DECEMBER 1970 WASHINGTON AND LEE WASHINGTON AND LEE ALUMNUS VOLUME 45 NUMBER 6 DECEMBER 1970 CONTENTS 1. Roger Mudd delivers ODK address. 4. Campus news. —prepared by Robert S. Keefe 12. Ihe exploits of Steve Mahaffey. 15. A digest of the football season. 17. Alumni affairs. 20. Class notes. COVER Steve Mahaffey is a football anomaly. Unlike most hard- nosed players, his lifestyle borders on the almost reckless notion of irresponsibility as he wanders about day by day looking for things not to do. In short, he distains hard work. Yet during a football game, he does manage to get down to business, and it turned out this year that he be- came the nation’s leading pass catcher among thousands of small college performers. For a complete interpreta- tion, Steve Mahaffey’s story can be found beginning on page 12. EDITOR: William C. Washburn, ’40 MANAGING EDITOR: Romulus T. Weatherman ASSOCIATE EDITOR AND PHOTOGRAPHER: A. Michael Philipps, ’64 EDITORIAL ASSISTANT: Mrs. Joyce Carter WASHINGTON AND LEE ALUMNI, INC:: Charles F. Clarke, Jr., ’38, President Emil L. Rassman, ’41, Vice-President William C. Washburn, ’40, Secretary Richard H. Turrell, 49, Treasurer BOARD OF DIRECTORS: Upton Beall, ’51; Joe F. Bear, ’33; Charles F. Clarke, Jr., 38; T. Hal Clarke, ’38; A. Christian Compton, ’50; William H. Hillier, ’38; S. L. Kopald, Jr., 43; Dr. J. Peter Muhlenberg, ’50; Ed- ward H. Ould, ’29; Emil L. Rassman, ’41; Beauregard A. Redmond, ’55; Richard H. Turrell, ’49. Published in February, April, June, August, October, and December by Washington and Lee University Alumni, Inc., Lexington, Virginia 24450. All communications and POD Forms 3579 should be sent to Washington and Lee University Alumni, Inc., Lexington, Virginia 24450. Second class postage paid at Lexington, Virginia 24450, with additional mailing privileges at Roanoke, Virginia 24001. Roger Mudd closed his speech at the ODK tapping ceremony (see article in this issue) with a true story. He related: “Recently in Loudoun County the Selma Plantation, a country estate, went up for auction—contents, furniture, house, the outbuildings, and the land. And a woman from Fairfax drove out there on the first day that the plantation was open and spotted hanging over the mantle in the main hall an idealized, romantic painting of General Lee on Traveller. ‘The opening bid on a little piece of paper stuck in the frame was $60. She became excited about the possibility of getting a Lee on Traveller, and that night she went back to her home and told her husband about it. He agreed that it would be a great acquisition—that Lee on Traveller hanging over their mantle would be just the thing. So she went back on the second day, but very quickly the bidding went beyond her pocketbook. It sold for about $150. That night she told her husband how dis- appointed she had been and how great it would have been to have had the painting. And toward the end of their conversation, their 16-year-old son interrupted and said, ‘Mom, maybe I’m stupid, but who is Leon Traveller?’ ”’ Roger’s point in telling the story was that more change has occurred in this country than anyone is perhaps pre- pared to admit. His point was well made. Beside his story we would like to place a quotation from Lee himself, a quotation found in his papers after his death: “The forbearing use of power does not only form a touchstone, but the manner in which an individual enjoys certain advantages over others is a test of a true gentle- man. ‘he power which the strong have over the weak, the employer over the employed, the educated over the un- lettered, the experienced over the confiding, even the clever over the silly—the forebearing and inoffensive use of all this power or authority, or a total abstinence from it when the case admits, it will show the gentleman in a plain light. The gentleman does not needlessly and un- necessarily remind an offender of a wrong he may have committed against him. He can not only forgive, he can forget; and he strives for that nobleness of self and mild- ness of character which impart sufficient strength to let the past be but the past. A true man of honor feels humbled himself when he cannot help humbling others.” Our point is that no matter how much change takes place there are still many good things from the past, in- cluding Lee’s gentlemanly code, which are worth learning and adopting because they are timeless. | ~ eo) ‘ { y * ‘Mudd cites TV failures in ODK tap day address Roger Mudd, the CBS-TV report- er, gave a Washington and Lee audi- ence an insider’s view of televison in a speech at the annual Omicron Delta Kappa tapping ceremony in Lee Cha- pel on Dec. 7. It was not a wholly fav- orable view. “It is now my belief after about 17 years in the newspaper and television business that broadcasting, in sound or vision, will not prove to have con- tributed to the advancement of ideas or the education of man as much as the printed word,” he said. Mudd, a 1950 graduate of W&L and a classmate and fraternity brother of President Huntley, was initiated into ODK at W&L in 1966 as an hon- orary member. He told of his disap- pointment at not being tapped as an undergraduate and wondered whether the standards for recognizng Univer- sity leadership had changed when so much else had changed in college life. “The standards of 20 years ago conformed to what most of us then re- garded as the plateaus of college life,”’ he said. “They seemed right for us then, but I have wondered in recent years whether there are other qualities in men that also ought to be recogniz- ed. Intellectual honesty and candor, skepticism and _ integrity—these, it seems to me, are the qualities most lacking in our current public leaders.” Twelve Washington and Lee stu- dent leaders and five others—four of them alumni—were inducted into the honorary fraternity founded at Wash- ington and Lee 55 years ago. (The new members are listed in a separate story.) Mudd devoted part of his talk to a discussion of Vice President Spiro T. Agnew’s criticism of television news reporting. Mudd ‘said: ‘What the Vice President, I think, tried to do when he began speaking in Des Moines and at subsequent en- gagements was to take the circum- stance of our modern technological life and change it into a conspiracy against Richard Nixon. “The television corporations are in Manhattan for the same reason that most large U.S. corporations are there. There are only three TV corp- orations because the cost of covering, with moving pictures, massive events like the Arab-Israeli War, or the Viet- nam War, an assassination, a nominat- ing convention, or a national election amounts to millions and millions of dollars. Local stations . . . don’t have the money to cover live each night the Congress, the White House, and the Pentagon. They are forced to rely on the networks. “Now the networks operate out of New York, and they are commanded and directed by people who live in New York, and the frontier of change PEATUREs 1 in America today is in that city. New York is different from the rest of the country—its thought, its expression, and its emotions. . . . It is literally im- possible to shock New Yorkers, or Cornhuskers or Hoosiers who have been in New York for some time. But what they send out on the tube is shocking and disturbing, at times, be- cause New Yorkers really do not realize how remote and out of touch they are with the America beyond the Alleghenies. “It is simply a cultural breach of enormous proportions. It is one of the things that divide us, and it may take 50 years before we realize what has happened. But when we do look back I do not think that it can be con- sidered a conspiracy against Richard Nixon or against any president. . “What the national media, and mainly television, have done is to be- lieve that their chief duty is to put before the nation its unfinished busi- ness—pollution, the Vietnam War, dis- crimination, continuing violence, slums. ‘The media simply by its report- ” " 3 ys ea 3 ™ Aa? SOE President Huntley and CBS correspondent Roger Mudd—roommates getting together again. 2: FEATURE ing of these problems have become the nation’s critics, and, as critics, no poli- tical administration, regardless of how hard it tries, will satisfy them. But the New Yorkers who produce the programs about our unfinished business live in a city where pollution is at its worst, where traffic is unbeliev- able, where the slums are almost be- yond comprehension, where life is al- most unmanageable. Yet the programs are seen each night by 20 to 30 mil- lion Americans who live in the old environment, who are not nearly so disturbed by our modern life, whose lives in fact have gotten better, whose schools are better, whose food is bet- ter, whose vacations are longer, who are generally proud of what they have made for themselves and of their country. “Basically that conflict was what the Vice President was complaining about, and politically he was trying to convert the resentment of Middle America, whose self-doubts were be- ing fed by television, into a political asset, and I think he succeeded.”’ In discussing the shortcomings of television, Mudd said: “The inherent limitations of our media make it a powerful means of communication, but also a crude one which tends to strike at the emotions rather than at the intellect. For tele- vision journalists, this means a dan- gerous and increasing concentration on action which is usually violent and bloody rather than on thought, on happenings rather than issues, on shock rather than explanation, on personalities rather than ideas. “Television has brought communi- cation back, really, to its primitive ori- gin. Communication began with pic- tures and gestures, and only later the word, and just 500 years ago the print- ed word. Now, it seems to me, we have come full circle. The bright hopes that we all had for television forever elude us. Even with the unbelievable techni- cal improvements—the satellites, the live-remotes, the moon transmissions— the industry somehow is still unable or unwilling now to move beyond its pre- occupation with razzle-dazzle into a preoccupation with substance. Our broadcasts have not improved; if any- thing, their quality has declined. The tube has become a trip, a national opiate, a baby-sitter who charges noth- ing, something to iron by, to shave to, and to doze over. And in the news de- partments of the networks the first question a producer asks a reporter is not what’s in the piece, but how long is it? “The instant defense is that pic- tures don’t lie. Well, you know and I know that pictures do lie. The most vivid picture can distort the reality it appears to show unless it is combined with inquiry or explanation. But too often on television the issues are pre- sented solely in terms of their immedi- ate visible results. Why is there no time to furnish explanation? First, there is no desire because television attracts very few explainers. The em- phasis is on the face, the voice, the body—not on the mind. And there is no time for these explainers because news broadcasts are only 30 minutes long. The news must yield to the prime-time schedule because all of us in television have been taught since, the day we were hired that this is an entertainment business. “Well, look what we have done. We haven't really entertained—not if you mean by entertainment “Truth or Consequences,’ “The Newlywed Game,’ ‘What’s My Line,’ ‘Green Acres,’ ‘Adam 12,’ ‘Petticoat Junction.’ The highest form of entertainment on tele- vision is by default—the movie, for which we can take absolutely no credit. ‘As for the news, we really haven’t informed the nation about what is happening to it. In fact, I would sug- gest we are frequently the cause of what’s happening to it. For all Vice President Agnew’s crudities and his attack on TV, we cannot ignore his basic point that TV has helped spread violence and extremist dissent. I am convinced that President Nixon would never have made folk heroes out of the hard-hat demonstrators if the networks had not first elevated the ROTC-build- ing burners, the research-file destroy- ers, and the non-negotiable demanders. ‘Television news has wrought pro- found changes in our country’s atti- tude toward war. The Vietnam con- flict is, as network brass never tires of saying, the first war covered by televi- sion. The living-room war, it is called. But the result has caused me to won- der whether in the future a democracy which has uncensored TV in every home will ever be able to fight a war, however moral or just. When people are horrified by the same-day sights of bloodshed and mutilation—the hall- marks of all wars—they are not easily convinced that a cause may also be at stake. Ihe consequence may well be that television will breed pacifism in a democracy where the evidence of its own military action can be tuned in every night. “I do not advocate that we do not show dissent or war, but I do suggest that we stop thinking and acting as if television were an entertainment busi- ness. It ceased to be that long ago. It is a powerful medium and also a dan- gerous one which in the last 20 years has, almost unknowingly, produced more changes in the American char- acter than we are willing to admit. I appeal for integrity, intelligence, and responsibility on the part of televi- sion’s proprietors and _ television’s journalists so that the events that we portray throughout the nation will be subject to questioning and explana- tion of a critical and challenging na- ture.” Following the recognition of pro- fessor emeritus Rupert N. Latture, one of three surviving founders of Omicron Delta Kappa, Washington and Lee’s Alpha Circle tapped the following new members during a special ceremony Dec. 7: —Rt. Reverend Christoph Keller, Jr., Washington and Lee class of 1939, Bishop Episcopal Diocese of Arkansas, Doctor of Divinity, Doctor of Sacred Theology, member of the board of trustees of Sweet Briar College, the Kent School, and the University of the South. Honorary. In abstentia. that more than pleased the audience. gram: ‘“Ihe Rube and Boomer Show.” ...nhere Ss Rube and Boomer Roger Mudd arrived 40 minutes late for his ODK appearance. That could have made for a lot of “dead air,” a no-no in television circles. But President Huntley was equal to the moment and filled the gap with a series of anecdotes He told how Roger’s Piedmont flight had been canceled, how Roger had tried to call and was told by the operator that Washington and Lee could not be reached by telephone (the telephone number had changed that morning), how he and Roger had rowed together on the W&L crew team, and how Roger used to feud with and mimic the coach (the “Mad Swede” was Roger’s name for him), and how Roger was known as “Boomer” and how he was known as “Rube.” Roger arrived (he had chartered a plane) just as Huntley was running out of stories, and noted wryly: “I daresay you can realize the magnitude of the change [at W&L] when I look over here at my former roommate and fraternity brother and find that he is your president. As the Democrats are fond of saying of Mr. Nixon, ‘Of course he is my President, too.’ Then Roger jumped in with a story of his own about Huntley and the “Mad Swede.” It was a great reunion for the two old classmates. It was great fun for the audience. And if W&L ever goes into the TV business, it has a ready-made pro- —Donald T. Regan, Harvard class of 1940, president of Merrill, Lynch, Pearce, Fenner, & Smith, Inc., former vice president and governor of the In- vestment Bankers Association of America, trustee of Charles E. Merrill Trust. Honorary. In abstentia. —Omer L. Hirst, Washington and Lee class of 1936, member of Virginia House of Delegates (1954-59) and the Virginia Senate (1964-present), trustee of the Washington Center for Metro- politan Studies, trustee of the Virginia Foundation for Independent Colleges, president of the Hirst Co., Annandale, Va. Honorary. —James A. Philpott, Washington and Lee class of 1945, vice president of the United Furniture Corp. of Lexing- ton, N.C., past lieutenant governor of a Kiwanis district, president of the Lexington (N.C.) Boy Scout Council. Honorary. —Frank A. Parsons, Washington and Lee class of 1954, assistant to the president of Washington and Lee, co- ordinator of immediate and long-range University planning, supervisor of Washington and Lee’s over-all pro- gram of public relations and informa- tion. Honorary. Law students named to member- ship were: —Robin P. Hartmann of Arling- ton, editor-in-chief of the University’s Law Review, president of the Student Bar Association, member of the moot court team, president of his law class during his first two years at Washing- ton and Lee. —H. William Walker, Jr. of Cin- cinnati, editor of the Law Review dur- ing the second semester, member of the Student Bar Association’s board of governors. --Benjamin Atticus Williams of Courtland, Va., chairman of the Uni- versity’s Legal Research Program, gov- ernor of the Student Bar Association, Law Review staff member. Undergraduates inducted Omicron Delta Kappa included: —Glenn M. Azuma of New Mil- ford, N.J., junior representative to the University’s student government, leader in several action and study com- mittees, Dean’s List student majoring in English and philosophy. into PEATURESs 3 —Robert G. Brookby of Bartles- ville, Okla., junior economics major, Honor Roll and Dean’s List student, counselor in the University’s freshman dormitories, vice president of the com- merce fraternity, treasurer of his social fraternity, member of both the basket- ball and baseball teams. —Madison F. Cole of Newnan, Ga., president of Washington and Lee’s Publications Board, chairman of CON- TACT this year, editor-in-chief of the yearbook last year, Honor Roll stu- dent, American history major. —Hugh F. Hill of Roanoke, major- ing both in drama and in Washington and Lee’s pre-medical program, presi- dent of the Troubadours, program di- rector for WLUR-FM, an Honor Roll scholar. —Stephen R. Haughney of Cleve- land, Ohio, Honor Roll English major, president of the “Free University” or- ganization, member of the Student Curriculum Committee, former staff member of the campus newspaper and the University’s scholarly literary magazine. —Andrew G. Kumpuris of Little Rock, senior biology major, tri-captain of Washington and Lee’s football team, chairman of the Student Control Committee, Honor Roll student, ac- tive in a number of civic and social organizations. ae —John M. McCardell, Jr. of Hagers- town, Md., majoring both in Ameri- can history and English, editor-in- chief of the Calyx, secretary of the Publications Board, president of Circle K, editor of the Interfraternity Coun- cil’s rush book. —Lawrence L. McConnell of At- lanta, editor-in-chief of the Ring-tum Phi, member of the Troubadours, vice president of the Publications Board, Dean’s List student majoring in English. —Stephen W. Robinson of Alex- andria, chairman of the Student Re- cruitment Committee, representative on the faculty admissions committee, vice president of his class, associate justice of the Interfraternity Council, junior taking two majors, in Latin and in history. eR SL eS ES Oe Re a Re Ne 0 a As CAMPUS Rev. Thomas named rector and two new Trustees elected The Board of Trustees, at its meeting on October 9, elected two new members, chose a new rector, and named one mem- ber to emeritus status. The new members are Thomas C. Frost, Jr., of San Antonio, Tex., and Isa- dore M. Scott of Philadelphia, Pa. Both were elected to six-year terms. The new rector is the Rev. John New- ton Thomas of Richmond, Va. He suc- ceded Dr. Huston St. Clair of Surfside, Fla., who had been rector for the past five years. Dr. St. Clair remains a member of the Board. The trustee emeritus is Christopher T. Chenery of New York City, who retired from active service due to poor health. He was first elected to the Board in 1950. Frost is president of Frost National Bank of San Antonio. He graduated from Washington and Lee in 1950 and was vale- dictorian of his class. Frost is currently president of the Texas Bankers Associa- tion and a past president of the San An- tonio Clearing House Association. He is the first chairman-comptroller of the Currency Regional Advisory Committee and a trustee of both the Southwest Re- search Association and the University of the Americans Foundation of Mexico. Frost is also a trustee and vice chair- man of the board of the Texas Military In- stitute, a trustee of the San Antonio Medi- cal Foundation and of the Foundation of Full-Service Banks. He is treasurer of the Trustee Thomas C. Frost, Jr. Southwest Texas Methodist Hospital Board and of the Texas Foundation of Voluntarily Supported Colleges and Uni- versities. In addition, he holds directorships on the board of the San Antonio United Fund, the Farah Manufacturing Co. of El Paso and San Antonio, the Handy Andy Co., Inc. of San Antonio, the San Antonio branch of the Federal Reserve Bank, and the Association of Reserve City Bankers. He has also served as chairman of the Greater San Antonio Development Com- mittee, vice president of the city’s United Fund campaign, and director of the San Antonio Chamber of Commerce and Boy Scouts. Scott was president of the Winner Manufacturing Co. of Trenton, N. J., from 1947 until 1961, when the company was sold. He received his LL.B. degree from Washington and Lee in 1937. He is a 1934 graduate of West Virginia Univer- sity and also holds an M.A. in political science from West Virginia. Active in a wide range of civic groups, Scott has been chairman of a citizens’ committee to study the financial needs of the Philadelphia public schools; chairman of the board of Tri-Institutional Facili- ties, Inc., a joint medical complex built for the Philadelphia General Hospital, the Children’s Hospital, and the University of Pennsylvania; a member of the board of governors of the Pennsylvania Economy Trustee Isadore M. Scott League; president of the Philadelphia Council for International Visitors; and a director of Scientific American magazine. Scott is a board member of Girard Trust Bank, the Western Savings Fund Society of Philadelphia, and the Lister Institute. He is president of University City Associates, a director of the Oil Shale Corp., and chairman of the Star- wood Corp. He heads the Old Christ Church Preservation Trust and is vice president of Abington Hospital. Dr. Thomas, the new rector, is profes- sor of systematic theology at the Union Theological Seminary in Richmond. He is a 1924 graduate of Washington and Lee and holds the M.A. and Ph.D. de- grees from Edinburgh University. He is also a graduate of Union Theological Seminary and was awarded an honorary doctor of divinity degree in 1943 by Hampden-Sydney College. He is also a trustee of Mary Baldwin College and for- mer pastor of the Second Presbyterian Church in Richmond. He began teaching at Union Theological Seminary in 1940. Dr. Thomas has been a trustee of Wash- ington and Lee since 1938 and is the senior member of the Board. Dr. St. Clair, the retiring rector, is a 1922 graduate of Washington and Lee. He has been a trustee since 1943. His father, George Walker St. Clair, was rector of the Washington and Lee Board of Trus- tees from 1928 until his death in 1939, having been elected to the Board in 1901. Dr. St. Clair has been a member of the Board’s executive committee and was one of two members of a special scholarship selection committee. He was president of Rector Rev. John Newton Thomas =) | ate Me cle i 1 sd - a a Lal a 3 = - Eg > Trustee emeritus Christopher T. Chenery the Virginia State Chamber of Commerce between 1944 and 1946. Chenery, a 1909 graduate of Washing- ton and Lee, joins two other members who currently hold emeritus status. The others are Walter Andrew McDonald of Cin- cinnati, who retired from active service in 1961, and Homer Adams Holt of Char- leston, W. Va., who retired in 1969. Chen- ery is a former chairman of the board of the Southern Natural Gas Co. and an executive of several other utility interests. In a resolution of appreciation, his fellow trustees described Chenery as “a leader of integrity, wisdom, and foresight.” The resolution added: “Throughout the 62 years that have passed since he enrolled as a student here, the University family has looked with admiration and pride upon his achievements as an engineer, indus- trialist, sportsman, and good citizen of the nation he loved.” The Board now has 18 active members. Besides Dr. Thomas, Dr. St. Clair, and the two new members, Frost and Scott, they are J. Stewart Buxton of Memphis, Tenn.; Joseph L. Lanier of West Point, Ga.; Judge John Minor Wisdom of New Or- leans, La.; John F. Hendon of Birming- ham, Ala.; Joseph E. Birnie of Atlanta, Ga.; Lewis F. Powell, Jr., of Richmond, Va.; Joseph T. Lykes, Jr., of New Or- leans; John M. Stemmons of Dallas; Ross L. Malone of New York City; Robert E. R. Huntley, president of the University; John W. Warner of Washington, D. C.; E. Marshall Nuckols, Jr., of Newtown, Pa.; Jonathan W. Warner of Tuscaloosa, Ala.; and John L. Crist, Jr., of Charlotte, N. C. Chaffin scholarship An endowed scholarship to be awarded at Washington and Lee has been created under terms of the will of William W. Chaffin, the University’s debate coach from 1960 to 1970. His debaters had won more than 100 trophies at the time of his death last Feb. 22 in an automobile accident returning from an invitational debate meet at Dart- mouth College. Under his direction, Wash- ington and Lee’s debate teams earned a national reputation and participated in most major invitational tournaments in the East. The new scholarship established in Prof. Chaffin’s will is expected to be award- ed for the first time in the coming year, according to William A. Noell, Jr., di- rector of student financial aid. Noell said other contributions to the University in memory of Chaffin, primarily from former debaters, will be added to the fund established in his will. Election coverage With a team of more than 40 experi- enced reporters, broadcasters, and analysts, WLUR-FM, the University’s student radio Station, claimed the largest radio news- gathering and reporting operation in Vir- ginia during election night this past No- vember. The station had on-the-spot reporters throughout the state, with two-man news teams at the headquarters of the three CAMPUS: 5 U.S. Senate candidates, at the headquar- ters of the two 7th District Congressional candidates, and at several locations in Richmond, Lexington, Buena Vista, and Rockbridge County. And in one case, the station beat the major networks by carrying a victory state- ment from Sen. Harry F. Byrd, Jr. as soon as he made it. . At home base, WLUR’s studios in Reid Hall on campus, were stationed a score of analysts, as well as the anchor team. Dr. William Buchanan, a highly regarded expert in American electoral politics (an analyst for ABC in 1968) and professor of politics at the University, was available for his special perspective. In addition to the coverage provided by WLUR’s field reporters, the station broadcast Associated Press news through- out the night. The broadcast was carried simultaneously for most of the evening over Lexington’s AM _ station, WREL, which preferred to rely on the Washington and Lee staff for local and Virginia re- turns rather than its own network, ABC. Professor Ronald H. MacDonald of Washington and Lee’s department of journalism and communications, advisor to WLUR, and station manager Hugh Hill of Roanoke and news director Rich Murray of Valatie, N.Y. coordinated the election reporting effort. Stewart recorded A new musical composition by Pro- fessor Robert Stewart, head of the music division in the fine arts department, has been recorded by the Iowa String Quartet. The piece, “String Quartet Three,” is released by Composers Recording, Inc. (No. SD-256). The Iowa String Quartet has perform- ed the composition in both the United States and Europe. The new record will be available in Washington and Lee’s bookstore. Two other compositions by Stewart were recorded previously—““Three Pieces for Brass Quintet” and “Music For Brass, Number Four.” Those two compositions are being broadcast this season by Radio Fusion France. In addition, the Manhattan Brass Per- cussion Ensemble plans to perform Ste- wart’s “Hydra Three,” written for 15 brass, six percussion instruments, and a piano, this season. Stewart, a member of Washington and Lee’s faculty since 1964, holds three mas- 6: CAMPUS ter’s degrees in music—one each in music education, violin, and composition—from the American Conservatory in Chicago. His compositions have been performed by some of the leading groups in the United States, including the Atlanta Sym- phony Orchestra, and both the New York and the American Brass Quintets. He has also received a number of awards and commissions, and for the last three years was president of the Southeastern Com- posers League. Faculty actions Authority to determine and enforce regulations dealing with dates in Wash- ington and Lee’s residential fraternity houses has been given jointly to the In- terfraternity Council and the Student Af- fairs Committee as a result of faculty ac- tion in November. Previously, regulations were voted by the faculty itself. Under the new arrange- ment, the Interfraternity Council’s judicial board will establish broad guidelines for visits in fraternity houses by dates and will then approve or reject proposals for parietal hours submitted by each frater- nity. The Student Affairs Committee, com- posed of half students and half faculty and administrators at the University, will then review the Interfraternity Council’s ac- tion on individual fraternity regulations. The judicial board will have primary responsibility for judging violations of those rules, with the Student Affairs Com- mittee retaining review power. Under guidelines already determined by the Interfraternity Council, a 75 per cent vote of the members in an individual fraternity house would be required before a set of proposed rules would be consider- ed for approval. The new procedure for regulating the hours for visits in fraternity houses by women grew out of a rejection by the faculty that it permit the Council alone to determine parietal hours, sub- ject to review by no other university agency. In other action at its November meet- ing, the faculty approved a recommenda- tion by the courses and degrees commit- tee to permit Washington and Lee’s stu- dent government to appoint a student rep- resentative on the committee, with full membership and voting privileges. The courses and degrees committee is the faculty agency charged with develop- ment, supervision, and evaluation of poli- cies, subject to faculty approval, concern- ing individual courses of study, curricula, academic standards, and degree require- ments. It normally meets once each week. The decision to add a voting student member to the committee was initiated by the committee itself, and did not come in response to student petitions or re- quests. Approval of the measure was attribut- ed to the committee’s belief that it is useful to have student opinion represent- ed on the committee, which consists of the deans of the College (of Arts and Sciences) and of the School of Commerce, Economics, and Politics, and of six elected faculty members. Students already serve as members on a wide variety of other faculty committees, including the faculty executive committee. The Student Control Committee, one of Washington and Lee’s two disciplinary groups, is composed entirely of students. Students also serve on University com- mittees concerned with intercollegiate ath- letics, the library, and officially sponsored lectures. In addition, student leaders have been permitted the privilege of the floor at meetings of the faculty and the board of trustees by recent custom at Washington and Lee. The faculty also approved creation of two new courses in art museum methods, both involving apprenticeship at the Vir- ginia Museum of Fine Arts in Richmond, emphasizing intensive and personal train- ing. Both the new courses will be offered during Washington and Lee’s six-week short term in the spring. The faculty reaffirmed its ruling that seniors who expect to graduate in June each year must remain enrolled in the Uni- versity during. the spring “mini-semester,” even if they have completed all their other formal degree requirements before that term begins. More scholarships Two endowed scholarships, both to be awarded for the first time in the next academic year, have been established at the University. A $15,000 gift from Dr. and Mrs. Mer- ton E. Carver of Richmond has established the David C. Montgomery Memorial Scholarship. Mrs. Carver’s son, Mr. Mont- gomery, was a 1963 graduate of Washing- ton and Lee who died March 19 in an ac- cident. At the time of his death, he was assistant vice president of the Mercantile Safe Deposit & Trust Co. of Baltimore. The second new endowed scholarship was established by Charles S. Gay of New York City, a 1957 Washington and Lee alumnus, in memory of his grandfather, the late Charles R. Gay, president of the New York Stock Exchange from 1935 to 1938. Mr. Gay, a member of the board of governors of the exchange from 1923 until assuming its presidency, died in 1946. Both new scholarships are unrestricted, and will be awarded by University officials to deserving students on the basis of academic achievement, character, and need, Ad infinitum An Englishman is going to send Wash- ington and Lee a check for $10 each year on January 19, the birthday of Robert E. Lee. David A. H. Cleggett of Maidstone, Kent, informed the University of the ar- rangement in a letter received here in November. ‘“‘I wish it could be more,” he wrote, “but at the present time it is all that can be spared.” He also said he and his wife have a bedroom available, with- out charge, for any Washington and Lee student who wishes to spend his summer holiday in England. Their home is only 35 miles from London. Mr. and Mrs. Cleggett and their son, James, visited the Washington and Lee campus last August and laid flowers at the Recumbent Statue of Lee in a private ceremony in Lee Chapel. Mr. Cleggett has a singular interest in Virginia history and especially in Robert E. Lee, an inter- est he has been developing since his school days. The Cleggetts had planned to visit the United States in October and attend the official ceremony in Lee Chapel on Octo- ber 10, commemorating the 100th anni- versary of Lee’s death and of the change in the title of Washington College to Washington and Lee University. But he had to move his visit up two months. He arranged for his annual gift to the University after receiving the texts of the remarks made at the centennial ceremony here together with a folder on Lee’s con- tributions to the University which is be- ing used in this year’s annual giving pro- gram. The material was sent to him by Frank A. Parsons, assistant to President Huntley. City fathers Q: How do you learn first-hand to run a city, making all the decisions and accept- ing all their consequences, without having a real, live one to use as your guinea pig? A: You program a computer to act as your “city,” that’s how. You arrange for it to include all the variables, the paradoxes, the frustrations you’d find in actual muni- cipal government... You arrange for it to include planning and zoning departments, city and county councils, school boards, and all the other formal agencies of government — each with its own particular aims and _ proce- dures, necessarily working and cooperating with every other agency and yet competing against them... You include slums, because they really do exist, and then you have to do some- thing about your citizens’ flight from them, and the tax drain they create, and all the while keeping your city’s other priorities in mind... You program into your computer high- way and transit problems, because what city doesn’t have them, and then you try to solve them, or at least keep them from becoming worse, or else your party will be voted out of office, and yet you simply don’t have the resources you need .. . You include unemployment, another fact of real life, and at the same time you have to include jobs begging in area in- dustry and commerce, because that exists, too, and somehow you have to reconcile i You know city people want more parks, and better highways, and new schools, and so you have to include those factors, too... You take into account new areas deve- loping all the time, because generally they do develop in a real city, and cer- tainly now the city has to attract new in- dustry and business to accommodate your new Citizens, and vice-versa; and yet you know the established residents don’t want their town becoming an ugly, noisy, dirty, teeming mini-Megalopolis . . . And with all that (and more), of cours€ you program your computer to in- clude the nitty and the gritty—a budget. If it’s going to be realistic, it’s going to be smaller than any of your agencies’ needs, and. larger than what your citizens like. Now you have to worry about tax rates and bond issues; you have to wonder if you're going to drive industry away and how you'll finance your welfare depart- ment if you do; you have to decide who’s going to carry the extra load if you give in- dustry a tax break to attract it or keep ee So there you are. You have a computer city, and now you have to begin thinking in terms of sewer connections, pupil-teach- er ratios, curbs and esplanades, rehabilita- tion vs. demolition, residential or light industrial, raises for your workers, rents, buying in your city to stimulate the econ- omy in which you operate as against buy- ing elsewhere and paying less for the mer- chandise, and so on, and so on, and... And you have to learn to persuade the people whose help and cooperation — and whose money — you need to carry through with your plans. And you learn to make deals with them, and to coerce them, and even (worst of all) to alter your own de- signs to fit theirs’... * * * They've done all that at Washington and Lee. It’s an interdepartmental pro- ject in the School of Commerce, Econo- mics, and Politics (with a bit of participa- tion from sociology from the College). Students were the city. It was an intensely educational experience for them (and for their teachers), and they loved it. An educational enterprise called ‘‘En- virometrics” provided the basic computer program — a structural design of sorts — — a ss ~~ * 3 CAMPUS: 7 for the University’s IBM 1130. Enviro- metrics calls it a game, but it’s absolutely serious. “City 1” is the name of the game, and, technically speaking, it’s described as an urban simulation system. It cost more than $100,000 to produce. The federal Of- fice of Education paid most. The theory was that it would prove invaluable to real city planners, giving them a chance to try out their ideas on a hypothetical city, one which duplicated almost precisely the conditions and problems (political, social, economic) that would come up in the real thing — but where their errors would hurt hardly at all. It worked. So well that now new and even more sophisticated cities have been designed for computers. And the idea is being shared with others. Washington and Lee is among the very first colleges in the nation to adopt “City 1.’”” Co-supervised by Drs. William Buchanan and John DeVogt, heads re- spectively of the politics and administra- tion departments, it generated some extra- ordinary enthusiasm among the 70 or so students who participated — the politi- cians, the entrepreneurs, the civil admini- strators, the managers of the city. It took a while for them to develop the knack of it. Decisions had to be coded into special computer language, and the =: 3 vee Students and professors joined to run computer city experiment. 33 CAMPUS 1130 threw back any would-be decisions or policies when all the other people and agencies involved hadn’t given an explicit okay. (Exactly as in a real city. After all, you can’t very well widen a road if you haven’t bought the land, or build a sky- scraper without a zoning change.) The students benefited considerably. By the third or fourth round (a computer round equals a year in the life of the city), they had become pretty expert in meeting all the requirements programmed into the 1130 — that is, all the requirements they'd have to meet if they were dealing with the real thing. Businessmen’s profit-loss statements be- gan looking better, once the students took their formal learning and put themselves in situations where they had to use it, not merely know it ... once they began, for example, to analyze investment-return and interest rates the way they’d have to if they were really in business. New parks were built. Taxes were kept more or less under control, if not quite stable. New areas were developed, and schools and roads and power lines and all the other city services were brought in, once students learned what “economically practical” means in government and how to deal that way. There were elections. There were na- tural disasters which inflicted property damage in patterns that were designed to be random. Scandal touched the govern- ment. Interest groups pressured civic agencies (students pressured other stu- dents) constantly for favors. As the game progressed, students began realizing just how complex it all is, especi- ally how much influencing and even pol- icy-making occurs outside the formal struc- ture. No less than in real life, politics in “City 1” made for some strange, strange bedfellows. Students began seeing the pos- sibilities for shady deals that probably wouldn’t be caught by anybody else, and as members of the government they liter- ally agonized over the choice between easy private gain at public expense on the one hand and the notions of responsibility and integrity on the other. True politicians, they began seeing that they’d look pretty good to the voters next election if they improved city serv- ices and kept taxes down, if the “little man” in the city saw that he was finally getting a break from government. And be- fore too long, pragmatic considerations were entering into decision-making at least as much as theories and ideologies. (Just as in the real thing, to repeat a point.) And for everything accomplished or not accomplished, there were costs — eco- nomic, social, political, usually all three. Students learned to pay the price and still come out ahead. They learned to bal- ance needs and wishes against practical possibilities. They learned with none of the danger in experimenting on the actual thing. And they learned a lot more effectively than if they had simply read textbooks and listened to lectures and looked at charts. They learned, in short, what goes into running a real, live city. $1,000 gift The Reader’s Digest Foundation has made a gift of $1,000 to Washington and Lee’s department of journalism and com- munications to assist students and faculty with travel expenses while on reporting assignments. Announcement of the gift was made by Professor Paxton Davis, head of the department. Similar grants from the foundation have been made to Washing- ton and Lee each year since 1963. Davis said the gift will be used for student expenses in reporting, broadcast- ing, and other journalism courses at Wash- ington and Lee in a wide range of assign- ments. Journalism students this year will tra- vel to cover political activity in Richmond and in Washington, D.C., and Washington and Lee’s away basketball games, which are broadcast on WLUR-FM, the Univer- sity’s student-operated radio station. Part of the gift was used to defray expenses in- curred in covering the 1970 elections and W&L’s away football games this fall. DeVogt elected Dr. John F. DeVogt, associate professor of commerce, has been elected to the board of directors of the Southern Man- agement Association. DeVogt, secretary-treasurer of the as- sociation since 1966, was named to the board at the organization’s annual con- vention in late November. The Southern Management Associa- tion, a division of the Academy of Man- agement, has approximately 250 mem- bers representing teachers in all the major colleges and universities in the South and Southwest. DeVogt is head of Washington and Lee’s department of business administra- tion. He joined the University’s faculty in 1962, and received his Ph.D. degree from the University of North Carolina in 1966. POW concern Washington and Lee’s Republican Club has joined the American Red Cross campaign to secure better treatment for American prisoners of war in North Viet- nam and their eventual release. The group is circulating individual letters to be signed by Washington and Lee students, appealing for the uncondi- tional release of all war captives and, even before that, for the release of prisoners’ names and better care, treatment, and facilities. The signed letters will be sent to North Vietnam’s president, according to the Re- publican Club leadership. The campus organization’s drive grew out of a resolution of support unani- mously endorsed at its October general meeting. Harvey heads PAC Eldon P. Harvey, Sr. of El Paso, Tex. has been elected president of the 1971-72 Parents’ Advisory Council, succeeding Dr. Frank Kumpuris of Little Rock, Ark. Harvey’s election came in late Octo- ber, during Washington and Lee’s 16th annual Parents’ Weekend that featured a 13-0 football win over College Athletic Conference rival Sewanee, talks to par- ents from members of the University’s ad- ministration and student body leaders, campus tours, a “mixed media’ presenta- tion by W&L’s Glee Club, John A. Gra- ham Brass Choir, and the Troubadours, and other social events. More than 1,000 parents were expected to attend the annual event, but inclement weather cut that number by more than half. Harvey is a cattle and sheep rancher, and he is connected with the Harvey In- vestment Co. His son, Eldon P. Harvey, Jr. is a junior at Washington and Lee. Commager visits America’s colleges and universities are in a state of so-called ‘‘crisis” largely be- cause of ever-increasing demands from students and from society as a whole that they perform impossible and “irrelevant” .o ©. od ‘ Ge ae cee Oy ae uh i ne Ph» : a e a por 2 ~ oe » 4) Z res ha : -*y Ye : mes ee Pe RY 3 Historian Commager meets the press in an afternoon interview. tasks, Dr. Henry Steele Commager de- clared in a lecture at Washington and Lee early in November. The eminent American historian told an audience of 600 in the University’s Lee Chapel that the problem of irreconcilable demands from outside the academic com- munity on the one hand is aggravated by internal confusion and turmoil on the other hand. “Colleges do not know what they are, or what they should be,” Dr. Commager declared. As preparation in lower levels of education becomes less and less thorough, colleges necessarily spend more and more time ‘teaching high-school mathematics and high-school reading’”— while at the same time the need for experts of enor- mous skill and highly sophisticated educa- tion becomes more and more crucial. During his visit to Washington and Lee, he lashed out at the Nixon Admini- stration’s foreign and domestic policies (“insane’’), as well as at Vice President Spiro Agnew and Martha Mitchell (both present nothing but “insanely irrelevant” arguments). In a number of wide-ranging com- mentaries on political and educational problems, and the relations between them, he pointed to the irony that hardhats, whom he called anti-intellectual intellec- CAMPUS: 9 tuals, proclaim their disgust for colleges and college kids, while at the same time wanting nothing more badly than for their own children to graduate from college. He termed it “schizophrenia.” The sprightly 68-year-old professor of American history at Amherst College spent the afternoon of Nov. 5 talking informally with Washington and Lee students on campus and in seminars. In his lecture that night, he said the crisis in education is hardly limited to American colleges and universities, but in this country it uniquely reflects the pecu- liar problems facing both the nation and its students. He gently chided students who present colleges with demands in areas where the academic community has no control what- ever. ‘““Nor is it the business of colleges and universities,” Dr. Commager con- tinued, ‘‘to involve themselves with the transitory problems of society. The uni- versity is not the government; it is not the press; it is not a great corporation.” Rather, he declared, the university’s sole job is “to push outward the bound- aries of knowledge.” Individuals in the universities as elsewhere are obliged to become “involved,” he said, but the in- stitutions themselves are obliged not to. The solution to the political part of the problem, according to Dr. Commager, is “not to give up on government—for that is to give up on democracy—but rather to educate the government and society.” Col- leges have been remiss in this, he said, and unless they begin the task seriously, greater crises loom ahead. Dr. Commager’s lecture was the inaug- ural address in CONTACT, an annual student-organized and financed symposium at Washington and Lee. Johnson honored Dr. Lewis K. Johnson, professor of ad- ministration, is among those to whom a textbook on agricultural marketing is dedicated. One of the authors is Dr. Ho- ward L. Steele, a 1950 graduate of W&L, a former student of Dr. Johnson’s, and now associate professor of agricultural marketing at Ohio State University. The book, Agricultural Marketing (Comerctalizacao Agricola), will be pub- lished in January. The original edition will be in Portuguese since it is directed at Brazilian marketing students and lead- ers interested in improving the efficiency of agricultural marketing institutions in 10: CAMPUS Brazil. The book, in both its Portuguese and English editions, is also designed to help students of marketing and economic development around the world. The dedication reads: ‘““The authors dedicate this book to their mothers and fathers whose hope, encouragement, and help at all times can never be repaid, and to Dr. Lewis K. Johnson, professor of ad- ministration, Washington and Lee Uni- versity, whose example as a teacher and counselor is admired by so many but emulated by too few.” Dr. Steele spent two years at the Uni- versity of San Paulo in Brazil, setting up a marketing curriculum and _ teaching marketing courses, and recently carried out consulting assignments in Brazil and ‘Taiwan. Dr. Johnson has been a member of the W&L faculty since 1933 and was head of the commerce department from 1950 to 1968. He is author of a widely used text- book published in 1957, Sales and Market- ing Management. Museum course Once upon a time, “art appreciation” was strictly for the ladies. Slightly kinky girls were the only ones who majored in it at college, then they became Bohemians or beatniks. Middle-aged matrons sometimes discussed art at afternoon club meetings. And above all, art museums were stuffy, stuffy, stuffy. Not so any longer. The experts say there is an art revolution underway, and the people behind it don’t fit any of the old cartoon stereotypes. Last year, for example, more people went to New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art than to all the Mets, Jets, Nets, Knicks, and Rangers games put together. This year, new public and university- sponsored art museums are opening at the rate of one every week. “Happily,” says Dr. Gerard Maurice Doyon, head of Washington and Lee Uni- versity’s art department, “Americans are beginning to become aware of their cul- tural heritage.” But buildings and paintings and sculp- ture and even money do not a good museum make. One critical need is for professionals to direct museum operations, people with carefully refined and devel- oped skills, extraordinary imagination, and masterful administrative abilities. And there aren’t enough of them to go around, At Washington and Lee, as elsewhere, interest in art has grown at an astonishing rate. In the basic art appreciation courses, there are about twice as many students en- rolled now as there were five years ago. In the advanced courses, there are up to five times as many. A fifth of the student body is enrolled in one art course or another at any given moment. And so the programs are expanding, too. One of the most interesting, devel- oped at the University by Doyon, is de- signed to accommodate the new intensive interest in art with the need for new museum managers—“museumologists,” as they are called professionally. Beginning this spring, Washington and Lee art majors will be eligible to apply for the first of two unique new courses in museum methods and apprenticeship, be- ing offered by the University with the co- operation of the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts in Richmond. The new courses are designed to pro- vide students with a basic understanding of museum management through full-time, on-the-job training—and, hopefully, to pro- vide some of them with the incentive to continue on to graduate study in the field. Students accepted into the highly selec- tive courses will spend the entire six-week spring term working with William Gaines, the Virginia Museum’s program director, as professional museum administrators. Gaines and Doyon will jointly supervise and evaluate their work. The first course, museum methods, is a prerequisite even for applying to under- take the formal apprenticeship. Only one student—the cream of the crop from the first course—will be admitted to the sec- ond course each year. Doyon, who joined Washington and Lee’s faculty in 1968, set up similar ap- prenticeship programs at Florida Atlantic University when he was chairman of the art department there. They were highly successful, and almost half the students who participated eventually took up ca- reers in art museum work. At Washington and Lee, the course requirements will be stiff. Students will have to be on the Dean’s List, and have 12 credits in ancient or modern foreign languages to be eligible even for an in- terview. The new programs are designed to provide a handful of highly motivated, capable students; not a lot of casually curious ones. Students in the museum courses will have one day a week off (Mondays), and they’ll work without pay (their reward will Art department chairman Dr. Doyon—a new course to make museums less stuffy. be six credits toward graduation, the maximum that can be earned during Washington and Lee’s short spring term). When the boss has to work overtime, pre- paring a new program, for instance, so will the students. Later in the six-week period, they will be given charge of new, challenging pro- jects at the Virginia Museum. According to Doyon, each student “will be considered a professional, and in turn will be expect- ed to conduct himself as one.” “It is a remarkably complex field,” Doyon says. “Most laymen don’t realize it. Museums aren’t simply places where you see stuffed birds. They’re dynamic. They are becoming centers for civic cultural life, as well as community education. And museums are seriously short of people with the ideas and the professionalism to help them fill these new roles.” The new courses will acquaint students with methods in acquisition, preservation, exhibiting, cataloguing, and general mu- seum administration, to be sure. But with museums becoming less stuffy every day, the courses will also aim to spark the student’s imagination, to help him develop ideas on how museums can be more exciting, more vital, more instruc- tive, and more interesting. Who’‘s who Six law students and 18 seniors in the undergraduate schools at Washington and Lee have been selected to appear in the 1970-71 edition of Who’s Who Among Stu- dents at American Colleges and Universt- ties. The 24 students whose biographies will appear in the publication were nominated by the student government on the basis of outstanding achievement in academic _ work, extracurricular activity, and service to the community. The law students named to Who’s Who include: —Robin Philips Hartman of Arlington, Va., editor of the University’s Law Review, president of the Student Bar Association, and president of his class his first two years in law school. —Albert Marcellus Orgain, IV of Rich- mond, president of the senior law class, publication editor of the Law Review, and a member of the Student Bar As- sociation and the legal research program. —Beverly Creighton Read of Falls Church, Va., who served as president of the Student Bar Association and captain of the law school’s championship Burks Moot Court team. —Philip Clinton Thompson of Short Hills, N.J., vice president of Washington and Lee’s student body, active in the Law Review, the legal research program, and the Student Bar Association. —Harold William Walker, Jr. of Cin- cinnati, Ohio, a member of the Law Re- view staff, the board of governors of the Student Bar Association, and the Burks Moot Court team. —Benjamin Atticus Williams of Court- land, Va., chairman of the legal research program, and a member of the board of governors of the Student Bar Association and of the Law Review staff. Seniors in Washington and Lee’s un- dergraduate schools selected for Who’s Who include: —William Edward Brumback of Balti- more, Md., captain of the swimming team, twice an All-America freestyler, an All- America lacrosse player, and a Dean’s List psychology major. —Arthur Franklin Cleveland of Spar- tanburg, S.C., a Robert E. Lee Research Scholar, Honor Roll student, social fra- ternity officer, and member of the Student War Memorial Scholarship Fund Commit- tee, majoring in chemistry. —Madison Filmore Cole, Jr. of New- nan, Ga., an Honor Roll student majoring in history, president of the University’s Publications Board, chairman of its stu- dent-sponsored intellectual symposium CONTACT this year, and editor of the yearbook last year. —Pleas Blair Rogers Geyer of Berwyn, Pa., a member of Phi Eta Sigma, an honor- ary society for students of exceptional aca- demic distinction. —Douglas Kerr Gossmann of Louisville, Ky., president of the Interfraternity Coun- cil, a member of the football team, the Student Affairs Committee, and the Var- sity Club, majoring in English. —Henry Averill Harkey of Charlotte, N.C., a Dean’s List sociology major who is a freshman dormitory counselor, and former chairman of the Cold Check Com- mittee. —Charles Frederick Harris, Jr. of Worcester, Mass., president of Sigma Delta Chi journalism society, chairman of the Student Library Committee, a re- porter for the Richmond (Va.) Times- Dispatch, and a Dean’s List journalism major. —Stephen Robert Haughney of Cleve- land, Ohio, a member of Phi Beta Kappa, CAMPUS: 11 the Student Curriculum Committee, the CONTACT symposium committee, and a staff member of both the student news- paper and Shenandoah, the University’s literary quarterly. —Hugh Francis Hill, III of Roanoke, program director of WLUR-FM, the Uni- versity’s student-operated radio station, president of the Troubadours, Washing- ton and Lee’s dramatic troupe, and a member of Alpha Epsilon Delta, honorary pre-medical fraternity. —Andrew George Kumpuris of Little Rock, Ark., tri-captain of the football team, chairman of the Student Control Committee, and vice chairman of the CONTACT symposium. —Francis McQuaid Lawrence of Lake- land, Fla., president of the student body and a member of the Student Service Soc- iety. —John Malcolm McCardell of Hagers- town, Md., an Honor Roll student major- ing in American history and English, edi- tor this year of the yearbook, a dormitory counselor, and secretary of the Publica- tions Board. —Lawrence Lee McConnell of Atlanta, Ga., editor-in-chief of the Ring-tum Phi, Washington and Lee’s student newspaper, vice president of the Publications Board, and a Dean’s List English major. —Richard James Murray of Valatie, N.Y., secretary of the student body, news director of WLUR-FM, and a member of Sigma Delta Chi. —Henry Nottberg, III of Shawnee Mis- sion, Kan., president of the Dance Board, a member of the Interfraternity Council, the Student Service Society, and an Honor Roll politics major. —Edwin Staman Ogilvie of Shreveport, La., tri-captain of the football team, a member of the student government and of Omicron Delta Kappa, honorary leader- ship fraternity, and an Honor Roll busi- ness major. —Joseph Buford Tompkins of Vinton, Va., a member of Phi Beta Kappa and Omicron Delta Kappa, a four-year mem- ber of the student government, assistant head dormitory counselor, and an Honor Roll politics major. —Rufus Timothy Wright of Beaumont, Tex., a member of Omicron Delta Kappa, a member of Washington and Lee’s debate team who has won several awards, includ- ing best speaker among 140 debaters from 43 colleges at the Ohio State National In- vitational tournament last winter, and a Dean’s List English major. | ORDER NIK Dac gene RR LRN MOTE 12: ATHLETICS Without trying harder, Mahaffey makes No. 1 It must be said that Steve Mahaffey, the nation’s No. 1 pass catcher this fall. never was your Classic example of an All- American football hero. Like the kind that go to bed early, the ones who lead a clean life, the hard workers, and some- times the ones who make the academic teams. No, Mahaffey never was the Spar- tan type. Mahaffey was the guy who, on a good day and if things were going right, could waste 10, maybe 12 hours with no trouble at all. Mahaffey’s idea of a good day be- gan somewhere around noon—after a long night’s sleep—and one that included about 30 or 40 trips to the Co-op, a couple of visits to the PR office to check his latest press clippings, a flick or two, and, finally, With nothing better to do, Mahaffey either went to the Co-op or out to catch a pass or 74. re a topping-off run to Hollins or Mary Baldwin. Classes were the least of his worries, and his preoccupation with learning was limited only to graduating in December (he did) so he could get out in the world and make money selling securities. As he walked along the Colonnade on his way to history or religion, he would ponder the benefits of a gray classroom as opposed to earning some cash back in Columbus, Ohio, and, suddenly, in a moment of fiscal rationale, he would veer off course, nar- rowly avoiding the bell to call him into a lecture that had nothing to do with his capitalistic plans. Fittingly, Mahaffey was one of the all- time great talkers, one of the past mas- ters at holding court with banter and tale. “Want to see me, huh?” he would ask, hoping to corner yet another unsuspect- ing soul for an hour’s worth of chatter. “Well, meet me at the Co-op in 10 min- utes. I’ll be there. You can count on it.” Such was Mahaffey’s demeanor. Loose. Never taking anything too seriously. Re- laxed. Calm. No hard stuff. Which is the way he took football. About three each afternoon, settled in one of the many booths that dot the side of Washington and Lee’s snack bar, split end Mahaffey would sit there with his sidekick and foil, flanker Bruce Green, playing one of their favorite games—trying to talk each other out of their favorite sport. “Well, what do you think, Excite- ment?’ Mahaffey would lead off, calling Green by his anomalistic nickname. “Think we ought to go today? I could be talked out of it, you know.” “I dunno,” Green would reply with his usual enthusiasm. “Could be bad. Looks like they’re going to work us pretty good.” “That settles it,’”Mahaffey would de- cide. “We're pulling out today. I could use the rest, anyway.” And the two would laugh and carry on and pride themselves on how easy it was to bail out of practice. But always, almost as if they understood a subconsci- ous cue, both would slide out of the booth and trudge off to Wilson Field, across the longest concrete footbridge of its kind in the world to run their patterns and take cal. Although they’d badmouth the drudgery and work, they’d always show up, Green setting up the jokes and Mahaffey delivering the zingers. Mahaffey first became famous, you might say, in August when the Virginia press got wind that he’d been to Asia last spring. Mahaffey took the trip during Washington and Lee’s second semester so he could return this fall to play out his final season of football eligibility. In one article, he was described as the world’s only globetrotting redshirt, but what the story failed to point out, probably because Ma- haffey kept it from the reporter, was the fact he’d had a few flirtations with trouble during the tour. Among the many sides to his character, one to them seems to be a distinct facility for walking into bad situations. Mahaffey, for example, just happened to be in Thai- land and on his way to Angkor Wat when American troops invaded Cambodia. Be- cause he was in ROTC and somewhat inclined for adventure, Mahaffey was thinking about going to the front lines to see what things looked like, but that was before the invasion. When he heard what was going on, he quickly turned tail and headed off in another direction. Among other things, Mahaffey readily admits he’s a chicken. Several weeks later, he was in Manila wrapping up his tour and on the way home. One night he was in a restaurant, he says minding his own business, when a drunk approached him, pulled out a gun, and started asking Mahaffey why he was bothering his girlfriend. Arms raised, a friendly smile on his face, and nervously claiming innocence, Mahaffey discreetly moved out of the place—backwards—and went somewhere else for dinner. Later, he was able to laugh about it, pointing out that the girl wasn’t that good looking, anyway, and certainly nothing to fight over. “When that dude pulled out a gun,” Mahaffey says, “I figured it was time for me to go. There’s no sense fighting bul- lets.” If Mahaffey’s trip to Asia didn’t make him an overnight celebrity, his nickname did. Somehow, word got out that he was a full-blooded Chickasaw Indian, and peo- ple got to calling him “Chief.” It seemed to be a natural—Mahaffey had those high cheekbones. He was lithe, lean, and fast as the March wind. Running patterns or chasing down punts, no one could lay a hand on him. Of course, nothing was further from the truth, his being a full- blooded Chickasaw or even part Chicka- saw, that is, but Mahaffey never did deny it. As he would point out to any number of cornerbacks and safeties during the sea- son, there was no way they were going to cover him, and they knew why. It was a psyche factor he played to the hilt. ATHLETICS: 13 | When the weather finally abated in Boston, Mahaffey went after a national ranking. Here, he takes off on a 50-yard touchdown play, getting a block from Bruce Green. In some ways, the press hurt Mahaffey. Through Washington and Lee’s first four games, he was stifled, mainly because teams were laying for him, but also be- cause the Generals were having troubles getting the ball his way. Washington and Lee’s first opponent—Emory & Henry— came to town thinking the best way to handle Mahaffey was to put three or four defenders on him during punting situa- tions, when they knew exactly where he was going. On Washington and Lee’s first punt, three Wasps tore into Mahaffey as he started downfield, and the massacre was on. When a fourth defender came in headfirst and speared him, an official fin- ally threw a flag to halt the annihilation. When Mahaffey got up, he was dazed and soundly beaten. But he came back later in the afternoon to catch a 69-yard touch- down pass, one of four throws he caught that day for 147 yards. The following week, playing with a bruised thigh, Mahaffey caught only one pass, a 13-yarder. Towson doubled up on him throughout the game, often adding a third back to the cloak. But in that con- test, the Generals discovered a new quar- terback—sophomore Steve Fluharty—and that change was to be instrumental in Ma- haffey’s success as the season wore on. When the Generals flew to Boston to meet Tufts for their fifth game, Mahaffey appeared to be a washout. Against Centre in the third game, he had caught six passes for 49 yards; against Hampden-Sydney, in the fourth, only three for 30 yards. In four games, he had caught only 14 passes for 239 yards and a single touchdown. He definitely was not enjoying the kind of year that had been planned for him. But against Tufts, in a howling gale that blew snow flurries across the field, Mahaffey started sneaking up on a national rank- ing. In that game, he caught 15 passes for 236 yards, both school records. One of his catches was a beautiful 50-yard touch- down play that was broken by a nifty block from Green. Mahaffey’s reception record stood ex- actly one week. Against Western Mary- land the following Saturday, he caught 17 Fluharty passes, only two shy of the NCAA college division single game mark. His performance against the Green ‘Terrors vaulted him to a spot among the nation’s top receivers, with three games to go. During the final three weeks, Mahaffey cooled off, but only slightly. He got five in the rain against Sewanee, 13 against South- western, and finished with 10 against Washington University. For nine games, 14: ATHLETICS Mahaffey caught a whopping 74 passes, good for 897 yards and a pair of touch- downs. He broke the Washington and Lee season record convincingly, surpass- ing by 30 receptions the standard formerly held by Bill David and Bucky Cunning- ham, and he set a new W&L career mark with 127 catches. The old record of 88 lifetime receptions was held previously by Cunningham. More importantly, Mahaffey finished the season as the country’s No. 1 pass re- ceiver among college division players. He was first in two categories—most caught total and most caught per game, the lat- ter standard used by the NCAA this year to award individual honors since some teams played nine games while others scheduled 10 or 11. To take the top spot, Mahaffey had to sweat out a two-week period when Bob Somerville of the University of Missouri- Rolla had a chance to maintain the first- place ranking he held throughout the year. With the Washington and Lee sched- ule completed, Mahaffey, with an average of 8.2 catches for nine games, was behind Somerville, who was averaging 8.4 catches through eight games. But Somerville caught only three passes in his ninth game, at that point dropping him to eight catches a game and behind Mahaffey. Still, Somerville had a chance to retain the No. 1 position during Missouri-Rolla’s game with Lincoln University on Thanksgiving Day. He needed 10 receptions in his final game to tie Mahaffey, 11 to pass him, but, in a blustery cold wind, Somerville didn’t make one catch. Mahaffey had the title. When notified by phone on Thanks- giving night that he’d made it, Mahaffey’s acceptance speech was brief and concise. “You're kidding?” he asked. “Really?” Thinking he had misunderstood the in- tention of the call, Mahaffey again was told what happened. “All right,” came the reply. “Aw’ll r-r-right.” He was asked jokingly how it felt to back into the top spot. “I'll take it,” Mahaffey chimed. “It wasn't easy.” He hung up laughing. For his spectacular year, he easily won first-team All-Virginia honors, was named to the All-College Athletic Conference squad, and was picked to a berth on the Little All-America honorable mention team. That seemed to be an insult to Ma- haffey’s abilities, since one of the first-team selections—John Curtis of Springfield— caught only 43 passes for 753 yards, and in his best game, against Albright, caught only 10 passes for 193 yards. One of the reasons Mahaffey didn’t rate any higher, it was explained, was the fact that the Generals had a losing season, an automatic strike against a player regardless of his individual merit. Yet there was some talk that he’d be going to a post-season all-star bowl game, even after he’d been slighted by the All- America selectors. That never panned out, either. Mahaffey got some kind of notion that he wasn’t going to make it when the North-South game people announced that among the first few receivers they had picked one had 9.3 speed and the other 9.6, and they were from Arizona State and USC, “I knew then there was no way,” Ma- haffey says. “I’m from W&L, remember, and I haven’t run that fast since Manila.” So Mahaffey spent his final college days in Lexington, rather than in Miami or Honolulu where he might have run pat- terns against, say, Jack Tatum of Ohio State, “a hometown boy,” as he put it. Maybe it was best he didn’t go, though, since he did have exams to study for and it would be good to make high grades. He was asked five days before the ex- amination period if he was cracking the books. “No, not really,” came the reply. “Too much work. Besides, Green and I have to shoot billiards in 10 minutes.” No, Steve Mahaffey never was a Spar- tan. Cleaning up after work, Mahaffey grabs a quick rest between plays. ATRILETICS: 15 | . It was a frustrating season for Wash- 4 ) ington and Lee, to be sure. The Generals’ G en era Is d efense trou b ed i | \ offense, somewhat sluggish in recent times, surprisingly grew capricious, while the k ms d . ad | W&L defensive unit, for years firm and but quarterbac IS iscovere ‘s trustworthy, suddenly fell inconsistent. | Notably, it was a season that featured ) the emergence of second-year quarterback s Steve Fluharty, a player unheralded at | if the start but nationally prominent at the ~ conclusion of the Generals’ schedule. » Loved by his receivers because he threw floating passes, Fluharty came off the bench during W&L’s second game, against J Towson, and from that point it was just “s a matter of how long it would take him to |. get used to varsity competition. All it | l took was the next two games—against Cen- tre and Hampden-Sydney. * After he refined his timing and gained \ his unit’s confidence, things began to \ mM click. During a bitterly cold afternoon in Boston against Tufts, it was apparent the > game was going to be an offensive dual; ‘» while Tufts was running the ball at will, the Generals were having little trouble passing. The lead changed hands six times, but, finally, the issue was settled as Flu- harty hit 19 of 30 for 307 yards, 15 ending up in Steve Mahaffey’s arms, and when senior linebacker Frank Evans dropped i » the Tuft’s quarterback on a crucial end- +», of-the-game two-point conversion attempt. With his arm limber, experience under (” his belt, and Mahaffey out scouting the [. secondary for open spots, Fluharty con- | tinued to put the ball up frequently, to | such an extent and with so much success } that he finished the year 131 for 257 for | 1,458 yards and seven touchdowns, aver- | » aging better than 16 completions a game. That ranked him seventh among the na- | tion’s small college quarterbacks, and it =" | vaulted him to the top of the College Ath- r letic Conference passing and total offense Ss categories. Along with Mahaffey, he was ) named to the Little All-America honor- iti, Oe able mention team. % Unfortunately, W&L had more than its share of troubles this fall proving that its «4, best offense, aside from Fluharty and Ma- ' . haffey, was a good defense. The Generals } were unable to come up with the big play, 1-~- halting opponents on critical third-down | situations. As defensive coordinator Boyd - Williams said after W&L’s final game: “It’s been a long time since we’ve been > . | pushed around as much as we have this ve year.” # One of the most disturbing elements of the fall occurred in a pre-season prac- The find of the year was sophomore quarterback Steve Fluharty. lo: ATHLETICS ew Defensive coordinator Boyd Williams spent the season pondering the problems of inconsistency, often conferring with linebackers Frank Evans (above) and Tim Haley. tice session when senior linebacker and tri-captain Drew Kumpuris was hit on a freak play that twisted his knee every way possible. He was immediately lost for the season, thus removing from the Generals’ defensive unit its most knowledgeable and experienced player at a time when W&L could ill-afford such a loss. The rest of the unit was relatively young and inexperi- enced, and it was thin on depth. In addition to the Tufts game, about the only other time Williams was able to smile was when the Generals braced for a fine Parents’ Weekend 13-0 shutout over Sewanee. After Williams was handed the game ball, he turned to his players and told them that “this is one of the proudest days of my life. We made them use every chicken play in the book, and they still couldn’t do a damn thing. Fellas, you've made me a mighty happy man today.” Because W&L suffered from its youth, lack of size and speed, and depth prob- lems, the team simply wore out each game. Emory & Henry in the first game, for example, defeated the Generals, 27-14, by overpowering W&L, a trend that was to characterize losses to Towson (34-14), Centre (40-6), Hampden-Sydney (19-0), Western Maryland (37-21), Southwestern (42-14), and Washington University (17- 13). In all, the Generals gave up an aver- age of 338 yards a game—229 by rushing and 109 passing—and relinquished 250 points, an average of 28 per game. Trying to improve W&L’s balance, no doubt, will be head coach Buck Leslie’s major worry over the next several months, but there are signs pointing to better times ahead. A year’s experience should greatly help the Generals’ defensive unit, which loses only four players—linebackers Kum- puris, Evans, Ken Carter, and cornerback Jim Allen—to graduation. The returning personnel include linebackers George Harris and Tim Haley, and cornerback Dave Brooks, who represent the best of the lot in expertise, aggressiveness, and speed, On the other hand, W&L’s offensive unit could be just as pass conscious as it was this fall. Fluharty returns, of course, and end Chappy Conrad will move up to take Mahaffey’s place. Conrad is tall and rangy, has a good pair of hands, and re- flects Mahaffey’s ability to get open. Also available will be Rich Romanelli, who more than likely will assume Bruce Green’s job at flanker. Romanelli was used in spots during the 1970 season, and when he was in showed flashes of speed and in- stinct, thus offering Fluharty a second good receiver when the 1971 schedule opens. The list of opponents is a demanding one, to say the least. Emory & Henry and Tufts will be dropped, but taking their places will be powerful Bucknell and the Coast Guard Academy, joining Towson, Centre, Hampden-Sydney, Western Mary- land, Sewanee, Southwestern, and Wash- ington University. More than enough to keep Leslie and Williams busy in the days ahead. * * * Washington and Lee players named to the All-Virginia small college teams in- cluded split end Steve Mahaffey to the first team, and guard Staman Ogilvie, tackle Steve Hannon, quarterback Steve Flu- harty, flanker Bruce Green, linebacker George Harris, and cornerback Dave Brooks to the honorable mention list. ALUMNI: 17 Now is the time to submit to the Alumni Committee on Nomi- nations the names of alumni you prefer for nomination for three seats on the Alumni Board of Di- rectors and one seat on the Uni- versity Committee on Intercol- legiate Athletics. The nominating committee will close its report on April 1, and present its nominations to be voted upon at the annual meeting of the Washington and Lee Alumni Association on May 8 in Lee Chapel. The annual meeting coincides with the spring reunion weekend. JAMES H. BIERER, ’40 Pittsburgh Corning Corp. One Gateway Center Pittsburgh, Pa. 15222 Name your candidate Under the By-Laws, any mem- ber of the Alumni Association may suggest names of alumni to the nominating committee for nomination for the offices to be filled. Alumni may send names to any member of the nominating committee or to the committee through the office of the execu- tive secretary of the Alumni As- sociation. Members of the 12-man Alum- ni Board of Directors are elected to four-year terms, with the terms of three members expiring each year. Retiring from the Board in May are Joseph F. Bear, ‘33, WILLIAM KING SELF, ’39, Chairman Riverside Industries P. O. Box 218 Marks, Miss. 38646 of Montgomery, Ala., Charles F. Clarke, ’38, of Cleveland, Ohio, and Edward H. Ould, ’29, of Roanoke, Va. Alumni members of the Ath- letic Committee serve two-year terms, with one alumni member retiring each year. The member retiring in 1971 is Richard W. Smith, ’41, of Staunton, Va. In compliance with Article g of the By-Laws of Washington and Lee Alumni, Inc., the names, addresses, and pictures of the members of the nominating com- mittee for 1971-72 are published here: ROBERT M. WHITE, II, ’38 Editor, The Mexico Ledger 3 Park Circle Mexico, Missouri 65265 Chapter news DANVILLE. The four freshmen and their parents from the chapter area were guests at a dinner-reception on Sept. 2 in Mar- tinsville, featuring talks by athletic direc- tor Gene Corrigan, assistant development gram. director Jerry Poudrier, assistant dean of students Jim Mathews, and alumni secre- tary Bill Washburn. F. Nelson Light, ’52, chapter president, presided over the pro- their fathers were guests of the chapter on + Sept. 2 at the home of John Howard, ’57, at which several upperclassmen presented brief talks on campus life. , BALTIMORE. Twenty two freshmen and 183: ALUMNI SAVE THESE DATES —_— aaa for honoring 1921 1931 1946 (50th) (40th) (25th) and dates now. May 7 and 8 1971 Spring Class Reunions Academic and Law Classes (15th) (10th) An informative and entertaining program Make your plans now to be present for a rewarding weekend on the Washington and Lee campus. 1956 1961 The Old Guard (Those who were at W&L more than 50 years ago) Invitations and reservation forms will be mailed to you. But save the is being prepared for you. Chapter correspondents Appalachian—A, C. Smeltzer, '29, 127 West Main Street, Abingdon, Virginia 24210 Arkansas—Richard C. Butler, III. '59, 36 River Ridge Rd., Little Rock, Ark. 72207 Atlanta—R. William Ide, III, ’62, 3126 Roberta Drive, N. W., Atlanta, Georgia 30327 AEE Te ee ee ODES L. Rhea, ’58, 619 Fraser Lane, Staunton, Va. 24401 Baltimore—Thomas J. Kenny, ’54, Rt. 7. ae Avenue, Pikesville, Maryland Birmingham—William E. Smith, Jr., '’63, 15 Norman Drive, Birmingham, Ala. 35213 Charleston, West Virginia—William T. W. Brotherton, Jr., ’47, 1020 Kanawha Valley Building, Charleston, W. Va. 25301 Charlotte—Harry J. Grim, '52, 2522 Sherwood Avenue, Charlotte, North Carolina 28207 Chattanooga—Wesley G. Brown, ’51, Penn Mutual Life Ins. Co., Lobby Maclellan Bldg., Chattanooga, Tenn. 37402 Chicago—William H. Hillier, '38, 321 West Lincoln Avenue, Wheaton, Ill. 60187 Cleveland—Peter M. Weimer, '63, c/o The W. F, Ryan Corp., 3940 Euclid Ave., Cleveland, Ohio 44115 Cumberland Valley—O. Thomas Kaylor, Jr.. ’45, 940 The Terrace, Hagerstown, Md. 21740 Danville—F. Nelson Light, '52, Route No. 2, Box 695, Chatham, Va. 24531 Florida West Coast—J. Thomas Touchton, ’60, 3701 Bayshore Blvd., Tampa, Florida 33611 Gulf Stream—J. Alan Cross, Jr., '51, 9700 Dominican Drive, Cutler Ridge, Miami, Florida 33157 Houston—Fred B. Griffin, ’60, 4005 Chatham, Houston, Texas 77027 Jacksonville—John G. McGiffin, III, °63, 4114 McGirts Blvd., Jacksonville, Fla. 32201 Kansas City—W. H. Leedy, '49, 814 Westover Road, Kansas City, Mo. 64113 Louisville—A. R. Boden, Jr., °52, 3913 Druid Hill Road, Louisville, Ky. 40207 Lynchburg—James D. Taylor, ’41, P.O. Box 97, Lynchburg, Va. 24505 Mid-South—Donald A. Malmo, ’50, 395 South Yates Road, Memphis, Tenn. 38117 Mobile—G. Sage Lyons, ’58, Lyons, Pipes & Cook, 517 First National Bank Bldg., Mobile, Ala. 36602 New Orleans—Gus A. Fritchie, Jr., ’50, 213 Cleveland Ave., Slidell, La. 70458 New River-Greenbrier—Thomas A. Myles, ‘16, Box 126, Fayetteville. W. Va. 25840 New York—Matthews A. Griffith, ’40, 2 West 16th Street. New York, New York 10011 Norfolk—Frank H. Callahan, Jr.. ’52, 1401 Brunswick Ave., Norfolk, Va. 23508 North Texas—Richard D. Haynes, '58, 2921 LTV Tower, Dallas, Texas 75201 Northern California—John A. Williamson, IT, 53, 3147 Stevens Creek Blvd., Santa Clara, Calif. 95050 Northern Louisiana—M. Alton Evans. Jr., ’63, P. O. Box 639, Shreveport, La. 71102 Palm Beach-Ft. Lauderdale—Hugh S. Glick- stein, '53, 2138 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood, Fla. 33020 Palmetto—William M. Bowen, ’63, Dowling, Dowling, Sanders and Dukes, Beaufort, S. C. 29902 Peninsula—Frank S. Beazlie, Jr., ’40, 1205 Mallicotte Lane, Newport News, Va. 23606 Pensacola—Robert D. Hart, Jr., ’63, 3985 Pied- mont Rd., Pensacola Fla. 32503 Philadelphia—Arthur Blank, II, 60, Reynolds ee Chestnut St., Philadelphia, Pa. 1910 Piedmont—Walter L. Hannah, ’50, 5100 Lau- vinda Dr., Greensboro, N.C. 27410 Pittsburgh—John E. Perry, ’38, 1330 Terrace Drive. Pittsburgh, Pa. 15228 Richmond—Joseph M. Spivey, ’62, 4207 Brom- ley Lane, Richmond, Va, 23221 Roanoke—William J, Lemon, ’57, 2201 Grandin Road, S. W., Roanoke, Va. 24015 : Rockbridge—Robert W. H. Mish, Jr., 46, 15 West Washington Street, Lexington, Va. 24450 San Antonio Texas—Brentano C. Harnisch, ’39, 231 Burr Road, San Antonio, Texas 78209 St. Louis—Bruce E. Bussen, ’56, 5000 Bussen Road, St, Louis, Mo. 63129 Savannah River—Tudor Hall, ’60, P. O. Box 116, Beech Isiand, S.C. 29842 South Carolina Piedmont—Alvin T. Fleish- man, ’41, P. O. Drawer 1049, Anderson, S. C. 29621 Southern California—Frank A. McCormick, ’58, 2026 North Olive, Santa Ana., Calif. 92706 Southern Ohio—Stanley A. Hooker, Jr., '39, ae Beverly Hills Drive, Cincinnati, Ohio 45 Tulsa—J. Barry Epperson, ’60, 2440 E. 45th St., Tulsa, Oklahoma 74105 a aac Potomac—Albert D. Darby, Jr., ’48, 507 umberland St., Cumberland. Md. 21502 Washington—Edson B. Olds, ’61, 808 Fordham St., Rockville, Md. 20850 Wilmington—S. Maynard Turk, ’52, Box 3958, Wilmington, Del. 19807 b. ALUMNI: 19 & WASHINGTON AND LEE UNIVERSITY ALUMNI, INCORPORATED }- STATEMENT OF REVENUES AND EXPENDITURES [ For the Year ended June 30, 1970 /« INCOME: aN Cash collected on pledges and matching gifts ........ le ceeeeeeseeereeeereeeens $291,262.00 | OPERATING EXPENSES: ,. RMI pigs: Sedan e hea e one NORPAad hj aahc tosh cstusngutons vnlvesstidvap dias cadoieyadbecpereassacrosacene $35,897.00 l BR NI 555 ipa o5 cos oa shh stage spon tadne hs ak vatas consns Febnsaenats tas sceushanecosciqunseenansei dives 14,195.00 fi ASANTE OGG SUVs... ccslerddieessenechvsnssonnndsensnesneis cdhutipenancdsnos rsbhehpinbennncdaveneae 630.00 ;** TUN eS US Bi Be cit eee dc aibaadcy cad ce vos ackepeabes 346.00 . « PNG 055i acces esc nsa i cov secdsddegswac Sesssdnouasssteusiseadaigesukyssubetebeby ys ysrsapaayegis 4,080.00 MMOLE NS © ORE CA taoitns cuacecoh tv caibazlaidtiondictgligsh Oeduaeemnelesasbines dibcabonrse sila dacveuniiel 92.00 3 . RPMI ao ons. da nea ei ss obtains dann tas Maddog aga th «ig SAMAMEA SCALA in addesmpd tabann becocedtoee 1,54'7.00 | PURRUIR NEL: DRAM RNA RED E50 acess +