W. Calhoun F Dr. John R. Calvert 54 Prof. Robert Campbell F Peter M. Candler '64 Mrs. Hellen |. Cannon P Mrs. William H. Carder P David D. Carothers '61 C. M. Carpenter F Herbert P. Carroll F Ms. Florence B. Carter F Kathleen T. Carter F Estate Mrs. Katharine R. Caruthers P Mr. & Mrs. John J. Casey P Mrs. Mary Ann Cassel P Dr. Rodolfo Celis P H. Glenn Chaffer '49 Benjamin L. Chapman ’64 Mrs. Sophie A. Chapman F William F. Chew '68 Dr. Carey D. Chisholm '76 Evan Alevizatos Chriss '42 Lotte R. Christensen F Mr. & Mrs. Ronald Christensen F Mr. & Mrs. David M. Clark F William H. Clark Jr. 60, ’63L Mr. & Mrs. Ernest H. Clarke ’52, '58L Palmore Clarke '80 Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Clements P James M. Clifton P Ms. Marilynn J. Cobb P Ms. Iris N. Cobble F Lester V. Coe P Madison F. Cole Jr. '71 John Peter Coll Jr. P Mr. & Mrs. T. M. Collerain P Dr. Milton Colvin F Charles E. Commander Ill 62 David B. Cook ’81 Mrs. Hervey Cook F Dr. Jay D. Cook Jr. '43 Rodney M. Cook ’46 Charles N. Cooper P Mr. & Mrs. Alan D. Corwith ’73 Mr. & Mrs. L. Arlen Cotter P George L. Cowan Ill '48L Estate Mrs. Jennifer E. Cox P Mrs. Lelah Price Coyle P F. Thorns Craven ’62 Ms. Caroline A. Crawford F Ms. Berthenia Crocker ’78L Edward S. Croft Ill 64 Mrs. Judith M. Crooker P Mrs. Nancy Larrick Crosby F Edward B. Crosland Sr. P Richard F. Cummins '59 Miss Alice Cunningham F Miss Helen Cunningham F John J. Czyzewski ’66, '68L Warren Daane F Edward C. Darling ‘52 Mr. & Mrs. Ralph P. Davidson P Francis A. Davis Jr. ’48 Ms. Rebecca W. Davis F Richard M. Davis P John C. Dawson Jr. ’60 Peter D. DeBoer ’49 John H. DeCourcy F W. C. Deering F Dr. J. David deHoll P Mrs. Veronica M. Deighan F David S. DeJong '75L Delta Upsilon Fraternity Peter M. de Manio ’66L Mr. & Mrs. Charles W. Denny P Michael T. DeVan F Rugeley P. DeVan Ill ’63 Dr. W. Todd DeVan '33 The Dickson Foundation, Inc. Ms. Michela Diduro P Gregory J. Digel ’70, °73L W. W. Diggs '54 Ms. Dorothy P. Dillon ’80L Richard E. Dixon P Frank A. D’Lauro Jr. '62 Howard W. Dobbins ’42L Gary H. Dobbs III 70 Estate Thomas Donahoo P Harry J. Donahue P Ms. Harriet D. Dorsey ’76L John D. Drinko F Joseph D. Dulaney P Mr. & Mrs. James E. Dunn Jr. ’82 Jessie Ball duPont Religious, Charitable and Educational Fund Mr. & Mrs. Paul A. DuPre P Sherman Dye F Alfred H. Ebert Jr. '50 Mrs. LaPrelle Edens F Stetson W. Eddy '79L Ms. Regina M. Ednie '80L Daniel Mark Einstein ‘83 H. Watkins Ellerson Ill °73L E. Tazewell Ellett °77L Mr. & Mrs. Aubrey J. Ellis P David M. Ellis ’65 Joseph F. Ellis Jr. 43 Mr. & Mrs. Richard C. Emrey P Frank G. English P Mrs. Thomas E. Ennis F Enterra Corporation E. Stewart Epley ‘49 Mr. & Mrs. William E. Esham Jr. P Mr. & Mrs. J. Thomas Eubank P William L. Evans Jr. ‘41 Andrew N. Farley P Paul N. Farquharson '84 Robert R. Feagin Jr. ‘60 W. Lawrence Fellman '67 Allen Mead Ferguson ’60 Dr. William J. Fidler ’61 First Slovak Wreath of the Free Eagle Norman Fischer '49 William H. Fleming F Dan H. Flournoy '64 Mr. & Mrs. Samuel J. Foley Jr. P Edwin J. Foltz '40L The Fortnightly Club of Roanoke Charles D. Fox Ill F J. Carter Fox '61 John G. Fox ’44, ’49L Lawrence H. Framme Ill '74L The Ershel A. Franklin Charitable Unitrust Joseph J. French Jr. ‘50 Carl C. Fritsche '53 James F. Gallivan '51 Benjamin D. S. Gambill Jr. ’67 Mr. & Mrs. Louis Garavente P James P. Garner F Ralph E. Garner 74 Mr. & Mrs. William A. Garrett P Mr. & Mrs. Richard S. Gatti Jr. P Charles S. Gay '56, '58L Ms. Karen L. Geary '77L Prof. William S. Geimer F Anthony F. Gerike '55, ‘62L Floyd Brian Gibson ‘82 R. Gordon Gooch '56 John D. Goodin '39L Robert U. Goodman ’50 Bruce N. Gordin '74 William S. Gorman ‘77 Dr Paul L: Gorsuch’ dr. 75S Ms. Margaret R. Goss P Mr. & Mrs. Floyd D. Gottwald Jr. F Harry C. Gottwals P William J. Goyer F Col. William W. Graham ’49 Fred King Granade '75L Edward S. Graves '30 Ms. Marilyn S. Greenberg F Stephen |. Greenhalgh °77L Mr. & Mrs. William R. Greer Sr. P H. Morgan Griffith '83L Mrs. Kathleen A. Griffith F James B. Groff P Prof. Roger Groot F Dr. Francis C. Grumbine ’67 Thad Grundy Jr. ’75 Thad Grundy Sr. P Prof. Mark Grunewald F Ms. Elizabeth T. Guarino ’77L C. F. Gummey Jr. '63 Mr. & Mrs. Henry Gunst Jr. F Mr. & Mrs. Stephen B. Haggerty P Lee Halford Jr. '69 Channing M. Hall Jr. P Col. & Mrs. Warren W. Halstead F Raymond W. Haman '52L Mr. & Mrs. J. S. Hamblen P Carl Martin Hames F John G. Hamilton '32 Mr. & Mrs. W. L. Hampton P C. M. Hamrick Jr. F Guy M. Harbert III ’83L John F. Hardesty Jr. ’50 Judge Alex M. Harman ur. ’44L G. Lee Harralson P Mrs. John L. Hart F Robert D. Hart Jr. '63 Mr. & Mrs. John J. Hartigan P Mr. & Mrs. R. L. Hartman Jr. P Ray V. Hartwell Ill ’69, °75L Ms. Constance Ray Harvey F Ms. Joan M. Haskett P Frank B. Hayne ‘15 Estate James L. Hayne P Mrs. Alice M. Head P Henry H. Hecht Jr. ‘59 Estate William R. Hemphill Jr. ’86 Mrs. William R. Hemphill P John Franklin Hendon '24 Estate Dean Edward O. Henneman F Dr. Paul E. Henson Jr. P The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation Mr. & Mrs. Daniel J. Hickey P James C. Hickey ’62 Dr. Cleveland P. Hickman Jr. F Steven L. Higgs ’80 Harry H. Hill Jr. °49 Robert W. Hilton Jr. °39 W. Hayne Hipp '62 Mrs. Margaret Hird F Mr. & Mrs. Carl H. Hirsch F William F. Hirschmann P Edward P. Hobbs ’62 Theodore S. Hochstim ’48 John F. Hoffman °75L Sam B. Hollis ’51 Mr. & Mrs. Walter W. Hollis P James F. Holmes P Donnis E. Honeycutt Jr. P George E. Honts Ill 62, ‘68L William B. Hoofstitler '36 Frederick W. Hope Jr. P Harold Y. Hoppes P Farris P. Hotchkiss '58 Mr. & Mrs. Elton Hoyt III F John K. Hudson P James Humphreys '87L Dr. H. Robert Huntley F Charles D. Hurt Jr. ’59 Richard A. Hurxthal ’50 Christopher Hutchins '60 Raymond E. Hutchinson P Alton R. Hyatt F W. G. ller P Ms. Carlyn W. Immerman P Charles M. Ives Jr. P Michael K. Jackson ’78L Terrence Garry Jackson ’75L Mr. & Mrs. Thomas S. Jacoby P Mr. & Mrs. Ronald Jakubek P Tyson L. Janney '53 Mr. & Mrs. Paul J. Janyska P Dean Lewis G. John '58 David T. Johnson Sr. P Dr. Fred F. Johnston P Henry P. Johnston Sr. '29 Mr. & Mrs. David H. Jones P Mr. & Mrs. Jimmy C. Jones P Ms. Jonzennie M. Jones P Lloyd H. Jones P Mr. & Mrs. R. Clifton Jones Jr. P Mrs. W. R. Jones F Lee Roy Jordan P Dr. Lewis J. Joseph P Kanawha City Company R. R. Kane Ill '54L Dr. Alan L. Kaplan 51 Sidmon J. Kaplan ’56 Mr. & Mrs. John F. Keanna P Joseph S. Keelty '44 Thomas B. Kellam P The Rt. Rev. Christoph Keller Jr. ’39 James Joseph Kelley '74L Mr. & Mrs. James F. Kelly P Kendall Family Educational Trust Mr. & Mrs. W. Franklin Kepler F Ms. Paula A. Kerns F Guy H. Kerr ’75 John H. Kerr Ill P Ms. Susan S. Kerr P Theodore M. Kerr '57, ’59L Dr. Emory Kimbrough Jr. F Thomas R. King ur. ’74L John B. Kinkead ’53 Dean Frederic L. Kirgis Jr. F Murrel D. Klein °25 Mrs. Diane Knapp P Edward P. Knight P William W. Knobloch P John G. Koedel Jr. ’59 Jack D. Kopald ’78L S L Kopald ur. '43 Eugene E. Krewson ’35 Dr. E. Ross Kyger Ill 63 Albert S. Kyle 49 Ralph D. Lackey F Vaden Lackey Jr. P John L. Lancaster Ill 58 Robert P. Lancaster '62 W. Hanes Lancaster Jr. '46 William A. Landreth '37 Edward H. Lane Foundation John Edward Lane Ill ’74 Landon B. Lane Jr. ’72 Mrs. Edward W. Laney Ill P W. H. Langhorne ’83 James R. Larrick Jr. ’81L Andrew S. Lasine ’83L Sam P. Latture F William E. Latture '49 Mrs. Hope E. Laughlin F Joseph S. Laurent ’55 John H. Lawrence ‘41 Samuel S. Laws F Estate Howard D. Leake '24 Mr. & Mrs. William F. Leary P Robert E. Lee '80 Robert E. Lee IV ’49 The Leggett Foundation Dr. Francis E. LeJeune Jr. F Johnthan R. Lemon ’60 A. J. Lester Ill ’58 Ernest D. Levering '64 Earl N. Levitt F Ms. Catharine W. Lewis P Donald R. Lewis P Mrs. Elizabeth M. Lewis F Frances & Sydney Lewis '40, ’43L Henry Darnell Lewis '81L Mr. & Mrs. Harry V. Lewis Jr. P James E. Lipscomb Ill '58 David H. Livingstone F Mrs. Richard M. Lofton F Arthur Loring '69 Mary and Daniel Loughran Foundation, Inc. S. Mark Lovell F Ms. Lucille C. Lundy P Tavenner C. Lupton Ill °75 William J. Luria ’28 James R. Lyle '48L Lawrence F. Lyles '75 Edmund... Lynch Jr F Mr. & Mrs. Gerard R. Lynch P Jonathan S. Lynn 71, °75L Mr. & Mrs. James A. McBride P Clyde S. McCall Jr. '53 Adrian L. McCardell '29 Lawrence L. McCarthy ‘29 Ms. Catherine Terrell McCartney F J. W. McClintock III 53 W. Lane McColl Ill ’84 Charles T. McCord ’63 Michael S. McCord ’65 Mr. & Mrs. Robert S. McCoy ur. P Dr. & Mrs. T. W. McDonald P Joseph H. McGee ’50, '52L Clarence A. McGowan ur. F Mr. & Mrs. Robert G. McGraw P Dr. Donald G. McKaba ’'56 Herbert G. McKay ’51 James T. McKinistry '48 Miss Leila Laughlin McKnight F Ms. Wanda McLeod F Dr. F. C. McMains P Donald T. McMillan °72, °75L William H. McNair P Mr. & Mrs. Carter V. McNeese F Prof. Andrew W. McThenia Jr. 3S, G3L R. F. MacCachran '43 John D. MacDonald F Mr. & Mrs. Alvin A. Machonis P John M. Madison Jr. 64 H. Stephen Madsen F Bruce Y. Malmo F J. Stephen Marks '59 Mr. & Mrs. William P. Maroney P Mr. & Mrs. Thomas J. Marrie P Mr. & Mrs. Gene A. Marsh ’81L Marsh & McLennan, Inc. Joseph R. Martin ’72 Lewe B. Martin '49, ‘51k Robert C. Martin P Paul M. Maslansky ’54 Mr. & Mrs. Charles H. Mason P Prof. Toni Massaro F John R. Matthews Jr. F Dr. Roy T. Matthews '54 Harold E. Maurer P Courtney R. Mauzy Jr. ’61 W. Peyton May F Estate John D. Mayhew ’26 C. Parkhill Mays Jr. ’58 Allan J. Mead ’58 The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Joseph Mendelsohn Ill ’52 Mr. & Mrs. Irvin C. Messner P Mr. & Mrs. David L. Metz P Midlothian Enterprises, Inc. A. Stevens Miles Jr. ’51 Dr. Mike E. Miles '68 H. Thorp Minister Jr. °49 Mr. & Mrs. William E. Missert P John G. Mitchell Jr. P Roby D. Mize P Joel W. Mohrmann ’77 W&L 39 Charles D. Mohrmann ‘79 Prof. Clark R. Mollenhoff F Robert J. Moody ’49, '51L Mrs. Theresa D. Moody P Dr. Harold A. Moore P Sam Moore Furniture Mr. & Mrs. Robert C. Morbeck F Lawrence E. Morhous '72L Ms. Dorothy G. Morris F Mrs. Stephen Morris F Mr. & Mrs. Stewart Morris F Johnny E. Morrison '74, '77L Norwood O. Morrison '70 H. Taylor Morrissette P Robert A. Mosbacher ’47, '49L Kenneth D. Moxley '41 Estate Mrs. M. J. Muller F Dr. Robert L. Munt Jr. °73 Dean Dan N. Murphy ’°73 James E. Murphy P Col. Paul J. B. Murphy Jr. ’49 Mr. & Mrs. James L. Nave P Dr. Oakie G. Newsome P Ms. Catherine Carr Nichols P Shuford R. Nichols ’30 Harry M. Nielsen F David G. Noble ’58 Ms. Mary P. Noble P William A. Noell Jr. ’64 Ms. Betty J. Nord F John C. Norman Jr. ’64 Philip W. Norwood ’69 George E. Nowack Jr. ’81L Dr. William C. Ober ’70 Elliott M. Ogden Jr. P E. Staman Ogilvie 71 W. B. Ogilvie Jr. ’64 David W. Ogilvy '67 Mr. & Mrs. Raymond S. Oliger P John D. Owen Jr. F C. William Pacy ’50 Stephen H. Paley '61 Foster McCrum Palmer '34 Mr. & Mrs. James A. Paone P Russell Park ’82 Ruth Parmly F Estate Mr. & Mrs. Buford L. Partee P Donald H. Partington 61, ’64L Mr. & Mrs. Raymond D. Patterson P James H. Patton IV ’51 Matthew W. Paxton Jr. '49 Dr. Robert O. Paxton '54 Miss Elizabeth Ashley Payne F Ms. Laura C. Payne P Mr. & Mrs. Brad Pearsall P Dr. & Mrs. Andrew A. Pecora P Mrs. Alexandra N. Peirez P Capt. & Mrs. Robert C. Peniston F Rhodes L. Perdue P Dr. Marvin B. Perry Jr. F A. Winniett Peters P Prof. James M. Phemister F Ae wd. Philips dr. 72 Prof. J. Timothy Philipps F James A. Philpott Jr. ‘69, ’72L J. A. Philpott ‘45 Richard Corbin Pierson ’80 Thomas L. Pittman Jr. '68 Ms. JoAnn H. Platt P Dr. Henry P. Porter Jr. '54 William C. Porth P Mr. & Mrs. Walter B. Posey F Mr. & Mrs. Louis P. Poulton P William A. Powel Ill '83L Dr. John W. Poynor '62 Townes G. Pressler P T. Rowe Price Associates Foundation, Inc. Kenneth S. Purdie F Estate Maurice E. Purnell Jr. '61 Dr. & Mrs. William W. Pusey Ill F Lillian & Rupert Radford Trust Mr. & Mrs. James C. Rae ur. P Mrs. Frances C. Ranc F William P. Raines P Tom L. Rankin ’62 George W. Ray F James H. Redford '76 400 W&L Mr. & Mrs. Alfred A. Reed P Mr. & Mrs. James R. Reichert P Dr. & Mrs. Robert Reinhardt F Mr. & Mrs. Harvey R. Reinstein P Dr. Frank M. Rembert P George J. Renner Jr. P Ms. Melinda Willis Renuart P Mrs. Margaret M. Richardson P Ms. Mildred C. Richmond F Stephen W. Rideout '65, ’68L Kent Rigg ‘52, ’55L Mr. & Mrs. George D. Riley Jr. P Ms. Dianne G. Ringer ’80L Mr. & Mrs. David I. Rippeon P William R. Ritter Jr. ’55 Roanoke Electric Steel Corporation Bruce H. Roberson ‘63 Mr. & Mrs. John Everett Roberts P M. Paraker Roberts lil ’82 Robertshaw Controls Charles H. Robertson ’50, '51L Major E. B. Robertson Jr. ’67 Pat H. Robertson ’65 Mr. & Mrs. Gerald L. Robins P E. B. Robinson Jr. P Stephen W. Robinson ’72, '75L Mr. & Mrs. Francis P. Rooney P Ms. Helen M. Roser F Mrs. John H. Roser F Charles S. Rowe ’45, ’50L Josiah P. Rowe ’48 Herb Rubenstein '74 James A. Russ '62 David E. Ryer ’51 Don M. Sallinger 61, ’64L Lowell L. Sanders P William Sapp P Steven R. Saunders '68 Mrs. R. Terry Sawyer ur. F Mr. & Mrs. G. J. Scannapieco P Helene & Bert Schewel '41 John S. R. Schoenfeld '49 Mr. & Mrs. Frederic D. Schuh F William J. Scott Jr. ’42 David A. Sensabaugh F Mr. & Mrs. George F. Sensabaugh F Mr. & Mrs. George F. Sensabaugh Jr. F Mr. & Mrs. John S. Shannon P Prof. Joan Shaughnessy F William A. Shearer Jr. P Gen. & Mrs. George R. E. Shell F Martin R. Shelton P Shenandoah Life Insurance Company Eva K. Sheppard Charitable Lead Trust. Ms. Edith M. Sheridan F John Sherwin F John M. Shuey Jr. '73 William A. Shutze F Estate Donald W. Sigmund ’59 Leo J. Signaigo Jr. '43 Leroy H. Simkins Jr. '55 Arthur D. Simmons ’29 Mr. & Mrs. Carlton Simons P Ms. Mary Gwynn Simpson F Sam P. Simpson ’65 Michael E. Singer '84 John W. Sinwell '57 John M. Slack Ill P Richard T. Sloan ’42 Stephen Sloan '54 Chester T. Smith Jr. ’53 Or, Ge Oe. LO I iP Ms. Louise Tennent Smith P Parker K. Smith Jr. ’53 William Burford Smith P William H. Smith °15 Bayard J. Snyder '76L L. Vernon Snyder '49 Dr. Jack Solomon P William S. Solmson '64 David L. Spaulding '40 Lloyd E. Spear '79L Leland Speed P Thomas A. Speer '57 Dr. William H. Spencer-Strong '63 Daniel T. Stacey ’75L Harry C. Stahel P John H. Stansfield '44 George W. St. Clair 53 Martin E. Stein Jr. °74 Mr. & Mrs. Martin E. Stein P Prof. Roy L. Steinheimer Jr. F John M. Stemmons ’31 Prof. B. S. Stephenson '42 Mr. & Mrs. E. F. Stephenson Jr. P Judge Roscoe B. Stephenson Jr. 4a AP Warren L. Stern P Guy T. Steuart Il ‘53 Prof. James W. H. Stewart ’52L Robert L. Stone ‘62, ’65L Mr. & Mrs. Robert L. Strickland P V. T. Strickler Agency, Inc. Peter R. Strohm ’68 Gene P. Stuart P H. Webster Stull P Samuel E. Stumpf Jr. F Rudolph J. Stutzmann ‘55 Jesse Suber '80, ’83L Mrs. Marcelline L. Sullivan P Hatton W. Sumners Foundation Michael L. Suthard F Mrs. Marcia R. Sutton P Mr. & Mrs. Samuel L. Svalina P Robert N. Sweeney ’41 Dr. J. Brantley Sydnor '63 Dr. J. T. Sylvester '64 John C. Szcezecinski P Dr. John E. Tartaglione P Dr. G. Douglas Tatum Jr. P Dr. & Mrs. Francis B. Teague Jr. P Dr. Nelson S. Teague ’58 Tenneco, Inc. David K. Tharp ’62, ’64L Don O. Thayer Jr. P Mr. & Mrs. Robert L. Thedinger F Clifford C. Thomas Jr. '50 Mrs. C. Reynolds Thompson Jr. P Mr. & Mrs. James R. Thompson P Glenn O. Thornhill Jr. 63 Benton C. Tolley Ill °75L Alan Tomlin '69 Charles B. Tomm ’68, '75L C. C. Torbert Jr. P J. Thomas Touchton '60 W. Bryan Trammell Jr. P Charles R. Treadgold '49 The J. Edwin Treakle Foundation, Inc. Dr. David T. Trice '78 Mr. & Mrs. Louis A. Trosch P Charles Tait Trussell ’49 Mr. & Mrs. Gary Tucker P John H. Tucker Jr. '10 Estate S. Maynard Turk ’52L Thomas M. T. Turk ’84 Edward W. Turley Jr. P Cdr. & Mrs. Warren D. Turner P Richard H. Turrell ’49 Dr. & Mrs. Richard H. Unger P United Daughters of the Confederacy Ms. Anne Unverzagt F Mr. & Mrs. W. Warren Upton P U. S. Engineering Company United Virginia Bank John H. Van Amburgh P William B. VanBuren III '44 Dr. & Mrs. Robert N. Van Son P Judge Robert T. Vaughan '42, '44L Joseph C. Vawter P Virginia Power Company Virginia Foundation for Independent Colleges Mr. & Mrs. Karl E. Vogt P Kenneth H. Wacker '49 Mr. & Mrs. Frank W. Wagner P Willard B. Wagner Ill ’70 Mr. & Mrs. Harold D. Walker F Mr. & Mrs. Gene A. Wallace P William A. Wallace '75 James H. Wallenstein '64 Mrs. Ruth Berg Walsh F Washington and Lee Alumni, Inc. Mr. & Mrs. J. Foster Watkins P Dr. William J. Watt F Ms. Caroline Watts '75L David K. Weaver '60 Mr. & Mrs. John W. Weaver P Rev. Ercel F. Webb P W. Temple Webber Jr..’53 H. Dunlap Weichsel ’57 The Hon. Paul H. Weinstein ’55 Mrs. Samuel M. Weinstein F Richard E. Welch Jr. F The Hon. Harry W. Wellford ’46 John A. Wells Ill ’82 W. Calvin Wells °17 Frank P. Wetherbee P Mrs. Sally D. Whelden F Dr. Joseph G. Whelan Jr. P C. C. White P J. Allen White P Ms. Joanna K. White P Robert A. White °72L Dr. Robert S. White P Mr. & Mrs. James W. Whitehead F Russell W. Whitman P Ms. Sarah K. Wiant ’78L Judge H. E. Widener Jr. '53L George B. Wilkinson '26 Estate Ms. Victoria T. Willett P Cranston Williams Jr. P Harry K. Williams °83 J. Bowman Williams '75 Jesse F. Williams Ill 65 Lewis D. Williams '37 Ms. Martha H. Williamson F Richmond Williamson ’51 Jeffrey Willis ’75L Dr. John D. Wilson F Ashley T. Wiltshire Jr. 63 J. Otis Winters P Sherwood W. Wise ’32, ’34L Mr. & Mrs. Louis E. Wiser Jr. P Beverley H. Wood '74L Evelyne Helm Wood F Estate Ms. Karen Kraak Wood P Edward G. Woodson Jr. '60 Raymond E. Wooldridge '60 Thomas K. Wotring '75L Charles F. Wreaks III F Ms. Henrietta Wright F Thomas P. Wright '29 Douglas B. Wyatt '79 Richard M. Yankee Jr. ’49 Charles R. Yates Jr. ’70 John C. Yost '65 Edward S. Young F Frank M. Young Ill ’63 Frank G. Young ’66 George M. Young '54 Mr. & Mrs. Robert J. Young Jr. P Mrs. Catherine A. Zabriskie P Mr. & Mrs. Richard W. Zahn P John M. Zamoiski '74 Ms. Floridene Zamorano P Mr. & Mrs. Samuel Zavatsky P Edwin A. Zelnicker Jr. ’43 Ms. Marian Zola P 6 Anonymous Gifts Irrevocable Deferred Gifts and Estate Plans The following persons have either created an irrevocable deferred gift on behalf of Washington and Lee or have in- formed the Trustees that they have included the University in their wills or estate plans. Irrevocable deferred gifts are charitable arrangements whereby income is retained for the lifetime of the donor and/or his or her beneficiaries. An income tax deduction is available at the time the deferred gift is created even though the principal does not pass to Washington and Lee until the death of the donor or beneficiaries. Also included are planned gifts to Washington and Lee which use life insurance as the financial arrangement. C. Edmonds Allen ’32 Thomas H. Alphin ’36 Charles V. Amole ’29 Eugene M. Anderson, ur. ’52, '54L Thomas D. Anderson '34L Willis M. Anderson ’52L Karldon Apgar P Edmund H. Armentrout ’68 George S. Arnold '28L W. D. Bain, Jr. '49L Edgar A. Basse, Jr. ’39 John T. Bate ‘19 John T. Battle ’34 John W. Beaire '39L Benjamin V. Blagg II ’47L Calhoun Bond '43 James D. Bonebrake '54 Leonard C. Borland ’31 Harry Lee Bowman '36 David R. Braun ’76 Harry J. Breithaupt, Jr. '36 Irving B. Bricken ‘33 A. Compton Broders, Jr. '38 William J. Brooks, Jr. '33 Robert G. Brown ’49 George E. Burks ’27 William Burtner °17, '21L Calvin T. Burton '25 C. Lynch Christian, Sr. '16 A. B. Claytor F Henrietta B. Claytor F A. Christian Compton ’50, '53L Thomas A. Courtnay Ill ’51 John L. Crist, Jr. '45 Robert S. Curl ’47 Calvin H. Curry, Jr. '56 Dudley W. Denton ‘30 William W. Davis, Sr. ‘26. |. Langston Donkle Ill °74 Ben R. Downing, Jr. P Dr. & Mrs. W. Magruder Drake '36 M. Irvine Dunn, Jr. '23 E. Stewart Epley ‘49 Robert J. Fellows, Jr. '36 James D. Finley II ’35L William B. Fitzgerald F | Alvin T. Fleishman ’°41 James M. Franklin ’35 John P. Freeman '59 Julian S. Fulcher Ill °74 Fred O. Funkhouser '34 William B. Geise, Jr. '45 H. Mynders Glover '76 Horace Gooch, Jr. '31L Robert B. Graham '73 George M. Grasty ’40 Howard Greenblatt '44 Eugene E. Griese, Jr. '46 Bernard Candler Grigsby II °72 John G. Guerrant '24 Roger J. Haller '28 John G. Hamilton '32 Waller C. Hardy, Jr. '39 Alexander M. Harman, Jr. '44L Andrew H. Harriss, Jr. 24 Houston H. Harte '50 Lawrence P. Haynes '22, '25L Edward O. Henderson ’25 John T. Herwick '36 Robert W. Hilton, Jr. ’38 Robert C. Hobson ’40, ’42L Samuel B. Hollis °51 William B. Hoofstitler 36 Farris P. Hotchkiss ’58 C. Royce Hough Ill ’59 Woodson P. Houghton '15 Mr. & Mrs. James L. Howe, Jr. ‘18 William D. Hoyt, Jr. ’32 Mrs. William A. Hyman F W. Gordon ller || ’51 Sidney Isenberg °42 Earl T. Jones ’30 V. C. Pat Jones ’30 Hannibal N. Joyce ’32L Joseph J. Kaplan '28 Kenneth L. Keil ’30 Christoph Keller, Jr. °39 John G. Kennedy Ill ’83 Stephen K. Kent, Jr. ’60 Robert L. King '24 S L Kopald, Jr. '43 T. Kerr Laird ’33 Allie H. Lane '43, '47L Stephen B. Lee ’37 ~ William H. Leedy '49 William Revell Lewis Ill °73 Herbert B. Luria Ill °31 Mrs. E. Carlyle Lynch, Jr. F G. Sage Lyons ’58, '60L Harry Lyons '22 Lucile Emerson MacCorkle F Thomas A. Malloy, Jr. '38 Mrs. Ross L. Malone F Bertram B. Mantell ’35 Richard P. Marcus ’51 James Bland Martin ’31L D. Carleton Mayes '47L William MclIndoe, Jr. '44 Herbert G. McKay ’51L Robert S. Mendelsohn ’50 Grace McPhail Mitchell F Robert H. Moore, Jr. '44 Gus Morgan ’35 Edwin A. Morris '26 George C. Morris, Jr. '46 Mrs. Hilton W. Mount F J. Peter G. Muhlenberg '50 John E. Neill 38 Milburn K. Noell, Jr. 51, '54L William A. Noell 64 Neilson J. November ’45 E. Marshall Nuckols, Jr. ’33, '35L Gilmore N. Nunn ’31 Foster M. Palmer '34 Frank L. Paschall, Jr. ’43 Matthew W. Paxton, Sr. '18, ‘20L Markham L. Peacock, Jr. '24 John T. Perry, Jr. ’41 Marvin B. Perry, Jr. F H. Merrill Plaisted III °57 William B. Poff ’55L Herbert Pollack °25 Lewis F. Powell, Jr. °29, '31L Benjamin L. Rawlins ’30L Robert R. Reid, Jr. '49 Dewey A. Reynolds ’22 Anne H. Roberts F Robert W. Root ’42 Charles S. Rowe ’45, ’50L lra H. Samelson ’33 William W. Schaefer ’60 Elliot Schewel ’45 L. Roper Shamhart ’47 Edgar F. Shannon, Jr. '39 Howard T. Shepherd ’40 Margaret Shepherd F Xen N. Sideris ’52 _ Richard T. Sloan '42 LN. Smith; Je "S7; 60. John C. B. Smith, Jr. ’67 Roger M. Soth °44 Jerry G. South '54, ’56L Jeffrey B. Spence ’71 Mr. & Mrs. A. Erskine Sproul 37 Harold E. Sturgill '55 Charles A. Sweet '36 Charles E. Swope ‘59L Robert Lee Telford '22 Calvert Thomas '38, '40L John Newton Thomas '24 Roland E. Thompson ’52 J. Thomas Touchton’60 Norfleet R. Turner ‘51 Clinton Van Vliet ’41, ’47L W. Emory Waters '68 Stanley D. Waxberg ‘31 Harry W. Wellford '46 William C. Wilburg ’37 Lewis D. Williams, Jr. '37 Carroll B. Wiltshire 13 Sherwood W. Wise, Jr. '63 William E. Woodroof '52 Raymond E. Wooldridge ’60 James H. Woosley ’42 Ellis N. Zuckerman '49 phe Anonymous Estate Distributions Estate distributions received during the 1984-85 year reached a total of $2,985,724. Estates in administration of which we have been notified but from which there have been no distributions are not included. Frank H. Brady '32 Kathleen T. Carter F George L. Cowan Ill '48L Gary H. Dobbs III ’70 Frank B. Hayne ‘15 Henry H. Hecht Jr. '59 John F. Hendon '24 Samuel S. Laws F W. Peyton May F Kenneth D. Moxley '41, '47L Ruth Parmly F Kenneth S. Purdie F William A. Shutze F John H. Tucker '10 George B. Wilkinson '26 Evelyne Helm Wood F Gifts in Kind Many generous gifts are made to Washington and Lee in ways Other than cash and securities. Listed here are the names of those who contributed Gifts in Kind for the 1984-85 year. Mrs. Marion Carson Mrs. Jane Cavanaugh Mr. & Mrs. Bruce Dewing Mrs. Richard France Mrs. David Freudenthal Ms. Ann Genge Mr. & Mrs. John G. Hamilton ’32 Frank B. Hayne Estate ‘15 Mrs. Anne McCorkle Knox Mr. & Mrs. Thomas C. Lee Jr. Joseph Matthews Herbert McKay ‘51 Mr. & Mrs. Edwin A. Morris '26 Mr. & Mrs. Elliott M. Ogden Jr. James N. Overton '75 Mrs. Leon Sensabaugh John Shanks Welby A. Smith — Mr. & Mrs. Byron Swift Mrs. William Watson W&L 41 1985/86 Annual Fund Chairman: James W. Jennings Jr. ’65, ’72L Vice Chairmen: J. Hardin Marion ’55, ’58L Conway H. Sheild Ill 64, ’67L Milton T. Herndon ’56L James A. Philpott Jr. ’69, ’72L Class Agents: Academic *1951: James F. Gallivan 1979: C. Stephen Jones 1958: Robert E. Stroud 1952: George E. Eagle 1980: P. Craig Cornett 1959: Richard H. Horn 1915: Rupert N. Latture 1953: Hayes C. McClerkin Jr. *1981: Christopher Gammon 1960: Thomas B. Branch III 1916: Edwin B. Shultz 1954: Walter E. Smith 1982: S. Braxton Puryear *1961: Robert E. Shepherd Jr. 1917: William J. Cox 1955: Raymond D. Smith Jr. 1983: Bennett L. Ross 1962: Raymond R. Robrecht J: 1921: Samuel L. Raines “1956: J. Richard O’Connell 1984: John M. Cleghorn 1963: Paul H. Boswell 1925: Earle T. Andrews 1957: Sam Bendheim III 1985: J. Matthew Anthony 1964: Thomas W. Budd 1926: Thomas T. Moore 1958: Malcolm A. Clinger Jr. *Reunion Classes 1965: Frederick A. Casto 1929: T. Graham Gibson 1959: Richard F. Cummins “1966: Walter E. Cox 1930: Herbert G. Jahncke 1960: Malcolm Lassman Law 1967: Joseph D. Logan Ill 1933: Charles J. Longacre *1961: William M. Bowen 1968: A. Alling Jones 1934: Scott Mosovich 1962: Mason T. New 1933: Franklin R. Bigham 1969: David D. Redmond 1935: Peyton B. Winfree Jr. 1963: D. Randolph Cole Jr. 1934: Sherwood W. Wise 1970: Edward B. Crosland Jr. *1936: George W. Harrison 1964: William M. Schildt 1935: Thomas E. Sparks *1971: Robin P. Hartman 1937: Richard K. Stuart 1965: Jack H. DeJarnette *1936: William L. Martin 1972: John A. Wolf 1938: David N. Walker “1966: Michael E. Lawrence 1939: Thomas A. Williams Jr. 1973: John C. Moore 1939: Victor F. Radcliffe 1967: John S. Graham Ill 1941: H. Tyndall Dickinson 1974: Stephen G. Elkins 1940: Ross V. Hersey 1968: Buddy Atkins 1942: Clifford L. Walters 1975: Thomas K. Wotring *1941: Alvin T. Fleishman 1969: John F. Carrere Jr. 1948: Carter R. Allen *1976: Stephen D. Rosenthal 1942: Leon J. Warms 1970: Williard B. Wagner Ill 1949: J. Randolph Larrick 1977: Stephen |. Greenhalgh 1943: Albert D. Darby Jr. *1971: Joseph B. Tompkins Jr. 1950: Rufus B. Hailey 1978: Derek Swope 1944: George T. Wood 1972: John W. Robinson IV *1951: Ernest M. Holdaway 1979: John F. Murphy 1945: E. Dean Finney 1973: Hatton C. V. Smith 1952: James C. Reed 1980: John J. Eklund *1946: M. Pressley Mead 1974: Douglas C. Chase 1953: Robert L. Banse *1981: David G. Weaver 1947: Warren G. Merrin 1975: Robert A. Keatley 1954: Donald R. Klenk 1982: Robert M. Couch 1948: William W. Burton *1976: John A. Cocklereece Jr. 1955: Richard W. Hudgins 1983: Matthew L. Kimball 1949: H. Thorp Minister Jr. 1977: Joseph L. Carrere *1956: Reno S. Harp Ill 1984: Peter W. Leberman 1950: Frank Love Jr. 1978: George F. Griffin IV 1957: Overton P. Pollard 1985: John Sicilian “Reunion Classes 42 W&L The W&L Gazette Mrs. Holton, Ogilvie Elected Trustees ashington and Lee University has announced the election of two new members to its Board of Trustees. Virginia Rogers Holton of McLean, Va., and W. Buckner Ogilvie of Houston, Texas, were elected to six-year terms on the Board, effective January 1, 1986. The elections came during the fall meeting of the Trustees held on the cam- pus October 25-26. Mrs. Holton is a native of Roanoke who received her bachelor’s degree from Wellesley College. She attended the School of Language at Middlebury Col- lege and the Latin American Secretarial School in New York City. She worked for the State Department at the American Embassy in Brussels for two years and later served as an in- telligence analyst for the Central In- telligence Agency. In 1953, she married Linwood Holton, a 1944 Washington and Lee graduate and former Roanoke lawyer who was governor of Virginia from 1970 through 1974. During her years as Virginia’s First Lady, Mrs. Holton was involved in the Right to Read program sponsored by the Department of Health, Education and Welfare. In 1974 she was appointed to the steering committee of the first Gover- nor’s Conference on Reading. She also initiated and chaired the statewide Gover- nor’s Conference on the Family Food Dollar. From 1974 to 1982 she was a member of the University of Virginia’s board of visitors, chairing the board’s academic af- fairs committee. She is vice chairman of the Conserve Virginia Campaign of the Nature Conservancy and is on the board of directors of the Virginia Environmen- tal Endowment. She is also a member of the board of the University of Virginia Medical School Fund. Mrs. Holton has a keen interest in the fine arts and has been a member of the Northern Virginia Panel of the Virginia Commission for the Arts. She has recent- Virginia Rogers Holton ly been president and chairman of the board of the McLean Orchestra. The Holtons are the parents of four children and currently live in McLean. Ogilvie, a 1964 graduate of Washington and Lee, was elected to the trusteeship by a vote of the Washington and Lee alumni. He is executive vice president of Excalibur Computer Systems Inc. He holds a master of science degree from Massachusetts Institute of Technology. At Washington and Lee, he was elected to Phi Beta Kappa and Omicron Delta Kappa, the national leadership fraternity. He was also co-captain of the varsity football team and active in the student government. Ogilvie has served as a member of Washington and Lee’s Alumni Board of Directors and has been vice chairman of the Annual Fund. He has been president of the Houston Chapter of the W&L alumni and chairman of the Houston Honor Scholarship Committee. Active in community affairs, Ogilvie has served as a vestryman at St. Martin’s Episcopal Church, president of the Frostwood Elementary PTA and the Forest Club, vice chairman of the Houston United Fund, and director of Kastle Security Systems. He also founded W. Buckner Ogilvie the Houston Rugby Club. Ogilvie and his wife, Jacquelin Bland Ogilvie, have four children. Edward C. Atwood, dean of Washington and Lee’s School of Com- merce, Economics, and Politics the past 16 years, will step down from that post next June. After a leave of absence during the 1986-87 academic year, Atwood will return to the University to resume . teaching in the department of economics. A search committee has been formed to choose Atwood’s successor. That com- mittee is headed by Louis W. Hodges, professor of religion. In accepting Atwood’s resignation, W&L President John D. Wilson said that Atwood’s years as dean ‘‘have been eventful and fruitful ones and have earn- ed him the deepest gratitude of the University family.’’ ‘*It will be impossible to find a suc- cessor to match his faithful and caring service to the students and faculty of the School and of the larger University,”’ Wilson said. ‘‘His administrative col- leagues will also miss his droll commen- tary on the passing scene even as they W&L 43 will miss his insightful judgment and the richness of his academic experience. His decision to resign the deanship is more easily accepted because we can count upon his return to our full-time service in September of 1987.”’ Prior to becoming dean of the School of Commerce, Economics, and Politics, Atwood served as dean of students at W&L. He taught economics at W&L from 1952 until 1960 when he left to join the General Electric Company’s staff of economists in New York. He returned to W&L in 1962 as dean of students and professor of economics. Williams replaces Simpson as associate dean H. Thomas Williams Jr., associate professor of physics at Washington and Lee, has been named associate dean of the College (of arts and sciences), effec- tive July 1, 1986. Williams succeeds Pamela H. Simp- son, who is returning to full-time teaching at the end of the current academic year. Simpson has held the deanship since 1981. Williams’ appointment is for a three- year term. He will maintain his position in the physics department and will teach on a limited basis while he serves as assistant dean. Williams joined the Washington and Lee faculty in 1974 and is the author of numerous articles on nuclear physics. In the past, he has received research grant support from the National Science Foun- dation, the Virginia Foundation for Humanities and Public Policy, and the Cottrell College Science Grant program. Simpson, a professor of art history, joined the faculty in 1973. She was nam- ed assistant dean in 1981 and promoted to associate dean in 1983. During 1984-85 Simpson chaired the University’s Coeducation Steering Committee. Professors, students team up to publish papers Two teams of Washington and Lee students and professors have combined to publish articles in scholarly journals—one in astronomy and the other in law. Ronald L. Reese, associate professor of physics, and C. Reade Williams, a senior politics major from Roanoke, published an article entitled ‘‘An Astronomer’s Poet: Alfred, Lord Ten- nyson’’ in the November 1985 issue of 44. W&L Griffith Observer, a national astronomy journal. In their article, Reese and Williams examine Tennyson’s poetry and how he used astronomy extensively in his works. Reese and Williams also note Tennyson’s use of universal themes and astrological imagery and the similarities to poet John Milton’s development of the same themes. Roger Groot, professor of law, and Tom Thagard, a junior European history major from Montgomery, Ala., have teamed up to write an article forthcoming in the January 1986 issue of The Virginia Bar Association Journal. The article is entitled ‘‘Immunized Witnesses in Virginia’ and deals with an obscure Virginia statute first written in 1793. Groot and Thagard argue that the ar- chaic terms of the statute—once understood—do not allow immunity to be granted in exchange for testimony that could convict others. The authors say the statute forbids the admission of witnesses who have been granted such ‘‘pocket immunity.’’ The two articles serve to illustrate the way in which W&L professors continue to involve undergraduates in research projects and provide them the opportuni- ty to publish. Moreover, in the case of the Groot- Thagard team, the article represents an instance of a cooperative venture between the law and undergraduate schools. Groot credited W&L history professor Taylor Sanders with contacting him about Thagard’s interest in a related field. Said Groot: ‘‘This never would have happened on a larger campus. The faculty members’ familiarity with each other’s work and with the interests and abilities of students made this project possible.”’ Bartering Washington and Lee economics pro- fessor Bruce Herrick has added new meaning to the adage ‘‘You reap what you sow.’’ In a lecture to his introductory economics class in October, Herrick was discussing the advantages of using money in contemporary society instead of the barter system. “I told the students that under the barter system, if I needed a tooth filled, I would have to find a dentist who was willing to do the work in exchange for a lecture in economics,’’ said Herrick. ‘‘Or, if I were hungry, I would have to find a farmer to exchange potatoes for a lecture.” Unbeknownst to Herrick, he had planted a seed that would grow into a bountiful harvest. Two class meetings later, Herrick had completed a lecture to the same group when the bell rang to end the period. As the students filed past the professor, they pulled from their book bags various vegetables and produce items. Herrick’s desk soon became a cornucopia of squash, leeks, celery, bread, potatoes, and other items. Slightly dumbfounded, Herrick gathered his goods and retired to his of- fice, which began to take on the ap- pearance of a late-season produce stand. In later conversations with students in his class, Herrick recalled that during the Herrick and veggies Depression it was not uncommon for students to pay their bills with goods rather than cash, a situation that would create a logistical nightmare for even the most conscientious university treasurer. Was the produce prank planned? “Only in that there are 11 students in the class, and I received 11 distinctly different items of food,’’ Herrick said. ‘‘Something like this has never hap- pened to me before,’’ he added, gazing at the fruits (and vegetables) of his labors scattered across his desk. No doubt, Her- rick is secretly thankful that his salary isn’t paid in soybeans. E. Stewart Epley, ’49, Washington and Lee’s treasurer since 1980, has an- nounced his intention to retire next sum- mer. | Epley’s retirement was announced by W&L President John D. Wilson who said: ‘‘Stewart Epley’s management of the financial affairs of the University has been exemplary. The Trustees and I have had total confidence in the skill and in- tegrity with which he has conducted his vitally important duties.’’ Wilson announced plans to review the current alignment of responsibilities now entrusted to the position of treasurer and to involve Trustees in the search for Epley’s successor. A native of Great Falls, Mont., Epley joined the University’s development staff in 1977 before becoming treasurer three years later. He had previously been associated with several major management and con- sulting firms, including McKinsey & Company and Price Waterhouse & Com- pany. He came to W&L from a post as chief analyst for the New York State Dormitory Authority. A three-member subcommittee of the Board of Trustees that was appointed in May to study the University’s investment policy with regard to South Africa presented an interim report at the Board’s fall meeting and will continue its study. A statement issued after the meeting read, in part: ‘‘During the summer, this subcommittee became familiar with cur- rent issues and recent actions taken by some universities and other investors. On Thursday, Oct. 24, members of this sub- committee, President John D. Wilson, and Rector James M. Ballengee met with the representatives of the W&L Cam- paign Against Apartheid to learn of their views and recommendations on this ques- tion. The subcommittee felt that this meeting was very informative and instructive. **An interim report, outlining the results of this meeting and discussions with the University’s investment advisors and other institutions, was made to the Board of Trustees on Saturday, Oct. 26. The subcommittee’s study will continue, and it is expected that.a proposal will be considered by the Board at its February meeting.”’ The Bookshelf W&L Ranked Among Best Buys in Colleges (New York Times Books) Washington and Lee is one of 221 colleges and universities from across the country featured in The Best Buys in College Education, a new volume by New York Times education editors Edward B. Fiske and Joseph M. Michalak. | At the outset of the new volume, Fiske and Michalak acknowledge that ‘‘there is no end to daunting statistics on the soaring cost of a college education.’’ But, they add, ‘‘[t]he good news is that, despite the general inability of col- leges to keep their tuition levels in line with the rate of inflation, there are still plenty of colleges around that can be described as relative ‘bargains.’ ’’ The book then profiles the 221 bargains the editors identified among the nation’s 2,000 four-year institutions. Washington and Lee’s profile, written on the basis of data gathered from both University officials and students who fill- ed out questionnaires, notes: ‘‘The cost of a Washington and Lee education is at the higher end of a bargain, but the outstanding nature of the academic pro- gram ranks it with colleges that usually cost half again as much.’’ Among the specific plusses that Best Buys cites are the Honor System and the accessibility of faculty: ‘‘The honor code is taken seriously at W&L—‘It shows the influence of Robert E. Lee!’—and exams are unproctored, doors left unlocked, and the library open twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week. The faculty members are committed. ‘Their doors are always Open to you, and you can call them at home for help.’ ”’ The editors mention the W&L social life, the ‘‘excellent’’ meals in Evans Din- ing Hall, active intercollegiate and in- tramural programs, and the University’s setting in the Shenandoah Valley as assets that contribute to the quality of a Washington and Lee education. The entry concludes: ‘‘[F]or an educa- tion that is both distinctive and distinguished, Washington and Lee is one of the best.”’ Guidebook to the Natural Bridge and Natural Bridge Caverns (Poorhouse Mountain Studio) The book is both a guide to two of Rockbridge County’s greatest natural at- tractions and an educational tool for in- dividuals interested in geology. Spencer provides a guided tour of the bridge and caverns, outlining a number of stops along the way where visitors can enjoy views of particular interest. Various photographs and sketches il- lustrate the sections on the geological history of the area and the formation of the natural bridge and caverns. A member of the Washington and Lee faculty since 1957 and head of the geology department since 1959, Spencer is the author of six textbooks. He received his bachelor’s degree from Washington and Lee and his Ph.D. in geology from Columbia University. Jose Diaz Fernandez y la otra generacion del 27 (Jose Diaz Fernandez and the Other Generation of 1927) Editorial Pliegos of Madrid Boetsch’s book, written in Spanish, studies Jose Diaz Fernandez in the con- text of Spain in the 1920s and focuses on two of Fernandez’s novels—E/ Blocao (The Blockhouse) and La Venus Mecanica (The Mechanical Venus). Boetsch’s book also demonstrates how Fernandez was able to treat social themes without abandoning the aesthetic values of the Spanish avant garde. A member of the Washington and Lee faculty since 1976, Boetsch received his bachelor’s degree from Washington and Lee. He earned both the master’s and the doctorate from Middlebury College, where he served as assistant director of Middlebury’s graduate program in Madrid. W&L 45 Alumni News Alumni Fraternity Council Created to Strengthen Ties A new organization has recently been formed at Washington and Lee to create a stronger link between alumni and undergraduate fraternity members. The Alumni Fraternity Council of- ficially came into existence during Homecoming weekend when it drew up a formal charter. The council held its first organizational meeting in July. The council is composed of alumni representatives of the 17 national frater- nities that have chapters at Washington and Lee. Paul J. B. Murphy Jr., ’49, who has been elected president of the organization, explains that the group’s ‘overall objective is to provide alumni participation in a renaissance movement of the fraternity system at Washington and Lee. We hope that this can be done by encouraging more active participation of alumni in chapter activities and by ad- dressing and proposing solutions to any system-wide problems.”’ Such interaction between the council and the undergraduates will, Murphy believes, bring about ‘‘a re-dedication to the basic principles and goals of frater- nities and increased support of Washington and Lee’s traditional values of honor and gentlemanly conduct.’’ Plans for the establishment of an alumni fraternity organization were first formulated in February 1984, Murphy says. At that time, representatives of na- tional fraternities volunteered to sponsor a meeting to help promote improvements in the W&L fraternity system. Such a meeting was held in the summer of 1985, at which time the Alumni Fraternity Council was born. The formation of the group has been greeted with enthusiasm from the rest of the University community. ‘‘The response of the administration has been outstand- ing,’’ says Murphy. ‘‘The president and the dean of students voiced unqualified support for alumni participation in fraternity affairs. In addition, the Alumni Association has been very supportive of the effort.’’ Murphy, incidentally, was recently appointed to fill an unexpired term on the board of directors of the W&L Alumni Association. 46 W&L Undergraduates have joined the ad- ministration in welcoming the new organization. During Homecoming weekend, Murphy met with Jamie Hayne, °86, president of the Interfraternity Council. ‘‘Jamie expressed the IFC’s eagerness to work with the Alumni Fraternity Council,’’ said Murphy. During its organizational meeting in July, the council established four goals for its first year of existence. The first of those, the enactment of a charter, has already been achieved. The other three objectives are to publish a handbook for fraternity house corporations, to develop a plan for the long-term renovation of the fraternities’ physical plants, and to complete planning for a symposium on fraternities in the fall of 1986. Chapter Activities Tallahassee. The inaugural meeting of a new Tallahassee Chapter was a steak cookout held in August at the farm of Duby Ausley, ’*59, a member of the Alumni Board. Don Bryant, ’76, was in- strumental in organizing the first gathering. Pensacola. C. Miner Harrell, ’71, presi- dent of the Pensacola Chapter, and his wife, Jeannie, were hosts for a cocktail buffet in August when two Pensacola area freshmen, Carol Couch and Scott Trimble, were welcomed into the Univer- sity family. Puget Sound. Members of the new chapter rode a ferry to Whidbey Island in August and enjoyed a picnic at the home of Ray (52L) and Phyllis Haman. Northwest Louisiana. The annual August outing was held at Wilson’s Bistineau Inn near Shreveport. New Orleans. A rejuvenated New Orleans chapter enjoyed an active summer and fall. The activities started with a recep- tion in June featuring Farris Hotchkiss, director of development and university relations at W&L. About 100 alumni, students, and spouses participated in the event at which 12 entering freshmen from the New Orleans area were guests. Later in the summer R. Parke Ellis, ’81, cap- tained a W&L team that defeated the local Harvard alumni on the softball field. In late October the local committee of the Alumni-Admissions Program, under the leadership of chairman John R. Sarpy, ’72, held a reception for prospec- tive students at the home of Martin D. Claiborne, ’72. W&L Associate Admis- sions Director Van Pate was in attendance. Shenandoah. The chapter held a recep- tion and picnic for members of the enter- ing class in late August at the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. Randolph Larrick, ’49L, outside Winchester, Va. Augusta-Rockingham. The chapter’s an- nual picnic was held at the farm of Rick Chittum, ’69, chapter president. W&L President John D. Wilson attended along with John Lewis, ’86, president of the Executive Committee and a native of nearby Greenville. Appalachian. Members of the Ap- palachian Chapter enjoyed a weekend outing in September that included an evening at the Barter Theatre in Ab- ingdon, Va. It was followed the next day by a business meeting and a luncheon at the Martha Washington Inn before the group traveled to nearby Emory, Va., to watch the Generals’ football team open its season against Emory and Henry Col- lege. Although the football outcome was not what the W&L partisans had hoped for (a 30-0 loss), the weekend concluded on an upbeat note with a post-game reception. Jim Elliott, ’67L, was elected president of the chapter. San Francisco. Washington and Lee Ad- missions Director Bill Hartog joined the San Francisco Chapter for a reception in September during Hartog’s fall recruiting visit to the West Coast. Winston-Salem. The Winston-Salem Chapter held its third annual barbecue in Tanglewood Park in September. The group heard Milburn K. Noell, ’51, associate director of development at W&L, discuss the University’s scholarship needs. Richmond. Pamela H. Simpson, associate dean of the College, was the featured speaker at a buffet luncheon in mid- October. Dean Simpson, who chaired the University’s Coeducation Steering Com- mittee, presented a report on the early stages of coeducation, complete with slides taken during the first four weeks of the academic year. Roanoke. Anne C. P. Schroer, who join- ed the University this fall as associate dean of students, provided a report on her initial impressions of W&L and the transition to coeducation at a luncheon meeting in late October. Jody Ringland, °87, a freshman dorm counselor, also provided her views of the transition. The new chapter officers are Scott Farrar, é TALLAHASSEE—Sally and Don Bryant, ’76, put their guests in a festive mood for the in- augural meeting of the Tallahassee Chapter. AUGUSTA-ROCKINGHAM— “‘Cy”’ Painter (left), ’33, and his son, Simon, ’62, enjoyed the Augusta-Rockingham’s annual picnic. PENSACOLA —Jeannie and Miner Harrell, ’71, caught a typographical error on the invitation sent to members of the Pensacola Chapter and made certain that guests at the chapter’s meeting knew whom to blame for the transgression. W&L 47 °76, president; Bill Wallace, ’74, vice president; and A. B. Boxley, ’80, secretary-treasurer. San Diego. Members of the San Diego Chapter joined alumni from other Virginia colleges for the fifth annual San Diego ‘‘Old Dominion Day’’ Reunion in mid-October. Oklahoma City. The Oklahoma City Chapter members were invited to par- ticipate in the third annual Old Dominion Cocktail Party hosted by the University of Virginia’s Oklahoma City chapter in October. Two Florida alumni chapters— Jacksonville and Florida West Coast— had special programs on the financial, tax and estate aspects of deferred (income-retained) or estate-planned gifts at separate meetings in September. Farris Hotchkiss, director of develop- ment and university relations, was joined by Bill Washburn and Milburn Noell, associate directors of development, in presenting the program on the tax and financial advantages of making the de- ferred (as opposed to outright) gifts. The Florida West Coast Chapter held two meetings on the subject, one at the University Club in Tampa and the other at the St. Petersburg Yacht Club, while the Jacksonville Chapter met at the River Club. Washington and Lee will hold its an- nual spring reunions on May 8, 9, and 10 in 1986. The weekend events begin May 8 with a keynote address in Lee Chapel. During the three days, alumni participate in a variety of activities, including parties and banquets for their reunion class. Classes holding their reunions this year will be 1931, 1936, 1941, 1946, 1951, 1956, 1961, 1966, 1971, 1976, and 1981. Information on the program and ac- commodations for the weekend will be forthcoming from the Alumni Office. The 79th annual Fancy Dress Ball has been scheduled for Friday, March 7, 1986, in Warner Center. Alumni are in- vited to attend. For information, contact the Student Activities Board, University Center, Washington and Lee University, Lex- ington, VA 24450. 48 W&L APPALACHIAN—From left, Alumni Board member Howard Capito, ’68; Phil McFarlane, ’71,; Mike Riley, ’72; Howard Packett, ’58; and Pam McFarlane cheered W&L’s football team at Emory and Henry. ae Fees ea i Te ROANOKE—From left, Biil Wallace, ’74; Linda Farrar; Scott Farrar, ’76; Singleton Garrett, mother of W&L freshman Laura Carty; and Ab Boxley, ’80. iiss NEW ORLEANS—The New Orleans Chapter’s softball team: front row from left, Charlie Van Horn, ’81; Julian Good, ’78; Parke Ellis, ’81; John Embree, ’75; John Hastings, ’81; Chip Hunter, ’73; John Carrere, 69; John Walsh, ’83; second row from left, Mike Forrester, °89; Cove Geary, ’80; Ashley Gray, 89; Ann Geary, ’89; Benji Eastwood, ’29; Madison Woodward, 81; Del Agnew, ’82; Tom Pritchard, ’84; John Pleasant, 60; Tim White, ’75; Bill Beacham, °74. Alumni President’s Report Cadaver Gift to Alumni House, Plaque for Medal of Honor Winner by William N. Clements, ’50 ellow Alumni: Your Alumni Board met October 10 and 11 during the Homecoming weekend. Here is your report of that meeting: The University has received a generous gift pledge of $50,000 from the Cadaver Society to be used specifically for upgrading the Alumni House. Nothing is more timely or need- ed. The first $10,000 of the gift will be used to dress up the downstairs area of the Alumni House. No building on the campus gets more traffic or use from alumni. The gift is very much appreciated. Thanks, Cadaver, whoever you are. The Alumni Board forwarded a resolution to the Board of Trustees requesting that a plaque be placed in Lee Chapel in memory of James Howard Monroe, Class of 1966, who was killed in action in Vietnam and was posthumously awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor. Our research indicates that Jim Monroe is the only Washington and Lee alumnus who has received the nation’s highest military honor. (If we have overlooked a previous Medal of Honor winner, we hope that someone will advise us so that all appropriate names can be included on the plaque.) At their meeting later in October, the Trustees approved our resolution. The plaque will be installed in May during the 20th reunion activities of the Class of 1966— Jim Monroe’s class. The Alumni Board now numbers 19 members and will be increased to 20 members in 1986. There are two basic. commit- tees of the Board: University Programs, which is concerned with internal matters of the University, and Alumni Programs, which deals with the external area of alumni activities. The University Programs Committee concerns itself with such matters as admissions, fraternities, the coeducation tran- sition, athletics; and the Annual Fund. These areas are covered through reports to the committee from members of the University’s faculty and administration. Briefly, the admissions office reported that applications are still increasing over last year’s record totals; the coeducation transition is progressing smoothly; athletics will be discussed more fully in the May meeting of the Alumni Board; and the early stages of the 1985-86 Annual Fund was discussed in detail by James Jennings, ’65, ’72L, who is chairman of the Annual Fund and also a member of the Alumni Board. The University Programs Committee focused primarily on the issue of fraternities and specifically the newly formed Alumni Fraternity Council under the leadership of Paul Mur- phy, ’49, who is also a member of the Alumni Board. The formation of this new council is reported in detail on page 46 of this issue of the Alumni Magazine. The Alumni Fraternity Council hopes to have in place as soon as possible Alumni House Committees in each fraternity that will oversee the operations of the fraternities. In some cases, as in the case of Sigma Nu for instance, the Alumni House Committee can ac- tually lease the building from the University and sublet it to the chapter. To improve the physical appearance of the frater- nity houses, the Alumni House Committees will be the vehicle for raising the needed funds for repairs from fraternity alumni and will be responsible for the proper use of those funds. William N. Clements, President Alumni Association The Alumni Programs Committee discussed chapter ac- tivities, Kathekon (our student alumni group), homecomings and reunions, alumni travel programs, and career assistance. Kathekon, organized a year ago by associate alumni direc- tor Buddy Atkins, ’68, has become one of the finest organiza- tions on the campus. Kathekon members are involved in all phases of the University’s life—from freshman orientation to phonathons for the Annual Fund to dedicated work in the Alumni Office. This group of students represents the current campus leaders who will be our alumni leaders once they graduate. The Alumni Programs Committee is working to prepare a Model Chapter Program and a handbook for chapter presidents in hopes of unifying our activities across the coun- try as well as strengthening our individual chapter member- ship. You should know that we now have a total of 81 alumni chapters—almost double the 41 chapters that we had in 1966. The Alumni Board thinks that the staff of the Alumni Of- fice is doing an excellent job in the homecoming and reunion programs and in making alumni travel programs available. The Alumni Programs Committee is currently working on plans to help improve the career planning and assistance pro- gram for undergraduates through coordinating the efforts of the University Office of Career Development and the Alumni Office. We hope in the future to be able to involve alumni on a more formal basis in the career development area. We think that this plan should be carried into the chapters themselves and will thereby provide further incentive for young men and women to consider Washington and Lee. It was my duty as president of the Alumni Board to report the proceedings of our October meeting to the Board of Trustees. That report was made to the Trustees on October 26. Finally, from one who has the good fortune (and a good reason) to have to return to Washington and Lee often, let me assure you that the coeducation transition is going smoothly. Students, faculty, and all members of the administration are upbeat. The University remains the same simply because our truly new freshmen are just as interested in the traditions and uniqueness of Washington and Lee as we ever were. W&L 49 7 | with cherry arms 7 Stanley Barrows, long-time professor at the Par- sons School of Design and just recently retired as chairman of the Interior Design department at the Fashion Institute of Technology in New York Ci- ty, was the subject of a flattering profile feature in the April issue of Avenue magazine. Barrows is credited with influencing many of the major talents in the modern decorating field. He has been named an honorary lifetime fellow of the American Society of Interior Designers. After 41 years with the Maryland Casualty Co., Harry T. Moreland retired in 1978 as a vice presi- dent. Moreland is active as a volunteer in the United Way of Central Maryland campaign. He and his wife, Mary, now spend their summers in Baltimore and their winters in Florida. J. Oliver Gluyas has retired a second time and moved from Princeton, N.J., to Brevard, N.C. He still works on a part-time basis in San Francisco. A. Ward Archer, chairman of Ward Archer & Associates of Memphis, Tenn., announces that his firm has been selected to handle the trade adver- tising business for several new accounts. Those ac- counts include American Innerspring Manufac- turers, Oak Hall Clothiers, and U.S. Emulsifier. George C. Graff has retired as senior project engineer of Continental Telephone Corp. after 40 years in the telecommunications industry. He now lives in Gainesville, Va. Sydney Lewis has been named chairman of the board of trustees of the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, a bureau of the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C. Lewis, the second chairman in the museum’s history, has been a trustee of the museum since 1976 and vice chair- man of its board since 1979. In his new post, he succeeds U.S. Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan. Lewis is co-founder and former chairman of Best Products Inc. of Richmond. John J. Dangler has retired after 31 years as a sales representative for IBM. He has moved from his Atlanta home to Daytona Beach, Fla. Wilbur S. (Bill) Metcalf Jr. has retired and mov- ed to Salem, S.C., in the Blue Ridge mountains. Hugh G. Ashcraft Jr. retired Feb. 1 after spend- ing the last 12 years as president and then chair- man of Harris-Teeter Supermarkets. He was granted an extra year beyond retirement in order to assist in a post-merger consolidation which enlarged the chain of stores to 127 in four states. Ashcraft resides in Charlotte, N.C. Lupton Avery has retired from the Chattanooga Glass Co. He lives in Chattanooga, Tenn. Le Compte K. Davis and his wife, Jane, attended W&L’s Alumni College Abroad in England Aug. 6-22, 1985. The Davises live in Maryland. Samuel R. Ames is chairman of the board of IN- SCO Group Inc. of Norfolk, Va. Ames lives in Virginia Beach. Lawrence J. Fisher Jr. is vice president and general manager of the textile division of Wellman In- dustries Inc. in Johnsville, S.C. Two of his sons have graduated from W&L. Donald E. Garretson retired on May 1 from the 3-M Corporation. He will, however, continue to represent the company in community and national affairs. He lives in St. Paul, Minn., where he formerly served as chairman of the board of Macalester College. John E. Zombro Jr. retired in March 1983 after 37 years with Sunkist Growers. He lives in Palos Verdes Peninsula, Calif. After two years as dean of Northwest Queens, N.Y., L. Roper Shamhart has been appointed as archdeacon of Queens, representing the bishop to 30 parishes with oversight of three missions. His new responsibilities have forced him to resign as chairman of the Commission on Liturgy and Church Music after four years of service. In June Shamhart will celebrate his 25th anniversary as rec- tor of St. Mark’s Church in Jackson Heights, N.Y. Joseph E. Blackburn recently received the Presbyterian Home Alumni Association’s Outstan- ding Alumni Award. He retired in the spring as chief executive officer of the Chesapeake and Potomac Telephone Co. of Virginia and now prac- tices law in Richmond. Wilbur S. Metcalf Jr. (See 1940.) James A. Anderson III is practicing law with the firm of Lewis, Anderson & Gilmore in Benton, Ky. Leigh Carter, vice chairman and director of B.F. Goodrich Co., has been named a director of Sherwin-Williams Co. He lives in Cleveland. Thomas S. Hook retired from the Federal Avia- tion Administration on Jan. 3, 1985, after 24 years of federal service. He still enjoys tennis and play- ing the trombone and is now writing in his leisure time at his new home in Baltimore, Md. John I. Carper has retired from the Norfolk Ledger-Star in order to pursue free-lance writing, golf, and travel. Thus far, his travels have taken him to the Los Angeles Olympics and throughout the South and Southwest. J. Peter G. Muhlenberg is chairman of the depart- ment of pediatrics at Reading (Pa.) Hospital and is on that hospital’s board of directors. He lives in Wyomissing, Pa. Marion G. (Pat) Robertson has been the subject of major articles in Newsweek, The Wall Street Journal, and the Washington Post concerning his possible candidacy in 1988 for president of the United States. Andrew J. Ellis Jr. has become a fellow of the American College of Trial Lawyers. The college is an association whose purpose is to improve the standards and ethics of trial practice. Ellis is a part- ner in the firm of Mays, Valentine, Davenport & Moore in Richmond, Va. Guy B. Hammond has returned to full-time teaching after six years as chairman of the philosophy and religion department and two years as chairman of the newly formed religion depart- ment at Virginia Tech. Hammond lives in Blacksburg, Va. Townsend Oast has been elected president of the Virginia Bankers Association. Oast is currently president of People’s Bank of Chesapeake and resides in Portsmouth, Va. James A. Anderson III (See 1949.) Hugh C. Newton was honored this summer when his company received a Silver Anvil Award in the category of public affairs—not-for-profit organizations from the Public Relations Society of America. Hugh C. Newton & Associates, a public relations firm in Alexandria, Va., won the award for a media campaign publicizing a report written by the Heritage Foundation of Washington, D.C., that sought to influence the policies of the Reagan administration. Because of the extensive publicity, policymakers paid atten- tion to the report and adopted many of its proposals. In September 1984, Samuel K. Patton returned from Brussels to Poughkeepsie, N.Y. In Brussels, he had been a senior staff member at the IBM In- ternational Education Center. He is now a senior engineer at IBM’s Data Systems Division lab in Poughkeepsie, where he is a member of that ci- ty’s library board and Republican committee. Andrew J. Ellis Jr. (See 1951.) Dr. Thomas J. Kenny has been appointed to a pro- fessorship at the University of Maryland Medical School. His daughter Alison spent her junior year of college in England and returned to Randolph- Macon Woman’s College this fall. His daughter Elizabeth has completed her first year at Trinity College (Conn.). The Kennys live in Ruxton, Md. Newton H. Ray is serving as a horticulture lecturer to various civic and garden organizations. He is working as a landscape design consultant for his son’s garden firm in Danville, Va. Dr. Charles E. Dobbs is currently practicing hematology and oncology in Louisville, Ky. Keith Rogers, vice president of the U.S. Tobacco Co., has taken early retirement in order to con- duct research for a volume on the influence of the consumer movement on American politics. Rogers lives in Greenwich, Conn. MARRIAGE: Dr. Bernard Schaaf Jr. and Madeleine Carignan on Aug. 24, 1985, in Lafayette, Ind. Schaaf practices urology and urologic surgery in Lafayette. Madeleine is a native of Montreal who previously worked in New York. James M. Boswell recently enrolled his son, James Jr., in Washington and Lee’s freshman class. The Boswells live in Little Rock, Ark. Townsend Oast (See 1951.) After a brief period as an international consultant, James J. Crawford Jr. has accepted a position with Sun Exploration and Production Co. He and his wife will be moving from their home in Denver to Khartoum, Sudan, for an upcoming exploratory drilling operation. Leonard C. Greenebaum is managing partner of Sachs, Greenebaum & Tayler in Washington, D.C. The firm specializes in referrals from other law firms and is one of Washington’s leading firms in domestic cases. W&L 5i ee aan aa ee a . for ‘American ‘businesses: . Rear Wachovia i in] nent is mn en in 1 1974. g I 1 ulin was recently transferred from. No: < to the United States and is now senior r project a associate in the project managem department of Exxon Engineering in Florham : Park, N.J. He lives in Chatham, N. J. John P. Moyer has been with the Youngstown, : Ohio, office of the Philad elphia-based Butches & Singer Inc. for the past 19 years. He is active in the Rotary Club and. the cher ® Scouts. | Sadler ‘Hollins "59, ‘have built a home. on Maryland’s eastern shore near the town of Oxford. His firm, Human Resource Associates, is involv- 1 © Sadlers’ third ‘Stephen W. Rutledge has moved from Dallas to B St. Louis, where he i 1s employed by the Ralston ¢ Purina Co. OO Renshaw Il i is executive producer for Cor. porate Video a in Washington, D.C. g im : financial services. - -ason, Alan -and— conducts ; f+ the fe prac a mgs Snes A cMahon, BIRTH ecame a senior or vice r a T. Kenneth Cribb J - BIRTH: Mr. and Mrs. Donald J. Lineback, a _ daughter, Sally Casey, i Feb. 2, 1985, ‘in _Mem- Lockhart, ¢ on April 26, 1985, in DA ington, Va. Edward B. Crosland Jr. has joined the firm of Baker & Hostetler i in its Washington, D.C., of- fice. He will practice in the areas of financial i in- stitutions and corporate @ and securities law. has been nai ned executive: vice rOSS and Blue mee of 7 ment Fraud. | He i is the author of numerous articles on federal securities laws. | IRR IAGE: Alexander S. oe and Susan ine’s Sept. Dis issue e featured Palmer Brown Cos., a Bethesda, Md. -based adver- _ tising agency. As president of the agency, Brown has led the firm to $100 million in billings in 1985 and plans to double that growth i in the next five years. | William Cc. Tyler and Ch: harles R. Yates, °70, have formed Tyler/Yates Financial Group Inc. in Atlan-. ta. The company will offer aiversiiied real. estate Jr. ” for merly assistant cou L | Jacksonville, Fla. . 3 Mr. and Mrs. John L. _ Smith hdr, a son, _ Clarke McIntyre, on May 27, 185, 1 in a Neroll - Va. 7 Advertising Age magazi Jeremy E. Brown in its cover story. The article — ‘concerned the phenomenal growth of the Earle | ‘Rehoboth E yunselor ‘manager ‘of, ‘the Wooden to the president, is now counselor to the attorney general of the United States. John M. Nolan became the 41st postmaster of New York in January 1985. He is the youngest person ever to hold that position as head of the largest- volume post office system in the wor d, with 115 branches in Manhattan and the employees, and $950 million in gross. receipts in 1984. Nolan joined the Postal Service in 1970 and served most recently as northeast 8 onal direc- tor of customer services. ee Michael T. Thornton i is a t ariner i in ‘the newly BIRTH: Mr. and Mrs. William A. Gatlin MI, 8 a son, Douglas Stuart H, on ae - pee Klaus Eder is a lecturer at the University of Duessel-Dorf. He has received a Heisenberg grant from the German Research Foundation. Eder si les i in 1 Munich, West Germany. — | sea 6 of Pediatrics a ata recent | AAP) E Exccutive t Bc oard, . Allender i is “Holt O’Far- Williams 3 & Palmore i in ihe spring of 1985, -E Henry J ernigan Jr. has relocated to the firm’s on, Ky., office. Corporate defense con- tinues to be the primary focus of his practice. Marc J. Small has announced the formation of a law partnership, Melton and Small, | in Roanoke, Va. . H. Lockhart t Handley 1 i I (See 1966. 6) Armstrong Barratt Iv, on “Dec. 21, | each, Del. Cullen is a sales as with Jack Lingo Ine. 4 a ‘teal esta ate firm Rehoboth Beach. SS BIRTH: Mr. and Mrs. Timothy Fr. Haley adopted a daughter, Meegan Anne, born Aug. 5, 1985. "Haley is an = in aie | Boat ‘Show ‘for ae S D Newport (R.I.) Yachting Center since its inception in 1981. Dwelley lives in Westport, Mass. James S. Mahan III and John S. Penn are members of an investment group which recently purchased the Citizen’s Union National Bank and Trust Co. in Lexington, Ky. Citizen’s Union is Lexington’s third largest bank with assets of $255 million and capital of $20 million. Mahan, former- ly with Wachovia Bank and Trust, joined Citizen’s Union in 1983 and will be its new president. Penn, who joined the bank in 1984, will be executive vice president, administration. Both Mahan and Penn are on the board of directors of KYNB Bankshares Inc., with Mahan serving as the board’s chairman. John A. Steinhauer has given up his public ac- counting practice to become the senior syndica- tion manager for Public Storage Inc. He packages real estate tax shelters for the firm. Steinhauer is a director of the National Association of Private Placement Syndicators, a trade group, and serves as chairman of its political advisory committee. He lives in Pasadena, Calif. Walter J. Wilkins III has been appointed assistant professor of history and philosophy at Virginia Wesleyan College in Virginia Beach, Va. He previously had been at Florida State University, where he earned his Ph.D. BIRTH: Mr. and Mrs. Russell W. Chambliss, a son, Frank Mason, on April 5, 1985, in Bir- mingham, Ala. Chambliss is vice president of sales and marketing for Mason Corp. of Birmingham. B. Troy Ferguson III has joined the staff of North Carolina National Bank as a commercial loan of- ficer in the Salisbury, N.C., office. Ferguson received his M.B.A. from New York University in 1982. Mark W. Preston has become an associate with the firm of Strother, Weiner & Dwyer in Atlanta, Ga. Stuart Ragland III has entered the graduate pro- gram in economics at the University of Maryland College Park. He and his wife, Lisa, now live in the Maryland suburbs of Washington, D.C. B. Michael Herman (See 1967.) BIRTH: Dr. and Mrs. Preston R. Simpson, a daughter, Mary Carolyn, on Feb. 22, 1985, in Beaumont, Texas. Simpson is in the private prac- tice of pathology in Beaumont. BIRTH: Capt. and Mrs. Kim Stenson, a daughter, Leslie Elin, on March 12, 1985, in Warminster, Pa. BIRTH: Mr. and Mrs. William H. Sturges, a daughter, Lindsey Hathaway, on Aug. 23, 1985, in Charlotte, N.C. BIRTH: Mr. and Mrs. William W. Terry III, a son, William Marfleet, on Sept. 5, 1985, in Roanoke, Va. Terry is a partner in the law firm of Wetherington & Melchionna. Curtis E. Boswell Jr. has been named assistant general counsel for Schneider Commercial Real Estate, a statewide firm in California. He earned his law degree at Texas Tech and is a member of the Texas and California bar associations. Boswell is in the Los Angeles headquarters of Schneider. Dr. Paul L. Gorsuch recently passed the written neurological specialty boards in Pennsylvania. An avid mountain climber, Gorsuch recently com- pleted a successful climb of Mt. McKinley in Alaska. On Jan. 1, 1985, Ralph F. MacDonald III became a partner in the Birmingham, Ala., law firm of Balch and Bingham. Irvin E. Wolfson is a sales manager for Com- munications Inc. He is based in Grand Rapids, Mich. W. Henry Jernigan Jr. (See 1972.) BIRTH: Mr. and Mrs. David R. Braun, a daughter, Katherine Anne, on Oct. 12, 1985, in Edina, Minn. BIRTH: Mr. and Mrs. Brian M. Levine, a son, Aaron, on June 28, 1985, in Spartanburg, S.C. Walter S. Robertson III, vice president of the Rich- mond insurance agency DeJarnette and Paul Inc., has been elected president of the Independent In- surance Agents of Richmond for the 1985-86 term. BIRTH: Mr. and Mrs. Brian L. Garr, a daughter, Tyler Leigh, on June 26, 1984, in Bethesda, Md. Ronald R. Adams has announced the formation of a new corporation for the practice of law under the name of Adams, Howe & Zoss in Des Moines, Iowa. Adams was formerly with the firm of Myers, Knox & Hart. T. Patrick Brennan is currently curator of the Oglebay Museum in Wheeling, W.Va. Brennan, who was a student curator of Lee Chapel while an undergraduate, is working on a master’s degree at West Virginia University. G. Scott Thomas has left the Virginia News Net- work in Richmond to become a news anchor for WEBR-AM Radio in Buffalo, N.Y. Berthenia S. Crocker was the subject of a feature story last spring in the Wyoming State Journal. Crocker, who began a private practice in Lander, Wyo., five years ago, juggles an active civic life successfully while raising three young children: Genya, 5; Rosie, 4; and Nicholas, 1. Michael T. Thornton (See 1970.) MARRIAGE: Lowell R. Buckner III and Amy Elizabeth Morrett, on Nov. 10, 1984, in Dallas. Buckner is assistant employee relations manager in design products of the films division of the Mobil Chemical Co., in Rochester, N.Y., where the couple resides. MARRIAGE: Kevin T. McFadden and Ilene C. Andersen on July 6, 1985, in Marin County, Calif. Groomsmen included Tom McFadden, Jr., ’76, °79L, Mike McFadden, ’82, Tom McFadden, *79L, and Tommy Tift, ’78. Attending the wed- ding were classmates Steve Calabro, John Gula, Tom Turco, and Ed Turtak; Joe Litosky, ’80; Tim White, ’83; Brad Kidd, ’73; Paul Hendry, ’80; Pete Pearl, ’78; and John Klinedinst, ’71, ’78L. The couple lives in Mar Vista, Calif. McFadden is a commercial construction loan officer in the Real Estate Industries Division at Lloyds Bank in Los Angeles. Although B. Davis Jackson has not played baseball on a regular basis since his Little League days, the 1976 Washington and Lee graduate was credited with an assist that helped end major league baseball’s brief strike this summer. 7 Jackson’s assist came in the form of some advice that he of- fered Commissioner Peter Ueberroth. According to a report published in the San Antonio Express- © News, Jackson wrote a — letter to Ueberroth on July 18 and proposed that the ‘‘untapped sources of baseball, particularly unused seating capacity and new broadcasting contracts,’’ be used to resolve the dispute be- tween owners and the Major League Players Association. Jackson, a Houston native who has his own accounting firm in New Braunfels, Texas, viewed his suggestion as ‘‘an unsolicited letter- to-the-editor type of thing. I never expected it to receive such top-level attention.”’ But the letter did indeed receive attention—from the top. On Aug. 1, Jackson got a telephone call from the commissioner’s office, thanking him for his suggestions. Jackson was one of three individuals who were Alumnus Earns Assist in Baseball Settlement contacted by Ueberroth’s office after they had written the commissioner with proposals for settling the dispute. Jackson’s proposals not only caught Ueber- roth’s eye, but also captured the attention of the media. He received calls from both The CBS Morning News and NBC’s Today show. And, the San Antonio newspaper account noted, the Jackson’s family dinner was repeatedly interrupted by reporters from newspapers, television news teams, and na- tional wire services on the day Ueberroth’s of- fice called. a Exactly what was it about Jackson’s pro- posals that he was thrust into the limelight? He believed the key to resolving the problems be- tween the players and the owners involved us- ing broadcasting contracts to improve atten- dance at games. ‘‘They go hand-in-hand,’’ he said. ‘‘If the owners cut ticket prices and the players take a fixed percentage of broadcasting revenue, it would serve everyone. “*The idea has been lingering in my mind,”’ Jackson explained. ‘‘So I decided to write the letter... . I am delighted that the commis- sioner’s office called me.’’ Although Jackson has never before sent such a letter to a top-ranking sports official, it is not the first time he has shared his exten- sive baseball knowledge with the world. His book, The Last Word in Baseball Statistics, is a compilation of nearly every statistic available from the 1984 baseball season. W&L 53 | BIRTH: Mr. and Mrs. John A. Alexander Jr., on June 24 country sales manag United States Lines. He and his wife, Susan, and _ their new son live in ‘Taipei, Republic of China. BIRTH: Mr. and Mrs. Dan A. Kniffen, a son, Chase Tyler, on Jan. ‘1, 1985, in Richmond. Knif _ fen is supervisor of family counseling with Catholic Charities of Richmond, Inc. BIRTH: Mr. and Mrs. William M. Moffet, a so son, Christopher Morris, on Dec. 4, 1984. The family lives in Abingdon, Va. BIRTH: Mr. and Mrs. Scott A. Storey, a son, - Matthew Kyle, on June 25, 1985, in Lansing, Mich. Storey is a member of the board of direc- tors of the law firm of Foster, Swift, ‘Collins & ~Coey in Lansing. : BIRTH: Mr. and Mrs. Tracy A. White, a son, Charles Bernard, on ESSPE 23, AM; in Atlanta. ‘When John S. LeCato were married i in J ria Franktown, va, . two of his classmates travelled some distance to attend the wedding. Keith B. Romi me fron Harker Heights, Texas, and O. ‘Lee Cave came : from eis tie ‘Ky. Their names were in- A lumi Magazine. i Reserve. Umbarger is saa pursuing a master’s _ degree in urban planning at the Univ - Virginia. He lives i in Aclington, = stockbroker with | options. | - . BIRTH: - Mr. and in A vestn ment Co. in Wathington E D. Cc. | g left private practice, he lives i in Alexan- ‘dria, Va. with his wife, Carrie, and son, John Robert TY. He on ithe alumni board of Pot ae +o oe Shield dof Soul Ss hate general counsel, 1985, in Hong Kong. Craig was recently promoted to the position of © er for Taiwan by his company, © Michael R. Tester ma partn: eutsch, Kerrigan & Stiles in New | After star nk Thomas R. Wall IV moved to Kelso & Compan in the summer of 1983. Kelso & Company i is an ‘investment banking firm which specializes i _ leveraged buy-out tra tore City. | is working for Thomas “‘mander of tl the 309th Medic: Group, U. Ss. Army | ersity of rs. Michael R. Devine, ason, 3 De | Matiliew Baines on peter 15, 1985, in Virginia h, Va. Dev and | ty of Michigan. ; MB ‘John J. Stathakis receiv ed | from ‘the Cumberland ‘ need of. Law in Bir- I wvestern Virginia, Gardner formerly David A. Greer is an associate with Hofheimer, “Nusbaum, McPhaul & Brenner in Norfolk, Va. Ss. Dewey Kressler Jr. is in the London office of Putnam International Advisors, Ltd. He and his _ wife, Anne, will be in London for two years. James E. Mendoza has been promoted to mé ager of educational marketing for the computer systems division of Harris Corporation. He also manages the Harris Corporate University Grant Program. This program n annually grants over $7 million worth of computer hardware and software to academic institutions throughout the United States. Mendoza lives in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. n has been named a p: in the firm of De Orleans, La. ; ting his career - with Chemical Bar isactions. Wall lives: in New Southern California ology att "School versity ry of = Calif. | : York. | his law w degree i in May Law Week 85, ‘named the nation’s best by the wrote and directed a vid leo on the law school, which was promotional named the nation’s best student bar associati project by the ABA; and editec newspaper. Stathakis is an associate ni the law firm of povierys He ood and ie aaa iA ‘Ander- son, S.C. "MARRIAGE: Paul M. Black and Anna Barbara (Bobbie) Serrano on Aug. 17, 1985, in Richmond, ao Va. Stuart R.W. ‘Scruggs, "83, and James qT. An- year student at Bowinan : Gra r | degree prog) MARRIAGE: W. Warr drews, ’83, were members of the wedding party. Black is a recent graduate of the University of Richmond’s T.C. Williams School of Law and is a law clerk for the Hon. BI ckw I N. Shelley, United States Bankruptcy Judge for the Eastern irginia. Black and his wife, who is a 1983 graduate of Sweet Briar College, live in Richmond. oe MARRIAGE: David A. Core and ¢ Williams on Aug. 17, 1985, in T. ia Michele asse, Fla. Sean T. Broderick and John T. Warmath II and Shepard M. Smith, ’84, se as attendants, University School of Law. After a hon Spain the couple will live in Bonn, West G where Core will attend Bonn Pmiyersity as a Rotary Foundation Scholar. ;eorge U. Carneal III is a first-year law student at the University of Virginia. In May he completed a master’s degree program with honors at Yale University. Carneal combined three areas of study—psychology, sociology, and religion- worked part-time as a counselor in a r¢ treatment f inN n disturbed teenagers. F. Brian Gibson received a fellows nip to conduct summer research at the Bowman Gray School of Medicine at Wake Forest nic Factor as He wil to “Local Skin Flap Surv vi ival.” id, 1 Na athaniel Ww. n Sept. 27, 1985, aboard the King — ing the Colgate im ministration at the University of Virginia, - Lee Woosley III is enrolled i in the master’s am at the Thunderbird Campus of the American Graduate Schogl of International Management. MARRIAGE: Mark R. Carduner and Linda M. Morton on July 20, 1985, in Charlottesville, Va. They live in Hightstown, N. J . where he works for Carduners Inc. | MARRIAGE: John Hq. Chase on June 229, Hare | ae H. = Ir., °83, was an usher. Feuerstein has" just completed his M.B.A. and will be joining the New York office of f Touche, F Ross and i an ny. The couple will nent or Pitsbureh haem Bank. on B. Rhett and Ellen MacElvain on May 4, 1985, in Eufaula, Ala. Rhett is with the investment firm of Sterne, Agee and Leach Inc. The couple lives in Mountain Brook, Ala. Stephen H. Denny is sales manager of Corton Systems Corp., an electronics and computer firm based in Japan. He currently lives in Tokyo. After working for two years in the Bamberger’s division of R.H. Macy and Co. Inc., Frank G. English IV is pursuing an M.B.A. at the Fuqua School of Business at Duke University. 2nd Lt. Todd W. Meyer completed the U.S. Ar- my field artillery officer basic course at Fort Sill, Okla. Cecily L. Morris has been appointed town attorney of Massena, N.Y. She is with the firm of Nican- dri and LaVigne. William M. Peery is enrolled in the graduate geology program at the University of Montana in Missoula. Christopher B. Power attends West Virginia University and will complete his M.B.A. in _ December and his J.D. in May of 1986. G. Kenneth Robinson III is a tax specialist in the Washington office of Arthur Young and Co. He is studying for a master of science degree in taxa- tion at Georgetown University. Robinson lives in Arlington. John P. Walsh Jr. is currently employed as a geological assistant with C&R Exploration Inc. of New Orleans. He is also working toward a master’s degree at the University of New Orleans. MARRIAGE: Andrew E. Clark and Gail Minnix on Oct. 19, 1985, in Vinton, Va. They live in Catonsville, Md., where both are employed in the Baltimore office of Peat, Marwick & Mitchell. 2nd Lt. Jed L. Goad earned his wings as a helicopter pilot at the U.S. Army Aviation School at Fort Rucker, Ala. David K. Salsbury works at the Arena Stage in Washington. He lives in Vienna, Va. John A. Sanders is a sales representative with Cahill & Associates Insurance Brokers in Ken- sington, Md. Dolores M. Schmitt is an assistant vice president with L.S. Waldrop Realty Co. in Salem, Va. She lives in Roanoke. Stuart D. Adams is attending law school at the University of San Diego. 2nd Lt. John D. Buchanan has been assigned for duty at Fort Rucker, Ala. He is a student with the U.S. Army Aviation Center. Kathy B. Meadows has joined the law firm of Klinedinst & Meiser in San Diego, Calif. William H. Schoeffler is a management associate for Barnett Bank in Tampa, Fla. In Memoriam Dr. Frank Laird Wysor, a retired physician, died July 4, 1985, in Clifton Forge, Va. He was an otolaryngologist who earned his medical degree from the University of Virginia in 1915. Wysor served in the U.S. Army Medical Corps during World War I. He retired in 1966 as head of the eye, ear, nose, and throat department of the C&O Hospital Association. Donald David Utt, a self-employed realtor, died July 26, 1985, in Martinsburg, W.Va. After graduating from Washington and Lee, Utt was engaged in government service and eventually became involved in real estate in the Cumberland, Md., area. He was a member of Centre Street United Methodist Church and the Scottish Rite Bodies of Cumberland. For 60 years he was a member of Fort Cumberland Lodge 211, AF and AM. James Levesque Shaver died Aug. 1, 1985, in Wynne, Ark., where he had practiced law since 1922. When he was only 19 years old he earned his law degree from Washington and Lee. Because of his age, his license was granted by a special act of the Arkansas legislature after he had passed the bar exam. Shaver served in the Arkansas House of Representatives from 1925 to 1930 and in the state Senate from 1931 to 1938. He was lieutenant governor of Arkansas from 1942 to 1946. He was president of the Arkansas Bar Association in 1953-54 and was honored by the association as its outstanding lawyer and citizen in 1971. Shaver chaired the board of the Cross County Hospital from 1951 to 1977. President Nixon appointed him to the Arkansas State Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights. Shaver was an elder in the Wynne Presbyterian Church and a member of the Rotary Club and Chamber of Com- merce. He also served on a number of state com- missions and boards. Albert Newman Jr., a retired consultant for the Homelite Division of Textron Industries, died Aug. 15, 1985, in Stratford, Conn. He earned a bachelor of science degree in 1925 from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and his master of science degree a year later. Newman was an engineer with Electric Specialty Co. of Stam- ford, Conn., from 1926 until 1942 when he join- ed Homelite Corp. He progressed from project engineer to chief engineer and then vice president in charge of engineering prior to his retirement. John Howard Emrich, manager of the Tyronza Supply Co., died June 28, 1985, in Tyronza, Ark. Clarence Emmett Hinkle, a retired attorney, died Sept. 13, 1985, in Roswell, N.M. He practiced law in Roswell until his retirement in 1978. Hinkle serv- ed in the New Mexico House of Representatives from 1931 to 1933. During his term, he drafted the Artesian Conservancy District Act, the first water-conservancy district act concerning underground water ever passed in the United States. A landmark piece of legislation in the western part of the country, it has been upheld by the Supreme Court and only slightly amended. Hinkle also served in the state Senate from 1945 to 1948. He was a member of the Roswell Municipal Board of Education from 1935 until 1952, when he resigned to accept an appointment to the board of regents of New Mexico Military Institute. He presided over that board until 1958 and also was an organizer of the NMMI Founda- tion Inc., which he chaired from 1945 to 1975. In 1969 Hinkle organized and chaired the board of Roswell Retirement Services Inc., formed to adver- tise his native city as a retirement center. He also served from 1965 to 1970 on the Advisory Coun- cil of the Public Land Law Review Commission and chaired the Public Lands Committee of the New Mexico Oil and Gas Association for more than 20 years. Hinkle was a director of several banks and savings and loan and bank holding com- panies; president of Hinkle Investment Co.; and senior partner of his law firm, Hinkle, Cox, Eaton, Coffield and Hensley. He was author of the New Mexico Oil and Gas Leasing Act and contributed to federal laws on the same subject. He was ac- tive in the Masons and Elks. Calhoun Holcomb, a retired employee of Ford Motor Co., died March 28, 1985, in Mount Ida, Ark. Charles Johnson Allison Jr., retired vice president of Equitable Securities, died Sept. 5, 1985, in Bir- mingham, Ala. He was an employee of J. C. Brad- ford and Co. and a past member of the board of governors of the National Association of Securities Dealers. Allison was a member of the Birmingham Rotary Club and a board member of the Country Club of Birmingham and the Mountain Brook Club. Gilbert David Mayor, a retired division engineer for the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad, died March 22, 1985, in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Zed Clarke Layson, a farmer and retired district supervisor for the U. S. Dept. of Agriculture Tobacco Marketing and Inspection, died March 13, 1985, in Millersburg, Ky. He was a director of the Paris, Ky., Stockyards and the Farmers Ex- change Bank, an elder of the First Presbyterian Church, and past president of the Rotary Club and the Stoner Creek Country Club. Charles Watkins Lewis, counsel to the Wall Street law firm of Thacher, Proffitt and Wood, died Sept. 4, 1985, in Fairfield, Conn. Lewis, a V.M.I. graduate, attended the Washington and Lee School of Law while he was an assistant professor at V.M.I. and earned his law degree at Yale. He was managing partner of his law firm before becom- ing counsel in 1977. Lewis was a president of the board of Brick Presbyterian Church in New York and a trustee of the Cancer Research Institute Inc. and the V.M.I. Foundation Inc. He was a member of the V.M.I. Board of Visitors and a director of the General American Oil Co. of Texas. Lewis was a member of the American, New York State, and New York City bar associations, as well as a number of clubs in New York, Connecticut, and Florida. Henry Stoneham Raleston Wilson, a printer, died Aug. 22, 1985, in Martinsburg, W.Va. Wilson was born in Rockbridge County. After leaving Washington and Lee, he moved to Martinsburg and worked as a pressman at Martinsburg Print- WS, 55 died July 30, 1985, in Troy, C Ohio. He fe serve 10 a TOY y Board of E F was a member of the Upper alley Joint Voca- tional School Board and chairman of the United Fund and American Red Cross. He was a direc- tor and general counsel for Miami Citizens Na- tional | Bank and Trust oe and former rt Benera r Lott, | . retired “attorney de je Commission, died eo a of. the Kiwanis, \ Vv. F. W., “American Toa mn First Presby terjan Chureh. 13-sti ate rea. fa — = 1970. ‘Lott — in the U. JS. Army Judge Advocate General’s ‘Corps in ig pleas canon aa ie 2 to hago: oe emzined3 in aa | ty ‘of Vienna, and the Ne University of F Got The Rev. Colin Campbell Jr, former p pastor of St. Mark’s Episcopal Church in Palo Alto, Calif., died fsept. | 10, 18. >. Campbell © Renewed a year ago ndency. He I aa Divint dent a corks : = es is California and a member of the Sa ty Alcoholism Advisory Board. d as an officer in the United St EDITOR: | ae ee | read with disbelief the e article in the Ju u- ~ly/August 1985 issue of t the ae i eaeaene en- titled 1 “New L Drug an lic’ Dortic © DeFuniah Springs iw ! ans i Cup nd A iif revong mi Renna ury, a retired coal oper | yurne, Fla. He also main | with a festering grudge lis for slurs to report is spretty sickening by but iti is ike ‘Si ply n not distinctions Q eal eee T] bil ty to giaduate hinge Finally, how seri students really sc 80 set | slurs even ne else out of ng an honor jor moral ot make my list of ;, and it seems to ho dreamed up the new rule on oo much idle time on their hands. THomas D. SWANN, "74 a Waco, » Texas EDITOR: You did a splendid job with the Sey ptember/Oc- tober issue of the Alumni Magazine presenting the highlights of the Class of 1989. Of course, you had the best of subjects. Congratulations to you and eine, classe 7 EDITOR: I just received the Septen October iss the Alumni Magazine. I thought it itv was the mo exciting and inspiring issue ever. (ae can’) together. For the first time I am 1 able to recommend High School] W&L to my students [at Episcopal F and to my friends’ children. I am certain W&L is now y ready to move into a new era of prestige . quality. Congratulations. BEN Swan, ’78 _ Alexandria, Va. Nov. Dec. Dec. Dec. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Feb. Feb. Feb. 3—James Madison Takedown Tournament 4—Hampden-Sydney 7—W&L Invitational 11—Newport News Appren. 4—Maryland Open 11—Johns Hopkins Quad. 15—Duke 18—Davidson 22— Virginia State 25—W&L College Invit. 1—W&L Triangular 5—Longwood 8—Washington & Jefferson Triangular Away HOME HOME HOME Away Away HOME HOME HOME HOME HOME HOME Away Nov. Nov. Dec. Dec. Dec. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. | Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Nov. Nov. Nov. Dec. Jan. Jan. Jan. Jan. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Nov. Nov. Dec. Jan. Jan. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. 22-23—W&L Tip-Off Tournament 26—Emory University 3—Hampden-Sydney 7—Lynchburg 11—Greensboro 7—Cortland State 10-11—W&L Invitational 14—Maryville 16—Roanoke 18—Bridgewater 21—Eastern Mennonite 23—Emory & Henry 24—Mary Washington 28—Hampden-Sydney 30—Emory & Henry 1—Lynchburg 3— Bridgewater 5—Mary Washington 8— Roanoke 11—Eastern Mennonite 12—Emory University 14—Maryville 18—ODAC Quarterfinals 21-22—ODAC Semi-Finals & Finals 13—V.M.I. 22—Johns Hopkins 23—Shippensburg 5-7—Virginia State Collegiate Championships 17—James Madison 18—Georgetown/Frostburg 24—Towson State 31—Shepherd College 1—Gettysburg 5—Mary Washington 8—William & Mary 21-23—Tri-State Championships 13—Mary Baldwin 22—Johns Hopkins 5-7—Virginia State Collegiate Championships 18—Georgetown/Frostburg 31—Shepherd College 1—Gettysburg 5—Mary Washington 12—Sweet Briar/R-M 21-23—Tri-State Championships HOME Away HOME Away HOME HOME HOME HOME HOME Away Away HOME HOME Away Away HOME HOME Away Away HOME HOME Away T.B.A. Away HOME HOME HOME Away Away HOME HOME Away Away Away HOME HOME HOME HOME Away HOME Away Away Away Away HOME The Alumni M ETL aTG a : Seon Corte Postage Paid At Lexington, Virginia 24450 WASHINGTON AND LEE UNIVERSITY pa pep ace Ce earn (USPS 667-040) ae Lexington, Virginia 24450 Don’t Wait © Until The Last Minute To Make Your Gift To The Annual Fund In 1985. (You might forget and cost yourself a tax deduction this Bae, The Annual Fund Washington and Lee University Lexington, Virginia 24450