.¢ the alumni magazine of washington and lee university APRIL 1973 Z [ A / ichti W. Davis 100th Anniversary A New Biography The Complete Man William H. Harbaugh Non Incautus Futuri Robert S. Ke ’eryelope Gilliatt Carolyn Kizer Denise Levertov Mary McCarthy Gail Dudley Non Incautus Futuri Contact 1973 Frank Mankie awyer New Trustees Non Incautus Futuri Thomas D. Anderson J. Alvin Philpott Non Incautus Futuri Glasgow Endowment S: »yédan James Dickey Dick Gregory Non Incautus Futuri Campus News New Law School Building Contract Development Prog fe Woman of Letters in the Modern World Barbara Deming Penelope Gilliatt Carolyn Kizer Denise Levertov Mary McCarthy C teport John M. Stemmons 36 by *76 Non Incautus Futuri Washington and Lee Commerce Review Black Culture Week New St ny Incautus Futuri Contact 1973 Frank Mankiewicz Betty Friedan James Dickey Dick Gregory Non Incautus Futuri Campus Yfficers Coeducation Yes Non Incautus Futuri Winter Athletics Wrestling Swimming Basketball John E. Hughes Non Incautus |] School Building Contract Development Program Progress Report John M. Stemmons 36 by °76 Non Incautus Futuri Washingto ws Lynchburg Citation Frances and Sydney Lewis Chapter Correspondents Class Notes Washington and Lee Chair Commenc *ommerce Review Black Culture Week New Student Body Officers Coeducation Yes Non Incautus Futuri Winter Athletics Wre jh Memoriam Washington and Lee Ice Buckets and Trays Non Incautus Futuri Now Is The Time For All Good Men To Come T asketball John E. Hughes Non Incautus Futuri Chapter News Lynchburg Citation Frances and Sydney Lewis Chapter Corresp: Vashington and Lee University John W. Davis 100th Anniversary A New Biography The Complete Man William H. Harbaugh N \:4es Washington and Lee Chair Commencement Schedule In Memoriam Washington and Lee Ice Buckets and Trays Non Inca -Wuri Robert S. Keefe Country Lawyer Non Incautus Futuri New Trustees Thomas D. Anderson J. Alvin Philpott Non Incautt ‘ow Is The Time For All Good Men To Come To The Aid Of Washington And Lee University John W. Davis 100th Anniversar, lasgow Endowment Symposium The Woman of Letters in the Modern World Barbara Deming Penelope Gilliatt Carolyn Kizer ee The Complete Man William H. Harbaugh Non Incautus Futuri Robert S. Keefe Country Lawyer New Trustees Non I ary McCarthy Gail Dudley Non Incautus Futuri Contact 1973 Frank Mankiewicz Betty Friedan James Dickey Dick Gregory | {Hiomas D. Anderson J. Alvin Philpott Non Incautus Futuri Glasgow Endowment Symposium The Woman of Letters in the Mo \turi Campus News New Law School Building Contract Development Program Progress Report John M. Stemmons 36 by ’76 Fikbara Deming Penelope Gilliatt Carolyn Kizer Denise Levertov Mary McCarthy Gail Dudley Non Incautus Futuri Contact 19’ hturi Washington and Lee Commerce Review Black Culture Week New Student Body Officers Coeducation Yes Non Incautus dankiewicz Betty Friedan James Dickey Dick Gregory Non Incautus Futuri Campus News New Law School Building Contract 4thletics Wrestling Swimming Basketball John E. Hughes Non Incautus Futuri Chapter News Lynchburg Citation Frances and | , ogram Progress Report John M. Stemmons 36 by ’76 Non Incautus Futuri Washington and Lee Commerce Review Black Cul _apter Correspondents Class Notes Washington and Lee Chair Commencement Schedule In Memoriam Washington and Lee Ic “ew Student Body Officers Coeducation Yes Non Incautus Futuri Winter Athletics Wrestling Swimming Basketball John E. Hu ‘rays Non Incautus Futuri Now Is The Time For All Good Men To Come To The Aid Of Washington And Lee University John ~vautus Futuri Chapter News Lynchburg Citation Frances and Sydney Lewis Chapter Correspondents Class Notes Washington aniversary A New Biography The Complete Man William H. Harbaugh Non Incautus Futuri Robert S. Keefe Country Lawyer _ mmencement Schedule In Memoriam Washington and Lee Ice Buckets and Trays Non Incautus Futuri Now Is The Time For Wweuri New Trustees Thomas D. Anderson J. Alvin Philpott Non Incautus Futuri Glasgow Endowment Symposium The Womat 9 Come To The Aid Of Washington and Lee University John W. Davis 100th Anniversary A New Biography The Complete Mz ‘ne Modern World Barbara Deming Penelope Gilliatt Carolyn Kizer Denise Levertov Mary McCarthy Gail Dudley Non Incautus " trbaugh Non Incautus Futuri Robert S. Keefe Country Lawyer Non Incautus Futuri New Trustees Thomas D. Anderson J. A _273 Frank Mankiewicz Betty Friedan James Dickey Dick Gregory Non Incautus Futuri Campus News New Law School Build | ‘on Incautus Futuri Glasgow Endowment Symposium The Woman of Letters in the Modern World Barbara Deming Penelope ' ¢velopnient Program Progress Report John M. Stemmons 36 by *76 Non Incautus Futuri Washington and Lee Commerce Rev KG er Denise Levertov Mary McCarthy Gail Dudley Non Incautus Futuri Contact 1973 Frank Mankiewicz Betty Friedan James ek New Student Body Officers Coeducation Yes Non Incautus Futuri Winter Athletics Wrestling Swimming Basketball John Ry | pesory Non Incautus Futuri Campus News New Law School Building Contract Development Program Progress Report John N Acautus Futuri Chapter News Lynchburg Citation Frances and Sydney Lewis Chapter Correspondents Class Notes Washington "by ’76 Non Incautus Futuri Washington and Lee Commerce Review Black Culture Week New Student Body Officers Coedu ymmencement Schedule In Memoriam Washington and Lee Ice Buckets and Trays Non Incautus Futuri Now Is The Time Fo von Incautus Futuri Winter Athletics Wrestling Swimming Basketball John E. Hughes Non Incautus Futuri Chapter News Lync ' Come To The Aid Of Washington And Lee University John W. Davis 100th Anniversary A New Biography The Complete M gt Oe te ee Tne Ob nn tan Onwenanandanta Cane Matac Wachinatan andl aa Chair Cammencement Schedule In Memo: Mh the alumni magazine of washington and lee Volume 48, Number 3, April 1973 William €. Washburn 740.000.000.000... ce eect Editor Romulus T. Weatherman...................... Managing Editor Robert S. Keefe, ’68................0.cccceeees Associate Editor Mrs, Jopoe Cartets 00.0000 a, Editorial Assistant Robert .LOchhart..i icici. ccd redid agalaaetieae Photographer TABLE OF CONTENTS John W. Davis oo... ccc iene etree ] Country Lawyer ooo... eee 4 Two New Trustees ........0...20000 ieee 5 Glasgow Symposium ............0. ce 6 Contact 1973 o....cccccccc cece cece tte teenieen 10 Campus News... cc etter 13 Development Progress Report «0.0.0.0... 15 Winter Sports Roundup ........0......c cee 23 Chapter News 0.0... eerie 25 Class Notes ....0.0cccccccceccetecetee eect terettteseeten 27 In Memoriam o..........00ccccccc cette ve BQ Published in January, March, April, May, July, September, November 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 Alumni, Inc., Lexington, Virginia 24450. Second class postage paid at Lexington, Virginia 24450, with additional mailing privileges at Roanoke, Virginia 24001. Officers and Directors Washington and Lee Alumni, Inc. A. CHRISTIAN ComMPpTON, ’50, Richmond, Va. President Upton BEALL, 51, Tyler, ‘Texas Vice President T. Hat Crarkg, ’38, Washington, D.C. Treasurer WILLIAM C. WasHsurn, ’40, Lexington, Va. Secretary RicuHarp D. HAYNES, ’58, Dallas, ‘Texas Wituiam H. Hitter, ’38, Chicago, Ill. VERNON W. HOLLEMAN, JR., 58, Washington, D.C. C. Royce House, III, 59, Winston-Salem, N.C. Tueopore M. Kerr, ’57, Midland, ‘Texas J. PETER G. MUHLENBERG, 50, Wyomissing, Pa. J. Atvin Puitrott, 45, Lexington, N.C. BEAUREGARD A. REDMOND, ’55, New Orleans, La. EVERETT TUCKER, JR., ’34, Little Rock, Ark. q On the cover: Our cover is a kind of typist’s free association on the contents of this magazine and the people who contributed to it. The red, white, and blue presentation symbolizes Washington and Lee’s participation in the American Bicentennial to be celebrated in 1976, the year in which the Uni- versity hopes to complete the first phase of its de- cade-long Development Program. For a report on the first year’s effort of that program, see Page 15. by William H. Harbaugh W&L Trustee John W. Davis: a view from a new biography ~— This is the 100th anniversary of the birth of John W. Davis, who was one of Washington and Lee’s most illustrious and dedicated alumni and perhaps the most distinguished American lawyer of his time. He was born on April 13, 1873, in Clarksburg, W.Va. William H. Harbaugh, professor of history at the University of Virginia, has gust completed a new biography, Lawyer’s Lawyer: The Life of John W. Davis, to be published in November by Oxford Uni- versity Press. This article is excerpted from “The Complete Man,” a chapter in that biography, and ts printed here by permission. Copyright © 1973 by Oxford University Press. For 27 years Davis’ conviction, as expressed to the president of Washington and Lee at the end of World War II, that ‘“‘we can afford to stick to ‘whatever things are true’ a long time yet,” governed his conduct as a member of his Alma Mater’s Board of ‘Trustees. One of those ‘things’ was academic freedom. A first, and inconclusive, test arose back in 1926 when a bright young professor of criminal law gave his class a breezily phrased examination on five hypothetical cases involving sexual or unusually gruesome incidents. Appalled by such “rot,” one of the resident ‘Trustees sent Davis a copy of the examination. “This strikes me as the Harvard method carried to its ultimate limit,” Davis replied. “I would be glad to have any further samples.” Davis was detained in New York when the Board voted to give the professor a terminal contract that June. With his usual kindliness, however, he recommended the professor for a position in the National City Bank the following year. Five years later the desire of a fellow Board mem- ber to endow a chair of Bible with $25,000 produced a considerably more awkward situation. ‘The prospective donor stipulated that the occupant must “hold to, acknowledge, teach and inculcate the Christian religion as being above all others the true religion,” and that he be “conservative, and not liberal or radical” in his interpretation of the Holy Scriptures. He further stipu- lated that the occupant must be removed if he “teach contrary” to those views. Davis agreed with the Presi- dent of the University, Francis P. Gaines, that the April 1973 John W. Davis gift had to be refused, and he drew up a statement of principles couched in jurisdictional terms. ‘he Board’s absolute discretion to remove a professor, he asserted, should not be compromised; no donor of a chair had the right ‘‘to limit the academic freedom of the oc- cupant either as to the substance, the scope, or the matter of his teaching.” How far Davis would have defended freedom as an absolute right of students and faculty is conjectural, for Washington and Lee never produced a hard case. Assuredly, he fretted over reports of rampant New Dealism on campus. He wrote that he was particularly shocked to hear that some members of the law faculty approved Roosevelt’s court-packing scheme, and he questioned whether a ‘Trustee could do his duty sitting in remote seclusion. In the only specific matter John W. Davis that came before him, however, he stood firmly for freedom. In March, 1935, one of Davis’ classmates reported that Secretary of Agriculture Henry A. Wallace and Lucy Mason, an intimate of Secretary of Labor Frances Perkins, had been invited to speak at Washington and Lee; also that permission had been granted interested students to form a chapter of the left-wing League of Industrial Democracy. ‘““Ye Gods—in the name of... the conservative University that we knew,” wrote the classmate, “I protest.’”” Meanwhile, Newton D. Baker, one of Davis’ fellow Trustees, dismissed the com- plaint with the remark that the real trouble was ‘‘professors who lack manners and intellectual humility rather than... professors who have dangerous notions.” Before Davis could reply to the original protest, President Gaines reported that Miss Mason’s speech had been entirely innocuous and that the invitation to Wallace had been extended at the instance of Davis’ old friend, Edward A. O’ Neal, president of the American Farm Bureau and an 1898 graduate of the University. He added that the League of Industrial Democracy had chapters on 124 other campuses and that a ban would have brought unfavorable pub- licity. “We advised these young men that we would not tolerate... any student propaganda subversive to our basic forms of government. ... Within these restrictions the students have a right, we feel, to discuss any political theories.” Davis endorsed Gaines’ position emphatically. “Firm as I am in my own individualistic convictions,” he wrote the classmate who had raised the issue, “I do not believe in tying down the safety valve. Let these boys alone and let them listen to nonsense and they will know it when they see it.”” He appended a quota- tion from Jefferson: ... truth is great and will prevail if she is left to herself; that she is the proper and sufficient antagonist to error, and has nothing to fear from the conflict unless by human interposition disarmed of her natural weapons, free argument and debate; errors ceasing to be dangerous when it is permitted freely to contradict them. ‘That same year, 1937, brought a test of an entirely different kind of principle—federal aid to private institu- 2 Francis P. Gaines ... Davis called him “Boss.” tions. Following destruction of the law building and library by fire in 1934, Gaines and a majority of the Board decided to apply for a PWA grant. The de- cision saddened and frustrated Davis. “I do not know of any theory which justifies the Federal Government - in thus dispersing money... ,” he wrote Gaines. “I have pretty distinct ideas as to the things the Federal Government can and cannot do within its constitu- tional powers. For much of this I have my training at Washington & Lee to thank. ... Believing as I do... how can I in conscience . . . vote for its acceptance?” ‘ That was the only important difference Davis and Gaines had in 17 years of close association. Davis believed strongly and repeatedly proposed that the terms of Board membetrs be limited to 10 years. This had been a pet project of Gaines’ predecessor, Dr. Henry Louis Smith, a crusty, dominant man who had been thwarted for years by what he called the “ultra- conservatism and ... childish vanity” of even the better Board members. Smith’s special burden was the provin- cialism of local ‘Trustees: The town of Lexington simply cannot generate or build up suitable men for such a task. It is too brimful of and dominated by village views and sects and groups and standards of judgment. An institution like W. and L. is and should be inter-church, inter-state, inter-party, and all-american. A tiny ultra-patriotic group of little-business, home-grown, home-loyal, utterly secretarian villagers can neither visualize, long-for, manage, or build up a 20th century inter-state institution. They will instinctively . feel hostile toward plans and people that are different from OURS and US. Davis was understanding, though he never criticized the Lexington group so directly. Instead, he continued to push for a ten-year term. Actually, Davis had been responsible for Gaines’ appointment. On President Smith's retirement in 1930, Davis had insisted that they bring in a broad-gauged man to succeed him; and, in a rare exercise of power, he had swung the board behind Gaines, then president of Wake Forest. A cultured gentleman, polished orator, and idolator of Robert E. Lee, Gaines had turned down the presidency of the University of Minnesota shortly before going to Washington and Lee. Davis Wel a " _ es . re Bote at > — - . = - a - i a - oe - oe . : an . oe ° a - * _ being still “a country lawyer, practicing — in New York— which is all I am and all I ever wish to be.” A country lawyer, to be_ sure. For 17 years, after graduation from Washington and Lee’s ‘School of Law in 1892, he rode circuit over all the eastern counties of ‘West Virginia. His partner was his father, a graduate of Jud; at Me, Ss ee _ The post-war years in Lon- don were epee easy ones, and diplomatic s service required of even a “country” lawyer was" fit any single mold or | knowledge went, no stranger coming to England had ever so quickly and completely captured all hearts as John W. Davis... .” And in 1922 the highest honor in his colleagues’ power _to confer: the presidency of the American Bar Association. “It would have been a re- proach upon our organization if we had not made him our president,” the ABA J ournal said in its 1955 obituary.) In 1924, as every Washing- ‘ton and Lee man knows who | has ever participated in a | For "30 years. “after | ‘that tumultuous: decade of intense _ public service, Davis confined himself principally to the practice of law—the ‘ ‘country lawyer,” displaced onto Wall Street. He remained proud of the fact that he never specialized and that—despite staunch political _conserva- | tism—his legal “causes” never of selective conscientious be jection and in favor of the old “separate but tems. His conviction that ‘Alger Hiss, his friend and colleague, could not possibly have betrayed the nation was no less strong than his con-_ viction that Franklin D. Roo- sevelt’s politics were, simply, abominable. “I have never thought of myself as in any sense an indurated Tory,” he wrote to his friend Francis Pendelton Gaines in 1937. “On we: | came to be, - mained, extraordinarily close friends. They were two of only three men ever elected to membership in the Daugh- ters of the American Revolu- tion (Bernard Baruch was the third) and in private it amus- ed Davis and Gaines” to a equal” doctrine in public school sys-. and always “re- c yciation). As a Trustee he lobbied for al- most 40 years in’ favor of abolishing — malin ; trustee: tennial observance. a id inau- gurated the distinguished lec- ture series named to honor his revered Jaw teacher, John f } Anderson and Philpott are new WA&L Trustees A leading Houston, Tex., lawyer and a North Carolina furniture manufactur- ing executive have been elected to the Board of Trustees of Washington and Lee. They are Thomas D. Anderson of Houston, a 1934 graduate, and J. Alvin Philpott of Lexington, N.C., a 1947 gra- duate. Their election came at the mid- winter meeting of the Board, held in At- lanta in February. Anderson is a partner in the Hous- ton law firm of Anderson, Brown, Orn & Pressler and is president of The Boston Co. of Texas, an investment counseling service. Philpott is executive vice presi- dent of Burlington House Furniture, a division of Burlington Industries, and is a director of the Southern Furniture Manufacturers’ Association. Anderson has long been active in business and civic activities in Houston. After graduation from Washington and Lee, he joined a law firm in that city, but in 1947 became vice president of the ‘Texas National Bank. In 1956, he became president of the Texas Fund Manage- ment Co, and later was senior vice presi- dent and trust officer of Texas Com- merce Bank. He returned to the practice of law in 1965. He is a director and past president of the Museum of Fine Arts of Houston and of the city’s Grand Opera Associa- tion. He is also a board member of the Episcopal Church Foundation, the Epis- copal Diocese of Texas, and Lambuth College, which awarded him an _ honor- ary doctorate in 1967. He and his wife Helen have one son, John S. Anderson, a 1968 graduate of Washington and Lee, and two daughters, Mrs. J. David Wright of Houston and Mrs. Richard C. Streeter of Washington, D.C. April 1973 Thomas D. Anderson Philpott has been a member of the Board of Directors of the Washington and Lee Alumni Association since 1971. He has been associated with Burlington House, formerly United Furniture Co., since graduation from W&L. He too is ex- tremely active in community affairs and has been chairman of the Lexington School Board, Lexington Hospital Board, Red Cross, United Fund, Boy Scouts’ Council, and the Kiwanis Club. One son, James A. Philpott, Jr., holds his undergraduate and law degrees from W&L, and another son, Benjamin G, Philpott, is currently a junior at the University. He and his wife Helen also have a daughter, Mary Elizabeth, 14. Philpott’s brother, Harry M. Philpott, is a 1938 graduate of Washington and Lee and is now president of Auburn Uni- versity. Both men will join the Board for- mally when it meets in Lexington in May. The University’s charter authorizes J. Alvin Philpott a maximum of 22 Trustees, and the elec- tion of Anderson and Philpott bring the number now serving to 21. The other current Trustees are: John Newton Thomas, Rector, of Richmond; Robert E. R. Huntley, Prest- dent of the University, of Lexington; Joseph E. Birnie of Atlanta; James Ste- wart Buxton of Memphis; Frank C. Brooks of Baltimore; John L. Crist, Jr., of Charlotte, N.C.; E. Waller Dudley of Alexandria, Va.; Thomas C. Frost, Jr.,, of San Antonio; Joseph L. Lanier of West Point, Ga.; Sydney Lewis of Rich- mond; Joseph T. Lykes, Jr., of New Orleans; Ross L. Malone of New York City; E. Marshall Nuckols, Jr., of New- ton, Pa.; The Hon. Lewis F. Powell, Jr., of Washington, D.C.; Isadore M. Scott of Philadelphia; John M. Stemmons of Dallas; Jack W, Warner of Tuscalossa, Ala.; The Hon. John W. Warner of Washington, D.C.; and Judge Minor Wisdom of New Orleans. John by Gail Dudley Of women and literature and a changing society Will the release of women from the domestic roles of housewife and mother bring about significant social change? Are there particular ways in which women can work for the betterment of society? Five prominent female writers were invited to the Washington and Lee campus on March 7-9 to discuss these and related questions. The three-day symposium, sponsored by the University’s Glasgow Endowment Pro- eram, featured panel discussions, prose and poetry read- ings, and informal gatherings. Carolyn Kizer, poet, teacher, and founder of the literary magazine Poetry Northwest, served as panel moderator and organ- izer. Other members of the group were poet Denise Levertoy, essayist Barbara Deming, novelist Mary Mc Carthy, and film critic Penelope Gilliatt. “There is a danger for women, and therefore for women as artists (women as writers included), of falling into the trap of being expected to save the world,” Ms. Levertov told students. ‘““The necessity to save the world is a human necessity, and not one for which one gender can, or should be responsible.” Ms. Levertov, a native of England, now lives near Boston. Her long activity in the anti-war movement has influenced much of her recent poetry (Relearning the Alphabet, To Stay Alive and Footprints). While at W&L, she showed slides taken when she visited Hanoi in 1972. It is Ms. Levertov’s belief that it is impossible for the contemporary writer, as a sensitive human being, to avoid being concerned with political issues and affairs. The important thing about a poem is not whether it is political or nonpolitical, she said, but whether it springs from feeling or from opinion. She described the best poems as those which come from feeling. Ms. Levertov’s Gail Dudley is a senior English major at Hollins College. She is presently working on a study of Eudora Welty and the woman's point of view in fiction. Gail was an exchange stu- dent at Washington and Lee during the 1971-72 academic year. other volumes of poetry include The Sorrow Dance, O Taste and See, The Jacob’s Ladder and With Eyes in the Back of Our Heads. Politically concerned women must avoid taking on power within the existing structure, she said. If they do so, she fears they will inherit all the familiar consequ- ences—‘“ruthlessness, coldness, cynicism, and ulcers.” “What men and women both must work at concur- rently with changing the structures of society is the soul work, the inner work, of the greater humanization of themselves,” Ms. Levertov said. She spoke of the need to nurture a sense of “communion and community” among people. According to. Ms. Deming, who has also been active in the anti-war movement, the classification of certain personal characteristics as either masculine or feminine is a “fatal division’ that has hindered the development of both the individual and society. “The masculine has been defined pretty generally THE GLASGOW ENDOWMENT PROGRAM At his death in 1955, the late Arthur Graham Glas- gow, a distinguished engineer and an honorary alumnus of Washington and Lee, bequeathed to the University a generous sum with the following recommendation for its use: ... Such income is to be known as the “Arthur and Margaret Glasgow Endowment in proud memory of Francis Thomas Glasgow and namesakes.” It is hoped that all such income may be used to promote the art of expression by pen and tongue, including voice produc- tion and delivery. The program was inaugurated in the spring term of the 1958-59 academic year, when Miss Katherine Anne Porter, distinguished American short story writer and novelist, took up residence at Washington and Lee as the first Glasgow Visiting Professor. Subsequent artists appearing at Washington and Lee under the Glasgow program, some in terms of residence and others for briefer visits, include John Ciardi, Merle Miller, Edward Albee, Richard Eberhart, Robert Lo- well, Howard Nemerov, William Humphrey, Robert Penn Warren, Karl Shapiro, and James Dickey. Wel » as self-assertion, and the womanly has been defined as nurturing selves other than our own,” she explained. “The human truth is that each and every one of us born should both assert ourselves and live out active sym- pathy for others trying to assert themselves.” “To assign the two motions of the psyche to different sexes has tended to split asunder these two motions,” she continued. “It has brought us the world we have to- day.” Ms. Deming, who lives in Monticello, N.Y., is a for- mer film analyst for the Library of Congress. In her book, Running Away From Myself, she demonstrates how the films of the ’40’s have contributed to the for- mation of present male and female stereotypes. Her other works include Revolution and Equilibrium, Pri- son Notes, based on her arrest during a peace march, and Wash Us and Comb Us, a collection of short stories. The author voiced her hope for the evolution of a “new eroticism,’ a spiritual and physical love among all people. She also showed slides of her own trip to Vietnam and observed that it is often at times of crisis that she feels this closeness among people. An advocate of nonviolence as a means of solving both politcial and social problems, Ms. Deming 1s an outspoken member of the War Resisters’ League and has written for their anti-war magazine, WIN. All of the panel members, with the exception of Ms. McCarthy, viewed the women’s movement as a Catalyst for social change. “I am absolutely incapable of seeing the emancipatory role of women, more than one-half of the population, as being able to change civilization,’’ she said. “If there is this stereotyping, I find these figures very pathetic. ‘They only show the very pathetic cases. ‘They do not represent any real power relationships.” Ms. McCarthy, who is considered one of America’s foremost novelists, now lives in Paris. Her best-known titles include The Groves of Academe, The Company She Keeps, The Group and Birds of America. She has also written autobiography (Memoirs of a Catholic Girl- hood), travel and art criticism (The Stones of Florence and Venice Observed), literary essays and sharp com- mentaries on American involvement in Southeast Asia (Vietnam and Hanot). According to Ms. McCarthy, achieving what is com- April 1973 Barbara Deming, in student roundtable. Glasgow Symposium monly called “equality” for women might cause them to lose some valuable characteristics. ‘The woman writer, for instance, displays a certain vigor of style and concise- ness that may speak of “a tidiness of mind, a neatness, a spinsterly or housewifely quality that already belongs to a past that women’s liberators are trying to expunge, ” she said. “I value these traits and consider them almost a mark of feminine superiority.” In the past, women were spectators, rather than ac- tors in the human drama, Ms. McCarthy continued. As a result, certain feminine narrative modes emerged. She cited the novel written as an exchange of letters and the novel in diary form as examples. “Women have always excelled in the art of dialogue,” she added. This may also have something to do with their traditional roles as watchers and listeners. On the other hand, Ms. Gilliatt spoke of the “‘femi- nine” position of onlooker as one that has hampered and debilitated women. “Women who have wanted to take action publicly have often had to do it as fifth colum- nists, as saboteurs,” she said. ‘““Up to the very near past, intelligent women have had to pretend not to have brains—it might turn men off. I’m not really convinced that the situation has changed all that much.” Ms. Gilliatt, who was born in Great Britain, spends half a year as film critic for The New Yorker. She is also a short-story writer and has published two collections of stories (Come Back If It Doesn’t Get Better and No- body’s Business). Her screenplay for the movie Sunday Bloody Sunday won the New York Film Critics’ Award for the best film of 1971. While working on the film, Ms. Gilliatt said, she had problems communicating with the predominantly male movie crew. In such a position it is difficult for a woman to assert her authority, she explained. “Some married career women in the past have been so split by what is called their divided role that they have committed suicide,” she said, mentioning the sui- cide of writer Sylvia Plath. In Ms. Gilliatt’s estimation, many career women have not developed an “objective, self-chosen view of the world.” “It is still difficult for women not to adopt disguises,” she concluded. “I think women are aware of the danger now, but they still fall into it.” She pointed to the fact 8 58,535 t & Industry Joseph T. Lykes, Jr. Joseph Merrick Jones, Jr. ( Committee Partner: Frank Markoe, Jr. ON i r # ak Pe y Ps Ps > . es : : os : ; ’ a fi Pre is OF ky SO . F c ; x Pa tt o. Mie west & wt renct > Ps ¢ Po * Shes a ets Under the current master plan, shown above, the Washington and Lee campus will continue to expand to the west and the interesting topography of the Woods Creek Valley will be put to use. Construction represents 43% of the overall financial objectives of the Program. yx job opportunities and employers with a greatly enlarged interview group. The joint program has been initiated by Hollins, Sweet Briar, Randolph-Ma- con Woman’s, Lynchburg, and Roanoke Colleges and Virginia Military Institute as well as W&L. Together, the seven participating col- leges have more than 1,500 seniors — one- third of all the private-college seniors in Virginia. The new cooperative schedul- ing plan is designed to attract a larger number of businesses and other employ- ers to the area and to increase the effi- ciency of the interviewing process itself. Under the plan, students at all seven colleges will be invited to schedule ap- pointments with firms which conduct in- terviews at any one institution. New Commerce Journal The first issue of a new student pub- lication, the Washington and Lee Com- merce Review, a semi-annual journal in the fields of business, economics, and politics, appeared in March. It contains the following articles: “What Has Government Done to Our Money?” by Dr. Murray N. Rothbard, professor of economics at Brooklyn Poly- technic Institute. It deals with the philo- sophical alternative of the free market mechanism to the production, distribu- tion, and exchange of the money of a society, providing a basis for its pre- dicted work-ability and citing the ill ef- fects of an inflatable, government-con- trolled fiat currency. “The Federal Reserve System: Pro and Con” by U.S. Sen. William E. Brock, Ill, Republican of Tennesee, a 1953 graduate of W&L. It expresses a favorable view toward the record of the Federal April 1973 Need OR Keaaeaccec ss Commerce Review editors Bill McIlhany, Bill Merrill, and’ Thornton Hardie, III. Reserve System, concluding that it has been the object of much unjustified cri- ticism. “The Attack on the American Free Enterprise System” by Associate Justice Lewis F. Powell, Jr., of the U.S. Supreme Court, a 1929 graduate of W&L and a 1931 graduate of its School of Law and a member of the University Board of Trustees. This is a memorandum to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, written be- fore Powell was named to the Supreme Court. It deals with attacks on the free enterprise system by leftist groups in the U.S. and the lack of effective opposition to these groups by advocates of the free enterprise system and suggests ways in which the attacks can be met and de- feated. President Nixon’s Executive Order 11490, “Assigning Emergency Prepared- ness Functions to Federal Departments and Agencies,” with an introduction by Bill McIlhany, a W&L senior from Roa- noke, Va., a history major and a com- merce student, and leader in the John Birch Society. The commentary sees a threat to individual rights posed by arbi- trary, unconstitutional powers of the President. “The Responsibilties of Business in a Changing Society” by Stewart S. Cort, chairman of the board of Bethlehem Steel Corp. This is an analysis of popular fal- lacies regarding the nature of a business- man’s responsibilties to society, identify- ing those that are rational and that will naturally result from the profitable opera- tion of a business. “Western Technology in the Soviet Union” by Antony Sutton of the Hoover Institution at Sanford University. ‘The article is the previously unpublished con- clusions to his three-volume study of Sov- iet economic development, 1917 to 1965. The summation contends that the little- known near total dependence of the Sov- iet economy on Western technology and inventiveness has resulted from the in- ability of Soviet central planning to serve 19 team prizes - | petition at the Old | Norfolk, and anothe Citadel Invitati a ‘Competing i “ney were 60 tean ee ; Be | ss - So - - - a a - ; ; Oo So : 7 oe oe a 7 : - : - - : 7 a 7 : oe 7 - : : - ; - : 7 7 a - - + 7 - 7 : - - 7 - : - - : : : - 7 ; - - > - 7 a : - : - - - a OO . / : : . - - - : : 7 -_ - - 7 - a i a ; - : - - ; a - ; : a 7 a oe —_— oe pats See a 4, ar oe a eo eo ae oe us| ings reen 8 . lm A by John E. Hughes : a » Wrestlers and swimmers excel: basketball team Is runner-up -~ _ Washington and Lee capped off a very successful winter sports season by capturing two of three conference cham- pionships. The W&L wrestlers won the College Athletic Con- swimmers and ference titles, while the Generals’ bas- ketball team was runner-up to a very good Sewanee team. All three had winning seasons, with the basketball team finishing at 13-12, the wrestling team 13-5 in dual meet competition, and 10-2 in dual meets. In addition, the W&L swimmers and wrestlers also won state championships, the swimming team capturing the first championships of the year-old Virginia College Athletic Asso- ciation (VCAA). The VCAA is made up of 15 of the smaller colleges in Virginia. W&L was host to both championship events. track coach Norris Aldridge also reinstituted indoor Washington and Lee track for the winter, primarily as a pre- season conditioning program for outdoor track in the spring. The Generals won the Lynchburg Relays and placed fifth among eight teams (and just two points out of third) in the VCAA Indoor Meet. For Coach John Piper’s wrestlers, it was not only the first winning season in a long time, but matched the all-time record for the most wins in a season (the 1949-50 W&L wrestling team was 13-2). Seven W&L wrestlers had winning rec- ords, five won conference championships and four captured state titles in the VCAA. Doug Ford, 167-pound sopho- more, posted the best record, 13-2, while the other regulars were: Don Overdorft (118) 12-2-1; Jim Stieff (150) 12-3-1; Dan White (134) 11-3-2; Sam Lewis (177) 11-5-1; Bill Melton (142) 10-4-2; Lee Keck (126) 10-5-2; Lanny Rainey (190) 8-8; April 1973 Star wrestler Doug Ford tosses an opponent. Outstanding diver Bill Cogar and teammates. Dave Powers (Hwt.) 5-8; and Rick Held- irch (158) 4-6-2. Lewis and Melton won both confer- state championships; Keck, Stieff and Overdorff captured conference ence and crowns, and Powers and Ford won state titles. Injuries hampered Rainey and Heldrich. Coach Bill Stearns’ swimmers set 14 new school records and 15 conference marks, and qualified two men for the na- tional championship meet en route to winning both the conference and VCAA titles. W&L’s only dual meet losses were to state champion Virginia and to run- ner-up William and Mary (by one point). The Generals finished third (of nine teams) behind UVa and W&M in the state meet for all Virginia schools. Bill ‘Tiers set school and conference records in both the 500- and 1000-yard freestyle events; Steve Erickson qualified for the national meet in the 100-yard backstroke in record 23 Freshman swimmer Athletics time; and freshman diver Bill Cogar qualified in both the one- and _ three- meter diving in record performances. Other record-setters were Will Brotherton in the 100- and 200-yard butterfly, Ro- bert Searles in the 200- and 400-yard in- dividual medley, and Rick Koch in the 100-yard breaststroke. Three relay teams also. set new marks: the 400-yard medley relay (Erickson, Koch, Bro- therton, Jim Howard), 400-yard free- style (Searles, Tiers, Howard, Brother- ton) and 800-yard freestyle (Searles, Alan Corwith, Tiers, Brotherton). W&L’s young basketball team had an tricks—batting away an opponent’s shot. 24 Basketball captain Paul McClure is up to one of his favorite up-and-down season, but still recorded its seventh straight winning season. The Generals capped off the season by playing well in the CAC tournament. W&L eas- ily disposed of Centre and Southwestern in the first two games of the round-robin, and fell to a very good Sewanee team on its home court, 89-81, in the champion- ship game. Particularly outstanding were junior Skip Lichtfuss and senior Paul McClure, who were both named to the All-Conference Team. It was the second such honor for both men. The Generals played in three tourna- ments during the year, and Lichtfuss was RR Skip Lichtfuss with game ball presented to him after he scored his 1,000th career point. named to the All-Tournament Team of all three. He led the Generals in scoring with a 19.7 average for the year and went over the 1,000-point mark for his career late in the season. McClure also averaged double figures with an 11.2 mark, and was tops in rebounding with a 10.7 average. Besides McClure, other seniors closing out their basketball careers were Doug Clelan, Charlie Strain and Hatton Smith. W&L’s freshman basketball squad also had a banner year, posting a 10-2 record. The frosh were led by John Rice with a 19.5 average and John Podgajny with 11.1. a 3 eS ESE WeL Chapter News Lynchburg Citation awarded to Frances and Sydney Lewis LYNCHBURG. The Lynchburg Citation for outstanding service to the University was presented on March 2 to Frances and Sydney Lewis of Richmond. The citation honored the Lewises for their gift of $9 million to the School of Law. The pres- entation was made at the Lynchburg chapter’s annual meeting at the Holi- day Inn, South. Chapter President O. Raymond Cundiff, ’33L, presented the citation to Mr. and Mrs. Lewis, both of whom made brief acceptance remarks. A highlight of the evening was humorous comments by Bert Schewel, °41, a fra- ternity brother and roommate of Sydney Lewis. His anecdotes about Sydney and their days on campus kept the assembled alumni and their wives in constant laugh- ter. Schewel’s talk, all in fun, was a great tribute to the Lewises. Lea Booth, ’40, presented a plaque to Judge Cundiff and expressed appreciation to him on behalf of the chapter for his leadership during the past year. The principal speaker was Law Dean Roy L. Steinheimer, introduc- ed by Edward S. Graves, ’30. Dean Stein- heimer talked about the future of the School of Law and how the Lewis gift will strengthen the law program and pro- vide a magnificent new building. Among the guests from the University were Dean and Mrs. Steinheimer, Dean and Mrs. W. J. Watt, Dean and Mrs. Edward C. Atwood, Jr., Dean Robert McAhren, Treasurer and Mrs. James W. Whitehead, Athletic Director and Mrs. William D. McHenry, and Alumni Secretary and Mrs. W. C. Washburn. The following new officers were elected: Robert C. Wood, III, ’62, president; Henry M. Sac- kett, III, 64, vice president; and Rodger W. Fauber, ’63, secretary-treasurer. Chair- man of the nominating committee was Dr. Ed Calvert, ’44. April 1973 ———e ai" | | Digs ae HT SAR TON (Nal : , Pe Ny oe \\ BALTIMORE. To the tunes of a live and swinging rock-’n-roll band, Baltimore alumni and their wives or dates gathered at the Mount Washington Club on Feb. 3 for a “Roar’n ’50’s Dance.” The “swing- ers’ wore the picturesque dress of the '50’s, and jitterbugging was the order of the evening. Clark Carter, 69, outgoing president, paid tribute to the wives and dates for providing a delicious buffet din- ner. There was plenty to eat and drink, At left, Judge Cundiff (center) presents the Lynchburg Citation to Sydney and Frances Lewis. Below are officers of the Baltimore chapter: Carroll Klingelhofer, ’65, James S. Maffitt, IV, ’64, Randy H. Lee, ’69, and Butch West, III, ’65. \ N NA and the revelry went on into the small hours. At one point, Carter took the mike “Sinatra fashion” and called for the report of the nominating committee. Unanimously acclaimed new officers were: Randy H. Lee, ’69, president; Carroll Klingelhofer, ’65, vice president; James S. Maffitt, IV, ’64, secretary; and J. H. (Butch) West, III, ’65, treasurer. Alumni Secretary Bill Washburn joined the group for the merry evening. 25 WeL’s Reeves Collection of Chinese ee tirt porcelain on i ditbiay at the High Museum of Art in Atlanta. ATLANTA. An estimated 650 Atlanta- area alumni and friends of the Univer- sity attended a reception on Feb. 23 on the occasion of the opening of an exhibi- tion of the Reeves Collection of Chinese export porcelain at the High Museum of Art. The show was the first major ex- hibition of pieces from the extraordinary collection, bequeathed to W&L in 1967 by Euchlin D. Reeves, ’27, and his wife Louise Herreshoff Reeves of Providence, R. I. Hosts at the reception were mem- bers of the University’s Board of Trus- tees, whose midwinter meeting coincided with the premiere. More than 260 pieces were included in the show which con- tinued through April 8. The exhibition was part of W&L’s observance of the U.S. Bicentennial to be celebrated in 1976. ‘The Reeves Collection has intrin- sic historical and aesthetic value. Chapter Correspondents Appalachian—Jimmy D. Bowie, ’56, 714 Arl- ington Avenue, Bristol, Va. 24201 Arkansas—Edward D. Briscoe, Jr., ’59, 17 Edgehill, Little Rock, Ark. 72207 ; Atlanta—Alex Hitz, Jr., ‘42, 1883 Wrycliff Road, N.W., Atlanta, Georgia 30309 Augusta-Rockingham—William B. Gunn, ’42, Box 668, Harrisonburg, Va. 22801 Baltimore—Randy H. Lee, ’69, 119-E. Ver- sailles Circle, Towson, Maryland 21204 Birmingham—William E.° Smith, Jr., °’63, 15 Norman Drive, Birmingham, Ala. 35213 Charleston—Louie A. Paterno, Jr., ’65, 12 Hill- top Court, Charleston, W. Va. 25314 Charlotte—Harry J. Grim, ’52, 2522 Sherwood Avenue, Charlotte, N.C. 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, 10813 Music Street, Newbury, Ohio 44065 Cumberland Valley—Dr. Clovis M. Snyder, ’51, 1825 Woodburn Drive, Hagerstown, Mary- land 21740 Danville—Judge F. Nelson Light, '52, Route No. 2, Box 49-A, Chatham, Va. 24531 Florida West Coast—George W. Harvey, Jr., ’63, WFLA-TV, 905 Jackson Street, Tampa, Fla. 33601 Gulf Stream—A. J. Barranco, '64, Suite 1004 Concord Bldg., 66 West Flagler St., Miami, Fla. 33130 Houston—Fred B. Griffin, Houston, Texas 77027 26 "60, 4005 Chatham, Jacksonville—John G. McGiffin, III, ’63, 4114 McGirts Blvd., Jacksonville, Fla. 32201 Kansas City—William N. Leedy, ’49, 814 Westover Road, Kansas City, Mo. 64113 Louisville—John C. Norman Jr., ’64, 118 Travois Road, Louisville, Kentucky 40207 Lynchburg—Robert C. Wood III, ’62, 4720 yeaah Road, Lynchburg, Virginia Mid-South—Jerome Turner, ’64, 325 N. Rose Road, Memphis. Tenn. 38117 Mobile—Harvey E. Jones, Jr., ’64, 204 Walsh- wood, Mobile, Ala. 36604 Montgomery—Joe F. Bear, ’33, 2134 Rose- mont Drive, Montgomery, Ala. 36111 New Orleans—Gus A. Fritchie, Jr., ’50, P.O. Box 729, Slidell, La. 70258 New River-Greenbrier—Thomas A. Myles, ’16, Drawer 60, Fayetteville, W. Va. 25840 New York—Steven A. Galef, ’62, 44 Orchard Drive, Ossining, N.Y. 10562 Norfolk—Frank Callaham, Jr., ’52, 1401 Bruns- wick Avenue, Norfolk, Va. 23508 North Texas—David Carothers, ’61, 5532 Park Lane, Dallas, Texas 75220 Northern California—Paul R. Speckman, Jr., 57, 1562 Lilac Lane, Mountain View, Cali- fornia 94040 Northern Louisiana—M. Alton Evans, Jr., ’63, P. O. Box 639, Shreveport, La. 71102 Palm Beach-Fort Lauderdale—Hugh S. Glick- stein, °53, 2138 Hollywood Blvd., Holly- wood, Fla. 33020 Palmetto—William M. Bowen, ’63, Dowling, Dowling, Sanders Box 1027, oe Dukes, Beaufort, S.C. 2 Peninsula—Dr. Frank S. Beazlie, Jr., ’40, cane Mallicotte Lane, Newport News, Va. 236 Pensacola—Robert D. Hart, Jr., ’'63, 3985 Piedmont Road, Pensacola, Fla. 32503 Philadelphia—Theodore G. Rich, Jr., 58, 226 . Rittenhouse Square No. 3011, Philadel- phia, Pa. 19103 Piedmont—Walter Hannah, ’50, 5100 Laurinda Drive, Greensboro. N.C. 274 10 Richmond—Daniel T. Balfour, °’63, 326 Ross Building, Richmond, Virginia 23219 Roanoke—William S. Hubard, ’50, Shenan- doah Life Ins. Co., Roanoke, Va. 24010 Rockbridge—P. B. Winfree, III, ’59, P.O. Box 948, Lexington, Va. 24450 San Antonio—Edgar M. Duncan, ’61, 700 Wiltshire, San Antonio, Texas 78209 St. Louis—Andrew N. Baur, ’67, 1631 Dear- born, St. Louis, Mo. 63122 South ee ae Piedmont—Alvin F. Fleish- man, ’41, O. Drawer 4106, Station B, Anderson. g Cc. 29621 Southern California—Frank A. McCormick, 53, Box 475, Santa Ana, Calif. 92702 Southern Ohio—Stanley Hooker, Jr., ’39, 1185 Beverly Hills Drive, Cincinnati, Ohio | 45226 Tulsa—Neil McNeill, 50, 3724 South Florence, ’43, 507 Tulsa, Okla. 74105 Upper ‘Potomac—Albert D. Darby, Cumberland Street, Cumberland, Md. 21502 Washington—Joseph J. Smith, III, ’60, Legg, Mason and Company, 1100 17th Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20036 West Texas—Stephen H. Suttle, ’62, 3010 Ventura, Abilene, Texas 79605 Wilmington—S. Maynard Turk, ’52, Box 3958, Greenville, Wilmington, Delaware 19807 WeL ae - Janes Ww. ee is aie in after 6 years a a ] mill worker for outhworks,, in the S. J. Colvin, *64 Business School in a year or so for the second unit of the Smaller Company Man- agement Program. 1966 BORN: Mr. and Mrs. C. FREDERICK BENT, III, a son, Jonathan Mace, on Nov. 1, 1972. Bent is employed by The Boston Co. Per- sonal Resources, Inc., a division of The Boston Co. He is director of client services, which handles complete tax investment and estate planning. The family lives in Milton, Mass. BORN: Mr. and Mrs. Roy A. TYLER, a daughter, Kristen Ashley, on Jan. 17, 1973. Tyler, formerly legal advisor in the Evans- vill, Ind., Police Department is now an associate in the law firm of Trockman, Flynn & Swain. BORN: Mr. and Mrs. THEODORE E. LARSON, II, a daughter, on Feb. 9, 1973. She joins two older brothers in New Milford, N.J. Larson is sales manager for Bach & Co. of Paramus, N.J. THORNTON MONTAU HENRY has taken a posi- tion as tax law specialist with the IRS. He is a member of the Florida Bar and was released from the U. S. Army Corps of Engineers in April, 1972. CHARLES F. CLEMENT is now with the mortgage banking firm of Northland Mort- gage Co. in St. Louis, Mo. He and his wife, the former Susan Edith Brazwell, have two children. Bruce W. RIpeR, sales representative for Xerox Corp. in Myrtle Beach, S.C., for the past year, has recently been promoted to the position of product coordinator in the Business Product Center in the Xerox marketing offices in Rochester, N.Y. Cart. JAMES K. BurTON is in the second year of a two-year tour of duty in Thailand with the Special Forces. 1967 BORN: Mr. and Mrs. HuBertT HOWELL YOUNG, JR., a son, Hubert Howell, III, on Jan. 6, 1973. Young is presently stationed as a Navy legal officer at Gulfport, Miss. BORN: Mr. and Mrs. CHARLES G. LEVY, a daughter, Amy Beth on Sept. 10, 1972. The April 1973 family lives in Great Neck, N.Y. JouHN S. GRAHAM, III, after three years as a gunnery officer in the U. S. Navy, is now in his second year at Yale Law School. JAMeEs R. HICKAM is working towards an M.B.A. at the University of Rochester. JAMEs H. Cooper is now assistant rector of Christ Church in Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla. He and his wife, Tay, have two children. Tuomas C. Davis, III, is currently pursuing a Ph.D. degree in religion from the Pitts- burgh Technological Seminary of the Uni- versity of Pittsburgh. MICHAEL Y. SAUNDERS received a masters degree in political science from Stanford University in 1968 and a J.D. Degree from Harvard Law School in 1971. He is married to the former Sheryl Ameen. They live in Houston, where Saunders is associated with the law firm of Baker & Botts. 1968 BORN: Dr. and Mrs. ROBERT WEIN, a son, Robert Michael, Jr., on Oct. 20, 1972. Dr. Wein will complete his first year of family practice residency at the University of Vir- ginia Medical Center. He will enter the National Health Service Corps for two years and expects assignment to a clinic in New- port News. Ropert T. MILLER is employed by Lukens Steel Co. as a sales representative in Hous- ton, Tex. He and Elizabeth Ann White were married Aug. 12, 1972. Dr. PAuL A. BROWER is a resident in the department of surgery at the University of California, Los Angeles. He expects to pursue a career in either pediatric surgery or urology. SAMUEL B. PRESTON is a consultant with Syn-Cronamics, Inc., in River Edge, N.J. He holds an M.B.A. from Wharton’s Graduate School of Business. 1969 MARRIED: JAMES B. GITHLER to Deborah Saxton of Cincinnati, Ohio, on July 15, 1972. Now attending Syracuse Law School, Githler expects to enter practice this sum- mer in Corning, N.Y. BORN: Mr. and Mrs. JAMES M. CHANCE, a daughter, Kirby Scott, on Aug. 16, 1972. Chance is a Ph.D. candidate in biology at the University of Pennsylvania. J. B. Goopwin, after discharge from Navy in July, 1972, is presently a student at Columbia Business School. Joe H. DAvENporT, III, is general manager of Coca-Cola Bottling Works in Charleston, W.Va. After receiving his LL.B. from the Univer- sity of Texas, ROBERT G. ARMSTRONG is now practicing law in Roswell, N.M. STEPHEN A. SHARP, upon release from the Army in April, will practice law with the Federal Communications Commission in Washington, D.C. THomaAs W. MULLENIx will be discharged from the U.S. Army, Military Intelligence Group, in August, 1973. He expects to enter the University of Maryland Graduate School of Government and Politics. 1970 RIcHARD M. IrsBy, III, is presently chief prosecutor for Army JAG, 2nd _ Infantry Division, in Korea. 31 Court died Oct. 16, 1973. J te | Dr. Stevens Dies University from 1924 until 1 1930 and | at Central College, Fayette, Mo., from Dr. Bennet Porter Stevens, pro- 1930 to 1946. He held | his under. until his retirement in "1964, died in | At Washington and Lee he de his home in Lexington on March 26. loped a the SnSULEMLON 5: i : 7 ca He was 80. . ual stret Dr. Stevens joined the Washington and Lee faculty in 1946 as professor, having taught previously at Princeton tea hing in 1964, he was 5 elected | pro- i fessor emeritus. For two years” he- 1971 Of years: reat returning to Lex. Mannie: "lo CROMMELIN to Fran lance | writer. uring his Lodge No. 533 B'nai Brith. He was also- a member and ay t presiden Joplin Chapter of the “National, Assn. of Life Underwriters. a ROBERT — NCER LEONARD of “Kingsport Tenn., and former ; t vic for finance of the | Ohio, attorney, « died Jan. 7. admitted to_ the bar in- ‘1930. ‘He was a lieutenant in the U.S. Navy during World | War II. Mr. Shipman — member of the International Assn. ¢ and the American and | Qc | was also one of ‘the ori is Se ____ the Ohio Supreme Court's Board of ! LILE, a retired mining eng! ances and Discipline Mr. pman served Heer died Dec. 30, 1972, in Clearwater, Fla, as director of the First National Bank ‘and | where he hae, been Hiving for several ears. Trust Co., | Specialty Co., the ineer in Bagu Troy ‘Sunshade _ Co, ‘the. | ‘Troy-Tipp Tele- phone Co., and the Skinner pomaeaton Co. businessman, died Jan. 28, 1973. Mn Love- _ lace founded a motor supply business in Bozeman and expanded it into a chain. of stores and machine shops in Oe © Dillon, and Helena. In early 1942, he i secuiee ane impleme d 7 ey contract at a > time, general cou unsel and . a = | vela 0 d th ing to ‘supply / business vnc i EFioml it was sold Canning Co., which he: thinaged q during the 1950’ s. Since 1961, he had manag ee — tended both Virginia : iar —- and 100 tor 1 He eo MI fron Va., died Feb. 13, 1973. . Cathey ‘died in oe where he ie Washington and Lee Ice Buckets and Trays GPE ae: Lee LE Le Ls 4 4 c 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. [ ] Snack tray, $10.00 each plus $1 handling ana postage. Addvess City ard State... eee cereeseeeenesnee onsen MO Virginia residents add 4% sales tax. Payment Of 3.000... is enclosed. 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 maho- gany tops. All profit from sale of these items goes to the scholarship fund in memory of John Gra- ham, 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. Small snack tray (12x17) $10 plus $1 handling and postage. WASHINGTON AND LEE UNIVERSITY Lexington, Virginia 24450 Available Again WASHINGTON AND LEE (Wedgwood) Sold only in sets of four different scenes Price $32.00 for set of four including shipping charges Available in blue color only The four scenes are: LEE CHAPEL WASHINGTON COLLEGE, 1857 LEE-JACKSON HOUSE WASHINGTON COLLEGE (contemporary) Send order and check to WASHINGTON AND LEE ALUMNI, INC. Lexington, Virginia 24450