oh the alumni magazine of washington and lee (USPS 667-040) Volume 59, Number 6, November 1984 Pio Parsons, 547007 | ge Editor Romulus T. Weatherman .............. Managing Editor deticiyG Hante....).....¢2. 4.0.2... Associate Editor Peover Fle 2... ee ee es Contributing Editor MeO PPA ee a el Editorial Assistant pulene Thomas... .. ee et Y. Editorial Assistant My Patrick Finely, ’73:.00. 2 so os sic hd. Photographer TABLE OF CONTENTS ROTC Climbing Back.............. ccc. cccccececceccuccccecees 1 New Dean Back to His Roots............c.cccecceccecccceeces 6 Homecoming °84.............cccccccseccccecececcecccceccucceccces 10 Teaching by Osmosis..............ccccccececcecceccecceccececcee 12 Rave Reviews for Alumni Colleges................0c0c0c000- 14 Dick Miller’s 200th.............c cc cceccceccccecececsecececccceces 16 Two Trustees Elected.............cccccccccecceccccececcucecceces 18 University Report 1983-84...00...... ccc cocccccccceceeeceecs 19-50 CALC Foc a hele cece cccahiecdaccdcucsocccceccice sili. 51 Chapter NOws ei igs i yercci skis cessedccscoscccececocceccicecescs 59 Class. NOtes..1 ili ks ees bine coceccecnececccccecccceui 61 In Memoriam... cies icnkes bes cccccccccscccoceccee.ce 5g. 65 And furthermore. Geis oecies ovis co cnccccceccceccccesceee. 68 Type for this magazine was set using equipment provided through the generosity of Mary Moody Northen, Inc., Galveston, Texas. Published six times a year in January/February, March/April, May/June, July/August, September/October, November/December by Washington and Lee University Alumni, Inc., Lexington, Virginia 24450. All communications and POD Forms 3579 Should be sent to Washington and Lee Alumni, Inc., Lexington, Va. 24450. Second class postage paid at Lexington, Va. 24450 and additional offices. Change in frequency pending. Copyright © 1984, Washington and Lee University Officers and Directors Washington and Lee Alumni, Inc. CHARLES D. Hurt Jr., ’59, Atlanta, Ga. President, JAMES W. MCCLINTOCK III, ’53, Tunica, Miss. Vice President OLIVER M. MENDELL, ’50, New York, N.Y. Treasurer RICHARD B. Sessoms, Lexington, Va. Director of Alumni Programs and Secretary LERoy C. ATKINS, ’68, Lexington, Va. Assistant Secretary C. DUBOsE AUSLEY, ’59, Tallahassee, Fla. W. NaT BAKER, 67, San Francisco, Calif. CHARLES R. BEALL, ’56, Martinsburg, WVa. G. EDWARD CALVERT, ’44, Lynchburg, Va. JOHN F, CARRERE JR., 69, New Orleans, La. WILLIAM N. CLEMENTS, ’50, Baltimore, Md. JOHN W. Fotsom, ’73, Columbia, S.C. M. LEE HALForD Jr., ’69, Dallas, Tex. JAMES W. JENNINGS JR., ’65, ’72L, Roanoke, Va. SIDMON J. KAPLAN, ’56, Cleveland, Ohio HENRY NorTserc III, ’71, Kansas City, Mo. JOHN PoyNnor, ’62, Birmingham, Ala. RIcE M. TILLEY JrR., ’58, Fort Worth, Tex. S. MAYNARD TuRK, 52, Wilmington, Del. STANLEY A. WALTON III, 62, ’65L, Chicago, III. CV v ON THE COVER: The color guard of Washington and Lee’s Army ROTC detachment presents the colors prior to the start of a Generals’ football game at Wilson Field. ROTC has made an about-face since the Vietnam War era. A story on the program begins on page 1. Photograph by W. Patrick FAiinely, ’73. by Jeffery G. Hanna ROTC Climbing Back at W&L Not so very many years ago ROTC was a four-letter word on most college campuses. As opposition to the war in Vietnam escalated during the late 1960s and early 1970s, enrollment in the Reserved Officer Training Corps drop- : ped dramatically throughout the country. Washington and Lee was no exception. Like the ROTC programs almost everywhere, W&L’s Army ROTC detachment hit bottom during the 1973-74 academic year when only 64 students were enrolled—a 62 percent decline from just three years previously. And consider this: in 1960, nine years after ROTC was established at the Universi- ty, 364 undergraduates were enrolled in the program. The drop was precipitous indeed. Today memories of Vietnam have faded. ROTC enrollments na- tionwide are climbing almost as dramatically as they fell a decade ago, from a low of 33,220 cadets in 1974 to a 1984 level of 72,823. And again, Washington and Lee is no exception. This fall 192 students are enroll- ed in the University’s program. W&L’s ROTC officials expect 24 students to be commissioned as sec- ond lieutenants on commencement morning next June. Projections are for those numbers to continue to in- crease aS more and more students gravitate toward the program. Clearly, ROTC has made an im- pressive comeback at W&L just as it has throughout the country. Why the about-face? For starters, attitudes toward the military have unquestionably improved in @ the years since anti-Vietnam demonstra- SS tions swept the nation’s campuses. The mood of the country has shifted percep- ' Vy t Rangers rappelling at Fort Bragg Photo by Capt. Robert Ripple ROTC Climbs Back tibly; there has been an obvious surge in patriotism. But there are practical reasons for ROTC’s return, too: increased tuition costs coupled with the availability of lucrative ROTC scholarships, for one; guaranteed post-graduate employment in an uncertain job market, for another; the prospect of draft registration, for yet another. **I would like to say that patriotism is the number one reason for the increase in ROTC enrollments nationwide,’’ says Lt. Col. Luke B. Ferguson, professor of military science at W&L. ‘‘But while I do believe many of the students become in- terested out of a sense of duty, I must honestly say the primary reason is prob- ably monetary. Those scholarships are very appealing.’’ Those scholarships were no less ap- pealing during the mid-1970s, of course. And yet that appeal was not strong enough to offset the negative feelings many students had about the military then. ‘*Those were black days for ROTC,”’ Says Ferguson. ‘‘Vietnam was probably the only war we’ve ever fought that was not supported by the public. ‘“‘For me personally it was a very dif- ficult time. I invested two years of my life in Vietnam. I know that by the end of my second tour, I sensed a real con- cern over the continuing commitment of my own soldiers in the field. It was harder and harder. Being a loyal soldier you did it, but there were many evenings when you did a lot of soul-searching. In that kind of situation, I think you can begin to sense why the public felt as it did.’’ Many of today’s ROTC cadets have only the vaguest memories of Vietnam— memories of the nightly television news reports, perhaps, but little more. And yet, they do sense how different the at- mosphere is now. ‘‘Knowing what I do about the at- mosphere back then, I can’t imagine that I would have been in ROTC had I been in college during Vietnam,’’ admits Bob Tomaso, a senior from Milford, Mass., who is corps executive officer of the 2 aff PO te ig he Lt. Col. Luke Ferguson (left), professor of military science, presents colors to senior Greg Lukanuski. W&L detachment this year. Adds senior Greg Lukanuski of Mechanicsburg, Pa., the detachment commanding officer: ‘‘I don’t want to say I wouldn’t have ended up in ROTC back then, but the social pressures against going ROTC must have been awfully strong.” Perhaps those pressures were not as strong at Washington and Lee as they were elsewhere. ROTC units at some universities were disbanded under pressure from students and faculty. That never happened at W&L, but there was an ongoing debate over ROTC’s existence at the University. That debate focused on whether students ought to receive academic credit for their participation in the program with articles in and letters to the Ring-tum Phi arguing both sides of the case. e ‘“‘The main objection to ROTC among a segment of the faculty was the fact that students received academic credit for a kind of study and learning that many felt was not appropriate to the liberal arts,”’ recalls Louis W. Hodges, professor of religion at W&L. ‘“There were, at the same time, arguments that certain other kinds of study—physical education, for instance— should not earn credit either. But the argument against ROTC was heightened by the Vietnam War.”’ On the other side of the debate were those who argued that the presence of ROTC on a campus such as Washington and Lee was not only valid but vitally important. “*That side took the basic view that armies are dangerous, and it is not good for armies to be run altogether by people who have been trained strictly in the military,’’ says Hodges. ‘‘It was felt that we would be far better off as a nation to have some liberally-educated military leaders. I suppose you could still hear both sides of that debate on campuses to- day, but the intensity of the debate was clearly a product of the overall climate of that period.’’ That debate was one sign of the times. Another sign came at the height of the campus unrest in the spring of 1970 when rumors abounded that anti-war protesters planned to set fire to W&L’s ROTC building. Around the country ROTC was a popular target of the war protests. Some ROTC buildings were oc- cupied by protesting students; it never came to that at W&L. Those days of controversy are long forgotten now. Today uniformed ROTC cadets scarcely warrant a second glance when they walk across the campus. Any comments directed at the cadets nowadays are not so much derisive as facetious. ‘“Once in a while somebody will salute me or something like that when I’m in uniform,’’ says Lukanuski. ‘‘But it’s real- ly no big deal on the campus. Nobody’s ever called me a fascist or a baby killer because of the uniform.’’ ‘Whenever a helicopter flies over the campus, one of my roommates will warn me to get used to that sound because I’ll be hearing it a lot in a couple of years,’ says William E. (Hutch) Hutchinson, a junior member of the ROTC detachment from Providence, R.I. The atmosphere and the attitudes have changed, to be sure. And in the meantime, ROTC has become an even more attractive alternative from a prac- tical standpoint. The extensive scholarship program is perhaps the major attraction. Of the 192 Washington and Lee students in ROTC this year, 65 are receiving one of the 16 different varieties of ROTC scholarships, most of which offer full tuition, fees, books, and $100 a month in spending money. ‘“We have a larger proportion of students on ROTC scholarship than many schools,’’ notes Ferguson. ‘‘The scholar- ships are awarded on the basis of na- tional competition, and our students tend to do quite well in that competition.’’ According to Ferguson, the University received in excess of $195,000 in scholar- ship monies from the government for a single semester in 1983-84. *‘That is a major investment for us, but we think it is an investment well worth making,’’ says Ferguson, who took over this year from Lt. Col. David F. Fowler. **! frankly wondered whether the scholarship would make that much dif- ference to students here,’’ adds Ferguson. **But I’ve found that it does make a difference.”’ Take Tomaso, for instance. Four years ago when he began looking at col- leges, Tomaso’s father encouraged him to consider the service academies or, if not that, to look into the possibility of an ROTC scholarship. “It had absolutely no appeal to me,”’ says Tomaso. ‘‘Even when I got to W&L and decided to take the first year of military science, I was not very enthused. But Col. Fowler wiped out the stereotyped idea I had of the military, the nuts and bolts idea. *‘! wound up applying for the scholar- ship. And I must admit that, to a large extent at least, I did it for the money.’’ Tomaso chose one of the scholarships through which he will wind up spending six years in the Army Reserve after finishing law school. For others, the attraction of ROTC goes beyond the scholarship to the future. While his classmates scramble around this year getting their resumes printed and their interviews lined up, Lukanuski is sitting back and watching. He knows that next fall he’ll be employed by the U.S. Army at the bi I Photo by Capt. Robert Ripple ROTC Climbs Back $19,000 entering annual salary of a se- cond lieutenant. With that security, however, comes a commitment to four years of active duty. ‘‘When I first began to consider com- mitting myself to ROTC my father cau- tioned me to be certain that I wanted to put in those four years,’’ said Lukanuski. “*T really did think long and hard about that. ‘I am not under the pressure that some of my classmates are to find a job. My goal is to end up as a military in- telligence officer stationed in West Ger- many. I want to spend whatever free time I have traveling around Europe. If I’m going to be in the Army, I want to see all I can see.’’ In its recruitment campaign, ROTC emphasizes positive aspects of that four- year commitment, selling potential cadets on the fact that they will leave the Army with more marketable skills than they possessed when they entered. ‘‘During my four years of active duty, I will increase my qualifications,’’ says Hutchinson. ‘‘I think that I’ll come out of the service ahead of my classmates in terms of experience. That should help me find a position that I want.”’ Is ROTC a valid career move? Michael Cappeto is the director of career placement at W&L. He does not hestitate to recommend ROTC to students with an interest in the military. “*It is my personal feeling that we need more liberally-educated people in the military rather than relying solely on the leadership of people who have spent four years training specifically for the military,’’ says Cappeto. ‘‘I find that is not different at all from my belief that we need more liberally educated people in business. From that standpoint, ROTC does represent a valid option for some students.”’ Another practical reason more students are opting for ROTC involves the reinstitution of draft registration. That, says Ferguson, has been a factor in increased enrollments since students can eliminate the threat of having their careers interrupted. ‘I remember one of the first ques- tions I was asked by a prospective employer out of college was whether I had served in the military,’’ says Ferguson. ‘‘There was the understandable concern then that a company didn’t want to train you only to lose you to military service. ROTC allows the student to exer- cise control over the situation.’’ There are various other reasons students choose to participate in ROTC. Some see it as an adventure, a challenge. *“We do have students who are excited about the fact that they’re going into a situation that is not routine, that they’ll change jobs every two or three years,”’ says Ferguson. ‘“‘And there are others who naturally gravitate toward the military because of family influences in that direction.’’ For whatever reason they choose ROTC, Ferguson finds the students come from an increasingly wide variety of backgrounds and bring an equally wide variety of viewpoints. ‘*I’ve been interested in coming up with a model of a prospective ROTC cadet at Washington and Lee,’’ says Ferguson. ‘‘And what I have found is that we have an excellent cross section here. In the senior class, for instance, we’ve probably got less than 10 percent from military families. That our students Photo by Capt. Robert Ripple come from the whole range of backgrounds is, I think, important to the program.’’ But though they come to ROTC from different directions, W&L’s ROTC students seem to be headed in similar directions. Most, according to Ferguson, are considering military intelligence while the second most popular post-graduate choice involves delaying active duty for law school and then entering the military as attorneys. Ferguson acknowledges that the ROTC program’s primary responsibility is to produce quality officers. He insists that is particularly critical given the com- plexities of today’s military. “‘It takes a different breed of officer to come in and lead a military unit to- day,’’ he offers. ‘‘We have become so complex in our weapons systems and in our leadership dynamics that we must have officers who are able to handle these situations. More than ever we need to have leaders from schools such as Washington and Lee.’’ With the Army officer corps today, 75 percent received their commissions from the ROTC while the others were commissioned from West Point or Army officer candidate schools. Not all of the W&L students who par- ticipate in ROTC are in the program for four full years. Indeed, the majority of the cadets are not headed toward the military commitment. For some, maybe even most, ROTC offers a chance to see, if only in a cursory way, what the military is all about—and the opportunity to get academic credits in the process. The ROTC program is divided into two parts—the basic course and the ad- vanced course. The basic course is for freshmen and sophomores. Worth five credit hours altogether, it introduces the students to management principles, na- tional defense, military history, leadership development, and military courtesy, discipline, and customs. The advanced course covers the final two years and includes a six-week ad- vanced camp at Ft. Bragg, N.C. Instruc- ion in that segment involves advanced leadership development, group dynamics, organization, and management, small unit tactics and administration, and the practical leadership that comes with assigning students as cadet officers. Ferguson suggests that even in- structing students who will not move beyond the basic course represents an im- portant service not just to the University but to the public at large. **‘T am not so naive as to believe the military is for everybody,’’ Ferguson says. ‘“‘But I do think that everyone needs to be aware of what the military is all about. ‘I have an obligation, as does every other military officer, to educate the public. After all, we do work for the public. And I see ROTC as an excellent place to do that. Even if a student doesn’t remain in the program the full four years, we’ve still done a service because we’ve educated that student on how the system works—some of the values, some of the traditions, some of the professional ethics. I think that is really important.’’ Ten years ago arguments raged over whether the purpose of ROTC was not antithetical to the avowed purposes of college education. For his part, Ferguson believes that W&L’s ROTC program operates within the University’s overall educational goals. ““We realize that education is primari- ly preparing a student for the decision- making process. We hope we’re preparing these students to step out and lead,’’ says Ferguson. ‘‘We counsel our students con- tinuously. It is a requirement that every semester, the instructors sit down with each student. We strive to foster the same close student-professor relationship that is so crucial to the atmosphere of this University. We think we do belong.”’ And though they may have been drawn to the program for very practical reasons, many of the W&L cadets find that ROTC can complement the other facets of their educational experience. *‘My participation in ROTC hasn’t changed my philosophy at all in the sense that I’m still against killing people,”’ Tomaso says. ‘‘But ROTC has instilled in me a sense of discipline. gt! eae: aw :. a ing am ey " # iss W&L’s ROTC detachment in formation **! think it’s important to note that you don’t necessarily have to be a gung- ho military type to be in ROTC or to derive benefit from it. After all, I’m a member of ROTC and a member of the Frisbee Club at the same time.”’ Lukanuski credits his ROTC ex- perience with improving his classroom work, particularly in the sense of helping him to mature. ‘‘When I attended summer Advanced Camp at Fort Bragg, I was forced to realize that the time is coming, sooner than I might want to admit, when I’ll be out on my own,’’ said Lukanuski. ‘‘There is the tendency in college to take things less seriously because you know you’re still a kid, that the line between student and adult is there. This ex- perience has forced me to cross that line before some of my classmates. And because of that I tend to take my school work more seriously now.’’ Most of the ROTC students look upon the program as one form of ex- tracurricular activity and contend that it does not intrude on their time even on those occasions when they are off on an overnight field training exercise. ‘*T actually look forward to those Overnights once a semester,’’ says Hut- chinson. “‘It is good to get away from the campus occasionally. It doesn’t take up any of my study time. In fact, it might help me organize my time a bit better.’’ Some ROTC students are more active- ly involved than others, taking advantage of the voluntary Ranger program which provides more field training oppor- tunities. Ferguson believes the interest will con- tinue to grow for ROTC and expects the unit to benefit next year when the University’s first women undergraduates arrive. “‘Coeducation will have a very positive effect on ROTC here,”’ says Ferguson. ‘‘Actually, we have been coeducational in a sense for several years since we have a cross enrollment with Lynchburg College, Liberty Baptist Col- lege, Hollins, and Randolph-Macon Woman’s College. We have had several women participate in various aspects of the program. ‘““We are very excited about the pro- spect of women members of ROTC. Across the board a large number of the Army’s female officers come from ROTC.”’ Ferguson is confident the popularity of ROTC will continue to increase and that the W&L detachment will produce more officers in the years ahead. ‘“‘Although I have a quota to produce a certain number of second lieutenants each year, I make only one promise: that I will produce quality lieutenants,”’ Says Ferguson. ‘“That, I think, is the value of ROTC. And I think it js particularly valuable given the quality of the officers Washington and Lee has produced and will undoubtedly continue to produce.”’ oe 7: _ by Jeffery G. Hanna Returning to His Roots John Elrod moves in as Dean of the College Though Einstein, God, and an Iowa State physicist combined to bring John Elrod to Washington and Lee in the first place, something more akin to fate seem- ed to be at work to bring him back. It was in February of 1983 that Elrod paid his first visit to W&L. At the time, he was chairman of the department of philosophy at Iowa State University in Ames. Under a grant from the National En- dowment for the Humanities, Elrod and a high energy physicist on the Iowa State faculty had collaborated on a study of Einstein’s scientific, ethical, and religious views. That study formed the basis for a lecture entitled ‘‘Einstein and God’’ which Elrod was invited to deliver under the auspices of W&L’s Howerton Fund in Religion. Elrod had not set foot on the Washington and Lee campus before he came to lecture. He remembers distinctly that he liked what he found. ‘**‘T guess my reaction was like that of most everyone else who comes here for the first time,’’ recalls Elrod. ‘‘I was awfully impressed with the beauty of the campus and the congeniality of the facul- ty and the quality of the students. I just had a very positive experience.’’ The converse was true as well. Those who had the opportunity to hear Elrod’s lecture or to meet with him during the visit were as impressed with him as he was with the University. Less than nine weeks after Elrod’s lec- ture, William J. Watt announc- first visit and Watt’s announcement seemed providential, to be sure. But there was even more to the timing than was immediately evident. Not long before he became a can- didate at W&L, Elrod had begun to grow restless at Iowa State. For one thing, he and his wife, Mimi, are both Southerners—Georgians, to be precise. They had lived in the Midwest for 15 years and in New York City for six years before that. ‘We had begun to think seriously about coming home to the South,’’ says Elrod, whose soft Georgia accent has managed to survive the years in Iowa. ‘“We both had some very strong attrac- tions to our roots.”’ Those roots were not just geographic, however; they were educational as well. Though he had spent his entire teaching career at Iowa State (a university with about 25,000 students), Elrod had receiv- ed his undergraduate education at South Carolina’s Presbyterian College (a school that currently has an enrollment of 950). He retained vivid memories, positive memories, of his undergraduate ex- perience. And perhaps those memories had, in part at least, led to his increasing frustrations with education in the state university setting. ‘“Though I certainly had a mostly positive experience throughout my years at lowa State, I was frustrated in the sense that I found it extremely difficult to make changes,’’ says Elrod, who had joined the Iowa State faculty in 1971 after earning his Ph.D. in the philosophy of religion from Columbia University. ‘*T found the whole educational enter- prise at Iowa State highly politicized. People were fighting for a piece of the requirement pie,’’ he says. ‘‘I found it very difficult to get anyone to think pedagogically and philosophically about what we ought to be doing. ‘‘For better or worse, I think it is perceived in state universities that the main survival mechanism is students. If you don’t draw students, you just don’t keep going. And that doesn’t create a cooperative atmosphere. There is a tremendous competitiveness for the stu- dent and for the dollar.’’ So it was that when Elrod received a letter from Washington and Lee inform- ing him of the vacant deanship and in- viting his application, he immediately recognized the potential of returning to his roots—the South, on the one hand, and a small liberal arts setting, on the other. ‘“When this opportunity came along I thought maybe if I find myself in an academic environment where departmen- tal lines don’t mean quite as much as they do in a big university and where faculty are accustomed to talking with each other over departmental fences and where there is a lot of interdisciplinary teaching going on, then it might be more possible for faculty to work as a single unit. It might be possible for ed he was stepping down as Dean of the College at Washington and Lee. The search for Watt’s suc- cessor had just begun when someone suggested that the lowa State philosopher who had lec- tured on Einstein and God would be a strong candidate. So John Elrod’s name was quickly added to the list of candidates. Ultimately Elrod’s name wound up at the top of that list. And on August 1, he took over as Dean of the College. The proximity of Elrod’s e¢ my expectations have not been frustrated at all.’’ faculty to sit down in a disinterested way and try to figure out what we ought to do to educate coming generations of students. ‘‘Having been here at Washington and Lee, even for a brief time, my expectations have not been frustrated at all. I do find what I thought I would.”’ x * * In the back of his mind, John Elrod had always thought he might one day teach on the college level. (‘‘I liked the ivory 7 tower character of it,’’ he says.) Fact is, he had intended to head straight in that direction after he graduated from Presbyterian. His plan was to pursue a graduate degree in English literature at Vanderbilt. But the summer before he was to enroll at Vanderbilt, Elrod took a summer job as youth minister of a large Presbyterian church in suburban Atlanta. He never made it to Vanderbilt. Three years later he eed, “I find that students really resonate to [the] understanding of life that is evident in Kierkegaard.’’ them this way and that, and they like the idea of stopping and taking some time to think about what is really important. They like the idea of trying to take control of your life and to choose a direction in which you want to go rather than choosing a direction because your parents want you to do it or because society is pushing this way.”’ When he began teaching at Iowa State 13 years ago, Elrod discovered students were eager was still working at that summer job and found himself being pulled in an altogether different direc- tion, toward the parish ministry. When he finally began his graduate studies in 1965, it was not at Vanderbilt but at Union Theological Seminary in New York. After one semester at Union, he changed directions again, this time merely walking across the street to Col- umbia University and entering the graduate program in an area called philosophy of religion. **T realized at that time that there were issues and questions and problems that I had running around in my head which could only be dealt with by going on into philosophy and theology,’’ Elrod says. During his second year at Columbia, Elrod’s future course took yet another turn when he took a course entitled ‘Kierkegaard and His Contem- poraries’’—a course that examined the people who had influenced 19th-century Danish theologian Soren Kierkegaard, the man many consider the father of existentialism. *‘There was an immediate understand- ing between me and Kierkegaard,’’ says Elrod. ‘‘I knew right then that I was go- ing to spend a lot of time with him.’’ Indeed, he did. Indeed, he has. Today Elrod is generally acknowledged as one of the leading authorities on Kierkegaard. He is the author of two major works on the philosopher—Being and Existence in Kierkegaard’s Pseudonymous Works (1975) and Kierkegaard and Christendom (1981) and is in the process of finishing a third, this one a biography. He has writ- 8 ten numerous articles about Kierkegaard for professional journals. He serves on the international advisory board for a new uniform translation into English of Kierkegaard’s collected works. Though Elrod stops short of saying that he embraces Kierkegaard’s philosophies, he readily confesses that his thinking has been shaped in large measure by 15 years of studying Kierkegaard. ‘*Kierkegaard believed there were three fundamental life orientations: a life lived according to pleasure, a life lived ac- cording to duty, and a life of faith,’’ ex- plains Elrod. ‘‘He believed the most im- portant thing in life was for each in- dividual to choose one of those orienta- tions and not just inadvertently end up in one. ‘*He believed that, in the final analysis, the most important thing that a human being could do is to choose how he or she is going to live their life. And he wrote in such a way as to try to awaken people to these possibilities in life and to encourage them to make a choice.”’ As Elrod notes, the idea of exercising control over your future rather than allowing outside forces to chart the course for you is particularly intriguing for college students. ‘*T find that students really resonate to this understanding of life that is evi- dent in Kierkegaard,’’ he says. ‘‘They are at a point where they sense it is impor- tant that decisions be made and they sense the number of pressures pushing to pursue courses in philosophy, not just Kierkegaard. At first blush it may seem rather odd to find a Kierkegaard authority on the faculty at Iowa State University or to find such a strong philosophy department existing alongside such traditionally strong pro- grams as engineering and veterinary science. Indeed, Elrod recalls that many among those future engineers and veterinarians steered clear of the philosophy classrooms and considered such topics ‘‘little more than fluff.’’ **In the early 1960s many of the large land grant universities were trying to broaden their programs, and that was certainly true at Iowa State,’’ notes Elrod. ‘‘It was a very good time for universities to do that from the stand- point of the humanities because it was a counter-cultural period and this was driv- ing some of our best undergraduates in the direction of the humanities and graduate study. And, of course, they wanted to continue the revolution on a faculty side rather than the student side. ‘‘When I got to Iowa State, the counter-cultural interest of students was still very high so we had good students and lots of students studying both philosophy and religion simply because they were looking for something else. *‘They were looking for a way of life different from the one they were rebelling against on the college campuses across the country. So you had the natural in- clination of students to take these courses.’’ During Elrod’s tenure at Iowa State, including five years as chairman of the philosophy department, the department grew in size and quality. So, too, did Elrod’s frustrations grow. ‘““‘If you get people just voting their political interests, it doesn’t always work out for the best educationally,’’ Elrod observes. ‘‘You have to think more not only in terms of your interests, but in terms of the final product you’re trying to put out—the educated student. That requires you to think about this process in terms much ‘*The role of the dean is to help the faculty do its job.”’ trying to do themselves what they’re teaching the students.”’ None of this should be inter- preted as a doctrine of publish or perish, however. Elrod is quick to observe that Washington and Lee’s stated mission is that of a teaching university. ‘“When we emphasize, as we properly do, that what is distinc- tive about Washington and Lee is the personal attention in- larger than your own very specific interests.”’ xk *& * Were he to write the job description for Dean of the College, John Elrod would make it brief: ‘‘The role of the Dean is to help the faculty do its job,”’ he says. If only the task were as simple as the job description sounds. Elrod makes it plain that his very first assignment upon taking up the deanship at W&L has been to learn how things are done in a small school in general and at Washington and Lee in particular. His own educational process began shortly after he arrived in August and visited each of W&L’s department heads to get a sense of the departments. When classes commenced in September, he started another round of visits, this time to each professor in the College. ‘‘This is learning time. I want to hear how the faculty think things are going. I want to tell each one individually what I think is important,’’ Elrod says. And what exactly is it that John Elrod thinks is important? It is this: the faculty of a university, any university, must be constantly growing professionally. ‘*T think it is the dean’s responsibility to see that they are doing that,’’ he says. ‘*T think it is the dean’s responsibility to make sure the faculty are doing the very best they can do in the classroom, too.’’ Those are the dean’s responsibilities. But how are they achieved? That is what Elrod is striving to determine. ‘*T know how these things are done in a state university; that’s clear as a bell to me,’’ he says. ‘‘At Iowa State, we had fairly elaborate procedures to evaluate a person’s teaching. That included peer evaluations and student evaluations and alumni evaluations. We also evaluated the quality of the faculty member’s research by having experts in their fields look at that work. That’s scary stuff. *‘But the central purpose of evalua- tion is the positive one of helping the faculty members improve. You can’t im- prove unless you’ve got some kind of ob- jective feedback on where you are now and what you might do to make yourself better. Every faculty member can be better.”’ For Elrod, one of the principal ways a teacher can improve is to continue to grow professionally, ‘‘to stay intellectual- ly alive in his or her discipline.”’ An avid tennis player, it is only natural that Elrod uses that sport to il- lustrate his point. ‘‘I don’t think the best tennis teacher is always going to be the person who’s best at the game. Connors and McEnroe may be terrible teachers. We have outstanding researchers who are terrible teachers. But you want anybody who’s teaching you how to play tennis to know how to play the game. They need not play it perfectly or better than anybody else. But they should know how to play it and should be continuing over a period of time to try to refine their own game. ‘‘T want my own children to be taught by faculty members who are, in ways ap- propriate to their abilities and interests, dividual students receive from their instructors, that means you just aren’t going to have the research output and productivity you’re going to have in a research institution,”’ he says. ‘*But you don’t want that. It’s unrealistic and counterproductive to expect that of our faculty here. ‘*At the same time, you don’t want a faculty member who does nothing but meet his classes, either. I think those ex- tremes are disastrous. We need to aim somewhere in-between. But what comes first is being prepared to teach our students well and giving them the atten- tion and the time that they deserve. That, after all, is why they’ve come here, to get the personal attention of a strong faculty.”’ From the time he was first contacted about the vacant deanship at W&L until he actually accepted the position, John Elrod read everything he could find about the University. He read what the University said about itself; he read what others said about the University. Among his conclusions was the strong belief that he could not have come to Washington and Lee at a more exciting time in the University’s history. ‘‘We have at this University outstan- ding resources, an exceptional faculty, unmatched facilities, a strong and loyal alumni body, and an outstanding man at the top in John Wilson,’’ says Elrod. ‘“‘With those elements going for us, I see no reason why Washington and Lee can- not move forward to become one of the most distinguished national liberal arts colleges in the country.’’ - oe A = Be 3 =: ee a t faa 4 Returning alumni, including a busload from the Lynchburg chapter, prepared for the game by listening to some Dixieland jazz. ' z " Pe ere = i fe - — i . R io : : : a nm ee el ts as ge a ea a ee # a e Re 4 ui TT The Alumni Association’s pre-game picnic drew a good crowd of returning alumni prior to the Generals’ contest with Hampden-Sydney. even been born when the 1934 team captured its champion- ship. That did not diminish their appreciation of the achieve- ment. And the crowd demonstrated its appreciation with a long, loud ovation that provided an electric moment when the returning players were introduced at halftime. The returning players were special guests at a banquet in their honor that evening and had plenty of opportunity to swap stories. All the salutes to the ’34 team did not end there, however. One member of that 1934 team who could not be present for the festivities was Joe Arnold of Versailles, Ky. But Arnold did write a letter to his returning teammates and told them of a yearling thoroughbred colt he owns. ‘‘If the colt appears to have real quality,’’ wrote Arnold, ‘‘I will name him ’34 Champs.”’ In addition to the reunion of the 1934 team, the weekend’s Homecoming activities featured a pre-game picnic sponsored by the Alumni Association. The 1984 Homecoming Queen was Kathleen Plante, a junior at Hollins College who is attending W&L this fall under the Seven-College Exchange program. She was spon- sored by Pi Kappa Alpha. Another major event over Homecoming weekend was a sneak preview of the University’s new Student Pavilion. Although considerable work remained on the structure, it received a baptism of fire when a crowd estimated at 2,200 jammed the facility on Friday evening to hear a concert by The Spinners. Two days later the Homecoming festivities end- ed with another Pavilion concert, featuring Eight to the Bar. . ie he " 4 ee” iki ee ae i iF Chemistry professor Keith Shillington introduces 1984 Homecoming Queen Kathleen Plante, a W&L exchange student from Hollins College. cS é a P a 3 fs fd = a4 ces f= . = a4 ‘dl Ae Be 3 \¢) Even though construction was not yet complete, the new Student Pavilion was put to good use during Homecoming Weekend when the Spinners enter- tained a crowd estimated at 2,200. 1] The Osmosis Method Of Teaching Acting Irish Professional Actor Jarlath Conroy Spends a Month at W&L 12 When the Washington and Lee University Theatre presented Sean O’Casey’s Juno and the Paycock as its first production of the 1984-85 season, it was quite apparent that the actors and actresses had worked overtime to perfect their Irish accents. For at least one of the cast members, however, the accent came quite naturally. That was understandable. The actor in question, Jarlath Conroy, was born in County Galway, Ireland. His accent is genuine. And so is his acting. Conroy is a professional actor with some impressive Broadway and film credits. He spent the month of October on the Washington and Lee campus as the Glasgow Actor-in-Residence. In addi- tion to teaching an acting class and lec- turing to several other classes, Conroy played the lead role of Captain Boyle in Juno and the Paycock. For his fellow cast members, Con- roy’s very presence on the stage provided an invaluable learning experience. **Playing opposite Jarlath is akin to playing tennis against an opponent who is better than you are—you aren’t going to win the match, but you’re going to learn some things and you’re going to become a better player, or actor in this case,”’ said W&L drama professor Albert C. Gordon, who shared several of the play’s most memorable scenes with Conroy. The learning experience worked both ways, according to Conroy. ‘‘There is a kind of selfish reason in my coming here as an actor-in- residence,’’ Conroy explained. ‘‘I like to learn, too. I think just in doing my work and relating to other people that I learn a great deal. **For instance, I learn about what I’m capable of in terms of dealing with myself, with my own irritations, in a situation like this. On another level I learn what I can do in a performance, what depends on me, whether I can come up with it or not.’’ Though Conroy instructed W&L students twice a week in a formal acting class, he agreed that much of the best in- struction took place on the stage, both in rehearsals and performances. Conroy presents an O’Casey reading. “In terms of what I like to achieve in relation to the people I’m working with, I like to set a reasonable example without being too severe about it. I think that is the way the students learn. I think they learn from osmosis in this situation where there is an artist in residence,”’ said Conroy. **A lot of the work I’m here to do was done during the rehearsal for the play. It’s in that process that one learns. Of course, one learns still more in the performance situation. That is a new level, and there are new situations.’’ Conroy admitted that leaving the Broadway stage and its professionalism for a university theatre can sometimes be frustrating. ‘‘But to me professionalism has got to do with a mental attitude. People can be professional in this situation just as peo- ple can be totally amateurish in the so- called professional situation,’’ he said. “‘Obviously, if one finds people who take their work seriously, it’s an added bonus. Certainly the people here approached this production with quite a degree of professionalism. ‘I would expect to find that degree of professionalism, though, since any theatre department that goes so far as to invite in a guest artist has probably achieved a level of discipline and approach to the craft already.’’ ‘‘People can be professional in this situation just as people can be totally amateurish in the so-called professional situation. ’”’ By the time Juno and the Paycock opened in late October, the cast had had four weeks of rehearsals. That, said Con- roy, was time enough to create a first- rate production. ‘‘T have seen a group of people come together who basically did not know each other and do a play in two weeks,”’ he said. “‘It really depends upon the people working and what they want to bring to it and what allowances they’re prepared to make for each other’s personalities. Usually in a short period of time you don’t have the opportunity to work out personality differences, so if there is a lit- tle bit of give all around on that level, then people can get on with the work.’’ For their part, the cast members found Conroy more than willing to make adjustments to the situation. ‘‘] never saw any sign of temper, and he was never condescending in any shape or form to the rest of us,’’ said Helena Roller, manager of the W&L Book Store who played Juno opposite Conroy’s Cap- tain Boyle. ‘“‘It was an incredible experience for me. Jarlath is such a master, very pa- tient, very meticulous.”’ W&L junior Chris Carmouche of Gary, Ind., was Conroy’s understudy for Juno and the Paycock. Carmouche had the opportunity to take over the role of Captain Boyle for a special production of the play on Parents’ Weekend after Con- roy had left. ‘‘My interpretation of the role was somewhat different from his, but it was unquestionably a great help for me to watch Jarlath on the stage,’’ said Car- mouche. ‘‘Not only did I learn by watch- ing the things he did during rehearsals, but just being around him gave me a sense of the professional attitude that an actor must possess.”’ According to Gordon, Conroy was the first visiting actor-in-residence for the University Theatre although in years past the theatre has had the benefit of visiting directors and was also host to a troupe of Polish mimes. ‘‘Other college theatres take advan- tage of this opportunity on a fairly regular basis,’’ said Gordon. ‘‘It is often Conroy as Captain Boyle (right) rehearses a scene from Juno and the Paycock with W&L drama ie Ht professor Albert C. Gordon (center) and chemistry professor Keith Shillington. difficult to arrange because of scheduling and satisfying conditions of the actors’ union. ‘“We were especially grateful that the Glasgow Endowment Fund could use its resources to bring Jarlath here.’’ Conroy’s visit was, in large measure, a product of his long-standing relation- ship with Joseph Martinez, assistant pro- fessor of drama at W&L. Conroy and Martinez, who directed Juno and the Paycock, were classmates at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts in London. ‘*Although Joseph and I have never worked together, we have always kept in touch with each other and with each other’s professional progress,”’ said Conroy. For Conroy, that progress has meant parts in The Elephant Man, both on Broadway and on national television, as well as a role in the movie Heaven’s Gate. And though his Irish accent clearly came in handy for a Sean O’Casey play such as Juno and the Paycock, Conroy does admit that the Irish brogue can oc- casionally be a drawback in his career. “‘In New York I have become typecast as an Irish actor. I’m working to get away from that,’’ he explained. ‘‘There are some casting people who want to depart from that while there are others who will not consider you for anything else. “IT personally find it almost racial. I don’t want to be penalized for it. There are a lot of other very good plays out there that are not just Irish.’’ 13 Photo by Scott Ferrell **The lectures were excellent, the discussions stimulating, and the food altogether too delicious. The gracious adaptation of the Alumni College to so many people of diverse personality and backgrounds is remarkable.’’ So enthused one of the 179 alumni, spouses, and children who attended the three W&L Alumni Colleges in 1984. They came from far and wide— California, Connecticut, Washington (state), Texas, Louisiana, Iowa, Colorado—to enjoy week-long seminars on topics as diverse as ‘‘Society and the Media,”’ ‘‘Elizabethan England,’’ and ‘Scientific Frontiers.’” And many were back for their second or third Alumni College session. One couple, Robert and Giddy Dyer of Chicago, attended all three 1984 programs. How good can the food be? ‘**The Alumni College has really caught on at W&L,”’ says Rob Fure, director of summer programs, ‘‘and we’re delighted by the enthusiasm of our alumni and faculty alike. It’s gratifying to see people from all walks of life com- ing together so happily over books and issues. The wisdom, curiosity, and good humor of our participants are truly in- spiring. They’ve helped to make our sum- mer campus a lively, busy place.’’ Highlights of Alumni College ’84 in- cluded guest appearances by NBC’s Roger Mudd, Washington correspondent Charles McDowell, Hollywood’s Stan Kamen, and Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Howard Nemerov. Participants also en- joyed films, plays, and musical perform- ances in addition to lectures by the facul- ty on readings ranging from Shakespeare to Lewis Thomas. ‘‘But the real highlight of the Alumni College experience,’’ says Tom Nye, head of the biology depart- ment and director of last summer’s ‘*Scientific Frontiers,’ ‘‘has been and con- tinues to be the participants themselves. Their receptiveness to new ideas and will- ingness to share their own thoughts and experiences make the Alumni College not simply another teaching experience but a learning experience for all.’’ Fure reports that since the Alumni College’s inaugural session in 1982 enroll- ment has tripled. ‘‘Already we’re looking ahead to next summer. The faculty, again a mixture of junior and senior professors, have begun meeting to plan another fine series of programs. We expect to have our 1985 Alumni College brochure in the mail to all alumni and parents of current students in early February.”’ The first of the 1985 Alumni College 14 ‘Wishing You Were Here’ And You Can Be— For Alumni Colleges ’85 (June 30-July 6) will be entitled ‘‘Great Writers, Etc.” Participants will have an opportunity to take a week-long course on either Mark Twain, recent Latin American Nobel Laureate Gabriel Garcia Marquez, or selected short works by three Russian novelists. Alumni collegians will also select a second course on either Baroque music, Grecian vases, or great painters. Those wishing to spend their afternoons on campus will be able to at- tend workshops in the W&L art studio or the Reeves Center for Research and Ex- hibition of Porcelain and Paintings. Alumni College No. 2 will focus on modern health care, its abundant prom- ises and problems. ‘‘Society and Health’’ (July 7-13) will examine several of the difficult issues posed by recent advances in medical technology. Joining Tom Nye as faculty for the program will be Louis W. Hodges, professor of religion and director of W&L’s Society and the Pro- fessions, and Leonard E. Jarrard, head of the psychology department and a widely published authority on brain research. “‘Classical Athens’’ (July 14-20), with Professors Harrison J. Pemberton, I. Taylor Sanders, and Herman W. Taylor, will conclude the three consecutive weeks of Alumni Colleges in 1985. Following a week-long introduction to the history and culture of ancient Greece next summer, participants will have the opportunity to join the faculty for a tour of Greece in 1986. Following up on last summer’s first international program, the ‘‘Elizabethan England’’ faculty have arranged an itinerary and reserved tours, theatre, and first-class accommodations for W&L’s in- augural Alumni College Abroad session (August 6-23). Experienced English scholar-travelers, Professors John M. Evans, Taylor Sanders, and Pamela H. Simpson, expect to join 40 participants for a 16-day excursion to London, Strat- ford, Oxford, and several Elizabethan houses. Participants in the 1984 program will have first crack at the limited number of available spaces. ““Two of the 1985 programs will be quite new experiences for us,’’ says Fure. “‘The Alumni College Abroad, which we’re very excited about, and the ‘Great Writers, Etc.’ program, which will give us a chance to involve more W&L faculty than ever before, are important innova- tions. We are also adopting a consecutive week schedule to accommodate those who want to attend more than one pro- gram. And 1985 will bring our first graduating class of Alumni College seniors—participants for four consecutive years. After that it’s graduate school, I guess.”’ Asked if he thinks the Alumni College will soon outgrow its size, Fure responds, ‘‘We already have more facul- ty eager to teach in the Alumni College than we can employ. We’ll continue to limit our enrollment to 75 adults per ses- sion in order to assure the personal atten- tion that is, after all, essential to the W&L experience. We won’t get crowded, just busier. ‘“We do hope more families will bring their children in 1985. We have an ex- cellent junior program that keeps the children from six to 16 happily occupied each day and evening. Young or old, everyone qualifies for admission to the W&L Alumni College. And everyone benefits. It’s a good way for children to see W&L for the first time and for adults to keep us on our toes.”’’ The Alumni College lectures provide a stimulating way to start the day. Hollywood agent Stan Kamen, ’49, ae Ed ae pres Junior program participants enjoyed the lake at Skylark on the Blue Ridge Parkway. And a good time was had by all. 15 by Mark Mandel Sports Information Director Dick Miller Captures No. 200 Cross Country Wins ODAC Title, Another Winning Season in Football 16 When long-time Washington and Lee cross country coach Dick Miller earned his 200th career victory midway through the season, there was little fanfare to herald his achievement. It seems cross country coaches, like cross country run- ners, get little attention outside their cir- cle of friends. Three weeks later, though, Miller received his just due. After he guided the Generals to a 14-0 regular season record and the championship of the Old Domin- ion Athletic Conference his colleagues selected him as ODAC’s Coach of the Year for the second time in three years. ‘‘I am flattered by the award and very proud of the 200 wins, but I must give the credit to the runners I’ve been privileged to coach,’’ says Miller, who has been coaching the harriers for 33 years. **Success in cross country stems from individual motivation. There is little spec- tator interest and a coach sees almost nothing of what the runners do out on the course in meets and in practice. Therefore, the runners must motivate themselves and work hard daily. They must discipline their minds and bodies. I’ve been fortunate enough to coach in- dividuals who have had that discipline. I’m very proud of them.”’ Miller is equally proud of the way his runners perform in the classroom and, eventually, in the business world. He credits their success to the same deter- mination they exhibited on the cross country trails. ‘Almost all of my runners have been successful students and went on to be productive people in their communities,”’ he says. ‘‘I cannot attribute it solely to their cross country experience, but I believe that while competing as runners they learned some valuable lessons. In ~ " Cross country coach ag Dick Miller cross country you dont have teammates to support you if you make a mistake. You are responsible for the way you finish as an individual, which is what it’s like in the real world, to a large degree.’’ Having reached the 200-win plateau, Miller has another major assignment to tackle—starting W&L’s women’s cross country program. ‘‘I don’t know what to expect, but if the women who enter next fall want to run they have a place on our team. It may be difficult to find team competition because few schools have women’s teams, but they will be given every Opportunity to compete,’’ says Miller. Miller is bound to make the athletic experience of Washington and Lee’s undergraduate women as rewarding as he has for the men over the past 33 years. Miller was head wrestling coach for 19 years and spent brief stints as head coach of the track and tennis teams. Collective- ly, he has coached W&L athletes in more than 500 contests, winning over 300 of those. He is also associate athletic director. Miller has no regrets, just fond memories. ‘‘I mostly remember in- dividuals, not teams. I’ve had the oppor- tunity to coach some interesting in- dividuals. I’ve had success but mostly a lot of fun. I’m very happy with what I am doing. W&L has given me the ver- satility and freedom to achieve my goals.’’ His goal this year was to win the ODAC Championship and take his team to the national championship in Delaware, Ohio, on Nov. 17. Thus far he has reached his first goal, when W&L literally ran away with the team conference title. The Generals, led by junior Eddie Goundry and senior Frank Pittman, who finished second and third respectively, All-ODAC honors. xk ke * and his were not the only - DuBose, Hipp Elected New Trustees Trustees Clarke, Leggett, Philpott Retire from the Board Washington and Lee has announced the election of two new members to its Board of Trustees. Beverly M. (Bo) DuBose III, ’62, of Atlanta, Ga., and W. Hayne Hipp, ’62, of Greenville, S.C., were elected to six- year terms on the Board, effective January 1, 1985. The election of DuBose and Hipp came during the fall meeting of the Trustees in Lexington. At the same meeting three Trustees who retired from the Board were recognized for their outstanding service to the University and were elected to emeritus status. The three are T. Hal Clarke, ’38, of Atlanta; H. Gordon Leggett Jr., ’54, of Lynchburg; and James A. Philpott, ’45, of Lex- ington, N.C. In other action, the Board elected James M. Ballengee of Radford, Pa., to another three-year term as Rector. DuBose is a founding partner of the DuBose-Jones Company, a real estate firm in Atlanta. He received his bachelor of science degree in commerce from Washington and Lee in 1962. While at W&L, he was president of the Commerce Fraternity, president of Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity, and vice-president of the senior class. He was elected to Beta Gam- ma Sigma, the honor fraternity in business administration. Following his graduation, DuBose at- tended Navy Officer Candidate School in Newport, R. I. He served on active duty with the Navy from 1962 to 1965, leaving with the rank of lieutenant. He was na- tional field sales manager for the Atlanta Stove Works from 1965 until 1977 when he and W&L classmate Louis L. Jones III, °62, formed the DuBose-Jones Company. He is also president of Waterford, a company involved in the recruitment of executives for the banking industry. He is on the board of Seydel International, is a member of the Piedmont Driving Club, and is president of the Benedicts. Active as an alumnus of the Universi- ty, he has served as president of W&L’s Atlanta Alumni Chapter and was one of the founders of the annual Lee Day Par- 18 Beverly M. DuBose IIT Retiring Trustees T. Hal Clarke (second from left) and H. Gordon Leggett Jr. (third from left) were recognized during the Board’s fall meeting in Lexington. Trustees Jerry South (left) and A. Christian Compton presented silver trays to Clarke and Leggett. Retiring Trustee James A. Philpott was not present at the meeting. ty for Atlanta area alumni of W&L. He and his wife, Eileen, live in Atlan- ta. He is the father of three children. Hipp is president of the Liberty Cor- poration, the parent organization of Liberty Life Insurance and Cosmos Broadcasting. Headquartered in Green- ville, the Liberty Corporation has Operating units in 41 states. He earned his bachelor of arts degree in English from W&L. He also holds an M.B.A. degree from the Wharton Graduate School of Business at the University of Pennsylvania and completed additional studies at the Graduate School of Business at Harvard University. He serves as a director of South Carolina National Bank, Dan River, Inc., and South Carolina Electric & Gas Co. He serves as vice chairman of the Na- tional Urban League and as incoming chairman of the Greenville Chamber of Commerce. In addition, he serves on the governing boards of the National Alliance of Business (Southeast), South Carolina Foundation of Independent Col- leges, Greenville YMCA, and Episcopal High School in Alexandria, Va. Hipp began his professional career in 1965 with Metropolitan Life Insurance in San Francisco and joined Liberty Life in 1969. He became the Chief Executive Of- ficer of the Liberty Corporation in 1978. He and his wife, Anna Kate Reid Hipp, live in Greenville with their three children. The University Report 1983-84 19 by President John D. Wilson Muchas Gracias from the President 20 I spent a recent evening with the annual Report of the Registrar (1983). Some would find it rather dull reading, but I confess a fascination with tables of statistics, recording course by course, and state by state, and grade by grade, where our students come from and what they do once they arrive—that is, what they do in the classroom! I am, of course, aware that nothing so inadequately reflects the real nature of learning than a stark recital of the percentage of students taking English 101 who received a grade of B-. But if you look beneath the statistics, a stronger framework can be discerned. I mean by this that the educational values of Washington and Lee can be discovered, not only in our Trustee Statement of Institutional Purpose, but also in the registrar’s homely account of what we teach and to whom, term by term, in the course of the academic year. He records, for exam- ple, that in the Fall Term of 1983, approximately 83 percent of the courses taught at Washington and Lee were taught in sections of 25 or fewer students. Indeed fully half of our courses were taught in sections of 15 or fewer, and these percentages do not take into account the 27 supervised in- dependent study courses taught in that same term. What is to be made of these statistics? What they reveal is a settled, consistent theory of pedagogy. They eloquently convey the Faculty’s con- viction that truly exceptional teaching and learning can only take place when the scale is carefully controlled, when anonymity is impossible, when intellectual discourse can assume the shape of dialogue or conversation and not simply the uninterrupted monologue of a distant lecturer. They reveal the Faculty’s conviction that human development is idiosyncratic; it has its own peculiar pace and admits of very different impediments from one stu- dent to the next. Teaching in human scale permits the skilled instructor to know what is happening in every seat in the seminar room; permits the assignment of much critical writing which can, in turn, be criticized: per- mits a small group to leap quickly past principles already understood, pro- cedures already mastered. These things cannot be taken lightly. They are translations from a carefully controlled budget, a budget which, nonetheless, turns upon the requirements of a settled pedagogy. Let me explain it this way: A) The Faculty approve changes in degree requirements calling for a higher level of foreign language study; B) Enrollments in Spanish rise by 30 percent; C) The options in response to this phenomenon are: 1) offer the same number of Spanish sections as before with an average enrollment of 15 and compel some students who wish to study Spanish to take Russian instead; 2) offer the same number of Spanish sections as before but allow the average enrollment to rise to 20, thus changing the conversaticnal nature of the course. 3) offer the necessary sections of Spanish, maintaining both class size and student choice even though it means adding a new position in Romance languages. We elect the third option at Washington and Lee because it is the cor- rect one but also because we have been given the liberty to do so by the generosity of our alumni, parents, and friends. The Annual Fund makes exactly this kind of difference in our lives and in our work. Members of the Washington and Lee family know this well enough, for they experienc- ed it firsthand when they were here. More importantly, they continue to act upon that knowledge by giving generously each year to our educational budget through the Annual Fund. We are all immensely grateful, faculty and students alike—especially those of us enrolled in Spanish this year! Muchas Gracias! TOTAL NEW GIFT SUPPORT FOR 1983-84 The figures below represent cash only for the 1983-84 Annual Fund. Pledges, in addi- tion to cash and securities, are included for all other gifts. 1. BY SOURCE Current* Alumni (incl. Annual Fund) $1,469,898 Parents 118,061 Friends 226,878 Foundations 130,747 Business Ziawer: Remainder Value of Deferred —-— Gifts (Pooled Income Fund, Unitrusts, Annuity Trusts) sillelg bbc A ah Totals $2,218,611 ll. BY PURPOSE For annual operating expenses (current gifts) Annual Fund Virginia Foundation for Independent Colleges Other Current Gifts, unrestricted and restricted For Endowment (capital gifts) Student Aid General & Special Endowment For Plant Fund (capital gifts) General Building Restoration GRAND TOTAL Capital* * $ 621,736 275 150,518 73,019 1,173,120 $2,173,709 1,354,311 174,141 690,159 488,596 1,613,283 330 71,500 Total $2,091,634 118,336 377,396 285,788 346,046 1,173,120 $4,392,320 2,218,611 2,101,879 71,830 $4,392,320 “Current gifts are completely expended during the academic year. **Capital gifts are designated as additions to endowment and physical plant. ***Includes $174,141 in gifts from business firms and friends through the Virginia Founda- tion for Independent Colleges. GIFT SUPPORT 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 record- ed in previous years. Year Current 1979-80 $1,657,763 1980-81 1 Fe1,443 1981-82 2,180,185 1982-83 2,293,858 1983-84 2,210,117 Capital $2,813,067 3,946,933 5,639,118 2,458,601 3,519,657 Total $4,470,830 5,668,044 7,819,303 4,752,459 5,729,774 B. Total alumni support during the past five years. Cash only (no pledges) as reported to the Council for Financial Aid to Education. Year Current 1979-80 1,093,643 1980-81 1,219,384 1981-82 1,584,475 1982-83 1,631,948 1983-84 1,467,853 Capital 2,303,575 2,384,378 3,355,448 1,113,370 1,866,365 Total 3,397,218 3,603,762 4,939,923 2,745,318 3,334,218 C. Alumni support for current operations per student (annual fund plus other current gifts). $644 per student 746 per student 944 per student 1979-80 1,698 students 1980-81 1,634 students 1981-82 1,679 students 1982-83 1,714 students 1983-84 1,719 students 952 per 853 per student student 21 Historic High for Deferred Giving Programs Washington and Lee’s ever-expanding program of deferred giving reached a major plateau during the 1983-84 academic year when nine alumni and one friend of the University made gifts which totaled more than $1 million—the highest total of such gifts in W&L’s history. S L Kopald, ’43, chairman of the Board of Trustees’ Planning and Development Committee, explained that the value of those defer- red gifts was $1,173,120, a figure representing the total tax deduc- tions available to the donors. That is the standard for measuring deferred gifts used by all philanthropically-supported institutions. The combined market value of the gifts to W&L was $2,595,569. Unlike outright gifts, which are measured by their market or cash values, deferred gifts are benefactions which allow donors, or their named beneficiaries, to retain lifetime incomes based on the donated assets. Because the assets are not given over for the school’s exclusive use during the donors’ lifetimes, or the beneficiaries’ lifetimes, the actuarial value of the gifts (rather than the full asset or cash values) determine income tax deductions. But assets approximating $2.5 million will some day benefit Washington and Lee—by adding to en- dowment, by creating endowed scholarship funds, or through some other purposes stipulated by the donors. Among the eventual uses designated by donors during 1983-84 are: e An endowment for an undergraduate scholarship in honor of Dr. Charles V. Amole, ’29. Future Amole Scholars will be students who possess high traits of character and who have records of outstanding academic achievement. ¢ An endowment creating the Esmarch S. and Sara T. Gilreath Endowment for Chemistry to support scholarships, lectureships, and other urgent needs of the department of chemistry. ¢ The establishment of an endowed scholarship in honor of James Lewis Howe Sr., 718, and in honor of James Lewis Howe AF imi 8 ik and IV. Howe Scholars are to be students of notable achievement who require financial assistance in order to attend Washington and Lee. ¢ An endowed scholarship in honor of Russell W. Ingram Jr., ’45, to be awarded with preference to deserving students from high schools in the Hollywood and Fort Lauderdale, Fla., areas. e The creation of an endowed scholarship in honor of Earl T. Jones, *30. Qualified students from the state of North Carolina will be eligible to become Jones Scholars. e A special University Fund in honor of James Bland Martin, "31L, and the late Christine Hale Martin. Mrs. Martin was a Trustee of the University from 1978 to 1983. e Three other University Funds similar to the Martin Fund will be created in honor of Clyde Nixon Allen, ’25, William L. Webster, 712, and Carroll B. Wiltshire, ’13. 22 ~@ Of the $1,173,120 in combined actuarial values, six unitrusts amounted to $796,377; two annuity trusts totaled $159,157; and, two pooled income fund gifts equalled $217,586. *‘More and more alumni and friends are realizing that they can substantially benefit Washington and Lee and, at the same time, engage in helpful tax and financial planning for their families by making income-retained deferred gifts for the University,’’ noted William C. Washburn, associate director of development for deferred giving. Washburn added that a special publication Non Incautus Futuri, describes a variety of beneficial income-retained giving methods available to those who would like to invest, through gifts, in Washington and Lee’s future. That publication is available from the Office of University Development, Washington and Lee University, Lexington, Virginia 24450. Milburn K. Noell, also an associate director of development for deferred giving, observed that many alumni wish to create family memorials, scholarships, and the like. Said Noell: ‘‘These alumni often find that they can assure their objectives by making deferred gifts while enjoying important immediate income tax deductions plus lifetime incomes.’’ Including last year’s historic deferred giving activity, Washington and Lee has had 19 unitrusts, six annuity trusts, and 14 pooled income fund gifts created for the University’s benefit. The approximate total acturial value of these 39 deferred gifts is in excess of $9 million. Non Incautus Futuri: A Guide to Participation in the Future of Washington and Lee University is available from the Office of University Development. The Robert E. Lee Associates The Board of Trustees established the Robert E. Lee Associates in 1967 to identify and recognize leadership in sup- port of the University’s educational program through the An- nual Fund. Alumni and friends are cordially invited to join this fellowship. Qualification for membership: An alumnus, parent, or friend may join the Robert E. Lee Associates by contributing $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 Mrs. William E. Allaun P Ethan Allen ’31L James C. Ambler ’18 Frank S. Anderson Jr. ’70 Thomas D. Anderson ’34L Earle T. Andrews ’25 Billy V. Ayers °40 Lee K. Bailey P James M. Ballengee ’48L Richard S. Barnett Jr. ’27 Arthur E. W. Barrett Jr. 55 Frederick Bartenstein Jr. 39, ’41L Edgar A. Basse Jr. '39 Upton Beall ’51 F. Fox Benton Jr. ’60 Richard H. Berry '57 Dr. William J. Berry ’47 Joseph E. Birnie ’27 Harry L. Bowman ’36 Edgar M. Boyd ’42 Thomas B. Branch Ill 58, ’60L Irving B. Bricken ’33 Thomas H. Broadus ’25 Dr. A. Compton Broders Jr. ’38 Frank C. Brooks ’46 Frank C. Brooks Jr. ’71 L. Palmer Brown ’30 Robert G. Brown '49 Russell G. Browning '42 W. P. Buckthal P Ralph R. Burchenal '54 Martin P. Burks Ill ’32L William O. Burtner °17, '21L J. Stewart Buxton '36 Cadaver F Mrs. Alma T. Camp P Dr. & Mrs. Merton E. Carver F Charles J. Cella ’58 Benjamin L. Chapman ’64 Charles F. Clarke Jr. ’38 Thomas Hal Clarke ’38L William N. Clements II '50 Percy Cohen '28 James B. Cone ’61 Noel P. Copen ’57L Dr. George B. Craddock '30 Rogers L. Crain ’75 Ralph A. Cusick Jr. ’56 H. Tyndall Dickinson ’39, ’41L Rush S. Dickson Family Foundation, Inc. P Harold R. Dobbs ’28 Ben R. Downing Jr. P E. Waller Dudley °43, ’47L Mr. & Mrs. Lynn D. Durham P Joseph F. Ellis Jr. ’43 E. Stewart Epley ’49 John S. Fangboner P James D. Farquhar '63 D. Blair Favrot P Benjamin F. Fiery ‘13 24 Robert N. Fishburn 755 Edwin J. Foltz ’40L William F. Ford ’61L Mr. & Mrs. William B. Fortune P John G. Fox ’44, ’49L Virgil L. Frantz ’28 Thomas C. Frost Jr. ’50 C. Thomas Fuller ’42 Robert A. Fulwiler Jr. ’25 Fred O. Funkhouser ’34 William J. Garrity P John Gately ’46 Claiborne W. Gooch Ill ’50 Harry G. Goodheart Ill ‘66 Floyd D. Gottwald Jr. P William B. Graham P Gerard E. Grashorn ’30 Bernard C. Grigsby Il ’72 Gaylord C. Hall Ill 67 Houston H. Harte ’50 Mrs. Oliver H. Havens P Robert E. Hill ’40 Douglas H. Hunt ’75 Robert E. R. Huntley 50, °57L Herbert G. Jahncke ’30 Raleigh M. Jenkins '24 David T. Johnson P H. Reed Johnston ’28 William R. Johnston ’61 Earl T. Jones '30 Stanley A. Kamen ’49L Dr. Samuel Kampf P Joseph S. Keelty 44 William H. Keland ’41 Rt. Rev. Christoph Keller Jr. ’39 Ralph C. Kemp P W. Martin Kempe P Edward W. King '49 S L Kopald Ur. ’43 Eugene M. Kramer '40 Joseph L. Lanier Sr. ’27 William E. Latture ’49 Leroy M. Lee Jr. ’33 H. Gordon Leggett '54 Charles R. Lemon ’49 William J. Lemon ’55, ’59L Sydney Lewis ’40 Gerald M. Lively ’38 Hon. Charles E. Long ur. ’32 Joseph T. Lykes Jr. ’41 John M. McCardell ’37 Alfred L. McCarthy ’23L Lawrence L. McCarthy '29 Samuel P. McChesney ur. ’38 James W. McClintock III 53 Joseph B. McCutcheon ’51 Lewis A. McMurran Jr. ’36 Robert H. Mann Jr. 55, ’57L J. Hardin Marion ’55, ’58L Frank Markoe Jr. ’45 Hon. Jack G. Marks ’32 John F. Marshall Jr. ’65 Everett Martin ’37 James Bland Martin ’31L Oliver M. Mendell ’50 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 ac- complish this result. Thus, a donor may fulfill this require- ment 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 1983-84. Mrs. Cornelius W. Middleton F Edgar B. Miller ’31 Houston M. Minniece ’31 Julian B. Mohr ’52 James P. Morefield ’52L Edwin A. Morris '26 T. J. Morrison Jr. ’29 John E. Neill ’38 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 Walter B. Potter ’48 Hon. Lewis F. Powell Jr. 29, ’31L Donald H. Putnam Jr. ’44 Lee A. Putney ‘53 W. Bryce Rea ur. 39, ’41L William M. Read ’40 William E. Reid P Mrs. Dorothy B. Rich F Patterson H. Robertson '65 Robert W. Root ’42 Charles S. Rowe ’45 Josiah P. Rowe Ill ’48 Mr. & Mrs. A. T. Sanders P John E. Scheifly ’48L |. M. Scott ’37L Richard T. Scruggs P Charles Shapiro P 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 III ’37 John W. Stackhouse ‘55 John M. Stemmons ’31 Guy T. Steuart Il 53 Charles C. Stieff Il ’45 Robert L. Telford ’22 Calvert Thomas '38 Dr. John N. Thomas ’24 J. Thomas Touchton ’60 Everett Tucker Jr. 34 Solon B. Turman F Richard H. Turrell ’49 John H. Van Amburgh P M. Theodore Van Leer ’51 David N. Walker ’38 Robert C. Walker ’38 Jonathan W. Warner 41 W. Emory Waters Jr. 68 John F. Watlington Jr. ’33 Herbert M. Weed ’42 David S. Weinberg ‘55 J. Albert Weinberg '31 Manuel M. Weinberg '31L William E. Whaley Jr. ’40 Walter H. Wilcox ’29 Ernest Williams Il ’38 P. B. Winfree Ill '59 William P. Woodley ’28L Herbert M. Woodward ’41 Thomas L. Woodward Jr. ’65 Frank C. Young '66 George M. Young '54 William K. Young ‘58 3 Anonymous Members Lee Associates Edward B. Addison °45 Peter A. Agelasto Ill '62 Dr. & Mrs. Bobby R. Alford P A. Lewis Allen '58 Ethan Allen ’31L James C. Ambler °18 William P. Ames Jr. ’41 Frank S. Anderson Jr. ’70 Earle T. Andrews ’25 James B. Andrews 54 C. Dubose Ausley '59 Billy V. Ayers ’40 Lee K. Bailey P W. D. Bain Jr. ’49L Seth N. Baker ’38 W. Nat Baker '67 William H. Baldock III 739 James M. Ballengee ’48L Norwood E. Band '34 Virginius J. Barnett ’30 Arthur E. W. Barrett Jr. °55 William F. Barron Jr. ’52 Frederick Bartenstein Jr. ’39, ’41L Edgar A. Basse Jr. ’39 Dr. Ralph W. Baucum Jr. ’58 Andrew H. Baur Jr. '37 Allein Beall ’18 Upton Beall ’51 William G. Bean Jr. ’51 Clyde S. Bear ’29 F. Fox Benton Jr. '60 Richard H. Berry '57 T. Anthony Bewley ’70 Howard M. Bing ’63 Alfred T. Bishop Jr. '41 C. Edward Blair ’40 Joseph J. Blake Jr. '72 T. Talbott Bond °51 A. Lea Booth ’40 William M. Bowen ’61 Harry L. Bowman ’36 Edgar M. Boyd 42 Thomas B. Branch Ill 58, ’6OL Thomas H. Broadus ur. ’59 Charles D. Broll 59, ’62L Frank C. Brooks ’46 Frank C. Brooks ur. ’71 L. Palmer Brown ’30 William E. Brown ’30 Russell G. Browning '42 Thomas B. Bryant Ill ’59, ’61L W. P. Buckthal P Joseph R. Burkart '64 Dr. J. Gillum Burke ’69 Martin P. Burks Ill ’32L William O. Burtner 17, ’214L Dr. Calvin T. Burton ’25 J. Stewart Buxton ’36 Cadaver F John R. Calvert '54 Mrs. Alma T. Camp P George W. Campbell Jr. P C. Howard Capito 68 John F. Carrere Jr. ’69 Leigh Carter ’49 Robert S. Cartmill P Frederick A. Casto ’65L Charles J. Cella 58 Benjamin L. Chapman '64 John H. Cheatham Jr. ’46 J. Donald Childress ’70 Dr. L. Glenn Christie Jr. 53 Hon. Robert E. Clapp Jr. ’30 John K. Clark ’33 Charles F. Clarke Jr. 38 Thomas Hal Clarke ’38L William N. Clements II ’50 Malcolm A. Clinger Jr. ’58 John A. Cocklereece '76, '79L Percy Cohen ’28 James B. Cone ’61 Noel P. Copen ’57L William E. Cornelius ’55 T. Grantham Couch ’62 William J. Cox '17 Dr. George B. Craddock ’30 Rogers L. Crain ’75 Joseph L. Craycroft Jr. ’59 J. Robert Cross ’54 Richard F. Cummins ’59 Ralph A. Cusick Jr. ’56 Jeb S. Darby ur. ’33 Robert K. Davidson ’37 Calvert G. de Coligny Jr. '61 J. H. DeJarnette °65 Dudley W. Denton ’30 Richard A. Denny Jr. '52, ’54L Rugeley P. DeVan Jr. 34 H. Tyndall Dickinson ’39, ’41L Rush S. Dickson Family Foundation, Inc. P Ben W. Ditto ’43 Harold R. Dobbs ’28 Ben R. Downing Jr. P E. Waller Dudley '43, ’47L Mrs. Thomas P. Duncan Jr. F Mr. & Mrs. Lynn D. Durham P Holmes M. Dyer ’34 George E. Eagle '52 Dr. Max L. Elliott ’60 Joseph F. Ellis Jr. °43 Jorge E. Estrada ’69 James D. Farquhar ’63 W. Gilbert Faulk Jr. ’68L Mark R. Ferdinand ’67L Lewis M. Fetterman Jr. ’72 Stewart B. Finder ’67L Norman Fischer ’49 Robert N. Fishburn '55 Charles L. Forbes ’56L William F. Ford ’6IL G. Archer Frierson II ’73 Thomas C. Frost Jr. ’50 Fred O. Funkhouser ’34 James F. Gallivan 51 Benjamin D. S. Gambill Jr. '67 William J. Garrity P Claiborne W. Gooch Ill ’50 Harry G. Goodheart III ’66 David G. Gordon ’69 Floyd D. Gottwald Jr. P Dr. William M. Gottwald ’70 Gerard E. Grashorn ’30 Edward S. Graves ’30 Robert S. Griffith 52 Bernard C. Grigsby II ’72 Waller C. Hardy Jr. ’39 Houston H. Harte ’50 Mrs. Oliver H. Havens P Marion G. Heatwold '41, ’46L Kazimierz J. Herchold '68 Milton T. Herndon ’56L Robert E. Hill ’40 Clarence E. Hinkle ’25L Malcolm M. Hirsh °45 W. Roy Hogan ’39 David L. Holland ’72 Vernon W. Holleman Jr. ’58 Arthur Hollins tll °51 Samuel B. Hollis °51 William M. Hollis °53 William B. Hoofstitler ‘36 Richard H. Horn ’59L Farris P. Hotchkiss ’58 C. Royce Hough Ill ’59 Albert C. Hubbard Jr. ’59 Forrest E. Huffman ’36 Thomas J. Hughes ’30 Douglas H. Hunt ’75 J. Ward Hunt ’69 W. Herbert Hunt ’51 Robert E. R. Huntley ’50, ’57L Charles D. Hurt Jr. '59 Richard A. Hurxthal ’50 Ross J. Interrante P Clay T. Jackson '76 Herbert G. Jahncke ’30 Raleigh M. Jenkins ’24 Carlton D. Johnson ’49 David T. Johnson P H. Reed Johnston ’28 William R. Johnston ’61 Earl T. Jones '30 John M. Jones Ill 737 Mrs. Nona J. Jones F Robert H. Jones ’27L J. Luther Jordan Jr. '42 John P. Jordan ’44 Stanley A. Kamen ’49L Joseph S. Keelty °44 Rt. Rev. Christoph Keller Jr. ’39 W. Martin Kempe P Edward W. King ’49 Walton W. Kingsbery Jr. '48 Walter F. Kirk Jr. ’'37 Mr. & Mrs. John D. Kirkland P John D. Klinedinst °71L, ’78L Edward P. Knight P Donald H. Koontz ’'71 S L Kopald Jr. ’43 Eugene M. Kramer ’40 Richard R. Kreitler °65 Mark A. Krieger Jr. P Dr. D. Dean Kumpuris ’70 Dr. E. Ross Kyger Il 63 G. Russell Ladd Ill ’57 John L. Lancaster Ill 58 Hon. Allie H. Lane ’43, ’47L Kenneth P. Lane ’36 Joseph L. Lanier Sr. ’27 Richard P. Laskey ’57 Malcolm Lassman ’60, ’63L William E. Latture ’49 Thomas O. Lawson ’56 Howard D. Leake ’24 William J. Ledbetter ’50L H. Drake Leddy ’71 Leroy M. Lee Jr. ’33 H. Gordon Leggett '54 Charles R. Lemon ’49 William J. Lemon ’55, '59L Harold F. Lenfest ’53 Sydney Lewis ’40 Joseph D. Logan Ill '67L Michael R. Long ’72 Charles J. Longacre ’33 Charles P. Lykes '39 Joseph T. Lykes Jr. ’41 Dr. John P. Lynch ’30 John M. McCardell ’37 Alfred L. McCarthy ’23L Samuel P. McChesney ur. ’38 Albert M. McClain ’56 Hayes C. McClerkin 53 Donald H. McClure ’62 Charles T. McCord Ill ‘63 Joseph B. McCutcheon ’51 Joseph S. McDaniel Ill ‘65 James C. McElroy °70 Dr. John R. McGill '67 Wayne D. McGrew '52 Thomas N. McJunkin ’70, 74L Lewis A. McMurran Jr. ’36 Emmett W. MacCorkle Jr. '26 Robert H. Mann Jr. ’55, °57 J. Hardin Marion ’55, '58L Frank Markoe Jr. ’45 Edwin M. Marks ’37L J. Stephen Marks III ’59 John F. Marshall Jr. ’65 James Bland Martin ’31L Paul M. Maslansky '54 Robert W. Mathews ’69 J. Jason Matthews '73 Thomas A. Mattesky '74 Courtney R. Mauzy Jr. ’61 John D. Mayhew ’26 Dr. Floyd R. Mays ur. '38 Frederick A. Meiser Jr. 68 Oliver M. Mendell 50 Joseph Mendelsohn Ill ’52 James A. Meriwether ’70 Mrs. Cornelius W. Middleton F Edgar B. Miller ’31 Stuart T. Miller ’36 Mr. & Mrs. Ross R. Millhiser P H. Thorp Minister '49 Houston M. Minniece ’31 Julian B. Mohr ’52 Phillip D. Mollere ’66 Robert J. Moody ’49 James P. Morefield '52L J. Marvin Moreland dr. 56 Edwin A. Morris '26 Dr. George C. Morris Jr. ’46 A. Payne Morrow '28 John H. Mullin Ill 63 David M. Murray ’52, '55L John E. Neill ’38 Charles H. Newman Ill 66 Milburn K. Noell Jr. ’51, 54L William C. Norman Jr. ’56 Henry Nottberg III '71 E. Marshall Nuckols Jr. '33, ’35L J. Richard O'Connell '56 E. Staman Ogilvie ’71 Harry H. Orgain Jr. ’45 Howard B. Peabody ur. ’44 Hon. Albert G. Peery ’31, ’32L John T. Perry Jr. ’41 F. Lisle Peters Jr. '50 Reginald H. Pettus ’48L Dr. Harry M. Philpott ’38 James A. Philpott Jr. 69, °72L J. Alvin Philpott ’45 Dr. George H. Pierson Jr. ’50 Edward F. Pilley ’30 Frederick H. Pitzer Jr. '42 Daniel E. Popovich ’53 Jack B. Porterfield Jr. ’49L Hon. Lewis F. Powell Jr. ’29 "B1L Maurice E. Purnell Jr. '61 Donald H. Putnam Jr. ’44 Dr. Louis R. Putnam °52 Lee A. Putney '53 Miss Mary R. Quinlan F Dr. Harold J. Quinn Jr. °54 William E. Rawlings '53 W. Bryce Rea Jr. ’39, ’41L William M. Read ’40 Kelley E. Reed ’37 Neil W. Riley ’26 Patterson H. Robertson ’65 Robert W. Root °42 Charles S. Rowe ’45 Josiah P. Rowe Ill ’48 William J. Russell Jr. °57 A. T. Sanders P Steven B. Sandler ’70 John E. Scheifly ’48L Mr. & Mrs. Bertram R. Schewel "A1 : Mr. & Mrs. Elliott S. Schewel ’45 Mr. & Mrs. Marc A. Schewel ‘69 Stanford L. Schewel ’40L Francis E. Schmitt ’30 |. M. Scott ’37L Richard T. Scruggs P Bernard M. Shapiro ’64 Richard S. Sharlin ’61 Michael W. Sheffey '64 Conway H. Sheild Ill ‘64, °67L Frontis W. Sherrill '28 Frank H. Simmons ’51 Dr. Sanford R. Singer P Richard T. Sloan ’42 Chadbourne B. Smith ’45 Chester T. Smith Jr. ’53 Hatton C. V. Smith ’73 James W. Smith ’62 Otis H. Smith ’31 Richard W. Smith ’41 William H. Smith °15 Jerry G. South '54 Jason B. Sowell Jr. ’54 James D. Sparks Sr. ’32L George M. Spaulding ’34 Gen. A. A. Sproul III ’37 John W. Stackhouse °55 Martin E. Stein P John M. Stemmons ’31 Hon. Roscoe B. Stephenson Jr. "43 Guy T. Steuart Il 53 Charles C. Stieff Il °45 Edward E. Stover '37L Robert E. Stroud ’58L William T. Stuchell Jr. ’30 Charles A. Sweet ’36 Dr. J. Brookins Taylor ’50 Calvert Thomas ’38 Mrs. William O. Thomas F Roland E. Thompson ’52 Glenn O. Thornhill Jr. °63 Rice M. Tilley Jr. ’58 Conrad H. Todd ’60 J. Thomas Touchton ’60 W. Bryan Trammell Jr. P Col. John H. Tucker Jr. '10 S. Maynard Turk ’52L Richard H. Turrell ’49 J. Hoge Tyler Ill *33L John H. Van Amburgh P Kenneth B. Van de Water ’41 M. Theodore Van Leer ’51 John W. Vardaman Jr. '62 C. Ganahl Walker ’40 Robert C. Walker ’38 David N. Walker ’38 |. Grier Wallace '35 Jonathan W. Warner ’41 Richard R. Warren '57 Dr. Thomas A. Wash ’51 W. Emory Waters Jr. 68 John F. Watlington Jr. ’33 John A. Webber ’35 W. Temple Webber Jr. '54 Herbert M. Weed ’42 David S. Weinberg ’55 J. Albert Weinberg Jr. '31 Manuel M. Weinberg ’31L John L. Wellford Jr. ’57 Warren R. Welsh ’61L Robert F. Wersel ’42 William E. Whaley Jr. ’40 James J. White Ill °51 Robert M. White II ’38 Walter H. Wilcox ’29- - William M. Wilcox Jr. '47 Maxwell P. Wilkinson ’28 Charles M. Williams '38 Ernest Williams Il ’38 Lewis D. Williams Jr. °37 Dr. John D. Wilson F William L. Wilson ’38L 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 ’°41 Thomas L. Woodward ur. 65 Raymond E. Wooldridge ’60 Dr. William L. Woolfolk ’25 Richard T. Wright ’42 Frank G. Young ’66 George M. Young ’54 William K. Young ’58 © Anonymous Members 25 Capital Gifts Listed below are the names of alumni, friends, corpora- tions, and foundations who made gift commitments either for some form of endowment or for enlargement or improvement of the physical plant. Such grants amounted to $1,000,589 during the 1983-84 year. Robert L. Adams '49 Mr. & Mrs. Richard W. Arey F Stephen E. Arey '75L Mr. & Mrs. C. N. Baker F James M. Ballengee '48L John D. Bassett III ’59 Dr. John T. Bate '19 Clifford B. Beasley Jr. '49 Brian Bell '49 Mrs. Shirley Field Berry F Arthur A. Birney '50, ’52L Lorenzo G. Blacksmith F Estate John G. Boatwright '15 Estate Mr. & Mrs. Lowell T. Bodiford F Granville S. R. Bouldin '49, °51L Bowie's, Inc. Frank H. Brady '32 Estate Philip C. Braunschweig '49° Thomas H. Broadus Jr. '59 Dr. D. Earl Brown Jr. ’49 Thomas B. Bryant Jr. ’28L¢ Estate Mrs. Ruth W. Bussiere F J. Stewart Buxton '36 A. J. T. Byrne ’65, ’68L J. Waller Callison '20 Mr. Caius M. Carpenter F H. Glenn Chaffer Realty Palmore Clarke '80 Walter D. Cline Jr. ’33 Ms. Julia Winter Cohen F Dr. Milton Colvin F J. Fred Cook '33 C&P Telephone Company of Virginia Mrs. Nancy L. Crosby F Edward W. Curtis '75 Claibourne H. Darden Jr. '66 Ms. Josephine Darner Ms. Sara K. Darner Mr. & Mrs. R. J. Darragh P George E. Dashiell '49 The Arthur Vining Davis Foundations Mrs. James R. Denny Ill F Robert C. DeVaney ’65 Gregory J. Digel ’70, 73L Mr. & Mrs. Lewis R. Donelson F Benjamin C. Eastwood '29 Dr. Max L. Elliott 60 E. Stewart Epley ’49 Dr. Robert E. Evans '74 Robert R. Feagin Ill ’60 Dr. William J. Fidler Jr. ’6l Norman Fischer '49 Henry J. Ford F Mrs. Maudine Fouts F J. Carter Fox '6l Roger M. Fritchie '49 James F. Gallivan ’5] T. Graham Gibson '29 Thomas R. Glass °49 Hugh Dana Grindy '49 Prof. Roger Groot F Mrs. G. Kellock Hale Jr. F Col. & Mrs. Warren W. Halstead F Judge Lapsley W. Hamblen Jr. F Mrs. John L. Hart F Ms. Constance R. Harvey F Andrew Hemm '76 Dean Edward O. Henneman F 26 The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation Harry H. Hill Jr. ’49 Mrs. Ruth Beebe Hill F Mrs. Margaret C. Hird F Mr. & Mrs. W. F. Hirschmann P Mrs. Ruth F. Howe F Alton R. Hyatt F A. M. Janney '29 Dr. William A. Jenks '39 David D. Johnson '21 Estate Henry P. Johnston Sr. '29 Robert R. Kane Ill ’54L Joseph S. Keelty '44 Dr. Emory Kimbrough Jr. F Dean Frederic L. Kirgis Jr. F Jack D. Kopald ’78L Bert Kyle '49 W. Hanes Lancaster Jr. '46 Joseph L..Lanier Sr. '27 William E. Latture '49 Mr. & Mrs. Charles Laughlin F Maurice D. Leach F Robert B. Lee ’29 Robert E. Lee IV '49 The Leggett Foundation H. Gordon Leggett Jr. '54 Ainsley J. Lester Ill '58 Mrs. J. Edward Lewis F The Sydney and Frances Lewis Foundation Mrs. Alma C. Lippincott F Adrian L. McCardell '29 J. W. McClintock III '53 Michael S. McCord '65 John S. McGuinness F Miss Leila L. McKnight F Ms. MaryJoe McNeely F William A. MacDonough ’29 Mrs. Ross L. Malone F Robert H. Mann Jr. '55 J. Stephen Marks ’59 Courtney R. Mauzy Jr. ’61 The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Mr. & Mrs. Ross R. Millhiser F H. Thorp Minister Jr. '49 Ms. Margaret N. Monroe F Montessori Children’s House Mrs. W. W. Moorman F Mr. & Mrs. J. P. Morefield '52L Allen and Elise Morgan Advised Fund Col. Paul J. B. Murphy Jr. '49 National Endowment for the Humanities Dr. Harry B. Neel '28 Neighbor's Fund, Inc. Mrs. Marie Nelson F Mr. & Mrs. S. R. Nichols '30 William A. Noell Jr. 64 Matthew W. Paxton Jr. '49 Miss E. Ashley Payne F Mrs. Alexandra N. Peirez P Dr. & Mrs. Marvin Perry Jr. F Prof. J. Timothy Philipps F Parker B. Potter Jr. '79 Dr. John W. Poynor ’62 Robert R. Reid Jr. '49 Edward B. Robertson '67 Rollwage-Alderson-Morse Foundation Capt. & Mrs. E. C. Rook F A. Prescott Rowe '60 William C. Ruble '49 James J. Salinger '29 William G. Sargent '29 Saunders & Company William B. Sawers Jr. '60 John S. R. Schoenfeld '49 Ms. Joan M. Shaughnessy F Gen. & Mrs. George R. E. Shell F Eva K. Sheppard Charitable Lead Trust F Leo J. Signaigo Jr. '43 Arthur Simmons '29 Mrs. Catherine Terrell Smith F L. Vernon Snyder '49 John W. Stackhouse '55 Dr. Buford S. Stephenson '42 Judge Roscoe B. Stephenson Jr. '43, '47L Peter R. Strohm ’68 Henry M. Strouss Ill '61 H. Webster Stull P James P. Sunderland '50 Bernard Talley ‘50 Dr. E. L. Taylor Jr. ’49 Dr. Pendleton Tompkins '27 J. Thomas Touchton '60 John Bell Towill '29L The J. Edwin Treakle Foundation, Inc. Charles Tait Trussell '49 Mrs. Elizabeth T. Jones Turner F Richard H. Turrell '49 Dr. E. D. Vaughan Jr. '61 Mrs. Mary Lee Jones Virden F Kenneth H. Wacker '49 Washington and Lee Alumni Inc. Dean William J. Watt F Ms. Sally D. Whelden F Judge H. E. Widener Jr. '53L Walter H. Wilcox ’29 Dr. John H. Wise F Thomas P. Wright '29 The Wythe Corporation Richard M. Yankee Jr. '49 3 Anonymous Gifts 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 gifts it received from foundations in support of current operations in 1983-84. (Other foundation grants are listed in the section describing gifts for capital purposes.) Martha Jane & James E. Anthony Foundation, Inc. Beckett-Jones Charitable Trust B GC L Foundation, Inc. D. S. Blount Educational Foundation Charleston Foundation for Research Communities Foundation of Texas, Inc. The Westmoreland Davis Memorial Foundation, Inc. The Eisenman Foundation Edward Chase Garvey Memorial Foundation Goldsmith Foundation, Inc. The Sydney & Frances Lewis Foundation Mamie F. Martel Trust McCasland Foundation National Science Foundation Mary Moody Northen, Inc. Oak Park-River Forest Community Foundation The Richard Nelson Ryan Foundation Whitehall Foundation, Inc. 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 1983-84 Annual Fund. Their gifts helped Washington and Lee continue the high quality of its educational program. Those donors whose names are followed by (¢) are members of the Lee Associates and made gifts of $1,000 or more in 1983-84; donors whose names are followed by (*) are Colonnade Club members and made gifts of $100-$999 in 1983-84. CLASS OF 1910-A John H. Tucker Jr.¢ CLASS OF 1912-A William M. Miller CLASS OF 1913-A Edward S. Delaplaine Carroll B. Wiltshire x CLASS OF 1914-A J. Goodloe Jackson Jr. * Julian W. Selig CLASS OF 1915-A Leslie S. Anderson * Evans Dunn Millard F. Hays* Woodson P. Houghton * Rupert N. Latturex William H. Smithe Paul C. Thomas CLASS OF 1916-A L. Battle Bagley C. Lynch Christian * Edwin B. Shultz * CLASS OF 1917-A J. Withers Blake William O. Burtnere Joseph R. Campbell x William J. Coxe Archie E. Cruthirds John L. Early Morris H. Hester Curtis C. Humphris W. Calvin Wells x CLASS OF 1918-A James C. Amblere Allein Beall Jr. Edmund D. Campbell Sr. Alfred C. 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 J. Waller Callison Eric B. Hallman H. Douglas Jones * Emmett W. Poindexter x 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. * James A. Cranford * W. Franklin Portlock * W. Ashton Powell Dewey A. Reynolds Samuel L. Sanderson William H. Trotter Jr. * CLASS OF 1923-A Robert L. Berryman George H. Bowers Jr. Melville |. Dunn Jr. * R. Maurice Frew Judson B. Holloway * Frank B. Hurt Weldon T. Kilmon* Ainsley J. Lester Jr. * Joseph W. McDonald Jr. * George C. Mason Jr. * J. Vaughn Penn* R. Winter Royston * Kenneth R. Smith D. Raymond Snively Thomas M. Wade Jr. * CLASS OF 1924-A E. Almer Ames Jr. Percy D. Ayres* J. Paul Brawner* Edmund M. Cameron John A. Cummins William S. Gay Sr. * John G. Guerrant x Andrew H. Harriss Jr. Raleigh M. Jenkinse Henry W. Jones * Robert L. King* Will P. Kirkman* Howard D. Leakee Robert T. Merritt Albert Newman * Francis W. Plowman* Turner Rice * Barrett C. Shelton Sr. x H. Ogden Shropshire * Glenn R. Stoutt * John Newton Thomas * Norfleet Turner * CLASS OF 1925-A Earle T. Andrewse Robert F. Bolling Jr. Calvin T. Burtone Elmore G. Dufour Bruce F. Gannaway * Robert F. Goodrich * Frank T. Mitchell Andrew T. Roy* Joe Shuman * Allan P. Sloan* Edgar J. Spady * William L. Woolfolke CLASS OF 1926-A B. Campbell Blake * Jack G. Chapman Almand R. Colemanx Wilton W. Conner William W. Davis* Fred W. Dismukex Rufus A. Fulton Russell L. Gordon Charles H. Hamilton James R. Hendrix * Kenneth C. Kimbrough * Charles W. Lowry John G. McGiffin Jr. * Emmett W. MacCorklee William R. Marchman John D. Mayhewe Thomas T. Moorex Edwin A. Morrise Harry Pfeffer * Neil W. Rileye Paul M. Schuchart Thomas L. Seehorn Ernest L. Smith William F. Smith Hugh B. Sproul Jr. Digby C. West * George B. Wilkinson James N. Williams * W. Burke Williamson Henry M. Wilson* CLASS OF 1927-A Joseph E. Birnie Walter R. Bishop * George E. Burks * Charles G. Burton Allen M. Clauss H. Reese Coleman * George T. Ellisx Allen Harris Jr. * Thomas L. Harris * Henry A. Ingalls Jr. * William M. Jennings Joseph L. Lanier Sr.e Zed C. Layson® Robert P. London Jr. * Reginald V. Milbank* Russell G. Miller * Alexander S. Moffett * J. Preston Moore*x Wilson A. Orr John B. Perry dr. C. W Clark Poole Burchard S. Pruett x R. Wilbur Simmons Robert E. Stevenson * George W. Summerson Alfred F. Taylor Robert F. Thompson * David H. Wice*x CLASS OF 1928-A John W. Alderson * Walter D. Bachx Lester A. Brown*® Joseph B. Clower Jr. Percy Cohene Harold R. Dobbse William C. Drewry * John B. Ecker * Julius Goldstein x Thurlow C. Guinn* Roger J. Haller John S. Hanckel * Carl V. Harris * Van A. Halloman Sr. * Gerald F. Horine H. Reed Johnstone Joseph J. Kaplan* William J. Luriax Willett C. Magruder Jr. * A. Payne Morrowe Emil J. Sadloch Frontis W. Sherrille John L. Stuart Jr. Howard K. Tayloe* Maxwell P. Wilkinsone Stuard A. Wurzburger John M. Yarbrough * CLASS OF 1929-A Charles V. Amolex Clyde S. Beare Richard D. Carver James A. Castner William F. Chandler Hugh D. Ebert Royal B. Embree Jr. * Earl A. Fitzpatrick x E. Lee Gamble T. Graham Gibson * Harry E. Godwin George H. Goodwin* Gale B. Haley x Asa M. Janney Franklin P. Johnson Il * Henry P. Johnston Sr. * Benjamin P. Knight Jr. * Robert B. Leex John M. Luft Adolphus L. Lunsford Adrian L. McCardell Jr. * William A. MacDonough * William W. Pacex Francis T. Parker Jr. Robert W. Pharr * Walter N. Pharrx Lewis F. Powell Jr.e Vernon R. Preston * John S. Ragland* Henry A. Renken James J. Salinger Irwin T. Sanders William G. Sargent Alfred |. Schlossberg ® James M. Shackelford Arthur D. Simmons * O. Norris Smith Kenneth E. Spencer * Walter H. Wilcoxe Thomas P. Wright * CLASS OF 1930-A William T. Alsop Virginius J. Barnette Franklin R. Bigham * L. Palmer Brown llle William E. Browne Henry F. Bullard * Robert E. Clapp Jr.e Charles W. Cockex George B. Craddocke John P. Davis * Robert W. Davis Jr. x Dudley W. Dentone Frank O. Evans Sr. Justin E. Farrell Idus D. Felder Jr. * Isaac L. Flory Jr.* Lawrence Y. Footex Gerard E. Grashorne Edward S. Gravese Stanley F. Hampton * James N. Hess * Thomas J. Hughes Jr.e Herbert G. Jahnckee George M. Jennings * Earl T. Jonese Virgil C. Jones Murrel H. Kaplan * Fred B. King Jr. Harry C. Lawder III Charles |. Lewis * Philo Lindsey Bryan T. Lloyd* John P. Lynche Robert V. May* James B. Merrickx Gus E. Mitchell Jr. * John A. Mitchell John H. Nelson Edward F. Pilleye Duval Radford Alexander L. Roberson Jr. * James R. Roberts Leon R. Robison Jr. * Francis E. Schmitte Harold E. Slanker George A. Sprinkel III William T. Stuchell Jr.e Merle Suter * James W. Tankard William G. Tarrant Jr. * Jack Thorington Jr. J. Marshall Vaught Jack A. Williamson * CLASS OF 1931-A John H. Beury * Leonard C. Borland Charles A. Bowes* Watson A. Bowes Lawton M. Calhoun* Robert S. Chapin* Sidney W. Clay* Walter E. Coe Thomas S. Fox Redmond B. Gautier Jr. * Bradford E. Haley x Elbert E. Hall «x Julius Halpern * John H. Hardwick* A. McGehee Harvey * O. Kenneth Hickman x Paul A. Hornor* Eugene Johnson * William L. Jones * George Junkin Merle G. Kaetzel * Beverly J. Lambert Jr. * Talcott C. Lancaster Frank B. Leverette A. Bernard Levine James L. Lytle Jr. Duncan McConnell Henry R. Mahler Jr. Edgar B. Millere Houston M. Minniecee William C. Morris Gilmore N. Nunn* James K. Osterman* Charles Peeper * Reno R. Porter * James C. Rash Jr. James L. Rimler* William V. Rucker * Stuart Sanders II * Myron A. Schrantz Otis H. Smithe George H. Snyder Jr. John M. Stemmonse 27 John A. Stuart Jr. * John H. Thomas Jr. * Wallace N. Tiffany x L. Alexander Vance * Stanley D. Waxberg * J. Albert Weinberg Jr.e Harold M. Weston * Walter F. Williams * CLASS OF 1932-A Erwin J. Ade C. Edmonds Allen* 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. Finkx Sollace M. Freeman Hunter B. Frischkorn Jr. * Charles B. Fulton John G. Hamilton* John C. Harris* J. Robert Hornor*® William D. Hoyt Jr. * Isaac F. Hudson Walter W. Hunzicker Jr. * Leonard W. Johnson J. Shiers Jones * John F. Ladd* Thomas N. Layne Charles E. Long Jr. * Millard R. Louis Charles C. Love E. Carlyle Lynch Jr. * Robert L. McBride * Harry L. McCarthy * James W. McLaurin® Eugene P. Martin Jr. * Robert F. Nelson* Henry W. Northup James S. Pollak David G. Pricex Kenneth R. Routon Arthur B. Scharff Randolph T. Shields Jr. * J. Bernard Spector Jack J. Stark* Haven Walton* Harry L. Williams Jr. Beverly R. Wilson Jr. * Sherwood W. Wisee Paul H. Wofford Jr. * Samuel S. Woody Jr. Joseph L. Wright* John W. Zimmerman* CLASS OF 1933-A Harold B. Abramson * Reuben B. Armistead Frank R. Bailey x William S. Barker * Ralph C. Barnett x T. Deale Blanchard Irving B. Bricken* William J. Brooks Jr. * Frank E. Calhoun*x Edwin W. Chittum John K. Clarke James F. Cook John D. Copenhaver x M. Hoge Crighton Jr. x John D. Crowl* John A. Culley Theodore M. Curtis Jeb S. Darby Jr.e William T. Devan* William H. Flowers Jr. x William D. Gunter George H. Hagadorn Jr. x Gray W. Hume Jr. * Cary F. lrons Jr. * John W. Jones C. Robert Kaplan* William C. Kimbrell * 28 Leroy M. Lee Jr.e Charles J. Longacree Neil Z. Meredith x William F. Methvin Jr. Frank B. Mooers Jr. * John L. Mosby Stanley S. Mundy* Thomas O. Murphey * G. William Musser * E. Marshall Nuckols Jr.e Walter J. Pound® Edward H. Pringlex Homer G. Ray ur. 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 * John F. Watlington Jr.e William A. Williamson * John A. Womeldorf CLASS OF 1934-A Norwood E. Bande W. W. Barron* John D. Battle Jr. * Darby W. Betts James A. Black* Thomasson M. Boland Amos A. Bolen* Robert L. Buffington x Robert |. Bull Frank J. Burkart* J. Duncan Burn Joseph A. Burton* Kenneth R. Cole Charles C. Collier * John H. Cookex John J. Cuomo* Isadore E. Dattel Rugeley P. Devan Jr.e Dan T. Dunn Sr. * James D. Dyex Holmes M. Dyere Robert C. Dyer * Samuel M. Englehardt ur. Leslie A. Faudreex Robert E. Field* Fred O. Funkhousere Hunter E. Gaylor* Richard W. Grafton Henry L. Haines John S. Haines * F. Hadley Hamilton Jr. Bernard G. Harless Milton L. Harris *® Claude Harrison Jr. * Charles O. Hearon Jr. William T. Homberg * Maxwell B. Hostetter Edward S. Jacobs John T. Jarrett * M. Alexander Jones * Henry L. King Jr. William O. Leffell Donald S. Levinson* Robert C. McCardell x George D. McClure * Gilbert C. McKown Victor F. Marshall * Olin K. Miller William J. Moran Jr. Scott Mosovich x Joseph C. Muller Foster McCrum Palmer * Neil C. Pascoe*x Francis L. Patton* George W. Pedigo Jr. Edwin H. Pewett* James O. Phelps Jr. * George W. Price Harvey Pridex Charles A. Pritchard George L. Reynolds * William H. Robinson * Herbert Rudlin* Robert W. Ruth James T. Rutherford Richard Sale x Claude E. Sanford * Robert B. Shively * John F. Shroder Howard F. Smith George M. Spauldinge Daniel B. Startsman*x John H. Thomas* Everett Tucker Jr. * Robert K. Turney William B. Tyree Henry Waller Jr. James M. Whitex Ralph D. Whitley CLASS OF 1935-A Claude H. Barrickx David J. Bennett Jr. Guy H. Branaman Jr. Edward W. Chappell Jr. * Thomas L. Coley Jr. Robert F. Cooper Jr. * George E. Crisp Claibourne H. Darden® William P. Diggs Jr. Charles E. Elbrick Leighton P. Everhart Norman S. Fitzhugh Jr. William R. Fox James M. Franklin x Clifford J. Freund John E. Friend Beardsley A. Gammel Jr. Loyal P. Gassman* Ferdinand A. Hauslein L. Leslie Helmer * Albert T. Hickin Norman F. Hill Leroy Hodges Jr. Benjamin B. Hope H. Harrison Huster * James P. Jordan* D. Lyle Kinnear x Eugene E. Krewson Carney G. Laslie Jr. William D. McDavid George J. McGeory* Lewis W. Martin® Samuel C. Mattox Gus Morgan* Albert W. Moss * Robert S. Munger * John A. Newton John B. Nicholson Jr. William C. Orth Charles F. Porzig N. Joe Rahall« Henry L. Ravenhorst * Harry M. Rhett Jr. * Thomas T. Richards Jr. George E. Short Winthrope C. Smithx John D. Spohr* Frederick D. Strong* Jo M. VanZanat Charles L. Walker Jr. |. Grier Wallace Jr.e Donald R. Wallis Sr. * John A. Webbere Thomas K. Williams William A. Wilson * Peyton B. Winfree Jr. James S. Woods Jr. CLASS OF 1936-A William M. Allen William C. Barbee x J. Vaughan Beale x Harry L. Bowmane Edward S. Boze Jr. Harry J. Breithaupt Jr. J. Stewart Buxtone Duncan Corbett x Robert F. Corrigan Joseph T. Drake Jr. * W. Magruder Drake x Walter B. Eager Jr. * Edgar E. Eaton Jr.* Julius E. Garber Harry George Jr. * William W. Gerber * Joel Grayson Ill * Joseph J. Harding Jr. * Arthur E. Hauck® Charles W. Hawks * George M. B. Hawley II John T. Herwick * Omer L. Hirst * William B. Hoofstitlere Forrest E. Huffmane William S. Johnson * Alfred Kahn Jr. Martin Z. Kaplan Kenneth P. Lanee Bruce N. Lanierx Walter T. Lawton Jr. Leonard Leight Lewis A. McMurrane Kenneth G. MacDonald * George S. Maury Jr. * Stuart T. Millere George R. Myers* C. Hooper Phillips Ill « Frank L. Price James L. Price Jr. William A. Rawakx Alfred L. Reeser William T. Riley James A. Robertson * Richard T. Scully x Edward L. Seitz*x Jacob S. Seligman* |. Glenn Shively x Ralph H. Smith* Henry H. Staehling Charles A. Sweete Rene L. Tallichet x Joe B. Thomas * Thomas R. Thomas * Edward A. Turvillex S. Adrian Whiteside x Tyree F. Wilson* CLASS OF 1937-A William H. Armentrout Ernest C. Barrett Jr. * Stanley Barrows * Andrew H. Baure Karl E. Beamer * Porter Duane Berry * Douglas E. Brady Jr. x A. Austin Bricker Jr. * Morton A. Brown James S. Bruce * Charles A. Butterworth Jr. James A. Byers * Louis P. Cashman Jr. * William A. Clary Eugene G. Clayton Given W. Cleek Robert V. Colex William H. Daniel * Robert K. Davidsone Raymond F. Dustin William D. Ellis* Herbert E. Fenner Jr. William D. Fishback x Robert V. Flint Robert E. Graham * Randolph V. Hall x Charles K. Hauke x Robert C. Hoff x Norman P. ller* John M. Jones Ille Phillip S. Jones * Walter F. Kirk Jr.e William A. Landreth * Victor R. LaVolpe*x Stephen B. Lee William T. Long* George W. Lowry * John M. McCardelle Alexander Mclintosh Harold C. Magoon C. Arnold Matthews * Donald R. Moore x Douglas J. Munhall*x William P. Neal Stuart B. Over Jr. * Michael A. Perna Theodore M. Plowden* Albert A. Radcliffe x John W. Ray* Donald C. Redfield Jr. * Kelley E. Reed Jr.e James H. Rice Jr. Edwin Rich® Thomas B. Ripy* Howell W. Roberts Jr. Charles E. Roth x Parke S. Rouse Jr.* Arthur W. Sinclair * Alexander E. Sproul * Archibald A. Sproul Ille Richard K. Stuart * Walter G. Thomas * John J. Vandale*x 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 Alfred H. Wishnew Frank H. Yaffex CLASS OF 1938-A Arthur H. Alexander R. Tate Alexander Norman Allison Ben L. Anderson* Edwin D. Axton Jr. * William B. Bagbey x Seth N. Bakere William C. Baker Jr. * Robert M. Basile George F. Bauer Jr. * James C. Beale Jr. Chandler P. Berryman* Arthur L. Bice A. Compton Broders Jr. * Jerry A. Burke Jr. William S. Burns * William H. Byrn*& Charles F. Clarke Jr.e Thomas B. Cottingham * Paul H. Darsiex James M. Davidson Jr. Robert R. Finn J. Oliver Gluyas * David W. Heath Frank Jones Jr. Landon Y. Jones* Oliver K. Jones Jr. * Edward F. Kaczka George Stevenson Kemp Jr. * Gerald M. Livelyx Samuel P. McChesney Jr.¢ Thomas A. Malloy Jr. Donald N. Maloy * Floyd R. Mays Jr.e Gilbert S. Meem* Paul M. Miller *® John E. Neille James R. Parkey Jr. * John E. Perry John S. Petot Jr. * Harry M. Philpotte Charles A. Prater x C. Paul Reed Jr. Sidney N. Repplier Stuart M. Reynolds E. Alton Sartor Jr. * Chester Schept * Alphonse J. Sherman J. Chester Shively Courtland N. Smith Jr. * J. Hiram Smith * J. McLain Stewart x Wendell R. Stoops * SO ag sos Spc TN Robert E. Surles* W. Saxby Tavel * Calvert Thomase Earl C. Thompson Jr. * E. Sidney Vaughn Jr. * David N. Walkere Ernest B. Walker Jr. Robert C. Walkere Fred E. Waters Jr. * Robert M. White lle Charles M. Williamse Ernest Williamse CLASS OF 1939-A Hugh P. Avery William H. Baldock Ille Frederick Bartenstein Jr. Edgar A. Basse Jr.e Alexander W. Blain III Murray O. Both Philip R. Brooks Robert A. Brower Arthur E. Buck Jr. Edward F. Burrows Martin C. Cassett * Thomas W. Christopher J. Francis Coffey Marvin K. Collie x Rogers M. Cox* Allen B. Craig Jr. Melvin E. Cruser Jr. * H. Tyndall Dickinsone James S. Dudley * Randolph M. Duncan* J. Donald Eackles Andrew M. Eastwick Jr. Warren H. Edwards * Harold L. Fenton Jr. * John T. Fey* James W. Fishel «x Sherwin B. French*x John B. Furr Charles G. Gilmore George E. Goodwin* George C. Graff*x Charles L. Guthrie Jr. Harvey L. Handley Jr. * Frank M. Hankins Jr. * Waller C. Hardy Jr.e Charles R. Hart* Robert W. Hilton Jr. * W. Roy Hogane Henry R. Hornex Neil T. Houston * Christoph Keller Jr.e George C. Kerr Joe W. Lydick* Charles P. Lykese Frank X. McNicol David K. McNish Ferdinand P. Maupai Cass A. Mayo Jr. * 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 x W. Bryce Rea Jr. Harry E. Redenbaugh* Wilfred J. Ritz John R. Robinson Randolph D. Rouse * Richard S. Rudex James A. Saltsman Jr. * Charles H. Semple dr. * Wilbert T. Shafer Edgar F. Shannon Jr. * John H. Sherrill Jr. * Herbert C. Sigvartsen * Donald C. Smith G. Murray. Smith Jr. x Maurice J. Swan Jr. Elton H. Thuranx Stockton H. Tyler Jr. Charles M. Wall John H. Ward Ill * J. Warren White Jr. Philip K. Yonge CLASS OF 1940-A Jackson G. Akin® John G. Alnutt Billy V. Ayerse Grover C. Baldwin Jr. * Frank S. Beazlie Jr. * James ‘H. Bierer x Joseph A. Billingsley Jr. * C. Edward Blaire A. Lea Boothe Edward E. Brown Jr. * Thomas E. Bruce Jr. * Donald T. Burton William E. Buxton* Lawrence E. Carson* John B. Cleveland * Custis L. Colemanx Uriah F. Coulbourn* Michael P. Crocker * Charles C. Curl Jr. * Solomon Diamond Hamilton G. Disbrow Jr. * Charles R. Disharoon* Theodore Donaldson John C. Easterberg Temple J. English Jr. Sion A. Faulk* Fred A. Feddeman* Roland S. Freeman* James P. Fristoe Robert A. Fuller Robert L. Gayle George M. Grasty * Matthews A. Griffith x Jerome A. Heldman* T. Kennedy Helm Jr. * Ross V. Hersey x Hamilton Hertz * Robert E. Hille Robert C. Hobson * Curg H. Hogan* Joseph Hunter Robert S. Hutcheson Jr. G. Watson James Ill * John W. Johnston* William R. Jones* William W. Kastner Jr. * Lee M. Kennax Eugene M. Kramere Charles P. Lewis Jr. * Lorenzo C. Lewis Sydney Lewise Kelley Litteral x Mervin H. Luriax Melvin R. McCaskill * M. Tom McClure Arthur W. Mann Jr. * Harry C. Mason Wilbur S. Metcalf Jr. Joseph R. Mighell Ill x Andrew M. Moore*x Franklin A. Nichols George C. Nielsen* _Louis F. Plummer x Richard M. Radcliffe x William M. Reade Peyton E. Rice*« Jerome A. Sacks Hans A. Schmitt Fred D. Shellabarger x Howard T. Shepherd * Lee Spaulding Charles O. Turner* C. Ganahl Walker Jr.e William B. Walker Jr. * William C. Washburn * William E. Whaley Jr.e Ernest Woodward Il *« CLASS OF 1941-A Robert H. Adams * William P. Amese Benjamin F. Ashcroft * Arthur W. Avent Lupton Avery Alfred T. Bishop Jr.e Gale C. Boxill x Thomas S. Brizendine Thomas W. Brockenbrough Paul D. Brown Theodore A. Bruinsma* Francis C. Bryan® William Buchanan * James R. Burkholder III Charles H. Chapman Jr. * James F. Cunningham Lecompte K. Davis * G. Richard Day * Cameron Dean* William J. Douglas John D. Durham Chester Eccleston * William L. Evans Jr. * Frederic B. Farrar * Otis C. Ferrell Jr. Alvin T. Fleishman* Kiah T. Ford Jr. Hamilton P. Fox Jr. * N. Charlton Gilbert « Donald J. Godehn« Walter D. Harrod Marion G. Heatwolee J. Sherman Henderson * Richard M. Herndon Charles L. Hobson * Egmont Horn® Macauley Howard Edward E. Hunter Jr. Franklin W. Hynson* Robert McLean Jeter Jr. * F. Sydnor Kirkpatrick * Guy Labaw John H. Lawrence * Robert E. Lee Ralph E. Lehrx Joseph T. Lykese James R. McConnell x George K. McMurran* Thomas L. Martin Thomas G. Morris William A. Murray * James F. Norton® Robert C. Peery * John T. Perry Jr.e Robert C. Petrey Robert H. Porter Jr. James H. Price Jr. James B. Richardson Jr. Macey H. Rosenthal * John H. Rozelle * James A. Russell Jr. x Bertram R. Schewele William L. Shannon Arthur C. Smith Jr. * Harry L. Smith Richard W. Smithe Robert E. Steele Ill «x Robert L. Stein Francis T. Strangx Joseph G. Street James D. Taylor* Charles G. Thalhimer* Edward H. Trice Jr. Thomas S. Tuley Jr. Kenneth B. Vandewater Jr.e Clinton VanvVliet * Herbert VanVoast Carl L. Varner Benton M. Wakefield Jr. * Claude M. Walker * Jonathan W. Warnere John W. Weathers Marvin S. Winter * Herbert M. Woodward ur.¢ CLASS OF 1942-A William C. Amick Jr. John Barrie Jr. * Edgar M. Boyde Lawrence J. Bradford * Edward W. Brockman Jr. * Frederick T. Bromm* Ned H. Brower * Russell G. Browninge Richard A. Brunn* F. Gregg Burger Robert F. Campbell Jr. Donald S. Carnahan Jr. * Robert Cavannax Evan Alevizatos Chriss * Thomas A. Clark* Kenneth S. Clendaniel Edwin C. Cuttinox W. John Daniel Charles P. Didier Lanson B. Ditto Jr. * John L. Dorsey * Gustave A. Essig * James E. Foard* Charlton T. Fuller* Robert D. Gage Ill x C. Tom Garten W. Scott Gilmer Louis C. Greentree x Joseph H. Grubbs Jr. William B. Gunn James S. Hill* Alex M. Hitz Jr. William B. Hopkins Sidney Isenberg * William E. Jennings * Horace H. Jeter* W. Marshall Johnson * J. Luther Jordan Jr.e Frank L. LaMotte Jr. Andrew S. Lanier * Robert A. Lawton Beverley W. Lee Jr. Daniel C. Lewis Jr. * Gordon R. Lloyd* Edward J. McCarty* Giles C. McCrary * John H. McMillan* Joseph A. Matthews * Walter L. Monroe x Harrell F. Morris * Lee D. Parker Robert Lloyd Pinckx Frederick H. Pitzer Jr. Archer C. Puddington Carter L. Refo* Louis S. Rehr Frederick K. Rippetoe x Green Rives Jr. * Robert W. Roote Robert S. Rosenfeld Charles L. Sartor * Stanley L. Sater William J. Scott Jr. * Richard T.’ Sloane Clyde E. Smith Jr. * James R. Sterrett John W. Stowers * Paul C. Thomas Jr. Glen F. Toalson* Robert T. Vaughan Robert C. Walker * Leon J. Warms* Herbert M. Weede Robert F. Wersele Philip A. Wilhite Jr. John J. Wilkinson * Alfred L. Wolfe Jr. * Gibson M. Wolfex George A. Woolfenden * James H. Woosley Richard T. Wrighte Floyd K. Yeomans * Henry M. Yonge Paul R. Zumkeller * CLASS OF 1943-A&L Charles C. Adams Donald H. Adams * Donald R. Andrews Westbrook Barritt x Richard E. Basilex Frank R. Bell Jr. J. Paul Blakely Calhoun Bond * Robert B. Brainard Jr. x Richard J. Bromley x A. Leon Cahn John C. W. Campbell Adelbert B. Conley Jr. x Jay D. Cook Jr. * Richard E. Cooke x William R. Cory * Louis R. Coulling* Donald J. Crawford Albert D. Darby Jr.* Lester L. Dillard Ben W. Dittoe E. Waller Dudleye Leonard P. Eager Jr. William M. Easterlin Joseph F. Ellis Jr.e Beverly T. Fitzpatrick x Douglas F. Fleet Jr. U. Grey Flowers * Lawrence W. Galloway * Robert L. Garges * Donald E. Garretson * John W. Goode Jr. * Franklin Gruesser * William C. Hamilton * Jefferson W. Hudson* Conrad L. Inman Jr. * R. Francis Johnson John C. Kammerer * Harry C. Keller Houston M. Kimbrough * S L Kopald Jr.e Robert S. Lambert Jr. Allie H. Lanee James G. LaPlante x Stuart E. Lawrence Joseph E. Leex M. M. Long* Raymond G. Long* Douglas W. McCammish * James E. McCausland William McCoy Jr. * John W. McGehee Jr. * Robert F. MacCachran x Alexander M. Maish Haven W. Mankin* Hill Maury * Stanley R. Mitchell x Barton W. Morris Jr. * Corneal B. Myers * Russell H. Neilson * Morrison R. Nelson* William J. Noonan Jr. James S. Parsons * John N. Peeples * James W. Priest x Donald L. Richardson * Richard M. Roberts * Edward H. Scherr Marrion U. Scott * Philip A. Sellers * William K. Sevier * Allen J. Sharitz John C. Sherrard Kenelm L. Shirk Jr. * Paul M. Shuford * Philip K. Shutex — Leo J. Signaigo Jr. * Jay A. Silverstein * William G. Sizemore * Charles H. Smith Jr. * Ernest E. Smithx Roscoe B. Stephensone Lawrence C. Sullivan Jr. James S. Sutherland Ill * C. W. Swinford* Ralph S. Taggart * Horace K. Tenney Ill * Arthur Thompson Jr. * Robert P. Tyson* William A. Webster Jr. * William J. Wilcox Jr. * M. Neely Young Edwin A. Zelnicker Jr. * CLASS OF 1944-A&L Alvin D. Aisenberg * Paul D. Barns Jr. John L. Barrett x William H. Baugher Jr. ‘ E. Lovell Becker * 29 Charles W. Broders Baird Brown* William B. Bryan* G. Edward Calvert « John B. Cancelmo II C. Lynch Christian Jr. * Thomas D. Crittenden* G. Richard Cronin* Robert M. Dehaven* Edmund A. Donnan Jr. * Richard L. Duchossois * Albert H. Dudley Jr. * Richard C. Eglin David R. Embry* Robert Ewing * Leon Garber * Robbins L. Gates William B. Geise Jr. * Robert R. Giebel * Bryant W. Gillespie Howard Greenblatt * Robert P. Haley * Leon Harris Jr. * 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 Donald Johnston * John P. Jordane Joseph S. Keeltye Paul T. Kohr* William S. Latz Edward P. Lyons Jr. William Mclndoe Jr. William R. Malloy William M. Manger Eugene R. Marable Jr. * ' Edmund W. Marx Robert C. Mehorter * William R. Miller III Robert H. Moore Jr. * Norvelle W. Moses Grant E. Mouser III * William F. Noll Jr. William H. Oast Jr.* William F. Parkerson Jr. Howard B. Peabody Jr.e William P. Peak Donald H. Putnam ur.e Byron P. Redman Jr. Richard Rockwell * Frederick B. Rowex John W. Runyan Jr. Henry H. Schewel Everett J. Schneider Jr. John Schuber Jr. * Robert H. Seal John H. Sherman Lloyd H. Smith Jr. * Roger M. Soth* James C. Stanfield * John H. Stansfield * William M. Sterrett Marshall T. Steves * William R. Talbott John W. Taylor Robert B. Taylor* John C. Theurer Thomas B. Ulam Fred M. Valz Jr. William B. VanBuren III * Samuel C. Williams Cullen F. Wimmer * George T. Wood* CLASS OF 1945-A&L Edward B. Addisone Richard E. Bartlebaugh* Robert K. Billingslea Jr. * John H. Brooks Harry F. Brown Jr. John F. Burger Paul R. Byrd John H. Churchwell Jr. * 30 Robert O. Crockett Jr. * Cortlandt S. Dietler* | Owen R. Easley dr. Peter M. Fetterolf* E. Dean Finney * David W. Foerster* . Walter E. Frye Edwin H. W. Harlan Jr. * Malcolm M. Hirshe R. Edward Jackson * T. Haller Jackson Jr. * David L. Jones Benjamin M. Kaplan* Omer T. Kaylor Jr. * H. Wise Kelly Jr. * Roger R. Kimball x Erwin D. Latimer III * Charles E. Lewis Jr. S. Allan McAllister Myron McKee Jr. * Floyd W. McRae Jr. * Frank Markoe Jr.e J. Maurice Miller Jr. * L. Gordon Miller Jr. * Joseph P. Mingioli* Ellis O. Moore* William H. Naylor Robert E. Norman* Harry H. Orgain Jr.e J. Alvin Philpotte Kenneth G. Puller * Lee R. Redmond Jr. Charles S. Rowee Elliot S. Schewele Chadbourne B. Smithe Lucius S. Smith x Milton H. Smith Il * John H. Sorrells Jr. Charles C. Stieff Ile Collier Wenderoth Jr. * Joseph M. Zamoiski Il * CLASS OF 1946-A&L Joseph P. Adams Hugh C. Allen Daniel H. Ball x James F. Brewster Frank C. Brookse Benjamin M. Brown Jr. Robert S. Brown Jr. John H. Cheatham Jr.e J. Fielder Cook* Sidney M. B. Coulling Ill x Patrick C. Devine T. Ryland Dodson * Roy J. Fahl Jr. * Norman Fischere Clarence N. Frierson* John Gately x Ambrose W. Givens * Eugene E. Griese Jr. David V. Guthrie Jr. Louis R. Hahn Jr. * Wade H. Haislip IV Robert C. Harter Donald S. Hillman* John J. Kelly Ill * W. Hanes Lancaster Jr. * Thomas C. Lee Oliver W. McClintock Jr. * Fraser K. MacMinn* William A. Magee* Don R. Marsh Jr.* Theodore B. Martin x M. Pressley Mead * Robert W. H. Mish Jr. George C. Morris Jr.e Donald R. Moxham * William C. Olendorf James A. Ottignon * Dan C. Pinck Barton P. Quaintance * Thomas Randall Hugh E. Reams* Robert S. Richardson . John C. Short ur. Philip J. Silverstein Sherman J. Smith Charles M. Weeks * Charles J. Williamson III Edmund S. Willis* Kenneth B. Wilson * Roger M. Winborne Jr. Sheppard W. Zinovoy* CLASS OF 1947-A&L Robert S. Axtell Jr. James H. Baldwin William J. Berry * Brent Breedin Jr. W. T. Brotherton Jr. * Harold T. Chittum Jr. * Henry C. Clark* Fred L. Coover ur. Robert S. Curlx Ellison P. Gaulding Jr. Bernard F. Judy Harrison Kinney * D. Carleton Mayes * Warren G. Merrin Jr. * Joseph G. Patrick William H. Pifer* William T. Ratliff Jr. James H. Sammons * L. Roper Shamhart Charles H. Shook T. W. Sommer McDonald L. Stephens Robert A. Warms* Thomas R. Watkins * William M. Wilcox Jr.e Eugene B. Wright Jr. CLASS OF 1948-A Nate L. Adams II * Julian C. Anderson James F. Booker Lewis V. Boyle Harry W. Brown Jr. William W. Burton*® Donald E. Campbell x James A. Cranford Jr. * Marvin L. Daves Francis A. Davis Jr. * Rutledge H. Deas Jr. * Marshall S. Ellis Gordon A. Fox* Elmer H. French Jr. Frederick B. Gillette Hardin M. Goodman* Edgar D. Holladay William L. Hopkins Charles C. Hubbard * Leslie F. James* Walton W. Kingsbery Jr. William F. Leffen* Andrew H. McCutcheon * Charles R. McDowell Jr. Andrew C. McFall Jr. * James T. McKinstry * Johnson McRee Jr. John E. Miller Jr. * Neilson November * Walter B. Potter * William H. Rattner * Josiah P. Rowe llle Thomas A. Scott Jr. Louis W. Shroyer Ill Jesse W. Turner* Gilbert H. Wilson * Sterling W. Winn Paul R. S. Yates CLASS OF 1949-A Robert L. S. Adams* James A. Anderson Ill * Henry M. Barker Michael J. Barrett Jr. Clifford B. Beasley Jr.* Brian Bell Edward P. Berlin Jr. Donald M. Bertram Granville S. R. Bouldin® David M. Bower Jr. Edward L. Bowiex Michael B. Boyda Philip C. Braunschweig * D. Earl Brown Jr. * David K. Caldwell Frank Carter Jr. * Leigh Cartere H. Glenn Chaffer * Richard S. Cooley George E. Dashiell x Ralph J. Davis Peter D. DeBoer Bruce H. Donald Frank C. Dorman Jr. * E. Stewart Epleyx E. McGruder Faris Jr. * John A. Farr Jr. Norman Fischer Jr. Roger M. Fritchie*x Thomas R. Glass * William W. Graham Ill * James T. Graybeal* — John C. Green Jr. H. Dana Grindy John M. Guthrie William Hamilton * Ossie D. Hamrick Jr. Henry H. Hicks Harry H. Hill Jr. James C. Hitz Thomas S. Hook Jr. Carlton Johnsone Edward W. Kinge Albert S. Kyle Ill x John T. Lanier Jr. William E. Latturee Charles R. Lemone Daniel J. Little Madison D. McKee Jur. * Joseph B. Martin Burr W. Miller* John Q. Miller Jr. * H. Thorp Minister Jr. Robert J. Moodye Clarence V. Moore Jr. Spencer W. Morten* Paul J. B. Murphy Jr. * Leonard A. Nixon* Matthew W. Paxton Jr. * Robert T. Pickett III Stephen W. Ramaley x Robert R. Reid Jr. * James M. Ress William R. Rice * William C. Ruble x Mark W. Saurs* John S. R. Schoenfeld * William C. Smith Jr. L. Vernon Snyder* Everette L. Taylor Jr. * John F. Taylor Robert A. Totty Jr. Richard H. Turrelle Kenneth H. Wacker * Connie K. Warren Jr. Donald E. Warren* Richard H. Whiteman* Walter H. Williams Richard M. Yankee Jr. * Ellis N. Zuckerman CLASS OF 1950-A James Q. Agnew* Stuart S. Bailey x John R. Baldwin W. Hale Barrett « W. Paul Bennett Richard F. Bidwell *« Arthur A. Birney * William G. Brooks * Richard T. Brown* William L. Brown Jr. Douglas |. Buckx Gerard A. Burchell Jr. William S. Cale James E. Cantler John S. Chapman R. Dabney Chapman William N. Clements Ile John R. Colex A. Christian Compton * W. Randolph Cosby Jr. * David S. Croyder * Maurice Dick* Atwell Dugger * John C. Earlex P. James Fahey Jr.* Gus A. Fritchie Jr. * Thomas C. Frost Jr.e Edwin M. Gaines George W. Ginn* Claiborne W. Gooch Ille Byron W. Graves Jr. * Thomas L. Guthrie Albert H. Hamel* John F. Hardesty Jr. Francis A. Hare Houston H. Hartee James T. Hedrick* Robert T. Helmen Alexander R. Hill* Richard E. Hodges * Roy Hoffman Jr.* Thomas A. Hollis Curtis C. Humphris Jr. * Robert E. R. Huntleye Richard A. Hurxthale Lawrence E. Jarchow*x Howard S. Kaylor * Gordon Kennedy Jr. Bruce R. King Jr.* Allie B. Kreger Jr.* Clifford B. Lattax Lester H. Lewis Jr. Ernest T. Love Jr. * Frank Love Jr.* Herbert A. Lubs Jr. W. B. McCausland * Charles F. A. McCluer Jr. * John H. McCormack Jr. * Andrew W. McCulloch James R. McDonald Joseph H. McGeex Donald A. Malmox Robert H. Mauck Oliver M. Mendelle Robert S. Mendelsohn J. Peter G. Muhlenberg F. Alden Murray Jr.* C. William Pacy Il* Bruce S. Parkinson * Andrew L. Peabody * Franklin S. Pease Jr. * F. Lisle Peters Jr. George H. Pierson Jr. Charles S. Plumb* Joseph H. Reese Jr. * Charles H. Robertson Barnett Robinson Jr. * Paul B. Root Jr. Francis E. Rushton* Isaac M. Scher James G. Sheridan Robert F. Silverstein A. Fletcher Sisk Jr. * Kenneth R. Stark Jr. Howard L. Steelex Gerry U. Stephens James P. Sunderland* Robert W. Swinarton* J. Brookins Taylore James E. Taylor Thomas T. Tongue II C. Dwight Townes William H. Townsend * James T. Trundlex Robert Van Buren* Richard C. Vierbuchen* Allan M. Warner * Lawrence V. Wheater’ Millar B. White Jr. * G. William Whitehurst I. N. Wicknick * 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. * Edward P. Bassett « W. Upton Bealle William G. Bean Jr.e Joe Bergstein John K. Boardman Jr. * Thomas T. Bonde Donald W. Bourne* John L. Bowles Howard Bratches * Wesley G. Brown* Richard P. Cancelmo*. James P. Carpenter Stephen P. Coco*x William R. Cogar* Lewis P. Collins III Marcus A. Cook Ill * Thomas A. Courtenay Ill * J. Alan Cross Jr. * William E. Daniel Jr. * Richard D. Davis * William R. Davis * Andrew J. Ellis Jr. Donald M. Fergusson * Peter E. Forkgen Eugene E. Freeman Jr. * James F. Gallivane Fontaine J. Gilliam * Robert E. Glenn* John A. F. Hall Guy B. Hammond Arthur Hollins Ile Samuel B. Hollise Robert L. Hopkins Jr. * William H. Hunte William G. ller Il* John W. Johnson Ill * Richard L. Jones Jr. * John E. Kannapell Jr. Alan L. Kaplanx John F. Kay Jr. John W. Kay* Joseph E. Kling O. David Kulman Peyton S. Kulman Wilson H. Lear * Lester |. Levine x Thomas A. Lupton Jr. Joseph B. McCutcheone Richard R. McDonald * Herbert G. McKay * Barton MacDonald * John O. Martin A. Stevens Miles Jr. * Samuel E. Miles Jr. * James E. Moyler Jr. * Berryman V. Nealx A. Parker Neffx Barry T. Newberry Milburn K. Noell Jr.e Townsend Oast * James N. Paradies * Herbert G. Peters Ill * Ferdinand Phillips Jr. * Robert T. Pittman Michael Radulovic * James W. Roberts Jr. * William S. Rosasco III Richard D. Rosenfeld W. Vance Rucker Jr. * David E. Ryerx Robert H. Salisbury Jr. Richard W. Salmons * James Z. Shanks Franklin H. Simmonse Douglas M. Smith Park B. Smith*x Robert L. Smith Jr. * Morton B. Solomon Henry B. Stern* Richard B. Taylor John |. Thompson Jr. Landon W. Trigg Charles F. Tucker * Norfleet R. Turner * Frederick G. Uhlmann* M. Theodore Van Leere Sol Wachtler x Charles Smyth Walden Jr. John C. Warfield x Thomas A. Washe Henry J. Waters Ill x S. Ray West Jr. James J. White Ille Richard E. Whitson Jr. Thomas P. Winborne x John R. Wittpenn* Dave Wolf Jr. * Thomas K. Wolfe Jr.¢ Daniel S. Wooldridge CLASS OF 1952-A John H. Allenx Eugene M. Anderson Jr. * Frank A. Baer Il *® Richard G. Ballard William F. Barron Jr.e Robert E. L. Batts Jr. * Robert M. Bayler Victor E. Behrens Jr. Perry L. Borom* George S. Boswell Frank H. Callaham Jr. * William M. Canby * Charles B. Castner Jr. Ernest H. Clarke x Samuel E. E. Conklin Robert F. Connally Ill * Joel B. Cooper * Edward C. Darling* Charles O. Dean Jr. * Rogelio DeLa Guardia x Richard A. Denny Jr.¢ Phillips M. Dowding * George E. Eaglee Joseph J. Eisler x William G. Fuquax Edward E. Gardiner * Thomas G. Gardner Paul R. Giordani * James T. Gray Robert S. Griffith Jr. Thomas N. Harris * John H. Holler * 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 Ill * Boyd H. Leyburn Jr. * Lynn F. Lummus William H. Lyon* Wayne D. McGrew Jr.e Preston C. Manning Jr. Robert A. Maslansky Edward D. Matz Jr. * William R. Mauck* Joseph Mendelsohn lille Thomas S. Miller Julian B. Mohre David M. Murraye Orest Neimanis * Cephas T. Patch II Louis R. Putname Walter R. Randall Kent Rigg * Philip Robbins Hilliard A. Robertson Charles S. Rockel W. J. Kenneth Rockwell x William H. Rowe Edwin F. Schaeffer Jr. x Robert D. Schenkel Jr. George W. Seger* Thomas R. Shepherd * Donald L. Shuck William C. Shuck II Edward B. Sickle Jr. Gideon N. Stieff Jr. * Robert W. Storey x Edwin Streuli Jr. * Francis L. Summers Jr. William A. Swarts Jr. Roland E. Thompsone John D. Trimble Jr. * C. Byron Waites James J. Walsh Thomas R. Warfield x Dudley A. White Jr. * John W. Willcoxon Ill *. Henry |. Willett Jr. * C. Molton Williams * Donald K. Williams Elisha W. Winfrey Ill * Lester E. Zittrainw CLASS OF 1953-A Cecil R. Adams Jr. William E. Baggs Robert B. Bell Hugh H. Bond John |. Bowman Jr. Willis F. Brown William D. Bruce*x Ferd E. Carter Gray C. Castle x A. Roger Chappelka Jr. Laurence G. Christie Jr. William H. Coleman * Roy A. Craig Jr. * Crowell T. Dawkins Jr. * John R. Delahunty * Leonard C. Dill Ill John W. Dodd Jr. * Jaroslav A. Drabek Samuel S. M. DuBois Jr. x Robert F. Duguay * M. Alton Evans Jr. * Herbert S. Falk Jr. * William H. Foster Jr. Harry A. Fozzard* Wyatt French Jr. C. Craighead Fritsche Owen B. Fuqua Jr. * Herbert O. Funsten* Simon H. Galperin Jr. Clark P. Garrecht Hugh S. Glickstein * Herbert F. Gordon Henry W. Grady Jr. John D. Heard ® James L. Hinkle William A. Hockett Jr. * William M. Hollis Jr.e Sam B. Hulsey Jay W. Jackson Tyson L. Janney John B. Kinkead * John R. Kremer Jr. * Peter J. Kurapka Jr. * John R. Lawson Jr. * Harold F. Lenfeste Stephen F. Lichtenstein x Charles R. Lovegrove x Clyde S. McCall Jr. * Hayes C. McClerkin Jr.e Robert J. Maccubbin* John D. Maguire x Thomas L. Maker C. Scott May * George F. Maynard Ill * John L. S. Northrop * John R. O’Connell Jr. * Alden M. Pitard Daniel E. Popoviche Lee A. Putneye William E. Rawlingse Melville P. Roberts Jr. * George W. St. Clair* Mark H. Schaul Jr. * Jan J. Schilthuis Jr. Ellis B. Schulist * Barrett C. Shelton Jr. * Charles H. Sipple Ill Kenneth B. Sizer Chester T. Smith Jr.e Spencer T. Snedecor ur. Kenneth F. Spence Jr. * Edgar W. Spencer * Clayton A. Stallworth x Guy T. Steuart Ile Webb E. Stevenson Daniel C. Stickley Jr. Rodney F. Stock Jr. Seth A. Thayer* Robert H. Thomas * Justin D. Towner III Ruel W. Tyson Jr. Kyle W. Walden * Robert H. Warren* W. Temple Webber Jr.e John B. Wheeler * J. Edward Wise x CLASS OF 1954-A James B. Andrews Ile Thomas E. Aschenbrener Don P. Barbex Earle S. Bates Jr. * Hugh L. Berryman John M. Blumex James D. Bonebrake x John R. Calverte James C. Conner* J. Robert Crosse George S. Denning Jr. * Daniel D. Dickenson Jr. * Horace D. Douty J. Spencer Frantz * James A. Freedman* Ross B. Grenard Jr. A. Dean Guy Ehrick K. Haight * Richard T. Harbison Daniel G. Hartshorn Frank T. Hundley Ill x William B. Inabnet Jr. * Farris Jackson William R. C. Jones * Thomas J. Kenny Friedrich G. Lackmann Jr. H. Gordon Leggett Jr. J. Fletcher Lowe Jr. Nicholas G. Mandak* Paul Maslanskye Roy T. Matthews Jr. * H. Victor Millner Jr. Robert O. Paxton * Henry P. Porter Jr. * Harold J. Quinn Jr.e Laurier T. Raymond Jr. x Richard P. Ross Franklin L. Shipman Jr. * Jacob A. Sitesx Robert P. Smith Jr. * Stephen H. Snowx Jerry G. Southe Jason B. Sowell Jr.e Gordon M. Taylor * James R. Trimm Kenneth |. Van Cott W. Temple Webber ur.¢ George B. Werthan* Donald E. West* Wiley R. Wright Jr. * George M. Younge 31 CLASS OF 1955-A Kenneth L. Abernathy * Hadden C. Alexander Ill * Thomas W. Alexander |. Thomas Baker * Joseph K. Banks Jr. * Arthur E. W. Barrett Jr. William H. Bartsch David M. Berlinghof x William D. Blake x Watson A. Bowes dr. * Barry D. Clark* Scott B. Clinton M. Lewis Cope Jr. William E. Corneliuse W. Andrew R. Dalton Roland C. Davies Jr. Ray B. Dinkel*x Marvin R. Doerfler* John W. Englishman Robert N. Fishburne Harry M. Ford Jr.* Anthony F. Gerike* Frank G. Gibson Jr. * Lowell D. Hamric*. Harry M. Hollins * John T. Huddle Walk C. Jones Ill * Richard Kops William J. Lemone Laurence Levitan* Richard G. Littlejonn* Thomas E. Lohrey Jr. * Christian A. Luhnow David W. McCainx Conrad H. McEachern Jr. Robert H. Mann ur.e J. Hardin Marion Ille Marvin P. Meadors Jr. * William S. Merrick Jr. * Guy P. Metcalfe Jr. * Douglas D. Monroe Jr. Paul R. Muller+* Charles M. Patrick Jr.* M. Raymond Piland Ill * E. Stuart Quarngesser * O. Bertrand Ramsay William R. Ritter Jr. * Thomas W. Robbins Jr. Judson H. Rodman John A. Rutherford Anthony H. Sargent * Francis O. Schaefer Jr. * Eugene B. Sieminski Leroy H. Simkins Jr. * E. Naudain Simons Ill Raymond D. Smith Jr. * Harrison Somerville Jr. * Wiley W. Spurgeon Jr. John W. Stackhousee William J. Stober II * Jerry F. Stone dr. * Rudolph J. Stutzmann* John M. Walbridge* David S. Weinberge Paul H. Weinstein * Robert D. Whitaker * Arthur F. Woeber * CLASS OF 1956-A Aristides M. Alevizatos * Arnold M. Applefeld David D. Bare Charles R. Beall «x Jasper B. Becker Jr. * Joel Bennett x Byron Berman Sam H. Berry Victor R. Bond Philip H. Brasfield Jr. * Robert G. Callaway * S. Booker Carter Jr. Rupert F. Chisholm Jr. * Ralph A. Cusick Jr.e Mark B. Davis Jr. * Charles E. Dobbs * Ellis B. Drew Jr. * Michael R. Dubin * 32 Gilbert F. Dukes Jr. John M. Ellis* Henry H. Fisher Dudley D. Flanders * Wayne W. Fowler Charles S. Gay * Earl S. Gillespie x Robert G. Gooch* John D. Grabau * Jean M. G. Grandpierre Leonard C. Greenebaum * Andrew B. Greenman* Edgar L. Grovex Richard B. Gwathmey Victor Herrick Hanson* Allen Harberg * William A. Henley * William H. Houston Ill * Jamie M. Howe Peter J. Jacobs * James C. Jeter * Lucius E. Johnson* Richard M. Johnston* Alfred O. Jones Jr. * John K. Kane II ~ Sidmon J. Kaplan* Emmett R. Kelley x Thomas O. Lawsone James W. Lewis Arthur W. McCain Jr. * Edward D. McCarthy * Albert M. McClaine J. Robert McHenry Donald G. McKabax Richard G. McNeer William D. Manning* James W. Marvin Jr. Sanford R..Maslansky * R. C. Gunnar Miller* George F. Milligan* J. Marvin Moreland Jr.e William C. Norman Jr.e Peter Q. Nyce Jr.* John K. Oast J. Richard O’Connelle G. Dewey Oxner Jr. James D. Perryman Jr. * John E. Peters Jr. * Frank S. Pittman Ill *« A. Bert Pruitt Jr. * James L. Pullen Arch W. Roberts * C. Dudley Rodgers Jr.* W. Jacques Schuler Jr. Richard A. Skolnik* George |. Smith Jr. * Frederick P. Stamp Jr. * E. Harrison Stonex Samuel A. Syme Jr. Daniel B. Thompson Il * Milam Turner Jr.* Dederick C. W. Ward IIl Charles C. Watson Headley S. White Jr. * Thomas A. S. Wilson * CLASS OF 1957-A William H. Abeloff* Joseph M. Alanis* John R. Alford* Joseph A. Amato Jr.* Lawrence A. Atler* Robert D. Ballantine x Ross H. Bayard Richard C. Belden Sam Bendheim Ill * Joel H. Bernstein Richard H. Berrye Richard A. Block John T. Boone Jr. * Lenox B. Buchanan Jr. * Robert A. Cairns * J. Colin Campbell James R. Creel Jr. H. Greig Cummings Jr. Charles F. Davis Jr.% John G. Dickenson Charles M. Drum David H. Dunton* Stephen M. Ehudin Stanley M. Erdreich Jr. * Donald V. Farriss* John J. Fox ur. J. Warren Frazier * Karl M. Funkhouser John D. Garson George S. Gee Jr. * John A. Gold Jr.* Leonard E. Goodman Warren H. Goodwyn * Richard C. Gower Dale F. Guy* John M. Ham* Donald W. Harper* Robert P. Hawkins Ill * William A. P. Haynes ur. Benjamin N. Hoover * John B. Howard * Morton P. ller* Joseph M. Jones Jr. * Kendall C. Jones William L. Kauffman Theodore M. Kerr* Jan C. Koontz * Gilbert R. Ladd Ille Robert H. Large Richard P. Laskeye C. Peter Leininger Ill Thomas V. Litzenburg Jr. * George M. Lupton Jr. * Donald S. Luria John E. McDonald Jr. * Alfred J. Magoline Jr. * John D. Marsh* A. Jackson Mason Loren A. Mintz Richard A. Moore Henry C. Morgan Jr. Robert |. Peeples * H. Merrill Plaisted Ill * Alexander B. Platt Charles B. Richardson* Jeb J. Rosebrook* William J. Russell Jr.e Bernard Schaaf Jr. * Charles L. Sherman IV William O. Shropshire * John W. Sinwell * Isaac N. Smith Jr. * John M. Smith * Jordan M. Smith Marquis M. Smith Jr. Thomas A. Speer* James R. Stockton Jr. * H. Alfred Tarrant Jr. * William B. Tippetts Jr. Richard R. Warrene H. Dunlap Weichsel* John L. Wellford Jr.e Richard C. Whiteford * Warren E. Wilcox Jr. * CLASS OF 1958-A Osborne S. Aiken Jr. A. Lewis Allene Ralph W. Baucum ur.e Irwin R. Berman* Neil C. Bland * Thomas B. Branch Ille H. Clayton Brants * Manley P. Caldwell Jr. * Irvin N. Caplan Charles J. Cellae Kenneth W. Chandler * Sheldon Clark, II Malcolm A. Clinger Jr. Harry S. Cockey Charles G. Crawford James J. Crawford Jr. * Richard A. Davis David M. Dawson* W. Rowland Denman Samuel C. Dudley * Glenn R. Fahrenthold Herman Fenstermacher II William C. Finch Jr. Donald R. Fowler* William M. France* Thomas C. Friedman Edward M. George Jr.* Allan R. Gitter* John R. Hanson* Edward L. Harlow Charles M. Helzberg * Nixon C. Henley x Caton N. Hill Jr. * John G. Holland Vernon W. Holleman Jr.e¢ Farris P. Hotchkisse John C. Huffard* Campbell Hutchinson III * Howard E. Jacobs * Archie O. Jenkins II * Avery B. Juhring* Thomas F. King Jr. Wilfred M. Kullman Jr. * John L. Lancaster IlIle W. Philip Laughlin * Henry F. LeBrun Jr. Ainsley J. Lester Ill * James E. Lipscomb Ill * Joseph L. Lyle Jr. * G. Sage Lyons * C. L. McCormick III Andrew W. McThenia Jr. Edgar H. MacKinlay * E. Michael Masinter * Robert W. Maxwell Charles P. Midgley * Charles H. Miller Jr. * W. C. Miller+* Charles E. Mochwart * John P. Moyer Lee Mullins * David G. Noble x Charles E. Nolte Ill Thomas P. O’Brien Jr. * Robert C. Pearson O. Brooks Pollock Jr. * Harry L. Pressley Jr. * Frederick J. Ramsay James W. Reid Theodore G. Rich Jr. Robert A. Richards x Rufus L. Safford R. Lawrence Smith* Charles R. Spencer Jr. * Hugh B. Sproul III Nelson S. Teague * Rice M. Tilley Jr.e John L. Tucker *® James W. Van Cleave Ill x Edgar A. Wallacex K. William Waterson Jr. Benjamin A. Weimer Jr. * S. Scott Whipple x James L. Whitlock William |. Winchestere William K. Younge CLASS OF 1959-A Walter L. Ansell « C. Dubose Ausleye Edgar M. Baber* Robert D. Bohan* Henry H. Bohlman* Thomas H. Broadus Jr. Charles D. Brolle Thomas B. Bryant Ille Joseph S. Cambria* Salvatore R. Casella Charles W. Cole Jr. Joseph L. Craycroft Jr.e James M. Crews Jr. * Richard F. Cumminse Clinton M. Early* Irvin Ebaugh Ill « John H. Esperian Ralph M. Evans* Thomas P. Foley Jr. Anthony J. Frank* John P. Freeman* Stephen H. Friedlander * Arthur |. Gottsegen* Robert S. Grady Arthur S. Grove Jr. * Dwight L. Guy* Edward F. Halsell Jr. * Owen H. Harper * William S. Harrison John D. Hattendorf* C. Royce Hough Ille Albert C. Hubbard Jr.e William K. Hughes * Charles D. Hurt Jr.e Phillip A. Insley Jr. Robert G. Jacob* Don K. Joffrion* Thomas G. Johnson Robert R. Kanex Evan J. Kemp Jr. Robert C. Ketcham * Daniel W. Kling * Paul G. Knox John G. Koedel Jr. * John C. Kotz Tom L. Larimore* L. Geoffrey Lawrence Clark M. Lea Junius M. Lemmon Edward D. Levy Jr. * Robert B. Levy Joseph S. Lewis IV Edward R. Lilly Jr. * S. Melville McCarthy * Bruce Macgowan* J. Stephen Marks Ille Walter Matthews Jr. David W. Meese * Peyton G. Middleton Jr. * Max D. Miller Ill *« . Thomas M. Moore H. Donald Morine Michael A. Norell *« Philip E. Palmer* H. Gary Pannell * John A. Paul William H. Pixton David C. Poteet Richard A. Powell Edward M. Reaves * John P. Reilly * David B. Root Edwin P. Sapinsley Jr. Robert E. Shepherd Jr. * Donald W. Sigmund * William F. Simpson Jr. Jerald H. Sklar* Laurence M. Smailx H. Holden Smith Jr. * L. Voight Smith * Arnold L. Steiner * Boardman Stewart * James N. Stofer Il * Andrew T. Treadway * Francis B. Van Nuys* Murray M. Wadsworth * Jesse H. Webb Jr. * Raymond P. White Jr. * Jere H. Williams James A. Woode John W. Worsham Jr. CLASS OF 1960-A Charles D. Aiken Jr. Leigh B. Allen III * Michael D. Applefeld * Douglas E. Barnard Fletcher J. Barnes IIl* John J. Barnes Jr. * Frederick H. Belden Jr. * Edward Bell Jr. * Thaddeus W. Bell F. Fox Benton Jr.e Louis R. Bloodworth Rockwell S. Boyle Jr. * John M. Bradford *. Daniel F. Bridges Charles G. Buffum Ill Malcolm B. Burton Edward E. Calhoun* Hugh L. Campbell * Charles S. Chamberlin * John W. Clark Jr.* William H. Clark Jr. * Oliver T. Cookx Edward A. Corcoran John T. Crone, Vx Robert R. Davidson * John C. Dawson Jr. * Edward D. Deters Max L. Elliotte Robert R. Feagin Ill * Allen M. Ferguson * Alexander R. Fitzenhagen* Leslie E. Gaut Jr. * William M. Gibson * Thomas W. Gilliam Jr. * Frank S. Glaser * Edward F. Good* Grayfred B. Gray James |. Greene W. Preston Greene Jr. * Jack C. Groner* Philip G. Grose Jr. * John J. Haun*® Joseph E. Hess * Robert C. Hinkel John S. Hopewell Louis Horst Jr. Harley B. Howcott Jr. * Hoyle C. Jones * Julian C. Josey * Carter S. Kaufmann * Stephen K. Kent Jr. * Thomas C. Kern* David N. Keys*® Randolph Kilmon* John M. Kirk* Malcolm Lassmane Jonathan R. Lemon* Daniel B. Leonard * Harvey R. Levine W. Kendall Lipscomb Jr. * E. Peter Litton Jr. * William G. Loeffler Jr. James R. Loutit * Jon B. McLin* Sandy C. Marks Jr. Richard E. Miller Stephen D. Miller * Clifton D. Mitchell Willoughby Newton Ill * Thornton W. Owen Jr. * McGowin |. Patrick* David D. Pitard John R. Pleasant Jr. J. Davis Reed IIl John L. Reynoids Jr. Joseph E. Ringland Karl E. Rohnke Gordon E. Rountree x William B. Sawers Jr. * William W. Schaefer * Charles C. Sherrill * H. Gerald Shields Mervyn F. Silverman Joseph J. Smith Ill Robert H. Spratt * Charles W. Springer * Walter R. Staub Jr. J. Frank Surface Jr. * James B. Threlkel Conrad H. Todde J. Thomas Touchtone David K. Weaver J. Walter Weingart x Richard K. White Jr. * Robert O. Wilbur* Raymond E. Wooldridgee CLASS OF 1961-A Edward A. Ames Ill Raleigh R. Archer* Haywood M. Ball x Charles W. Baucum Kenneth S. Beall Jr. * Huntley H. Biggs George Y. Birdsong* Roy E. Bowen* William M. Bowene Jack H. Breard Jr. * J. Alfred Broaddus Jr. * J. Malcolm Brownlee Jr. Augustin C. Bryan Jr. Thomas W. Budd * William T. Buice III * Louis H. Burford Dwight R. Chamberlain George N. Chandler II * Philip W. Conaway James B. Conee David F. Cook Richard A. Cowles Jr. * Drew P. Danko Calvert G. DeColigny Jr.e Stephen P. Degenharat C. Howard Drexel Joseph C. Elgin Jr. * William J. Fidler Jr. * J. Clifford Foster III J. Carter Foxx Graham D. S. Fulton William V. Giles Jr. Perry L. Gordon James H. Hamersley * Henry H. Harrell * William H. Heald Wickliffe Hollingshead * Richard W. Hoover Norbert W. Irvine William R. Johnstone Kenneth Kleeman Winston E. Kock Jr. * Richard L. Kuersteiner Richard W. Lacy Edward B. Ladd* Courtney R. Mauzy Jr. Edward F. Meyers Jr.* William N. Offutt IV * Edson B. Olds IVx Robert K. Park II Donald H. Partington * Jon C. Peterson* William S. Proctor Maurice E. Purnell Jr.e Ronald L. Randel * James K. Randolph * Robert G. Rappel William C. Remington * A. Douglas Salmon III Milford F. Schwartz * Richard S. Sharline James W. Shugart Ill * Charles H. Smith Il * Reginald M. Smith Jr. * Wilmer L. Snowdon Jr. * John H. Soper Il * William M. Storey Peter T. Straub * Samuel C. Strite, Ur. * Henry M. Strouss Ill Donald W. Thalacker E. Hunter Thompson Jr. * Marshall Timberlake x E. Darracott Vaughan Jr. * Brian H. Vitsky * Charles S. Wassum III Jerry S. Wilbourn* Frank B. Wolfe Ille Robert W. Wornall L. David Zinn* CLASS OF 1962-A Peter A. Agelasto Ille Ronald H. Alenstein * William R. Anderson Jr. Harry G. Ballance Jr. William C. Boyd Ill x John W. Boyle Jr. * Aubrey B. Calvinx James W. Carty Jr. Stephen R. Chernay * Carl B. Connell x Charles M. Conway Jr. * Alan M. Corwin® Grantham Couche F. Thorns Craven Jr. * H. Allen Curran* Jerome M. Dattel x Hayward F. Day Jr.* W. Barton Dick* Frank A. D’Lauro Jr. * Robert S. Doenges* Robert A. Dunlap Jr. * G. T Dunlop Ecker * John O. Edmunds Jr. Robert E. Eikel x Ralph L. Elias Jr. * Rawson Foreman David K. Fraser * Norman R. Frisbie Steven A. Galefx Park Gilmore * R. Roy Goodwin Il * Guy N. Graham* Pearce D. Hardwick Ralph O. Harvey III Henry C. Hawthorne dr. * Samuel |. Hellman* Michael N. Herndon* G. Lindsay Hickam James C. Hickey Jr. James K. Hitch Il * Edward P. Hobbs * George E. Honts Ill * Justus C. Hoyt* Jerry H. Hyatt * R. William Ide Ill « Rupert H. Johnson Jr. * Kenneth B. Jones Jr. * Richard S. Jones* Ernest F. Ladd Ill* Robert P. Lancaster * Vincent T. Lathbury III * Robert D. Lewis * Donald H. McCluree Alan M. McLeod Philip F. J. Macon John A. Martin K. Douglas Martin * Arnold P. Masinter * Thomas L. Melgaard Jr. H. Eugene Melton dr. * Benjamin P. Michel x Russell B. Miller R. King Milling * E. Warren Mills * Barton S. Mitchell *« Michael H. Monier* J. Leyburn Mosby Jr. * Mason T. New* Charles J. Niemeyer * Theodore L. Oldham * Wesley R. Ostergren* William D. Outman* Rosewell Page Ill * Hugh K. Paton Jr. * John L. Paynex Leslie H. Peard Ill * George M. Peters* John W. Poynor® Venable B. Proctor Bruce A. Ratcliff x Kerry E. Reynolds* Paul K. Rhoads * James A. Russ * James S. Sagner* Philip D. Sharp Jr. Howard L. Slater * James W. Smithe James H. Starkey Ill * Stephen H. Suttle*x David K. Tharp * Walfred B. Thulin Jr. John R. Trible Ilx William E. Tschumy Jr. E. Monty Tucker * David C. Tyrrell Jr. * George H. Van Sciver* John W. Vardaman Jr.e John P. White C. Mark Whitehead Jr. * Ralph C. Wiegandt * Robert C. Wood Ill* Rufus C. Young Jr. CLASS OF 1963-A Alexander J. Alexander Jr. * Thomas G. Andrew Jr. * George Austen III A. Judson Babcock * Daniel T. Balfour * Rufus K. Barton Ill David W. Bevans Howard M. Binge William P. Boardman* Charles R. Brandt Il * Thomas M. Brewer Robert M. Briede J. Timothy Brown* Robert C. Browne Thomas A. Bunkley * Landon V. Butler Jr. * C. Vance Campbell Jr. James M. Campbell Samuel W. Channell x George M. Chapman Jr. R. Meade Christian Jr. D. Randolph Colex John P. Cover*. Walter E. Coxx A. Neil Crawford Jr. John O. Culley x Ruge P. Devan Ill Theodore A. Doremus Jr. * Matthew T. Douglass * John R. Dunnell William M. Durrett Edward B. Eadie Jr. * R. Thomas Edwards Ill * Thomas D. Edwards * J. Douglas Farquhare Rodger W. Fauber* Henry A. Fenn dr. * Ronald L. Garber Edwin P. Garretson Jr. * Joel L. Goozh* David R. Grogan* Jesse B. Grove Ill* Stephen E. Guild John N. Gulick Jr. Wilmot L. Harris Jr. * Robert D. Hart Jr. * George W. Harvey Jr. * James M. Henderson*® H. Kirkland Henry * Robert G. Holland Edward W. Holmes Jr. * Joseph P. Howson * Warren B. Hughes Jr. J. Winston Ivey * D. Eldredge Jackson III Omer L. Jeter Jr. Watkins C. Johnston Jr. John A. Kiely * Ronald L. King* Walter E. Klaas Jr. Henry H. Knight * Ken C. Kowalski E. Ross Kyger Ille 33 Eugene A. Leonard * Thomas R. Ligon E. Philip McCaleb Charles T. McCord Ille Thomas P. McDavid William B. MacKenney III John P. March John T. Mills * Thomas T. Moore Jr. * J. Holmes Morrison * John H. Mullin Ille David R. Munroe*x G. Andrew Nea Jr. Hamlet T. Newsom * Lewis G. Noe ur. * W. Allen ‘Northcutt III * Edward B. Ostroff* John M. Owen* David F. Peters * Lee G. Price Thomas N. Rains * Thomas P. Rideout * Bruce H. Roberson * Louis A. Rosenstock III Michael J. Shank Andrew A. Smith Jr. David T. H. Spencer * James L. Stott Jr. * James L. Surface Michael D. Sussman David C. Swann* Samuel D. Tankard Ill Glenn O. Thornhill Jr.e John C. Thurmond * G. McNeir Tilman* John E. Tipton* Hugh H. Trout Ill J. Richard Uhlig Il * Robert M. VanRensselaer H. Michael Walker * E. Brent Wells Il * Ashley T. Wiltshire Jr. Sherwood W. Wise Jr. Frank M. Young Ill* Robert A. Young Ill * CLASS OF 1964-A John M. Allgood David J. Andrex Alonzo Atkins Jr. * John W. Baker Jr. * Anthony J. Barranco Jr.* David C. Black Ill * Vincent C. Blackstock x Peter D. Blakeslee x Frederic W. Boye Ill * Michael H. Bright Arthur E. Broadus * Thomas M. Brumby IV Joseph R. Burkarte F. William Burke Jay M. Caplan Benjamin L. Chapmane Bruce T. Chosney x Richard C. Colton Jr. * Stanley A. Cook Frederick E. Cooper * Richard A. Coplan* Jere D. Cravens* Edward S. Croft Ill x Richard R. Cruse *x Rutledge W. Curriex John M. Dixon* Timothy W. Dols John Duncan III Alfred E. Eckes Jr.* Johnny P. Edwards Jr. * John D. Eure Jr. Philip R. Farnsworth Jr.* Charlie C. Flippen Jr. Lester M. Foote D. James French® Martin E. Galt Ill Brice R. Gamber* John F. Ganong Jr. * G. William Gossmann * Thomas Robbins Green Barry A. Greenex Kenneth E. Greer 34 Smith Hickenlooper III * John E. Hilker Matthew H. Hulbert Alvin B. Hutzler 11 David L. Hyman* Jay F. Jacot* J. Michael Jenkins Ill * Harvey E. Jones Jr. * Robert A. Kell Wilmot H. Kidd III * Eugene R. Kidwell Jr. « Charles D. Kimbell Bill H. Kinsey Jr. John H. Kirkley Frederick J. Krall Arthur G. Kroos III * Kenneth P. Lane Jr. * Michael E. Levinw Thomas C. Lewis* Thomas M. Lybass James B. McCeney John M. McDaniel III Douglass McDowell x Richard W. McEnally x Floyd W. McKinnon Walter L. McManus Jr. * Lewis B. McNeace Jr. * Bruce R. MacDonald * John M. Madison Jr. * James S. Maffitt IV * William H. Marmion Jr. Howard W. Martin Jr. * S. Walton Maurras * John E. Michaelsen* Hollis |. Moore Dennis R. Morgan J. Hobson Morrison Jr. * William A. Noell Jr. * John C. Norman Jr. * W. Buckner Ogilvie Jr. * A. Thomas Owen Charles C. Owens Donald Palmer * Stephen M. Parel Harry L. Parlette Ill x John Y. Pearson Jr. * Samuel W. Pipes, IV * Cotton Rawls Jr. * Judson P. Reis* Consider W. Ross * Philip B. Roulette Henry M. Sackett Ill * Charles B. Savage Frederick C. Schaeffer * William M. Schildt* Howard M. Schramm Jr. * Bernard M. Shapiroe Michael W. Sheffeye Conway H. Sheild Ille Nicholas R. Simmons D. Culver Smith Ill x Herbert F. Smith* Burton B. Staniar* Spencer R. Stouffer * James T. Sylvester Tain P. Tompkins Peter S. Trager Jerome Turner S. Gwathmey Tyler Ill * C. Fox Urquhart Ill * James H. Wallenstein * E. Stephen Walsh x Gus B. Walton Jr. Pennington H. Way Ill* John W. Wescoat J. Bruce Whelihan* George C. Wick Jr. Eric H. Wilson Rex H. Wooldridge * E. Randolph Wootton Jr. Robert E. Wyatt Jack Yarbrough* Stuart J. Yoffex CLASS OF 1965-A David H. Adams* C. Edmonds Allen IIl* Douglas G. Bielenberg James R. Boardmanx Warren K. Bolton* William G. Broaddus Brooks G. Brown Ill Blaine A. Brownell Jeffrey G. Conrad Jaquelin H. De Jarnettee Robert C. DeVaney * Gustave R. Dubus Ill* E. Robert Elicker II Gregory E. Euston Adam J. Fiedler * George M. Fisher, IV * Kiah T. Ford Ill Larkin M. Fowler Jr. * Victor R. Galef x Kirk A. Griffin Baird S. Grimson* Mark G. Haeberle x Douglas D. Hagestad * Stewart M. Hurtt* Stephen G. Hussey James W. Jennings Jr. * John E. Jennings |. Curtis Jernigan Jr. H. Daniel Jones III Randall P. Jones * Douglas Kannapell Richard K. Kneipper* Richard R. Kreitlere Robert E. Lee Ill* Michael S. McCord * Joseph S. McDaniel Ille Earl M. McGowin Jr. * Earl J. Magdovitz*. John F. Marshall Jr.e Alan L. Marx* Larry M. Meeks * Michael J. Michaeles x Ronald W. Moore*x J. Malcolm Morris Paul S. Murphy * Woodard D. Openox Robert B. Patton Eugene L. Pearce Ill« Peter M. Preston* Stephen W. Rideout * Patterson H. Robertsone J. Wood Rutter II * Max L. Shapirax Arthur B. Sher* Sam P. Simpson IV * Charles A. Sweet Jr. Royal Terrell Jr. * Robert G. Thomas* Timothy A. Vanderver Jr. * Joseph G. Wheeler * Jesse F. Williams Ill * J. C. Peter Winfield * John F. Wolfee M. Lanier Woodrum * Thomas L. Woodwarde Norman Yoerg Jr. * CLASS OF 1966-A C. Barrett Aldredge John D. Anderson John L. Baber Ill* Frank A. Bailey III Andrew N. Baur* Charles N. Bensinger Jr. Harry E. Brookby* James K. Bruton Jr. C. Thomas Burton Jr. Geoffrey C. Butler Stephen S. Case Lawrance B. Craig III James A. Crothers Il * John J. Czyzewski* T. Todd Dabney Jr.* Claibourne H. Darden Jr. * Thomas G. Day* Thomas M. Edwards * David E. Fleischer Maurice R. Fliess* Samuel H. Frazier* Gavin R. Garrett * Harry G. Goodheart Ille Charles N. Griffin Il « W. David Hasfurther * Michael M. Hash Thornton M. Henry J. Pegram Johnson III Thomas R. Kelsey * Michael E. Lawrence * Randy H. Leex Sydney Lewis Jr. * Donald J. Lineback William B. McClung * Val S. McWhorter * Hendrick W. Manley David J. Mathewson Jr. * George K. Meier III Lewis N. Miller Jr. * Phillip D. Molleree John C. Moore* Jon R. Neergaard Charles H. Newman lille Tabor R. Novak Jr. * Duncan E. Osborne John A. B. Palmer* Grayson C. Powell Jr. David D. Redmond * Charles W. Reese Jr. * Bruce W. Rider John H. Rutherford * Paul R. Schlesinger * Alfred L. Shapleigh III Eric L. Sislerx Anderson D. Smith E. Starke Sydnor* Gerard T. Taylor* James B. Thompson Jr. * Robert C. Vaughan Ill * C. Ganahl Walker Ill * William C. Washburn Jr. * Carter N. Williams IV Frank G. Younge CLASS OF 1967-A Richard D. Allen Galen E. Andersen* Christopher F. Armstrong William N. Bakere Edward E. Bates Jr. * Edward N. Beachum David P. Bendann Jr. S. Bryan Benedict Robert G. Bigham Robert R. Black® Roger A. Blair Gary B. Bokinsky x Richard D. Bradford * Stephen F. Brauer * William J. Bridges Ill * Ward W. Briggs Jr. Gregory E. Brooks Jr. Charles M. Bruce Nathaniel E. Clement Philip L. Cline Alan G. Cohen Randall A. Cole James H. Cooper Ernest |. Cornbrooks III * E. Thomas Cox Thomas C. Davis III R. Tracy Duggan Ill* Howard S. Epstein* Blaine Ewing III W. Lawrence Fellman* Stuart Finestone Marshall K. Follo Benjamin D. S. Gambill Jr.e Harold B. Gordy Jr. * John S. Graham Ill * Kenneth M. Greene* P. Rowland Greenwade * Francis C. Grumbine x Richard L. Harden Thomas J. Hardin II Tyree B. Harris IV Charles C. Hart B. Michael Herman James R. Hickam * J. Aldwin Hight Jr. Thomas J. Holden III J. McDaniel Holladay x John K. Hopkins * William S. Hulse x William H. Jeffress Jr. * S. Bryant Kendrick Jr. Leroy W. Krumperman Jr. * Richard S. Kurz J. Howard Luck* Andrew H. Lupton* Thomas J. McCarthy Jr. * Guyte P. McCord Ill * Stephen T. McElhaney John R. McGille H. D. Mayfield Ill * Roger A. Milam John R. Miller Douglas C. Morrison Clinton S. Morse * John T. Morsex Harold W. Nase* Michael K. Nation Walter S. Nicklin Ill * Theodore K. Oates || David W. Ogilvy Lee Parsons * James H. Price Ill Robert B. Priddy Randall L. Prior Alan T. Rains Jr.* Robert A. Reading II Edward B. Robertson Jr. * Bradford A. Rochester * Robert E. Sadler Jr. * Michael Y. Saunders * Bradford Shinkle IV Frederic P. Skinner* William H. Sledge * John C. B. Smith Jr. « Wood T. Sparks * William R. Sphar Ill + Jamie A. Stalnaker * George N. Stamas* Paul R. Stanton Charles T. Staples * H. Platt B. Staunton Warren E. Stewart * Aron L. Suna* Edward A. Supplee Jr. James A. Tyler Jr. William L. Walker Jr. Roger W. Wallace * William L. Want John J. Werst Ill * William S. Wildrick Ernest Williams Ill * John H. Zink Ill * CLASS OF 1968-A Jonathan E. Adams Robert F. Aldrich* John S. Anderson* John H. Anthony * Edmund H. Armentrout x ‘Leroy C. Atkins Il* James W. Bartlett III David E. Bass W. Hugh Baugher James L. Beckner Jr. Edward L. Bishop Ill x A. Rodney Boren Jr. * James M. Boyd Jr. Mark T. Boyd M. Ray Bradford Jr. Paul A. Brower* William D. Brown Corbet F. Bryant Jr.* Richard C. Burroughs * Russell V. L. Buxton C. Howard Capitoe N. Taylor Carlson* Robert B. Carter Carlile M. Chambers * Christopher B. Chandor* William F. Chew Ill Richard T. Clapp * Andrew B. Cleverly R. Noel Clinard — William A. Colom Jr. * Patrick B. Costello Philip G. Cottell Jr. W. Reid Cox* Theodore J. Craddock * Allen B. Craig Ill x Douglas S. Craig Jr.* John R. Crigler Linwood W. Davis James J. Dawson* James D. DeSouza David R. Dougherty * Frank S. Fairey Jr. Robert C. Gastrock Henry R. Gonzalez Jr.* Francis C. Green Jr. * Steven H. Greenia Frank Greer* Charles C. Harrold Ill « W. Christopher Hart * Malcolm T. Hartman* Kazimierz J. Hercholde Thomas L. Howard* Jon T. Hulsizer *® Donovan D. Husat* Robert D. Hutchens Edward |. Hutchins Jr. * W. Thomas Ingold * Frank A. Jackson * Rolly W. Jacobs Eugene R. Jacobsen Ill Benjamin H. Johnson Ill * Alexander S. Jones * Robert S. Keefe * Mavis P. Kelsey dr. Houston M. Kimbrough Jr. Jody S. Klinex Roane M. Lacy ur. James W. Large*x John H. Lawrence Jr. Jeffrey G. Lawson* John M. Lee William M. Lee Jr. Barry J. Levine Charles C. Lewis Leslie D. Locke * James R. Madison * Kirk R. Manning Eric P. Mantz * Joseph A. Matthews Jur. * Robert V. May Jr. Frederick A. Meiser Jr.e Mike E. Miles* Newton B. Miller Robert T. Miller * Robert H. Moll George A. Morgan Jr. * Michael G. Morganx Richard H. Nash Jr. * John R. Nazzaro*x Thomas W. Pettyjohn Jr. * Tom L. Pittman Jr. * Samuel B. Preston*x L. Holmes Raker * William S. Rasmussen John R. Reynolds * John W. Rice Jr. William P. Ridley Ill * Steven R. Saunders William C. Schaefer * Ralph W. Schenkel * Joseph G. Seay* S. Gates Shaw* H. Gilbert Smith Jr. * Robert J. Smith Lane B. Steinger* Geoffrey L. Stone Peter R. Strohm* Howard K. Tayloe Jr.* J. Jeffrey Thistle * D. Whitney Thornton II *« Charles B. Tomm* Peter W. Tooker* Guy M. Townley Wilson F. Vellines Jr. Jeffrey M. Wainscott * John H. Ward IV® William Emory Waters Jr.e Stephen H. Watts * Robert M. Weinx Gary P. Wilkinson*® Dale E. Williams Wendall L. Winn Jr. E. Ellis Zahra Jr.* CLASS OF 1969-A Robert G. Armstrong * Timothy R. Askew Jr.* Thomas P. Atkins * Willis M. Ball Ill * John M. Barr Ill * Michael C. Barr* Richard H. Bassett * Morris C. Benners Jr. Lee Bivins Il * Leonard A. Blanchard H. Laurent Boetsch Jr. Jeremy E. Brown* William J. Brown* J. Gillum Burkee R. Gillis Campbell Hugh A. Carithers Jr. * John F. Carrere Jr.e J. Ricks Carson Ill Clark H. Carter Leslie S. Carter Allen R. Caskie* Joseph T. Chadwick Jr. * Burnet H. Chalmers James M. Chance William M. Christie Jr. Alan H. Cooper* Gregory B. Crampton* Lucien B. Crosland * Joseph H. Davenport Ill * David L. Dowler* Dennis S. Drexler Robert Dunbar Theodore J. Duncan Ill * Dan T. Dunn Jr. Mark R. Eaker* Douglas R. Engle David C. Ennis* Jorge E. Estradae William D. Falvey John S. Fechnay Mayo M. Fitzhugh Ill Frederick C. Fletcher Il * Stephen W. Fletcher J. Ross Forman Ill* Harold F. Gallivan III William L. Gilmer J. Barton Goodwin*® David G. Gordone W. Henry Graddy IV Walter H. Green* M. Lee Halford Jr. * W. Douglas Hall * James C. Hamill Jr. * David W. Hardee Ill * John C. Harris Ur. Ray V. Hartwell Ill * Mark M. Heatwole x Robert M. Henes Philip L. Herndon* Samuel D. Hinkel IV Robert A. Hulten * J. Ward Hunte David D. Jackson Walter S. Jones* Leon D. Katz Neil S. Kessler William J. Kimmel Ill * Rufus D. Kinney Michael J. Kline x Richard E. Kramer * Alan N. Leex Alan M. Levine James J. Livesay* Arthur S. Loring * Daniel R. Lynn Jr. James W. McCommons* William T. McCutchen * Brittain McJunkin * L. Richards McMillan Il * Robert W. Mathewse Glen P. Mattox Fletcher F. Maynard Christopher P. Meyer David G. Mongan* Glenn R. Moorex Thomas S. Moore Robert A. Moselle Thomas W. Mullenix* Alan W. Nashx* Corydon C. Nicholson || Philip W. Norwood * Geoffrey C. Orth R. Stephens Pannill Ralph E. Pearcy Il* Jerald L. Perlman J. Alvin Philpott Jr.¢ Richard M. Preston* Thomas E. Robinson * Henry L. Roediger Ill * H. Daniel Rogers Jr. L. Phillips Runyon Ill W. Wade Sample*« Marc A. Schewele Peveril O. Settle III * Stephen A. Sharp * Donald A. Sharpe * David T. Shufflebarger * John G. Simmons* Thomas K. Slabaugh * Michael C. Stevens Christian Straley Bruce W. Talcott * R. Alan Tomlin* James A. Truss John R. Turman William C. Tyler* Edwin B. Vaden Jr. * Tinkham Veale III * William C. Walker Jr. Julian W. Walthall John T. Whetstone Joseph C. Wich Jr. * William R. Wilkerson Il *« C. Crawford Williams Jr. * Addison G. Wilson Robert W. Wipfler John A. Wolfe Kirk Woodward Thomas H. Wright Ill Harry J. Zeliffx Stanley E. Zimmerman Jr. * CLASS OF 1970-A F. Sheldon Anderson Jr.e Richard H. Antell Richard B. Armstrong John D. Baizley Bryan Baldwin H. Walter Barre Il*x George Z. Batehx Gordon W. Beall Bruce O. Beckman John M. Bernard * T. Anthony Bewleye James E. Bisbort Scot A. Brower * Charles C. Cahn Jr. * Richard W. Capron* J. Donald Childresse William Alvin Childs Jr. * Douglas E. Clarke * Kenneth M. Clayton Michael M. Cole Edward W. Coslett Ill * Christopher D. Coursen Charles P. Cowell III T. Kenneth Cribb Jr. * B. Waugh Crigler John H. Crockett Jr. * Richard C. Daughtrey Gregory J. Digelx Jay F. Dorman Philip D. Douglass Walter J. Dozier Jr.* Richard F. Dunlap Jr. * Robert L. Entzminger Mark S. Evans Stuart C. Fauber*. Albert T. Fechtel Jr. * Frank E. Fisher Jr.* Henry A. Fleishman* Thomas O. Fleming Jr. Walter J. Francisco Jr. * Charles G. Frankx David R. Frankstone Charles S. Freret Broox G. Garrett Jr. * Andrew M. Gombos ur. * William M. Gottwalde Jeffrey B. Grossman* Thomas C. Groton Ill Hugh B. Guill George W. Hamlin Brent G. Hankins * Howard L. Hansberry III Milford B. Hatcher Jr. David P. Haydu Marvin C. Henberg* Christopher R. Herchold Gary D. Herman Kenneth L. Hickman* David K. Higgins * Harry H. Hill Ill Gregory L. Holmes * Charles A. Holt Jr. Lawrence E. Honigx Frank B. Houseman* David L. Hull Curt B. Jamison L. Clarke Jones III David R. Katz John M. Kefauver Jr. Reeve W. Kelsey x G. Whitney Kemper Charles W. Kuhn Jr. * D. Dean Kumpurise David D. Kympton* Robert C. Lee Danny M. Leonard F. Miles Little * Joseph T. Lykes III Daniel C. McDavitt x James C. McElroye Thomas N. McJunkine Michael T. McVay Bruce R. MacQueen * Lee B. Madinger * James W. Major* James H. Maloney Jr. * Christopher R. Martin Roger S. Martin Steven P. Maslansky James O. Mathews ur. * James A. Meriwethere Bruce A. Meyers John E. Miller Sheldon J. Miller H. Lamar Mixson Jr. * W. Lee Moffatt III * Lawrence H. Morrison* Norwood O. Morrison Gary L. Murphy * Michael R. Murphy * Michael C. G. Neer John M. Nolan Benjamin C. Paden* George P. Page Ilx Clinton B. Palmer III E. Owen Perry Ill * John A. Phillips Jr. * William R. Phillips * Peter M. Piltz E. Angus Powell Jr. * Joseph D. Raine Jr. William F. Rector Jr.+* Hal S. Rhea William G. Rogers Robert W. Root ur. Bruce S. Samuels Steven B. Sandlere Martin F. Schmidt Jr. Richard T. Scruggs ur. * Byron R. Seward* G. Richard Singeltary * John M. Spencer Jr. Michael J. Spoor Malcolm H. Squires Jr. * Charles M. Stonex Paul S. Sugar Stephen L. Tabakin * Andrew B. Thomas * Michael T. Thornton Philip J. Tissue* Robert P. Trout* Willard B. Wagner Ill * Kennon C. Walden Jr. Gerald W. Weedon John E. Wetsel Jr. William A. Wilson Jr. * W. Harvey Wise* W. Whitlow Wyatt * One Anonymous Donor 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 Jr. Thomas K. Berger Walter B. Beverly x T. Carleton Billups Jr. Craig S. Bow Craig A. Bowlus Barry R. Boyce x Marcus E. Bromley x Marvin M. Brooke Frank C. Brooks Jr.e William E. Brumback William P. Canby* Kenneth P. Carter * Charles J. Cartwright * Lucius D. Clay Ill Stephen Clement Arthur F. Cleveland Il * Thomas W. Clyde Raymond D. Coates Jr. Madison F. Cole Jr. * John D. Copenhaver Jr. Thomas C. Daniel Jeffrey A. Davis Roy C. Deemer Bruce W. Derrick Sanford Doxey III * Christopher C. Dove John M. Duckworth * James F. Easterlin x John O. Ellis Jr. Clark W. Faulkner Jr. Michael G. Florence * George M. Foote Jr. Christopher D. Friend * Joel A. Fulmer IV Alan B. GaNun* G. Carr Garnett * William A. Gatlin Ill Charles W. Glasgow ur. * Stephen J. Hannon* Henry A. Harkey * C. Miner Harrell x Charles F. Harris Jr. * Steven L. Hawley * John R. Heath Hugh F. Hill Ill « E. Wren Hudgins Thomas B. Hudson Jr. * William S. Ingersoll. Richard C. lvey * Robert J. Jantzen Jr. Michael S. Jenkins * Robert R. Jensen Kelly C. Jones * Edward F. Judt William A. Kahn Patrick L. Keen John H. King John D. Klinedinste Donald H. Koontze Andrew G. Kumpuris* Francis M. Lawrence H. Drake Leddye Bruce C. Leex Harry D. LeTourneau Jr. D. Downs Little Alva M. Lumpkin Ill * John M. McCardell Jr. * Philip D. McFarlanex Gordon S. Macrae* Walter W. May * G. Lee Millar Ill Marshall B. Miller Jr. * 35 Barry W. Mitchell James A. Moses Alexander M. Nading Jr. Martin L. Nelson Kenneth W. Newman Henry Nottberg Ille William H. Oast III * E. Staman Ogilviee Van H. Pate * Joseph B. Philips III Robert R. Radcliffe Richard W. Regan Thomas E. Reynolds * Franklin R. Rich Stephen D. Rosenthal * Jackson H. Ross* T. Jeffrey Salb R. Balfour Sartor Mark H. Sayers * Allen C. Shepard Jr. * Kenelm L. Shirk III J. Connor Smith S. Russell Smith Jr. * Jeffrey B. Spencex Henry W. Stephenson Jr. Ronald N. Stetler* Timothy A. Strait John L. P. Sullivan Jr. * Ben P. Tatum * J. Wade Taylor * J. Grégory Tinaglia Joseph B. Tompkins Jr. * Bate C. Toms Ill Clifford L. Walters III Thomas H. Watts * Andrew J. White Jr. * David P. White Calvert S. Whitehurst * G. Hoy Widener III Paul D. Wilber Donald E. Woodard Jr. Robert G. Woodward * Bradfield F. Wright * Peter F. Zimmermann * CLASS OF 1972-A James A. Abele Jr. * Richard S. Abernethy x Edward H. Achorn Jr. * Thomas E. Addison III J. Hudson Allender Daniel W. Armstrong Charles K. Arnold William G. Arnot III Glenn M. Azuma* James M. Ballengee Jr. Thomas O. Barton David M. Bernard D. Michael Berry Joseph J. Blake Jr.e Max F. Brantley * Robert G. Brookby * Allen C. Brown* Colin K. Buell * Robert L. Burns * Ralph D. Caldroney Donald B. Cartwright * Timothy D. A. Chriss * Beach M. Clark Jr. * Leland C. Clemons Robert C. Coleman Peter A. Converse Bruce W. Cusson James S. Davis*x Lynn D. Durham Jr. J. Hagood Ellison Jr. * Lewis M. Fetterman Jr.e Robert P. Foley x Wade K. Forbes * Alan D. Frazer * Thomas J. Friedman Arthur N. Furhman Carter Glass IV Robert L. Goehring Jr. Lloyd M. Goodman * D. Randolph Graham Charles L. Gregory Brian S. Greig 36 Bernard C. Grigsby lle Mark W. Grobmyer Bruce R. Hankins C. James Harland Jr. James F. Heatwole *, Howell V. Hill * Thomas B. Hobbes David L. Hollande Robert J. Humphreys * Marshall T. Irving III George H. Jones Ill Robert C. Jordan Thomas G. Keefe Robert D. LaRuex John E. Lawlor Ill Scott E. Lebensburger Michael R. Longe Michael W. McCall Lex O. McMillan Ill « Bruce P. Madison* Douglas H. Madison Lawson H. Marshall Douglas F. Martin® Joseph R. Martin x P. Hale Mast Jr. * John P. Mellox William H. Miller Ill *® Edward G. Moore Meryl D. Moore David R. Munsick Jr. * Kenneth B. Murov Jarvis E. Newman Ill David W. Olson John C. O'Neal Steven J. Ory William W. Peery * Harry J. Phillips Jr. * Michael E. Riley x John W. Robinson IV * Stephen W. Robinson * Fredrick H. Sands* John R. Sarpy * Robert C. Shufeldt « Mark E. Skoggard * Peter M. Somerville * Richard J. Splittorf James M. Stege E. George Stook Jr. * Everett Tucker Ill * John G. Tucker Robert M. Turnbull * Terry W. Tylerx Robert C. Walker Jr. Donald W. Weir Jr. * Charles L. White E. Bruce Wilsie Jr. * M. Scott Wood Jr. * John B. Woodlief William M. Woodward * CLASS OF 1973-A William P. Ballard Jr. Jeffrey K. Baugher W. Christopher Beeler Jr. x George W. Blackford Jr. L. Price Blackford * Robert P. Boyd E. Mark Braden* M. Anderson Bradshaw Townsend Brown Jr. Robert J. Brumback Robert T. Bruyere Jeffrey C. Burris* Robert B. Cabell George E. Calvert Jr.* James H. Clapp * William C. Clark T. Hal Clarke Jr. * William D. Coan Jr. James E. Creamer Jr. Richard C. Crittenden Joffre J. Cross Il* Jeffrey O. Davies * Michael S. Davis James R. Denny Ill * John C. Dovel John H. Dumas II * Charles W. Dunn Donald D. Eavenson Jr. * William D. Emma Lawrence E. Evans Jr. James A. Fernald Ill John W. Folsom * Douglas A. Forsyth Cecil J. Francisco III William C. French* G. Archer Frierson Ile John C. Fullerton Ill C. Christopher Giragosian * Wade D. Gowl Richard H. Graham Richard E. Gray Ill James G. Hardwick Bruce N. Hasfurther Robert L. Hillman Andrew G. Hollinger * Conway W. Hunter III T. Haller Jackson Ill * Craig B. Jones* George R. Jones Jr. * Paul D. Jones* T. M. Kampfmueller Jr. * Jay H. Kern D. Bradford Kidd Matthew B. LaMotte Lanny R. Levenson* Robert E. Levy W. Revell Lewis Ill * Nimrod W. E. Long Jr. * Laurie A. McAlpine Paul K. McClure * G. William Macleod James S. Mahan Ill J. Jason Matthewse Wilson C. Merchant Ill « William G. K. Merrill William D. Miller % Philip H. Milner Jr. Robert L. Munt Jr. Danny N. Murphy Thomas J. Murray * Norwood E. Paukert Jr. Charles R. Pennington Charles D. Perry Jr. * Gary W. Poliakoff x E. Bryson Powell * Lat W. Purser III * John J. Reid Gregory B. Robertson * Michael C. Schaeffer R. Keith Shaner * Robert W. Sherwood * Robert A. Silverman Hatton C. V. Smithe Ralph H. Smith 11 James F. Spaulding * Andrew D. Staniar* J. Griffith Steel Charles M. Strain * Robert P. Tabb * J. Stanley Taylor * Robert J. Taylor IV x Daniel L. Topping * William G. Tucker John A. Wade Ill Marshall P. Washburn Scott P. Wellford Jack V. Whipple II Craig R. Williams * Julian Bartow Willingham Jr. Frederick W. Woodward Ill * Mark R. Young* CLASS OF 1974-A William D. Adams IV Jack E. Altman Ill * Gary M. Arthur Victor A. Barnes Theodore W. Bauer William F. Beacham * Gary C. Bingham Wilson E. Blain Chester F. Burgess Ill * Jeffrey D. Burke x Edgar T. Campbell Paul G. Cavaliere Jr. Douglas C. Chase Jr. * Andrew J. Chriss Timothy C. Conner * Francis J. Crilley Patrick T. Daly Marvin P. Daniel *« Raymond P. Davidson II * Robert A. Doll |. Langston Donkle IIl*& — William L. Downing * Waller T. Dudley x Lloyd E. Eagen Jr. * Leonard P. Eager Ill * Norman D. Fagge* James D. Farrar Jr. James C. Ferguson David V. Finnell Carl R. Fletcher III R. Leigh Frackelton Jr. Ralph E. Garner * Stephen J. Greene x Michael Guroian Stephen M. Hagey Walter L. Hannah Jr. Averill C. Harkey * E. Phifer Helms * Russell L. Hewit* Bliss Y. Hicky Lewis J. Hixson * Walter J. Hoyt Robert E. Johnson Jr. Kenneth D. Julian * William D. Kientz II * Duncan S. Klinedinst * Henry J. Koci Edward M. Kowalx Matthew B. LaMotte William R. LaRosa Jr. Steven E. Leftwich Joel L. Leginw Edward H. Leonard Ill Floyd W. Lewis Jr. Ernest J. Lichtfuss Jr. * Neil D. Lutins Gary W. McAuliffe * Richard S. McCain Charles L. McCardell * Bradford N. Martins Everett A. Martin Jr. Thomas A. Matteskye William R. Melton IV Richard H. Metcalf Stephen V. Metch David L. Moore Jr. Douglas J. Newell W. Perrin Nicolson IV * James N. Nolan Clifton O. Overcash Jr. Paul W. Perkins * Lewis F. Powell Ill * Mark W. Preston Stuart Ragland II Robert M. Rainey * Lee R. Redmond Ill * James G. Rogers John B. Russell Jr. William H. Sanders Jr. Edmund K. Seibels J. Stephen Shaner John M. Sheridan III * Wright D. Shields David B. Smith Martin E. Stein Jr.e Richard K. Stuart Jr. S. Jeffress Sullivan Thomas D. Swann J. Timothy Thompson * Alfred C. Thullbery Jr. John S. Wallace * William P. Wallace Jr. * Edwin O. Wiley * John P. Woodley Jr. * Stephen C. Woodruff x Andrew Graham Wright Jr. * John M. Zamoiski* CLASS OF 1975-A William E. Allaun Il J. Barclay Armstrong * James V. Baird Samuel M. Bell «x William H. Biesel Jr. * William T. W. Brotherton Lawrence B. Cahoon David A. Cantox Michael P. Chapman John R. Clapp * Michael F. Colpoys Robert A. Cook Richard K. Cooksey Richard R. Councill Mark V. Couy Rogers L. Craine James A. Cranford Ill * Charles M. Cushing Jr. * William C. Datz T. Barry Davis Duncan B. DeGraff Mark X. Diveriox David G. Dowell * Lawrence Dumville John R. Embreex David A. Estes Julian T. Evans Ill Kenneth M. Fauteux Edward G. Feddemanx Paul G. Firth Randy L. Flink* Robert C. Floyd William E. Forland Jr. * William D. Genge* John W. Getz Edmond B. Gregory Ill * Thad Grundy Jr. * B. Spencer Heddens Ill * William M. Hiden* Murray T. Holland * James J. Howard Douglas H. Hunte Joseph E. Johnson Richard D. Jones Robert H. Jones Richard D. Judson Robert A. Keatley * John E. Keith Jr. Guy H. Kerr John D. Killpack * Kim B. Kirk Karl E. Klinger * Richard M. Koch* Matthew B. Krafft Kim D. Kuehner * Paul J. Lancaster Thomas D. Lancaster J. William Lassetter David R. Lee Louis A. LeLaurin Ill *% Samuel R. Lewis Warren L. Look Lawrence F. Lyles* Alexander H. Mackintosh * Channing J. Martin David H. Mathews * Mark J. Mennel Kenneth C. Miller III Carter H. Moore * Stuart B. Nibley * David W. Otey Vernon F. Ottenritter James N. Overton * Eugene C. Perry ur. Benjamin G. Philpott * John R. Picciotti David R. Pittman* James E. Pope Steven W. Purtell Thomas B. Ramey Ill John E. Ramsey * Jack W. Ray Jr. Raymond L. Rheault Eric C. Rowex Peter J. Schneider Thomas E. Schneider * Mitchel J. Seleznick Philip L. Sellers David E. Shaffner Benjamin M. Sherman Preston R. Simpson W. Kennedy Simpson * Michael S. Sisak David H. Slater * Sterling H. Smith Lamar R. Spencer Charles A. Stein Kim Stenson William H. Sturges William W. Terry III 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. J. Bowman Williams x Joel A. Williams James Wilson Duncan F. Winter CLASS OF 1976-A Robert L. Amsler Jr. R. Stewart Barroll Ernest W. Bartlett III Ben R. Barton Frederick L. Bates* Thomas H. Baumann * Robert M. Bender William E. Birbick * David R. Braun* G. Don N. Bryant III John J. Burns Donelson Caffery Peter R. Cavalier David S. Cayer* Hunter N. Charbonnet Carey D. Chisholm John A. Cocklereece Jr. William R. Cogar Craig H. Coller William L. Cooper III William W. Crawford Jr. * Paul B. Cromelin III Douglas W. Darby David W. Denny James D. Doyle III Alan P. Dozier Daniel E. Drennen II * Bruce B. Dunnan* Milton B. Ellis Douglas M. Faris* D. Scott Farrar Gary T. Fitzgerald Jay R. Fries* William E. Garrison Ill * H. Mynders Glover * John L. Gray ur. David S. Greever* Philip L. Hanrahan T. Hunt Hardinge III Malcolm R. Hastings Frederick W. Havasy * William E. Hoatson Jr. Laurence P. Hobbes * Kenneth J. Holdax Harold R. Howe Jr. * Michael B. Hubbard Breckenridge Ingles * Bruce Davis Jackson Clay T. Jacksone Neilson L. Johnson J. Lee Keiger Ill « Donald R. Kempton Jr. Stephen C. LaRosa R. Brooke Lewis Harry L. McCarthy II Thomas K. McClellan David S. Martinx Mark R. Maurais Theodore C. Merrick Henry M. Montague William H. Moomaw Jr. M. Reed Morgan Robin Morgan William Howell Morrison Spencer W. Morten III * Douglas R. Muir* Paul J. B. Murphy III * Julian J. Nexsen Jr. * Dennis Oakley x Vernon E. O'Berry Jr. * Michael A. Okin B. Craig Owens * William B. Peard* Alan W. Pettigrew A. Dickinson B. Phillips William W. Pifer Robert D. Propst Gerard ‘R. Quinlan* Kenneth P. Ruscio Robert F. Searles Gary W. Seldomridge William C. Shelton Patrick K. Sieg Frederick L. Silbernagel * Paul A. Simpson Michael A. Spaulding Paul K. Stillwagon Stephen R. Strawsburg * Richard L. Thieringer William E. Thompson IV Walter E. Veghte Ill * Peyton A. Via Joseph Walker I! Scott E. Watson * Richard O. Whitaker * CLASS OF 1977-A H. Cobb Alexander Jr. * Michael D. Armstrong *® Camillus L. Avent William F. Beauchamp Richard O. Bolden William M. Broders James R. Brooks * William G. Brothers Solomon G. Brotman John R. Buckthal * Michael J. Burns * Edwin H. Callison Jr. * William D. Cantler Robert A. Carpentier * Joseph L. Carrerex Robert M. Chiaviello Jr. Michael Howard Clary William Clemons Gary Collier M. Calhoun Colvin Jr. * David C. Davis Christian G. Dietz III John R. Downey x Joseph D. Dubuque * James J. Duffy Ill x Roger B. Durham * Edward M. Duvall Allen R. Emmert Ill J. N. Falk Richard P. Fink James Hagood Fisher * Michael E. Forry Bradley J. Fretz Clarence N. Frierson Jr. * Steven N. Gabelman* Landon W. Garland Edward B. Gerharat T. Nicholas Gill Stephen D. Good * John D. Gottwald * Reid H. Griffin Jon R. Grigg Louis B. Hackerman Gary K. Haley Craig F. Hamilton Sinclair J. Harcus Jr. Philip L. Hatchett Bolling C. Haygood * Edward C. Irby Jr. David B. Johnston James A. Jones IV Leon F. Joyner Jr. Walter H. Kansteiner Thomas N. Keigler Walter D. Kelley Jr. x William J. Kerr James E. Koch Rand J. Krikorian * W. Dana LaForgex Paul James Larkin Lawrence James Lawson III Roger B. Leithead Jr. Benjamin M. Lowe John A. Magee V James B. Mallory III W. Randall Mann Joel W. Mohrmann * Thomas H. Murphy Robert E. Ottenritter Vaughan M. Pultz* Richard T. Rathbonex Patrick Reilly * Alfred Burgess Robinson Jr. John D. Rosen* William H. Sands Angelo B. Santella James U. Scott Douglas A. Scovanner * Stuart W. Serenbetz x Howard R. Sklaroff Marshall K. Snyder * John Strock D. Lowell Sullivan Gregory Scott Thomas Clark G. Thompson Jr. Samuel E. Thompson Frank Keech Turner Jr. Theodore L. Uhlman ur. John A. Ulizio James C. Vardell III * Timothy R. Vaughan Kenneth S. Voelker x Gregory S. Walden® Steven White x Lewis R. Windham Il *. James N. Wohlfarth Richard S. Wolf * Warren T. Wolfe Isaac L. Wornom Ill *® Thomas H. Yancey Stephen C. Yevich* CLASS OF 1978-A Maurice G. Adams Andrew Michael Airheart * Philip Edward Bailey Jerry M. Baird James A. Barnes* M. Daniel Becque Kenneth J. Bewick x Alexander H. Bishop IV Darnall W. Boyd Jr. Parke L. Bradley Charles V. Brown III William D. Brown John L. Bruch Illx William K. Burton Brian P. Carroll George L. Carson David W. Chester * Michael T. Cleary Richard S. Cleary Daniel C. Coffey Rodney M. Cook ur. * Donald A. Cowser Jr. * William O. Cranshaw Ted Desaussure Reynolds Dods * Tupper H. Dorsey Peter L. Farrenx Robert B. N. Francis Jr. * David C. Franklin Gustave A. Fritchie III Julian H. Good Jr. * John C. Gorden* Erik S. Greenbaum George F. Griffin IV R. Holman Head * Steven B. Heird Thomas D. Heldmanx Henry M. Helzberg Charles E. Hinkle Thomas R. Hodges John Hollinger E. Brewington Houston Jr. Jonn S. Hudson Robert J. Ingram Benjamin |. Johns Peter C. Keefe Craig B. Kendall Karl N. Koon® James K. Ladky Alexis B. LaMotte Jeffrey Lee Peter Lin George David Low James N. Lynn Richard B. McDaniel R. Boyce McGrewx Henry S. McKelway David J. McLean James S. McNider Ill * Gerald Maatman Robert J. Marvin Jr. Stephen E. Mattesky * A. John May Ill Michael Joseph Missal * Robert N. Mucciola Lee W. Muse Jr. Rex D. Nyquist * Thomas O. O’Hara Peter M. Pearl Robert C. Peery Jr. Marcus M. Pennell III Stephen P. Rodgers DeLambert Stowe Rose W. Gordon Ross Howard A. Rubel * Fred L. Rush Jr. Lloyd R. Sams William S. Sands Jr. L. Scott Shelton Gregory Sieminski* George M. Smith Richard W. Stewart Richard C. Taylor Robert Boardman Tremblay David T. Trice David A. Tumen William G. Turner James M. Underhill x J. Dorman Walker Jr. * Michael M. Wallis James N. Walter Jr. Rand D. Weinberg * William G. Welch Robertson H. Wenat Jr. Edmund V. Wick* Steven C. Yeakel CLASS OF 1979-A Douglas H. Adams Robert M. Balentine Marshall M. Barroll Thomas E. Baynham III Robert H. Benfield Jr. * Robert F. Brewerx Michael S. Brown * Robert Burkholder Douglas A. Byrd D. Keith Calhoun J. Landers Carnal * Clement Dean Carter || O. Lee Cave x John Peter Clements x M. Gray Coleman II|* R. Chris Collins x John A. Craig Robert E. Lee Davies Luis deHechavarria Jr. * Robert H. Devilbiss Michael J. Doody Shawn Ellsworth * John H. Ferguson * Frederick S. Fischer III James H. Flippen Ill James S. Frantz Jr. Paul W. Gerharat James D. Gray Alan S. Guyes* Charles C. Habliston IV Henry H. Hagan Henry Y. Hamilton Ferdinand B. Harrington III Palmer Heenan Harry F. Hoke Ill Scott W. Hood Freeman E. Jones Woods King III Douglas B. Lanex Thomas H. McCarthy * John E. McDonald Jr. Stephen Y. McGehee Tim J. Manson Ill « Marvin Porter Meadors III William R. Meyer Hagood Morrison Eric Nord Thomas Oxendine Jr. * David M. Persson Alexander C. Philpott Jonathan W. Pine Jr. Johnny Plowden Thomas Mcloy Pritchard Mark F. Prysi Andrew Radcliffe * R. B. Ramirez William F. Reighley * William L. Rodgers Jr. J. Randolph Sacks John Saylor David R. Scott James R. Shoemaker * Andrew M. Sims John P. Stafford Warren Stephens * K. Scott Swope William T. Thistlethwaite Mark S. Travers Morgan W. Walker III * J. Michael Watson William M. Webster IV * Neil J. Welch Jr. * Michael F. Wenke Tracy Alexander White John W. Wilcox Ill * Douglas K. Willis x Douglas B. Wyatt x Landon R. Wyatt Ill « CLASS OF 1980-A Richard J. Allen Jr. Stewart Atkinson Jr. H. Holcombe Baird III Jeffrey A. Bartlett Paul Becht Robert J. Berghel Jr. * George L. Booth Abney S. Boxley III Timothy A. Brooks ® David A. Bryant Richard F. Cancelmo David Lent Church Walton V. Clark Robert D. Colvin® P. Craig Cornett * Leslie A. Cotter Jr. James Clay Crumbliss x Michael F. Deighan Douglas C. Dorsey Thomas E. Dutton Robert B. Earlex Goetz Eaton Richard S. Essex * Sydney D. F. Farrar Eben D. Finney David L. Garner * Covert J. Geary Wellington Goddin Jr. Thomas E. Goss ur. Homer D. Graham III Lawrence Gumprich Stephen D. Hallowwell John C. Hamilton* Albin B. Hammond II Paul C. Hendry Steven C. Herold Robert E. Hummel S. Dewey Keesler Stephen R. Kern Michael D. O. Lavitt Richard Mark Lewis Mark Lockhart John W. McAlister Murry G. McClintock 37 Mo Michael R. McCraney Kevin F. McGowan Barksdale W. McNider Richard A. Makepeace E. Philip Mangum Jr. Theodore B. Martin William H. Matthai Jr. Walker Mayo James E. Mendoza* R. Marshall Merriman Jr. * Carl W. Miller Edward C. Morrison Ralph Ownby Ill James H. Parker Howard T. Parks Russell Parmele Robert W. Pearce Jr. Jeffrey T. Powers William E. Pritchard * William S. Ridge Hugh L. Robinson Il ® John Kelly Ryan Walter Keith Sanford Jonathan B. Schewel Peter J. Schott Jesse M. Shaver Ill Charles H. Shuford Jr. Sidney S. Simmons II Jesse F. Suber Charles Terry Gregory Ward Vaughan Mitchell S. Wynne CLASS OF 1981-A C. O. Adler Thomas G. Alfano Carl M. Bates Peter H. Benda Raymond K. Best John G. Billmyre Robert D. Binder John G. P. Boatwright Jr. Paul S. Bourdon Geoffrey H. Brent Jerry L. Broccoli William E. Brock, IV Robert L. Brooke Winston W. Burks III W. Craig Burns Samuel H. Campbell IV * James Scott Cardozo W. Tobin Cassels III William R. Cole Ill * Claude B. Colonna Jr. David Cook James T. Coyle Jr. William W. Crowdus Ill Larry G. Davis Richard H. Drennen David M. Dudka Kevin B. Dwyer Peter D. Eliades Richard P. Ellis George D. Fagan Christopher J. Fay Robert Firnberg Jr. John J. Fox Ill Robert R. Frantz Douglas L. Gaker R. Christopher Gammon * Randolph B. George J. Ross Germano Gerald A. Giblin Jr. * James Hugh Gordon Ill Robert P. Gordon III Andrew M. Grisebaum * Stephen M. Handy Douglas L. Hassinger John S. Hastings Steven W. Hellberg* Jonathan Hendler N. Jeffrey Herdelin David B. Irvin Aric W. Johnson Frank S. Jones W. Powell Jones Ben W. Keesee 38 Craig W. Kennelly Frank B. B. Knowlton Lee Larimore Richard Garland Latture Kevin K. Leonard Bradley A. Lewis David A. Lewis Gordon John Lewis Harry Hill McAlister Kevin McGuire M. Victor McLaughlin A. Williams Mackie Stuart Mason * Christopher Menefee Lee Minetree Edward Mintz James B. Moore William Cope Moyers Robert J. Mullican David F. Mullin O. P. Newberry Ill Joseph R. Newell III Bishop B. Norris *® C. Penn Owen Ill * Robert S. Palmer John P. Pigue Russell Z. Plowden George A. Polizos * John Alston Pritchett * John P. Purcell Daniel J. Raskin Mac Rein Jr. Jefferson J. Reiter R. Donald Rigger Jr. Joseph Robles Edwin S. Ryan Jr. John D. Sadd Daryl A. Sakol Richard W. Salmons * Scott Salpeter John K. Schmicdt Mark W. Scully x Joel E. Segall Douglas R. Shipman Richard B. Silberstein Geoffrey P. Sisk Robert V. Sisk Jr. James R. Small * Michael C. Smith x Scott T. Stafford John J. Stathakis James W. Stewart Mark M. Suber John R. Sult* Perry H. Sutherland * Todd L. Sutherland * Edward T. Taylor Il William B. Taylor John Kirby Tompkins Charles J. Vanhorn James K. Vines * Robert O. Waldbauer Jr. Robert E. Walton Jr. Douglas W. Werth Robert H. Willis Jr. Warren W. Woodring Madison T. Woodward III Jonathan Yale CLASS OF 1982-A Frank D. Agnew Gordon Atkins Travis Stan Barnes Jr. Stephen Scott Barr James V. Bent * John R. Bestor Paul M. Black Frederick A. Boyd E. Thomas Brockman Sean T. Broderick Frank W. Brower Ill William F. L. Brown Philip M. Browne Ronald F. Calkins Jr. George G. Carey V William D. Clark Henry Clay Michael J. Collier David A. Core J. Preston Covington III Thomas K. Creson III John T. Daniel * Earle David A. Robert Dementi William A. DuPre IV Craig J. Dye J. Thad Ellis Il* Michael Fogarty John E. Fowler F. Brian Gibson Arthur M. Gilman Herbert C. Gresens R. Gordon Grubb * Jeffrey W. Gustafson Ehrick K. Haight Jr. Channing Moore Hall Ill James M. Hall Jim Haynes Stewart A. Hinckley Scott T. Howell Anthony R. lerardi Bruce C. Jones James S. Kaplan* Glen F. Koontz Kenneth A. Lang* Steve D. LaPrade Douglas R. Linton Ill Kenneth S. Lucas Jr. John W. Mclintryre Jr. Michael J. Malesardi * John W. Martin John Monroe J. Stratton Moore Preston Moore IIl Fredrik Eric Nelson Jr.. Kelly J. Niernberger Brian J. Noonan* Nelson Ould William R. Parks Jr. Edmund Payne Perry Erik D. Peterson Hollis W. Plimpton III Charles H. Prioleau Colt Puryear William M. E. Rachal Jr. * Charles F. Randolph John B. Riis M. Parker Roberts III Henry F. Sattlehight Robert T. Schmiat Dan Schott Douglas G. Sheldon George S. Spears Jr. James D. Stanton Jr. Timothy C. Taylor * Douglas R. Veasey * John T. Warmath Ill * Rob H. Warren Ill Daniel L. Weiss * W. Lawrence Wescott || Franklin H. White R. Blake Witherington * Robert K. Wittpenn * CLASS OF 1983-A William E. Alison Jr. Alan S. Armitage Evans S. Attwell James E. Averett III Andrew H. Backus Richard Baer Seng-Kah Baey William M. Bell Ill Thomas J. Bronner John E. Buttarazzi James H. Campbell Charles D. Caruthers * Ejay Clark Kraig A. Conn Steven D. Corbeille George Crady Bruce E. Damark Steven A. Daub Stephen H. Denny Glenn A. U. Drake Lawrence Robert Duffee Thomas L. Egbert Daniel M. Einstein Tim Elfering Mason Ellerbe Frank G. English IV Vincent J. Fechtel Ill Harry A. Feuerstein Eric R. Fife Theodore M. Galanides Stephen P. Geary Howard E. Gill Ill Keith E. Goretzka D. Christian Graham Michael M. Gregory Stephen K. Greene David Haddock David M. Hagigh C. Todd Hanks Brian L. Hanson Don A. Harrold Jr. Eric A. Heinsohn Deane A. Hennett Brian K. Holdaway Gregory E. Johnson Patrick Jordan Benjamin Leigh Kaplan Brett S. Kass Donald W. Kellerman Jr. Thomas Fitch King III J. Dwight Le Blanc Ill Michael H. Lewers Morris Lewis IV James F. Londrey Michael Darryl Mahoney Robert W. Marshall Hansel B. Millican III David Wise Moore Clifton |. Morrissette Fredrik Eric Nelson Raymond Lee Nichols Jr. Townsend Oast Jr. Edward J. O'Brian IV Richard W. Ordway Richard G. Owen John W. Perkinson Jr. Herbert M. Ponder Ill * Christopher B. Power William M. Read Israel K. Redd Ill David P. Ridlon Dennis S. Roberts Bennett Ross * John A. Ross Henry W. Royal John B. Rudder John J. Sancilio Christopher D. Schram Michael G. Schuler William M. Self Ill Camden Wood Selig Scott A. Slade Robert R. Smith Jr. Nicholas W. Teare Charles E. Thompson S. Bradford Vaughan Jr. * John Viahoplus Bruce E. Wennerholm John H. Windsor III Anthony J. Zaccagnini CLASS OF 1984-A John L. Graves William R. Rampone Jr. Law Classes CLASS OF 1917-L Gus Ottenheimer* CLASS OF 1921-L William O. Burtnere CLASS OF 1922-L George S. Riggs George W. Taliaferro* CLASS OF 1923-L Alfred L. McCarthye William W. Ogden* Emmett W. Poindexter * CLASS OF 1924-L William C. Dennis * Douglass P. Wingo* CLASS OF 1925-L E. Almer Ames Jr. Clarence E. Hinklee CLASS OF 1926-L Robert O. Bentley Jr. * William H. Brown Jr. * William R. Cosby * CLASS OF 1927-L James P. Bumgardner Robert H. Jonese John S. Letcher * Charles W. Lewis* Charles T. Smith * CLASS OF 1928-L John G. Koedel William P. Woodleye CLASS OF 1929-L Philip R. Becker William G. Gault Samuel C. Strite x CLASS OF 1930-L Maurice J. Arnd* Leonard H. Davis* Benjamin L. Rawlins Jr. * CLASS OF 1931-L Ethan Allene Earl A. Fitzpatrick * Horace Gooch, Jr.* Walter E. Hoffman * James B. Martine Gus E. Mitchell Jr. * Hon. Lewis F. Powell Jr.e Manuel M. Weinberg Jr.e CLASS OF 1932-L Martin P. Burks Ille Paul A. Holstein Hannibal N. Joyce * Henry W. MacKenzie Jr. * William E. Malone Alfred D. Noyes James K. Osterman* Albert G. Peerye James D. Sparks Sr.e 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 ® Cavett Robert George H. Strouse Jr.* Wallace N. Tiffany * J. Hoge Tyler Ille CLASS OF 1934-L Thomas D. Anderson * Thornton G. Berry Jr.* John H. Cooke * Albert M. Fowler Francis M. Hoge*x E. Rodney Massie Jr. Sherwood W. Wisee CLASS OF 1935-L Winston W. Brown John D. Copenhaver * Eli H. Fink® James D. Finley Il* William W. Fowlkes * E. Marshall Nuckols Jr.e Thomas E. Sparks Sr. * William L. Wilson * CLASS OF 1936-L William T. Homberg * William L. Martin* John H. Thomas* CLASS OF 1937-L James P. Baker Jr. Amos A. Bolen* David R. Dillon Francis M. England Edwin M. Markse Harry T. Moreland S. Tilford Payne Jr. * William H. Robinson * Isadore M. Scotte Edward E. Stovere J. Addington Wagner Jr. * CLASS OF 1938-L T. Hal Clarkee Joseph T. Drake Jr. * C. William Karraker Jr. Leonard Leight Frank L. Price Charles W. Wilkinson William L. Wilsone CLASS OF 1939-L V. Cassel Adamson * William S. Ammerman Jr. * J. Vaughan Beale x John D. Goodin * Philip M. Grabill x Robert E. Graham * R. F. Hutcheson * Samuel G. Jones Jr. * John C. A. MacKenzie * Martin V. Partenope John B. Pearson*® James E. Quisenberry Ambrose A. Rucker Edgar L. Smith Ralph H. Smith G. William Swift Jr. Thomas A. Williams Jr. * William A. Young* CLASS OF 1940-L William S. Burns * Edwin J. Foltz * Oswald B. McEwan * Ethelbert S. Roby Jr. x Stanford L. Schewele Harry R. Stephenson Jr. * Wendell R. Stoops * CLASS OF 1941-L Frederick Bartenstein Jr.e Frank C. Bedinger Jr. * Haskell T. Dickinsone Charles F. Heiner * George F. Mclinerney Charles E. Mottesheard * John E. Perry Bryce Rea Jr.e Rufus H. Shumate G. Murray Smith Jr. * CLASS OF 1942-L Charles F. Bagley Jr. * Howard W. Dobbins * Carter Glass Illx Homer A. Jones Jr. * E. Austin McCaskill Jr. * Samuel B. Read * Edmund Schaefer III Clifford L. Walters * CLASS OF 1948-L Charles C. Adams Carter R. Allenx James M. Ballengeee Joseph E. Blackburn * Henry C. Clark* David B. Cofer Jr. Lloyd Cowan Howard M. Fender Beverly T. Fitzpatrick x Henry J. Foresman Joseph B. Geyer Robert P. Haley x George E. Haw Jr. * T. Haller Jackson Jr. * James E. McNeer * Eugene R. Marable Jr. * Joseph A. Matthews * Wilbur S. Metcalf Jr. H. Maurice Mitchell * Grant E. Mouser Ill * James H. Murphy * Robert M. Patterson* Reginald H. Pettuse E. Rogers Pleasants * James O. Porter * John E. Scheiflye Paul M. Shuford * Trent D. Siple James C. Stanfield * Claude E. Taylor Jr.* Benton C. Tolley Jr. * J. Randolph Tucker Jr. William Earle Tucker M. Williamson Watts CLASS OF 1949-L Bonva C. Allen Jr. William D. Bain Jr.e Charles F. Blackburn * Carter C. Chinnis* Louis R. Coulling* Jack B. Coulter William C. Eickhof Jr. Maurice J. Flynn William C. Hamilton * H. Walker Hawthorne Wesley H. Jolly * Stanley A. Kamene Omer T. Kaylor Jr. * James G. Kincheloe * John J. Koehler J. Randolph Larrick * Robert C. Mehorter * J. Maurice Miller Jr. * Jack B. Porterfield Jr. Robert H. Ramsey * Lee R. Redmond Jr. John H. Reed Jr. John Schuber Jr. * Sam Silverstein Jr. * Hugh T. Verano*x Luther W. White III * Gilbert H. Wilson * CLASS OF 1950-L Kenneth P. Asbury * William T. Brotherton Jr. * Hugh Craig Castle Thomas D. Crittenden * Jack A. Crowder C. Hobson Goddin* George H. Gray* Rufus B. Hailey * Jack F. Hankins * Walter L. Hannah * Leon Harris Jr. * E. Bruce Harvey John L. Hopkins William S. Hubard ‘John S. Lanex Philip M. Lanier * William J. Ledbettere J. S. Livesay Jr.* Neal E. McNeill Jr. & Robert C. Maddox William H. Oast Jr. * Barton P. Quaintance x William E. Quisenberry * Milton H. Smith II ® William S. Todd* Thomas R. Watkins * Samuel |. White * Isaac L. Wornom Jr. * CLASS OF 1951-L John S. Bailey Jr. * Michael J. Barrett Jr. William H. Bender Virgil M. Bowles ® Marvin C. Bowling Jr. Thomas J. Condon George S. Cummins E. McGruder Faris Jr. x John J. Flood* David W. Foerster * James T. Graybeal * Jack E. Greer* Blair J. Harkett « Ernest M. Holdaway Albert F. Knight Frank Love Jr. * Donald W. Mason Leslie L. Mason Jr. John Q. Miller Jr. * H. Harvey Oakley 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 * Douglas B. Smith Warren L. Snead * John F. Taylor Benjamin B. White Jr. Gibson M. Wolfe x CLASS OF 1952-L Willis M. Anderson William C. Beatty Arthur A. Birney * Harry G. Camper John A. Farr Raymond W. Haman* Jackson L. Kiser * F. Nelson Light * Joseph H. McGeex James P. Morefielde Robert B. Murdock Jr. William H. Nelson Andrew D. Owens Harold J. Powell James C. Reedx J. Penrod Toles * S. Maynard Turke Sol Wachtler * Robert F. Ward *® B. Lamar Winegeart Jr. * Joseph B. Yanity Jr. * CLASS OF 1953-L Robert L. Bansex Howard Bratches * - James P. Carpenter A. Christian Compton* Robert E. Glenn* Robert S. Goldsmith Jr. * E. Allan Skinner * Charles F. Tucker * CLASS OF 1954-L James P. Brice Richard A. Denny Jr.e Harry J. Grim* Claude R. Hill Jr. * Robert B. Jacobi* Donald R. Klenk * Donald S. LaTourette x Lewis C. Markel Jr. Alvin Y. Milberg * Lawrence C. Musgrove ® Milburn K. Noell Jr.e Roger J. Perry * Elias Richards IIl * John P. Ward*® Frank M. Whiting * CLASS OF 1955-L Gray C. Castle x William R. Cogar* Hugh 8S. Glickstein * Richard E. Hill Richard W. Hudgins * Jay W. Jackson John F. Kay Jr. * Peter J. Kurapka Jr. * John R. Lawson Jr. * Peter F. Materax David M. Murraye Kent Rigg * CLASS OF 1956-L Douglas |. Buck * Charles L. Forbese Reno S. Harp Ill * Milton T. Herndone William H. Hodges Laurier T. Raymond ur. * George J. Tzangas* Willard |. Walker Wiley R. Wright Jr. * CLASS OF 1957-L Jack K. Agee Thomas C. Broyles * Noel P. Copene George W. Eason Douglas K. Frith Robert E. R. Huntleye Lewis S. Leex Thomas E. Lohrey Jr. * Robert H. Mann ur. Townsend Oast * Overton P. Pollard * Stephen M. Quillen* 39 pemonnet A are mae CLASS OF 1958-L Ernest H. Clarke x Donald J. Curriex Mark B. Davis Jr. * Charles S. Gay * Leonard C. Greenebaum * Richard D. Haynes * J. Hardin Marion Ille Norman C. Roettger Jr. * Robert E. Stroude Patrick D. Sullivan* CLASS OF 1959-L John R. Alford * J. Colin Campbell Claude D. Carter* Charles F. Davis Jr. * Thomas D. Frith Jr. Patrick Henry Richard H. Horne William J. Lemone R. C. Gunnar Miller * Owen A. Neffx John F. Richards * Charles E. Swope* CLASS OF 1960-L William H. Abeloffx Samuel L. Bare Ill N. William Bath * Thomas B. Branch Ille Manley P. Caldwell Jr. * Gerald O. Clemens* William E. Crowell Jr. Neal P. Lavelle H. Victor Millner Jr. Henry C. Morgan Jr. Thomas P. O’Brien Jr. * Isaac N. Smith Jr. * Jordan M. Smith CLASS OF 1961-L Harold M. Bates * Paul X. Bolt Thomas B. Bryant Ille William F. Forde Robert L. Gilliam Ill * Warren H. Goodwyn * E. Michael Masinter * W. C. Miller* Richard H. Parsons * Nicholas H. Rodriguez * Robert E. Shepherd Jr. * Gerald E. Smallwood Michael K. Smeltzer * Emil J. Sulzberger Jr. George R. Triplett Warren R. Welshe Hugh V. White Jr. * CLASS OF 1962-L Walter L. Ansell « Edward Bell Jr. Charles D. Brolle Henry L. Carter Thomas L. Feazell* Osie H. Gay ur. Robert C. Ketcham * John M. Kirk William R. Moore Jr. * William W. Moore* John A. Paul Raymond R. Robrecht Jr. * Laurence M. Smail* Joseph M. Spivey Ill « Charles F. Stow Ill Francis B. Vannuys* CLASS OF 1963-L Kenneth S. Beall Jr. * Paul H. Boswell * Malcolm B. Burton William H. Clark Jr. * Benjamin H. Hansel II Joseph E. Hess * James L. Howe Ill« Gerald L. Kesten Robert L. Lambert * 40 Andrew W. McThenia Jr. Edward F. Meyers Jr. * Thornton W. Owen Jr.* James K. Randolph * Richard L. Rose ) Leonard Sargeant Ill & — CLASS OF 1964-L Edward A. Ames Ill Thomas W. Budd * Charles M. Conway Jr. * Stanley A. Fink James A. Gorry Ill |. Lionel Hancock III Barry W. Kerchner Joseph W. Kozlik Richard L. Lawrence * Benjamin P. Lynch Edgar H. MacKinlay * Richard V. Mattingly Jr.* Benjamin L. Meluskey Jr. * Benjamin P. Michel * Donald H. Partington * Charles E. Reed Ill Charles B. Rowex Weldon J. Smith Peter T. Straub * Richard J. Tavss* David K. Tharp * CLASS OF 1965-L William D. Anderson Stanley P. Atwood Daniel T. Balfour* Frederick A. Castoe William M. Garrison * L. Gene Griffiths Jr. * Paul W. Hammack Jr. * William P. Harris Roger D. Kelsey James E. Kulp * Anthony J. Lasala Robert T. Mitchell J. Leyburn Mosby Jr. * Robert S. Pless Herbert P. Sapp Jr.* Philip H. Shafer James L. Surface Francis A. Sutherland Jr. Stephen L. Willson* CLASS OF 1966-L Henry Angel *« Robert R. Baldwin Daniel W. Bird Jr. Rudolph Bumgardner Ill *« S. W. Coleman III A. Henry Counts Jr. Walter E. Cox* Baxter L. Davis * Charles E. Hamilton III Jeffrey G. Haverson Charles E. Hubbard * Donald W. Huffman* Charles G. Johnson * James S. Maffitt IV * Bruce C. Miller William A. Schroeder III * Paul R. Thomson Jerome Turner Raymond H. Vizethann Jr.* George |. Vogel Michael P. Watkins Kent S. Wilson * . George W. Wooten * CLASS OF 1967-L David J. Andrex Douglas C. Arthur F. William Burke M. Kevin Concagh Malcomb G. Crawford * John O. Culley * James F. Douthat * James W. Elliott Jr. * Mark R. Ferdinande Stewart R. Findere Benjamin R. Gardner Richard E. Israel * Jon A. Kerr*® Joseph D. Logane Peter W. Martone* Richard L. Mitchell * Ronald W. Moore* J. Holmes Morrison * Richard D. Nichols William R. Reynolds * Martin W. Rosendorf * C. Edward Russell Jr. * Conway H. Shield Ille D. Culver Smith Ill * Herbert F. Smith * Jeffrey L. Ward CLASS OF 1968-L David H. Adams* C. Edmonds Allen Ill * John J. Czyzewski* Hayward F. Day Jr.* W. Gilbert Faulk Jr.e George M. Fisher IV x Vance A. Funk Ill George E. Honts Ill x Michael J. Michaeles * Paul M. Neville x George A. Ragland * Stephen W. Rideout * Robert F. Rutschow William M. Schildt * Andrew T. Still Ill W. Jay Tims* Ralph C. Wiegandt * CLASS OF 1969-L John B. Adams Jr. Charles F. Bagley Ill * Robert G. Bigham William P. Boardman* Stephen S. Case Stephen L. Echols Thomas M. Edwards * Roy G. Harrell Jr. Robert E. Harrison * Thornton M. Henry Justin E. Hoy dr. Frederick W. Hudson * Hugh J. M. Jones III Randy H. Leex William B. McClung * Val S. McWhorter * Tabor R. Novak Jr. * David D. Redmond * Jeffrey R. Reider * Harry C. Roberts Jr. * Eric L. Sisler* Thomas C. Spencer * William W. Stuart Dean K. Vegosen* Hubert H. Young Jr. * CLASS OF 1970-L Richard D. Bradford*. Michael S. Colo* William V. Corban Richard DeFronzo*. Ray W. Dezern Jr.* H. Vaughan Griffin Jr. * Richard P. Lasko*x John R. Patterson* Norman H. Singer* Aron L. Sunax D. Whitney Thornton Il * E. Monty Tucker * C. Fox Urquhart Ill x William A. Vaughan * Robert A. Vinyard * James J. Winn Jr.* John H. Zink Ill * CLASS OF 1971-L William D. Allen Ill David L. Baird Jr.* Albert V. Carr Jr. * Frank G. Davidson Ill James J. Dawson * Reinhard W. Fischer Robin P. Hartmann* Walter C. Jacob * Walton M. Jeffress Jr. Reverdy H. Jones Ill* John B. King Jr.* Charles C. Lewis Albert M. Orgain IV Beverly C. Read Paul R. Stanton Paul S. Trible Jr. * C. Rufus Walters Jr. Joseph H. Webb Jr. McDonald Wellford Jr. * John P. White Benjamin A. Williams III « CLASS OF 1972-L Stephen D. Annand* Timothy R. Askew Jr. * Joseph E. Carroll E. Thomas Cox Ira S. Feldman* Frederick C. Fletcher II * Roger A. Grayson John L. Griffith Jr. *« Mark M. Heatwole* Stewart M. Hurtt * James W. Jennings Jr. * Lawrence E. Morhous* ~Thomas W. Pettyjohn Jr. * James A. Philpott Jr.e Roger A. Pond William E. Quisenberry Jr. Paul A. Robblee Jr. John A. Wolfe CLASS OF 1973-L Richard V. Anderson John R. Bagby * John C. Baldwin Frederick W. Batten* J. William Batten * E. Patrick Burke Walter Butcka* Michael C. Bynane* Michael J. Campilongo* Lawrence M. Croft* Jesse C. Crumbley IIl* Thomas J. Czelusta Stephen K. Deay* Gregory J. Digelx Philip B. Dundas Jr. * H. Watkins Ellerson III Philip R. Farthing Thomas G. Ferguson Jr. Larry W. Fifer Eugene R. Giammittorio Ronald T. Gold * Thomas A. Gosse Richard V. Grimes Jr. Richard L. Harden Clyde M. Henkel * Robert A. Hulten* Larry D. Jones William R. McCall Douglas W. MacDougal Richard S. Mandelson * John J. Miles* John P. Miller John C. Moorex Alan W. Nash* James F. Pascal *« James E. Patterson Bruce L. Phillips Theodore H. Ritter * Elbert W. Robinson Jr. Donald B. Ross Jr. * Robert E. Ruloff* William A. Simon Jr.* Malcolm H. Squires Jr.* Jamie A. Stalnaker * Charles M. Stonex Stephen B. Sutton E. Starke Sydnor* Scott M. Turner Philip J. Wasilausky Kenneth J. Wernick Peter A. Wimbrowx William E. Wood Timothy S. Wright * CLASS OF 1974-L Thomas H. Alphin Jr. A. Neal Barkus David R. Beyer Arthur P. Bolton* David M. Bradt Jr. * Peter B. Brittin* John R. Broadway Jr. * T. Lee Brown Jr. Roy D. Carlton* Quentin R. Corrie James M. Costan* Stephen G. Elkins * James C. Fitter Jr. M. Craig Garner Jr. Dennis C. E. Gilchrist Andrew C. Goresh W. Bradney Griffin B. Michael Herman Harry H. Hill Ill C. David Johnston David M. Kelso*x Thomas R. King Jr. Joel S. Klinex Rex M. Lamb Ill« Thomas N. McJunkine Charles S. McNulty III * Glenn R. Moore* William H. Oast Ill * Paul E. Pysell Robert L. Taylor John H. Tisdale * Paul Wilber Joseph P. Wise CLASS OF 1975-L Stephen E. Arey * Richard F. Biribauer* Robert S. Bonney Jr. Charles J. Brown Ill* R. Noel Clinard Grady C. Frank Jr.* Pauli R. Garlock* Virginia B. Garrison Fred K. Granade Christopher J. Habenicht * William B. Hamilton Ray V. Hartwell Ill * David K. Higgins * John F. Hoffman Edward P. Kane Peter R. Kolyer* M. Steven Lacroix Francis M. Lawrence Jonathan S. Lynn John |. McClurkin Donald T. McMillan Jeffrey S. Miller * Robert L. Morrison Jr. John S. Orton*® Stephen W. Robinson* M. Pierce Rucker Andrew T. Smith R. David Stamm Charles B. Tomm* W. Bruce White Jr. Jeffrey L. Willis* James L. Wilson Thomas K. Wotring * CLASS OF 1976-L David S. Alter II Robert H. Anderson III E. Mark Braden* James P. Carmody Alan Chipperfield C. Lynch Christian Ill * Francis C. Clark Nan Robertson Clarke * T. Hal Clarke Jr. * Deborah Susman Dowd Jeff B. Dusek Hiram Ely Ill Cecil J. Francisco Ill. Robert L. Hillman Richard A. Hooker Blair A. Kooix James H. Maloney Jr. * Keith W. Martin Thomas J. Murray * John S. Norris Jr. Thomas P. Odell * Gary T. Pope Richard M. Preston Marinus Quist Stephen D. Rosenthal x Thomas L. Sansonetti Thomas A. Schmutz Bayard J. Snyder Gregory M. Sorg Jonathan L. Spear * Lucy D. Strickland Ray John Taylor* Scott T. Vaughn Clifford L. Walters III William A. Worthington * Richard T. Woulfe x Michael L. Zimmerman * One Anonymous Gift CLASS OF 1977-L William L. Downing * Wayne Edwards William S. Gee Robert W. Goodlatte Richard Gottlieb Elizabeth Toni Guarino Anne J. Gunderson Russell Lyle Hewit * Deborah A. Johnson Edward M. Kowal Jr. * Charles M. Lollar Osborne Phinizy Mackie Bradford N. Martinx Everett A. Martin Jr. E. Morgan Maxwell Ill * George R. Moore Jeff Morris James E. Nicholson * Jeffrey W. Parker Michael Rowan Jerry L. Short Douglas M. Thomas * Alfred C. Thullbery Jr. Randall J. Trost William Paul Wallace Jr. * Pamela J. Whitex Chauncey C. Williams Jr. John Paul Woodley Jr. x CLASS OF 1978-L Frank F. Barr® Keith D. Boyette Jean L. Byassee x Charles M. Cushing Jr. * Mark L. Dicken E. Townes Duncan Buford P. Early Illx David P. Falck Maryellen F. Goodlatte Norman A. Kinnier John D. Klinedinste Jack Danes Kopald * Raymond F. Leven Pamela Rogers Melton Mark Jay Mennel John C. Parker Kenneth Fred Parks Eugene C. Perry Jr. Benjamin G. Philpott * Richard A. Rogers Jonathan W. Sager Steven G. Schwartz Michael T. Thornton CLASS OF 1979-L John A. Agostini S. Richard Arnold * James |. Vance Berry Jr. Daniel G. Beyer Stanley G. Brading Jr. * William Davis Broadhurst Susan Hamilton Churuti John A. Cocklereece Jr. John E. Coffey x Kevin J. Cosgrove Jeffrey W. Crabtree Paul A. Dominick Charles N. Dorsey x Waller T. Dudley x Stetson W. Eddy Charles E. Falk Richard Goddard * Richard L. Greenberg William Lee Hallam Thomas P. Healy Jr. Michael B. Hubbard Breckenridge Ingles * John T. Jessee David Whitley Johnson Stephen R. Kasmar J. Scott McCandless Michael W. McLaughlin Archibald C. Magee Jr. Channing J. Martin Gary S. Marx William M. Moffet Jessine A. Monaghan * Stuart B. Nibley x David W. Otey Jr. Barry J. Plunkett III William Riker Purcell Gerard R. Quinlan H. Lawrence Remmel Mark E. Sharp Lloyd E. Spear* Robert T. Vaughan Jr. * Lynn Prymas Vollmer * Peter C. Williams Robert Womble * CLASS OF 1980-L David F. Brandley Jr. Douglas Broeker John R. Clark III Robert M. Connolly John J. Eklund Sally P. Falck John A. Fraser Ill * Joan M. Gardner William L. Garrett Jr. Betsy Callicott Goodell William R. Goodell Kenneth M. Lyons Thomas H. Romer * Kevin J. Ross Elizabeth Turley * Patricia A. VanAllan * Christopher Wolf Cheryl H. Wolfe M. Lanier Woodrum * John B. Yellott Jr. Mary Anne S. Young CLASS OF 1981-L Charles Cleveland Abbe William L. Abernathy Jr. Nate L. Adams Ill Blas P. Arroyo Charles F. Bahn Jr. Jonathan S. Berman Michael E. Bongiorno Patricia M. Brown Sara Anne Burford Alan L. Button Philip D. Calderone Margaret H. Campbell Daniel R. Collopy Elizabeth P. DeVine Malinda E. Dunn David W. Engel John Lanier File Samuel A. Flax* John J. Gifford Jeffrey H. Gray Nicholas Hantzes Kathleen M. F. Jessee Neal S. Johnson Steven M. Johnson Charles Juster * Walter D. Kelley Jr. * Henry Darnell Lewis Robert W. Ludwig Melissa Warner McClenahan* James S. McNider Ill * Gene A. Marsh* Jenelle Mims Marsh* Thomas E. Martinx William J. Milani Thomas M. Millhiser Robert W. Moorhead James H. Neale Anne Scott Porter Samuel O. Price Jr. G. Scott Rayson* Richard P. Rodgers * Tracy G. Savagex Clara S. Smith Nancy J. Spritzer John M. Sullivan* Phil N. Walker Dawn Ellen Warfield David G. Weaver * Mark A. Williams David O. Williamson Carolyn R. Saffold- Heyward Wilson * Kerry M. Wilson CLASS OF 1982-L Mary Dudley Allen Eric A. Anderson* S. Amy Arbucho Larry A. Barden Edward James Bedford Thomas R. Bender |. Scott Bieler William H. Bovers Johnathan W. Bryan Mark E. Cavanagh James L. Chapman IV Dana S. Connell Robert M. Couchx Craig S. Davis Linda A. Davis Susan M. Dern* William H. Edmisten Edward O. Falkowski Catherine McGuire Gilliam * Lucinda D. Harrison D. Gregory Howard Kirkland M. Kelley John Emery Lanier J. Andrew Lark Donald K. McCorkindale Susan C. May Donna Lynn Miller * Craig K. Morris Patrick O’Hare Jeffrey C. Palkovitz Dana C. Petersen Kevin W. Ryan Thomas Y. Savage James R. Shoemaker * Patricia Sinskey Nathan H. Smith Allen T. Snyder Jr. Julia G. Thigpen Lizanne Thomas * Eric J. Ward® Kenneth X. Warren Neil J. Welch Jr. * CLASS OF 1983-L Rod Clement Gaines H. Cleveland C. Drew DeMaray Michael J. Farr Millard L. Fretland Keith E. Goretzka A. Brooks Hock Caro! L. Hoshall * Matthew L. Kimball James R. MacAyeal Cecily L. Morris Robert J. Onda DeLambert Stowe Rose Gordon W. Stewart Sandra Thurston Patricia Lynn Woehrlen CLASS OF 1984-L Warren E. Nowlin THE ANNUAL FUND BY CLASSES—1983-84 UNDERGRADUATE CLASSES Class Class Agent 15 R. N. Latture 16 E. B. Shultz 17 W. J. Cox 18 A. Beall 19 No Agent 20 No Agent 21 S. L. Raines 22 No Agent 23 F. B. Hurt 24 No Agent 25 E. T. Andrews 26 T. T. Moore 27 No Agent 28 No Agent 29 T. G. Gibson 30 | No Agent 31 H. M. Minniece 32 No Agent 33 C. J. Longacre 34 S. Mosovich 35 L. P. Gassman 36 G. W. Harrison 37 R. K. Stuart 38 D. N. Walker 39 V. F. Radcliffe 40 R. V. Herse 41 A. T. Fleishman 42 R. T. Wright 43 A. D. Darby 44 G. T. Wood 45 E. D. Finney 46 M. P. Mead 47 W. G. Merrin 48 W. W. Burton 49 M. W. Saurs 50 W. N. Clements 51 J. B. McCutcheon 52 W. D. McGrew 53 H. C. McClerkin 54 F. A. Parsons 55 J. H. Marion 56 R. J. O’Connell 57 R. R. Warren 58 M. A. Clinger 59 T. B. Bryant 60 M. Lassman 61 W. M. Bowen 62 W. L. Roberts 63 C. T. McCord 64 W. M. Schildt 65 J. W. Rutter 66 M. E. Lawrence 67 J. S. Graham 68 B. Atkins 69 J. F. Carrere 70 W. B. Wagner 71 J. B. Tompkins 72 S. W. Robinson 73 D. D. Eavenson 74 W. P. Wallace 75 R. A. Keatley 76 C. T. Jackson 77 J. L. Carrere 78 J. M. Underhill 79 C. S. Jones 80 P. C. Cornett 81 C. Gammon 82 S. B. Puryear 83 B. L. Ross Donors ohranovnoWn oe Dollars $ 2,233 2,600 675 3,230 6,450 770 1,175 220 570 1,990 5,236 5,009 7,162 4,320 13,205 7,063 20,773 12,905 4,930 15,501 15,165 17,951 14,750 18,010 30,975 24,531 77,857 21,712 23,034 ‘20,475 21,516 18,166 9,825 4,742 8,050 19,540 28,063 46,736 22,195 23,830 22,390 27,156 15,733 16,565 26,063 21,062 23,983 19,280 23,880 19,824 22,344 17,523 21,160 12,359 20,636 28,728 26,202 18,352 17,832 13,080 11,855 29,720 9,677 9,014 6,313 5,759 4,675 6,878 4,191 2,650 % Part. 19.4 63.6 42.9 69.2 56.2 35.7 50.0 29.6 43.1 20.0 47.6 36.6 41.9 53.5 41.8 42.6 42.3 62.2 47.1 43.2 50.7 45.1 39.4 50.6 44.6 48.0 50.0 37.1 41.1 38.5 48.1 44.0 35.7 44.1 41.1 38.9 23.9 35.6 39.2 42.9 40.9 37.0 39.2 40.1 24.5 20.8 35.3 42.6 41.4 40.9 39.6 30.5 28.1 27.4 34.8 27.8 25.7 21.1 18.5 35.7 22.2 24.8 LAW CLASSES Class Class Agent 21 No Agent 22 No Agent 6-23 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 34 S. W. Wise 35 T. E. Sparks 36 W. L. Martin 37 J. Arnold 38 No Agent 39 T. A. Williams 40 H. R. Stephenson 41 C. M. Landrum 42 C. L. Walters 48 C. R. Allen 49 J. R. Larrick 50 R. B. Hailey 51 J. E. Greer 52 J. C. Reed 53 R. L. Banse 54 D. R. Klenk 55 R. W. Hudgins 56 R. S. Harp 57 O. P. Pollard 58 R. E. Stroud 59 R. H. Horn 60 N. W. Bath 61 R. E. Shepherd 62 R. R. Robrecht 63 P. H. Boswell 64 T. W. Budd 65 J. E. Kulp 66 J. S. Maffitt 67 J. D. Logan 68 A. A. Jones 69 D. D. Redmond 70 D. W. Thornton 71 D. L. Baird 72 J. A. Philpott 73 J. C. Moore 74 S. G. Elkins 75 T. K. Wotring 76 Hal & Nan Clarke 77 D. M. Thomas 78 D. Swope 79 J. F. Murphy 80 J. K. Boyden 81 D. G. Weaver 82 R. M. Couch 83 M. L. Kimball Donors — oh, NON$_$WONNODWDWOANAWNNAN- - —h, —s oo Dollars 100 100 125 1,250 200 1,015 500 1,455 1,550 325 900 6,620 5,875 1,925 2,205 3,425 250 4,089 3,235 2,200 2,150 2,970 1,325 15,338 4,729 5,490 4,106 6,385 1,330 2,500 1,375 2,385 8,890 2,660 4,440 2,150 3,575 2,314 1,350 2,647 2,760 2,346 6,867 2,855 2,335 2,424 2,388 5,320 6,134 4,292 2,643 4,610 1,970 1,714 4,361 1,390 2,925 2,780 620 The Annual Fund: Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Dr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Dr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Dr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Dr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Dr. Dr. Dr. 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 particularly grateful for this demonstration of confidence. Listed here are the names of parents who contributed to the 1983-84 Annual Fund. Those donors whose names are follow- ed by (©) are members of the Lee Associates and made gifts of $1,000 or more in 1983-84; those donors whose names are followed by (*) are members of the Colonnade Club and made gifts of $100-$999 in 1983-84. & Mrs. A. Ross Adams * & Mrs. Carl Adams Jr. * James F. Adams & Mrs. J. G. Adams * & Mrs. Richard B. Adams & Mrs. W. Duval Adams & Mrs. Abe Adler & Mrs. Bobby R. Alforde & Mrs. Richard W. Andrus * & Mrs. Ronald B. Andsager * & Mrs. Fred Anker & Mrs. Jack G. Armstrong * & Mrs. Tobin Armstrong * Thomas E. Arthur & Mrs. Stewart Atkinson & Mrs. James M. Auch Jr. & Mrs. Lee K. Baileye & Mrs. Hugh H. Baird Jr. * & Mrs. Rudolph S. Baizley T. E. Baker*® & Mrs. W. Ray Baldwin Jr. & Mrs. John Ball «x & Mrs. Charles M. Barger & Mrs. W. Watson Barnes & Mrs. Perry W. Bartsch* & Mrs. Edward L. Beauchamp & Mrs. Charles L. Benedict x Erik Bennorth & Mrs. James V. Bent C. N. Berents Jr. * Judah Best * & Mrs. Brad Bissinger W. J. Blackburn & Mrs. T. J. Blackwood Jr. * & Mrs. John G. P. Boatwright * & Mrs. William E. Bobbitt * & Mrs. Ken Braden & Mrs. Arthur Branan Jr.* & Mrs. W. T. Breithaupt & Mrs. Raleigh Brent II Robert H. Britton & Mrs. James G. Brock*x & Mrs. Harry D. Brookby * & Mrs. Russell J. Brooke & Mrs. Charles H. Brooks & Mrs. Daniel C. Brown* & Mrs. Darrell Brown * & Mrs. Fitzhugh L. Brown * Robert E. Brown C. Willing Browne & Mrs. John L. Bruch Jr* Alfred S. Bryant H. Richard Bucey & Mrs. W. P. Buckthale & Mrs. Peter M. Butler* & Mrs. Roger V. Butler * & Mrs. Thomas W. Butler & Mrs. Patrick Buttarazzi* & Mrs. Millard E. Byrd Jr. * Mrs. Alma T. Campe Mr. & Mrs. G. W. Campbell Jr.e Mr. & Mrs. S. H. Campbell Ill * Mr. M. M. Canon Mr. & Mrs. A. C. Cannon Mr. G. Cheston Carey Jr. Ms. Florence B. Carter Mr. & Mrs. Robert S. Cartmille Mr. & Mrs. Rufus A. Chambers Mr. & Mrs. Herbert B. Chisholm * Mr. & Mrs. John D. Clark Mr. & Mrs. Richard J. Clark Mr. & Mrs. Harvey Clarke x Mrs. Gwendolyn M. Cleghorn Mr. James M. Clifton* Mr. & Mrs. Norman Cobb* Mr. Thomas J. Connors * Dr. & Mrs. Edmund J. Conway * Mr. & Mrs. Roger W. Cope Mr. & Mrs. George T. Corrigan Mr. & Mrs. L. Arlen Cotter * Mr. & Mrs. Richard W. Couch* Mr. Victor R. Coudert Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Vincent J. Coviellox Mrs. Edward J. Crawford * Dr. & Mrs. T. Kyle Creson Jr. * Mr. & Mrs. Ralph R. Crosby * Mr. & Mrs. Edward B. Crosland* Mr. & Mrs. Timothy R. Cutting Mr. & Mrs. Thomas E. Davey Mr. & Mrs. Ralph P. Davidson* Mrs. Barbara F. Davis Mr. & Mrs. Seymour Davis Mr. & Mrs. F. Robertson Dawson Mr. & Mrs. William R. Deeley x Mr. J. D. deHoll x Mr. & Mrs. Francis Deighan Mr. & Mrs. Donald W. Devine Dr. & Mrs. Breese M. Dickinson Rush S. Dickson Family Foundation, Inc.e Mr. & Mrs. Joseph J. DiDuro Mr. & Mrs. Robert S. Diehl Mr. & Mrs. Harry J. Donahuex Mr. Joseph Donovan * Mr. & Mrs. Ben R. Downing Jr.e Dr. & Mrs. T. J. Dubuque dr. * Mr. & Mrs. Lawrence J. Duffee Mr. Joseph D. Dulaney Mr. & Mrs. John F. Dulken Mr. & Mrs. A. Baker Duncan Mr. P. L. Duncan Jr. Mr. & Mrs. T. J. Duncan Jr. * Dr. & Mrs. Robert T. Dunn* Mr. & Mrs. Paul A. DuPre Mr. & Mrs. Lynn Durhame Dr. & Mrs. Clifton M. Durning* Ms. Patricia Edelstein Mr. & Mrs. Aubrey J. Ellis ~ Mr. & Mrs. O. H. Entwistle Jr. Mr. William E. Esham Jr. * Mr. & Mrs. J. Thomas Eubank* _ Mr. & Mrs. William Ewing Jr. * Mr. & Mrs. Andrew N. Farley x Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Fellin Mr. & Mrs. George C. Finly* Mr. & Mrs. Eben D. Finney Jr. Dr. & Mrs. Robert L. Firnberg Mr. & Mrs. E. A. Fitzgerald Mr. Laurence F. Flentje Mr. & Mrs. Gale R. Fletcher * Mr. & Mrs. William M. G. Fletcher Mr. S. J. Foley Jr. * Mr. & Mrs. William E. Forland* Mr. & Mrs. Thomas K. Galvin Jr. * Mr. & Mrs. Robert H. Gammon Mr. & Mrs. Keith Garr Mr. William A. Garrett x Mr. & Mrs. Willliam J. Garritye Mr. & Mrs. Richard S. Gatti Jr. * Dr. & Mrs. Edwin A. Geex Mr. William B. Gerwig* Mr. & Mrs. Sandy Giacobbe Mr. & Mrs. William M. Ginder Mr. Earl W. Glazier Jr. * Mr. & Mrs. Howard G. Gold Mr. & Mrs. Richard A. Goodling Mr. & Mrs. Floyd D. Gottwald Jr.e Mr. Harry C. Gottwals Sr. Mrs. Mary B. Goundry Mr. Richard Grainger * Mr. & Mrs. Richard B. Graves Mr. & Mrs. James M. Gregg Jr. * Dr. W. Graham Guerriero* Mr. & Mrs. Roger .E. Gutowski Mr. & Mrs. David F. Gwynn* Mr. & Mrs. C. J. Haggerty Jr. * Dr. M. Reza Hagigh* Mr. & Mrs. Channing M. Hall Jr. Dr. Jack W. Hall* Dr. & Mrs. Arthur E. Halprin Mr. J. S. Hamblen* Mr. Gordon L. Hammock Mr. & Mrs. Robert E. Hanks* Mr. L. J. Hansen Mr. & Mrs. Sinclair J. Harcus* Mr. & Mrs. Martin C. Harmon Mr. G. Lee Harralson* Mr. & Mrs. John J. Hartigan* Mr. & Mrs. William Y. Harvey * Mrs. Elizabeth L. Havense Mr. & Mrs. James L. Haynex Mrs. Francis Watt-Haynes Mr. Charles F. Haywood * Dr. Albert E. Heimert Mr. & Mrs. Robert A. Hemm * Mrs. Floylee H. Hemphill Mr. Nathan V. Hendricks * Mrs. Margaret Henry Mr. & Mrs. Bernard Herman Mr. & Mrs. Oliver H. Hewit Ill Mr. & Mrs. Dean Hines Mr. James F. Holmes * Dr. William F. Holmes * Mr. & Mrs. F. W. Hope dr. * Mr. & Mrs. Harold Y. Hoppes* Mr. Robert F. Hornik Mr. & Mrs. Edwin E. Howard Mr. & Mrs. Harold R. Howex Mr. & Mrs. J. N. Humphreys * Mr. & Mrs. Gordon E. Hurd*® Mr. & Mrs. Robert L. Hurdman Mr. & Mrs. Richard W. Hurley Mr. Raymond Hutchinson * Mr. & Mrs. Ross J. Interrantee Mrs. Carol Irvin Mr. & Mrs. James P. Jackson* Mr. Ronald Jakubek Mrs. Elizabeth S. Jardinex Mr. C. B. Johnson Mr. & Mrs. David T. Johnsone Mr. & Mrs. Harold A. Johnson Mrs. Helen M. Johnson Dr. & Mrs. Norman J. Johnson * Dr. & Mrs. Fred F. Johnston* Mr. Rudolph G. Johnstone * Mr. & Mrs. James C. Jones Dr. & Mrs. Richard B. Jones Mr. & Mrs. W. J. Jonson Mr. & Mrs. Raymond S. Jordan * Mr. Charles M. Judge Mr. Y. Frank Jungman Dr. & Mrs. Melvin C. Kadesky x Mr. & Mrs. Michael Katkocin * Mr. James F. Kelly Mr. & Mrs. W. Martin Kempee Mr. & Mrs. C. L. Kendall Mr. E. J. Kendall Jr. Mr. & Mrs. James R. Kennedy x Mr. & Mrs. J. Robert Killpack * Mr. & Mrs. John T. King III Mr. & Mrs. John D. Kirklande Mr. & Mrs. David Klinedinst Mr. & Mrs. Richard F. Knapp * Mr. Vincent L. Knaus * Mr. Herbert B. Knight x Mr. & Mrs. Paul Knighte Mr. & Mrs. William W. Knobloch * Mr. & Mrs. Mark A. Krieger Jr.e Mr. & Mrs. Robert V. Krikorian * The Lalley Foundation * Mr. & Mrs. Edward W. Lane Jr. * Mrs. Nancy P. Lawson Dr. Francis E. Le June Jr. * Mr. & Mrs. Edward H. Leonard Dr. & Mrs. Donald R. Lewis * Mr. & Mrs. Harvey J. Lewis* Mr. & Mrs. Michael Loening * Mr. & Mrs. Richard M. Lofton* Mr. & Mrs. Vincent Longo Mr. & Mrs. J. Logan Look* Mr. & Mrs. John F. Lord Mr. & Mrs. Victor Losquadro Mrs. Lucille C. Lundy * Mr. & Mrs. Gerald R. Lynch* Mr. & Mrs. Joseph P. McAllister * Mr. & Mrs. Donald W. McCarthy Mr. & Mrs. Robert B. McClatchy Mr. Robert S. McCoy Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Harold J. McCulloch Mr. C. A. McGowan Dr. & Mrs. Kenneth MacLeod Mrs. Phyllis J. Manasco*%. Mr. & Mrs. Albert J. Marax Mr. & Mrs. Robert J. Marvin Mr. & Mrs. Charles Mason Mrs. William McKinnon Massie Mr. John F. Mauren Mr. & Mrs. Robert F. Mausser* Mr. & Mrs. Hiram P. Maxim II Mr. Dennis Maxwell Dr. John C. Melnick Dr. Streedhara K. G. Menon Mr. & Mrs. C. Irvin Messner Mr. & Mrs. Arnold F. Meyer Mr. & Mrs. William J. Meyer Ms. Miranda B. Miles Mr. & Mrs. Leo Militello Mr. & Mrs. Duane K. Miller* Dr. & Mrs. John W. Miller Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Russell E. Miller * Mr. & Mrs. Ross R. Millhisere Mr. John R. Minchew* Mrs. Florence Mintz Mr. & Mrs. Louis Mondello Mrs. William L. Monroe Jr. * Mr. & Mrs. John L. Montgomery II Mrs. Robert H. Monyek Mr. & Mrs. L. Everett Moore Mrs. Lucille J. Moore Mr. Sumner K. Moore Dr. & Mrs. William L. Moore x Mr. & Mrs. Herron P. Morris Mr. & Mrs. Walter K. Morris Mr. John H. Morrow Mr. & Mrs. Oliver W. Mowry * Mr. & Mrs. E. Lee Muller Dr. & Mrs. James J. Mulreany * Mr. & Mrs. Daniel L. Murphy * Mr. & Mrs. James P. Murphy Ms. Penelope L. Murray 43 Mr . James L. Myers* Mrs. Madeleine B. Newman Mrs. Alice H. Newsman Mrs. W. C. Nichols Mr Mr Mr Mr Mr Mr Mr . & Mrs. John H. Norberg . L. Brison Norris . & Mrs. Charles C. Nusbaum * . & Mrs. Robert H. Nutt Jr. * . & Mrs. Raymond S. Oliger* ._& Mrs. John D. O'Neill . & Mrs. Neno D. Osella Mrs. Mary F. Ould Mr Mr Mr . & Mrs. Philip D. Pakulax . Edward Palattelle s. Gloria A. Palettax Mrs. Prudence M. Palmer* Mr Mr Mr Mr Mr Mr Dr. Mr Mr Mr Mr Mr Mr Mr . & Mrs. James Paone* . & Mrs. Jefferson D. Parker .& Mrs. R. Dean Patterson* . A. Winniett Peters . & Mrs. Demetrois T. Petrides s. Eleanor O. Petty & Mrs. Osgoode S. Philpott * .& Mrs. William R. Pierce ._& Mrs. Ferdinand C. Plitt Jr. . & Mrs. Arlen S. Pockrass ._& Mrs. David K. Poole Jr. * . & Mrs. Henry F. Prysi . & Mrs. Anthony E. Puleo*x .& Mrs. James M. Quinlan* Mrs. William M. E. Rachel Mr Mr Dr. Mr Dr. Mr Dr. . Carl J. Raichle .& Mrs. William P. Raines* & Mrs. M. J. Rathbone Jr. * ._& Mrs. Alfred A. Reed* & Mrs. Richard J. Reed* . & Mrs. H. Ward Reighley Frank M. Rembert* Mrs. Bruin S. Richardson Jr. Mr Mr Mr Mr Mr Mr Mr Mr Mr Mr Mr Mr Mr Mr Mr Mr Mr Mr Mr Mr Mr Mr Mr Dr. Mr Mr s. Rosemary A. Richardson .& Mrs. Charles H. Rideout * . G. Donald Riley Jr. ._& Mrs. Alfred B. Robinson* . John D. Roe Sr. . & Mrs. Frank W. Rogers Jr. * . & Mrs. William C. Rogers Jr. . & Mrs. Michael J. Romanelli . & Mrs. John L. Root .& Mrs. Arthur M. Rosex . & Mrs. John J. Ross* . & Mrs. Martin B. Roth . Jay A. Rothenberger .& Mrs. W. Tarver Rountree .& Mrs. H. L. Boyer Royal . Miles Runner . & Mrs. Ronald Sakol . Sam Samuel .& Mrs. A. T. Sanderse . & Mrs. John E. Sanders . & Mrs. L. L. Sanders . & Mrs. Leon Sarpy * ..Harry W. Schoenberg & Mrs. F. D. Schuh . John Schurr . & Mrs. George Scott Mrs. Mary Ruth Scott Mr Mr Mr Mr Mr Mr Mr Mr Mr . & Mrs. Richard J. Scruggse . & Mrs. Donald H. Seid . & Mrs. John R. Seifert * . & Mrs. Morris L. Seleznick . & Mrs. Warren L. Serenbetz* . & Mrs. John S. Shannon* . & Mrs. Jesse M. Shaver * . Roy G. Sheldon . & Mrs. H. Reese Shoemaker ta Mr Mr Dr. Dr. . & Mrs. Winston J. Simon . Larry U. Sims & Mrs. Richard A. Sindler*. & Mrs. Sanford R. Singere Mr. & Mrs. John M. Slack III Mr Mr _& Mrs. Milan J. Slahor _& Mrs. James G. Small Mr. & Mrs. Leland R. Speed * Mr _& Mrs. William R. Spofford Jr. x Dr. David W. Sprunt 44 Mr. John F. Stachura Mr. & Mrs. John N. Stack Mr. & Mrs. S. Tracy Stackhouse * Mr. & Mrs. William A. Stanford * Mr. Robert H. Steilberg Mr. & Mrs. Warren L. Stern* Mr. Frank K. Stillwagon Mr. & Mrs. Robert L. Strickland * Mr. & Mrs. Robert B. Stuart Mr. & Mrs. H. T. Taylor*® Dr. & Mrs. Francis B. Teague Jr. * Mr. & Mrs. Fred Thieringer Jr. * Mr. & Mrs. George M. Thomas * Ms. Joyce M. Thomas Mr. Matthew G. Thompson * Mr. William DeF. Thompson * Mr. Richard F. Thornton Mr. Riley H. Tilley Mr. & Mrs. W. Bryan Trammell Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Robert H. Trumbox* Mr. W. D. Turner* Mr. & Mrs. S. G. Tyler* Mrs. Majorie H. Valliere | Mr. & Mrs. John H. Van Amburghe Mr. Joseph C. Vawter * Mr. & Mrs. James E. Vesper * Mr. & Mrs. James M. Vines * Mr. Karl E. Vogt Mr. & Mrs. Gene A. Wallace Mr. Hans H. Walter Mr. & Mrs. Edward T. Walters Mr. & Mrs. John T. Warmath Jr. * Mr. & Mrs. David L. Weaver * Mr. & Mrs. Vernon A. Webster * Mr. & Mrs. Jerrold G. Weinberg Mr. & Mrs. Floyd E. Westbrook Mr. Frank P. Wetherbee x Mr. & Mrs. Robert J. Whann Ill * Mr. C. Cody White Jr. * Dr. & Mrs. Robert S. White * Mr. & Mrs. R. W. Whitman Mrs. Margaret M. Wilkerson Mr. & Mrs. W. R. Wilkerson * Mr. & Mrs. Donald M. Wilkinson * Mr. E. M. Wilkinson Jr. Mrs. Victoria C. Willett Mr. & Mrs. Cranston Williams Jr. Mr. & Mrs. James B. Williams * Mr. & Mrs. James W. Williamson * Mr. & Mrs. Robert H. Willis Mr. & Mrs. Anthony M. Wilson * Mr. Robert E. Wilson Mr. & Mrs. Grover Winstead Mr. & Mrs. Louis Wiser Jr. * Ms. Martha Shelton-Wolf * Mr. & Mrs. Walter |. Wolfson Mr. & Mrs. R. K. Woltz Mr. & Mrs. M. E. Wood Jur. * Mr. & Mrs. Walter K. Woodward * Mr. Charles P. Wreaks III Mr. & Mrs. Lewis Wrenn Mr. Richard W. Zahn Dr. & Mrs. Gerald J. Ziebert* The Annual Fund: Friends Each year, Washington and Lee receives many gifts in sup- port of current operations from persons who are neither alum- ni 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. Washington and Lee is deeply grateful for these gifts. Those donors whose names are followed by a (°) are members of the Lee Associates and made gifts of $1,000 or more in 1983-84; those donors whose names are followed by a (*) are members of the Colonnade Club and made gifts of $100-$999 in 1983-84. Mrs. William H. Armstrong * Harold G. Ast Dr. & Mrs. George Austen Jr. Richard A. Austin Bankers Trust of South Carolina Mrs. W. H. Biesel The John S. Blum Family Mrs. Sybil Boland Mrs. Jeanette Boone Mrs. John P. Bronstein* Cadavere George Campbell Associates Corporatione Mrs. Cordelia Penn Cannon Mrs. George H. Carr* Lowry M. Close Crum and Forster Foundatione Derby David Mr. & Mrs. Burke Daves J. Sanford Doughty x Mrs. Thomas P. Duncan Jr.e Edward Eagles Henry B. Fairchild Ill Frigid Freeze Foods, Inc.e Mr. & Mrs. Joseph A. Gilchrist Jr. Arthur D. Guy Fred Haislip Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Dale Harris Mrs. H. M. Hayne* Victor W. Henningsen Jr. * Mrs. Nona J. Jonese John J. Kirlin* Mr. & Mrs. Warner M. Lewis John W. Luster* Mrs. Helen McMahon Mrs. S. Thomas Martin* Robert G. Marshall Allan McDonald * Carter V. McNeesex Mr. & Mrs. G. Otis Mead III Mendon-Upton Regional Teachers Association Mrs. Cornelius Middletone Mrs. Richard H. Middleton Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Dan Miller Ill Max D. Miller Mrs. Lindsey L. Moore * Mrs. Milton Morrison Dr. William W. Old III John D. Owen Jr. * J. Robert Philpott Jr.* Miss Mary R. Quinlane Mrs. Betty R. Schewel Manfred F. Schroeder John F. Shuler Mrs. James G. Smith * Sweet Briar Alumnae Association Mrs. William O. Thomase Mr. & Mrs. W. Warren Upton* Miss Jacquelyn Elaine Vinson* Mr. & Mrs. Peter Ward Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Rom Weatherman * Mrs. Marcia M. Weinberg Harold B. Whiteman Jr. Dr. John D. Wilsone Dr. & Mrs. John H. Wise Mrs. William L. Woodall * Virginia Foundation for Independent Colleges A record $2,513,533 was contributed by business and in- dustry to 14 private Virginia colleges through the VFIC during 1983-84. Washington and Lee’s share was $213,439. Under the direction of a board that includes 38 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. Although, 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 leader- ship of the companies, foundations and individuals, who made generous contributions through the VFIC. | Business and Industry Washington and Lee University was assisted in large measure during 1983-84 by direct grants for current expenditures from corporations in addition to corporate assistance received through the Virginia Foun- dation for Independent Col- leges (VFIC). Investments by private business in private education take on special meaning and impor- tance. The total of these gifts during the 1983-84 year was $73,424. American Broadcasting Companies, Inc. Amoco Oil Company Bayview Construction Browning-Ferris Industries 4 B's Restaurants, Inc. George Campbell Associates, Corp. Canon Safety & Health Co., Inc. Cellar Door Entertainment of Virginia Central Telephone Company of Virginia Compubank Services Crothers Insurance Agencies, Inc. Custom Audio, Inc. Deandale Plantation The Decatur Daily _ Law Offices of Dexter L. Delaney, P.C. Dod Distributing Company, Inc. Dominion Bank John D. Eiland Company, Inc. Exxon Education Foundation Dr. Kenneth M. Fink, Inc. Fitzpatrick & Mullis, Attorneys at Law John W. Gannon & Associates, Inc. Greeneville Publishing Company Grimes, Goebel, Parry, Blue, Boylston & McGuire Hartenstine Insurance Agency Hecht’s Hopping Boyd Green & Sams Hunton & Williams Gene Lail Sales Agency, Inc. G. H. Leidenheimer Baking Co., LTD Leonard Enterprises Linder Industrial Machinery Co. Lykes Brothers, Inc. McClain and Company McClintock Farms, Inc. The Maryland Company, Inc. Scott C. Mason Associates Metal Distributors, Inc. Mills Engineering Morrow Enterprises, Inc. National Homes Corporation Nationwide Pest & Termite Control, Inc. Patten, Wornom & Watkins T. Rowe Price Associates Foundation, Inc. Retzer & Retzer, Inc. The Roanoke Times & World-News Robinson Company, Inc. Scott Electric, Inc. The Sears-Roebuck Foundation The Scripps-Howard Foundation Silver Dollar Bar James R. Stewart Enterprises, Inc. Jack Thomas Inc. Time-Life Books Inc. Gene Tripp Jdr., Inc. Valley Center Florist The Virginian-Pilot and The Ledger-Star The Winchester Star Wise & Waddell Insurance Agency Matching Gifts ACF Foundation, Inc. Aetna Life and Casualty Airco, Inc. Air Products and Chemicals, Inc. Alcoa Foundation Alleghany International, Inc. Allis-Chalmers Corporation Allstate Insurance Companies Akzona, Inc. American Bell American Broadcasting Companies, Inc. American Cyanamid Company American Electric Power Corporation American Express Company American General Corporation American Hospital Supply Corp. American International Group American Maize Products Company American Standard, Inc. American Telephone and Telegraph Company Amoco Foundation, Inc. Armco Foundation Ashland Oil, Inc. Atlantic Richfield Company Automatic Data Processing Avondale Education and Charitable Foundation Bank America Foundation Bankers Trust Company The Bank of New York Barclays American Corporation Becton, Dickinson and Company Bell Laboratories Bell of Pennsylvania Best Products H & R Block, Inc. Blue Bell Foundation Borden Foundation, Inc. Brown-Forman Distillers Corp. Burlington Industries Foundation Cabot Corporation Campbell Soup Company Carpenter Technology Corporation Caterpillar Tractor Company CBT Corporation Celanese Corporation Centel Corporation Centerre Bank Certain-Teed Products Corporation Champion International Corporation The Chase Manhattan Bank Chemical Bank The Chesapeake Corporation of Virginia Chesapeake and Potomac Telephone Company Chevron USA, Inc. Chicago Title and Trust Chubb and Son, Inc. CIBA-GEIGY Corporation Citicorp Citizens and Southern National Banks Clark-Peeper Company Clorox Company The Coca-Cola Company Columbia Gas System Columbia Gas Transmission Corporation Combustion Engineering, Inc. Commercial Union Insurance Co. Commonwealth Life Insurance Co. Connecticut Mutual Life Continental Carbon Company The Continental Group, Inc. Continental Telecom Cooper Industries, Inc. Coopers & Lybrand Corning Glass Works Cowles Media Company CPC North America Crocker National Bank Foundation Crum & Forster Insurance Company CSX Corporation Deere and Company Deloitte Haskins and Sells Dennison Manufacturing Co. Digital Equipment Corporation Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette, Inc. Dow Chemical USA Dow Jones and Company _Dravo Corporation Duke Power Company Dun and Bradstreet Elis-Olsson Chesapeake Foundation Enserch Corporation Equitable Life Assurance Society Equitable Life Insurance of lowa Ernst and Whinney Ethyl Corporation Ethicon, Inc. Exxon Corporation Faegre and Benson Fidelity and Deposit Co. Fireman’s Fund Insurance Co. The First Atlanta Foundation First Chicago Corporation First Maryland Bancorp First and Merchants National Bank First National Bank of Louisville First Union Corporation First Virginia Banks, Inc. FMC Corporation Ford Motor Company Fund Freeport-McMoRan, Inc. Gainesway Farm Gannett Newspaper Foundation Gatx Corporation General Dynamics Corporation General Electric Company General Foods Corporation General Mills, Inc. General Reinsurance Corporation General Telephone and Electronics Georgia-Pacific Corporation Getty Oil Company B. F. Goodrich Company Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co. Great Lakes Rubber and Supply, Inc. Gulf Oil Foundation Gulf States Utilities Company Halliburton Education Foundation Hammermill Paper Company Harris Corporation The Hartford Insurance Group H. J. Heinz Company Hercules, Inc. Hershey Foods Corporation Hoffmann-LaRoche, Inc. Home Life Insurance Company Household International Hughes Aircraft Company Industrial Indemnity Company Ingersoll-Rand Company Integon Corporation International Business Machines International Minerals and Chemical Corporation International Telephone and Telegraph James River Corporation Jefferson-Pilot Broadcasting Co. John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company Johnson and Higgins Johnson and Johnson Johns-Manville Company J. A. Jones Construction Co. Kennedy's Piggly Wiggly Store Kerr-McGee Corporation Kidder, Peabody and Company Kimberly-Clark Foundation Koppers Company, Inc. Lake City Industries Lukens Steel Company McCormick and Company, Inc. McDonalds Corporation McDonnell Douglas Corporation McGraw-Hill, Inc. McGuire Woods and Battle McKesson Corporation Mac Panel Company Manufacturers Hanover Trust Co. The Marley Company Martin-Marietta Corporation Marsh and McLennan Asset Management Company The Mead Corporation William M. Mercer, Inc. Merck and Company, Inc. Merrill Lynch and Company, Inc. Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. Midlantic National Bank Milliken and Company Minnesota Mining & Manufacturers Company Mitre Corporation Mobile Oil Corporation Monsanto Company Montgomery Ward and Company, Inc. Moore McCormack Resources, Inc. Morgan Guaranty Trust Co. Morgan, Lewis and Bockius Morgan Stanley and Company, Inc. Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Co. Nabisco Brands, Inc. NCR, Inc. National City Bank National H&W Mutual Life Insurance National Steel Corporation National Westminster Bank Nationwide Foundation New England Life Insurance Co. New Jersey Bell Telephone Co. New York Telephone Co. The New York Times The Nokota Company Norfolk Southern Corporation Northern States Power Co. Northern Telecom The Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company Northwestern National Bank Northwestern National Life Insurance Company Occidental Petroleum Corporation Olin Corporation Peat, Marwick, Mitchell and Co. J. C. Penney Company, Inc. Pennzoil Company Perpetual Royalty Syndicate Peterson, Howell and Heather, Inc. Phelps Dodge Foundation Philip Morris, Inc. Phillips Petroleum Piedmont Aviation, Inc. T. Rowe Price, Inc. Price Waterhouse and Company Proctor and Gamble Company Provident Life and Accident Insurance Company The Prudential Foundation Public Service Electric and Gas Co. The Quaker Oats Company Raytheon Company Revion, Inc. Reynolds Metals Company R. J. Reynolds Industries, Inc. Rhode Island Hospital Trust National Bank Ryan Homes, Inc. Salomon Brothers, Inc. Scallop Corporation Joseph E. Seagram and Sons, Inc. Seattle Trust and Savings Bank Security Pacific Corporation Shell Oil Company 45 Shenandoah Life Insurance Co. Time, Inc. Signode Corporation The Travelers Insurance Companies SmithKline Foundation Trust Company of Georgia Snelling and Snelling TRW, Inc. Sonat, Inc. UGI Corporation South Central Bell Telephone Co. Union Oil Company of California Southeast Banking Corporation Union Trust Company Southeast Electronics, Inc. United Brands Foundation Southern Bell Telephone and United Technologies Corporation Telegraph Company United Virginia Bankshares Southland Corporation Universal Leaf Tobacco Co., Inc. Southside Animal Clinic, Inc. United States Engineering Co. Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. United States Fidelity and Springs Mills, Inc. Guaranty Company Standard-Coosa-Thatcher Co. United States Leasing Stanadyne, Inc. International, Inc. The Standard Oil Company United States Steel Corporation State Mutual Life Company United States Tobacco Company J. P. Stevens and Company Vulcan Materials Company Stone and Webster, Inc. Wachovia Corporation Suna Brothers, Inc. Warner-Lambert Company The Superior Oil Company The Washington Post Company Syntex Corporation Wausau Insurance Companies Tandy Corporation Wells Fargo Bank Tanner Company, Inc. Western Electric Company Tenneco, Inc. Westinghouse Educational Texaco, Inc. Foundation Texas Commerce Bank Texas Eastern Corporation Textron, Inc. Tektronix Foundation Thomas and Betts Corporation Thomas and Fiske P.C. Westvaco Corporation White Consolidated Industries Winston-Salem Health Care Plan Xerox Corporation West Point Pepperell Foundation Inc. 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. Those who made such gifts in 1983-84 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. Sara D. November Eugenia Morrison Oliver Alma Pleasants Marjorie Poindexter Andrew J. Power '48L Richard J. Reed Jr. ‘78 Alan Regan William H. Robinson ’34, ’37L George R. Shaw ‘15 James G. Smith '25 Mrs. Maurice Strause Charles R. Stribling Jr. '17 O. Bancroft Taylor ‘32 William O. Thomas ‘31 Fred M. Vinson Jr. 48, ’51L John Walker Vinson Jr. ’36 Jane G. Watkins William L. Webster ‘12 Thomas Carlyle Wilson Jr. '43 Ernest M. Wood ur. ’30 William L. Woodall ’32 Ruth Neely Young William H. Armstrong ‘43 John W. Ball ’32, 35L John Barroll Adrian L. Bendheim Sr. John Roser Bestor ‘82 Lorenzo G. Blacksmith John G. Boatwright °15 Mary Archer Glass Boatwright Robert McDearmon Boatwright '42 Thomasson M. Boland '34 John V. Bowser '30 Melissa Boyd J. Paul Bronstein '26, ’30L Thomas B. Bryant Jr. ’28L Marshall M. Callison ‘20 Deverton Carpenter '36 George H. Carr '28 John V. Coe Jr. '25 James T. Cooke ur. '54 Jessie McCall Gallivan Fewell James V. Freeman '32 Patricia M. Gassman Sara Taylor Gilreath Horace Gordon R. C. Haydon Jr. ’46 C. W. Hussey Jr. ’23 William H. Jeter 18 Lewis K. Johnson Robert R. Kane °17L Floribel Kaufman George H. Lanier ‘29 Dora Lewis Ross L. Malone '32L Mrs. James Bland Martin Oliver W. McClintock '23 Wiley C. Mohrman Lindsey Lee Moore '19 Milton Morrison 46 Estates and Irrevocable Deferred Gifts 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 Charles V. Amole '29 Thomas D. Anderson '34L Willis M. Anderson ’52L Edmund H. Armentrout '68 W. D. Bain Jr. ’49L Edgar A. Basse Jr. ‘39 John D. Battle '34 John W. Beaire '39L Benjamin V. Blagg II '47L Calhoun Bond ‘43 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 William E. Brown ’30 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 George Lloyd Cowan Ill '48L John L. Crist Jr. '45 Robert S. Curl ’47 Calvin H. Curry Jr. '56 |. Langston Donkle Ill '74 Ben R. Downing Jr. P M. Irvine Dunn Jr. ‘23 E. Stewart Epley ‘49 James D. Finley Il ‘35L William B. Fitzgerald F Alvin T. Fleishman ‘41 James M. Franklin '35 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 Edward S. Graves ’30 Howard Greenblatt '44 Eugene E. Griese Jr. '46 Bernard Candler Grigsby Il °72 John G. Guerrant ’24 John G. Hamilton °32 Alexander M. Harman Jr. ’44L 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 Il ’51 Sidney Isenberg ‘42 Earl T. Jones ’30 Hannibal N. Joyce '32L Joseph J. Kaplan '28 Kenneth L. Keil ’30 Christoph Keller Jr. '39 John G. Kennedy Ill ’83 Robert L. King ‘24 S L Koplad ur. °43 T. Kerr Laird °33 William H. Leedy ‘49 William Revell Lewis Ill ’73 Herbert B. Luria Ill °31 William J. Luria ’28 Mrs. E. Carlyle Lynch Jr. F G. Sage Lyons '58, '60L Lucile Emerson MacCorkle F Mrs. Ross L. Malone F Bertram B. Mantell 35 Richard P. Marcus ’51 James Bland Martin ’31L D. Carleton Mayes '47L Herbert G. McKay ’51L 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 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. 733, ’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 Ill 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 Paul A. Rockwell ’12 Robert W. Root '42 lra H. Samelson ’33 William W. Schaefer ’60 L. Roper Shamhart '47 Howard T. Shepherd 40: Margaret Shepherd F | , 4 q 7 } q Xen N. Sideris ’52 Richard T. Sloan ’42 John C. B. Smith Jr. '67 Jerry G. South '54, ’56L Jeffrey B. Spence '71 Mr. and Mrs. A. Erskine Sproul ’37 Harold E. Sturgill 55 Charles A. Sweet '36 Robert Lee Telford '22 Calvert Thomas ’38, ’40L John Newton Thomas '24 Roland E. Thompson '52 J. Thomas Touchton ’60 Norfleet R. Turner ’51 W. Emory Waters '68 Harry W. Wellford '46 William C. Wilbur ’37 Maxwell P. Wilkinson '28 Lewis D. Williams Jr. '37 Carroll B. Wiltshire 13 Sherwood W. Wise ur. '63 William E. Woodroof '52 Raymond E. Wooldridge ‘60 James H. Woosley '42 Ellis N. Zuckerman '49 11 Anonymous Estates Estate distributions received during the 1983-84 year reach- ed a total of $220,457. Estates in administration, of which we have been notified but from which there have been no distributions are not included. Lorenzo G. Blacksmith F (Chunksa Yuha) John G. Boatwright ’15A Frank H. Brady '32A Thomas B. Bryant Jr. ’28L W. Earle Crank '15L Frederic B. M. Hollyday '48A David D. Johnson '21A Donald G. Kaylor '25A Jack G. Marks '32A Lindsey L. Moore '19A Clara Hood Nielsen F Gifts for Restricted Current Purposes Each year generous gifts are made for expenditure on specific projects or programs within the current year’s educa- tional and general budget. As such these gifts are restricted by the donors as to use and are, therefore, not included in the unrestricted Annual Fund. Such gifts are vitally important to support academic enterprises of special focus. Peter J. Abitante '78 Wesley E. Abrams '53 Carl Adams Ill °71 Margaret B. Adams F Michael W. Adams ’86 Patton Adams ’65 Thomas A. Agnew '52 Mr. & Mrs. C. W. Alcorn Jr. P Fred C. Alcorn F George A. Alcorn F Alderson Legal Association Glynn M. Alexander P Glynn M. Alexander Jr. '87 Mrs. Barbara J. Allen P American Bar Association Glenn E. Anderson Jr. P Mrs. Karen Anderson P Kevin Anderson ’86 Mrs. Faye R. Andrews P Mrs. Louise M. Andsager P Mrs. R. E. Anthony F Alan L. Arey F Patrick K. Arey '69, '76L Mr. & Mrs. Richard Arey F B. B. Armstrong '42L David H. Arnold P William A. Asimos P William J. Atkins P Dean Edward C. Atwood Jr. F LeRoy Wren Autrey '83 William E. Baird Jr. F Lt. Col. Kenneth N. Baker P Ms. Christine H. Balthasar F John D. Bamonte P Mrs. Cicely A. Banfield P Mrs. Catherine M. Barker F Mrs. Marilyn B. Barlow P Mrs. E. L. Barnes P Mrs. Elizabeth T. Barnes P R. B. Barnes Jr. P Watson Barnes Jr. '86 Ms. Mildred C. Barnett F Mrs. Carol Ann Barns F C. Waller Barrett F Mrs. Patricia J. Barstow P Walter R. Beales Jr. '36 Dr. & Mrs. Harlan Beddey F Dr. Daniel M. Beekler F Ms. Ellen Bendheim F Sam Bendheim III P Vittorio Benedetto P Mrs. Priscilla A. Benford P Richard A. O. Bennett P Earl T. Berry '66 James T. Berry Jr. ’85 Cesare Bertolini P Ms. Nancy Bestor P Brad W. Beutel '86 Gerard F. Biedronski Jr. '86 John C. Binford '58 Ms. Rosemary L. Bingham F Judge Marvin L. Bishop Ill ’55, ‘60L Mrs. Mary E. Blackburn P Mr. & Mrs. Craig Blackstock F Ms. Wanda W. Blanchard F H. Bruce Boal P Mrs. Hannah C. Boatwright P R. J. Bolen ’65 Dr. Adrian F. Bom F Mrs. June M. Booher P John P. Boone F G. Michael Boswell F Mrs. Juanita M. Bowen P Mrs. Barbara C. Boyd P Thomas J. Boyd ’87 William B. Boyd ’72 Mrs. M. M. Braden P James H. Bradley F Jim H. Bradley F Shane Braganza ’86 Jay P. Brain F Ms. Evelyn T. Branic F Wade H. Brannon P Dr. Earl J. Brewer Jr. F Thomas J. Brinkman P Randolph W. Brinton ’68 P. K. Brock '54 Paul K. Brock Jr. ’78 Matthew J. Brogan F Mrs. Mary Wetzel Browne P Mrs. Elizabeth D. Brown P Mrs. Jean C. Brown P Mrs. Sarah M. Brown F William D. Brown Jr. ’85 James K. Bruton Jr. '66 Mrs. Jo Denton Bryant P John Douglas Buchanan '61L Mrs. Patricia A. Buchanan P Frank S. Buhler F Edward C. Burks Jr. '74 James M. Burlingame P Jon Burt '69 Richard C. Butler Jr. F Col. Thomas D. Byrne F Steven H. Caller F Ms. Frances B. Cambria F Mr. Guy Cambria Jr. F Mrs. Nancy Lee Canby Dr. P. Allan Carlsson F Anderson B. Carothers ’65 David D. Carothers '61 David G. Carpenter '78 Dr. Darryl Carter P John D. Caruthers Jr. F Mrs. Katharine R. Caruthers P John P. Case Jr. F Mrs. Mary Munger Cassidy F Ottis L. Cave Jr. P Lafe C. Chafin '53L Alex Chambers ’87 Tien-shang Chang F Mrs. E. B. Chapman F Charles L. Chassaignac IV '87 Mrs. Sheila Chatfield F Leslie Cheek Jr. F Thomas A. Church P Christain P. Cimmino '74 Mrs. Martha B. Cleek P Mrs. Marilynn J. Cobb P W. T. Cocke Jr. F Alton B. Cole P Mrs. Rosann Coleman P Dr. Milton Colvin F Ms. Mary E. Connelly F John L. Connolly '79 Ms. Maxine Perry Conrad F Mr. & Mrs. David E. Constine Jr. ho Dr. & Mrs. Jay Cook ’43 Mrs. Lewis Cope F RADM Frank W. Corley Jr. P Roland S. Corning ’65 Clarence A. Cover F William A. Cover P Lloyd L. Craighill P Mrs. Marlys J. Craun F John A. Crawford ’86 Dr. David L. Croasdaile '61 Col. G. T. Crowell '37 Ms. Louise Fly Crump F R. S. Cullen '54 John B. Cummings P William L. Curtiss ’87 William N. Cutshall F Stephen |. Danzansky ’61 Mrs. Ann T. Darling F Gerald J. Darrell F Joe Dashiell ’80 Kevin J. Davidson ’87 J. A. Davis F Ms. Rebecca W. Davis F Dr. J. H. Day P Bruce N. Dean 84 Mrs. Veronica M. Deighan F Mrs. Patricia Democko P H. Hurtt Deringer P C. David Dickey '87 C. David Dickey P Spencer Dickinson '84 Ms. Sylvia B. Dickinson F- Ms. Michela DiDuro F Horace W. Dietrich Jr. 52 Robert P. Deithrich '87 John W. Dindinger '84 Samuel L. Doak F Mrs. Patricia Donovan P Ms. Marjorie W. Douglas F Moulton S. Dowler Jr. '68 Joseph P. Doyle F Dr. George F. Drake F Mrs. Virginia B. Duesberry F Mrs. Betty Jane Duncan P R. C. Dunlap Jr. F Mrs. Lucy D. Dunn F Ms. Maria M. Dunn F Richard M. Dunn III P Wilton Rice Dunn F Mrs. Mary M. Du Pre P Walter L. Durham F Dr. S. P. C. Duvall F Alfred H. Ebert Jr. 50 Ernest V. Echols '41 Mrs. LaPrelle Edens F R. C. Edmunds ur. F Dr. J. MacDonald Edwards F Leslie A. Eglin F 47 M. E. Ellinger Jr. P Dale H. Elliott F David M. Ellis ’65 Mrs. Marilyn B. Emmons F Mr. & Mrs. Edwin H. Enzor F Mrs. Gloria H. Esham P Mrs. J. Thomas Eubank P Mrs. William Ewing Jr. F Henry Exall Jr. P Mrs. W. R. Fagan P Ms. Margaret S. Farmer F Ms. Angela K. Farrand F Tom Faulkner '74 William O. Faulkner Jr. F David B. Favrot '82 Clifton C. Fay F James L. Fay P Robert A. Fearey P Ms. Pauline J. Feimster F Mrs. Evelyn Feldman P Don M. Fergusson F Mrs. Mary B. Ferrell P Glenn E. Fidler ’61 W. C. Fisher Ill '87 Dr. Norton Fishman P Robert L. Fitts P Lex Fitzhagen ‘85 Mrs. Helen C. Fitzpatrick F Mrs. Kathleen F. Foley P Mrs. Danette J. Fountain F Mrs. Roberta H. Foutch P Jessie Paden Fox F John G. Fox '44, '49L Mrs. Corinne S. Franklin P David A. Freeman '83 John P. French '50 Christopher W. H. Fulton '85 James M. Gabler '53, '55L Edward A. Gadsby P Mrs. Jeppie A. Gallalee F Donald R. Gauvin P J. D. Geist F Mrs. J. D. Geist F Kenn S. George '70 Maj. Gen. E. J. Gibson F William M. Gibson P Dr. Peter G. Gilbert P Mrs. Kathryn F. Glazier P Dr. John Brown Goehring F C. W. Gooch Jr. Charitable Trust '15 Robert U. Goodman '50 Frank Goodpasture Jr. '43 Edward A. Goodrich '50 Mrs. Mary Helen Gottwals P William J. Goyer F Richard C. Grace Jr. '78 Rick Grainger '84 Capt. T. C. Greenwood '77 William R. Greer Jr. '87 Ms. Elizabeth E. Gregory F Robert K. Gresham '86 Irving M. Griffin Jr. F Mrs. Kathleen A. Griffith F Ms. Elizabeth A. Grogan P Mrs. Joyce M. Groh P Henry T. Groop '30 Herbert R. Groop '31 Mrs. Ruth D. Grover F. Mr. & Mrs. Henry Gunst Jr. F Dr. Ronald L. Gutberlet 56 James D. Hague Jr. '59 Greg W. Hair '85 Leroy M. Hair P Ms. Adelaide O. Halprin F Mrs. Jean Beth Hamblen P Dr. Edward B. Hamer F James T. Hamlin lV '87 Mrs. Lora E. Hamrick P Timothy A. Hanan F Mrs. W. J. Hancock F Dr. John Handelman F Donald R. Hansard P Matthew R. Hansard ’87 Dr. Frederick N. Haring P Mrs. Jane B. Harlow F John M. Harney F Reno S. Harp Ill ’54, ‘56L John D. Harris Jr. '82 48 George W. Harrison ’36 Mrs. Irene Hartigan P Ms. Cathy A. Hartman F R. L. Hartman Jr. P Dr. John Hassinger P N. H. Hatten ’35 Mrs. Norma Hattings F Samuel R. Hawkins '42 Jess Hay F Harold Head F Hayden W. Head Jr. '66 Herbert Heltzer P Dean Edward O. Henneman F Julian Hennig Jr. P Julian Hennig Ill ’86 Dr. Paul E. Henson Jr. P Mr. & Mrs. G. W. Herndon F Mrs. Constance W. Herr P Jeff Hersh F Robert J. Hewitt F Mrs. Nancy P. Higgason P Thomas Higgins P Judge Harold N. Hill Jr. ‘52 Dr. Jimmy V. Hill F W. Patrick Hinely '73 Mrs. Joy Nalty Hodges P Leland A. Hodges F Ms. Ann Holden F Mrs. Margaret E. Holbrook P Lee M. Hollis '86 B. C. Holmes F Jimmy Holmes '87 Joel H. Holt '73 Chris Hope '86 Ross A. Hotchkiss F Mrs. Gail L. Houlihan P Dr. Homer C. House '59 Mrs. Giohra Howard F Mrs. Hilda F. Hudson F Mrs. Elizabeth S. Huggins F Elwood T. Hughes Jr. P Hugh R. Hughes ‘43 James Humphreys P Dr. John A. Hunt '52 Lee H. Hunt F H. F. Hunter Jr. P H. Robert Huntley F Thomas E. Hurlbut '87 Mike Hutcherson '85 Christopher Hutchins ’60 William Kent Ihrig '84L Thomas C. Imeson Ill '85 Mr. & Mrs. G. N. Ingram F Mrs. Ross J. Interrante P Theodore Irwin P Charles M. Ives Jr. P Mrs. Edward E. Jackson P Ms. Patsy H. Jackson F Mrs. Bernadette D. Janyska P Tim Janyska '86 Dr. Roger B. Jeans Jr. F Joseph C. Jefferis '87 Dr. Edwin P. Jenevein Jr. P William H. Jeter Jr. ‘71 William L. Joel '85 Mrs. Champ R. Johnson F Mrs. Donald M. Johnson F Francis F. Johnson F Ms. Helen M. Johnson F Bruce W. Johnston F Ms. Nancy S. Johnston P Scott Bowen Johnstone ’86 D. Edwin Jones F Harry T. Jones Ill '78 Lloyd H. Jones P Capt. R. Clifton Jones Jr. P Mr. & Mrs. Y. F. Jungman F Mrs. Marta P. Kastner P Mrs. Jane J. Katkocin P Mrs. Patricia M. Kay F Anthony F. Keast P Mr. & Mrs. J. J. Kelley '74L Walter D. Kelley Jr. F Mrs. Jane K. Kelly P Raymond B. Kelly Jr. F W. Whitney Kelly 84 Caldwell C. Kendrick F J. Lary Kephart P James Y. Kerr Il '86 John H. Kerr Ill F Ms. Susan S. Kerr P William J. Kellea Ill P Mrs. Ethel Killenbeck P Dr. Emory Kimbrough Jr. F Charles Taylor King ’85 Mrs. Dow King Jr. F R. Robert H. King F George Kinkead '85 James W. Kinman F Dean Frederic Kirgis F Dr. W. J. Knauer Ill '75 Mrs. Jeanne M. Knaus P Edward P. Knight P Ms. Lucy Fay Knight F Mrs. Cordia P. Krastel P Ms. Carol Kraus F Ms. Katharine B. Kruse F Col. Robert A. Kurek P Mrs. Mary Purcell La Borde F Russell Ladd Ill P Dr. Robert T. Lafargue P Todd Lafargue '87 Mrs. Elizabeth A. Languilli P Ms. Gladys E. Lawton F Henry A. Lederer Ill ’49 Mrs. Patti L. Lefler F Dr. Francis E. LeJeune Jr. F O. P. Leonard F Jerome J. Levy P Donald R. Lewis F Mrs. Dora L. Lewis F Mrs. Elizabeth M. Lewis F Matthew S. Lewis '87 Steven Lewis '84 Perry Liles F Mrs. Laura H. Lindsay F William E. Lindsey '32 Christopher P. Lion '86 Fenn Little '84 David H. Livingston F Mrs.. Richard M. Lofton F Steven G. Logan '85 Alejandro Lopez-Duke ‘87 Norman F. Lord F Dr. Robert T. Love Jr. F Mrs. Jane B. Lowe P Dr. Todd Lowry F Tavenner C. Lupton Ill '75 William J. Luria '28 Joseph W. Luter III P Dr. Frederick F. Lykes F Frank G. Lyle F John McAllister '85 Craig H. McArn '84 Mrs. Sally R. McArn P John D. McCaffery '86 Clarke W. McCants Jr. P John L. McCants '84 James R. McCausland Jr. P Murray McClain P Mrs. Patricia P. McClellan F J. W. McClintock Ill ’53 Donald C. McClure Jr. ’69 Dennie L. McCrary F Robert McCullough Jr. '86 Kevin McCusty '80 Roland E. McDonald Trust F Mrs. Marian D. McElroy F John F. McFadden '36 David McGehee ’'85 Mrs. Jane R. McGoldrick F William D. McHenry '54 Ms. Elizabeth M. McKay P Ms. Meg McKee F Mrs. Betsy P. McQuiston P Kirby W. Malone '51 Mrs. Fred E. Manasco P Mrs. Heather L. Marion F William P. Maroney P David B. Marsh '86 Charles M. Martin P Charles M. Martin Jr. '85 Ms. Joan F. Marvin F Ms. Annie R. Massie F Dr. William McK. Massie P William McK. Massie Jr. '85 Mrs. Ada B. Matthews P D. R. Matthews F Mrs. Shirley A. Matzdorf P Mrs. Lillian M. Mausser P Ms. Alison H. Maxim F Ms. Marjorie P. Maxim P Jeffrey Mazza '87 Mrs. Jeanette E. Meadows P John R. Meadows F Mrs. Ruth Ann Messner P R. William Metzger P David J. Middleton F H. L. Middleton F David L. Miller ’84 Mrs. Mary Louise Miniard F Mrs. Patricia P. Mitchell F Charles M. Mitschow P Dr. Roby D. Mize P Mrs. Ann M. Mohr P Charles D. Mohrmann '79 James K. Moles '82 Prof. Clark R. Mollenhoff F Roy E. Monaco F Samuel E. Monroe '58 Ms. Doris C. Moore F Michael E. Moran F Mr.& Mrs. Robert C. Morbeck Allen Morgan '29 Robert B. Morgan Jr. ‘72 Hugh W. Morrell '56 Mrs. Anne J. Morledge P Richard H. Morris ’86 Dick E. S. Mulkey F Mrs. Patricia M. Muller P Joseph J. Mullins '52 James E. Murphy P Thomas F. Murray F Wilfred A. Nabors '34 Scott G. Nagley '85 National Geographic Society Judge Keith Nelson '53 Spencer Robertson Newell F Oakie G. Newsome P Mrs. Patsy M. Newsome P Robert G. Newsome F Ms. Cornelia Brown Nichols P Mr. & Mrs. Shuford R. Nichols 30 Wallace D. Niedringhaus Jr. '66 Dr. David R. Novack F Donald F. Novak '48 Brent M. O’Boyle '87 Daniel J. O'Connor Jr. P Mrs. Mary S. Ogden P Michael Jackson Oglesby F James R. Olin F Mrs. Jeanne A. Oliger P Mrs. Janet Osborne F Mrs. Linda L. Oskam P Mrs. A. B. Padgett F Merrill A. Palmer ’50 Mrs. Dorothy C. Paone P Edwin W. Parkinson Ill ’87 James T. Patterson Jr. F Raymond B. Patterson Ill '83 Kenneth E. Payne '77, '83L Mrs. Margaret L. Payne F Thomas M. Pearce P Mrs. Cecile Pearsall P Michael P. Peck ’71 Mrs. Betty Lou Pee P J. Carlton Peebles '84 Dr. & Mrs. Francis L. Peniston F Capt. & Mrs. Robert C. Peniston F Rhodes L. Perdue P A. Winniett Peters P Vernon W. Petty F John E. Pfaff F Mrs. Carol B. Phemister F Phi Kappa Sigma Fraternity Arnold Philhower F William W. Phillips ’25 Ms. Marynelle C. Philpott P Jerome C. Philpott ’84 Ms. Eve S. Phoenix P Joseph T. Phoenix '86 Mrs. Mary Louise Pierce P Mrs. Diana Pinckney P Francis Pinckney P H. J. Pinsoneault F Anthony D. Pistone F a eee Mrs. Ruth Carpenter Pitts P Dr. Herbert Pollack ’25 William C. Porth P Miss Winifred W. Porth F Mrs. Sally D. Potter P Louis P. Poulton P Mrs. Joanne Powell P Robert H. Powell Ill '64, '67L Ms. Muriel J. Powers F Alan J. Prater '80, '80L Mrs. Townes Pressler P Thomas A. Pressly Jr. '50 Dr. & Mrs. William W. Pusey F R. Penn Putman F George Quirk F The N. Joe Rahall Family Trust Mrs. Martha M. Raichle P Ms. Nancy E. Ratti F Dr. George W. Ray F Walter H. Rayner P Clarke Reed F Mrs. Julia Ann Reed P Mrs. W. L. Reed P Layton Register '85 Robert R. Reid Jr. '49. Jim Renfro Jr. 86 R. Coleman Rice Jr. F Mrs. Dorothy Richardson P Mrs. Margaret M. Richardson P Mrs. Nancy L. Richardson P Timothy M. Richardson '86 Mrs. Helen S. Riley P G. L. Buist Rivers Jr. P Marsh Robertson ’85 Dr. & Mrs. Minor Rogers F Capt. & Mrs. E. C. Rook F Mrs. Elvera A. Roth P A. Prescott Rowe '60 Howard A. Rubel F John S. Runge '73 Charles A. Ruppersberger Ill F Frederick C. Sage '46 Walter B. Salley Jr. '71 Don M. Sallinger '61 Ms. Laura N. Sammis F Dr. Howard V. Sanden '54 Dr. John A. Sanders P John S. Sanders ’86 L. Gray Sanders F Thomas L. Sansonetti ’76L William Sapp P Dr. Edward C. Sargent Jr. F George J. Sawyer Ill P Mrs. Judith S. Saxe F Mr. & Mrs. K. E. Scarisbrick P Gerard H. Schlimm P Mrs. Lucy T. Schoeffler P Richard H. Schoenfeld ’80 Carl D. Schroeder '84 Dr. Richard D. Schultz P Secretarial Office Support F John R. Seifert P Dr. Jerome D. Shaffer P Prof. Thomas L. Shaffer F Aven L. Sharp '73 Ms. Joan M. Shaughnessy F Mrs. Norma M. Shehan F Martin R. Shelton P Dr. Richard H. Shepard '72 Charles G. Shepherd P Stephen K. Shepherd '68 Charles C. Sherrill Jr. ’84 James M. Shoemaker Jr. P A. J. Shoup Jr. F David A. Shugart ’87 John H. Shumate ‘50 Ms. Beth Shuster F Carlton Simons Jr. '87 Carlton Simons P Ms. Christiane W. E. Simon P Steven C. Simon '69 Ms. Mary Gwynn Simpson F Sam Simpson F James A. Skinner Jr. P Mr. & Mrs. H. Richard Skutt F Robert Z. Slappey '87 James B. Sloan Jr. '87 John R. Slowik P Donald G. Smith P Dr. J. Stephen Smith P Dr. L. F. Smith Jr. P Rutherford P. C. Smith ’68, '74L William Burford Smith P Ms. Louise Smithwick P Robert Smithwick Jr. P Judge J. C. Snidow Jr. ’40L David Sorrells ’80 Mrs. Kathleen Kane Southard F Mrs. Virginia H. Sowell F Mrs. Thomas G. Spatig P Kingswood Sprott Jr. 56, '59L Mrs. Mary Ann Stachura P Harry C. Stahel Jr. 86 Harry C. Stahel P Lyndon S. Stambler F Bernard S. Steiner Jr. '54 Dr. Roy L. Steinheimer Jr. F Dr. B. S. Stephenson '42 Mrs. Mildred A. Stewart F John C. Stockburger P Richard J. Stoeffel P James D. Strader P John Stradinger III F Earl Stradtman P George W. Strake Jr. F Dr. Robert E. Strange P Mrs. Elsie N. Strickland P Dr. Dabney Stuart F Michael L. Suthard F John P. Sutton ’84 Dr. Carl D. Swanson '54, ’57L Mrs. Joane Swentzel F Hugh N. Tarbutton F John E. Tartaglione P Dr. G. Douglas Tatum Jr. P Dr. Herman W. Taylor Jr. ’57 Mrs. Margaret F. Teague P Thamer Eugene Temple Ill '84 Mrs. Carmella S. Templeton F John D. Templeton '86 Mrs. Mary S. Thalman F Mrs. William A. Thau Jr. P Mrs. Claire V. Thomas F Clifford C. Thomas Jr. '50 Douglas M. Thomas '74, '77L Robert McG. Thomas Jr. P Mrs. Ann W. Thomason F C. R. Thompson Jr. P Mrs. C. R. Thompson Sr. F Matthew G. Thompson ’64 Roy S. Thompson Jr. ’39 Ms. Dorothy Thrawley F Dr. Robert C. Tolle ’57 Ms. Mary E. Tolleson F Mrs. Robert H. Tolleson P Capt. George F. Tolson F C. C. Torbert Jr. P Col. Harry E. Trail '30 James Berry Trimble '84 Mrs. Robin Berry Trimble P William V. Trollinger ’53 Charles Tait Trussell '49 Mrs. Sally M. Tucker F Ms. Margaret E. Turner F Ms. Pauline S. Turner F David Tyson '83 Arnold H. Uggla ’38 United Daughters of the Confederacy Patrick Valder '86 Michael B. VanAmburgh '80 Steven W. VanAmburgh '75 Dr. Robert J. VanSon P Ms. Peggy Prag Varady F Mrs. Joan O. Varner P Ms. Anne Lloyd Vaughan P Ms. Blanche B. Vaughan F Virginia Environmental Endowment Virginia Foundation for Independent Colleges Mrs. Eugenia M. Vogel F Robert Parks Vrooman Jr. ‘87 Robert D. Wagner Jr. F Dr. George H. Wall F John N. Wall Jr. P Gene A. Wallace F Mrs. Dolores M. Walther P National Society of Washington Family Descendants Washington & Lee College Republicans Washington & Lee Executive Committee Mrs. Joan C. Waterbury P A. Sprunt Watkins II '82 Tim F. Watson '66 Dr. William J. Watt F W. Delaney Way Jr. ‘50 James M. Wearn '64 Rev. Ercel F. Webb P Miss Doris M. Weber F Andrew S. Weinberg '86 Kevin A. Welch '85 Leo J. Welder F Greg Wheeler '86 John P. Wheeler P Joseph G. Whelan Ill '86 Mrs. Jane Reid Whelchel P Bruce W. Whipple '80 Dr. Robert L. Whipple ‘26 John White '74 J. Allen White P Richard C. Whiteford P Mr. & Mrs. James W. Whitehead F David Wilkinson ’85 Donald McLean Wilkinson III ’86 Mrs. Henrietta W. Willcox P Ms. Anita Williams F Cranston R. Williams '86 James Franklin Williams '82 Dr. H. Thomas Williams F Ms. Martha H. Williamson P Hon. Thomas A. Williams Jr. '38, *39L Fielding L. Wilson Jr. '68 Dr. Robert L. Wilson F Mrs. Jean B. Wiltse P Dr. T. H. Winans F J. Otis Winters P Mrs. Carol H. Winterson P J. P. Wise ’74L Beverley H. Wood '74 Mrs. Helen F. Wood P James L. Wood ’85 Ms. Jeanne M. Wood F Anthony H. Woodson '51, ’53L John N. Wrinkle F W. B. Young Jr. ’60 Millard S. Younts '72 Ms. Mary L. Zartman F Mrs. Margaret Zavatsky P W. Dean Zimmer F Bruce Zivley '77 2 Anonymous Gifts 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 1983-84 year. Robert G. Brown Mrs. Eva Temple Prather Butler Leslie Cheek Jr. James T. Cook Jr. Estate Mrs. David M. Freudenthal Dr. Joseph Goldsten Mr. & Mrs. John G. Hamilton Donald F. Heatherington Mr. & Mrs. George W. Herndon W. Patrick Hinely Hollinger Corporation Mr. & Mrs. Thomas H. Jones Dr. Harry Lyons Emmett W. MacCorkle Jr. Miss Ruth Parmly Samuel K. Patton James Carter Prather Mrs. Philip K. Sanders Mr. & Mrs. Myron E. Tremain Milam Turner West Publishing Company C. B. Wilcox and the Richmond Light Infantry Blues Class Agents— Annual Fund Heroes Washington and Lee’s Annual Fund has been among the most successful in the nation for at least the last decade. The heroes of those successful efforts have been the Class Agents who work diligently each year to help the University maintain its strength and the quality of its educational program. Very few institutions place as much trust and reliance in Class Agents as does Washington and Lee. It can truly be said that if the Class Agents don’t do the job, it doesn’t get done. Under the leadership and guidance of the Annual Fund Chair- man, the Class Agents set their own class goals; plan and manage their own class campaigns; and handle their own mail- ings, from writing the letters to getting them stuffed, stamped, and posted. The Class Agent who does more than is asked is the rule, not the exception. Their outstanding record of suc- cess testifies to their devotion, dedication, and plain hard work. Once again in 1984-85 they face a formidable task—the Annual Fund goal is $1,450,000, a 7 percent increase over the total raised a year ago. Those whose names are listed below deserve both the support and the gratitude of all who care for Washington and Lee. Chairman: James A. Meriwether, '70 Class Agents: Academic 1915: 1916: 1917: 1921: 1925: 1926: 1929: 1930: 1931 1933: 1934: 1935: 1936: 1937: 1938: 1939: 1940: 1941: 1942: 1943: 1944: 1945: 1946: 1947: 1948: 1949: 1950: 1951: 50 Rupert N. Latture Edwin B. Shultz William J. Cox Samuel L. Raines Earl T. Andrews Thomas T. Moore T. Graham Gibson Herbert G. Jahncke : Houston M. Minniece Charles J. Longacre Scott Mosovich Loyal P. Gassman George W. Harrison Richard K. Stuart David N. Walker Victor F. Radliffe Ross V. Hersey Alvin T. Fleishman Leon J. Warms Albert D. Darby Jr. George T. Wood E. Dean Finney M . Pressley Mead Warren G.'Merrin William W. Burton Mark W. Saurs William N. Clements || James F. Gallivan : George E. Eagle : Hayes C. McClerkin Jr. : Walter E. Smith : J. Hardin Marion : R. Gordon Gooch : Richard R. Warren : Malcolm A. Clinger Jr. : T. B. Bryant Ill : Malcolm Lassman : William M. Bowen : William L. Roberts Jr. : D. Randolph Cole : William M. Schildt : Jack H. DeJarnette : Michael E. Lawrence : John S. Graham Ill : Buddy Atkins : John F. Carrere Jr. : Willard B. Wagner III : Joseph B. Tompkins Jr. : Stephen W. Robinson : Donald D. Eavenson Jr. : Douglas C. Chase : Robert A. Keatley : Clay T. Jackson : Joseph L. Carrere : Charles V. Brown Ill : C. Stephen Jones : P. Craig Cornett : Christopher Gammon : S. Braxton Puryear : Bennett L. Ross : John M. Cleghorn : Franklin R. Bigham : Sherwood W. Wise : Thomas E. Sparks : William L. Martin : Joseph Arnold : Thomas W. Williams : H. Tyndall Dickinson : Clifford L. Walters : Carter R. Allen : J. Randolph Larrick : Rufus B. Hailey : Ernest M. Holdaway : James C. Reed Jr. : Robert L. Banse - Donald R. Klenk : Richard W. Hudgins : Reno S. Harp Ill : Overton P. Pollard : Robert E. Stroud : Richard H. Horn : N. William Bath : Robert E. Shepherd Jr. : Raymond R. Robrecht Jr. : Paul H. Bosell : Thomas W. Budd : James E. Kulp : James S. Maffitt : Joseph D. Logan Ill : A. Alling Jones : David D. Redmond : Edward B. Crosland Jr. : David L. Baird Jr. : James A. Philpott Jr. : John C. Moore : Stephen G. Elkins : Thomas K. Wotring : Stephen D. Rosenthal : Douglas M. Thomas : Derek Swope : John F. Murphy : John J. Eklund : David G. Weaver : Robert M. Couch : Matthew L. Kimball : Peter W. Leberman Wy. & Gazette Scholarship honors Ross L. Malone Through the generosity of friends of the late Ross L. Malone, former Rector of the Washington and Lee Board of Trustees, the Ross Malone Honor Scholarship has been established in the W&L School of Law. The scholarship, in the amount of $10,000, will be awarded in the fall of 1985 to an entering first-year student in the School of Law who has demonstrated superior academic achievement and the high moral standards, diligence, and col- legiality that Ross Malone exemplified. Once awarded the scholarship will be renewable for the second and third years of study so long as the recipient con- tinues to demonstrate the academic and other characteristics that led to the award. “It is particularly appropriate that Ross Malone be honored in this way,’’ said W&L President John D. Wilson. “Having a Ross Malone Scholar in our law school will be a constant reminder to all of us of the many, many contribu- tions that Mr. Malone made to this University and to the legal profession.”’ Malone received both his undergraduate and law degrees at Washington and Lee. He held honorary doctorates from seven colleges and universities, including Washington and Lée (1958). Malone had been general counsel of General Motors from 1967 until shortly before his death in 1974. He had served as president of the American Bar Association in 1958-59. He was also a Deputy Attorney General of the United States in 1952-53 and was active in public service in a number of other capacities as well—including the chairmanship of the Hoover Commission’s task force on streamlining legal procedures in the Ex- ecutive branch. He was one of the principal drafters of the 25th Amendment to the Constitu- tion, providing for succession in the event of the ‘‘death or resignation’”’ of the President or Vice President. Malone became a member of the Scholarships honor Ross Malone, Rupert Latture Malone W&L Board of Trustees in 1967 and was elected Rector of the Board in 1973. According to Farris P. Hotchkiss, director of university relations and development, contributions may still be made to the endowment fund for the Malone Scholarship. Scholarships honor Rupert Latture Two separate scholarships have been established in honor of Rupert N. Lat- ture, professor emeritus of politics at Washington and Lee and a long-time member of the University community: the Rupert Nelson Latture Scholarship and the Delta Upsilon Fraternity Scholarship. **Professor Latture has contributed in sO many important ways to Washington and Lee that it is only appropriate that he be honored in a manner that will con- tribute so meaningfully to future genera- tions of W&L students,’’ said W&L President John D. Wilson of the two en- dowed scholarships. Mr. and Mrs. William E. Latture, °49, of Greensboro, N.C., have created the Rupert Nelson Latture Scholarship to recognize Latture’s ‘‘extraordinarily long years of devotion and service to Washington and Lee.”’ The scholarship is to be awarded an- nually to a deserving student who re- quires assistance to attend the University. Bill Latture is Rupert Latture’s son and has himself been an active member 51 Le Gazette of the Washington and Lee family, serv- ing his alma mater as a director and treasurer of the Alumni Board, a Class Agent for the Class of 1949, and presi- dent of the Greensboro, N.C., area alum- ni chapter. Bill and Louise Latture are the parents of a Washington and Lee graduate, Richard Garland Latture, ’81. The Delta Upsilon Fraternity Scholar- ship was established in Latture’s honor by the alumni of the Washington and Lee Chapter of Delta Upsilon. Preference in awarding the scholarship will be given to sons and daughters of Delta Upsilon chapter alumni. Latture served as adviser to the frater- nity, which was established at W&L in 1930 and remained active until 1971. At its meeting in October, the board of directors of the fraternity’s alumni chapter voted to dispose of the remaining corporation assets of approximately $26,000 by endowing the scholarship fund in honor of Latture. ‘*Professor Latture has been a valued friend of the chapter for many years, and we felt this was the very best way to acknowledge his contributions to Delta Upsilon,’’ said Emmett Poindexter, ’20, °23L, of Rutherford, N.J., president of the alumni corporation. The vice president of the corporation is Judge Joseph E. Hess of Buena Vista, °60, ’63L; secretary is W&L law professor Lewis H. LaRue, ’59; and treasurer is Lewis G. John, ’58, dean of students. Latture is a 1915 graduate of Washington and Lee. As a student he was one of the founders of the national honorary leadership society Omicron Delta Kappa, which now has chapters on college campuses across the country. After teaching for two years in private preparatory schools and serving in World War I, Latture returned to Washington and Lee in 1920 in the political science department. He was promoted to full professor in 1941, the year he was named head of the department. Following his retirement from active teaching in 1962, he stayed on as a special adviser to the president at W&L with a variety of assignments. He will celebrate his 93rd birthday in January. aps Librarian takes new post Maurice D. Leach Jr., head librarian at Washington and Lee since 1968, has resigned from that position, effective July 1, 1985. Following a year’s leave of absence, Leach will return to his professorial post at W&L and will direct a newly-created Friends of the Library organization. W&L President John D. Wilson an- nounced Leach’s resignation and said that a search for a new librarian will begin immediately under the direction of John Elrod, dean of the College (of arts and sciences). ‘‘Maurice Leach’s contributions to the development of our magnificent undergraduate library hardly need documentation from me,’’ said Wilson. ‘*His 16 years in office have witnessed an enormous growth in collection size and quality and in the range of bibliographic services provided to our students and faculty. The University will long be in his debt.” The Friends of the Library organiza- tion will be involved in increasing support for the University Library, both in monetary terms and in obtaining new materials for the library’s collections. Leach was appointed head librarian at W&L in July 1968. At the time of his ap- pointment, he was a program adviser to the Ford Foundation at the American University in Beirut, helping to upgrade, develop, and build libraries for colleges, universities, and governments in the Mid- dle East. He was pursuing that assignment on leave of absence from his post as pro- fessor and chairman of the department of library science at the University of Ken- tucky, a position he had held since 1959. He holds a B.A. in history from the University of Kentucky and a bachelor of library science degree from the University of Chicago. Earl T. Jones’ trust establishes scholarship Earl T. Jones, ’30, had a dream of making a significant lifetime gift to his alma mater. He has realized that dream not once, but twice, through Annuity Trustee Agreements with Washington and Lee. In July 1975 Jones, a prominent citizen of Raleigh, N.C., entered into the first Annuity Trust Agreement when he made a gift of General Mills’ stock valued at approximately $55,000 to Washington and Lee. Jones is president of Jesse Jones Sausage Company, which was founded by his father. He had just sold the company to General Mills at the time he made the gift. The irrevocable agreement stipulates that the principal of the Trust will ultimately go to Washington and Lee for the establishment of the Earl T. Jones Scholarship endowment, the proceeds of which are to provide financial assistance to students from North Carolina, Jones’ adopted state. (He is a Virginian by birth and does claim that ‘‘once a Virginian, always a Virginian.’’) In addition to attractive tax benefits in this life income trust, Jones receives quarterly annuity payments, set at his desired level, for his lifetime. Jones was extremely proud that the agreement enabled him to fulfill one of his strongest wishes. So proud was he, in fact, that nine years later in February 1984 he repeated the arrangement by establishing a second Annuity Trust Agreement. This one was funded with Gulf Oil appreciated securities valued at approximately $70,000. This came about at the time of Standard Oil of California’s buyout of Gulf. Once again, Jones realized attrac- tive tax benefits on the gift of the securities. As in the earlier Trust, Jones will receive annuity payments of a fixed amount for his lifetime and the principal will ultimately be added to the Earl T. Jones Scholarship endowment. The gifts are not surprising. Jones has long been a generous benefactor of Washington and Lee. He served as Class Agent for the Class of ’30 for many years and was instrumental in the all-time high amount that his class raised for the Annual Fund during its Golden Anniver- sary Reunion year of 1980. Of his latest contributions, Farris P. Hotchkiss, director of university relations and development said: ‘‘Washington and Lee is forever grateful to Earl Jones for his generous foresight. The future of North Carolina students and indeed all of Washington and Lee University will be brighter because of this devoted alumnus.”’ Alcohol educator mixes sound advice with humor Father Joseph Martin, widely acknowledged as one of the country’s most effective educators on alcoholism, told an audience of about 1,200 at Washington and Lee University on Oc- tober 15 that alcoholism is the most com- plex and destructive disease in the world. ‘Alcoholism is a disease that affects the body, mind, and soul,’’ said Martin. ‘*It is the most destructive disease in the world—most people who catch it die. It is also one of the diseases of which we know the least.’’ Martin made his presentation at W&L’s Warner Center under the auspices of the University’s Student Health Com- mittee and the Baur Alcohol Awareness Program. Currently associate pastor of St. Joan of Arc Church in Aberdeen, Md., Martin is the author of several books, including a new one entitled No Laughing Matter and is co-founder of Ashley, Inc., a non- profit, tax-exempt center dedicated to the treatment of the sick and suffering alcoholic. Martin entertained his audience with humor but delivered a sobering message about alcohol and alcoholism. An alcoholic himself, Martin was sent to a treatment center for priests and said that ‘‘the greatest thing I learned about myself was I was sick, not evil.’’ He suggested that most of the drink- ing done after high school is because “it’s either the macho thing to do or the sophisticated thing to do.”’ Among the reasons he listed for drinking alcohol are curiosity, custom, conviviality, escape, and euphoria. Alcohol, said Martin, is a sedative drug and alcoholism is the addiction to that drug. ‘‘Once contracted,’’ he said, “it lasts until death.’’ Martin compared the effects of alcohol on the brain to the effects of ether used as an anesthesia for surgery patients. ‘*Alcohol acts on the brain precisely the same way ether does,’’ he said, scrawling the chemical formulas for both on a blackboard. ‘‘Ether is a double shot of alcohol without a chaser. Now if alcoholism is the addiction to this drug, does it make sense to use just your mouth and not your head?’’ An alcoholic, Martin told the au- dience, is someone whose drinking makes trouble. “‘If you are an alcoholic, your defini- tion of alcoholism will not include you,’’ Martin said. ‘‘If your drinking is making trouble and you want your trouble to stop, stop drinking.’’ Alcoholism can be a deadly disease in a variety of ways, he added. ‘‘It can kill by sedation. You can overdose on alcohol,’’ he said. ‘‘And it kills by the ton on the highway.”’ Referring to the practice of drinking and driving, Martin said that it is physically impossible to drive competently under the influence of alcohol. Added Martin: ‘‘I believe that driving in a drugged condition is a breach of conscience.”’ Martin’s appearance at W&L was an outgrowth of the University’s program designed to educate incoming freshmen about the dangers of alcohol abuse. That program has been aided, in part, by the establishment of the Baur Alcohol Awareness Program which was establish- ed through a gift from Andrew H. Baur of St. Louis, a 1937 graduate of W&L. Father Martin presents his ‘‘Chalk Talk on Alcohol” in the Warner Center. a3 && Gazette President appoints committee on University drug policies Leonard E. Jarrard, professor of psychology and head of the psychology department at Washington and Lee, has been appointed chairman of a 10-member committee that will review the Universi- ty’s current policies and practices bearing on the institution’s response to drug offenses. Washington and Lee President John D. Wilson appointed the ad hoc commit- tee upon the recommendation of the University’s board of trustees, which ex- pressed its interest in the subject as the result of action of a special grand jury that probed drug trafficking in Rockbridge County. Composed of faculty, students, and administrators, the committee will be ask- ed to submit a report which will be reviewed by the president and the faculty and submitted to the trustees. In addition to Jarrard, the committee consists of Peter Baumgaertner, a third- year law student from Syosset, N.Y.; Darby Brower, a senior from Carversville, Pa.; Jay D. Cook Jr., pro- fessor of accounting; Robert J. de Maria, associate professor of journalism; Louis W. Hodges, professor of religion; Lewis G. John, dean of students; Robert W. McAhren, professor of history; Michael A. Pleva, professor of chemistry; and, Robert Tomaso, a senior from Milford, Mass. During its study, the committee will examine the University’s own internal agencies that are involved with cases in- volving drug offenses and the institu- tion’s relationships with external agencies. Further, President Wilson has express- ed his hope that the committee will make recommendations to improve the Univer- sity’s preventive or educational programs and that it will be able to give some con- sideration to questions associated with student criminal convictions of other kinds. Jarrard has been head of the depart- ment of psychology at Washington and Lee since 1971 and has conducted research into a brain structure called the 54 On-campus interviews of prospec- tive students are up 83 percent this year over the same period a year ago, according to the University’s Office of Admissions. From June | through October 31, admissions officials conducted on- campus interviews with 738 high school seniors. That compares with 404 interviews during the same period in 1983. The increase includes 168 young women and 166 more young men than last year. In addition, the University’s admis- sions office personnel and represen- tatives of W&L’s Alumni-Admissions Program are seeing more students dur- ing college night programs and on visits to individual high schools than in the past several years. ‘“We have taken more information cards and admissions materials on the road with us this year, but we are still running out of the literature in almost every instance,’’ noted William H. Hartog, director of admissions. Though Hartog adds that it is too early to predict what the increased in- terest might mean in the actual Admissions interviews increase by more than 80 percent number of applications, he did suggest it is quite possible that the University will receive as many as 2,000 applica- tions as opposed to 1,500 a year ago. Last year the admissions office printed 17,000 applications and distributed about 16,000; this year 25,000 forms were printed and are already gone with an extra 3,000 being printed. The increase in interest has caused the admissions staff to expand their high school visits. Officials will visit 600 high schools in 35 states this year. Too, the admissions office has been forced to add an extra hour of on- campus interviewing on Saturdays— traditionally the biggest day for students to visit campuses. ‘‘So far we couldn’t be happier with the increase in interest,’’ said Hartog. ‘‘As we had hoped, interest in Washington and Lee has not only in- creased among young women who will be entering the undergraduate schools for the first time in 1985 but there has also been a surge of interest among young men.”’ hippocampus for the past 17 years with grant support from the National Science Foundation. For a number of years, Jar- rard has taught a spring term class on psychoactive drugs, which examines psychological, pharmacological, and physiological aspects of drugs with con- sideration given to the response of society to drug usage. W&L Lab Jazz Band plays at World’s Fair The 19-piece Washington and Lee University Lab Jazz Band took its music to the birthplace of jazz in October when it performed at the Louisiana World Exposition. Under the direction of W&L music professor Robert Stewart, the band presented a 45-minute program on the Cornet Stage at the World’s Fair. ‘*Actually we didn’t play Dixieland, though we did perform a couple of ‘blues’ numbers,’’ said Stewart. ‘‘Much of the program featured ‘big band’ music from the 1940s along with the new music of composers Jay Chattaway and Rob McConnell.’’ Arrangements for the appearance were made more than two years ago when Stewart sent organizers of the World’s Fair a tape of the band’s music and some photographs. “It was a splendid opportunity for our young musicians, not only perform- ing at the World’s Fair but having a chance to hear some Dixieland jazz while we were there,’’ noted Stewart. The W&L Lab Jazz Band was formed two years ago with the addition of several musicians to the existing W&L Brass and Percussion Ensemble. That ensemble has routinely taken a spring tour, usually going to Florida and perfor- ming on a cruise ship to the Bahamas during the University’s spring break. The W&L Lab Jazz Band’s World’s Fair program featured soloists Whitney Gadsby on the tenor sax, Adam Reinstein and Todd Harvey on trumpet, John Riley on trombone, and Todd Brown, Jay Wingert, and Bruce Reed on drums. The band performs at various W&L functions throughout the school year and provided pre-game and halftime enter- tainment for this year’s Homecoming football game which was held on October 13 at Wilson Field. Craun examines blasphemy in medieval texts A study that determines the normative meaning of the term ‘‘blasphemy’’ in medieval texts has been published by Washington and Lee English professor Edwin D. Craun. Craun’s essay, entitled ‘‘Inordinata Locutio: Blasphemy in Pastoral Literature, 1200-1500,’’ appears in the scholarly journal, Traditio: Studies in Ancient and Medieval History, Thought, and Religion, published by the Fordham University Press. In the paper, Craun seeks to deter- mine why poets, jurists, and chroniclers call certain statements about God blasphemous by analyzing the works which popularized the teaching of the church fathers and scholastic theologians. The study is based on all the confessional manuals, handbooks for preachers and catechetical treatises which survive in English libraries, as well as on sermons, collections of canon law, and imaginative literature. Craun’s essay was researched and written while he was a Visiting Fellow of University College at England’s Oxford University under Washington and Lee’s program of faculty exchange with Oxford. Craun While at Oxford in the winter of 1982, Craun read an early version of the essay to the Oxford University Medieval Society. That society is composed of vir- tually all the dons from Oxford and neighboring universities who do research in medieval culture. A related essay by Craun on Robert Henryson’s 15th-century poem ‘‘The Testament of Cresseid’’ will appear in Studies in Philology this winter. Research for that essay was supported by a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities, and a shorter version of the essay was read at a gathering of the Southeastern Medieval Association earlier this year in Charlottesville. In October, Craun inaugurated a new series of lectures sponsored by W&L’s English department when he spoke on ‘‘The Hazards of Question-mongering: A Cautionary Tale for Readers.’’ The lec- ture was concerned with the question of why people misuse language to lie, slander, and blaspheme. Craun has taught English at W&L since 1971. He is a graduate of Wheaton College and received the Ph.D. from Princeton. He has been a Woodrow Wilson Fellow and a Fellow of the Southeastern Institute of Medieval and Renaissance Studies. During the summer of 1983, he was a participant in a Na- tional Endowment for the Humanities seminar at Brown University. Tucker Lecturer urges changes in U.S. Constitution Arthur S. Miller, professor of law emeritus at George Washington Universi- ty, told a Washington and Lee University audience that the U.S. Constitution is no longer able to adapt effectively to chang- ing circumstances and requires major revisions. Miller, who is the author of 10 books on constitutional law, delivered the 36th annual John Randolph Tucker Lecture at the W&L School of Law on October 19th. Admitting that he was bucking the tide of the ‘‘current euphoria that is sweeping the nation,’’ Miller contended that the Constitution ‘‘is always changing with the times. What the people did in 1787 was tell generations of Americans to write their own constitution. The Con- stitution is always in a state of becoming. It is always being updated.”’ But, said Miller, it is no longer possi- ble to make the incremental adaptations of constitutionalism that are necessary. **Today and in the immediate future,’’ said Miller, ‘‘we are faced with a novel and unique set of circumstances that, to me, suggest the need for rethink- ing our constitutional order. ‘We are confronted with something new and entirely unforeseen by those 55 men who wrote the document of 1787. We exist in a system of pandemic social change. Science and technology are on the loose. No one really knows where they are taking us.”’ He further said the current global society and the influence of major cor- porate powers in the United States today represent a new situation with which the current Constitution cannot effectively deal. Miller maintained that the only valid end of government ‘‘is the promotion of social justice’’ and argued that the political and economic order in this coun- try and elsewhere ‘‘does not achieve a satisfactory measure of social justice. Too many people are left out. There will be increasing numbers left out in the future.’’ >> de Gazette Justice Stephenson honored by W&L School of Law Justice Roscoe B. Stephenson Jr. of the Virginia Supreme Court was awarded honorary membership in the Washington and Lee University chapter of the Order of the Coif on October 12th. The Order of the Coif is a national legal honorary society which was founded to encourage legal scholarship and to ad- vance the ethical standards of the legal profession. Justice Stephenson’s award recognizes his distinguished legal career. Since 1981 he has served on the Virginia Supreme Court. Prior to that, he had served nine years as a judge on the Virginia Circuit Court. He received his bachelor’s degree from Washington and Lee in 1943 and his law degree from W&L in 1947. He was awarded an honorary degree from the University in 1983. Justice Stephenson had a distinguished career as a practicing lawyer in western Virginia prior to his election to the Cir- cult Court bench. A fellow of the American College of Trial Lawyers, he was for many years Commonwealth’s At- torney for Alleghany County and later was in private practice in Covington and Clifton Forge. Justice Stephenson comes from a family of Washington and Lee graduates. His father, Roscoe B. Stephenson Sr., received the LL.B. in 1908 while his son, Roscoe B. Stephenson III, received the juris doctor degree in 1981. The award to Justice Stephenson was made during a banquet held for members of the Washington and Lee Law Council, the organization of law school alumni. W&L professor receives NEH grant A team of biomedical investigators, including Washington and Lee University psychology professor H. Eugene King, has been awarded a grant of $184,507 to support its continued research on the behavioral consequences of hypertension. 56 fe a Justice Stephenson (right) with W&L Law School Dean Frederic L. Kirgis Jr. The two-year grant was made by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood In- stitute. It will be used to continue the detailed investigation of changes in behavior which may result from marked and persistent elevation of the cerebral blood pressure. In addition to King, the team consists of two co-principal scientists from the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine. Currently on academic leave from Washington and Lee for the fall term, King is now at the Laboratory of Physiology and Behavior in Pittsburgh where he is devising the experimental pro- tocol and behavioral tests that will be us- ed to examine some of the questions aris- ing from the team’s earlier research. W&L Superdance contributes $21,597 to MD Telethon Students at Washington and Lee University contributed $21,597 to the Muscular Dystrophy Association during the annual Jerry Lewis-Labor Day Telethon Monday (September 3). The money was raised last winter dur- ing W&L’s sixth annual Superdance, a three-day dance marathon. Ricky de Alessandrini, a 1984 W&L graduate from Norfolk and chairman of last year’s Superdance, appeared on na- tional television from Las Vegas presen- ting a check to Lewis. Meantime, W&L seniors Chris Williams of Newark, Del., and David Sizemore of Covington, officials of this year’s Superdance, made an appearance on the Lynchburg version of the telethon which was shown on WSET-TV. According to Williams, plans are already underway for the seventh W&L Superdance, which will be held February |, Z, and 3. Russ, ’78, named research archaeologist Kurt C. Russ has been appointed to the position of research archaeologist for the Washington and Lee University Laboratory of Archaeology. A Buena Vista native, Russ received his bachelor’s degree from Washington and Lee in 1978 and earned his master’s degree in anthropology from the Univer- sity of Tennessee in 1984. As a student at W&L, Russ worked on several of the University’s ar- chaeological projects, including the Liber- ty Hall project for which he was site supervisor in 1976 and field supervisor in 1977. During his graduate studies at Ten- nessee, Russ participated in several im- portant excavations. He was the mor- tuary site specialist for a project in Chillicothe, Ill., during the summer of 1980 and was field director and laboratory supervisor for an excavation in Knoxville, Tenn. Russ is a member of the American Anthropological Association, the Ar- chaeological Society of Virginia, and the Society of American Archaeology. Since joining the archaeology laboratory in July, Russ has already serv- ed as project director on an ar- chaeological investigation conducted in Pocahontas County, W.Va. W&L archaeologists uncover possible burial mound A team of Washington and Lee University archaeologists have uncovered what may have been a burial mound dating from between 1000 B.C. and 900 A.D. in Pocahontas County, W.Va. The W&L Laboratory of Archaeology was contracted by Copper and Smith, P.C., of Harrisonburg, Va., to conduct a Phase II archaeological investigation of a proposed waste treatment site near Hillsboro, W.Va. According to Kurt C. Russ, research archaeologist for W&L, the team located both a prehistoric site and one prehistoric mound that is approximately 18 feet in diameter and 2 1/2 feet high. ‘*The site was probably occupied on a seasonal basis, and we anticipate the mound may have contained human re- mains and was associated with the site,’’ said Russ. The W&L laboratory has recommend- ed that further studies be made of the area in the form of a Phase III investigation. ‘“We have only been engaged in limited testing of the mound,”’’ noted Russ, ‘‘so it is too early to say what might be contained in it. But there does exist the possibility that it could offer some idea on mortuary practices of the time.”’ During the course of their investiga- tion, the W&L team found 1,570 ar- tifacts, all of which are lithic and repre- sent the by-products of tool manufacture of subsequent modification. Included among those 1,570 artifacts were three projectile points that offer in- formation regarding the chronological af- filiation of the site and mound. The point types indicate a dominant Early to Middle Woodland occupation for the site. The Early to Middle Woodland period in that area of West Virginia is believed to be about 1000 B.C. to 900 A.D. The artifacts found at the site indicate the primary behaviorial routines occur- ring at the site had to do with tool pro- duction and hunting related activities, ac- cording to Russ. ‘The mound component at the site may offer us evidence of a more perma- nent Occupation as well as a behavorial routine associated with the treatment of the dead,’’ he said. John M. McDaniel, associate pro- fessor of sociology and anthropology at W&L and director of the laboratory of archaeology, was the principal in- vestigator on the project. **This is the 17th job that we have done of this kind under contract, and while we don’t want to exaggerate the importance of the find, it is clearly the most unusual and potentially exciting that we have had,’’ said McDaniel. In addition to McDaniel and Russ, the team included three W&L undergraduates—senior Randall Ray of Wake Forest, N.C., junior Ted Goebel of Coolville, Ohio, and sophomore Paul J. Smith of Gainesville, Ga. W&L graduate Michael Gregory, now a graduate student at Arizona State, and Linda A. Russ also participated in the field work and laboratory analysis. 34 W&L students included in Who’s Who The 1985 edition of Who’s Who Among Students in American Universities and Colleges will include the names of 34 students from Washington and Lee. Campus nominating committees and editors of the annual directory have in- cluded the names of these students based on their academic achievement, service to the community, leadership in extracur- ricular activities, and potential for con- tinued success. Outstanding students have been honored in the annual directory since it was first published in 1934. Of the 34 W&L students included in the 1985 volume, 27 are seniors in the University’s undergraduate divisions while seven are third-year students in the W&L School of Law. Those selected to Who’s Who are: Seniors: Ian B. Banwell of Cleveland Heights, Ohio; B. Darby Brower of Carversville, Pa.; Robert Bryant of Albu- querque, N.M.; Samuel P. Dalton of Springfield, Mo.; Cole Dawson of Houston, Texas; John DiDuro of Geneva, N.Y.; Jeffrey D. Dixon of Dun- can, Okla.; Ben Hale of Tracy City, Tenn; Glen Jackson of Atlanta, Ga.; Todd Jones of Muncie, Ind.; David N. Jonson of Elmhurst, Ill.; Kevin H. Kelley of San Antonio, Texas; Ken L. Moles of Roanoke, Va.; Clarke H. Morledge of Williamsburg, Va.; David L. Perdue of Atlanta, Ga.; G. Bruce Potter of Rich- mond, Va.; William L. Reed Jr. of Birm- ingham, Ala.; L. Gray Sanders of Tam- pa, Fla.; David A. Sizemore of Covington, Va.; James R. Spatig of Huntington, W.Va.; David W. Sprunt of Lexington, Va.; Charles W. Stern of New Orleans, La.; Mark E. Sullivan of Atlanta, Ga.: B. Scott Tilley of Richmond, Va.; Robert J. Tomaso of Milford, Mass.; Christopher Williams of Newark, Del.: and, Peter M. Wright of Tuscaloosa, Ala. Third-year law students: Louise Jackson Browner, now of Lexington; Paul E. Fletcher III of Fort Lauderdale, Fla.; Charles F. Martel of McLean, Va.; M. Susan Palmer, now of Lexington; Seth C. Prager of Rockville, Md.; Patricia A. Shean of Arlington, Va.; and John J. Sicilian of North Babylon, N.Y. a7 & Gazette Campus speakers e James M. Cox, Avalon Professor of English at Dartmouth College, delivered the third annual Shannon-Clark Lecture in English at Washington and Lee in Oc- tober. His lecture was entitled ‘‘Adven- tures of Huckleberry Finn: A Hard Book to Take. A native of Virginia, Cox holds degrees from the University of Michigan and Indiana University. He is editor of Robert Frost: Twentieth Century Views and author of Mark Twain: The Fate of Humor and of numerous essays on a wide range of American writers. The Shannon-Clark Lectures in English were inaugurated two years ago at Washington and Lee by Edgar F. Shannon Jr., Commonwealth Professor of English at the University of Virginia, a W&L alumnus, and a Trustee of the University. The series honors the memory of his father, chairman of the Washington and Lee English department from 1914 until 1938, and Harriet Mabel Fishburn Clark, a grandmother of the donor whose gift to W&L established the lecture series. e Robert J. Carson III, chairman of the department of geology at Whitman College in Walla Walla, Wash., presented an illustrated lecture about the eruption of Mount St. Helens in October under the sponsorship of the department of geology. A native of Lexington, Carson had studied Mount St. Helens for several years prior to the eruption three years ago. e The United States invasion of Grenada was the subject of a program that featured observations by a medical student who was in Grenada during the invasion and a spirited debate by two Washington and Lee professors. After a presentation by Michael Kim- mel, one of the medical students evacuated from Grenada during the inva- sion, Washington and Lee politics pro- fessor John Handelman and W&L jour- nalism professor Clark Mollenhoff took opposing views of whether the invasion was justified. 58 Felix P. Welch, 1906-1984 Felix P. Welch, former Cincinnati Professor of Mathematics at Washington and Lee University, died September 22 following a brief illness. He was 78. A memorial service was held in the R. E. Lee Episcopal Church in Lexington. A native of Kewanee, Miss., Welch taught mathematics at Washington and Lee for 30 years, serving as head of the department of mathematics for 25 of those years. He earned the bachelor of science degree in chemistry from Mississippi State University in 1929. He held the master’s degree in mathematics from the Univer- sity of Texas and received his Ph.D. in mathematics from the University of Illinois. He served with the United States Ar- my during World War II and retired from Welch began his teaching career at his undergraduate alma mater, Mississippi State, in 1929. He taught at the Starkville, Miss., school for 18 years before joining the faculty at Washington and Lee in 1947. He held W&L’s Cincinnati Professor- ship of Mathematics throughout his W&L teaching career. One of Welch’s fields of research in- volved developing visual aids in mathematics. In 1967, the Mathematical Association of America sponsored an animated film, The Theorem of the Mean, which Welch produced. He was the co-author with Washington and Lee mathematics pro- the Army in 1961 with the rank of major. fessor Robert S. Johnson of a text- workbook, Calculus. He was a member of Phi Beta Kap- pa, the American Mathematical Associa- tion, the Mathematical Association of America, and the Virginia Academy of Science. When Welch retired from active teaching in 1977, the W&L board of trustees elected him Cincinnati Professor of Mathematics, Emeritus. Survivors include three cousins: Mrs. Jeffrey Hardin Gainey of Lisman, Ala.; Junius P. Welch of Houston, Texas; and Mrs. Agnes Hardin Wood of Pensacola, Fla. Memorial contributions in Welch’s honor may be made to the American Heart Fund. The program was sponsored by W&L’s chapter of Pi Sigma Alpha, the national honorary politics fraternity. e Richard M. Rorty, the Kenan Pro- fessor of Humanities at the University of Virginia, presented a lecture entitled ‘‘The Objective of Values’’ in October under the sponsorship of the department of philosophy. ¢ Judge Randall T. Bell of the South Carolina Court of Appeals was the keynote speaker for Washington and Lee’s 10th annual Legal Ethics in November. Bell’s lecture was entitled ‘‘The Lawyer as Gatekeeper: Ethical Dilem- mas.’’ The Legal Ethics Institute is part of Washington and Lee’s program in ap- plied ethics, ‘‘Society and the Profes- sions.”’ e Milner S. Ball, Caldwell Professor of Constitutional Law at the University of Georgia, lectured on ‘‘A Theological Approach to Jurisprudence”’ in the W&L School of Law in November. The lecture represented the principal paper for a three-day colloquium held in W&L’s Frances Lewis Law Center. Chapter News RICHMOND. A large percentage of the chapter’s members gathered for lunch at the Downtown Club on September 11 to hear two University Trustees discuss the coeducation decision. Virginia Supreme Court Justice A. Christian Compton, ’50, and Best Products Executive Vice President Frances Lewis both emphasized the depth of the Trustees’ investigation, then engaged in a lengthy and informative dialogue with alumni. Chapter President Bill Garrison, ’76, recognized a number of special guests in attendance, including former Rector John Newton Thomas, ’24; former Trustee Sydney Lewis, ’40, °43L; former President Robert E. R. Huntley, ’50, ’57L; University Relations Director Farris Hotchkiss, ’58; and, Alumni Secretary Dick Sessoms. SAVANNAH/HILTON HEAD. Alumni from both areas held a meeting September 26 to discuss the formation of a joint chapter and to learn more about coeducation from two visitors from the campus. Geology professor Sam Kozak, a member of the W&L faculty for almost a quarter-century, provided a perspective from the classroom as he responded to questions. Alumni Secretary Dick Sessoms also made com- ments about the Trustees’ decision and the University’s challenge to implement it successfully. Prime movers for the meeting included Bill Bowen, ’61, and Jamie Canup, ’84L, of Hilton Head, and Rick Middleton, ’76, and Tom Rideout, °63, of Savannah. Among those taking an active part in the coeducation discussion were Lawton Calhoun, ’37, and Charles Sipple, ’53. Sessoms announced that W&L President John Wilson would meet with the joint group in March. SAN DIEGO and ORANGE COUNTY. The two chapters participated in an Old Dominion Party on October 19 at the Admiral Kidd Club in San Diego. LYNCHBURG. The chapter joined forces with Hampden- Sydney’s Lynchburg chapter to charter a bus to the Homecoming football game against Hampden-Sydney at Wilson Field. With Lea Booth as its marshall, the group join- ed the Alumni Association’s pre-game tailgate party and then adjourned to the Alumni House for a post-game reception. BALTIMORE. University Trustee Joe Keelty, ’44, and geology professor Sam Kozak reviewed the coeducation deci- sion with chapter members on October 16 and answered ques- tions about implementation plans. The turnout included Alum- ni Board member Bill Clements, ’50; University Relations Director Farris Hotchkiss, ’58; and, Alumni Secretary Dick Sessoms. Chapter President Tom Kiegler, ’77, presided over the meeting and announced plans to give all chapter members an opportunity to participate in funding of the Baltimore Honor Scholarship in 1985. To date, 38 alumni and parents have contributed or pledged $107,000 to the full-tuition scholarship. It is held currently by Chris Alevizatos, ’86, and 4 RICHMOND—Matt Calvert, ’75, ’79L, and Bill Garrison, ’76, chat with Trustee A. Christian Compton, ’50, following his presentation to the Rich- mond Alumni. =, ri Pi vs Fd bi: a ; SA VANNAH—Professor Sam Kozak (left) spoke to the group which in- cluded (from left) Tom Rideout, ’63, Dee Middleton, Bob Lockhart, ’73, Jamie Canup, ’84L, and Rick Middleton, ’76. BALTIMORE—Trustee Joseph Keelty, ’44, (left) with Baltimore Chapter President Tom Kiegler, ’77, (center) and Secretary-Treasurer Bob Clements, 80. BALTIMORE—Enjoying the festivities at the Baltimore meeting were (from left) Cal de Coligney, ’61, John Wolf, 69, ’72L, and Joe Wich, ’69. 59 Chapter News will be awarded against next year to another Baltimore area freshman for four years. ARKANSAS. University Trustee Christoph Keller Jr., °39, was the host for a reception on October 12 at the Little Rock Club in the Union Bank Building. Rev. Keller joined the group-in a discussion of the coeducation decision. ROCKBRIDGE. Members of the Rockbridge chapter attended a pre-game tailgate party prior to W&L’s game against the University of the South on October 20 and then enjoyed a reception after the game. PHILADELPHIA. An enthusiastic contingent of Philadelphia chapter members spearheaded alumni from seven other Virginia colleges for an Old Dominion Riverboat Cruise down the Delaware River on September 21. Led by Chapter Presi- dent Marty Bowers, ’80, and his wife, Anne, the large W&L group was joined for the occasion by alumni of William and Mary, the University of Virginia, Mary Baldwin, Richmond, Roanoke, VMI, and Virginia Tech. Alumni Secretary Dick Sessoms, on board for the first time, vowed to return for the third annual cruise. a silt ~ aa ea PHILADELPHIA—This view was for members of the Philadelphia Chapter who joined alumni of eight other Virginia colleges for a cruise down the Delaware River. Ye 2 PHILADELPHIA—Sam Stroud, ’83, enjoys the picnic lunch on the cruise. 60 iti, The W&L Alumni Association has staged pre-game tailgate parties during the 1984 football season. One picnic featured entertainment by Burr Datz, 74, (second from left) and his bluegrass band, Wildgrass. The Rockbridge and Lynchburg alumni chapters have joined the tailgates. Eg ae PHILADELPHIA—Larry Davis, ’81, and Brad Poorman, ’83, were among the W&L alums who took advantage of the annual Old Dominion cruise on the 300-passenger riverboat. \ gerne i ge gg i j PHILADELPHIA—Terry and Dwight Jaeggi, ’77, cruising the Delaware. Class Notes | lion f o> WASHINGTON AND LEE ARM CHAIRS AND ROCKERS With Crest in Five Colors The chairs are made of birch and rock maple, hand-rubbed in black lacquer (also available by special order in dark pine stain; see note below). They are attractive and sturdy pieces of furniture and are welcome gifts for all occasions—Christmas, birthdays, graduation, anniversaries, or weddings. All profit from sales of the chair goes to the scholarship fund in memory of John Graham, ’14. ARM CHAIR BOSTON ROCKER Black lacquer with cherry arms _ All black lacquer $145.00 f.o.b. Lexington, Va. $140.00 f.o.b. Lexington, Va. By Special Order Only: The Arm Chair and Boston Rocker are also available by special order in natural dark pine stain, with crest in five colors, at the same price as the black arm chair and rocker. Allow at least 12 weeks for delivery. Mail your order to WASHINGTON AND LEE ALUMNI, INC. Lexington, Virginia 24450 Shipment from available stock will be made upon receipt of your check. Freight charges and delivery delays can often be minimized by having the shipment made to an office or business address. Please include your name, address, and telephone number, and a telephone number, if known, for the delivery location. 1927 ALLEN HArRISs JR. and his wife of Johnson City, Tenn., received the highest honor given by Washington College Academy, the Cum Deo Omnes Award, at ceremonies held in September. A gift made in the early 1960s by Harris and his father, Allen Harris Sr., helped in the remodel- ing of the girls’ dormitory, the building of a new front porch and the complete refurbishing of the kitchen. Also, the Harris Foundation helped build the school’s new gymnasium complex. The presi- dent of Washington College Academy, Paul Gabinet, presented the award to Mr. and Mrs. Harris in recognition of their service and spirit. A room in the school has been named the Harris Boardroom and portraits of Mr. and Mrs. Harris were unveiled. 1932 SHERWOOD W. WIsE (See 1934.) 1934 SHERWOOD W. WISsE, chairman of the Jackson, Miss., law firm Wise Carter Child & Caraway, has been re-elected to represent the state of Mississip- pi in the American Bar Association House of Delegates. He has been active as co-chairman of the National Conference of Lawyers and En- vironmental Design Professions since 1981, a member of the Standing Committee on the Federal Judiciary (1973-79), and a member of the Com- mittee on Civil Rights and Racial Unrest (1962-64). Wise was elected a fellow of the American Col- lege of Trial Lawyers in 1968 and was president of the Hinds County Bar Association in 1957-58. 1943 PAUL M. SHUFORD (See 1948.) 1944 JOHN G. Fox. (See 1949.) 1946 Marion G. HEATWOLE has retired from his posi- tion as general counsel for the U.S. Steel Corp. 1948 PAUL M. SHUFoRD was recently elected by fellow lawyers in the 13th Judicial Circuit to the govern- ing council of the Virginia State Bar, the ad- ministrative agency for the Supreme Court of Virginia. Shuford served last year as chairman of the Virginia State Bar’s third district committee. 1949 JOHN G. Fox, formerly senior vice president of AT&T, has joined the firm of Reasoner, Davis & Fox in Washington, D.C. 61 Class Notes 1951 JOHN BOWEN, associate editor of The Times- Herald in Newport News, Va., received a master of arts degree in international studies from Old Dominion University in Norfolk. His thesis was entitled ‘‘The Gift of the Gods: The Impact of the Korean War on Japan.’’ It was published as a book by Old Dominion Graphics Consultants, Inc. 1956 JOHN K. AURELL has become a Fellow of the American College of Trial Lawyers by invitation of its board of regents. The college’s purposes are to examine the standards, justice and ethics in the profession. J. RICHARD O’CONNELL (See 1958.) 1958 CHARLES J. CELLA of St. Louis, Mo., and Hot Springs, Ark., has endowed the Norman P. Knowlton Jr. Chair of Excellence at Barnes Hospital in St. Louis to promote excellence in pa- tient care and to honor Dr. Knowlton, an inter- nist on the staff of the Barnes/Washington Univer- sity School of Medicine. Income from the endow- ment will be used to fund internal medicine residencies at Barnes and to honor those internal medicine residents who exemplify the highest caliber of excellence in patient care, professional accomplishments and clinical training. THOMAS P. O’BRIEN JR. (See 1960.) J. RICHARD O’CONNELIL will be leaving Miles & Stockbridge to form his own firm in Columbia, Md. He will be general counsel to the KMS Group, a Columbia development company. FREDERICK H. TARR III, selectman for Rockport, Mass., won the race for the Republican state representative and was opposing the Democratic candidate in the November elections. Tarr has been chairman of the Rockport board of selectmen, chairman of the economic development commit- tee of Cape Ann, and chairman of the Rockport planning board. 1960 JOHN M. BRADFORD, president of Mrs. Stratton’s Salads, has been appointed to the board of direc- tors of Southtrust Mortgage Corp. THE RIGHT REV. PETER JAMES LEE, bishop coad- jutor of Virginia has been awarded the honorary degree of doctor in divinity by the Protestant Episcopal Seminary of Virginia. THOMAS P. O’BRIEN JR. was awarded the Army Meritorious Service Medal for his duty perfor- mance as staff judge advocate, 83d U.S. Army Reserve Command. O’Brien, a colonel in the Ar- my JAG Reserve, has been appointed commander, 9th Military Law Center. Two W&L graduates 62 P. J. Lee, *60 who are in the 9th are Lt. Col. Robert E. Har- rison, ’69L, and Maj. Richard V. Anderson, ’73L. CHARLES C. SHERRILL has withdrawn from his former law firm to practice on his own in Pen- sacola, Fla. 1961 Dr. JOHN G. POWELL has received an award from the Governor’s Overall Advisory Council on the needs of handicapped persons for being instrumen- tal in creating a state advocacy system for men- tally retarded persons in residential facilities. JAMES A. VANN III, professor of history at the University of Michigan, has had his new book, The Making of a State: Wurtlenberg, 1593-1793, published by Cornell University Press. The book is dedicated, in part, to W&L history professor emeritus William A. Jenks. Vann has been a visiting professor at the Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales in Paris. 1962 Dr. JOSEPH L. GOLDSTEIN, the Paul J. Thomas Professor of Genetics at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical School and chairman of the department of molecular genetics, has received, with a colleague, the V.D. Mattia Award from the Roche Institute of Molecular Biology for their revolutionary discovery about how cholesterol enters cells from the bloodstream. JAMES C. HEARON was the subject of a recent New York Times article which described and celebrated his hobby of distributing free books to barge workers on the Mississippi River. Hearon lives in Granite City, IIl. 1963 Lewis G. Nok has been named administrative vice president and chief financial officer with respon- sibility for tax, treasury planning, accounting and related financial functions for Ashland Oil Co. in Ashland, Ky. 1964 WILLIAM T. BRAITHWAITE is associate professor of law at Loyola University of Chicago. He teaches commercial law, torts, remedies, law and literature and oral argument. PETER S. TRAGER has been elected president of the Cobb County Dental Society and treasurer of the Northwest Dental Society. He was also appointed by the Georgia Dental Association to chair a special committee to study statewide delivery systems for the state of Georgia. Trager practices in Marietta. 1965 BIRTH: Mr. AND Mrs. GEORGE F. MADISON, a daughter, Susan Gayle, on Nov. 14, 1983. She J. L. Goldstein, ’62 G. R. Singletary, ’70 joins an older brother, Stewart, and an older sister, Sarah. WILLIAM P. LANCASTER received a doctor of ministry degree from Columbia Theological Seminary of Decatur, Ga., in May of 1984. He is the minister of the Pickens, S.C., Presbyterian Church. 1966 W. Court SoLorF has resigned as corporate securi- ty director for GTE Corp. in Stamford, Conn., to establish W. Court Soloff and Associates, a security consultation and private investigations firm. With a worldwide scope of operations, his firm specializes in executive protection, product liability cases and crisis management response. He lives in San Angelo, Texas. 1968 PARKER A. DENACO is recruiting in Maine law schools this fall. His labor law business has had him speaking before the Central Labor Law Of- fice, the USAF at Randolph Air Force Base in San Antonio, Texas, and the Association of Labor Relations Agencies in Kalispell, Mont. He was ac- tive in the Air National Guard JAG general policy council this past year. 1969 Davip W. HARDEE was recently reported in the Wall Street Journal to have resigned as tax counsel to the Senate Finance Committee’s Democratic minority to join the law firm of Akin, Gump, Strauss, Hauer & Feld. ALEXIS TARUMIANZ JR. is president of Retirement Services of America, Inc., a development and management company specializing in life care communities, retirement centers and nursing facilities. 1970 Dr. F. Mires LITTLE, who specializes in neurosurgical problems in children, has been ap- pointed assistant professor and attending physi- cian within the department of neurological surgery at the University of Southern California School of Medicine. He is also on the attending staff of the Los Angeles County-U.S.C. Medical Center, the Kenneth J. Norris Cancer Center, the Hun- tington Memorial Hospital and the Rancho Los | Amigos Rehabilitation Hospital. Little resides in metropolitan Los Angeles. RICHARD SINGELTARY was recently elected to the office of county judge in Lake County, Fla., and will take office in January 1985. In a Florida Bar poll of attorneys in the Fifth Circuit, Singeltary was ranked second among 15 incumbent judges and judicial candidates with an approval rating of 97 percent. He is currently serving as deputy assis- T. N. McJunkin, ’70, ’74L J. W. Folsom, ’73 tant state attorney and chief of felony prosecutions in Lake County. In 1983, he was president of the Lake County Bar Association. THOMAS N. McJUNKIN (See 1974.) 197] MARRIAGE: RICHARD O. KIMBALL and Louise Skinner in Middleburg, N.Y. Chad Clasgan, ’71, was in attendance. The couple lives in Santa Fe, N.M. BIRTH: Mr. AND Mrs. ANDREW J. WHITE JR., ason, Andrew Chandler, on Nov. 4, 1983. White is a practicing attorney in Greenville, S.C. 1972 BIRTH: Mr. AND Mrs. Cary G. FITZHUGH, a daughter, Catherine Palmer, on July 25, 1984. Catherine joins two older sisters. JOHN H. KEcK has been elected chief executive of- ficer of the Union National Bank of Laredo, Texas. He was elected president in 1983. 1973 MARRIAGE: Dr. JOHN CLADER and Susan Sassi, on Aug. 25, 1984, in Cranford, N.J. Alumni at- tending were W. Patrick Hinely, ’73, Douglas B. Hutton, ’74, Richard M. Lobsitz, ’74, William Sturges, ’75, and William Wallace, ’75. Also at- ~tending was W&L Rector James M. Ballengee, ’48. Clader is a senior research chemist with Hoffmann- LaRoche, Inc. of Nutley, N.J. BIRTH: Dr. AND MRs. ROBERT O. BRENNAN, a son, Thomas Elliott, on Feb. 5, 1984, in Durham, N.C. Thomas joins an older brother, Owen Christopher, who was born on Nov. 13, 1981, in Durham. Brennan has joined the Medical Associates of Lynchburg, Va. He will practice in- ternal and infectious disease medicine. He com- pleted a medical residency at the Johns Hopkins Hospital, an infectious disease fellowship at the Duke University Medical Center, and a year as chief resident at Duke. Brennan lives in Lynchburg. BIRTH: Dr. AND Mrs. Scott RICKOFF, a daughter, Dana Lauren, on Oct. 18, 1983. She joins an older brother, Matthew. JOHN W. Fotsom has been elected president and chief operating officer of South Carolina Federal Savings Bank by its board of directors. He will also serve on the board. E. AUSTIN MCCASKILL JR., formerly an attorney in Little Rock, Ark., has moved his family to Jackson, Miss., where McCaskill is attending seminary. He and his wife, Beverly, have three daughters. MARSHALL P. WASHBURN, formerly Magnolia I plant manager of Milliken & Company, has been named director of development for their Magnolia Fabric Business with offices in Milliken’s corporate headquarters in Spartanburg, S.C. 1974 F. HARRISON Evatt is the regional sales manager for North Carolina, Virginia and West Virginia for Shelby Williams Industries, the leading manufacturer of chairs for the restaurant and lodg- ing industry. THomMAS N. McJUNKIN has entered legal practice with Jackson, Kelly, Holt & O’Farrell of Charleston, W.Va. He will be in the administrative and natural resources section of the firm. BRYAN E. MCNEILL is a jesuit scholastic engaged in a two-year regency at St. Joseph Church in the Houston inner city. He recently traveled to Nicaragua. KENNETH W. Roy, a captain in the U.S. Air Force, received an MA degree in business administration from the University of Nebraska in May 1984. He recently joined MENSA. 1975 BIRTH: Mr. AND Mrs. DoucLtas H. Hunt, triplets, Austin Douglas, Megan Kimberly and Davin Patrick on July 31, 1984, in Dallas. They have two older sons, Taylor, 3, and Casey, 2. BIRTH: Mr. AND Mrs. Roppy J. McCAsKILL, a son, Roddy Jones Jr., on July 10, 1984, in Little Rock, Ark. The McCaskills now have three children. Dr. JESSE T. MANN has been promoted to assis- tant professor of French at Westminster College in New Wilmington, Pa. Mann recently taught at the College of William and Mary and the Univer- sity of Virginia. Last summer and fall, he studied phonetics at the University de Paris VII. 1976 MARRIAGE: Davw S. CAYER and Karen Jenine Boston on Aug. 18, 1984, in Annandale, Va. BIRTH: Dr. AND Mrs. WILLARD C. THOMPSON, a girl, Hannah Bennett, on May 27, 1984. Thomp- son has finished his residency and has begun a fellowship in cardiology at the Salem Veterans Ad- ministration Medical Center and University of Virginia Hospital. The Thompsons live in Roanoke. Dr. H. SPRAGUE Eustis JR. has completed his residency at the LSU Eye Center in New Orleans. He is now at a children’s hospital in Toronto com- pleting a one-year fellowship in pediatric op- thalmology. He plans to pursue an additional six months of study at the Children’s Hospital in Washington, D.C. RICHARD F. MACDowELL Jr., formerly of the Fairfax County Commonwealth Attorney’s Office, is currently associated with the law firm of Con- nor & Duff of Fairfax, Va. STEVEN K. ROBERTS recently had a show, with another artist, entitled Neo Deco, in the Foxhall Gallery of Washington, D.C. In addition, Robert’s work was included in an exhibit in W&L’s duPont Gallery in October. 1977 MARRIAGE: CHARLES M. WILLIAMS JR. and Kathleen Price on Aug. 12, 1984. The couple will live in Nashville, Tenn., where Charles is a musician. BIRTH: Mr. AND Mrs. H. DENNY GAULTNEY, a daughter, Elizabethine Bacon, on July 21, 1984, in Atlanta. Gaultney has been elected president and chairman of the board of Skinners’ Dairy, Inc. of Jacksonville, Fla. BIRTH: Mr. AND Mrs. JAMES H. WEBSTER, a son, Benjamin James, on July 26, 1984. Webster has just been made a partner in the law firm of Springer and Perry in Pittsburgh, Pa. BARRY O. BARLOw is now president of Chase Barlow Lumber Co., which is based in Louisville, Ky. The company supplies building materials and manufactures wall panels and trusses. Bruce E. BRENNAN is working as an attorney for the City of Washington and enjoying life on Capitol Hill with his wife, Louise, and daughters, Kathleen, 6, and Beth, 3. WILLIAM E. CRAVER III has moved to Charleston, S.C., where he has formed a new law firm with Neil Robinson, Robinson & Craver, P.A. ROBERT A. ForRD has become an associate in the law firm of Falk, Carruthers & Roth, P.A., in Greensboro, N.C. He joins Charles E. Roth, ’37, Herbert S. Falk Jr., °53, and Kenneth M. Greene, 67. CARLTON M. HENSON II has moved with his wife and two children to Atlanta and is now with the firm of Peterson, Young, Self and Asselin. He is practicing construction litigation. EARL W. STRADTMAN Jr. is chief resident in obstetric-gynecology at the University of Alabama- Birmingham Hospital. WUBBO 7. TEMPEL graduated in September from the University of Wageningen in the Netherlands. He lives in Rotterdam and has recently become a journalist at NRC Handelsblad, the leading Dutch evening newspaper. 63 J. L. Bruch III, ’78 1978 BIRTH: Mr. AND Mrs. MaArK L. DICKEN, a daughter, Mary Rebekah Ward, on July 13, 1984. Dicken is a partner in the law firm of Yarling, Robinson, Hammel & Lamb in Indianapolis, Ind. BIRTH: Mr. AND Mrs... T. MARK DUNCAN, a son, David James, on Dec. 20, 1983, in Roanoke. BIRTH: Mr. AND MRS. THEODORE W. Hissey III, a son, Theodore IV, on March 18, 1984. Hissey works as a marketing manager for Pepsi Cola in Purchase, N.Y. He and his family live in Harrison, N.Y. BIRTH: Mr. AND Mrs. CLAY KINGSBERY, a son, Paul Curran, on Oct. 19, 1984, in Little Silver, N.J. BIRTH: Mr. AND Mrs. A. JOHN May III, a son, Andrew, on Oct. 10, 1984, in Bryn Mawr, Pa. Mark E. BENNETT graduated from New York University law school with a masters in corporate law in May 1984. He is a staff attorney in the en- forcement division of the New York regional of- fice of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. JOHN L. BRUCH, assistant vice president in First Union Bank’s world banking group, will manage the bank’s new loan production office in Baltimore, Md. JOHN H. FOLLANSBEE III has been named a bank- ing officer in the private banking division of Equibank’s executive and professional services department in Pittsburgh, Pa. He has been a loan documentation specialist with the bank since 1982. ROBERT H. JACKSON is completing his third year of residency in internal medicine at Louisiana State University hospital in Shreveport. DouGLas E. JOHNSTON is working as a vice presi- dent at First City National Bank of Houston. He is responsible for accounts in southern California. In the summer of 1983 Johnston was part of the gold medalist crew in world 5.5 meter yachting championship in Hanko Norway. He has been elected president of the St. John’s School (Houston) alumni board of directors. F. RAYMOND McINTyReE has been appointed to assistant vice president in the First National Bank of Atlanta’s international division. 1979 BIRTH: Mr. AND MRs. KENNETH W. SLEDD JR., a son, Andrew Kenneth, on Feb. 28, 1984, in Rich- mond, Va. Sledd has recently accepted the posi- tion of operations officer with National Card Con- trol, Inc. of Richmond. Epwarp M. ADLER has received a medical degree 64 J. H. Follansbee III, ’78 F. R. McIntyre, ’78 : from the University of Medicine and Dentistry of the New Jersey Medical School in Newark. While in medical school, Adler was a teaching assistant in gross anatomy, a recipient of Van Houten and C. R. Bergman scholarships, and earned honors in surgery, orthopedics and neurology. He plans to do his residency in Newark. Douc.tas M. JACKSON is a senior account executive with The Orsborn Group Public Relations, Inc. in San Francisco. WILLIAM N. ROPER is a maintenance engineer with Polinger Co. in Silver Spring, Md. Polinger Co. owns and manages rental property. 1980 MARRIAGE: ANDREW D. KING and Tami Lawson on June 9, 1984, in Atlanta, Ga. King is a psychology graduate student at Georgia State University. MARRIAGE: Davip E. Meyers and Sandy Evans, on Sept. 24, 1983. Meyers is sales director for Eastern Software Distributors in Baltimore. He is also pursuing an MBA degree at Loyola Col- lege in Baltimore. MARRIAGE: Hucu L. Rosinson II and Margaret L. Dearden, on Aug. 4, 1984, in Baltimore, Md. William H. Matthai Jr., ’80, was best man and Arthur P. Caltrider Jr., ’80, and Marc W. Ot- tinger, ’80, were ushers. In attendance were David E. Meyers, ’80, and Wade Gowl, ’73. Until recent- ly, Robinson was a branch officer with the Cen- tral Maryland Region of the First National Bank of Maryland. Now, under the auspices of First Maryland Credit Corp., a sister of First National, he will be responsible for a new retail loan pro- duction office in Tyson’s Corner, Va. Scott G. McLao is ‘vorking in Chicago as a sales representative for Fieldcrest Mills, Inc. 1981] MARRIAGE: Pui.ie D. CALDERONE and Anne Dwyer on Aug. 18, 1984, in Bayside, N.Y. In at- tendance was classmate Dan Collopy, ’81L. Calderone is in-house counsel for the New York Institute of Technology. MARRIAGE: R. CHRISTOPHER GAMMON and Ruth Sydnor Knight, on May 12, 1984, in Charlotte, N.C. Members of the wedding party included Winston W. Burks III, ’81, Samuel H. Campbell IV, ’81, and Jeffrey T. Powers, ’80. Other alum- ni in attendance were Richard M. Barron, ’79, William D. Clark, ’82, J. Peter Clements, ’79, Peter D. Eliades, ’81, R. Marshall Merriman Jr., °80, Alexis V. Richards, ’81, Robert V. Sisk Jr., ’°81, John R. Smith Jr., ’82, John R. Sult, ’81, and James K. Vines, ’81. Gammon is an international banking officer of Wachovia Bank and Trust Co. in Charlotte. BIRTH: Mr. AND Mrs. Doucias L. GAKER, a son, William Prentis, on August 28, 1984, in Charlottesville, Va. Gaker is now a fourth-year student at the University of Virginia Medical School. Douctas T. WEBB has been promoted to vice presi- dent in charge of sales at Webb & Sons, Inc., a Dallas color separation firm. His previous posi- tions with the firm included production manager and data processing/credit manager. 1982 MARRIAGE; WiutamM D. ALFANO and Mary- Stuart Copeland on Aug. 25, 1984, in Norfolk, Va. Thomas G. Alfano, ’81, was best man. C. Ware Palmer, ’82, and Gerald W. Barousse, ’81, were in attendance. Geoffrey P. Sisk, ’81, Borneo Clark, 82, Mr. and Mrs. Douglas R. Veasey, 82, Frank W. Brower III, ’82, J. Thad Ellis II, ’82, and Stephen A. Jones, ’84, also attended the festivities. MARRIAGE: Susan May and Rick Eckman on Sept. 8, 1984, in Phildelphia, Pa. A. John May III, ’78, Bradley J. Fretz, ’77, Gordon W. Stewart, °83L, Mary M. Johnston, ’84L, and Douglas J. Chumbley, ’82L, attended. MARRIAGE: Tuomas Y. SAVAGE and Julia J. Savino on Sept. 1, 1984, in Fredericksburg, Va. Savage is an attorney in Fredericksburg. F. ANDREW BoypD is on leave of absence from Virginia Tech’s architectural graduate school to work as an architectural draftsman for ITT on McMurdo Sound in Antarctica. RICARDO F. CASELLAS, a student at Boston Univer- sity School of Law, took first place in the Nor- theast regionals of the Phillip C. Jessup Interna- tional Law Moot Court and third place in the na- tional championships. He has been clerking for McConnell, Valiz, Kelly, Sifre, Griggs and Ruiz. WILLIAM T. COCKE works with SONAT in Washington, D.C. CRAIG J. DYE has become director of safety and preventive maintenance for James River Limestone Co., Inc. of Buchanan, Va. EARL S. GREENE JR. serves as Communications Platoon leader and assistant C and E officer for the 2-92 Field Artillery Battalion in Giessen, West Germany. E. RANDALL HUDSON spent a year in Utah with the Sunshine Mining Co. as a mine geologist and has now moved back to Fort Worth, Texas, where he has taken a position as a geologist for Burnett Oil Co., Inc. Ist. Lt. DouGtas R. LinTON III is working as a UHF (ultra-high frequency) platoon leader for B Company, 16th Signal Battalion, 3rd Signal Bde. in Ft. Hood, Texas. He has additional duties as motor officer and supply officer. Linton and his wife, Ist. Lt. Debbie Linton, live at Ft. Hood. THOMAS A. PIzZANo is an artillery officer attach- ed to an infantry battalion in Mainz, West Germany. RICHARD C. WITHERS attends Duquesne Univer- sity in Pittsburgh, Pa., where he is working on a masters in psychology. 1983 TOWNSEND OAST JR. has been promoted with Chubb Group of Insurance Companies and is now in their Washington, D.C., office as an under- writer in the department_of financial institutions. He resides in McLean, Va. DAvID P. PHIPPEN is an associate in the labor and employment law section of Smith, Currie & Han- cock in Atlanta, Ga. 1984 MARRIAGE: LEwis M. ALLEN JR. and Neysa R. Angle, on June 30, 1984, in Lee Chapel. Greg Lunsford, ’87, John Maass, ’87, and Michael Spellman, ’85, served as groomsmen. The couple lives in Birmingham, Ala. Allen is a paralegal with Cabaniss, Johnston, Gardner, Dumas, and O’Neal. MARRIAGE: Mark D. Kipp and Anne Carlisle Bourne on Aug. 4, 1984, on the Hollins College campus. He works for Ferguson, Natt, Ahern & Agee, P.C. The couple will make their home in Salem. JAMES W. C. CANupP is an attorney with Bowen, Smoot and Laughlin on Hilton Head Island, S.C. JOHN L. CARPENTER is an attorney with Bernstein, Shur, Sawyer and Nelson in Portland, Maine. ROBERT B. CAVE works for The Hecht Co. in Washington, D.C., in the retail-executive manage- ment department. JOHN M. CLEGHORN is reporting for The Charlotte Observer. He lives in Statesville, N.C. THomas G. Connors teaches at the Mt. St. Michael Academy in the Bronx, N.Y. ELuis B. Drew III is a law clerk for G. Ross Anderson Jr., U.S. District Judge in Anderson, S.C. ANDREA L. FULTON is a law secretary for Judge Nicholas G. Mandak of Passiac County in Pater- son, N.J. LAURA G. GOCKEL is an attorney with Taylor, Hazen, Kauffman, Lipscomb and Smith in Rich- mond, Va. JEFFREY B. GwyNNn is a calvary officer in the U.S. Army and will be stationed in West Germany. Lisa B. Hack is an attorney with Taylor and Zunka in Charlottesville, Va. Davip J. HANSEN is an attorney with Alston and Bird in Atlanta. DAvip R. HERR JR. is a second lieutenant in the U.S. Marine Corps. ROBERT E. Hornik JR. is an attorney with O’Hara, Felice and Crough in Syracuse, N.Y. WILLIAM K. JHRIG is an attorney with Anderson, Thorn, Grose and Quesada in Tampa, Fla. Davip C. JUDGE is a banker with Chase Manhat- tan in New York City. KEITH T. KADESKY attends the University of Texas Southwestern Medical School in Dallas. MICHAEL F. KILLEA attends Georgetown Univer- sity Law Center. GLENN L. KIRSCHNER attends the New England School of Law in Boston, Mass. JEFFREY W. KNApP is a bank trainee with Philadelphia National Bank in Philadelphia, Pa. ROBERT V. LONGO is in the Army JAG Corps. JOSEPH E. MAmo III is an investment banker with Dean Witter Reynolds in New York City. MARTIN E. MANASCO is a geophysicist with the Gulf Oil Corp. in Houston, Texas. HirAM H. Maxim II teaches German at the Woodberry Forest School. PATRICK H. Mooney is an auditor/accountant with Coopers and Lybrand in New York City. PETER M. MULLER is a sales representative with Lotus Development Corp. in New York City. ROBERT S. PARKER is an attorney with Adler, Pollock and Sheehan in Providence, R.I. LAURIE A. RACHFORD is a law clerk for The Hon. H. Emory Widener Jr. with the U.S. Court of Ap- peals for the Fourth Circuit in Abingdon, Va. JOHN M. RUGGIERO is an attorney with Baker and Hostetler in Cleveland, Ohio. O. BENJAMIN ST. CLAIR is enrolled in the organiza- tional psychology graduate program at the Univer- sity of West Florida. THOMAS B. SHEPHERD III is in Jackson, Miss., working with the law firm of Watkins, Ludlam & Stennis. LEVER F. STEWART is an attorney with King and Spalding in Atlanta. G. LEIGHTON STRADTMAN attends Vanderbilt University law school. DouGLas W. TEAGUE teaches English at the Christchurch School in Christchurch, Va. ANDREW TROTTER was one of 37 interns (selected from 1,500 applicants) with the Voice of America in Washington, D.C. He assisted with production and editing on the daily broadcasts. The V.O.A. is the global radio network of the United Nations Information Agency. Trotter has also worked for the United Nations Division of Social and Economic Information in Geneva and for Business International, also in Switzerland. He attends the University of Virginia law school where he con- centrates in international law. TIMOTHY A. VALLIERE attends Columbia’s Graduate School of International Affairs. KELLY M. WRENN practices law with Small, Craig and Werkenthin in Bloomfield Hills, Mich. PAUL C. ZIEBERT is a paralegal with Sidley and Austin in Washington, D.C. In Memoriam 1909 EDWARD M. STEVEs died on July 26, 1979, in Austin, Texas. He was retired from Steves Sash and Door Co., wholesale building material manufacturers. Steves was a veteran of both World Wars. 1915 Mr. Noau P. Mosgs died July 11, 1984, in Rich- mond. He was one of the operators of Lexington Roller Mills and was a U.S. Marine Corps flight sergeant in World War I. Retired from Dupont, he had also worked with Appian Mining in Reno, Nev., and Goodyear Tires in Akron, Ohio. He was a member of the Lexington Presbyterian Church. 1922 Dr. MAson IRA LowANnceE, a prominent Atlanta clinical physician specializing in internal medicine and allergies, died in Atlanta in August. He found- ed the Lowance Clinic and taught at the Emory University School of Medicine. A research chair has been recently established in his name at Emory. A veteran of the World Wars, he was a member of the American College of Physicians, the American Academy of Physicians, the American 65 In Memoriam Association of Immunology, the Capital City Club, the Piedmont Driving Club and the Nor- thside United Methodist Church. Tue Rev. J. LinpsAy PATTON JR. died on June 15, 1984, in San Francisco where he was honorary Canon of Grace Cathedral. Before going to San Francisco, Rev. Patton, who began as a missionary in Arizona, was Rector of St. Mark’s Church in Berkely, St. John’s in San Bernadino, and Grace Church in Colorado Springs, Colo. He spent time at Oxford and was a Fellow of the College of Preachers at Washington Cathedral. He was a member of the Rotary and Kiwanis clubs. 1924 JAMES P. BRAWNER died Aug. 7, 1984. Retired chairman of the English department of West Virginia University, he taught briefly at the Univer- sity of Illinois. He had been a visiting professor at the University of Arkansas, Eastern Michigan University, United States Advanced Study Center at the University of Florence, Italy, and at the Col- lege of the City of London. Brawner published several articles in scholarly journals and a book on early English drama. He was a member of the West Virginia state board on educational affairs, a consultant with the U.S. Office of Education, and campaign chairman for Community Chest. He is listed in Who’s Who, Dictionary of American Scholars, and the Blue Book of London. 1926 RUSSELL L. GoRDON died Aug. 6, 1984, in Hender- sonville, N.C. A retired executive of the Fireman’s Fund Insurance Co., he belonged to the vestry of the Church of the Transfiguration (Episcopal) in Saluda and St. Augustine Episcopal Church, Wilmette, Ill. He was also chairman of the Brotherhood of St. Andrew at St. John in the Wilderness Episcopal Church. Gordon was presi- dent of the Lake Summit Association for 10 years and a member of the Saluda Lions Club. He was an Army veteran of World War II. 1927 WILLIAM YATES TROTTER died Feb. 29, 1984, in Monticello, Ark. 1928 JOHN E. Jones died on Sept. 29, 1984, in Pitts- burgh, Pa. He had been an aide to several leading Allegheny County officials. Before he became in- volved in government, he was a political writer for the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Jones began his newspaper work after a brief duty in World War II, when he became a war correspondent in the Pacific. He was present when MacArthur accepted the Japanese surrender. Later he became Harrison- burg correspondent and then editorialist for the Post-Gazette. Jones was one of the first officers of the Pittsburgh chapter of the CIO American Newspaper Guild and a member of the Pittsburgh Press Club. 66 1930 HENRY T. Groop died on July 7, 1984, in Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. He was the retired owner of The Copper Pot, a gifts and imports shop on Cape Cod. 1935 ALANSON C. BROWN Jr. died in June of 1983 in San Antonio, Texas. He was the retired president of Hamilton-Brown Shoe Co. of St. Louis, Mo. WILLIAM M. McDOoNnaALp died on Sept. 19, 1984, in Memphis. He was president of McDonald Con- struction Co. A sports enthusiast and active of- ficial, he had coached football at the Memphis University School for five years after college. McDonald was past president of the Memphis Beagle Club, involved in the West Tennessee Sportsmans Association and past king of the Ra Met Cotton Carnival Society. He belonged to the Holy Communion Church. Cary E. Patrick died recently in Hampton, Va. Owner of a hardware business in Hampton, he was a director of the United Virginia/Citizen Marine Bank, a member of the Salvation Army board, a member of the Selective Service board, and a member of the planning committee for the Hamp- ton Roads Coliseum. Patrick belonged to the Hampton Baptist Church and was a Shriner (Khedive Temple). He was an Army veteran of World War II. He belonged to the James River Country Club, the Hampton Yacht Club, and the Hampton Roads German Club. WILLIAM A. WILSON Sr. died on Sept. 18, 1984, in Greensburg, Pa. He was a Navy veteran and a retired lab technician for U.S. Steel. He was an elder in the Westminster Presbyterian Church. 1936 Dr. GeorGE M. B. HAw ey II died on July 14 in Red Wing, Texas. A specialist in internal medicine, he took his degree from The Johns Hopkins Medical School and completed residency at Strong Memorial Hospital in Rochester, N.Y. He was a lieutenant commander with the U.S. Navy Medical Corps after which he interned at Parkland Memorial Hospital in Dallas. Since then he has been associated with the Medical Block Clinic and the Interstate Medical Center respectively, both of Red Wing. A fellow of the American College of Physicians, chief of staff at St. Johns Hospital, city health officer, and member of the Minnesota Board of the Experiment in International Living, Hawley published numerous articles in medical journals. He belonged to the Red Wing Country Club and was commander of the Red Wing Cruiser Club. He was also junior warden of Christ Episcopal Church in Red Wing. 1937 HERBERT BALTUCH died in September of 1983 in Hialeah, Fla. A U.S. Army veteran, he was presi- dent of the Pineapple Beach Club on St. Thomas, Virgin Islands. 1938 Curtis S. Crowe died Sept. 27, 1984, in Niceville, Fla. He was past president of Consolidated Freightways Corp. and of Tucker Freight Lines. A former officer in the American Trucking Association, he was a member of St. Paul’s Lutheran Church of Niceville and a charter member of the Blue Ray Country Club. 1949 MICHAEL B. BoypDA died on July 16, 1984, in Overland Park, Kan. Boyda, who formerly played football with the New York Bulldogs, was retired from the Fireman’s Fund American Insurance Co. A highly decorated veteran, he was a member of the V.F.W. and the American Legion. He was also active in the Knights of Columbus and the Holy Trinity Catholic Church of Leneta, Kan. 1950 JULIAN KNox MorrISON Jr., director of the news and liaison division of the Veterans Administra- tion, died on Sept. 2 in Fairfax, Va. A speech writer for the head of the VA, he also wrote presidential statements on veterans affairs and worked on the White House news summary desk. Before going to work in the administration, Mor- rison had been with the North Carolina Daily News in Greensboro, The Northern Virginia Sun, and Washington Daily News. 1962 LYLE ARTHUR LUTCKEN died on Sept. 24, 1984, in Florence, S.C. He was a special agent with the FBI for 21 years and received commendations from three FBI directors. A Dixie Youth Baseball coach in Florence, he belonged to the Calvary Bap- tist Church. 1975 DONALD A. WILLIS died on Oct. 11, 1984, in Rich- mond, Va. He was an administrative law hearing officer for the Commonwealth of Virginia and a captain in the Army Reserve. Very active in civic affairs, he was on the board of directors and past president of the Richmond Urban League, the board of directors of Leadership Metro, Family Children Service of Richmond, the Henrico Coun- ty branch of the NAACP, the Henrico County Civic League, and the Henrico County Democratic Committee. He belonged to Shiloh Baptist Church in Chesterfield County. 1981 Davip J. McGarry died on July 21, 1984, after a long illness. He had just returned from two years of teaching English in Japan. Nominate a Candidate for a Distinguished Alumnus Award Your Alumni Association is now receiving Alumni Board of Directors screens the nominations nominations for candidates for Distinguished Alum- and the Board as a whole makes the final selec- nus Awards. The awards recognize recipients for ex- tions—not more than three a year. The 1985 awards traordinary achievement in their personal and voca- will be presented at the Alumni Association’s Annual tional lives. Among the qualities considered are Meeting on May 11, 1985, in Lee Chapel. Participate superlative service to society, exceptional support by making a nomination, using the form below. of and loyalty to Washington and Lee, outstanding The deadline is March 1, 1985. Mail the form to character, notable success in a profession or Awards Committee, Washington and Lee Alumni, Inc., business, and singular contributions in worthy en- Lexington, VA 24450. deavors. A selection committee appointed by the NOMINATION FORM FOR THE DISTINGUISHED ALUMNUS AWARD NOTE: Be sure the nominee: (1) Has been out at least 10 years—his class must be ’74 or earlier; (2) Has not received an Honorary Degree from Washington and Lee University; (3) Is not an employee of the University in any capacity; (4) Is not a member of the University Board of Trustees or the Alumni Board of Directors. (19 thru19 ~~) Print Class and years of attendance POGr@SS: 4... 5c sei PA th Wee ek eS ede 8 win bee clg-oue esa @idlel ockudl pW ie 6) DUMMIN: | CUIAIRING nS na Current business ‘or professional affiliation 2...0...0..00 00000 ee SO ed ee Wiis arkt ls k ead base rece) « 0c ss dilate Jotul omit sercesch saceaweerd « Retired ?, .. «wndiddiedtl eee aos Yes or No Service to W&L (class agent, alumni activity, student recruitment and referrals, loyalty). Sponsor’s assessment of nominee’s service to Alma Mater’...............0.0..0. 0000000 OU. OS a eee a 2 a le eee ee ee eel klkhlc hl ml lll hl tml hl tml hl hl hl hl hl hl hl hl hl hl hl hl hl tlk kh we we wm mm enero =) 8 © © © s «© = © «8 «@ Please attach any additional data and your assessment of the nominee (Please be brief and limit to one page). Recommended by: .2............... cle a OREO ls... Address ore oe ———.... | 67 And furthermore... . Letters to the Editor EDITOR: The Board of Trustees’ decision to ad- mit women was both morally correct and in the best interests of the University. I applaud it. 1am confident that the silent majority of Washington and Lee alumni join me. SAMUEL D. HINKLE IV, ’69 San Francisco EDITOR: It was 1958. In the company of my father, I visited W&L, along with UVa, Sewanee, and VMI, in an effort to decide where to go to college. My feelings for the University are grounded in my first sight of the Colonnade. From that first moment the decision was out of our hands—the grip of history and tradition held us fast. We had to be part of it—each in our own way. The University molded my life in many ways. W&L, after all, is not just about academics—it is about moral character. It is about an Honor System which is not enforc- ed against men, but embedded in their lives. I fear for the traditions of the Universi- ty when women are admitted. I believe that the camaraderie among women—the bond between women as women—is stronger and older than any other code or standard. What things which are great will suffer at its ex- pense? Much, I fear. Washington and Lee was a great school. RICHARD GORDON HOLLADAY JR., ’63 Memphis, Tenn. EDITOR: I would like to comment on our new coeducational policy. Quite often it is easier and more pleasant to accept the status quo than to face the problems of the times. In the field of higher education the problems arising from mass education have led to a lowering of the quality of the education itself. With a seven-mile radius of where I have lived for the past 31 years there are now five colleges where formerly there was one. It is a noble reflection on the political and economic systems of our country which allows so many to take advantage of a col- lege level education. Unfortunately, the end product of a system which allows most anyone to enter, 68 to be promoted without having improved his mind, and finally to be given a degree without once having his intellectual curiosi- ty whetted leads to a mediocrity that I can- not approve of. I am appalled not by the form letter vocabulary of today’s students but by their inability to express themselves with any other words. To me, the essence of a liberal education is the development of an intellectual curiosi- ty. It makes life an adventure. It is a con- stant, fascinating companion, always enter- taining and faithful. So what is the purpose of all this ram- bling? It is simply the quality of that intangi- ble Washington and Lee education, that end- result of four years of close association with stimulating and interested’ teachers, the Honor System, the aura of what I think of as the General Lee mystique and the relaxed atmosphere whether one was in Doc’s Cor- ner Store or at the University Book Store browsing through the latest offerings. Of all the arguments presented, both pro and con, I think that the Trustees have focus- ed on those which most closely define the Washington and Lee experience, namely the quality of its education and its 235 years of proud heritage, and have concluded that they are in danger of being lost to the future generations of students. I am proud that they had the foresight to see the problem, the courage to accept the challenge, and the wisdom to act in a man- ner that adds hope to the future. Our motto, ‘‘Not unmindful of the future,’’ would be a fitting title to the Board of Trustees’ report for its minutes. RUDOLPH J. STUZMANN, ’55 Port Washington, N.Y. EDITOR: The shock of the [University’s] decision to go coed was something I had really felt would hamper my affections for Washington and Lee. Although I was never as militant as some students who threatened to withhold their ‘‘millions’’ (indeed I am neither that confident nor that tight), nonetheless I was quite disappointed. In the first few days after the decision, I could be found moping around hopelessly 1749 WASHINGTON a»oLEE UNIVERSITY 1949 ~— = ° a . wZwswvvweoQvwvaewewewvewea wv wv ge" "a — ‘Tae oe ee Ae —_ ty e422 @2 24224 24.4 2.42.8 2 @ 4 24 2.4 2.44 reassuring myself that at least my heritage was intact, and that maybe, just maybe, there was some mistake. Once it became evi- dent that all my ‘‘just maybes’’ were in vain, I resigned myself, however, reluctantly, to the fact that Washington and Lee as I knew it had somehow ceased to be. This made me angry, and somehow I took little solace in the fact that we had held out longer than the Democratic Party. Gradually, as often happens, my anger gave way to melancholy, which in turn gave way to introspection. What I slowly began to perceive was that this needn’t mark the end of my association with Washington and Lee, but instead the beginning of another one—one predicated on the kind of rational, intelligent thought that a Washington and Lee education is designed to foster. I began to realize that in the ‘‘freedom’’ of the ‘‘real world,’’ I am forever tempered by, and reminded of, the valuable lessons of Washington and Lee. Like the effortless dan- cing of a kite, or the gentle sway of the fur- thest branch on the furthest limb, I am in- exorably linked to a source from which I can take vitality and strength. This source, I find, is Washington and Lee, and feelings of remorse, regret, or anger over the decision to go coed are absolutely incongruous with the pride I take in having attended there. Horace Greely one said: ‘‘Truth is one forever absolute, but opinion is truth filtered through the moods, the blood, the disposi- tion of the spectator.’’ Reflecting upon this I can see my mistake. My mistake was not so much in the opinion that I took, and incidentally still hold, but rather in letting that opinion over- ride the truth. The truth is that taken as a whole Washington and Lee is far too fine a group of ideas to be shunted merely for the sake of one opinion. Now secure in this myself, I can only hope that other alumni with similar misgivings can bring themselves to see the forest as well, and look beyond the trees of bitter disappointment that often block the path to rational judgment. For my part at least, I can assure you now that I am not unmindful of the future. DAvID SHORT, ’84 Williamsburg, Va. 1985 Class Reunions May i 4 Opens Academic and Law Classes: 1935, 1940, 10854 1050, 1055, 1060, 1005, 1970, 1975, 1980 (Tlote: All ated 100MS aie reserved by the Alumni Associa- tion. Members of Reunion classes will receive reservation infor- mation by mail. in March.) The Alumni Magazine of Second Class Postage Paid WASHINGTON AND LEE UNIVERSITY _ At Lexington, Virginia 24450 (USPS 667-040) | And Additional Mailing Offices Lexington, Virginia 24450 043105 © Ralfour 211 Ralston Rd. 23229 , a VA anie 5 Richmond, MT « aia