eee iG a 4 — the alumni magazine of washington and lee university pin mestinaie NOVEMBER 1973 oe the alumni magazine of washington and lee Volume 48, Number 7, November 1973 William C. Washburn 740............::: cee Editor Romulus T. Weatherman.................5+ Managing Editor Robert S. Keefe, ’68...............:6 ee Associate Editor Mrs. Joyce Carter............cccee Editorial Assistant Robert Lockhart, ’72.......0::::: ees Photographer TABLE OF CONTENTS A Letter from Hillier ...............:::: ] National Historic Landmark Ceremony ...........--. ib Antiques Magazine Feature «0.0... 5 A Souvenir Booklet ..........:::: et 6 Shannon Named Trustee ..........::::: ee 7 Malone Named Rector ..........:::::: res 8 Distinctive Contributions of W&L. ............ 10 Historic Portrait Display ...........::0: 12 New Student Apartments 2.0.0... cs 13 Campus News .........:cccec ecient 14 Homecoming and Fall Reunions ...............--0+- 22 Chapter News oo... ccc eerste nesters 24 Class NOteS .....ccccccccccceeceecesceesseeeeeten renee esesee trent tian 26 In Memoriam ..........00cc ccc ies 31 Lost Alumni ooo... eter tiers 32 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. WiiuiAM H. Hiner, ’38, Chicago, Ill. President T. Har Crarke, 38, Washington, D.C. Vice President EVERETT TUCKER, JR., 34. Little Rock, Ark. Treasurer WILLIAM C. WASHBURN, '40, Lexington, Va. Secretary Tuomas B. BraAncy, III, 58, Atlanta, Ga. ALBERT D. Darby, JR., “43, Cumberland, Md. Ricuarp D. Haynes, ’58, Dallas, ‘Texas VERNON W. HoLLEMAN, ’58, Washington, D.C. C. Royce Houeu, 59, Winston-Salem, N.C. THEOpoRE M. Kerr, 57, Midland, Texas J. PerER G. MUHLENBERG, 50, Wyomissing, Pa. CuHartes C. STIEFF, II, 45, Baltimore, Md. J. THomas ‘TOUCHTON, 60, Tampa, Fla. On the cover: It’s a foggy October morning, and Washington Hall is shrouded in mist on its ma- jestic hill. There is a chill in the air, and the leaves are beginning to fall. Anyone who has spent time at Washington and Lee is familiar with this scene, an indelible memory. So it appeared again on the morning before the day on which the campus was officially designated a National Historic Land- mark. Photograph by Pat Hinely, ’73. a OO a a a : by Robert S. Keefe Campus is officially dedicated as a National Historic Landmark As usual, the weather was perfect. More than 500 guests gathered on the Front Campus in front of the two homes in which Robert E. Lee had lived while presi- dent of Washington College. The trustees were there; so were a number of newsmen; so were dignitaries from Virginia’s educational, political, and cultural establish- ments. They had come to honor, of all things, a dozen or so buildings—most of them dating to the first half of the 1800s, a collection of red-brick and whitewashed-wood structures “that, together, form one of the most dignified and beautiful college campuses in the nation,” as the National Park Service put it. The Governor was there, Linwood Holton, himself a product (1944) of the institution which, he said, “has throughout its history fought to preserve, and strengthen, and uplift the ideals for which [Generals] Washington and Lee stood.” The associate director of the Park Service, Dr. Ernest Governor Linwood Holton, the principal speaker at the ceremony, applauds as Rector John Newton Thomas and Dr. Ernest A. Connally of the National Park Service display the certificate officially designating the Washington and Lee campus a National Historic Landmark. WeL November, 1973 Pago a ! ra a ——__ — or 7] 4 wes seul a Tas An 1845 woodcut of Washington College that appeared in Henry Howe’s Historical Collections of Virginia. Jn the foreground of this foreshortened view runs the Great Wagon Road, which linked Pennsylvania with the South. The ceremony was preceded by a panel discussion in Lee Chapel on “Washington and Lee’s Architecture, Past, Present, and Future.” The panelists were Everett Fauber, Sr., the noted restoration architect; I. Taylor Sanders, the University historian; and Frederic Cox of Marcellus Wright, Cox & Cilimberg, principal architects for the capital portion of W&L’s development program. National Historic Landmark A. Connally, was there too. It is hardly a routine dis- tinction that the Park Service and Interior Department have bestowed on Washington and Lee, he said: the Front Campus has been designated to receive the high- est honor in the federal government’s power to confer on a private site because “careful scholarship and rigorous comparative scrutiny” have found the Colon- nade and flanking buildings to possess “a significance which transcends this Valley and the limits of the Com- monwealth of Virginia... to possess historical signifi- cance to the whole nation—to all Americans every- where.” And accepting the accolades on behalf of the Uni- versity was the gracious and well-spoken rector of its Board, Dr. John Newton Thomas. Not only is the Land- mark designation a first-order compliment to Washington and Lee, he said with tongue only half in cheek; it is also a sign of the government’s “own discernment.” (The only unexpected turn came when, literally in the middle of Governor Holton’s address, word began sweeping through the crowd of attending news re- porters that rumors were rampant in Richmond and Washington that Holton was to be designated the new vice president; President Nixon had said, earlier in the day, that he would announce his nominee that night, and Holton had been invited to the White House for the announcement—in his capacity, as it turned out, as chairman of the Republican Governors’ Conference. But the reporters were eager to speculate, and an Associated Press report triggered waves of it.) After the ceremony members of the Board of Trus- tees were hosts to an hour-long reception (cider) on the lawn; later in the evening they were also hosts at the annual black-tie banquet of the Robert E. Lee Associ- ates (fresh salmon, Liebfraumilch, a side of beef). Dr. Thomas was the after-dinner speaker; his topic was, aptly, “The Distinctive Contributions of Washington and Lee.’ (His remarks appear elsewhere in this maga- zine.) The University’s enduring traits are, he said, “aca- demic excellence, concern for the individual, and the maintenance of high moral standards.” = = F x . aa , . S ‘eS | 1 | Pg Ae a "3 f , gue WeL’s famous Colonnade received a fresh coat of paint during the weeks before the ceremony. Here the columns of Newcomb Hall are freshened. 4 WeL ee . Antiques magazine features The October issue of The Magazine Antiques carried two articles—one of them the cover fea- ture—and an editorial about Washington and Lee, coinciding with ceremonies marking the designa- tion of the Front Campus area as a National Historic Landmark. The cover article is “The Buildings of Wash- ington and Lee University,” an historical sketch concentrating principally on the ante bellum campus and its architecture. The article is by Parke S. Rouse, Jr., a 1937 W&L graduate who is executive director of ‘The Jamestown Foundation and director of Virginia’s Bicentennial Commission. Also appearing in the October Antiques is “The Reeves Collection of China Trade Porcelain at Washington and Lee University,” a review of the February premiére exhibition of pieces from the collection held at the High Museum of Art in Atlanta. The authors are Callie Huger Efird and Katherine Gross Farnham, authors of the catalogue for .the High exhibition. Both articles are accompanied by numerous illustrations—the Rouse article by a full-page color photo of Lee Chapel and 10 black-and-white scenes of the campus in the past and now; the Efird- Farnham article by nine color plates and four black-and-white photos. In addition, the editorial is accompanied by another full-color photograph of a piece from the Reeves collection. All the color and several of the black-and-white photos were taken by Thomas C. Bradshaw, II, of Lexington, a commercial photographer who is, ironically, a graduate of Virginia Military Institute. The cover photo of Washington Hall and the inside color photo of Lee Chapel are the same photos that appeared on the inside front and back covers of the booklet Washington and Lee Uni- versity: A National Historic Landmark, mailed in October to all alumni and to other friends of the University. The editorial, signed by Wendell Garrett, edi- tor of Antiques, speaks of “the durability of Wash- ¢ < ae > PR Cie Ta Pina OS; Fi SRY : Fak i a8 , en 4X —? awd £ me ; a rs a z ington and Lee as an educational institution and its maturity as a cultural establishment of consid- erable magnitude’’—characterized by ‘the majestic Greek revival facade of the old Washington Col- lege group” on the one hand and one of the majestic examples from the Reeves collection on the other. “No other people ever demanded so much of its higher institutions of learning as have the American,” Garrett says. “None other was ever so well served by them.” Single copies of the October Antiques can be purchased by alumni while supplies last for the cover price, $2 (postpaid), by writing Circulation Manager, The Magazine Antiques, 551 Fifth Ave- nue, New York, N.Y. 10017. November, 1973 pies cea s ~~, a 7 eas an oe a a re Is inet ee er om wee a sa oes ee ~ 4 acta er ens oo se ste : f / / Shannon is elected a trustee after nomination by alumni Dr. Edgar F. Shannon, Jr., a 1939 graduate of Washington and Lee and retiring president of the University of Virginia, has been elected to the Board of Trustees at Washington and Lee. Shannon was nominated for the trusteeship by a vote of his fellow W&L and the Board confirmed his selection at its October meeting. ‘The an- alumni, nouncement was made on Homecoming and Alumni Reunion Weekend at W&L. Also at the October meeting, four in- cumbent ‘Trustees were re-elected to serve additional six-year terms on the board. The four are Ross L. Malone of New York, rector-elect; Lewis F. Powell, Jr., of Richmond; John M. Stemmons of Dallas, and Joseph T. Lykes, Jr., of New Orleans. Under the comprehensive board re- organization of 1969, Trustees can serve a maximum of two consecutive six-year terms. (Trustees who have been off the board for a year or more are eligible to begin service again, however.) Malone, the rector-elect (see related article), is vice president and general counsel of General Motors Corp. Powell is an associate justice of the Supreme Court of the United States. Stemmons is president of Industrial Properties Corp. in Dallas and chairman also of the Achievement Council, the volunteer group charged with primary responsibility for the University’s decade-long $56-million Development Program. Lykes is president and chief executive officer of Lykes- Youngstown Corp. and chairman of the Achievement Council’s business and in- dustry committee. (As a member of the federal judiciary, Powell cannot partici- pate actively in fund-raising programs.) Shannon, whose father was professor of English at Washington and Lee from 1914 until his death in 1938, was a November, 1973 Rhodes Scholar, having been nominated by W&L. He was elected to Phi Beta Kappa and Omicron Delta Kappa while a Washington and Lee student and has held Fulbright and Guggenheim fellow- ships as well. Shannon was associate professor of English at Virginia when he was elected president of U.Va. in 1959. He will step down from that post next summer, re- turning full-time to the classroom. He is an authority on Tennyson. Shannon has been president of the Virginia Association of Colleges and the Council of Southern Universities; presi- dent and chairman of the executive com- mittee of the National Association of State Universities and Land-Grant Col- leges; board member of the Southern Regional Education Board and the Na- tional Commission for Accrediting, and a member of the boards of visitors of both the U.S. Naval and the Air Force Academies. Dr. Edgar Shannon addressing last year’s Phi Beta Kappa convocation at WL. He holds honorary doctorates from Washington and Lee (1959), Southwes- tern, Duke, Hampden-Sydney, Wake Forest, Centre, Jefferson Medical and Bridgewater. In 1967, Shannon was presented the Lynchburg Citation, the highest honor any W&L alumni chapter confers on a graduate of the University. The citation read in part: “As president of the University of Virginia he has fulfilled his heritage of distinguished scholarship with vision, skill and integrity — by his example en- couraging his colleagues and his students to higher academic attainment. “As Lee], gentleman, and patriot, he has been alumnus [of Washington and loyal to noble traditions — but, naturally enough, ‘not unmindful of the future’.” He is married to the former Eleanor Bosworth, and they have five daughters — Eleanor, Elizabeth, Lois, Susan and Vir- ginia. Malone is named rector, succeeding Dr. Thomas Incoming Rector Ross Malone with outgoing Rector John Newton Thomas and President Huntley. Ross L. Malone, vice president and general counsel of General Motors Corp., has been elected rector of the Board of Trustees of Washington and Lee. He will assume the office formally at the Board’s winter meeting in Janu- ary. The traditional title “rector” is the equivalent at Washington and Lee to chairman of the board. The term is trac- ed back to the founding of Augusta Academy, from which the University evolved, in 1749. As rector, Malone succeeds Dr. John Richmond. Dr. Thomas, professor emeritus of systematic Newton Thomas of theology at Union Theological Seminary, has been a W&L Trustee since 1938 and 8 rector since 1970. Dr. Thomas is 70, the age for mandatory retirement from the Washington and Lee board. He will re- tire officially from the Board at its Janu- ary meeting. Retiring in October after completion of his Joseph E. Birnie of Atlanta, a ‘Trustee second term of service was since 1961 and chairman of the Board’s investments committee and its successor, the finance committee, since inception of the committee system in 1966. Malone is a former president of the American Bar Association (1958-59) and deputy attorney general of the United States (1952-53). He was named vice president and general counsel of GM in 1967. A native of Roswell, N. M., he re- ceived his law degree from Washington and Lee in 1932, and upon graduation began practicing law in his hometown. He and Mrs. Malone maintain their resi- dence in Roswell, though they spend most of their time in New York City, where they have an apartment, and De- troit. At 47, Malone was one of the young- est men ever elected ABA president. He is also past president of the American an arm of the ABA which supports research in the practice of Bar Foundation, law and administration of justice. He is a fellow of the American College of Trial Lawyers and was a member of the Presi- dent’s Commission on Law Enforcement WeL and the Administration of Justice. Ma- lone is a trustee of Southern Methodist University, the New York University Law Foundation, and the Southwestern Legal Foundation. He is a member of Omicron Delta Kappa, honorary leadership fraternity, and Sigma Nu, social fraternity. He holds honorary degrees from seven colleges and universities, including Washington and Lee (1958), William and Mary, and the Universities of New Mexico and British Columbia. Birnie, the retiring Trustee, is chair- man of the executive committee of the National Bank of Georgia, and has serv- ed as its president and board chairman as well. He is a 1927 alumnus of Wash- ington and Lee and has been president of both the Richmond and Atlanta chap- ters of the W&L Alumni Association. In 1949, he was national treasurer of the University’s Bicentennial fund-raising program. A native of Greenville, S. C., Birnie began his career in banking as a clerk in the Alexander National Bank of St. Petersburg, Fla. Subsequently he went to work for the Bank of Virginia in Rich- mond, then in 1938 he joined the Bank of Georgia (now the National Bank of Georgia), becoming president and direc- tor in 1940. He is past national president of the Consumers Banking Association and past president of the Atlanta Sym- phony Association. He is a director of several businesses and of many other civic and charitable groups as well. As chairman of the Washington and Lee Board’s finance committee, Birnie persuaded his fellow Trustees to adopt the so-called “total rate of return” con- cept of investing, under which the Uni- versity seeks a combination of capital growth and dividend income from its November, 1973 endowment according to exacting stand- ards. In a resolution adopted by the Board on the occasion of Birnie’s retirement, it noted: “During a period of time when were higher education, Washington and Lee was for- the gravest financial challenges confronting American private tunate to have in the forefront of its financial leadership a man with the broad experience and imaginative foresight of Joe Birnie. Washington and Lee’s sound stance in the wash of today’s er- ratic financial currents can be linked di- rectly to [his] effective trusteeship.” “The 12 years during which Joe Bir- nie was a member of the Board of Trus- weg Tae gE CHS, er Caius tees were years of critically important de- cisions affecting the future of Washington and Lee. He took part in many spirited debates that accompanied the progress of a changing University through a changing world. A man of principle and integrity, the expressions of his views always commanded the greatest respect and consideration. Throughout his service Joe Birnie brought a special measure of the gentility and charm of the Southern gentleman to a Board al- ready abundantly endowed with such attributes.” The Trustees’ resolution bestowed on Birnie “with admiration and affection” the title trustee emeritus. Retiring Trustee Joseph E. Birnie is presented a gift by Dr. Thomas. da builtin | helps the eer ~ | “Academic excellence, concern for the individual, and... moral standards are the three-fold basis on which: I would call for support of Washington and Lee as a private institution.” — | ate is oe in the form of : a special concer. 1 | dent. Our petudene body vis oh mittedly ¢ the stud I was a student bu tions, it is even | sn University tries to ae ea out of his. years as a student. | | the instructional staff, but by mature ue a their productive scholarship is encourage ed, have come to Washington and Lee with the dent. Here again our rath e ic bution, since | the eliminati about 30% of our stu . | . athletics and 1 80% in ee and, in thee third place, mr | fold basis on which I cat a fo. associated veith * “morals,” the z a badge of high character character, made of a man a. gentleman. I cannot think nostalgically of the coat and tie tradi the friendly greeting on the campu . ‘“ cle ean shirt” stand ar d which. 1 1e OD: KC ante Nc ovem| ber, 1973 erately kept | by the youngest member ¢ “ ; |. | who, while — d and wel- clear F understanding a ee prime sueen is ied a | with creative © scholarship. The fact that there is an 7 and. “which, blended with [ God he eerie nor r did Lhe «oa ut — 7 of honor except or - at th the 7 | Lee sacrificed, ea kfu Dr. Thomas delivered these remarks at the | _ Robert E. Lee Associates Dinner, October 12, 1973, on the occasion of the dedication of the campus asa National Historic Landmark. to introduce in ‘the » Spring of 1923, only to. find that students of met day would not give up the wearing of — coats. Yes, I . that dress and hair style were differ- “sie peaking were roared’ I : . en 1. hope the parents of 1e Un iversity - traditionally stood in oo kind a to Pongal them- 2 ar cet Ss. 5 with cuts to ree that moral manners’ we ~~ 8 ag) ington and Lee has a special degree oO 1 is yah ne most Fendatng a bu t willingly has : Be it ours. to sustain “the | U1 ‘see a ‘few eartening | standards | are far more important. As a private institution Wash- of freedom in the setting of its moral standards and enjoys a national | reputation for the Honor System in which they are |_ - epitomized. ‘No one attends she University,” says The | ¢ ‘atalogue, “without becom s | sions of honor and integrity. . | hae ing aware of new / dimen- | 5 and | distinctive c ! ee le eel — 2! tow a - a _ i oe BS - oe BS a Bn 7 Bn 7 - - 7 - 7 - 7 7 7 7 a . 7 ‘ : a ; oe : - : : : 7 : 7 7 SS - - 7 7 : - 7 7 - - 7 - a . - 7 - a - 7 : : - _ - : : - . - 7 . - 7 - - - - - - 7 : 7 Oo - - : 7 - - - - - - > oe ; - - 7 a - : . oe 7 - ; - 7 - 7 : : . : 7 a : ; 7 Oo - - ; a : . 7 - 7 7 7 7 7 - 4 i : : : 7 - ao - - : - 7 7 - - - - : - a a a - ’ - : - 7 ; : 7 : . > 7 - 7 : : ; 7 7 7 a ; - - - ; - : : 7 7 7 - 7 7 7 : - a . 7 7 ; - - - ‘ - - - : , - 7 - - - : - - : a . . - - - - . - 7 - / 7 - - - a oe . - - - : - : - oe _- - - - a : 7 - - - - - - : - 7 - oe 7 - 7 7 : : ; / 7 a - - 7 . 7 - - a - : : - . - - - - - - - - - ee : 7 - 4 : a ; Oo - - - - - - - - - - - Reg - 3 e 7 . pus News available space — and more than loans will be ae | from the fund to de- Fund in 1932 while he was president of : second. the University's alumni association. = 14 400 also applied for the 82 places in the ASSO He was founder of the Walter and entering law-school class — 18 applica- tions s for r every opening. George McDonald Foundation, a bene- - factor of eas ao nian Ae In ee ne med him a Knight of Malta, recogni 11Z11 a 5 outstanding character and achievement - _ The McDonald bequest brings to more than $11.3 million . the amount committed toward the law school portion of Wash- ington and Lee’s ongoing development program. a for the 1970’s. In all, $14.5 mil- ic ion i is to be raised for the law program. _ Overall, $2 auiiion has: been com- | ents, foundations, 4 and Giastneebe aeeiiit an initial goal of $36 million by 1976 and ue million by he end of the decade Med Applicants Do ‘Well ‘Twenty-seven W&L men who applied for admission to medical school in 1973 were accepted. a was an average of 71 per cent c compared with the national | Co —— | average of just 30 per cent. ack 895) : | Eleven of the Washington and Lee — ——— | men were Phi Beta Kappa graduates, ac- cording to the report of the Pre- Medical Committee. Some medical schools report- ed an 80-to-1 ratio of applicants to open- | ings | in the 1973 * entering class. en's | Jealth Book Collective oo — 8. — fits of f faculty com- | and reported by ciation of University Alumni may order these Sand any other | boc he W&L. Bookstore sat a 10% discount. Sines € “and Lee © Universi ated Lexington E sa | 1972-73 survey ‘showed Wel ae 7 - - 7 OO - 7 7 7 OS - BS i Oo 7 7 i i Oo 7 - - - a - a - - - _ - - 7 - - - + - a \ - - - - - - 7 - - oe Oo : - - oe 7 - 7 - - 7 : - 7 - - 7 : - . 7 - 7 _ - - - a 7 : / ; ; ; ; : 7 - - : Oo a a - a 7 - - - - - - 7 - . - - - . 7 - - a - - - - - - - ‘ - oe - - - 7 7 . - oe * 7 - - - : / ; - ; : - 7 - - a oO - - - - - ; - a - - - Oo a a - - to - - 7 . a - - ’ - . - - - - . a - - - - . a - - a 7 a . . : : : : - - _ > - - ; - - : : : : - - - a 7 - - - - - - > - - . 7 - - 7 | s : - : ; 7 - ; . - - 7 a 7 - : a : : : : - - - - - - - 7 - 7 - - 7 > - - ; : - - a ; . 7 . - - TACT LO TTR LE TACT, LO TT I meena ere - pone rer Bn ee me ee - Oo Soren Campus News a er iy of Virginia, “Tis =: field | - = ; vanish and ‘Spanish literature. — Barritt’ s book, , his first published work of ‘poetry, may y be ordered from the ‘Wash- 7 ington and Lee Bookstore. The price is ‘$3.75. ‘The bo pokstore gives: W&L alumni oa 10% discount on all nok purchases. Prior | to his installation z as $ pastor of Lexington’s First Baptist Church this fall, he was executive director of the Charles City-New Kent County (Va.) social service agency and, before then, project director of the Handolpe urban renewal project in | Richme nd. 2 Join Law ‘Library 3 "wo i Promotions “Two ment ‘bel 3 of the WEL administra. tion have been. promoted to the rank of 7 ‘associate dean. Dr. Robe : t t Ww. paarctian has been named associat ? College, and ‘Kenneth: P. ‘Lane, Jr, has been named assoc i 18 staff of the s tions librari ciate dean of ‘students. 7 Each was” _ previously an assistant dean, A new acquisitions librarian and ae ° alogue libraric head cat School of Law. The acquisi- ian is Nancy Carrell McGown, formerly head cataloguer at the Under- . wood Law Library of Southern Methodist E University, | ; Dallas: The new WeL h logue librarian is Jean 1 Enea loguer at the University of Wis CO} 1 _ et of fields on college campuses for eae ac un have joined the Law Library prior | to joining the W&L law staff. - | Wel Shares iy Program the United States to participate in a new | : ‘ogram, sponsored by the ; Lilly Endowment of Indianapolis, design- ef to > bring the campus and the non- ademic world clout ser together. program — to 7 administered — will in a. undation 1 of Princeton, LW NJo— of ‘sfomitient: men and \ women , k or more at a time. The visiting lecturers, to be designated Woodrow Wil- son Senior Fellows, will be drawn from | business, | industry, finance, diplomacy, conservation, Journalism, and other pro- fessions. _ The Lilly Foundation’ s ‘executive vice president, pened aoe Bolling, said the three-year, $1-million grant is designed to “promote greater contact, understanding — and sharing of ideas and experiences’ be- tween the academic community and other sectors of society. The Wilson Founda- tion has designated 58 fellows for the current academic year. Washington and Lee is one of three colleges in Virginia designated to partici- pate in the project. The others are Ran- on women s $ College, and Mary Evans at Seminar a John M. Evans, , aSSO in eisai nner ann lt - Payroll taxes and insurance - Entertainment | dione as a Sy met. oe Be ll itiiO} English sponsored and financed by the National Endowment for Humanities. The course was designed | to give the eachers an. ‘opportunity to work with au-_ thorities in their respective fields while | ne ind. vidual studies of their own | “On the Synthesis of 1, é — the most articulate | = Campus News says in his reminiscence, “and my interest in the currents of American cultural and political life.” Riegel, a graduate of Wisconsin and Columbia, worked on the Paris edition of the Chicago Tribune — “for one reason: I ran out of money” — before joining the W&L faculty in ee ae 2 by the Witig Re- eorge S. ee also a Lewis Al Exhibit nt - and ' ance: wis Collection of Contem- | Richard ‘Estes, Ralph Goings Goodnough, Alfred Leslie, Richard Mc Lean, and John | Salt. _ Mr. and Mrs. Lewis are widely known for their collections of contemporary art. They have been major benefactors of the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts i in | the field ee | | - a. Ameri | \mericans” seemec sa graduate, is a member of the Univer- been “simple exuk er ae ce, vitality, ‘and sity Board of Trustees. He and Mrs. — curiosity of youth” — “coupled with “a Lewis are the donors of $9 million to the feeling of emotional, intellectual and- | cultural deprivation.” The i ‘image of Paris — 1at became fash ionable at the time was, Lee’s ongoing development program — 4973-74 a ‘Nov. 30—Clinch Valley ceeshoretanitensices - Home ~~ Thirteen’ paintings from ‘the Sydney . Lewis, ae 1940 Washington and law school portion of Washington and | Nov. 2 at the annual meeting of the Southern Political Science | Ass | Atlanta. His paper — “The 1959 Mboya Airlift: Rowen E Elite Socialization” — and China at the bai convention. Basketball Schedule 1—Virginia | oe eect sous. Home 7 _5—Baltimore eee Home 4-5—WL Invitational Tourna- | EMENE ecccccccssseeecssssevesveeee Home (St. Foul, St. May s, : St sa | &Bridgewater a .. Away 10—Wilmington College ........ Home Jan. Jan. Jan. ‘Emory and Henry . levees ... Home 17—Hampden-Sydney soe Home _19—Lebanon Valley ................ Home Jan. 23—Madison serereeetenetin a Away Jan. 26—Roanoke oe .. Home _ Jan. 28—Randolph-Macon. ............ Away — Jan. 30—Bridgewater ...................... Home 2—Bowie State ..................... Home Feb. 5—Lynchburg ........................ Home Feb. | Feb. 9-Old | Dominion . Away 13—Emory and Henry . voce, Away q 16-Hampden Sydney esteeneeeee Away Feb. ‘Feb. 20—Pitt-Johnstown. Feb. 23—Grove City . lotus Home Feb. 26-VCAA Tournament | 2 Away ‘Record | VFIC. Contributions | Riegel. points out, “determined largely by | mericans, the word- men.” — oe “The experience of CBaope mates : 7 hee d my sense of Ameri - Loesel Presents Paper at Washington and Lee, | presented a el, instructor in » polities search paper « on | Kenya's s politic al s ys em | A ‘record sum, $1,318,000, was contri- buted last year by Virginia businesses the state’ s privately ‘supported four-year oS through | the Virginia Foundation sociation in - is to be one nted at a session on Africa -3—Lynchburg . seienvenseses voce. Away 12—Towson State oo... Away 8 York haha: eee eee eee eee ee iM Home to | hh dependent Colleges (VFIC), the or-— ee ganization has reported. The announcement came from T. Jus- tin Moore, president of Virginia Electric and Power Co., the VFIC’s newly elected chairman of the board, and Luther W. White, III, president of Randolph-Macon College and a 1949 W&L law graduate, newly elected president of the VFIC. Their report said almost 1,000 cor- porations contributed to the state’s pri- vate institutions through the VFIC. The $1.3-million total amounts to approxi- mately $1,200 for each faculty member in the VFIC’s 12 member institutions, they noted. Washington & Lee’s share was $101,391. In addition to Moore and White, the Two of W&L’s silver-haired stalwarts exchange pleasantries before the Opening Convoca- tion in September. They are Dean Emeritus James G. Leyburn and Chaplain and Associate Dean of Students David Sprunt. Leyburn return- éd to the campus to deliver the spirit talk at Freshman Orientation. November, 1973 new chairman and president, other ofh- cers elected for the coming year were Ro- bert E. R. Huntley, president of Wash- ington and Lee University, vice president, and Preston C. Carruthers, president of Preston Construction Corp., Arlington, and chairman of the State Board of Edu- cation, vice chairman of the VFIC board. Others elected to the VFIC board are H. Hiter Harris, Jr., president of South- ern Bankshares, Inc. in Richmond; Rich- ard W. Wiltshire, president of Home Beneficial Life Insurance Co., also of Richmond; Thomas F. Chilcote, presi- dent of Emory & Henry College; Joshua P. Darden, Jr. of Norfolk, president of Colonial Chevrolet Corp.; W. Wright Harrison of Norfolk, chairman of the board of Virginia National Bank; Waldo G. Miles, a Bristol attorney; John D. Munford of Franklin, vice president and general manager of Union Camp Corp.; Lloyd U. Noland, Jr. of Newport News, chairman of the board of the Noland Co. and Chester I. Starkey, president of Com- monwealth Gas Distribution Corp. of Petersburg. Institutions sharing in the fund _ be- sides Washington and Lee are Bridge- water College, Emory & Henry College, Hampden-Sydney College, Hollins Col- lege, Lynchburg College, Mary Baldwin College, Randolph-Macon College, Ran- dolph-Macon Woman’s College, the Uni- versity of Richmond, Roanoke College, and Sweet Briar College. DeVogt Heads School Unit Dr. John F. DeVogt, professor of ad- ministration and head of the department in the School of Commerce, Economics and Politics, is the president of the Vir- ginia School Boards Association for the 1973-74 year. He was elected at the as- sociation’s annual convention, held in Norfolk in October. He will serve a one-year term as head of the federation. Dr. DeVogt is a member of Lexing- ton’s City School Board and was its chairman until earlier this year. He serv- ed as legislative committee chairman of the state school board group prior to his election as its president. He is a B.A. and Ph.D. graduate of the University of North Carolina and joined the W&L faculty in 1962. In ad- dition to his civic service on the city school board, Dr. DeVogt is profession- ally active as vice president and program chairman of the Southern Management Association. 21 Homecoming and Fall peniatiail 1973 ' Approximately 250 alumni and their guests | 5 BS : wa returned to the W&L campus on the weekend of ) ) Oct. 19-20 for Fall Class Reunions and Home- | coming. The weekend honored the Classes of 1928, 1938, 1943, 1953, and 1968. There was a gala round of social events including cocktail parties and the anniversary class banquets on Saturday evening. The returning alumni also heard an in-depth panel discussion on “Financing the University’ conducted in Lee Chapel by President Robert E. R. Huntley, Treasurer James W. Whitehead, and Director of Development Farris Hotchkiss. The weather was perfect and the fall foliage in full array. The only untoward note was a Homecoming football loss, 35-17, to Western Maryland. Stuard A. Wurzburger (standing) was host to the Class of 1928 at a lawn party at his home in Lexington. 22 ihde 3 bad 4 WeL : a yr ill .. ~ y , » - oe ae ie i 7 -— - 3 a _ | 4 Bs, “' re ug oat matte ee Ss te “ ~~ Pe: PENINSULA. President and Mrs. Ro- bert E. R. Huntley were guests of honor at a reception and dinner on Aug. 9 at the Huntington Club in Newport News. The occasion also welcomed the three freshmen from the area who entered W&L this fall, two of whom were present, I. Leake Wornom, III, and Philip Hatchett. Also present were a number of current students and parents. President and Mrs. Huntley were accompanied by their three daughters, Martha, Katie, and Jane, who were attending their first W&L alumni meeting. The President reported on the affairs of the University, with special re- ference to the question of coeducation. Presiding was Frank S. Beazlie, Jr., ’40, out-going chapter president. During a brief business session the following officers were elected: Dr. B. Voss Neal, ’51, presi- dent; Charles R. Spencer, Jr., ’59, vice president; and Benjamin A. Williams, ’42, Neal ad- journed the meeting with an expression secretary-treasurer. President of thanks for the attendance of the Hunt- ley family and Mr. and Mrs. Bill Wash- burn. He announced that the new officers would make plans soon for another chap- ter meeting. RICHMOND. Gov. A. Linwood Hol- ton, 44, and Mrs. Holton were guests of honor at a cocktail-buffet on Sept. 12 at the Rotunda Club. A large number of alumni, friends, and their wives attended. Both the Governor and his wife, Jinx, made brief remarks which were well re- ceived. Dan Balfour, ’63A, ’65L, chapter president, presided and announced plans for a touch football game with Wahoo alumni in the area. Attending the gather- ing from the University were Alumni Secretary and Mrs. Bill Washburn and Director of Publications and Mrs. Rom Weatherman. 24 Chapter News LOUISVILLE. desire to revitalize the chapter’s activities, In expressing a strong one of the largest groups of alumni in recent years attended a meeting on Sept. 25 at the Pendennis Club. The reception and dinner honored Dean of the Law Gov. and Mrs. Holton speak informally at Richmond chapter meeting. In the foreground is Dan Balfour, chapter president, who presided. Peninsula chapter officers are Charles R. Spencer, vice president; Dr. i B. Voss Neal, president; and Ben A. Williams, secretary-treasurer. Old friends and college mates swap stories at Louisville meet- ing. They are Norman P. Iler, °37, Edmond P. Lawrence, ’44, Grover C. (Dodo) Baldwin, 40, and Sydney Lewis, ’40. WeL School Roy L. Steinheimer and Mrs. Steinheimer. Dean Steinheimer reported on the state of the University, with par- ticular reference to the development of the new law school building and the Frances Lewis Law Center. Sydney and Frances Lewis, benefactors of the law school development program, were pres- ent as guests of the chapter and of a large group of Sydney Lewis’ classmates and friends headed by Robert Hobson, ’40. The arrangements for this well-attended meeting were made by John C. Norman, Jr., ’64, president of the chapter, and his board of governors. In his introductory remarks, Norman recognized each of the 14 new members of the board and paid tribute to their leadership. He encour- aged members to support the chapter in its recruiting efforts and introduced Dean Steinheimer. Hobson introduced Sydney Lewis in a humorous vein and presented a gift to Frances Lewis. CUMBERLAND VALLEY. A reception for freshmen who entered W&L this fall was held on Aug. 29 at the Sheraton Motor Inn in Hagerstown. Dr. Clovis Snyder, ’51, outgoing chapter president, presided at the buffet dinner. Following the report of the president, Ken Long, 69, reported for the treasurer in the ab- sence of E. Mason Hendrickson, Jr., ’67. The new freshmen and their parents were introduced and warmly received. Dean Emeritus James Leyburn was present and recognized. Alumni Secretary Bill Wash- burn made brief remarks and showed slides of the campus. John M. McCardell, 37, reported for the nominating commit- tee, and the following officers were elect- ed: Albert Radcliffe, Jr., 37, president; J. Oakley Seibert, ’68A, ’71L, vice president; and Dr. George I. Smith, Jr., 56, treas- urer. November, 1973 At Cumberland Valley meeting are J. Oakley Seibert, ’68; O. Thomas Kaylor, Jr., ’45; A. A. Radcliffe, Jr., 37, new president; John M. McCardell, ’37; Samuel C. Strite, 29; Robert E. Clapp, Jr., ’30; Clovis M. Snyder, 51, outgoing president; and Charles R. Beall, ’56. Name your candidate In compliance with Article 9 of the By-Laws of Washington and Lee Alumni, Inc., the names, pictures, and addresses of the Nominating Com- mittee for 1973-74 are listed below. WILLIAM E, LATTURE, 49 Chairman Blue Bell, Inc. 4115 Redwine Drive Greensboro, N. C. 27410 ROBERT H. SEAL, 744 National Bank of Commerce P. O. Box 121 San Antonio, Texas JouHN M. McCarbeELL, ’37 Potomac Edison Co. 1156 The Terrace Hagerstown, Md. 21740 The committee is now receiving the names of candidates to fill three seats on the Alumni Board of Directors and one vacancy on the Univer- sity Committee on Intercollegiate Athletics. Under the By-Laws, any member of the Alumni Association may submit names of alumni to the Nominating Committee for nomination for the offices to be filled. Alumni may send names to any member of the committee or to the committee through the office of the Executive Secretary of the Alumni Association. The committee will close its report on March 22, 1974, and present its nominations to the annual meeting of the Alumni Association on May 11, 1974. The annual meeting coincides with the Spring Reunion Week- end. Members of the 12-man Alumni Board of Directors are elected to four-year terms, with the terms of three members expiring each year. Re- tiring from the board in May are T. Hal Clarke, ’38, of Atlanta; William H. Hillier, ’38, of Chicago; and J. Peter G. Muhlenberg, ’50, of Wyo- missing, Pa. Alumni members of the Athletic Committee serve two-year terms with one alumni member retiring each year. The member retiring in May is Rodger W. Fauber, 63, of Lynchburg, Va. 25 was executive vice president of the Council for Financial Aid to Education, Inc., New York City, has become vice president for de- velopment in the western division of the School of the Ozarks. His headquarters are in La Jolla, Calif. 1938 T. HAL CrarKe, Atlanta attorney, has been elected chairman of the American Bar Assn.’s Section of Corporation, Banking and Busi- ness Law. He is former chairman of the sec- tion’s Committee on Savings and Loan Assns. and, in 1972, was chairman of the Commit- tee on Saving Assns. and Building Societies of the International Bar Assn. In 1969, he was appointed to the Federal Home Loan Bank Board by President Nixon to serve a three-year term, which ended last June 30. He has practiced law in Atlanta since he was admitted to the Georgia bar in 1939. The Section of Corporation, Banking and Busi- ness Law provides continuing education pro- grams and publishes a periodical called The Business Lawyer. POWELL GLAss, JR., editor of the Lynchburg News and Advance, is a member of the board of the Virginia Press Assn. 1939 GEORGE H. VANTA has been promoted to di- rector of field personnel for Eutectic and Castolin Institute of Flushing, N.Y. He is responsible for recruiting and coordinating the training of company representatives. The company produces a variety of welding rods and equipment. E. J. Foltz, ’40 1940 EDWIN J. FoLtz, who has been vice president- international and president of Campbell Soup’s International Division, was reassigned recently as vice president-corporate relations of Campbell Soup Co. He will assume re- sponsibility for the company’s programs in the areas of public, consumer, community and government relations. Foltz joined Camp- bell Soup in 1953, and shortly thereafter was appointed assistant director-personnel administration. In 1955, he became director- personnel administration, and in 1958, was elected vice president-personnel. He became vice president-international, and _ president of Campbell Soups International in 1960. Currently a director of the Thunderbird Graduate School of International Manage- ment and of the American Management Assn., Foltz has also served as vice president of the A.M.A.’s International Division Coun- cil and as a member of the Industrial Rela- tions Committee of the National Assn. of Manufacturers. He is also a member of the Crime Commission of Philadelphia, a direc- tor of the Philadelphia Council on World Affairs, and a past president of the Glad- wyne Free Library. Foltz is also chairman of the Robert E. Lee Associates at Washington and Lee University. 1942 J. LUTHER JORDAN, JR., has been elevated to the position of senior vice president of Louisiana National Bank of Baton Rouge. After service in World War II in the Marine Corps and earning a law degree from Louisi- ana State University, Jordan was first em- J. L. Jordan, Jr., ’42 Dr. R. L. Pinck, ’42 ployed in 1948 by the First National Bank of Shreveport; in 1960 he left to join Louisiana National Bank as vice president and trust officer. Jordan serves on the bank’s board of directors and is chairman of the bank’s eight-member executive committee. He is a member of the trust division of the Ameri- can Banker’s Assn. and sits on the legisla- tive council of ABA as well. Dr. RoBert L. PINCcK, director of the depart- ment of radiology at Long Island College Hospital, has been elected president of the hospital’s medical staff. Dr. Pinck was on the radiology staff at Roosevelt Hospital in New York City before joining Long Island College Hospital in 1956. A cofounder of the School of Radiologic Technology at Long Island College Hospital, Pinck has been active in establishing educational programs for X-ray technicians in the State of New York. In 1966, Dr. Pinck was the recipient of the Sports Illustrated Silver Anniversary All- America Award. He is a member of the American Medical Assn. and several other professional associations. Dr. Pinck is a fellow of the American College of Radiology and was recently elected a fellow of the American College of Physicians. 1943 EMMETT T.. DRAKE heads a contracting firm in Brightwaters, L. I. The firm specializes in the moving of buildings. The company was founded by Drake’s grandfather over 100 years ago. The firm has been engaged by Nassau County to move historical buildings throughout Long Island to a_ restoration Randy Rouse, Master of the Fox Hounds Randolph D. (Randy) Rouse of Arling- ton, Va., was the subject of a crisp fea- ture article in the sports section of the Sept. 20, 1973, edition of the Washington Post. The reason: Rouse has been the or- ganizer of the last 13 of the 16 annual Fairfax Steeplechase Races and another one was coming up in two days. Said the article, the steeplechase “just wouldn’t be the same without Randy Rouse” and went on, “under his guidance, the steeple- chase races have become to the horsy set what a ticket on the 50-yard line is to a football fan; the only place to be.” Rouse is Master of the Fox Hounds, president of the National Steeplechase and Hunt Association, chairman of the Fairfax Race Association, and, according to the article, “just about one of the most affable, if not the only millionaire on his block.” Rouse, in the article, tells how he worked his way through Washington and Lee dur- ing the depression years on a scholarship and a few part-time jobs. He graduated in 1939. He is now a builder-developer- banker-farmer and _hotel-and-restaurant owner. The article said he has applied his business acumen to raising, training, and racing his 16 horses. He said he has no idea how many trophies and awards he has amassed over the years, but there “are just a mess of them.” Rouse spent six months with other race association members planning the steeplechase. This included handling the average attendance of 8,000, some 60-odd_ horses, officials, jockeys, and equipment. Rouse, an ex- pert rider, is also a central figure in the annual Thanksgiving Day fox hunt in the area. He noted that there are 8 mil- lion horse owners in the country, and added, “There is a tremendous interest in horses and fox hunting today. There are foxes all over this area. The only prob- lem is, you rarely ever catch one.” November, 1973 27 R. H. Gray, *46 R. L. Banse, ’53 village the county is establishing in Old Bethpage. S. L. KopaALp, JRr., has been appointed presi- dent of Humko-Sheffield Chemical. The new organization was formed out of portions of Humko Products Co. and Sheffield Chemical Co. and is headquartered in Memphis, Tenn. Kopald has held various positions with Humko since 1946. In addition to serving on the boards of several major organizations, he is active in political, civic, and philanthropic affairs. 1946 ROBERT H. Gray has been appointed ad- vertising and public relations manager for Micro Design, Inc., of Hartford, Wis. Gray’s prior communications assignments have in- cluded Hubbard Associates, Kalmbach Pub- lishing Co., Bruce Publishing Co., Manpower, Inc., Army Times Publishing Co., and Con- over-Mast Publications. Micro Design, a divi- sion of Bell & Howell, manufacturers and markets microfiche readers, reader-printers, and accessory equipment. HERBERT N. HaAmric of Lexington, Va., is now representing Painter Real Estate of Staunton in the local area. Before joining the Staunton firm, he was a representative of the insurance firm of Mutual of Omaha. 1947 Dr. JAMES H. SAMMONS has been re-elected to a second three-year term as a trustee of the American Medical Assn. Dr. Sammons, who has been a member of the board since June 1970, was also re-elected to a one-year term as vice chairman of the board of trustees. After receiving his M.D. degree from St. Louis University School of Medi- cine, Dr. Sammons interned at Mobile City- County Hospital in Mobile, Ala., and since his internship has been a general practi- tioner in Baytown, Tex. Among his profes- sional memberships and offices are vice presi- dent of the Texas Medical Assn., Houston Academy of Medicine, where he served six years as president, the Board of Commission for Rehabilitation of Texas, and the South- ern Medical Assn. He is currently a clinical assistant professor of family medicine in the department of community medicine at Bay- lor College of Medicine. 1952 EDWARD C. DARLING has been named _ vice chairman of the First & Merchants Corp., whose principal affiliate is the First & Mer- 28 R. E. Bradford, ’54 chants National Bank of Richmond. Darling is also vice president of the holding com- pany and effective Jan. 1, 1974 will become a director. Joun B. (JAY) HANDLAN of Haddonfield, N.J., has been promoted to senior vice president- technical services at H. L. Yoh Co., a division of Day & Zimmerman, Inc., an engineering and construction firm. 1953 RoBerT L. BANSE of Philadelphia has been appointed senior counsel for Merck & Co., Inc. Banse was formerly counsel to Merck Sharp & Dohme, the company’s domestic pharmaceutical division at West Point, Pa. In his new position he will be headquartered at Rahway, N. J., with responsibility for the legal affairs of the Merck Sharp & Dohme research laboratories at Rahway and West Point as well as for Merck Sharp & Dohme. Before joining Merck, Banse was associated with Townsend and Lewis, a New York City law firm. He is a member of the bar of New York City, the Virginia State Bar Assn. and the American Bar Assn. He is also a mem- ber of the Pharmaceutical Manufacturers Assn.’s law section. 1954 Rosert E. BRADForD has been appointed as- sociate director for congressional affairs by the Cost of Living Council under the Econom- ic Stabilization Program. Bradford will be responsible for maintaining liaison with members of Congress and the Senate on economic stabilization matters. Before joining the council, Bradford was administrative as- sistant to Sen. William E. Brock (R-Tenn.), a W&L alumnus. From 1968 until 1970, he was the executive director of the Illinois Re- publican State Central Committee. After leaving Washington and Lee, Bradford was news director at WRAD radio in Radford, Va., and news director at WMAL radio and TV in Washington, D.C. RICHARD A. HARTLEY has been named vice president of One Eleven Distribution Co., the mutual fund marketing unit associated with the Philadelphia Life Insurance Co. Before his new apointment, Hartley was as- sociated for six years with PRO Services, Inc. of Flourtown, Pa., an agent of Philadelphia Life. During this period, he was a five-time qualifier for Philadelphia Life’s exclusive production club, the Circle of Stars. 4 J. R. Best, ’56 R. G. Bannon, ’57 1955 PAUL R. MULLER is one of three Washington and Lee men with the central office of the Social Security’s Bureau of Hearings and Appeals. With Muller are William M. Storey, ‘61, and Ed J. Yurkov, ’57. All three men are involved with various aspects of Social Se- curity, Medicare and “black lung” litigation. Another lawyer, Peter J. Kurupka, ’53, is with the bureau’s policy and procedure branch. 1956 BORN: Mr. and Mrs. S. BOOKER CARTER, Jr. a daughter, Sallie Ravenel, on July 17, 1973. Carter is a practicing attorney in Baltimore. JAMEs R. Best has been appointed by Owens- Corning Fiberglas Corp. as manager for chemical compounder marketing, a new mar- keting section created as a result of growing use of fiber glass-reinforced thermoplastic compounds. Best began his career with Owens-Corning in 1956 as a lab technician. Before he left the company three years later to become a manufacturer’s representative, Best had two patents issued in his name. In 1966, he returned to Owens-Corning to work in chemical compound market development. He is a member of the American Physical Society, the Society of Plastics Engineers, and the Policy Committee of the Society of the Plastics Industry. DR. SAMUEL A. SYME, JR., has recently joined the staff of the University of South Carolina, Coastal Carolina Regional Campus, located at Conway, S. C. Dr. Syme has been named assistant director of student affairs. In addi- tion, he has been appointed to the history faculty. 1957 Morton P. Iver, formerly with the Continen- tal Oil Co. in its corporate headquarters in Stamford, Conn., has recently become con- troller of Ashland Exploration Co., a world- wide oil and gas exploration and production division of Ashland Oil, Inc. He will be in the company headquarters in Houston. ROBERT G. BANNON of Windsor, Conn., was recently elected president of the New Eng- land Land Title Assn. The association has a total membership of more than 300 attor- neys, mortgage officers, land surveyors, and title insurance companies. Bannon is vice president and counsel of Security Title and Guaranty Co. in Hartford. He is coauthor of The Connecticut Condominium Manual, recently published by the Atlantic Law Book WeL os = . es a a M. B. Burton, ’60 Co. He was also elected president of the Connecticut Board of ‘Title Underwriters. The Board is a voluntary association of title insurance companies licensed by Connecticut as a title insurance rating organization. The formation of American Mineral Pro- ducts Corp. with OLIVER C. CONGER, JR., as chairman of the board, was recently an- nounced. The firm owns exclusive U. S. rights for manufacturing and marketing a new terrazzo tile product. The manufacturing plant is located at Conshohocken, Pa. Conger, a native of Philadelphia, is chairman of Evans, Conger, Broussard & McCrea, an in- surance brokerage and consulting firm, as well as an operating officer and director of several other companies. After attending W&L he attended the Wharton School of Finance. Conger is a member of the Phil- adelphia Crime Commission. He and his wife, Cynthia, and four children live in Bryn Mawr, Pa. WARREN E. WILCox, Jr., is currently vice president of the Sun First National Bank of Orlando, Fla. He and his wife, Anna, visited the campus in August. 19909 BORN: Mr. and Mrs. RoBertT D. BOHAN, a daughter, Christine Maria, on Sept. 20, 1973. The family lives in Arlington Heights, Ill. CHARLES E. Swope has been promoted to president of the First National Bank of West Chester, Pa. He had served as vice president and senior trust officer. Swope has been president and director of Eachus Dai- ries Co., a director of Denney-Reyburn Co., and Madison, Inc. He is a past president of the Chamber of Commerce, the West Chester Civic Assn., and the board of trustees of West Chester State College. 1960 H. Tupor HALL has been appointed man- ager of the Sacremento, Calif., branch office of Cessna Finance Corp. The office covers nine western states. Hall joined CFC in 1972 and before that he operated his own insur- ance and real estate firm. He has completed several American Institute of Banking courses and holds a commercial pilot’s li- cense with multi-engine and instrument rat- ings. MALCOLM B. BurRTON has been elected vice president of Chubb & Son, Inc., and is cur- rently national manager for liability, auto- mobile, and workmen’s compensation claims. November, 1973 E. R. Albert, Ill, ’63 W. H. Shepherd, ’63 1961 RoBeERT J. O’BRIEN has become news editor of Baptist Press, the news service of the South- ern Baptist Convention. He joined the pub- lic relations staff of the Baptist General Con- vention of Texas in 1968 and was later pro- moted to press director. He also served as as- sociate chief of the Dallas bureau of Baptist Press. HENRY M. Srrouss, III, and Philip Siffing, ’65, have joined Central International Under- writers, a newly formed insurance venture of the Fidelity Corp. of Richmond, Va., and the Calvert-Cavalier Group of Baltimore. The firm will be located in New York City. Before joining Central International Under- writers, both men were with Chubb & Son, Inc. THE Rev. and Mrs. J. MALCOLM BROWNLEE, Jr. and their two sons are now in Yogyakarta, Indonesia, where he is teaching in the local Presbyterian Seminary. The faculty of the seminary is composed of eight Indonesians, three Dutchmen, a New Zealander, and an American. Brownlee will be using the Indo- nesian language to teach two courses in ethics and will be using the English langu- age to teach one course in theological Eng- lish. A. CLAYTON BRYAN, JR., has received the pro- fessional designation of chartered life under- writers from the American College of Life Underwriters. Bryan’s headquarters are in Greensboro, N.C. 1962 EarL M. Tucker, a former attorney in Rich- mond, Va., has been named Assistant U. S. Attorney for the Western District Court in Roanoke. He will be involved in general trial work.in the office of U. S. Attorney Leigh Haynes. JoHN LeEyBURN Mossy, JR., an attorney in Lynchburg, Va., for the past eight years, re- cently opened a new law office. In addition to memberships in the various state and local bar associations, Mosby has served as president of the Lynchburg Junior Bar Assn. Dr. DoNALD H. McCvure has joined the staff of the Spartanburg, S.C., Orthopaedic Clinic for the practice of orthopaedic surgery. 1963 BORN: Mr. and Mrs. WILLIAM E. BROWN a daughter; Juliette Lee, on March 13, 1973. The young lady joins an older brother. The family lives in Pompano Beach, Fla. MALCOLM B. BuRTON (see 1960) E. RicHARD ALBERT, III, has been appointed general parts and service manager for Al- bert Equipment Co., Inc., the Caterpillar dealer for Eastern Oklahoma. Albert has served as sales representative in the firm’s pipe line division. He is vice president and a member of the firm’s executive committee, a director of Southeastern State Bank in Tulsa and an active participant in local polo activities. WeEsLEY H. SHEPHERD has been honored by the U.S. Army Engineer Topographic Labora- tories at Fort Belvoir. He was presented the Commanding Officer’s Scientific and Techno- logical Achievement Award for his personal design and development of the hardware and software for digital input/output display equipment which is a major component of a semi-automated cartography system. Shep- herd has been employed since 1964 by the Topographic Laboratories, the principal field agency of the Corps of Engineers for research and development in the fields of mapping and surveying. 1964 ROBERT G. BANNON (see 1957) Davip L. GiBson has joined Crown Zellerbach Corp. as corporate tax planner. He had been a senior trial attorney in the regional coun- sel’s office of the Internal Revenue Service in San Francisco for the past two years. Be- fore that assignment, he was attorney in the chief counsel’s office in Washington, D.C. STANLEY FINK of Clark, N.J., has been elected president of the board of trustees of the Union County Legal Service Corp. Fink, an attorney, has been a member of the legal unit’s board since July, 1971. He is also a board member of the Eastern Union County Chapter of the American Red Cross. The legal services unit works in the areas of civil rights violations, landlord-tenant disputes, welfare and veterans’ benefits, bankruptcy, and various other cases. 1965 MARRIED: ‘THOMAS LASSITER WOODWARD, Jr., to Susan Adminta Felton on April 15, 1973, in Winton, N.C. Tom is in the practice of law in Suffolk, Va. BORN: Mr. and Mrs. J. LINDSEY SHORT, JR., a daughter, Ashley Kirby, on July 26, 1973. Short is a practicing attorney in Houston, Tex. 29 ing: as the ophthalmologist He and : : - hie 7 Lk : / - ) 7 J 7 bE : - . of Pe : | : Parents so as on, W William Crane, Il. . the © . Brown, III, has completed his residency in “ophthalmology at the Washing- ton, D.C., Hospital Center and is now serv- at the Naval Academy and Naval Hospital in. Annapolis. his wife have one daughter. | PHILIP SURFING (see 1961, Strauss) ROBERT C ‘DEVANEY, a drilling engineer with Kerr-McGee Oil Co., has been transferred to Hamburg, Germany. The company is build- ing a semi-submersible drilling rig. Upon | completion sometime in the fall of 1973, the — “company expects to use the engi in ene North oun IR N, JR, was recently pro: moked to ‘assistant vice’ president and loan cer for Fidelity National Bank in| a Lynchburg: Washburn - joined Fi- delity in 1970 after military service with the U. 7 . Navy in, Mietnamn. He was named loan rue: E a noe became 5 the =: Haven ley WinuiaM Jj. “Harr has| been. named admini- strator of, the University of Illinois Hospital | . Before joining the University of Illinois as director of allied professional serv- in Chicago. ist, 1970, Hart worked at Rex Hospital in ‘Raleigh and at Duke University Medical Center. He is married to the former Ann Reitzel. - Berry ¥ graduated from Virginia Law and Dorsey in Adanta.— Kim, P Lavewie ist now y serving as s counsel for company provi des a . wide range “of financial, 30 _ Charlotte, N.C. Among. in the Army =. ge Ady ihe. eAvmy t he | has been . employed | by the law firm of Hansell, Post, Brandon, | DAN T. Dunn, Jr., is now research a: business, investment, and planning services Primarily for ea and entertainers. 1967 BORN: MR. and Mrs. PHiuip A. WALLACE, a daughter, Rebecca Elaine, on Sept. 9, 1973. Wallace is practicing law in Bedford, Ma 1968 Dr. Rosert G. SHAMBLIN is now in private | _ veterinary practice in Tuscaloosa, Ala. He is ied to the former: Donna Miler, they have one son. | marr | Tom L. ‘PITTMAN, jr. and Wantia F. Crew, oof the Suburban III, have assumed. control Real Esta Interna Tex, Poe Co. - mociated York ‘City. MARRIED: CLEBURNE E. Grecory, III, to Julia Elizabeth Temple on Aug. 4, 1973, in \mong the groomsmen were Charles Gregory, 72, Thomas W. Pettyjohn, Jr., °68, Garland Tucker, ’69, and Phillip Herndon, ’69. The couple will live in Jack- son, Miss., where Gregory will serve as law clerk for the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals for a year before returning to Atlanta, Ga., to enter a law firm of Arnall, Golden, and BORN: Mr. and Mrs. JERALD L. ‘PERLMAN, a daughter, Louise Mayer, on July 20, 1973. The couple is presently living in Shreveport, La., where Perlman is practicing law. The mother is the former Frances McNeely F now ers of Colfax, La. | BORN: Mr. and “Mrs. Roserr M. HENES, a daughter, Sarah Therese Christine, on Aug. 15, 1973. 7 | Kim P. LADE c wic (see 1966) ssociate at l'Institut pour Etude des Methodes de Direction de lEnterprise in Lausanne, Swit- verland. His duties include preparing teach- ing materials and case studies in the area of marketing managet nent. In the fall of 1974, he will return to Charlottesville, Va., where he is enrolled in the doctoral program of the Graduate School of Business Administration, at the University of Virginia. 1970 EArt M. Toews (see 1962) 197] BORN: MR. and Mrs. FRANK G. SELBE, III, a son, Mac Wilson. Laing, on June 7, 1973. The young man joins two older brothers. FRANK G. DAvInson, III, has been elected as- sistant trust officer for Fiduciary Trust Co. of New York. He joined the bank in June, 1972, as an estate administrator and was formerly with Morgan Guaranty Trust Co. vidson is married to the former Anne Mac- ARCUS E. BROMLEY has joined the treasury epartment of Ameilia Island Co. as finan- cial services officer for resort development. The company is a subsidiary of the Sea Pines Co., which is based on Hilton Head Island, S$. C. In his new capacity, Bromley 7 will be dividing his time between the treas- _ urer’s office and responsibilities for servicing resort financial activities at the company’s Amelia Island Plantation on Amelia Island | near Jacksonville, Fla. 1972. MARRIED: CHARLES THOMAS BENNETCH to Janet Kathleen Watson on July 14, 1973 in Virginia Beach. Bennetch is on the faculty of Norfolk Christian High School. — MARRIED: MICHAEL E. RILEY to Linda Lee Forbes on Jan. 6, 1973 in Roanoke, Va. Ushers included Byron R. Seward, ’70, Ro- bert G. Woodward, ’71, B. Patrick Tatum, “71, Allen C. Brown, 72, Harry C. Philips, 72, Donald B. Cartwright, 72, and Timothy D. Chriss, 72. After a year of teaching, Mike : a is now employed with Virginia fron, Coal and Coke in Roanoke, Va. The brid BORN: MR. and Mrs. PETER A. BIEnN, a son, Andrew Moulton, on Sept. 13, 1973. | Biehn is an insurance agent for Ww. J. Perry ¢ Corp. i a Staunton, Va. Puitip A. WALLACE (sce 1967) E. Austin McCaskILL, III, is now associated with the investment section of the trust i partment of the First National Bank Little Rock, Ark. He is also ‘attending the Little Rock Division of the University of Wel . oS wife, Beverly, were camp in Montgon his internship in Analysis: in Wit rently in his | a - : _ a | The Alumni Office has no address for the alumni listed below. Please check the list coretully, and if you Kinard D, Abbott, 93 Geral LF. Abernethy, ’39 — _B. Abrams, ’70 — L. Ab | Lawrence Ashcraft, "95 : 7 Samuel D. Atkins, J 39 | Manfred N. ‘Avrack, 97 Jack 1 Fr, “Dailey, 36 : James" M. Bailey, Try _ William M. Bailey, a - Gervais Baillio, ’01 _ John F. Baird, 24 — Floyd Jj. J Baker , 723 ‘Henry M. ‘Baker, ’09 Covert F. Baldwin, an - Morris E. Ballard, ’31 | William iH. Bancroft, Jes | Philip E. ‘Bank, * 29 Joseph H. Banks, aa | Wailea) E. Barbour, ce i William: Ww. Baines, els rn know the whereabouts of any of these lost alumni the information to Washington and Lee Alumni, Inc., Le epee Virginia 24450. Thank you. Additional lists of unloca ed alumni will be publined later. | | - pees ae °29 SL - Steven on — “Benne, ‘7 1 | Charles H. Barten, 43 Donald L. Bartlett, III, 63 James B. Bartlett, 53 - Paul V. Bartlett, ’02 William B. Barton, ’23 William J. Barton, 48 Harry E. Berger, ’36 Jerome E. Berger, 68 _ _ Joseph H. Berrien, ’35 _ James N. Berry, 58 | Preben G. Berthelsen, ’67 John E. Bertrand, ’70_ Hugh R. Best, ’41_ Alfred L. Bettis, ’26— John F. Betts, ’60 Alonzo N. Beville, Charles J. Biddle, ’32 Walter R. Biebelle, 13 ~ Ralph S. Bird, Jr., 41 Ora E. Birkhead, ’09 Marcus R. Bishop, ’32 _ Joseph. D. Bissell, 53 Robert W. Black, ’47_ Robert J. Blanding, 41 Charles W. Blanford, ’26 Howard L. Blau, ’63 Sam A. Bloch, Jr., 63 snare Ww J. Bloom, 68 Frank AL Blyth, 49 ane D. B eardman, » Je 71 9 send 7 William B. F. Be James M. Boyd, ’26— Mark T. Boyd, ’68 _ Henry L. Braddock, ’60 — us round up these lost alumni Ralph H. Bookmyer, Jr., 45 Morris T. Booth, ’31 Hugh J. Boulter, ’62 William B. Bourne, 49 | Dudley H. Bowen, Jr., ’63 Louis R. Bowen, ’62_ David E. Bowles, ’66 Richard B. Bradley, 25 Ralph L. Bragg, ’1 Boyce N. Brawley, ” 1) Anthony L. Brennan, ’ A eneea Cc oc °85 C. P. Brown, 31 Gaston Z. Brown, Je 06 Henry M. Br _ James B. Brown, oT Larry F. Brown, ’72_ Norris Y. Brown, ’29 : Welbourn M. Brown, ’27 G. Anderson Browne, 735 | Victor A. Browning, ’36 | John S. Brush, Jr., ’57 Charles C. Bryan, ’67 . Fred J. Bryant, ’24 Homer S. Bryant, ’20 Richard Bryant, ’11 Philip J. Bucher, ’23 Merwin E. Buchwald, 39° Theophilus R. Bullock, ’27 _ Abe Burchard, Jr., ’27 Jon W. Burger, ’61 Wendell E. Burns, ’52 Henry E. Burr, ’61 John P. Burrows, ’33. Harry C. Burton, ’08 James C. Bussart, ’65 - William F. Butler, 68 | John L. Buzby, 06 Julian M. Byrd, "30 Robert L. Byrne, ’69 Charles S. Caffery, ’02 Paul E. Caldwell, ’29 Percy A. Calkins, 17 _ Joseph E. Callaway, Jr., ’23 Carlos R. Callejas, ’27 Aubrey B. Calvin, 62 BOvV man, , 52 oo Charles H. Brennan, Je 47 | | a W. Brent, ’13 7 - All fi ? Homer E. Chervrier, 33 7 Lenox Cc. Chew, ‘Il EN Tete oie Donald K. Cameron, ’00° Robert A. — "42 William T. Camp, Sr., ’34 Alexander D. Campbell, *35 John B. Campbell, 40 0 Robert F. Campbell, 33 Carl C. Carey, °70 - Gordon W. Carlson, 42 _ Irwin P. Carlson, 54 - Walter C. Carlton, Jr., ’40 Donald E. Carmody, 37 Clarence M. Carpenter, 99 Herve D. Carr, "29 —— Russell Carr, 1200 _ Cleland N. Carter, ’29 Mel I. Cartwright, ’70 _ Howard D. Cecill oe) Rankin Chambers, "32 Stephen F. Chambers, 33 | _ George W. Champe, ’36 _ John T. Chandler, ’49 William H. Chandler, 05, _ Michael E. Chaney, 57 Jackson K. Cheatham, MQ 0 oot i John M. Cherrybone, 59 os 7 ra N. Clark, “40 John H. / Clarke, 47 David B. Clarkson, ’33 _ — John E. Clegg, 49 Forrest W. Cobb, ’23 Kenneth R. Cobb, Jr., ’14 | Ralph O. Cochran, ’97 Richard W. Coke, ’68 Donald S. Cohen, °55 Albert N. Cole, Jr., 39 Abe L. Colinsky, ’35_ James H. Coll, ’32_ David R. Collins, "54 Lawrence M. Collins, 710 | Ragan T. Collins, ’24 William P. Collins, ’30 John A. Collison, ’31 Stephen W. Cone, ’59 | Robert A. Connaughton, 51 Andrew B. Conner, 09 George L. Conner, ’31 Andrew J. Conroy, Jr., 62 Francis P. Conroy, ’24 Barnum Coolidge, 37 | \ Harry R. Cooper, ’27 James S. Corbett, 762 Gerald E. "Corry, 23 Calvin R. Couch, '38 Clifford VF - Counian, 31 +? ce +4 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 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. 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 and postage. vii evsv kvcviceenccs RT iach intnhpeeetcsenstecence ese Pa. Virginia residents add 4% sales tax. POMEOE OE 9... 5...:...:: is enclosed. WASHINGTON AND LEE UNIVERSITY Lexington, Virginia 24450 C4 ) 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-]ACKSON HousE WASHINGTON COLLEGE (contemporary) Send order and check to WASHINGTON AND LEE ALUMNI, INC. _ Lexington, Virginia 24450