_. the alumni magazine of washington and lee university DECEMBER 1972 vw » a >» -*- ~ > v ape iy a ! i Agel ie p< me. (es ai - Current Support Committee added to Achievement Council A Current Support Committee has been added to the Washington and Lee Achievement Council, the group formed by the Board of Trustees to spearhead the Uni- versity’s effort to raise $56 million by 1980. The Current Support Committee is the sixth com- mittee of the Council, headed by Trustee John M. Stem- mons of Dallas. Members of the new committee are Sydney Lewis, chairman and a Trustee; James H. Bierer, chairman of the Alumni Fund; Edwin J. Foltz, chair- man of the Robert E. Lee Associates; and Robert A. Hemm, chairman of the Parents’ Council. The Current Support Committee will concentrate its efforts on raising the remaining portion of the $7,850,000 in current support required by the Univer- sity as an integral part of the $56-million Development Program. The committee will direct its attention to the same constituencies during the 70’s as the other five Achievement Council committees. ‘The other five com- mittees have responsibility for these designated con- stituencies: Alumni, Law Alumni, Parents, Foundations, and Business and Industry. The Board of Trustees has issued a statement that asks all alumni, parents, and friends to make annual giv- ing—gifts for current support—their first priority. Devel- opment officials have emphasized that roughly one-half of the University’s current support requirements through the 70's need to be met through the Alumni Fund. ‘The other one-half must come from parents, friends, founda- tions, and corporations. These officials have also pointed out that the projec- tions in the Development Program of $7,850,000 for current support and $24 million for endowment are valid only if both succeed. To the extent that one should fall short, the other would have to be larger. The Current Support Committee will seek to co- ordinate the efforts of all of Washington and Lee’s an- nual giving volunteers and to give these men and women a direct link to the Achievement Council and the Board of ‘Trustees. The Robert E. Lee Associates and its General’s Coun- cil are not separate annual giving programs in them- selves but are programs for recognizing exceptional giv- ing and the means of assembling these donors and bring- ing them into a closer relationship with the University. December, 1972 Sydney Lewis A weekend of work and fun for Class Agents Twenty-five Class Agents, the Alumni Fund Chairman, and all four of the newly appointed Vice Chairmen came to Washington and Lee on Friday, ol Sept. 22, for a weekend of work and fun. This was the first weekend for Class Agents ever held at the Uni- . versity, and the unanimous verdict of all who partici- _ pated was that it was an unqualified success. The pic- tures on these and the following pages are a sampling + of what went on. Alumni Fund Chairman Jim Bierer, ’40, goes over plans for the 1972-73 Alumni Fund program with the vice chairmen. Calvert Thomas, ’38A, vice chairman for Academic Classes 1935-48, and Herbert Jahncke, ’30A, vice chairman for Academic Classes 1923-34. John Stump, °57L, vice chairman for Law Classes. th € ‘ fe ts wl hg wa_ Newt Harman, ’40L Class Agent, and his are. wife greet friends during cocktails at the President’s House. ew ‘ ~~ ww Oliver Mendell, ’50A, (center), vice president for Academic Classes 1949-72, at workshop with ~ other Class Agents. 2 WeL Photos by Robert Lockhart Class Agents and their wives at the President’s House for cocktails before dinner at Evans Dining Hall. Class Agents Buck Ogilvie, ’64A, and Carter Fox, ’61A, exchange ideas about running their class campaigns. Charlie Smith, ’27L Class Agent, and Paul Absorbed in an exchange of views are Dick Smith, ’41A, and Everett Martin, ’37A. Cavaliere, *48L Class Agent. President Huntley talks with Evins Hamm, ’53A, and wife. Scott Mosovich, ’34, and Charles Tutwiler, O44 °24L. + Pecember, 1972 3 SSAaataanoainge Bob Brennan, Agents ponder 1972-73 Alumni Fund program at workshop. ... And so did Jim Bierer and President Huntley. Ld ; i Lawson Turner, ’72L, Al Orgain, ’71L, and Claude Carter, 59L, at workshop. we Class Agents discuss plans at Saturday morning workshop. President Huntley ex plains why the Alumni Fund has top priority in the Development Program for the ’70’s. Before the football game, Class Agents had cocktails at the Alumni Charles Tutwiler, ’24L, gives a hand to Ethan Allen, ’31L, House. during pre-game cocktails. Matt Cole, ’71A, talks things over with President Huntley. From the President’s box, Agents watch W&L end Westminster’s 22-game winning streak. Eee ee eames . l =~ Ze j mm he - | | ! ; " - - a t ye! ae ; he A a iene see iii ae # \ ; ; 25, San OY y Frank Parsons, “544, and Jerome Frampton, ’33L, and their wives chat Class Agents and wives gather for post-game cookout at home of Farris j CE ee Hotchkiss, ’58, Director of Development. s > “a f > “> Or by Robert S. Keefe The little quarterly that helps Shape American literature It was just 22 years ago that Shenan- doah was born, a three-time-yearly magazine initially designed principally to provide students with an outlet for serious literary writing—to become what the Southern Collegian had been many years before. At first it was edited by a committee of undergraduates who were advised by a member of the faculty, and its principal content was the poetry, the reviews, the essays, and stories of Washington and Lee men. Today, Shenandoah has become one of America’s respected “little” quarter- lies, the breed of magazine often (but not always) connected with a respected college or university, and which is published for the sake of the art and not for the dollar. (The University hardly abandoned the notion that its students deserve a literary outlet of their own: Ariel is their quarterly and four years ago it was voted full membership on the stu- dent Publications Board.) Shenandoah has come of age in W&L’s English department: James Boat- wright, its respected editor, is professor of English, and his two assistants— Dabney Stuart, the we!l-known poet, and Stephen H. Goodwin, a creative young writer of fiction—are asociate professor and instructor in English respectively. “Little” magazines are freed of the pressures facing commercial publishers, Boatwright points out—and enormous pressures those are. Financially, Shenandoah is secure, though perhaps only barely so. Sub- sidies from Washington and Lee are crucial in that circumstance. Subscrip- tions are $4 a year and provide some revenue as well. So too do grants and 6 external subsidies, awarded for the merit of the magazine. The latest is a $2,500 grant from the Coordinating Council of Literary Magazines. The sum must be matched, however, and not from its regular University subsidy— and so that is one of Boatwright’s major non-editorial tasks this winter. Historically, America’s best writers — Shenandoah WINTER 1972 and poets—those whose talents have influenced American letters most pro- foundly—have “gotten their start” in little magazines. More than a few of those starts have been in Shenandoah. In Volume I, Number I, there appeared a story called “Shattered” by a W&L student named T. K. Wolfe. Now he’s known as Tom, and his books have titles like Kandy Colored Tangerine-Flake Streamline Baby and Radical Chic. Flannery O’Connor was published early in Shenandoah, and Washington and Lee now has in its archives the corres- pondence between her and Thomas H. Carter, the student editor of the magazine at the time. Reynolds Price, one of the foremost Southern writers now, was also “discovered” early by Shenandoah, and in fact he is now an advisory editor. (So is James Dickey, who is also published frequently in Shen- andoah.) The little magazine takes the best works of these people—and then doesn’t remold them. “There is a kind of freedom to experiment” in the quarter- lies like Shenandoah, Editor Boatwright comments, and as a result, it is precisely these magazines—and the writers they publish—that shape the whole of American literature. As its prominence has grown, the number of manuscripts submitted has grown too. Boatwright receives “maybe 1,000 fiction manuscripts” every year— and personally judges each. He has to, he says. Editing the magazine is necessar- ily that personal an assignment. Two or three thousand, poems come in every year too, and Stuart likewise reads them all—himself. An unpleasant chore? On the contrary. It keeps them intimate with much of the best that is being written today and with those who are writing it. And not the least of the rewards is the immense personal satisfaction. “The little magazine receives whatever character it has from the abilities and sensibilities of its editors,’ he observes. Which, of course, is exactly why Shenandoah is where it is today. WeL aa Jim Boatwright: teacher, editor, writers friend A good literary magazine is often thought to be a reflection of its editor, a sort of extension of himself. So it seemed especially appropriate this fall that the board of publishers of Shenandoah observed in a resolution: “Under Jim Boatwright’s guidance and direction Shenandoah has moved to a standing among national literary publications [which led it to be described recently] as ‘among the very best of the small magazines’.”’ In addition to teaching English (modern American and British poetry, creative writing, occasional survey courses in American literature) and in addition to editing and managing Shenandoah, Jim Boatwright is extraordinarily active in American literary or- ganizations. He serves as acting chairman of the Co- ordinating Council of Literary Magazines, for instance, and is a longtime member of its board and executive committee; he’s a member of the Advisory Panel to the Literary Program of the National Endowment for Arts; he is chairman of the Censorship Committee of the international PEN (Poets, Essayists, Novelists) American division. At Washington and Lee he is a member of the Glasgow Committee and the Seminar in Literature program committee. He has reviewed for the New York Times Book Review and occasionally now for the New Republic; he’s been published in Revue des Lettres Modernes. He’s in near-constant correspondence with America’s principal men and women in literature; the Eudora Weltys and W. H. Audens who come to Wash- ington and Lee (as both did last winter and spring) do so largely because of Shenandoah and Jim Boatwright. | December, 1972 Not long ago he bought a home in the country west of Lexington “with a beautiful view of the Blue Ridge,” where he spends much of his away-from-the- office time relaxing—generally reading or working. Summers? He tries to head for Greece as frequently as possible; he’s “fascinated by the Greek civilization and culture.” In spite of it all—or perhaps because of it all—he remains one of Washington and Lee’s most popular teachers—and one of its most demanding. “His” alumni, who return frequently, speak of the courses they took under Jim Boatwright as among their most rewarding experiences at Washington and Lee. R.S.K. = sect i Sa SS tases, _ sin 6th ibe a eae te ee es ue rate poem be ees opt a) se re m ae a 2 a ae za a Ti The University began its 224th aca- demic year in September—a year high- lighted by a record enrollment, the ma- triculation of the first women in the School of Law, the beginning of construc- tion on a new $7-million law building, and continuing planning for other con- struction projects. At the opening convocation in new Doremus Gymnasium, President Huntley called upon students, faculty, and _ staff to maintain a “community of trust and simultaneously to pursue academic ex- cellence” in the face of extensive physi- cal improvements on the campus. Total enrollment in the University’s three divisions is 1,685, the largest in his- tory. The breakdown is 1,172 in the Col- lege, 248 in the School of Commerce, Eco- nomics, and Politics, and 265 in the School of Law—also a record for that divi- sion. The enrollment includes 386 fresh- men, the largest number ever at W&L. The six women admitted to the School of Law are the first women to pursue a Washington and Lee degree. There have been other women students, principally in the Eight-College Exchange Program, involving W&L and other sing!e-sex in- stitutions in the area. Women also have traditionally been allowed to _ audit courses and earn transfer credit. Women have received honorary degrees from W&L, and one, Mrs. Alfred I. duPont, was a member of the Board of Trustees for many years. But never before has a woman been eligible to receive an earned degree from the University. Coeducation is limited to the School of Law. No determination has yet been made on the question of admitting wom- en as degree candidates in the under- graduate schools. Seventeen students are attending W&L December, 1972 this year under the Eight-College Ex- change Program. One is a man from Hampden-Sydney College, and the others are women, mostly from Hollins College. The exchange students are attending for the full year or for one or two terms. Under the program, credit earned at W&L is transferred to their “home” in- stitutions. The President, at the opening convo- cation, emphasized what he believes is a crucial question facing W&L today as physical growth takes place. He cited the graduation speech last June of Steve Robinson, president of the Student Body, who said that problems with the Honor System and the passing of bad checks in Lexington had indicated that the word of “W&L men is no longer taken with trust at face value.” “We may be in danger,” President Huntley said, “of losing those intangible qualities which make the Washington and Lee community such a fertile envir- onment.” He said there seemed to be some ‘dichotomy between the pursuit of academic excellence and the _ preser- vation of a community of trust.” “There can be only one answer to this duality,” he said. ““These two must. be reconciled 9? The challenge must be met. Clearing of the site for the new law building—immediately to the north of Wilson Field on previously undeveloped land—has already begun. The University wil ask for bids on the building this fall, and construction may begin before the end of the year. Funding of the new law building was assured last spring by the $9-million gift by Frances and Sydney Lewis of Richmond. The law building will be known as Lewis Hall in their honor, and an endowed center for inno- vative legal studies, also made _ possible by their gift, will be named for Frances Lewis. Other projects expected to come under contract within the year include the con- struction of 30 married student apart- ments in the general vicinity of Liberty Hall, the construction of upperclass housing for 168 students along the Woods Creek side of the new law school access road between the Footbridge and the existing maintenance building, and the relocation of the maintenance building itself. Advanced planning will continue this year on a new undergraduate library as well as on other projects included in the current decade-long $56-million Develop- ment Program. The University has al- ready raised $19.2 million in the effort, more than half of the initial goal of $36 million by the American Bicentennial in 1976. Greater Student Voice At its autumn meeting, the University Board of ‘Trustees voted unanimously to invite the president of the W&L. stu- dent body to attend every regular board meeting with full privileges except vot- ing. Until now, the Student Body Presi- dent has been invited simply to present a special report and ask and answer ques- tions at a single point during two regular board meetings each year. The new level of student participation reflects “the conviction that student body leadership at Washington and Lee has been consistently responsible and intelli- gent,” President Robert E. R. Huntley said in informing students of the board’s action. The University’s student government 9 SOT NNN OLE LOT TTT Campus News twice has asked the board to consider addition of the student body president as an ex officio member of the board. In his statement, President Huntley said the board agreed that the student presi- dent should have a more significant role in its discussions. The only portions of board meetings in which the student president will not participate will be those specified by the board itself. The new policy will be inaugurated at the board’s winter meeting scheduled for Atlanta, Ga., in February. Under the old policy, student body presidents were invited to present reports at the two board meetings held in Lex- ington. The new policy stipulates that the student president will be invited to attend the traditional out-of-town board meeting as well, at University expense. An editorial comment in the Ring-tum Phi, said: ‘““What this means is that a student voice will be heard on crucial issues. .. . The importance of this change should be obvious. While it may not translate into real student power in de- termining University policy, it does go a long way in providing considerable stu- dent influence.” Student Bar Officers Officers of the Student Bar Associa- tion for the fall semester are Malcolm Theodore H. Lawrence H. H. Squires, president; Ritter, vice Framme III, secretary; and Donald R. president : Johnson, treasurer. GOP’s Roll Caller The lady with the most widely heard voice in America for three days in Au- gust may well have been Mrs. Tobin 10 Armstrong of Armstrong, Tex., mother of Washington and Lee sophomore Bar- clay Armstrong. Mrs. Armstrong is co- chairman of the National Republican Committee, and in that capacity she called the roll of the states for nomina- tions and voting throughout the GOP convention in Miami Beach. Projects Manager Brady Douglas E. (Pat) Brady, superintendent of buildings and grounds, has assumed additional responsibilities as projects manager in connection with the capital construction portion of W&L’s current $56-million Development Program. James L. Arthur, previously assistant superintendent, has become associate superintendent and assumes day-to-day responsibility for direction of the 65- member staff. James Brown, an 18-year veteran of the staff, was named assistant superintendent, succeeding Arthur. In his new capacity, Brady will be Washington and Lee’s representative in all construction projects, including the new $7-million School of Law facility to be constructed in the near future, a new $5-million undergraduate library, sev- eral hundred new student housing units, and major remodeling of existing campus facilities. He will also serve as liaison between the University and contractors in all satellite projects, such as road- building, utility development and ground-clearing. Development of roads and site preparation has already begun on the new building, and construction is expected to begin early in 1973. Brady will also continue to play a_ principal role in physical planning activities at the University. Capital construction accounts for $24.2 million in the decade-tong Development Program, approximately half the $56- million total. With last spring’s $9-mil- lion gift from Frances and Sydney Lewis of Richmond, the law building has al- ready been funded. Almost $2 million Projects Manager Brady keeps a close eye on law building site preparation. > dele has been committed to the undergradu- ate library. Other major physical pro- jects in the Development Program are in various stages of planning and funding. Also in the Development Program, and now under Mr. Brady’s supervision as projects manager, is the $3-million addition to Doremus Gymnasium put into operation last winter. Brady’s duties will include supervision of operations in con- nection with completion of that project. A 1937 B.A. graduate of W&L, Brady has been buildings and grounds superin- tendent since 1947. He was Lexington’s mayor from its incorporation as a city in 1966 until 1971. Arthur, named to head the day-to-day operations of the buildings and grounds division at the University, has been as- 1968. He joined the University staff in 1964. Brown, sistant superintendent since newly named assistant superintendent, worked his way through the ranks from custodian to painting foreman, the posi- tion he fil’ed prior to his promotion. ROTC Exchange The W&L faculty recently approved a request from the military science depart- ment to permit students from any col- lege in the region that has no Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC) program of its own to take ROTC courses at W&L. Credits earned at Washington and Lee under the plan wil be apptied at the student’s “home” college, just as in the Eight-College Exchange Program, under which students may spend up to a full year taking a full load of academic pro- grams at any of the participating institu- tions. The ROTC program will be a more December, 1972 comprehensive exchange opportunity be- cause no restrictions will be imposed on the eligibility of other colleges, Maj. William J. Dragozetich, acting head of the department at W&L, observed. in the ROTC program at Washington and Lee will be eligible for the full range of benefits, in- cluding the $100-a-month allowance paid to students at the third-and fourth-year Students who enroll levels in the program. They will also be eligible to compete for U. S. Army schol- arships, which cover a student’s full tui- tion and book bill for an entire academic year. Deferred Giving Director Edward O. Henneman, formerly an as- sociate in the New York City law firm of Winthrop, Stimson, Putnam & Roberts, has been named director of deferred giv- ing programs and associate director of development at Washington and Lee. He began work in September. Henneman is a specialist in trust and estate law. He is a magna cum laude gra- duate of Yale University and received his LL.B. degree from Harvard University in 1962. At W&L, Henneman will administer a wide range of programs designed to provide tax-saving methods of making gifts to the University, such as pooled- income and other trust agreements. He will also provide liaison with the 42- member Estate Planning Council, com- posed of alumni throughout the nation. The council is headed by Martin P. Burks, a 1932 W&L law graduate who is now general counsel for the Norfolk & Western Railway in Roanoke. Robert who resigned as W&L’s deferred giving Henneman _ succeeds Liggitt, Edward O. Henneman director to accept a similar position at Converse College. Famed TV Series Shown The famed British television series Civilisation was shown in Lexington in W&L’s sponsorship of the art department. The duPont Auditorium under the 13 chapters in the acclaimed series were screened on successive Tuesday evenings beginning in September. Created, written, and produced by the distinguished historian Sir Kenneth Clark, Cuvvilisation traces the develop- ment of Western culture, ideas, and events over a span of 16 centuries. Man’s most exquisite paintings, architecture, sculpture, and music accompany the nar- rative, illustrating a common heritage. Grants from Xerox Corp. and the Na- 1] Campus News tional Endowment for the Humanities have enabled presentation of the series as a public service. Stuart 1s Visiting Poet See omen Dabney Stuart, professor of English and poetry editor of Shenandoah, W&L’s literary magazine, initiated the second year of the Visiting Poets Series at Vir- ginia Wesleyan College. He read selec- tions from his two collections of poetry, Diving Bell and A Particular Place. Stuart, who has also published poetry in many periodicals, including Poetry and New Yorker, has been teaching at W&L since 1965. Lectures by Phillips Dr. Charles F. Phillips Jr., professor of economics and an authority in the field of governmental utilities regulation, lectured in September at the Irving Trust Co.’s week-long Public Utilities Financial Seminar. He was one of two col-ege professors invited to participate. In October, Dr. Phillips conducted twin seminars in regulation and_ the economic characteristics of the natural gas industry. The seminars were spon- sored by the Panhandle Eastern Pipe- line Co. of Houston and Kansas City. Dr. Phillips, the author of several texts and a consultant to several utilities and financial organizations, has taught at W&L since 1959. Frat Honors Turner Dr. Charles W. Turner, professor of history, was awarded Lambda Chi Alpha’s Order of Merit award at the fraternity’s 33rd general assembly and_ leadership 12 A Retirement Surprise For 30 years Mrs. Mildred Brownlee worked in the W&L Office of Admis- sions. In September, she retired and received a little surprise. At a party for her, she was given a clock she had long admired in the office. With her above are Dean Emeritus Frank J. Gilliam, under whom she worked for two decades: Special Advisor to the President R. N. Latture; Admissions Director James D. Farrar; and University President Robert Huntley. Wel « & -s a — seminar in Portland, Ore., in August. The award is conferred by the fraternity’s board of directors who single out mem- bers of the fraternity whose work within the organization has not been publicly acclaimed. Since 1947, Dr. Turner has served the Lambda Chi Alpha chapter at W&L in such positions as chapter advisor, alumni advisory board member, house corpora- tion secretary-treasurer, financial advisor, and a!umni association secretary-treasur- er. This record of 25 years of continuous service in all these functions is unpre- cedented in the W&L chapter and is one of the most outstanding in the general fraternity. Yevich Reports Votes Robert H. Yevich, manager of the Laboratory Press division of the Univer- sity’s journalism department, was Vir- ginia state manager for the joint election- reporting service of the three national television networks and the two major wire services. Yevich, a 1970 graduate of Washing- ton and Lee, took a two-month leave of absence from his duties at the Univer- sity to organize the massive tallying en- Central operation were in Richmond. terprise. offices for the state Returns were counted and reported by News Election Service both on a precinct- by-precinct and county-by-county basis. Yevich supervised more than 2,300 em- pioyees and worked closely with clerks and electoral boards in each Virginia county and independent city. Baremore Scholars Lawrence E. Evans Jr., a senior from Pasadena, Tex., and Bryan E. McNeill, a junior from New Orleans have been awarded honor scholarships in memory of the late Tommy Mac Baremore, an outstanding debater at Washington and Lee who died in a drowning accident in 1968 shortly before he was to graduate. The scholarship was established by Baremore’s mother, Mrs. R. E. Baremore of Shreveport, La., and a number of her son’s friends. Baremore was a leading de- bater in each of his years at W&L and Pennies from Heaven? We have a little story that should instill some hope back into the hearts of those despairing friends of the W&L Honor System. The other day, the man- ager of the Bookstore decided to try to attract some of the Commerce School jocks. Well, what better way to attract young businessmen other than to shower the display table with money. So amidst copies of The Wall Street Jungle and Up the Organization, Mrs. Munger (manager) arranged a dollar’s worth of pennies. Several days later, just for fun, the coins were counted. It turned out that the total had become $1.30. So, Watchdogs of the Honor System, take heart; your baby is not only alive and kicking in the Bookstore, but it’s accruing interest as well. December, 1972 —An Editorial in the Ring-tum Phi had qualified the debate team for the National Invitational Debate ‘Tourna- ment only one day before his death. ‘The faculty voted him a posthumous B. A. degree in recognition of his achievements as a student. Both scholarship holders are members of the debate team. Evans is president of the team and of the University’s Pre- Law Society. He is also chairman of the Student Recruitment Neill is a Dean’s List student, a member Committee. Mc- of Pi Kappa Phi social fraternity, and on the staff of the student-operated radio station, WLUR-FM. Evans is majoring in politics, and McNeill in German and history. New Book by Spencer Dr. Edgar W. Spencer, professor of geology and head of the department, is the author of a new book, The Dyna- mics of the Earth, published by Thomas Y. Crowell Co. of New York. It is the fourth of Dr. Spencer’s books to be published by Crowell. Another publisher, McGraw Hill, has re-issued Dr. Spencer’s Introduction to the Structure of the Earth in paperback as part of its international series. The publication was in response to foreign interest in the text, first published in 1969. Dr. Spencer, a W&L graduate, has been a member of the faculty since 1957. He holds the Ph.D. in geology from Colum- bia University. Debate Season Opens The debate team opened its season in September by being host to the Washing- ton and Lee University Invitational De- 13 —— 7 ee ee oe _=- - 7 - - 7 7 - - : ’ . - . 7 - > . : : Ee . 2 be oe : - . - ‘ f, ed the rored by Gov. tht) and Mrs. Holton = a : 4 a 1e nation’s capital, ; y tt ‘ Robert Paxton dedicates book to former teachers Dr. Robert O. Paxton, a 1954. gradu- ate of Washington and Lee, is the au- thor of a major new book on Vichy France. He dedicated the work to three of his former teachers, two of them W&L professors—Dr. William A. Jenks and Dr. James G. Leyburn. The other is Henry W. Bragdon, under whom Dr. Paxton studied at Phillips Exeter Academy. The dedication cites them as “teachers, schol- ars, exemplars.” The book is entitled Vichy France: Old Guard and New Order, 1940-1944 and was published by Alfred A. Knopf. It was chosen as an alternate se‘ection for November by the History Book Club. Dr. Paxton, a native of Lexington, is now professor of history at Columbia University. Before that, he taught at the University of California at Berkeley and at the State University of New York at Stony Brook. He was valedictorian at Washington and Lee and a Rhodes Schol- ar at Oxford, where he received an M. A. degree. He received his Ph.D. degree from Harvard. Dr. Jenks is William R. Kenan, Jr., professor of history at W&L and head of the department; Dr. Leyburn is profes- sor emeritus of sociology and was dean of the University from 1947 to .1955. Dr. Leyburn retired from teaching last June. The book is an important contribu- tion in the field of modern Western Eu- ropean history. The jacket says of the work: “Uncompromising, often startling, meticulously documented—this book is an account of the government, and the governed, of co‘laborationist France. “Basing his work on captured German archives and contemporary materials rather than on self-serving postwar me- moirs or war-trial testimony, Professor December, 1972 Dr. Robert O. Paxton Paxton maps out the complex nature of the ill-famed Vichy government, showing that it in fact enjoyed mass participation. The majority of Frenchmen in 1940 fear- ed social disorder as the worst imaginable evil and rallied to support the state, thereby bringing about the betrayal of the nation as a whole. ‘The book lays bare the power struggle between Petain, Laval, and Darlan, their relationships with the Germans, and La- val’s attempts to nudge a suspicious Hit- ler toward a_ Franco-German alliance against Britain; it looks at their social reforms, some good, some farcical, and re- veals that their programs, included the persecution of the Jews, emanated less from any compulsion on the German side than from long-festering internal conflicts; it examines the (belated) rise of the Resistance and the deadly enmity of Dr. James G. Leyburn EPHH « 1700 wo isi4c. _ Dr. William A. Jenks General de Gaulle to the regime. conclusions are that “Professor Paxton’s devastating—he proves collabora- tionist Vichy France, contrary to com- forting myth, obtained for Frenchmen no better treatment than that accorded to the fully occupied nations, and that its very sovereignty turned out to be a ne- gotiating liability rather than a trump. As a result, his book also sheds consider- abie light on French politics and the fate of the country since the war.” Dr. Paxton lectured at Washington and Lee in 1969 under the sponsorship of the University Center in Virginia. His subject was “General de Gaulle: The General as World Strategist.” He is also the author of Parades and Politics at Vichy: The French Officer Corps under Marshal Petain, published in 1966 by the Princeton University Press. 15 The three fall sports at Washington and Lee—football, soccer—were doing well at the end of October. The football team had a 3-3 record, the cross-country team had only cross-country, and two losses, and the soccer team had a creditable record of 4-1-2. In _ football, defeated Westminster College, 21-14, in the first the Generals game, ending Westminster’s string of 22 victories, the longest regular season winning streak in the co'lege division. W&L overwhelmed Towson State, 538-0, and won a Homecoming victory, 35-25, over a persistent Sewanee team. The losses were to Centre, 15-14, to a very Chappy Conrad hauls in winning TD pass December, 1972 Fall sports are off to good start strong Hampden-Sydney team, 34-6, and to Western Maryland, 29-7. Remaining on the schedule were Southwestern, Deni- son, and Washington University. The cross-country runners seemed headed for a brilliant season, led by sophomore sensation Stu Nibley and backed by the best depth in many years. The team had suffered only two setbacks at the end of October, losing to Bridge- water in a direct meeting and coming in second to Bridgewater in a Virginia Athletic W&L in which seven teams participated. Association meet at College The team defeated Centre, won over all other teams in a four-way meet at Roa- against Westminster.. Cross-country Coach Dick noke College, and recorded victories over VMI and Davidson. Nibley set a new record in his first intercollegiate meet at He shaved 19 Centre course record, touring the four- Centre. seconds off the mile course in 21:05. He also led the vic- tories over VMI and Davidson. ‘The experience returning from last year, had soccer team, with considerable wins over Eastern Mennonite, Lynch- burg, VMI, and Randolph-Macon. The team tied Indiana University and Roa- noke, and lost only to Madison College. A fuller roundup of fall sports activi- ties will appear in a later issue of the magazine. Miller ponders strategy. 17 Le - \¢ Meeting without prior design on vacation at Myrtle Beach, S.C. were members of the Class of 1949: John Schoenfeld, Matt Paxton Jr., and W. Hugh Moomaw. chasing field, most recently with the Airco Speer Carbon-Graphite Co. of Niagara Falls. He has been a member of the Purchasing Management Association of Buffalo since 1963. 1946 Bric. GEN. Guy E. HAIRSTON JR. is com- mander of the School of Military Science at Lackland Air Force Base, Tex. His recent assignments included deputy commander, 504th Tactical Air Support Group in Viet- nam. He returned to the United States in October, 1970. 1948 LesLic F. JAMES has retired and lives in Bradenton, Fla. He was associated for 17 years with the CPA firm of Bosserman, Alt, James & Stickly in Waynesboro, Va. 1949 H. DE BAUN BRYANT, general counsel and secretary of Brown & Williamson ‘Tobacco Co. in Louisville, Ky., has been elected a vice president, in charge of the legal staff and public relations department. LUTHER W. Wuite III has been elected vice president of the Virginia Foundation for Independent Colleges. The foundation is a joint fund supported by contributions from business and industry, which are shared by 12 privately controlled four-year colleges in Virginia, including Washington and Lee. 1950 JoHN H. McCorMack Jr. has been elected a trustee of Jacksonville University, in Jack- sonville, Fla. McCormack is first vice presi- dent and director of the Atlantic National Bank of Jacksonville and chairman of the board of Springfield Atlantic Bank in Jack- sonville and the Atlantic National Bank of West Palm Beach, Fla. 1951 Rogpert E. GLENN of Roanoke, Va., has been appointed to the board of Radford Col- lege by Gov. Linwood Holton. Glenn is a practicing attorney in Roanoke and_ will serve on the board for a four-year term. A. STEVENS MILEs has been named president of the First National Bank of Louisville, Ky. Miles joined First National in 1954 and became executive vice president of the bank- ing division in 1969. December, 1972 Judge Turk J. Puitie THELIN has been promoted to vice president of the metropolitan and regional division for the First National Bank of Com- merce in New Orleans. Thelin joined First National in 1968. He attended Georgetown University’s School of Foreign Service. Loe ROLAND E. THOMPSON, a builder and land developer in Fairfax, Va., has been appoint- ed by Gov. Holton to the board of visitors of Longwood College in Farmville, Va. Thompson is also a director of the First Vir- ginia Bank and a member of the Fairfax Chamber of Commerce. S. MAYNARD TuRK, a member of the board of visitors of Radford College, was recently named rector of the board. Turk is a practic- ing attorney in Wilmington, Del. 1953 SEN. WILLIAM E. Brock III was awarded an honorary degree of Doctor of Laws by King College of Bristol, Va., during graduation exercises in late May. Brock is serving his first term in the U. S. Senate after eight years in the House of Representatives. He is Judge Widener a member of the Committee on Government Operations, of the Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs Committee, and of the Na- tional Commission on Consumer Finance. In 1969, he led a campus task force of con- gressmen to many college campuses to listen to the ideas of young people. Throughout his public and private career, Sen. Brock has been a leader in civic activities in Chat- tanooga, Tenn. Kermit E. HuNnbLEY has been named presi- dent of Mercantile National Bank of In- diana in Hammond. He succeeds Benton M. Wakefield, ’41. Prior to joining Mercantile, Hundley was vice chairman and chief exe- cutive officer of Citizens Bank and ‘Trust Co. in Park Ridge, Ill. He began his bank- ing career in Charleston, W.Va. with the Charleston National Bank in 1949. After graduation from law school, Hundley _be- came an officer in the trust department of Charleston National Bank. In 1956, he be- came senior vice president and executive trust officer of Houston (Tex.) Bank and Trust Co. Hundley has lectured widely and is a contributing author to the South Texas Law Journal. ALDEN M. PITARD is the industrial and labor Two Law Alumni Are Named to Federal Judgeships Two alumni of the Washington and Lee School of Law were tapped in Sep- tember by President Nixon for places in the federal judiciary. Judge H. Emory Widener Jr. of Bristol, Va., Class of 1953, was appointed to the Richmond-based 4th U. S. Circuit Court of Appeals, and State Sen. James C. Turk of Radford, Va., Class of 1952, was named to succeed Judge Widener on the bench of the U. S. District Court for Western Virginia. Judge Widener had been on the Wes- tern District bench since July, 1969, and had been senior judge since 1970. He graduated from the U. S. Naval Acad- emy and saw regular naval duty during World War II before entering law school at W&L. After graduation, he practiced law with his father, who was one of the few Republican lawyers in the old Demo- cratic-dominated Ninth District in South- west Virginia. Judge Widener is a close friend and adviser of U. S. Rep. William C. Wampler. Sen. Turk received his undergraduate degree from Roanoke College before at- tending law school. He was elected to the Virginia Senate in 1959, the only public office he ever sought, and was the GOP’s Senate minority leader. In 1969, he was co-chairman of Gov. Linwood Holton’s successful campaign for governor. He was a member of a Radford law firm that has produced two high judges: Rich- ard Poff, a former Republican congress- man who is on the Virginia Supreme Court and Ted Dalton, who was a U. S. District judge until his retirement. 19 SS — ; a am em a ee ~ OO = rm oN ee me me ee mem ce a . : : ; - - ae IT. T. Moore Jr., ’63 M. F. Rose, *63 BORN: Mr. and Mrs. ALAN M. CorRWwIN, a daughter, Lisa Anne, on Aug. 5, 1972. Cor- win is temple educator for Temple Beth Sholom in Santa Ana, Calif. He is respon- sible for a varied program including ad- ministration and supervision of a_ school With an enrollment of approximately 500 students. 1963 Joun P. Harcourt has been appointed as- sistant secretary to Gov. Nelson Rockefeller of New York. He had been serving as special program associate on the governor’s staff. He worked in banking before joining the gov- ernor’s staff in 1970. Tuomas T. Moore Jr. of Charlotte, N. C. has been promoted to assistant vice president at North Carolina National Bank. He join- ed NCNB in 1967 after two years on active duty with the U. S. Army. Moore has been a systems planning officer at the bank. MEADE F. Rose has been promoted to an assistant vice president of the Philadelphia National Bank. He joined the bank in 1966. Until May, 1971, SHERWooD W. WISsE Jr. was at the Swiss Federal Institute of Tech- nology in Zurich on a_ postdoctoral fellow- ship. He then spent two months at sea aboard the deep sea drilling project’s D/V Glomay Challenger as a staff micropaleon- tologist. Wise has now joined the faculty at Florida State University as an assistant pro- fessor, teaching geology, oceanography, and micropaleontology. 1964 MARRIED: Freverick H. HULETT to Martha J. Rinehart on June 10, 1972. The couple lives in Meridian, Miss., where he is vice president of Hulett Furniture Co. WILLIAM McC. Scnuitpt, who until Aug. | was an associate dean of students and co- ordinator of the freshman year at Wash- ington and Lee, is now an associate of the law firm of Miles & Stockbridge in Balti- more. He graduated from the W&L Law School with honors in 1968 and had _ been associated with the University until he be- gan the practice of law. JOHN E. MICHAELSEN has been promoted to the position of vice president for U. S. Guaranty Capital, a wholly-owned lending subsidiary of U. S. Financial Inc. Michael- December, 1972 sen, who directs the loan underwriting for the firm, joined USGC in 1971. 1965 Wooparpd D. OpeNno for the past year has participated in archaeological excavations in Salamis, Cypress, and Corinth, Greece. He studied at the America School of Classi- cal Studies at Athens and then returned there in the fall to work on his Ph.D. dis- sertation for the art history department of the University of Michigan. 1966 MARRIED: JAMES GREGG BUCKEY to Mari- lyn Meyers of Akron, Ohio, on June 24, 1972. Buckey attended the University of Cincinnati Law School and served in the Coast Guard. The couple lives in Boston, Mass. MARRIED: NATHAN’ VY. HENDRICKS to Kathryn Andrea Barnes on Aug. 19, 1972 in Griffin, Ga. Among the groomsmen were Douglas C. Morrison, ’67, Peter Kintz, ‘66, J. D. Humphries III, ’66, and Joseph L. Churchill, 69. Hendricks is associated with the Atlanta law firm of Morris, Redfern & Butler. MARRIED: SHAUN S. DONAHOE to Paula Stanley on May 27, 1972 in Apalachicola, Fla. Donahoe is employed by the U. S. Department of Agriculture and is working on a moth control project. He is also a commercial oyster fisherman. MARRIED: Epwarp B. CRosLANpd Jr. and Martha Mallory Stewart on Aug. 5, 1972. Ed is an attorney with the Securities Ex- change Commission, presently on loan to the Senate Banking Committee. BORN: Dr. and Mrs. JOHN R. BurRK, a sec- ond daughter, Jennifer Lynn Burk, on July 21, 1972. Dr. Burk is in his second year of residency at Ochsner Foundation Hospital in New Orleans. JAY Bowersox has been promoted by C&P ‘Telephone Co. to commercial manager in Easton, Md. Jay reports he has a new cot- tage on the Tred Avon River in historic Ox- ford, complete with sailboat, crab pots, and more. Dr. C. BARRETT ALLDREDGE is stationed with the U. S. Army at Fort Gordon in Augusta, Ga. His specialty is otolaryngology. After five and a half years of service with the U. S. Army Corps of Engineers, BRUCE P. Cooper is now taking graduate engineer- ing studies at Old Dominion University in Norfolk. PeTER M. pe MANio, former judge of the criminal court, Orange County, Fla., has been elected to a six-year term as Judge, Circuit Court Ninth Judicial Circuit, ef- fective January, 1973. 1967 MARRIED: WHucH WHARTON Scott II to Elizabeth Anne Hoke on Aug. 17, 1972, in Laramie, Wyo. The couple will make their home in Laramie, where Mrs. Scott is at- tending the University of Wyoming. BORN: Mr. and Mrs. KENNETH M. GREENE, a daughter, Diane Allison Greene, on July 12, 1972. The young lady joins an older sis- ter. The family lives in Virginia Beach, BORN: Mr. and Mrs. Puitie L. CLINE, a son, Benjamin Lee Cline, on Feb. 29, 1972. Cline is currently working towards his doctorate in economics at Oklahoma State University. He is a part-time instructor and an NDEA fellow. ANDREW N. BAtr has been elected a_ vice president of Mercantile Trust Co. in St. Louis, Mo. Prior to joining Mercantile, he was with the First National Bank of At- lanta, Ga. After receiving an MBA from Harvard in June, PHILANDER P. CLAxTON III is currently associated with Davidge and Co. in Wash- ington, D. C. He is also president of Uni- versity Enterprises, Ltd. and is attending Georgetown University Law School. 1968 MARRIED: Lars H. Horan to Jane Ellen Egan on July 29, 1972, in Rockford, Hl. Holtan is a system representative for Honey- well Information Systems, Inc. MARRIED: Artuur M. MEYER Jr. to Kathy Lynn Magee on Aug. 26, 1972 in Dallas. Meyers attends the University of Texas Law School in Austin. BORN: Mr. and Mrs. Ropert A. a son, James Kearns Cashill, on 1972. CASHILL, May 23, BORN: Mr. and Mrs. CHARLES C. LEWIS, a 21 Class Notes oe tone. Rebecca Dollins Lewi is, on Aug. , 1972. Lewis is a practicing attorney with the firm of. ae and Titeny in Warren- ton, Va. “BORN: Mr. and Mrs. ARNOLD STEPHAN GRANpis, a daughter, Evelyn _ Francina, on Dec. 31, 1971. Arnold is in his fifth year at Duke Medical Center. He expects to com- plete his genetics. research in June, 19738, and receive a Ph.D. in biochemistry. Recently promo ed Lr James W. WHITE-— HEAD JR. is stationed aboard the U. S. Navy Aircraft Carrier John F. Kennedy now in the Mediterranean, me is a L radar intercept officer, Me | A. Ropnry Boren is enrolled at - Thunder- bird Graduate School of International Man- agement in Glendale, Ariz. The school, founded in 1946, is devoted exclusively to _ pean ‘men and “women for international careers. | 969 | MARRIED: Siete “SHARP to” Lynn Cawley “30, 1971 in Denton, Md. Sharp is curren eral Counsel, Federal ~ Communications Com- mision in Washington, D. C. He expects to receive his J.D. degree at the University. of ‘Virginia in Decem re 1972. 7 MA RRIED: Ray ve M. Hock (Hollins, 69) on June 17, 1972, in Richmond, Va. Among: the groomsmen were classmates: John L. Johnson and William H. Graddy. Having c mpleted military service with the U. S. Navy, H Law School in September. MARRIED: LEsuiE STUART CARTER to Cor- delia Wheeler Exton on Sept. 9, 1972 in Southport, Conn. The couple will make their home in. Pittsburgh, Pa., where the — bridegroom is in the trust _ department of the Union National Bank. BORN: Mr. and Mrs. CLARK Carrer, a son, Read Allen Carter, on March 11, 1972. For- _ merly on the staff at McDonough School, ‘Carter has. recently | become associated with the Baltimore insurance agency of Mason & Carter, Inc. Davin R. HACKETT operates the Community Legal Aid Society, Inc. in Sussex County, Del. He counsels lower-income residents in problems ranging from consumer protection to tenant rights. — 220 ly working in the Office of the Gen- HARTWELL to Katherine Hartwell entered WEL | After receiving an MBA from the Univer- sity of Virginia, R. STEPHENS PANNILL has joined the staff of the First National Bank of Martinsville, Va. W. Cart WALKER received a J. D. degree from. the University of Virginia in June, 1972. He is now with the creative staff of | Batten, Barton, Durstine & Osborne, Inc., an advertising firm ine New, York City. Harry M. (HANK) Wutson II, after receiv- ing his Jaw degree from the University of Florida, is practicing in Jacksonville with the firm of Smith, oe Schwalbe, Spraker one Nichols. 1970 IED: “Martin. B. Turpin to Pamela Gay Firebaugh. on July, 22, 1972, in Rich- mond, Va. Turpin has recently been ap- pointed the Central Illinois | and Western Indiana sales’ representative for the Lane — Furniture Co. of Altavista, Va. The couple lives in ‘Springfield, oor MARRIED: MICHAEL C. G. NEER to, Cor- nelia Lee Kittle on Sept. 23, 1972. Ensign Neer is serving as a physical education | in- structor and a basketball coach at the U. S. Naval Academy at Annapolis. His bride is a stewardess | for Pan American Airways. “MARRIED: RICHARD Pp. “Lasko to Charlotte Jane Perry on July” 8, 1972, in Malverne, LI. Lasko practices: law in New York City. MARRIED: HucH BUCKLER| GuILL to Vic- toria Kathryn Simmons on Aug. 5, 1972 in Stamford, Conn. Having completed a tour of military duty in Vietnam, Guill entered Wharton Graduate School of Business in September. GEORGE F. BATEH worked this summer in the state attorney’ s office in Jacksonville, Fla. He is in his third year at the Univer- sity of Florida Law School. LARRY MANN studied ironmongery in Eng- land, Denmark, and Greece. He is back in Lexington with the blacksmith, Manly Brown, working primarily with wrought iron, turning out articles which are artistic and practical. ae Homer L. ‘(MICKEY ) Mixson is entering | his second year at Harvard Law School. Dur- ing his first year, Mixson won the Williston competition and placed third in the Ames competition. five law students _ being accepted, ; MARRIED: Wi1amM A. G Aine : a daughter, Rebecca Kern, on i 1 family lives in Newark, Del. 197] MARRIED: SHELBY WAYNE WEDDLE nie Jaye Blake on July 8, 1972, Va. oe . , ee MARRIED: youn G. STAFFORD > JR. thia Lee Eustace on July 8, 1972 chapel at the Quantico Marine Stafford is stationed at Camp Lejet after completing the field artillery course at Fort Sill, Okla. me ae De OM Tp ~~ => yo a Jor ToMPKINs Jr, currently | atten Harvard Law School, has been | into a joint degree program betwe vard Law School and the John F School of Government. It is a_ fe program and upon completion, Tc will receive his J.D. degree and a ' Master of Public Policy. The f highly selective with normally on 1979, Anne Lynn Williams on- July + Danville, Va. ied isa practicin, MARRIED: Kennet Bruce} Robin Lea Dickler on July | 30, Roanoke. The couple will live i Rouge, La “a. MARRIED: A. Scort Nrrst to | Felerski on July 8, 1972, in Iron N. Y. MARRIED: a T. ‘ous, Anne Tucker on June 11, 1972. | make their home in Baltimore. | BORN: Mr. and Mrs. JOHN A. The young lady joins an older | law clerk for the Delaware Suprem In n. Vl emoriam MAURICE Moore, former vice pre | Lynchburg National Bank and_ ‘1895 Lynchburg Cotton Mill Co., died 1972, at the Medical Care Center i burg. Moore was associated | oT He was secretary, treasurer, and v dent of the Lynchburg Cotton Mill | Inc. in New York City, in Palo Alto, Calif. 1921 | a 1972, i ted before the American trical ah ane One of TON of Shreveport, La., died “Melton was secretary-treas- . Hodges Industries, Inc., and ee is “and Pawleye Island, _ C.,, “1972 , after serious surgery. ed as assis ant legal counsel “died Taly, 25, y of comune ood, N. Je had retired Court / justice of New York, died Sept. ‘19, (1972, in Bridgewaters, N. Y. Gov. Thomas _E. Dewey appointed Ritchie in 1947 to i a vacancy as county judge of Suffolk County. His appointment as Supreme Court Justice for the 10th Judicial District came in Au- . gust, 1952. 1996 RADFORD KEIGHTLEY GIMSON, a chemist for the Alpha Portland Cement Co., died July former vice president of, “972, Grimley If you wish to receive the = campus —_— “the A. 7 J. and Nona Trigg” Address Zip Code 19, 1972, in Somers Point, N. J. Before re- tiring in 1967, Gimson was with Alpha Ce- ment for A years in LaSalle, Ill., and Eas- ton, Pa. 1932 ROBERT M. AveENT, a former attorney with the St. Joe Paper Co. in Jacksonville, Fla., died June 10, 1971. He was a Navy Lieu- tenant Commander in World War II and was also licensed by the Florida Real Estate ‘Commission. | . a 1937 Jack BRADLEY PIERCE, formerly in the in- vestment and security field and associated with A. I. Shatswell & Co., bank examiners and auditors of Boston, died Nov. 19, 1971. ae 1941 LATHAM L. THIGPEN Jr. ‘general manager of Westvaco Corp. in Baltimore and vice presi- dent of the Maryland Kidney Foundation, died Sept. 8, 1972. T higpen | joined the West Virginia” Pulp” and Paper Co. in 1946 and Was associated primarily with the Hinde and Dauch division, one of the nation’s leading producers of shipping containers and other corrugated products. Thigpen | Was a native of Richmond, Va. RoBert NELSON VAN DER VoorT JR., | Setauket, N. Y., in July, (1972. An_ active conservationist and a member of the Con- -servationists United for Long Island, he had recently completed a plan to prevent the loss of ground water by recharging sewage. After service in Wor Id War II, Van der Voort joined General Bronze Corp., where he worked for more than 20 years. 1946 ALLISON NAILOR| MILLER JR., president of the N. Miller Development Co., died “Aug. 28, 1972, in Potomac Falls, Md. The firm is engaged in development of resi- dential sites. Miller became president of the mpany in 1951. He was a member of the— board of directors of the Security Storage Co. of Washington, the Potomac National Bank, and the Washington Brick and Terra Cotta Co. He was also a member of the Washington Board of Realtors, the Wash- ington Home Builders’ Association, and the Metropolitan Washington Board of Trade. He was a founder of the Potomac Polo Club. | | 23 died in > . oe -; With Crest in Five Colors The chair is made of birch and rock maple, hand-rubbed in black with gold trim and arms finished in cherry. It makes a welcome gift for Christmas, birthdays, anniversaries, or wed- dings. All profit from sales of the chair goes to the scholarship fund in memory of John Gra- ham, ’14. Price: $44.50 f.0.b. Gardner, Massachusetts Mail your order to WASHINGTON AND LEE ALUMNI, INC. Lexington, Virginia 24450 Please allow five to six weeks for shipment after your order is placed. WASHINGTON AND LEE UNIVERSITY Lexington, Virginia 24450 ox Ag Use Order Form Below: ROCKBRIDGE CHAPTER—W&L P.O. Box 948 Lexington, Virginia 24450 Please send me the items checked below. Make checks payable to Rockbridge Chapter—WeL. [ ] Large ice bucket, $45.00 each plus $2 handling and postage. [ ] Small ice bucket, $37.50 each plus $2 handling and postage. [ | Big tray, $15.00 each plus $1 handling and postage. [ j Round tray, $9.00 each plus $1 handling and postage. HORT e eee ee eene Rey ON ORE Zip Virginia residents add 4% sales tax. Payne Of $00. is enclosed. WASHINGTON AND LEE ICE BUCKETS AND TRAYS The Rockbridge Chapter of the Washington and Lee Alumni Association, by authority of the Alumni Board of Directors, is offering these handsome ice buckets and trays for sale to raise funds for the University. Manufactured by the Bacova Guild, they are made of durable fiber glass and bear the Washington and Lee crest in full color. The ice buckets have hand-rubbed mahogany tops. They are a welcome addition to any home. All profit from sale of these items goes to the scholarship fund in memory of John Graham, ’14. Income from the fund helps worthy students attend Washington and Lee. THE PRICES: Large ice bucket (three gallons) $45.00 plus $2 handling and postage. Small ice bucket (five quarts) $37.50 plus $2 handling and postage. Big tray, (16x21) $15.00 plus $1 handling and. postage. Round tray (14 inches) $9 plus $1 handling and postage. Virginia residents add 4% sales tax. < ~ ee ~ +<