Birmingham Southern College - Southern Accent Yearbook (Birmingham, AL)

 - Class of 1924

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Birmingham Southern College - Southern Accent Yearbook (Birmingham, AL) online collection, 1924 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 250 of the 1924 volume:

sRAH ' f TW tr s ? Copyright, 1924 C. R. Smith, Editor-in-Chief R. D. HuRLBERT, Business Manager i- Htf . EDITED BY THE STUDENTS OF BJfiMINGHAM SOUTHERN COLLEGE BIRMINGHAM ALABAMA DEDICATION To MRS. ROBERT SYLVESTER HUNGER AS AN EXPRESSION OF OUR LOVE AND APPRECIATION OF A TRUE FRIEND, WHO HAS, THROUGH ALL THE YEARS, EXPRESSED HER WON- DERFUL FAITH IN OUR ALMA MATER, BOTH MATERIALLY AND SPIRITUALLY, AND HAS CONTRIB- UTED MUCH TOWARD A GLORIOUS FUTURE FOR BIRMINGHAM-SOUTH- ERN COLL EGE, THIS VOLUME IS RESPECTFULLY DEDI- CATED. 3n iU mnriam ROBERT SYLVESTER HUNGER Died April 20th, 1923 Trustee, Benefactor, and Friend Jin ilpmoriam OLIVER CLARK McGEHEE Died November 2nd, 1923 Trustee; Supporter, and Friend. Kit il ntnrtam WILLIAM HENRY STOCKHAM Died November 16, 1923 Trustee, Benefactor, and Friend La Revue! Hoxv appropriate Is the title. ' It implies so well its purpose, and has guided our en- deavors in its composition. Through this child of our imagination rve have attempted to let ou see Birmingham-Southern College in the drama of ac- tion; and to give ou a panoramic view of her stu- dent life and activities, an epitome of her accom- plishments, a perspective of her growth and prog- ress, and a record of her achievements. It has been our idea that this book reproduce the atmosphere that permeates our Alma Mater, and the spirit that envelops her campus. May these memories sunive the ravages of Time and awaken within us, some day, reminiscences of days gone by. O critic, we have not striven for literary merit in this volume! Our worl( has been merely the col- lection of suggestions to reflect the record that you helped to make. But our efforts have been earnest, conscientious, and impartial. Hence, we offer no apologies and grant no redresses. If, perchance, these pages afford you pleasure, or in any way meet with your f(ind favors, it will be our sincerest delight, and our only compensation. College mm ' ' l Alma Mater On the city ' s western border, Reared against the sky, Proudly stands our Alma Mater As the years roll by. CHORUS Forward, ever! be our watchword; Conquer and prevail ! Hail to thee, our Alma Mater; Birmingham — all hail! Cherished by her sons forever, Mem ' ries sweet shall throng ' Round our hearts, our Alma Mater, As vFe sing our song. SciKxcE Hall The LiRRARV wassssam Bsmmmm Approach to Hill OWENT HaLI, As Seen P ' roim the Air Andrhws Hall The Heart of the South LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Page seventeen LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Guv Everett Sxavelv, A.B., Ph.D. President A.B.. Johns Hopkin Educational Aclminl and Registrar. Alle Organizer and Dire( .Spa niversity, 1901; PIi.D.. Jolms Hopkins University, tion, Teachers ' College; Columbia University, 19 ny College, 1906-1919; Visiting Professor, New ■ and Director. Southern Division, American Red Cross, 1917-1 Converse College, 1919-1921; Editor of Je-han de Vignay ' s A Valdes Jose; Decorated as oflicier d ' -Academie by French Spanish-. merican Academy, Cadiz, Spain; Lieutenant-Colonel rnor ' s Staff; Member Cosmos and Quid Pro Quo Club, B ingliam Sunday School Assoc ingham-Southern College, 19; Club, Washington. ] rmingh am, Alabama ation; .Alabama Mem , 190S; Hoi lorarv Scholar in 114-1; ; Inst ructor. Professor, Yorl c Univ ersity, 1914-1915; 919; Dean and Professor of esopi Gove c Fabl es, El Capitan : Corresponding , Ah ibama National Guard, jb. New Yo rk City; Kiwanis Qhool Dircc tor; President of Page eighteen LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-FOUR LuDD M. Spivev, A.B., A.: I., B.D. Dean and Professor of Social Sciences Vanderbilt University; A.B., University University of Chicago, 1922; Dean and Pr iity oC Clilcago. 1921; B.D., sham-Southern College, 1923. Page nineteen Paul Pino ' Baby Mine LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R College Faculty, 1923-1924 Aldex Klxney Boor, B.S. Professor of Chemistry B.S. John Stetson i;n versify. llilJ H Professor of Che nist y. .John Stu ' son Georgia, 1917-lS. 1!114; Universi ty of Chic ago. 1915; ctor of Chen ustry Un versify of A. B.. M.A.. Indiana fnivi Latin and Gl-eelv, Geddine PiUsbury Military Academ Robert Bromberg, A.B., M.B.A. Professor of Accounting iversity of Alabama. 1921; M.B.A., Harvard University, 1923. Charles H. Brown, B.S., LL.B. Head Coach of Athletics nderbilt Univirsity, 1912; I.L.B., Vanderbilt University. 1916. George W. Currie, A.B., M.A. Professor of Ancient Languages versify. 1908-11; Graduate Student. University of Chicago. 1912-14; Instructoi Joilege. 1911-12. University of Wyoming. 1913-15, and Morgan Park and 1917-lS; Professor of Latin and Greek, Hendrix College, 1918-19. O. Gordon Ericksox Director of Band and Glee Club Student University of Chicago Thre. Harmony With Bernard Ziehn, Chi Faculty Two Years; Director of Ph tor City of Birmingham. : Voice Under Mr. Beard and Mr. Gandell. Chicago; nd Hugh Kaun, Berlin; Member of Chicago Musical nic Choral Society, Chicago; Municipal Music Director Roy Edward Hoke, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Education and Psychology A.B., A.M., Franklin and Marshall College, lSle-17; Phi Beta Kappa; Graduate Student, .lohns Hopkins University, 1919-22; Ph.D., ,Iohns Hopkins University, 1922; Head of Commercial Department, Columbia Grammar School, New York City, 1917. Mary Amelia Jackson, A.B. Assistant Professor of Spanish and French; Acting Dean of Women versify. Summer. 1923; Instructor Walter Clinton Jones, A.B., M.A., M.D. Professor of Biology A.B., M .A., M.D., Northwestern Unive; Instructor Surgical Pathology. Univcrsit University of Illinois, 1999-13; Profes 1918-1919. iity, 1898-99, 1902; Phi Beta Kappa; Alpha Omega Alpha; of Illinois, 1905-09; Assistant Professor, Surgical Pathology, )r of Pathology and Bacteriology, University of Alabama, Allen G. Loehr, A.B. Professor of Public Speaking and Assistant Professor of Modern Languages Vanderbilt University; University Cracow, Poland; A.B.. Birmingham-Southern College. 192 ' Edward George Mackay A.B. Professor of Biblical Literature, College Chaplain and Pastor of College Church ildent, Columbia University, Summer, 1923; Profess ingha Wesley Adolphus Moore, A.B., M.A. Professor of Mathematics A.B., Southern University. 1905; M.A.. Uni- School, 1905-20; Graduate Student, Unive Association of America. Page twenty-one LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Letitia McNeel, A.B. Assistant Professor of French A.B.. Swathmore College, 1920. Sara NE vso. r, A.B. Assistant Professor of History A.B.. University of Alabama, 11123; Phi Beta Kappa LoRENA Norton, A.B. Assistant Professor of Englisli A.B., Birmingham-Soutliein College, in23; Student, Columbia IJnivers Wilbur Dow Perry, A.B., M.A. Professor of Englisli A B., Southern University, 1905; Instructor, Southern University, 1905; Princ 190li-0S: Principal, Pine High School, 190S-O9; A.M., Vanderbilt Universil Chicago, Summer, 1922-23. Pal L PiM Instructor of Commercial Art John Huntin.atou Pnlyt.ehnic Institute. Keith E. Powlisox, A.B. Bursar and Assistant Professor of Economics A.B., Columbia. University, 1922. Austin Prodoehl. A.B., Ph.D. Professor of Modern Languages , B. Dubuque College, 1907; Graduate Student. University of Friebourg, Switzerland, 190S-10; University of Lausanne, Summer, 1909; University of Neuchatel, 1910; Instructor of Modern Languages, Mount St , Charles College, 1910-12; Ph.D.. University of Friebourg. 1921. Harrison Anthony Trexler, Ph.B., Ph.D. Professor of History and Political Science College. 1906: Ph.D., Johns Hopkins Un Ph.B.. Bel 1909-10; Professor, Hardin College, 1907-09; Professor, .• HopUins University, 1912-13; Professor, University of Mon ity, 1914; Student. Bonn, Germany, env College. 1910-11; Fellow. Johns 1913-19; Professor, Whitman College. William Alonzo Whiting, B.S., Ph.D. Professor of Biology and Geology B.S., Allegheny College, 1914; Ph.D.. Cornell T-niversit: 1917-21: Instructor, Biology, Allegheny College, 1913-14; I ' l School, 1914-16. Charles K. Zeilman, B.S. Assistant Professor of Physics and Director of Pliysical Education Renssalear Polytechnic Institute; Xe Wrestling Coach, Renssalear Polytt New York State College, 1916-17. Ruth Andrews Assistant Instructor in Household Arts Southern University: Peabody College. Mrs. ]VIinnie McNeil Carr Instructor in Piano Converse College Converse College Page tiventy-two LA REVUE. NINETEEN TWENTY-FOUR Berxard a. Davey, A.B. Instructor in A d ' verlising nnibard T ' niversity ; Graduate Voi-k. Boston Uni E. M. Henderson, B.S. Instructor in Journalism B.S.. Clemson College. lliOt; Furman LTniversity. Elizabeth Hunt Steadham, A. B. Instructor in Spanish Athens ' 1S15-1S; Inst Douglas Wingo, A.B. Assistant Coach of Athletics A.B.. AYashington and I.ee Ur.iveisity, 1922. LiLLLAN Gregory Librarian ge: Assistant Librarian, Public Library. Birmiv aerican Library Associaliun. Isaac Willlam May Assistant in Library Willlam Owens Barrow Assistant in Library Hugh L. Hughes Assistant in Library Benjamin Joseph Beaird Assistant in Biology James Grier Alexander Assistant in Biology R.AYMOND RiGGIN CrOW Assistant in Biology Joe Cecil Cameron Assistant in Chemistry George P. Thigpen Assistant in Chemistry Benjamin Hiram Englebert Assistant in Mathematics and Coach of Co-ed Baske Wyatt W. Hale, B.S. Secretary to College Eloise Cary Secretary to Dean Page tiventy-lhree LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Assistant Librariars News Scholarship Tno Biolorty A.55istanlsl Page IzverHy-faur ffiEl fflffl a asses LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R CuLLReveL. Page t ' wenty-seven LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-FOUR Class Elizabeth Coi.vik . Corresponding Secretary Raymond Huklbrrt Historian Helen Hasty Poet Offi cers Taylor Kirby Statistician Aubrey Miller Orator HoYT Levie Lawyer John: Rogers Thompson Prophet Senior Class History In September, 1920, there assembled on Sunshine Slopes ninety young men and women, a part of which group has survived as the members of the 1924 Senior Class. President Daniels received this green mob mercifully, assuring each one that his desire for knowledge would be satisfied. To prove their sincerity of interest in college life, the class as a whole entered into their activities with the determination to make Birmingham-Southern the better for having attended it. Half of the football and baseball scjuads consisted of men from this class, while in tennis and track it was equally well represented. Dan Cupid played the boys foul, inasmuch as there were only ten girls among the Rats, and Leap Year over half gone. However, these young maidens proved themselves very capable in handling the braver sex. Our Sophomore year began under the able and progressive guidance of our new president, Guy E. Snavely. Although somewhat diminished in enrollment, it kept pace in student life and contributed more participants than any other class. Howard was again, as in our Freshman year, defeated in football. However, the year offered further excitement when Birmingham had her fiftieth birthday, and many masculine members of the class escorted some of the county queens to the several social functions. Here it was 1923, and we were actually Juniors, with hopes of a diploma in the near future. My, but doesn ' t time fly! By this time we had no less than a half dozen representatives in every form of activity on Sunshine Slopes, and still going strong. Too bad, but couldn ' t be helped. Howard, 9; Birmingham-Southern, 7. ' The Spring of 192+ is here, and Senior dignity is quite noticeable, and especially so when the newly-inaugurated Freshman caps are seen being tipped to the disdainful and well-filled Senior derbys. The largest class in the history of Birmingham-Southern is now finishing its college career with a total enrollment of seventy-three. This number includes some special students and a few Juniors, Avho are doubling up in their studies. Our Freshman dreams. Sophomore hopes and Junior prayers are now realized as we stand on the elevated pedestal of Seniordom, ready to step forward into the world of endeavor as college graduates. May we ever carrv before ns the motto of our Alma Mater, FOR CHRIST AND THE REPIBLIC. ' Historian. Page twenty-eight SENIORS RUTH ANDREWS, A.B. JACKSON, ALABAMA Phi Gamma Pi; Southern University; Honor- ary member C ' lariosophic and Belles Lettres Literary Societies; George Peabody College; Instructor in Household Arts, Birmingham- Southern. We are glad to present to you our Household Arts Teacher, Miss Andrews has been a mem- ber of our class only one year, but as she once attended Southern University in Greensboro. we feel that she really belongs to us. In the short time she has been here we have learned to admire her for her excellence and the high grade of her work, and to love her for hci- friendliness and kindliness. W e wish our Teacher-Classmate the best ot luck. MILDRED BAKER, A.B. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Kappa Lambda; Classical Club, ' 22- ' 23; Cercle Francais, ' 22- ' 23; Honor Roll. ' 23; Secretary Clarlosophlc Literary Society. ' 23; Central- Southern Club. The Baker Twins stole a march on the Juniors, and are graduating a year ahead of time. Mildred is the peppy one. always run- ning over with enthusiasm, always happy ami merry. WTio could be sad when Little Sip is around? She has shown a strong liking for History-, especially for our past great gen- erals, Alexander, etc. MIRIAM BAKER, A.B. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Kappa Lambda; Classical Club. ■22- ' 23; Cei - cle Francais, ■22--23; Honor Roll. ' 23; Honor Book, ' 23; Clariosophic Literary Society; Vice- President Central-Southern Club, ' 23; T. W. C. A. Cabinet, ' 23- ' 24; Secretary Girls ' Pan-Hellenic Council, ' 23- ' 24. And here is Big Sip, the quiet, dignified one. Looking back over the past three years, we find that Miriam ' s scholastic standing is ex- cellent and that she has manifested a keen interest in College activities. She is not quick to jump to conclusions; she thinks before she acts. So here ' s to the Baker Twins! When we refer to one we mean they are Two in One. WILLIAM OWENS BARROW, A.B. RUTLEDGE, ALABAMA Kappa Phi Kappa; President Belles Lettres Literary Society. ' 23- ' 24; Vice-President. ' 21; Secretary. ' 22- ' 23; Honor Roll, ' 22- ' 23; Member Forum; Vice-President Jlinisterial Association, ' 22- ' 23; Assistant Librarian, ' 22- ' 24; Track Team, •21- ' 22; Class Football, ' 22- ' 23; B Club. Of soul sincere. In action faithful, and in honor clear. His classmates are agreed that never has our Alma Mater trained a student possessing a higher sense of honor and justice, a more pleas- ing personality, and a more perfect endowment of manhood than Barrow. We have known and respected him for four years, and now we bid him Godspeed. SENIORS JOSEPH BENJAMIN BEAIRD, B.S. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Masonic Club, 22- ' 23 ; Square and Compass, 3- ' 24; Vice-President Simpson-Southern Club, 3- ' 24; Assistant Chemistry Simpson School, 3; Student Senate, ' 23- ' 24; President Biolog- al Society, ' 23- ' 24; Junior Faculty, ' 23- ' 24; onor Roll. Ben is a pre-med student whose work is outstanding. His friendliness and manliness have won for him the esteem and admiration of both faculty and students. He possesses that which so many students lack — Amibition. ■•Faithful, loyal, firm and true is not enough to be said of Ben. We are expecting- great things of him in the future as a man in the medical profession. ' Bye, Ben, and good luck; SAM GOODE BERRV, A.B. CAMDEiV, ALABAMA Phi Alpha; Band. ■23- ' 24; Glee Club, •23- 24. Here ideals have lan whom we know by his good high moral standards and lofty won for him the respect of all wJio know him. He loves to hear the rippling sound of music, especially of the Reid instru- ment variety. However, his work in the band and Glee Club indicate that he is interested in other kinds of music as well. We are con- fident that success awaits him, whatever he may do. JOE CECIL CAMERON, B.S. LUVERNE, ALABAMA Belles Lettres Literary Society; Football Ho I, •21- ' 22; Book, 23 Fii-st Class Society; Honor Koll, Football, ' 22. Skinny may sleep in church, but he aa never sleep in a chemical laboratory. He se if heaven is one big laboratory he will fi happiness there. We teel that the scient: world will observe with eager interest when advances his theories in disintegrating tlie ato and building up synthetic radium, though : one philanthropic ambition must be to perfi a sure cure for insomnia. We know, Skinn: that you will keep up the fine work done all through your college course hav JAMES ALLEN CLARK, A.B. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Cheer Leader. •20- ' 21; Track Captain. ' 20- ' 21; Masonic Club, ' 20- ' 24; Panther C:ub, ' 22; Square and Compass. I am a student, and women are the enemies of studies. James Allen came to Sunshine Slopes before Nigger, Nigger, hoe potato! was dethroned for B. S. Ra! Ra! During his stay here he has been in the limelight tor more reasons than one: two of these reasons we would like to mention — his efforts as a cheer leader, and his track ability. Good luck to you, Clark. SENIORS P ' P JAMES M. CLARK, JR., A.B. ALBANY, ALABAMA Clariosophic Literary Society; Y. M. C. A. Vice-President, ' 22- ' 23; Cabinet. ' 22- ' 23; Dele- gate to Blue Ridge, ' 21; Cabinet Ministerial Association, ' 23- ' 24; Junior Oratorical Contest, ' 22- ' 23; Simpson-Southern Club. Thought is deeper than all speech. Dignity personified, Clark this year won the title of most dignified Senior. When ha speaks, others listen. He will be especially missed by the Ministerial Association and the Y. M. C. A., as he has been unusually active in these organizations while here. EDNA ELIZABETH COLVIN, A.B. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Tau Delta; Clariosophic Literary Society Secretary. ' 21- ' 23; Vice-President, ' 24; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, ' 22- ' 23; Delegate to Indianapolis, Secretary Sophomore Class. ' 22; Secretary Junior Class, lor Class, ' 24 Student Volu Treasurer Ce Glee Club, Corresponding Secretary Sen- Secretary Pre-Med Club, ' 22- ' 23; teer Band; Revue Elections, ' 23; ?le Francais, ' 22; President Girls ' !; College Pianist, ' 21- ' 22- ' 23- ' 24 ; 23- ' 24. nd Accompanist College Orchestr The dust of every-day life. For four years Elizabeth has done more than her share in boosting Birmingham-Southern. She believes in her College, and has never failed to respond to any call for service. Her place will be hard to fill in musical spheres, as well as in all other phases of student life. MARJORIE BRITTAIN CRAIG, A.B. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Secretary Freshman Class, Zeta Tau Alpha; ' 21; Vice-President President Cercle Fi Club. ' 21- ' 24; Y. M First Honor Roll. ' 21 ' 21- ' 23; Revue Staff. ncais, ' 21- ' 22; Dramatic C. A. Cabinet, ' 21- ' 22; 22; Gold and Black Staff, ' 22- ' 23; Revue Elections, H( - ' 24; Girls ' Pan-Helle nor Book, ' 23. little, tiny, pretty, v itty. The poet must have been thinking of Bits; when he wrote To know her is to love her For four years Bitsy has been the .Sunshii of Sunshine Slopes. The hill won ' t be the sar without her, but, needless to say. she w prove herself capable of big things. RAYMOND RIGGAN CROWE, B.S. GREENWOOD SPRINGS, MISSISSIPPI Doctors may come a nd doc ors may s o. But the -e ' ll r ever be one lik e Raymonf Crowe. He is one Df the most affable and pleasant men on the c ampus. Wher 3ver you n iieet him you get a br ad sm le and a cheery that is e alculated to rescue even the i nost dis- fron 1 the ■ Slough of Despor d. SENIORS CHAPMAN CURRY, A.B. MCWILLIAMS, ALABAMA Vice-President Clariosophic Literary Society, ' 21- ' 23; Ladies ' Debate, ' 22; Y. M. C. A. Cab- inet, ' 23- 24; President Ministerial Association, ' :i3- ' 24; Delegate Y. M. C. A. Conference Blue Ridge, ' 23; Modern Problems Club, ' 2:!- ' L ' o; Political Club, ' 23- 24. Since Chap came to Southern, he has proved his sterling worth in many ways. He has been Bishop of the young preachers on the hill this year, and has also led the vesper services. One would never take him. for a ladies ' man, but we have heard him boast to his friends that he has the best girl! Chap ' s friendly smile and genial nature will be missed as he leaves us. DWIGHT JAMES DARK, B.S. ALEXANDER CITY, ALABAMA Clariosophic Literary Society; Tracli, 22- ' 2 ' ,i; First Honor Roll, ' ii- ' iS; Second Place Cooper Road Race, ■■2-1; B Club; Class Football, ' 22- ' 23; Third Place Cross Country Track Meet, ' 22. ■■Little Dark has not been with us this year, having comp.eted hi; ing the summer of last ceive his diploma ivith the While here he excelled in scholarship, and ■was one of our star track men, winning several medals through his ability in that activity. BENJAMIN ELLISON DISMCKES, A.B. UNION SPRINGS, ALABAMA Phi Delta Sigma; Kappa Phi Kappa: Clan osophic Literary Society; Assistant ijJditoi- Gold and Black, ' 3S- ' 24; ulee Club, ' H; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, ' 24; Modern Problems Club, ' 22- ' 23: Treasurer Cercle i- ' rancals, 24. equired -work dur- le will re- in June. Fre of the From a green Seniors, Ben ' s progress has been quite remark able. His kindly disposition and sense o humor have won him many friends among th student body. The variety of h testify to his versatility. -Au Revoir, Ben Here ' s to you! Id OSCAR BYRON ELLIS, B.S. CLEVELAND, ALABAMA Kappa Psi, Emory; President T. JI. C. A.. ' 23; Student Senate-Elect, ' 23; Delegate to Blue Ridge Conference, ' 23; Revue Elections. ' 21- ' 23: Clariosophic Literary Society; Pre-Med Club, •21- ' 22; Biological Club. ' 22- ' 24: Foot- ball, ' 21- ' 22; B Club. This old world -would be a chilly place if men of O. B. ' s type were not living. His grace and charm, blended -with his good nature and sportsmanship, make him one sought for in all good society. As a student he is a success and a prominent figure in all college activities. For good fatherly advice all Freshmen go to ■ ' O. B. . always returning in a pensive mood, chagrined that they couldn ' t answer the simple question: ' n ' here were shingles first used. SENIORS ' s -r ' j. THADDEUS HARMON FERRELL, A.B. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Phi Alpha, University Alabama. ' 21- 22; Uni- versity Texas, ' 20- ' 21; Soloist and Varsity Quartette, Glee Club, ' 22- ' 23- ' 24; Gold and Black Business Staff, ' 22- ' 23; Business Staff Y Handbook, ' 23; Bsiles I ettres Literary Society; Junior Faculty. We boast that ive have in Thad the best near But nitating i-k the lii of artistic he is quite a business and highly desirable nd practical gifts. PORTER FRAZIER FLORENCE, JR., A.B. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Belles Lettres Literary Society Critic, ' 22; President, ' 23; Chaplain, ' 23- ' 24; Senior Class Treasurer, ' 24; Assistant Cheer Leader, ' 22- ' 23; Cheer Leader, ' 23- ' 24; Loyal Students ' Club, ' 20- ' 21; Simpson-Southern Club; Modern Prob- lems Club; Pre-Med Club, ' 21- ' 22; Dramatic Club, ' 21- ' 22; B Club; Track, ' 20- ' 23; Mana- ger, ' 21- ' 22; Champion. ' 22; Scrub Football. ' 20- ' 21; Class Football. •22- ' 24; Varsity and Scrap- iron Quartettes. Glee C:ub. ' 22- ' 23; Revue Elec- tions. ' 24; Student Senate, ' 24. Porter has been a headlight on our campus for four years, responsibility and honors hav- ing been thrust upon him. By the has wrought among the w eaker sex of Love Pirate would not be though he disclaims any i nterest in quests. When Porter leav E-s. Sunsh will be a little less sunnj ; so here most popular boy at Bi ■mingham aptain of the imself proud, er forget the Hoss went plaster cast. -Southern. ORMAN STANTON GANDY, B. S. ENSLEY, ALABAMA Alpha Tau Omega; Belles Lettres Literary Society; President Freshman Class, ' 20- ' 21; Masonic Club; Varsity Football, ' 20- ' 23; Cap- tain Football, ' 23; Track; Basketball; Vice- President Senior Class, ' 23- ' 24; Revue Elections, ■24; B Club. Here ' s our football star! team this year he has c Birmingham-Southerners w day of the Howard game, into the fight with his sid and so kept up the Panther ' s morale. Nor will they forget the stellar work Sunshine Slope ' s All-Southern End has done for the past four seasons. He well deserved his election as the most popular athlete. EARL LANIER GLENN, B.S. ALBANY, ALABAMA Belles Lettres Literary Society; Honor Roll, ' 20; Treasurer Pre-Med Club, ' 20; Vice-President Biological Club, ' 22- ' 23; Class Football, ' 22; Junior Faculty, ' 22- ' 23. The true ambition there alone resides Where justice vindicates and wisdom guides. Glenn is another of those who finished his work in the summer term. During his last year here he served as Chemistry Laboratory Instructor. Everyone who knew him had the highest regard tor his integrity or character, his excellence in scholarship, and his friend- liness toward all. ! T ' x 7:o ' : ' yy yy ' rT;ccKr:i:;rc :3 T SENIORS GORDON LEWIS GOLSON, A.B. GREENVILLE, TEXAS Honorary Member Bulger Club, ' 22; R Elections, ' 23. Who gained no title, and who lost no fri Boxy is a jolly, rollicking friend to all. keeps things the life of ery vd. He the but nple degree along with the rest of us. ANNE GREENE, A.B. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Tau Delta; Woman ' s College, ' 20- ' 21; Secre- tary Belles Lettres Literary Society. ' 21-22; Treasurer Cercle Francais. ' 22- ' 23; Secretary, ■23- ' 24; T. W. C. A. Cabinet, •21- ' 24; Gold and Black Staff, ' 21- ' 22; Associate Editor T Handbook, ' 22; Accompanist Glee Club, ' 21- ' 22; Girls ' Pan-Hellenic Council, ' 22-24; First Honor Roll, •22- ' 23; La Revue Elections, ' 23; La Revue Staff, ' 24; Secretary and Pianist Class, ' 24. Oh, what a pal is Anne! She is one of the most likeable, most attractive, and most tal- ented girls on the campus. In her own unob- ti-usive way she has gone about serenely and diligently, and has merited the distinction of the most versatile — and yea! the most popular girl at Birmingham-Southern. In class she is a real student, and in music she excels. As Senior Class Editor. Anne has had a tremen- dous job. But tasks to her seem mere pleas- JEWELL C. HALL, A.B. TALLADEGA, ALABAMA Lincoln Memorial University. ' 20- ' 21; Band, ' 22- ' 24; Glee Club, ■22- ' 24; Manager Band, ' 22- ' 23; Saxophone Sextette, •22- ' 23; Gold and Black Staff, ' 22; Business Manager Gold and Black, ' 2S- ' 24; Student Handbook, ' 22; Class Baseball. ' 22; College Orchestra, ' 23- ' 24; Contemporary Club; Simpson-Southern Club. A man without a sweetheart is like a fish without water. Here is a combination of wit. fun, and humor. As a musician he performs equally well on the clarinet and saxophone — jazz music or other- wise. He is particularly gifted in arguing with the professor about Psychology, or something, so that the class won ' t get to the lesson. ALLIE BESS HARPER, A.B. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Clariosophic Literary Society; Classical Club; Second Ho Roll, 21- ' 22 First Ho Roll, On one she smiled and he was blest. Allie Bess is quiet and modest, always calm and optimistic, with a sunny disposition that can be ruffled only by Chemistry Lab. By her hard study and perseverance, her dignity and high ideals, she has made a good record during her college career. Teachers and students alike know she can be depended on. While most are content to get one degree, Allie Bess is aspir- ing to two or three. So here ' s to the g irl that can cook and mend, who to other varied inter- ests is well able to attend. SENIORS HELEN GRAY HASTY, A.B. BESSEMER, ALABAMA Tau Delta; Winthrop College, ' 21- ' 22; Honor Roll, ' 22; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, ' 22- ' 24; Clari- osophic Literary Society; Vice-President, ' 23; Senior Class Poet. ' 24; Vice-President Bessemei - Southern Club, ' 23- ' 24. Here ' s a girl who is never too busy to stop and say a friendly word to anyone. Demo- cratic of spirit, with pep enough for any occasion, she is the kind of person who is always in demand. Helen is straight- forward. nd lo able JOHN HARPER HAWKINS, A.B. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Kappa Alpha; Kappa Phi Kappa; Emory University, ' 17- 1S; Belles Lettres Literary Soci- ety; First Honor Roll. ' 21-- 22; Vice-President Greeks. ' 22- ' 23: President Junior Class, ' 22- ' 23; President Bessemer-Southern Club. ' 22- ' 23; President Senior Class. ' 23- ' 24; Vice-President Pan-Hellenic Co uncil, ' 23- ' 24; Student Senate, ' 22- ' 24; Gold and Black Staff. ' 22- ' 2 3; Class Football, ' 22- ' 24; Contemporary Club; Vice-Pres- ident Modern Problems Club. ' 23. Noble thoughts and a kind heart are more to be desired than g-old, John ' s honors speak for themselves. Being elected most modest student ' ' and runner-up for most dignified is a happy combination for our Senior Class president. He has been an able leader, and as he goes he carries with him our best wishes. ROBERT FULMER HILL, B.S. WINFIELD, ALABAMA Belles Lettres Literary Society; Simpson- Southern Club; Honor Roll, ' 22; Class Baseball. ' 23; Vice-President Political Club, ' 23- ' 24; Gold and Black Staff, ' 23- ' 24; Biology Club, ' 23- ' 24, The ladies — heaven bless them! For I never will. Hill is a man who has done uniformly good class work during his entire stay at Birming- ham-Southern, Especially does he shine in Math, for which our hats are off to hi m. Much about baseball he knows, and football, too; then with wit and humor in abundance, held intact with a versatile line, he has all the requirements of a good sports writer. Father Time Hill is our hill ' s only namesake; a good scout and a fine fellow. JOHN FRANKLIN HODGES, B.S. GURLEY, ALABAMA Clariosophic Literary Society; President of Resident Student Council Government, ' 22- ' 23: Chairman of Dining Hall Committee, ■22- ' 23; President of Student Body, Summer Session, ' 23; B Club; Football, ' 20- ' 21- ' 22. Woman is Man ' s Bread of Life, I ' m getting hungry, Big Un has been a well-known and well- liked character at B. S, C, always ready to Orate on any subject up for discussion in student body meetings. He is a man with brains and a man of brawn, with equal ability to use both. As one of Southern ' s famous guards for three years, he is an athlete of no little renown. Love affairs! He had none ' til ' 23, but now — ? .-,-H -t t ' : r-rr- SENIORS ' ■i MARY ELIZABETH HOWARD, A.B. HUNTERSVILLE, ALABAMA Cercle Francais, ' 21- ' 24; Secretary and Treas- rer Biological Society, ' 22- ' 23 ; Biological ociety, ' 23- ' 24; Woman ' s College, ■20- ' 21; Mod- rn Problems Club, ' 23. oble led by w oman ' s gentle ords Mary is one whose brightness and optimisni will be missed when she leaves. She has been a good worker in many of the organizations of school, always putting her best into every- thing she undertakes. She has won respect and recognition by her excellent class work. We bid her God-speed and know she will come up to our expectations. EUGENE MILTON HOWELL, A.B. MARIOV, ALABAMA lad Liffled e quick n than a crown. He is calm and summer sea. His classmates know him for a true gentleman — courteous and kind — one who [s willing to share in responsibility. We wish for him the greatest success. RAYMOND DONALD HURLBERT, B.S. ENSLEV, ALABAMA Alpha Tau Omega; Pyramid Club; Belles Lett res Literary Society; Assistant Manager Gold and Black. ' 20- ' 21; Class Football, ' 22; President Ensley-Southern Club. ' 22- ' 23; Senior Class Historian, ' 24; Modern Problems Club. ' 23; Business Manager La Revue, ' 24. Great modesty often hides great merit. Originality, wit, friendliness, and the spirit and will to accomplish have won our whole- hearted admiration and respect for this lusty man of the ladies — not ladies ' man. However, Raymond does tame ' em. We don ' t know whether it Is by force of intellect, good looks, or a la cave man style. Still he does it. As he goes, he carries with him our best wishes for the success that is certain to be his. PERRY BENJAMIN JAMES, JR., A.B. TUSCALOOSA, ALABAMA Vice-President Clariosophic Literary Society. ' 22; Masonic Club; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet. ' 20- ' 21; President. ' 22- ' 23 ; Secretary Masonic Club, ' 21- ' 22; Sophomore Oratorical Contest, ' 22; Vice- President Ministerial Association, •21- ' 22; Y. M. C. A. Delegate to Blue Ridge, ' 21; Delegate to Montgomery. ' 22; Junior Oratorical Contest, ' 23. I would be pure, for the tho vho care. Perry is one of our number who has already begun making good. He has been teaching school in Missouri this year, having completed his course here last summer- He is the kind of man who does his best on any job, Pro- fessor James has our best wishes. SENIORS OTIS EDGAR KIRBV, A.B. ALBERTVILLE, ALABAMA Phi Alpha; Pyramid Club; University of Alabama, ' 21- ' 22; Masonic Club; President Sophomore Class. ' 22- ' 23; Clariosophic Literary Society; Pan-Hellenic Council, ' 23- ' 24; Sopho- more Declamation Medal, ' 23; Record on 100, 220 and 440-yard dashes; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, •23; Delegate to Indianapolis. ' 24 Ministerial Association. ' 23- ' 24; Coach Birmingham-South- ern Track, ' 23- ' 24. This is a man. Otis first won fame at Birmingham-Southern by his excellent ability in coaching Track, Since then he has directed a choir and has done assistant pastoral work, besides having entered into nearly all student activities. He is uni- versally liked. TAYLOR HERMAN KIRBY, A.B. ALBERTVILLE, ALABAMA Phi Alpha; Kappa Phi Kappa; University of Alabama, ' 21 ' 22; Clariosophic Literary Society; Education Club; Statistician Senior Class. ' 24; Secretary Ministerial Association. ' 23; President Y. M. C. A., ' 23- ' 24; Delegate to Indianapo- lis. ' 24. Taylor sampled several schools before he real- ized that Birmingham-Southern is the best. During the two years he has be en with us we for clean f alWE but -eady and a good ti: ; never afraid to buckle down to a hard job. le has been active in Bpworth League and ' . M. C. A. work, and has also made good in is class work. He seemingly is invulnerabl? 3 all co-ed efforts, but we have heard that IToman ' s College is the fatal arrow in the eel. SARA ROE LATHAM, A. B. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Kappa Lambda; President Classical Club. •22- ' 23; President Y. W. C. A. ' 23- ' 4; Honor Roll. ' 21- ' 2; ; Vic ' -Pres ident Clariosophic Liter- arv Society ' 22- ' 23; G irls ' Pan -Helle nic Coun- cil. ' 22- ' 23: Dele gate Montreal ' 23; Delegate Indianapolis . ' 24. Woman is most perfect when most 1 vomanly. Here we lave 1 girl who has been especially outstanding durir g he ■ Senior year as Y. W. C. A. pres ident. He positior ind cates the trust and onfidence i mposed i n her and the esteem in vhich she s held. Her c [ass work has been of a high ord er. and w e feel sure that after she 1 eaves she vill keep up the record that she ha s begun. HOYT BENTON LEVIE, A.B. SYLACAUCA, ALABAMA Alpha Tau Omega; Clariosophic Literary So- ciety; Football. ' 21- ' 23; Basketball, ' 21- ' 22; Track, •21- ' 22; B Club; Senior Class Lawyer, ' 24; Chairman of Council of New Dormitory, ' 23. He who ceases to love is dead already. So, take my advice and love forever. Another football mani The Class of ' 24 is taking off about half the team, not the least of whom is Levie. Many a time we have de- lighted in watching him tackle Bulldogs and such animals, and somehow, we always feel safe when he gets the ball. SENIORS JULIUS EARL LINN, B.S. ARAB, ALABAMA Pre-Med Club, •21- ' 22; Class Football, ' 22; Biological Society, •22- ' 23; Scrub Football, ' 23. I dare do all that becomes a man. During Linn ' s college career he has shown himself to be the possessor of a strong deter- mination and the will to put things through. He is a hard working Pre-Med student, who has done a great deal of outside work in addition to his school activities. EARL McBEE, A. B. ENSLEY, ALABAMA TCappa Phi Kappa; Winner Popular Science Monthly Scholarship Contest; University ot Virginia. ' 20; Track Team, •21- ' 23; Manager Track, ' 22; President Cercle Francais. ' 21- ' 22; President Belles Lettres Literary Society, ' 22; Honor Roll, ' 22; Education Club, ' 23; Class Football, ' 22: Instructor of English, Simpson School, ' 23- ' 24; Student Senate, ' 22- ' 23; La Revue Business Staff, ' 24. tic. Brave, n Learned, not pedantit McBee is a n an of personality Southern does not boast a bett lie — a student in the real sens Birmingham- student than of the word. At the same time, he is athletic enough to keep from being too intellectual, having done his share along that line. In short, he is a man who will lead his fellows. MARGARET McCALL, A.B. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Margaret has just enough dignity, just enough sweetness, ,just enough seriousness, and just enough fun to make up the kind of girl we all like. She came to us as a Junior from Woman ' s College, She has made a splendid record, both there and here. ELGIN WENDELL MELLOWN, B.S. YORK, ALABAMA Phi Delta Sigma; Ciariosophic Literary Society; Honor Roll. ' 22- ' 23; Track Team. ' 22- ■23; Cooper Medal. ' 22; Pre-Med Club, ' 22; B Club; Secretary Student Senate, ' 23; Gold and Black Staff, ' 24; Modern Problems Club, ' 23; Secretary Y. M. C. A., ' 23; Delegate Blue Ridge, ' 22; La Revue Staff, ' 24; Contemporary Club, ' 24; Assistant Librarian, ' 24; Biological Clul), ' 24; Editor Y Handbook, ' 23. It actual vhich deter values. Elgin is a me do, 1 vhethe Sine ■ ' o, he has iv hoolm ates h av who does what he proposes love, business, or college ac- ting to the Hill, three years a rather quiet life; but his come to admire his efHciency, SENIORS AUBREV ALFRED MILLER, A.B. VERNON, FLORIDA Pi Kappa Alpha; Belles Lettres Literary Society; Bulger Club; Porter Athletic Cups. ' 19- ' 21; Robertson Athletic Medals, ' 19- ' 21; Singles Tennis Champion Cup, ' 22- ' 23; Football, •19- ' 23; Captain Football, ' 22; Basketball, ' 18- ' 20; Captain Basketball, ' 18- ' 19; Baseball, ' 19- ' 22; Senior Class Orator, ' 24; B Club. Aubrey is a true example of a man ' s man. always ready to lend a feilow a helping hand. He has faced the Howard Bulldog tour times, and each time was ready for the scrap. Aubrey is almost a tradition at Birmingham-Southern — he has been the hero of the Hill for so long. Some would say that he is first in love, first in football, anil first in the hearts of his fellow- students. EMILY VENICE NESBITT, A.B. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Kappa Lambda: Maryv lie C allege. ' .•0- ' 21; Y. W. C. A. Cab t. ■22- ' 2 ; C ar iosophic Liter- ary Society; Fi ■s Honor Kc 11 ' 23; Modern Problems Club, ' n. Mirthful Emily is certain to ivi Hosts of friend vith her goo d- natured grin. Emily s the ty pe of g rl ,e call on when we want 1 thing ri( ne just right. She is ilways glad to h ■Ip out. She has cha -m woman liness. and poise —the b ■a ns to pi in a nything. a nd the energy to carry it out. She h as made a good scholastic showi ig and w e a e expectir g her to succeed. SARA NEWSOM, M.A. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Phi Beta Kappa. University of Alabama; Bachelor of Arts, University of Alabama, ' 23; Instructor in History, Birmingham-Southern, ' 23- ' 24. As a scholar, Sara is am to offer. The whole class Beta Kappa key which si of Alabama last year. Ho of human attributes t intellect. She is of : is generous with her will achieve great thi go ng the best we have is proud of the Phi won at University ever, she has plenty along with all that and she WILLIAM HERSCHEL NOLEN, B.S. ALEXANDER CITY, ALABAMA Kappa Alpha: Kappa Psi, Emory; Clariosophic Literary Society; Revue Staff, ' 23; Class Foot- ball, ' 22; Class Baseball, ' 23; Track, ' 22- ' 23. There are worse occupations in this world than feeling a woman ' s pulse. Nolen finished h Southern last summi school at Emor-y th likes the ladies and consequently, he ha year, P the work at Blrmingham- and has been in medical year. He Is a man who ho is liked by the ladies: le has been greatly missed this lover of fun and good times, and friends wish him much of both along with success that must be his. SENIORS PAUL MADDOX NORTON, A.B. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Here ' s to Mike, tlie best spoi-t ev€ shine Slope Club. ar all-round athlete, and er! The inhabitants of Sur.- feel not a little sadness when i the last ot the Nortons at of boosters for their college. hav stro n-Southe LOUISE FEMINEAR OBENCHAIN, A.B. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA The Class of ' 24 is glad to enroll Mrs. Oben- chain as one ot its members. Although she came to us in our last year, she brought with her an enviable record. As a kindergarten director she is an expert, having done work of that kind in Baldwin County, Montgomery County, and New York City. Mrs. Obenchain claims to be a collector of degrees. She has already gained the Mrs, and Ma degrees, and now will receive the A.B. from Birmingham- .=outhern. ELIJAH BERRY OGBURN, A.C. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Ministerial Association; Honor Roll. ■■I would be hun: hie. for I kno w my veakness; I would look up and laugh, ar d love. and lift. Hooker was th nkin g ot such a man when he said. The lite of a pious m inister is visible rhetoric. To know him is to adr lire him for his gentlenes s an d great optimisr a. He is a man of detern: inat on, who. finding obstacles in his path, has used them for steppii ig stones. His Alma Mater is V roud of uch a son. She expects much ol hin . and kn ows he will not fail her. MARJORIE ELIZABETH ORMOND, A.B. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Tau Delta; Basketball, ■21- ' 23; Manager, ' 22- 23; Cercle Francais, •21- ' 24: Secretary, ■22- ' 23; President. ' 23- ' 24; Secretary Sophomore Class, ' 22- ' 23; Honor Roll. ' 21- ' 23. Margie, Marg e. who is she. That all the s wains adc re her? There is no quest on more appropr iate foi Margie. Answer: She is 10 ■e ' y bee luse she is different, meaning that we lack -v ' ords to describe her. She is attractive and charming but she is quiet while other are v vacious She is appealing, but not too m uch so. She ' s a good sport and a rea pal, love d alike by girls and boys. Here ' s to •Margie! SENIORS LAFAYETTE L. PATTERSON, A.B. DAVISTON ' , ALABAMA Jacksonville State Normal School; President Clariosophic Literary Society, •23- ' :J4; President Political Club, •23- ' 24. n fraught. taught. Mr. Patterson has been a member of our class just one year, but he has taken such an active interest in the work of the class and of the College, that we are unanimously agreed that he is as loyal a son of our Alma Mater as Qld be He ha: nd admiratii the stude ' hole LEVERNE PRESTON, A.B. BESSEMER, ALABAMA Clariosophic Literary Society; First He Roll. ' 23; Cercle Francais. ' 23- ' 24; Class Club, ' 23; Bessemer-Southern Club. thr e-year girl. Her Leverne speak for themselves, showing an e; record in scholarship. She has also mai self felt in various student organization as Y. W. C. A. and French Club. A know her can testify to her friendline her sweet, sunny disposition. Class ' 24 for her the greatest success. JOHN M. PRICE, A.B. VALLEY HEAD, ALABAMA ellent ! her- sucli self happy who does thi John came to school. We know him by I and his fair and rosy comple: plain-spokenness and frankr from another genial nature n; also by his 5. tempered by ndli nterest. We shall EULA PRITCHETT, A.B. ENSLEYj ALABAMA Phi Gamma Pi; Clariosophic Literary Society; ercle Francais. ' 23- ' 24; Simpson-Southern Club; Classical Club, ' 22- ' 23; Honor Roll, ' 23. Sweet Eula i the thoughts that save npathetic and even-tempered, quiet and with a mind and a will to work. As she goes from our halls she leaves a record of which she may well be proud. She will be a useful person in whatever sphere of life she enters, and will always have the hearty backing of the Class of ' 24. SENIORS b-r:- ' : :; t:n CULL REVEL, A.B. LUVERNE, ALABAMA Belles Lettres Literar ball, ' 22; Student Senate Staff ■24. ell elf. ' Since Revel has been at B. S. C. he has taken a large part in various activities, especially this year. He is an optimistic person. Worries seem to slide oft his spirits like water oft a (luck ' s back. His cheerful smile and ready laugh will be missed when he leaves. WILLIAM RICHARDSON, A.B. GOODWATER, ALABAMA 24; Football, tain Track, ' ■■B Club. Can a fello the same tir that there isi the rest of th tha be in love and play football at 2? Ask Red. We do know t a member of our class whom est of the school hates to part with more they do with Red. He ' s a good sport, ere ever was one! He knows how to stand friend; and he knows how to stand by his ge. on the gridiron and elsewhere. Red, ALLEN HERSCHEL SMITH, A.B. FAYETTE, ALABAMA Clariosophit ' li3; La Revut Love me, Juliet, and the world is Romeo ' s. Herschel is an excellent student, a gentleman, and a man who never says no to a friend ' s request. A man of justice and principle who always stands for the right. A m,an of sterling character and high ideals who puts loyalty and honesty above all else. He is one of the most consistent and earnest workers in college, though always optimistic and happy. The ladies say he ' s tall and handsome. Yet he vows he ' ll never marry, because he believes a man married is a man marred. Though single or twain, Herschel, we know success is yours. LOUIS WILLIAM SIMS, A.B. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Belles Lettres Literary Society : Mathematics Medal, ' 20; Scholarship Medal, ' 20; President Sophomore Cass, ■20- ' 21; First Honor Roll. ' 20- ' 21; Secretary Student Senate. ' 22- ' 23; Ensley- Southern Club; Honor Book, ' 23. Not Still he tall fat- man for all that. ! is known and respected by all. He is ,nd unassuming of manner; yet he really lings. For four years, during his entire Sunshine Slopes, Louis has striven on for the honor of his Alma Mater in the field of scholarship. It is with honest pride that we note that he is being graduated Summa Cum Laude. stay ' SENIORS ANDREW WALES SMITH, B.S. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Belles Lettres Literary Society: Central- Southern Club; Manager Track, ' 23- ' 24; Assist- ant Manager Track, ' 21- ' 22: Class Football, Let us introduce you to Andy, man, full of lite and fun, who v his savings in hair brushes. 1 think he looks like a Senior, but dignity 1 Andy derby ai friends v our handy ely invests 1 may not lit ' til you derby and cane. He can put er J. M, Clark when it comes to Kats had bettor step around when omes across the campus with that 1 that cane. Andy has scores of lo heartily wish him the best of luck. ■ith hi! GEORGE RUTLEDGE STUART, JR., A.B. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Sigma Alpha Epsllon; Clariosophic Literary Society; Paints and Patches Club; B Club; Captain Freshman Basketball, ' 19; Gold and Black Staff, •19- ' 20; Revue Staff, •19- ' 20; Cheer I.,eader. ' 20; Scrub Football, ' 21; Band, ' 22; Class Football, ' 23; Glee Club, ' 21- ' 24; Scrap Iron Quartette, ' 21- ' 22; Varsity Baseball, ' 19- ' 22; Manager Baseball, ' 23; ager Dramatii Club, 23- ' 24; Wii Pan-Hellenic Counc ratorical Contest. ' 2 Club, •23- ' 24; Revue Eelectior Manager Gle ' 21- ' 24. Personality is a much-abused word; but Jack is the embodiment of personality. He is a leader who makes not the slightest effort to be one. His chief pastime is dispensing wit- ticisms. As an orator, lie holds his audience spellbound; as an all-round man, he is right there. There can never be but one Jack Stuart. GEORGE P. THIGPEN, B.S. MOBILE, ALABAMA Phi Alpha; Clariosophic Literary Society; Winner Ladies ' Debate. ' 21; Gold and Black Staff, ' 21- ' 23; Assistant Tennis Manager, ' 22; Glee Club, ' 21- ' 24; Vice-President Dramatic Club. ' 21- ' 22. Shall I, wasting in despair, die because a woman ' s fair? Pig has really done remarkably well in his school work, when you consider that he has had something so much more important to think about. He is graduating in three years, and has held the position of Chemistry Lab. Instructor during the past year. That in itself is evidence of his brains and ability. JOHN ROGERS THOMPSON, A.B. TRINITY, ALABAMA Kappa Alpha; Kappa Phi Kappa; Belles Let- tres Literary Society; Pan-Hellenic Council, ' 22- ' 24; Track Squad, ' 23; Football, ' 23; Class Football, ' 22; Senior Class Prophet. ' 24; Revue Elections, ' 24; B Club. Behold our Class Prophet! Do you note that prophetic gleam in his eyes? We ' re all anxious to know what fate he has marked out for us. Who could help liking John Rogers? He ' s such a jolly good fellow, always ready for a sure ' nough good time. p TCs SENIORS RICHARD EDMONDSON TYLER, B.S. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Phi Alpha; Belles Lettres Literary Society; Cercle Francais. ' 21- ' 22; Pre-Med Club, •21- ' 32; Dramatic Club, ' 22; Gold and Black Staff, ' 22- ■23; Class Football. ' 22. R. B. came to Sunshine Slopes in the fall of ' 20. He spent three years with us, and then went to Emory to begin his medical course. He always stood high in the estimation of professors and students. Perhaps the inspira- tion was afforded by the coming of a stranger to the Hill in 1922. After all is said and done. ■R. B. HOWARD CHARLES WALTON, M.A. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Bachelor of Arts, Bethel College; Bachelor of Divinity, Cumberland Presbyterian Theo- logical Seminary. Coolness and absence of heat and haste indi- cate fine qualities. Class ' 24 counts it an honor to have Mr. Walton receive his M.A. degree from our Alma Mater at the same time that we receive our degrees. Although he is personally known to only a few of us. we all join in wishing for the test po iible ROSA MAE WARREN, A.B. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Emory University; body; Critic and Secret Society, ' 23- ' 24; Girls ' .Scouts; Archery Club. abama College; P( ' Clariosophic Liters lee Club. •23- ' 24; G Every smile oerry. dr care away. Although this is the only year Rosa Mae has been with us, she has fallffli in line thoroughly with student lite at Birmingham-Southern, having been especially interested in Girl Scout- ing. She brings with her a good record from other schools she has attended. A girl of her determination is sure to succeed. MALCOLM MARION WATKINS, A.B. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA President Belles Lettres Literary Society. ' 22- ' 23; Secretary. ' 21- ' 22; Assistant Editor Gold and Black. ' ' 21- ' 22 ; Glee Club. ' 21- ' 24; Paint and Patches. ' 21- ' 22; Assistant Business Manager La Revue. ' 23; Central-Southern Club; Assistant Track Manager, ' 23- ' 24; Team, ' 22; Class Football, ' 23- ' 24; B Club. Honor maintaining. Malcolm is a hard worker, a good student, and a friend to everyone, having given his services freely wherever they were needed. He is a good eample of a perfect gentleman — true, chivalrous, honorable. aUvays glad to accom- modate a friend. We know that he will put his best into whatever work he undertakes. SENIORS CS ' iaW, RUTH ANNETTE WILLIAMS, A.B. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Zeta Tau Alpha; Honor Roll, •21- ' 23; Book ot Honor, ' 23; Belles Lettres Literary Society; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet. ■21- ' 23; Dramatic Club. •22- ' 23; Cercle Francais, ' 21- ' 22; Junior Class Poet. •22- ' 23; Girls ' Glee Club. ' 22- ' 24; Manager Girls ' Glee Club. ' 23- ' 24; Girls ' Pan-Hellenic Council. ' 22- ' 24; Secretary-Treasurer, ' 22- ' 23. Ruth, with her delightful personality vomanly cha of fr alty tudents. She md nds ready m heart that is re- nount of the Sun- possesso sympathy, and a big. sponsible for no smal shine on these Slope of a high scholastic record, and has entered whole-heartedly into various school activities. In a word, she is a girl whom the world will bow before. JOHN LEE WILLIAMSON, A.B. ASHLAND, ALABAMA Mr. Wil ' iamson has been with us for several years, and in that time he has always done his duty and fulfilled his obligations. Con- scientious, painstaking, with the courage of his convictions, he will play well his part in the drama of Life. BERTIE ALLEN, A.B. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Giaduate Alabama Technical Institute and College for Women; Summer Courses at Univer- sity of Alabama. University of Tennessee, Uni- versity of Chicago. Columbia University. Pea- body College; Extension Work at University of Alabama and Birmingham-Southern College. It is with pride that we name Miss Allen a member of the Class ot ' 24. Although her work with us has been as an Extension student, still from the splendid reports that have come from her, we know she is well worthy to rep- resent our Alma Mater. QUENTIN R. HENRY, M.A. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA A.B. Centenary College of Louisiana. Mr. Henry is a graduate student and is tl year taking his Masters Degree at Birn ingha Southern. He holds the position of teacher English at Ensley High School. We are c( fident that anyone with the determination a ambition shown by his willingness to go school and teach school at the same time sure to succeed. m SENIORS LUCILE JONES, A.B. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Peabody College; University of Alabama. The Class of ' 24 is proud of the prestige given them by claiming as one of their number a part-time student with such varied accomplish- ments as Miss Jones. She has done consistently good work, and we wish earnestly that suc- nay otln HIRAM HARDEGREE KING, A.B. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Graduate State Normal, Jacksonville: Pea- body College; High School Principal, ' 12- ' 17: County Superintendent of Education Coosa County. ' :7- ' 21. We are privileged in having as a member of our class one who has already stood the test of success, and has passed with flying colors. Mr. King is the principal of a school in Jefferson County, He owns a home in the neighborhood of the College, and is a worth-while citizen. MRS. EOLINE WALLACE MOORE, A.B. Peabody College; Howa School. LTnlversity of Florida: Kai Normal; Instructor Education at Birmingham- Southern Summer School, ' 23, Mrs, Moore is another member of our class whom we are sorry not to have known inti- mately. But she brings with her an enviable record in the teaching profession. I ' .LIZABETH HUNT STEADHAM, A.B. BIRMINGHAM. ALABAMA Bachelor of Philosophy, Athens Woman ' s College; Summer Course, University of Chicago. Miss Steadham is a recognized student of Spanish, and has done splendid work in that field as instructor. She has taught for several years in Havana, Cuba, and has taught Span- ish in several Birmingham High Schools. Last summer she did similar work at Birmingham- Southern and filled the position of Dean of Women. DRUSIE WHITSON, A.B. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Graduate Tucaloosa Female College. We extend our admiration and respect to Miss Whitson for her purity and goodness. Embodied in her are all of woman ' s fine ele- ments. The purest treasure mortal times afford is a spotless reputation. A life with an earnest purpose and constant application always merits reward. THOMAS CAMPBELL YOUNG, A.B. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Tuilford College. ' 91- ' 94; Winchester Normal. ' 94- ' 96; University of Tennessee, ' 01- ' 02; Exten- sion Work, Peabody College and LTnlversity of Alabama: Instructor Birmingham-Southern Col- lege, Summer of ' 23, Since 1916 Professor Young has been principal of the South Highlands School. Before that time he was principal of Birmingham Schools. In ■21- ' 22 he was president of the Elementary Principals Association. It is a privilege to have an educator of such note receive his degree with the Class of ' 24. LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-FOUR JUNIORS Page forly-sevett LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Junior Class JAMES GRIER ALEXANDER MARION JUNCTION, ALABAMA a; Belles Lettres Literary Society; ] rub Football, ■21- ' 22: Second Ho] unior Faculty. ' 24; Class Football. ' : he bo to le LEWIS GORDON ALLBRITTON WARRIOR, ALABAMA •al Club; Secretary Biological Club, ' 24. s sight, JULL- N THOMPSON ANDERSON OXFORD, ALABAMA nd sad to see. SAMUEL EUGENE ARMISTEAD CUMBERLAND CITV, TENNESSEE hi Alpha; Belles Lettres Literary Society; Gle. 2- ' 23; La Revue Staff, ' 23; Assistant Manage nd Black, ' 23; Contemporary Club. nd still the wonder uld hold all he knew CHARLES L. ASHWANDER HANCEVILLE, ALABAMA A. Cabinet, ' 23; Football, ' 23; B ELLEN GLENN BARNETT OPELIKA, ALABAMA Her open eyes desire the truth. JAMES KARY BEAVERS BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Pyramid Club; Belles Lettres Literary Society; Managing Editor Gold and Black. ■21- ' 22; Manager La Revue. ' 23; Class Football, ' 23; Central-Southern Club; President of Junior Class. ' 23- ' 24; Vice-President ot Student Senate; President of Modern Problems Club; Secretary Pan-Hellenic Coun- cil. ' 24; Student Senate. ' 24; Pan-Hellenic Council, ' 24; Contemporary Club; Delegate to Indianapolis. ' 24. He nothing did. LAWRENCE KEY BENSON, JR. TUSCALOOSA, ALABAMA ity ot Alabama, ' 22- ' 23; La Revue Art Staff. ' 24. Did he tell y( tale Page forty-eight LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Junior Class IDA LOIS CALDWELL EN ' Sr.EY, ALABAMA Gamma Pi: Athens College. ■20- ' 21; State Seer tarv Student Volunteer ■W. C. A.. ' 24: Delegate Vnh nior Class, Revi ' 24; Tr. FRANK HOWARD ECHOLS BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Belles Lettres Literary Society; Scrub Football. ' 2: ' 22- ' 23; Class Football. ' 22- ' 23; All-Class Football Tean ' 22; Scrub Baseball. ' 21; Simpson-Southern Club. 3 but the brave; ve the fair. ROBERT WADSWORTH ECHOLS BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA ; Class Football. ' 2: A nple child. HIRAM BENJAMIN ENGLEBERT HUNTSVILLE, ALABAMA Pi Kappa Alpha: Pyramid Club; President Stu Senate. ' 24; President Simpson-Southern Club. ' 24; Club; Contemporary Club; First Honor Roll. ' 22 Pan-Hellenic Council; Junior Faculty; Coach C Basketball Team, ' 23- ' 24; Manager Baseball. ' 23. What a noble pi. o( vork OSBORNE ALLEN FARR BESSEMER, ALABAMA otball. ' 22- ' 23; B Club; Student Se The Are like the bands BONNIE EARL GRAHAM COURTLAND, ALABAMA 1, ' 22- ' 23; B Club; Class FcotbaH. ' 22- ' 23. An earnest student, a lover of truth, A baseball player like Babe Ruth. RALPH EMERSON GRIFFIN MARION, ALABAMA Football, ' 23- ' 24; Scrub Football. ' 23; Biolo bitterness ORMOND RALPH GRIMES COFFEE SPRINGS,. ALABAMA Phi Delta Sigma; Graduate of Troy Normal: S Editor Gold and Black, ' 24; Glee Club, ' 24: Sc Instructor Simpson High; Assistant Coach Sin- High; Class Football, ' 24. There in his noisy mansion, skilled to rule The village master taught his little school. ' Page forty-nine LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-FOUR Junior Class TOHN WESLEY HANCHEY, JR. PRATT CITV, ALABAMA Belles Lettres Literarj ' Society; Biological Club; Gle EMMA LUCILE HANES BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Kappa Lambda. Love ' : ned. JOHN MARSHALL HARDIN TALLADEGA, ALABAMA Alpha Tau Omega; Paint and Patches Club; The Greeks; D. I. K. Club; Gold and Black Staff, ' 23; Revue Election, ■23- ' 24. LIZZIE MAE HARTLINE BESSEMER, ALABAMA Woman ' s College, ' 21- ' 22. vhos lbs JOSEPHINE HAWKINS BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Zeta Tau Alpha; Belles Lettres Literar She was indeed a pretty little cr Qode ELIZABETH ROSE HAYES BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Phi ItuI Gam ma Pi; Le Cercle Francais. ' 22- •Feelin ' blue, lonesome, too; Done been shot by Cupid. NELLE LEDBETTER HENRY BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Zeta Tau Alpha; Central-Southern Club. Those eyes were made so killing, and we fil She uses them tor the destruction of manUl EDGAR ADOLPHUS HOWELL MARION, ALABA.MA grief and fear. Page fifty LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Junior Class JOHN ELDRIDGE HUFFMAN EXSLEY, ALABAMA Lettres Literary Society; Ensley-Southei The wisdom we so highly prize Is blatant folly in his eyes. HUGH L. HUGHES GUIN, ALABAMA Sophie Literary Society; Assistant Librar vho loves to hear himself tal JOHN LEWIS JENKINS LAFAYETTE, ALABAMA Pi Kappa Alpha; Kappa Phi Kappa; Emory, ' 22: Honor Roll. ' 22- ' 23; Straiten Ready Debaters ' Medal. ' 23; Inter-Collegiate Debating Team, ' 23; Band, ' 23- ' 24: Glee Club. ' 23- ' 24; Pan-Hellenic Council. ' 23; Presi- dent Masonic Club. ' 23; Orchestra. ■23- ' 24; Class Foot- ball, ' 23; Clariosophic Literary Society. And ever and anon he beat The doubling drum with furious heat, PAUL Mcknight jones MARIANA, FLORIDA Society; Glee Club, t-ent on his careless v Swaggering grandly down the crazy road GERALD LIGHTFOOT KING TROY, ALABAMA Belles Lettres Literary Society; Ministerial Assc Band. ' 22- ' 23- ' 24.; Assistant Manager of Track. ALFRED LINN LUSK JACKSONVILLE, ALABAMA iiingham News Scholarship; Ladies ' Debate. 21; mate Millsaps ' Debate. ' 21; Gold and Black Staff, La Revue Staff, ' 24; Political Club. ' 23; Clario- MATTIE JULIA MANAR AKRON, ALABAMA Co-Ed Basketball. ' 23- ' 24. :ie studies she Ml -e the hearts of WILLIAM TAYLOR MANN STEVENSON, ALABAMA Sigma Alpha Epsilon; The Greeks. Nor of lo Page fifty-one LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-FOUR Junior Class DORIS AILEEN MARLER BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Zeta Tau Alpha. AMOS IRA MARSHALL COTTONWOOD, ALABAMA I.ettres Literary Society; Honor Roll WILLIAM BERTRAM MARTIN WARRIOR, ALABAMA ISAAC WILLIAM MAY MONTGOMERY, ALABAMA Clariosophic Literary Society; Vice-President, ' 22; Sec- retary. ' 23; Declaimer Ladies ' Debate. ' 22; Treasurer Ministerial Association, ' 22; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet. ' 22- ' 23- ' 24; President Ministerial Association, ' 24; Con- ESTHER CATHERINE MERRELL BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA elta; Woman ' s College, ' 22; Honor Roll, ' 23: La Staff, ' 23; Secretary Junior Class, ' 23- ' 24; rer Y. W. C. A.. ' 24; Secretary Classical Club, iris ' Pan-Hellenic Council, ' 24; Secretary Clari- 2 Literary Society, ' 24. Fail star, in the Alph! Liter Helle WILLIAM EDWARD MORRIS, JR. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Tau Omega; Kappa Phi Kappa: Clariosophic ry Society: Paint and Patches, ■22- ' 23- ' 24; Pan- lic Council, ' 22- ' 23- ' 24; Gold and Black Staff, ; Associate Editor La Revue, ' 24; Freshman Dec- ion Contest: Pre-Med Club, ' 21; Dramatic Club ' 23; Revue Elections, ' 24. feature and in mind, a gentleman. LEWIS JACKSON MYATT BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Lettres Literary Society; Glee Club. ' 2S- ' 24; Uni( Gold PEGRAM LAZENBY McCREARY MONROEVILLE, ALABAMA A youth to fortune and to fame unknown. ' Paffe fifty-tivo LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-FOUR Junior Class LOUISE NESBITT BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Kappa Lambda; Clariosophic Literary Society ithout de how ch she hath. MARV LINWOOD NEWTON BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA ROBERT BARRON NEWTON BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA ••Give me to the boon ot love. I ask for fame HANNAH ELIZABETH REID BESSEMER, ALABAMA Literary Society; La Revue Art Clariosophi ' 23- ' 24. • ' To be the best is but the fe St faults to ha LOTUS WALDEN RENEAU ONEONTA, ALABAMA Square and Compass; Chaplain Belles Lettr. Society; Sophomre Declaimer, ' 23; Ministc elation; Student Volunteer. ERNEST SHELTON MOULTON, ALABAMA Baseball, ' 23. 22; Manager Second Baseball He was a ca His play was re-free boy; life, and his life was play. HENRY POLHILL RICHARD BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Alpha Epsil on; Kappa Phi Kappa; Pyramid Sigma Alpha Epsilc n; Kappa Phi Kappa; Pj Club; Belles L ettr =•8 Literary Society; Pain Patches Club, ' 22- ' 23 ; President. ' 23- ' 24; Dramati Play, ' 23; Greeks. ' 22- ' 23; Secretary, ' 23; Vice- dent. ' 24; Treasurer Central-Southern Club; Gle Accompanist. ' 23- ' 24 Honor Roll, ' 22- ' 23. PERRY GORDON RICE ALBERTVILLE, ALABAMA Clariosophic Literary Society; Maryville College. ' 22- ' 23; Ministerial Association; Secretary Student Volun- teer Group, ' 24; Band, ' 21- ' 24. Page fifty-three LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-FOUR 17 Junior Class JAMES BROWN SHELTON BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Pi Kappa Alpha; La Revue Staff, CURRUTH RUSSELL SMITH FAYETTE, ALABAMA Phi Kappa; C ' .aiiosophic Literary Societj-; Con ■ary Club; iVIotlern Problems Club; Assistan Gold and Black, •22- ' 23; Editor-in-Chief U the g-reatest only In hii npli. ablii WILLIAM ANDREWS SMITH WADLEY, ALABAMA istant Ci brai vhich the th observatii WALTER DUBOSE STEAD birmin ' (;ham, Alabama TERRY HODGES TEAGUE BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Sigma Alpha Epsilon ; Assistant Manager La Re ■21; Scrub Football, ' 22; Class Football, ' 22; He Roll, •21- ' 22; Math. Medal, ' 23; Greeks; Revue E tions. ' 23; Treasurer Central-Southern Club, ' 22. OTIS DANIEL THOMAS ROCKFORD, ALABAMA Proclai: CORRINE TRAVIS BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Zeta Tau Alpha; Paint and Patches Club. A perl To va) ob y planned. nfort, and. ' HOMER TYNER BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA him that he is proud and his ■wrong about the clothes. Paffe fifty-four LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Junior Class THOMAS RICHARD WALKER, JR. WYLAM, ALABAMA Pi Kappa Alpha; Belles Lettres Literary Society Club. •22- ' 23- ' 24; President Glee Club. ' 24; Pre Greeks, ' 24; Vice-President Junior Class. ' 23; ' 23; Bnsley-Southern Club; B Club; Manager ball. ' 23; Assistant Manager Y. M. C. A. 1 book, ' 22. ' ■Full well they laughed with counterfeited g At all his jokes, for many a joke had he. ROBERT HENRY WALSTON RUSSELLVILLE, ALABAMA Belles Lettres Literary Society. rt; RUTH WARREN BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Alabama College. Montevallo, ' 21- ' 22- ' 23; Clariosoph Literary Society; Girl Scouts. If there be anyone whose p ower i_ in beauty. JOSEPH FRANKLIN WHITESIDE O. F0RD, ALABAMA JAMES MILTON WIGLEY BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA ■r English Medal NINA DEE MURIEL WILLIAMS BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Biological Club; Central-Southern Cluta; Radio Club. She doctoreth scars that never felt a wound, THEOLENE WOODRUFF BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Page fifty-five LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Our Best Friend v. J- • ' Ue eri ' Red TbeTwiTi 5 x I V • 1 t Tlar6aretforcV ir . p, -o CX-ur only nwver ' ° o§ Pa f fifty-six LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY- FOUR - HH«S ' m w§ P e! fifty-seven LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-FOUR Sophomore Class HIGH ALSTON! ABERNATHY, :i A E BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Cential-Southeii! Club. PAUL HAMMOND ACTON BIRMIXGHAM, ALABAMA Honor Roll. ' 22- ' -2S; Simpson-Southern Club. JOHN LEONARD ALLEY BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA ERIN ALLMAN GUIS ' , ALABAMA NEIL GRAHAM ARNOLD GOODWATER, ALABAMA LOUISE AVERYT BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Sor-iety Editor of Gold and Black, ' 22; La Revue Staff. ■24; Associate Editor T. W. C. A. Handbook, ' 22; Girls ' Glee Club. ■22- ' 23; Ensley-Southern Club: Revue Election. JAMES ARTHUR AYERS UMATILLA, FLORIDA Glee Club, ' 23- ' 24. ROBERT BOWLING BARNES, A T fi MONTGOMERY, ALABAMA Glee Club, •22- ' 23; Band. •22- ' 23. BALLARD BERRYMAN BAYLISS niRMINGHA.M, AL.-iBAMA RICHMOND CROOM BEATTY, n K A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Track. 23; Captain Track Team. ' 24; Freshman Dec- lamation Jledal, ' 23: Intercollegiate Debater. -23; Pres- ident of Belles Lettres. ' 23; Paint and Patches Club; Vice-President Sophomore Class. JOE DAVIS BELL ALBANV-DECATUR, ALABAMA CHARLES THERON BILLINGSLEY JASPER, ALABAMA Member Radio Club, JOHN NOEL BLACK BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Ministerial Association. MARCUS PURDON BLACK LUVERNE, ALABAMA Page fifiy-eitf it LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Sopk omore Ch BESSIE BOWERS TRENTON ' , TENNESSEE First Honor Roll. ■22- ' 23. LAMAR BRANSCOMB, 2 A E ANNISTON, ALABAMA Tennis Team, ' 23: Manager Tennis. •23--24; Assistan Football Manager, ' 23; Simpson-Southern Club. MARY BRINSKELLE, K A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Basketball, ' 23- ' 24. HOYT McCLAIN BROCK BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA GERALD JEROME BRYAN LATHROP, ALABAMA Pyramid Club; Sport Editor Gold and Black. ■22- ' 23 Editor Gold and Black. ' 24; La Revue Staff, ' 23- ' 2 1 Class Football. ' 22- ' 23; Class Baseball, ' 23. BERTRAM F. BRYANT STOCKTON, ALABAMA Band, ' 23; Assistant Business Manager Gold an Black. ' 23- ' 24. CECIL COLEMAN BURTON MINTER, ALABAMA Simpson-Southern Club; Biology Club. HUBERT CLAYTON CALDWELL, n K A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Baseball, ' 23. LILA MAY CANTEY, T A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Assistant Editor Freshman Gold and Black. ' 23; Fir Honor Roll, •22- ' 23; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet. •23- ' 2 Secretary Sophomore Class; Secretary and Treasure Ensley-Southern Club; La Revue Staff. ' 24. LUCILLE CLOWDUS, r n BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA JOHN ROBERT COLE, A T fi BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA PAUL COOKE CULLMAN, ALABAMA Associate Editor La Revue, ' 24; M tion; Belles Lettres Literary Societ C. A, Cabinet; Editor-in-Chief Gold listerial Associ: ; Forum; Y. : nd Black, ' 24. JAMES MORRIS COUSINS BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA MARGARET CRANE, AAA BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA La Revue Elections; Orchestra. Page fifty-nine LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-FOUR Soph phomore Ch INEZ CROSS, K A BIRMINGHAM, ALiVBAMA KATHERINE CROSS, K A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Bnsley-Southern Club. FRANCES ELIZABETH CROW, Z T A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA JEFFERSON DAVIS CROW, JR. JACKSONVILLE, ALABAMA JOHN B. CULP BILLINGSLEY, ALABAMA Masonic Club. BERTHA CUMMINS, K A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Glee Club. ' 23. JAMES PATRICK DANNELLY CAMDEN, ALABAMA ALTON WESLEY DAVIDSON, n K A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Advertising Manager Gold and Black. ' 23- ' 24: L Revue Staff. ' 24; First Honor Roll, ' 23; Presiden Jefferson-Southern Club, ' 23- ' 24. NELSON EDWARD DAVIS, A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA WILLIAM JOHN DUNCAN, JR., 2 A E BIRMINGHA.M, ALABAMA EDITH KATHERINE ECHOLS BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA HOWARD GASTON ELLINGTON, A T n PR. TTVILLEj ALABAMA Band, ■22- ' 23; Glee Club. ' 22- ' 23. EDGAR MEADOR ELLIOTT, JR., A T n BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Scrub Football, ■22- ' 23. JOHN THADDEUS ELLISOR, l A 2 ANDALUSIA, ALABAMA Page sixty LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-FOUR a SopK omore CI ass GARLAND KIRVEN ETHRIDGE SWEETWATER, ALABAMA Football, ' 23: B Club. KNOXIE MAE FAULK, T BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA St Honor Roll. ■22- ' 23; L Vice-Pl-esident. DON SEAY FULLBRIGHT, 2 A E BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Scrub Football, ' 22- ' 23. IRVING EASTBCRN FULLINGTON, K K GADSDEN, ALABAMA EUGENE EDWARDS GILMER BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Band, ' 23. FRANK CLIFFORD GREEN, A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Assistant Advertising Manager Gold and Black. •22- ' 2::; La Revue Art Staff. •23- ' 24; Business Manager Fresh- man Gold and Black, ' 23. PAUL TRUMBULL GREENE BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Le Cercle Francais; Classical Club; Glee Club. •22-23. MILES HARDY Tl ' LER, ALABAMA Advertising Collector Gold and Black, ' 24. JEWELL VASSIE HENDRIX BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA JANIE REBECCA HILL, T A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Central-Southern Club; Le Cercle Francais. ROGERS LEE HILL WINFIELD, ALABAMA CHARLES HUBERT HODGES, 1 A 2 YORK, ALABAMA Class Baseball, ' 23; Gold and Black Staff, ' 24. EMMETT JULIAN HODGES WOODVILLE, ALABAMA Political Club. MARY HAMILTON HORTON, T A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA First Honor Roll, ' 23; English Medal, ' 23; La Revue Elections, ' 24; Vice-President Classical Club, ' 24; Cen- tral-Southern Club. Page sixty-one LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Soph phomore Clc IRA HOUSTON DAWSON-, ALABAMA ERNEST PRICE HOWELL HARTFORD, ALABAMA Football, ' 23; B Club. MOLLIE BECK JENKINS, Z T A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA RUSSELL FOSTER JOHNSON, A BESSEMER, ALABAMA Bessemer-Southern Club; Vice-President, ' 23- ' 24; Vice- President Belles Lettres Literary Society, ' 23: Dra- matic Club; Inter-Society Oratorical Medal, ' 23; Honor Roll, ' 2;- ' 23, MARVIN WALTER JONES BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA RUSSEL QUINCY JONES JASPER, ALABAMA Ministerial Association, KATE ELINOR JOYNER ETHELSVILLE, ALABAMA MARGUERITE KEENON BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA ROSA LURLINE KERN GREENVILLE, ALABAMA VERMAN TICHNER KIMBROUGH, A RAGLAND, ALABAMA Baseball, ' 22; Glee Club. ■22- ' 23: Dramatic Club. Scrub Football. ' 22- ' 23; President Sophomore ■23- ' 24. WILLIAM ARTHUR KIPP LEEDS, ALABAMA ELSIE EDNA LANDERS, T A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Honor Roll, ' 22; Pan-Hellenic Council, ROBERT IRVIN LAWRENCE RANDOLPH, ALABAMA Ministerial Association. FRANCES LEDBETTER BIRMINGHA.M, ALABA.MA Revue Elections, ' 23- ' 24. Page sixly-tv-o LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Soph phomore Clc VIVIENNE LEWIS, r n BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA MARIANNE LYLES, Z T A BIRMIKGHAM, ALABAMA ANDREW GLADYS LYNCH BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Ministerial Association. OSCAR MACHADO DA SILVA URUGUAYANA, R. G. DO SUL, BRAZIL Track. ' 23- ' 24; Treasurer Clariosophic Literary Society ' 24; Secretary Ministerial Association; Presid ' -n Student Volunteers, ' 24; Glee Club. ' 24; Delegate 1 Indianapolis, ' 24. SARAH ELIZABETH MACKENZIE, Z T A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA INEZ GLENN MARABLE BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA SADIE DOUGLASS MARABLE BIRMINGHAM. ALABAMA MAXINE VIRGINIA MASSIE, K A BIRMiyGHAM, ALABAMA JAMIE LONG MEIGS, A i! CENTERVILLE, ALABA.MA MILDRED MIMS, Z T A BIRMINGHA.H, ALABAMA SIDNEY BERTRAM MORRIS, I A i: GADSDEN, ALABAMA Glee Club, Band. ' 22-23. ROBERT WARD MOOTY, A ROANOKE, ALABAMA Vice-President Freshman Class. ' 22- ' 23. FLOYD B. McCURDY FORT PAYNE, ALABAMA GUY B. McGOWAN LATHAM, ALABAMA Ministerial Association; Glee Club. ' 24; First Roll, ' 23. Pai e sixty-three LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Soph Clc pnomore i iass VELMA McNUTT EDCEWOOO, ALABAMA ZETA McTEIRE BESSEMER, ALABAMA MARY ELSIE ORR RIRMINCHAM, ALABAMA HERBERT OSBORNE BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA BEATRICE NATALIE OVERALL, K A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Glee Cub; Dramatic Club. CHARLES DOWELL PATTERSON GOODWATER, ALABAMA Ministerial Association. RUTH PEARSON ALEXANDER CITY; ALABAMA THEODORE BOWLING PEARSON, i: A E LEROV, ALABAMA CARLTON L. PERDUE MINTER, ALABAMA THOMAS COLEMAN PETTUS, A T o ATHENS, ALABAMA Classical Club. CALVIN MOORE PINKARD ROANOKE, ALABAMA JAMES OLIVER PINKSTON, A DADEVILLE, ALABAMA Biology Club. DOUGLAS CHARLES PRITCHETT THOMASVILLE, ALABAMA ryramid Club; Secretary Student Senate. ■23- ' 21; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet. •23- ' 24; Delegate to Indianapolis. ' 24; Football. ' 23; B Club. SARA PRITCHETT, r n BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Page sixty-four LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Sopli Clc ophomore Ljlass JAPHETH E. RAWLS, A T EK ' TERPRISE, ALABAMA lident B. S. C. FLORA JOY ROBERTS BESSEMER, ALABAMA Ensley-Southfrn Club; First Honor Roll, ' i- ' ALTON BUNDY ROBINSON, n K A MINDEN, LOUISIANA Biology Club; Masonic Club. JOHN WILLIAM ROONEY BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Central-Southern Club; .Scrub Football, ' 23, JOHN EDWIN RUSH BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Ministerial Association. MATTIE WOOD RUTLEDGE BIRMIN ' CHAM, ALABAMA PAULINE SANDS ABANDA, ALABAMA PIERCE TURNER SCOTT, II K A GADSDEN, ALABAMA Football, ' 23; B Club. RUDOLPH SCOTT GADSDEN, ALABAMA Ministerial Association; Scrub Football. ' 23. EDWARD DEWEY SIMMONS MINTZ, NORTH CAROLINA Biology Club. CLARENCE MORILTON SMALL, A GADSDEN, ALABAMA BOYD YOUNGBLOOD SMITH REFORM, ALABAMA Class Football, ' 22. ELIZABETH SMITH, Z T A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Dramatic Club. ALONZO CARROLTON SPEED HALSELL, ALABAMA Radio Club. Paffe sixty-five LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Sophomore Class LEWIS HAROLD SPRADLEY EASONVILLE, ALABAMA LEON McCOY STEVENSON, A T JASPER, ALABAMA OLIN HUGH STEVENSON, A ROANOKE, ALABAMA WILLIAM LEIGH TATOM, A S BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA THOMAS A. THORNBURGH BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA JAMES W. THORNTON GENEVA, ALABAMA RUFUS HAYNES TIMBERLAKE STEVENSON, ALABAMA Ministerial Association. HOLMES ALVAN TURNER, n K A ROANOKE, ALABAMA S.Tub Foutball, ■■li- ' 2i; Simpson-Soutlicrn CI MARY ELIZABETH TYLER, T A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA La Revue BlL-ctions, ' 24. WILLIAM HERCHIAL VANSANT ENSLEY, ALABAMA Biology Club. ALONZO WALTON VARNON PRATT CITV, ALABAMA Biology Club. STANLEY PLAXICO WATKINS QUINTON, ALABAMA Football, -i-l; I.a Revue Staff. ' 24. CI OSCAR THOMAS WEEKS HANCEVILLE, ALABAMA President Fr. slir nan Clas s. •2-2- ' 23 ; Vice-Pre sident 1 VI. C. A.; Ho nor Roll, ' 23 !; Stuclen t Senate, 24; Fool jail. ■■22- ' :;3; ■•B Club. ROBERT CULLEN WEST, JR. WINONA, MISSISSIPPI Page sixty-six LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Sophc Clc JOSEPH WILLIAM WHEELER, II K A TRUSSVILLE, ALABAMA Baseball, 21- ' 23; Club. LUCILLE LYLE WILLIAMS BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Basketball, •22- ' 23. MARVIN O ' NEAL WILLIAMS FAIRFAX, ALABAMA THOMAS LOREN WILLIAMS, K A FORT PAYNE, ALABAMA Football, ' 22- ' 23; B Club; Baseball, ' 23. FLORA WILLIS BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA VESTER E. WILLIS TUTWILER, MISSISSIPPI Scrub Football, ' 23. CATHERINE RICHARDSON WOOD, Z T A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA WALTER HOWELL WOODROW BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Ensley-Southern Club. DURWARD O. WRIGHT, i; A E FORT PAYNE, ALABAMA FRANK B. YEILDING, JR., 2 A E BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA LEWIS MILTON YEILDING, 2 A E BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Treasurer Sophomore Class, ' 23- ' 24; Football, B Club. WILBUR GRAY HOWELL, n K A MARION, ALABAMA Football, ■22- ' 23; Baseball, ' 22; ' -B Club, T. W. ROGERS BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA JOHN R. RUETE BMOKLYN, NEW YORK Page sixty-seven LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R BjiieOid e Page sixly-eigiit LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-FOUR sixty-ntne LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-FOUR in Cli JOE ALBERT ABERCROMBIE BIRMI.VGHAM, ALABAMA ETHEL BENA ABERNATHY m ' cALLA, ALABAMA WILL LEONARD ADAMS, A GREEXWOOD, ARKANSAS MARY RUTH ALLEN BIRMIXCHAM, ALABAMA HELON ALGOOD, Z T A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA HENLEY CALVIN AMMONS BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Simpson-Southern Club. VILLL M BRUNSON ATKINSON GRACEVILLE, FLORIDA I ' r. ' si.lent Frcsliman Plass; La Rivue Staff, ' lit HOWARD WILLIAM BAILEY, K A BESSEMER, ALABAMA ? Club; Band. ' 23; Pros. Bessomfi-Southcrn C DONNAVE MILDRED BAKER FAIRFIELD, ALABAMA WILLIAM LEE BARBER LANGDALE, ALABAMA JOHN LAVETTE BASWELL COAL CITY., ALABAMA MYRA BEAL WYLAM, ALABAMA La Revue Art Staff. ' 24. LORRAINE R. BLACK BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Football. ' 23; ■■B Club. ALBERT BLAYLOCK BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA LELAND CHARLES GILBERT BOGGS BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA WILLIAM DANIEL BOLING LENOX, ALABAMA Page seventy LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Freshman Class JULirS WALLACE BONNER ROAXOKE, ALABAMA MARTIN BRISCOE, t A UNION GROVE, ALABAMA NEIL BROOKS SELMER, TENNESSEE ARTHUR EDWARD BROWN BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Dramatic Club. CLAUDE JOE T. BROWN CULLMAN, ALABAMA Band, ' L i. WILBER EMORY BROWN BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA TALULAH FAY BURGESS ROANOKE, ALABAMA VIRGIL BURTRAM SPRINGVILLE, ALABAMA MAMIE MARTYS BUTTRAM PRATT CITY, ALABAMA ALLEN M. BUZAIRD BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA FRANK GILMORE CAIRNS BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA MARGARET DEAN CALHOUN, K A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA WILBUR O. CALHOUN GROVE HILL, ALABAMA Scrub Football. ' 23. MARY LUCILE CANNON, Z T A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA ORA ALMETH CARDER, r n TARRANT CITY, ALABAMA PAUL JONES CHAMBERS BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Page seventy-one LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Freshman Class OSIE VERNON CHAPMAN MORRIS, ALABAMA HOWARD G. CLARK, JR., f i 2 BIRMIN ' GHAM, ALABAMA LELA CLARK BIRMINGILAM, ALABAMA CLAUDE WILSON CLOWDCS BESSEMER, ALABAMA BENNIE BERNERD COCKRELL BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA JOSEPH EDWARD COLVIN, JR. BIR.MINGHAM, ALABAMA JOHN O. COOPER, JR. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Drum Major. REBECCA SNOW COUSINS, T A BIRMINCHA.M, ALABA.MA DOWLEN DORSEY COX ARAB, ALABAMA THERON OSCAR COX BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA HELEN LILLIAN CRAIN, T A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Vice-President Freshman Class. Re Ele CHARLES AUGUSTUS CRAVEN BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Simpson-Southern Club. JAMES READ CRAWFORD, A 2 DOTHAN, ALABAMA JAMES C. CRIM SILURIA, ALABAMA JOHN HOMER CRIM, 2 A E HOLT, ALABA.MA LORENE CURTIS JASPER, ALABAMA Page se-venly-two LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Freshman Class SUSIE AUGUSTA DAHLBERG BLADON ' SPRINGS, ALABAMA THOMAS LAWSON DAVIDSON ALBAXV, ALABAMA DOROTHY HUBBARD DAVIS, Z T A HOGANSVILLE, GEORGIA La Revue Election; Glee Club. GESSINA DE HOLL BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA ROSS PERRY DODDS, K A ROSEDALE, MISSISSIPPI ORION T. DOZIER BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Assistant Cheer Leader, •23- ' 24. IVEY N. DRINKARD LINDEN, ALABAMA JOHN WESLEY DRINKARD LINDEN, ALABAMA CHARLOTTE ELIZABETH DUGGER, K A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA La Revue Art Staff. ' 24. THOMAS ERSKINE EARNEST WINFIELD, ALABAMA STANLEY BRYAN ECHOLS BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA THEODORE MANNING ELDER BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA BARNES ELLIOTT BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA WILLIAM YOUNG ELLIOTT BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA VELMA MARY FALLON BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA WILFRED HILL FARISH CAMDEN, ALABAMA Page seventy-three LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R ' reshma n CI ass HLBERT WESLEY FARLEY LEEDS, ALABAMA Simpson-Southern Club. RICHARD ADAMS FENNELL, A ALBANY, ALABAMA EDNA WELLBORN FLOYD BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA MARGARET ETCJENL FORD BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA CLARENCE LOUIS FOSSETT, A 2 BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA President Cential-Soutliern Club. CHARLES BROWN FOWLER, A PELL CITV, ALABAMA VIOLA INEZ FRITTS WVLAM, ALABAMA JAMES EDWARD GAILEY SPRINfiVILLE, ALABAMA EUGENE GILBERT BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA LUTHER DOBBS GODBEY VALLEY HEAD, ALABAMA AMELIA GRACE GODFREY BIRMINGHA.M, ALABAMA FRANK CLARK GOW, JR. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA CHARLES MURDOCK GRAVES BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA WILLIAM DAV ' SON GRAVES, JR., i: A E ALE.XANDER CITV, ALABAMA ELIZABETH GREEN, ■! r n BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Basketball, ■22- ' 23. FRANCES ANNA GREENE BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Page seventy-four LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Fresnman Class ANDREW WARREN GRIFFIN BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA MARY GUILIAN PRATT CITY, ALABAMA WILLIAM NELSON GUTHRIE WYLAM, ALABAMA DORIS HAIGLER WYLAM, ALABAMA G ' .ee Club. JOHN KING HALL VALLEY HEAD, ALABAMA MARGARET AMANDA HANES, K A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA CARL HUFFMAN HANNA KELLYTOX, ALABAMA THOMAS S. HARRIS TALLAPOOSA, GEORGIA Glee Club. WALLACE BENTON HARRISON, JR., K A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA ETOYLE HEITLINGER, r n BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA ALVIN THORNTON HICKS SYCAMORE, ALABAMA JOHN B. HILL BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA VIRGINIA HILL, K A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA JOSEPH UNDERWOOD HOLCOMBE, n K A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA WILLIS RUSSELL HOLDER, 2 A E GALLATIN, TENNESSEE ARLIN ANDERSON HOLDRIDGE LANGSDALE, ALABAMA Page seventy-fi ' ve LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Freshman CL JESSE WILLIAM HOLLINGSWORTH WHICHAM, GEORGIA hi;tchenson holmes hooton ROANOKE, ALABAMA LONNIE HUDGENS LUVERN ' E, ALABAMA GEORGE DEWEV HCGHES WARRIOR, ALABAMA WILLIAM HARRISON JENKINS, n K A LAFAYETTE, ALABAMA Band, 23; Scrub FootbaU. LAURA JOHNSON BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA HUBERT W. JONES SPRINCVILLE, ALABAMA CLAUDE COLLIER KEATHLEY GORDONSVILLE, TENNESSEE ALBERT CLAY KELLY REPTON, ALABAMA Scrub Football. WARREN WOODFIN KELLY REPTON, ALABAMA Glee Club. CAROLINE KENNEDY BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA KARL T. KEY ROANOKE, ALABAMA Revue Elections. SPENCER T. KIMBROUGH, A T fJ RANCLAND, ALABAMA Glee Club. STEPHEN A. KISH BOOTHTON, ALABAMA ALLIE HELEN LAIRD BESSEMER, ALABAMA EDWARD J. LAPPAGE, A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Page seventy-six LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Freshman Class MILDRED LOUISE LEE BIRMIN ' GHAM, ALABAMA LEONA THELMA LEWIS BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA HENRV J. LIDSTER BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA RICHARD CAMERON LIPSEV, A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA STEWART LIVINGSTON BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA EUNICE OZELLA LOVE ADAMSVILLE, ALABAMA TELULAH ROSE LOVE BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA JAMES FREDERICK LOVETT BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA ALMYAN HERSCHALL LYNCH FAIRFAX, ALABAMA VERN MABRY, K A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA JOHN SIDNEY MALLOY BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Treasurer Freshman Class. LEON C. MANTEL BREWTON, ALABAMA DANIEL MABRY MARSHALL FLAT ROCK, ALABAMA News Scholarship. JOHN ARDIE MATHISON, IT K A ONEONTA, ALABAMA WILLIAM CHARLES MATTISON, A T n ANNISTON, ALABAMA MILDRED EMELINE MAYS TUSCALOOSA, ALABAMA Page seventy-seven LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-FOUR Freshman Class ROV HOUSTON MAYS BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA GLADYS McCONATHA BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA FRANK G. McCONNELL, n K A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA CLARENCE LESLIE McDORMAN BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA JAMES MALCOLM McEACHERN RANKS, ALABAMA NOBLE RALPH McEWEN, A COLUMBIANA, ALABAMA BESSIE BELLE McGEE CARROLTON, ALABAMA GRACE McGOUGHEY BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA MARY ALICE McLAREN, K A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA CATHERINE THERESA McNALLY BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA ALVA LEWIS McPHERSON TARRANT CITY, ALABAMA GRADY McSPADDEN, n K A FORT PAYNE, ALABAMA WILLIAM EWING MELLOWN, A YORK, ALABAMA JAMES EDWARD MILES BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA HOWLETT ANDREW MINTO BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA AMELIA IRENE MONTGOMERY WYLAM, ALABAMA Page sevenly-eigln LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R in Ch CARL EDWARD MOOR BIRMIN ' CHAM; ALABAMA FRANK DIRWORD MOORE, A MOBILE, ALABAMA Jt ' LIA MOORER BIRMIXGHAM, ALABAMA FRED M. MOOTY, A ROANOKE, ALABAMA ROBERT EDWIN MOOTV ROANOKE, ALABAMA Assistant Cheer Loader. CHARLES ELTON MORRIS, A T U FAIRFIELD, ALABAMA Orchestra. ■:;3- ' :;4; Band, ' 23. FRANK ROBINSON MORRIS, A T BIRMINCHA.M, ALABAMA JOSEPH SHELDON MORRIS, A T V. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA KARL MORRISON BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA GESTER LAMAR MULLENDORE, t A i; ROANOKE, ALABAMA MILDRED GREGORY MULLINS, T A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Glee Club. EARL OLIVER MURRAY ELOUNTSVILLE, ALABAMA WOODFORD OWEN NELSON HARTSELLE, ALABAMA MABLE CLAIR NESBITT, K A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA La Revue Elections. MARVINEE NEWTON, K A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA PAUL NICKERSON SILURIA, ALABAMA Band, ' 23. faffe seventy-nine LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R hman Cli rreshma JAMES A. NIXON MONTGOMERY, ALABAMA Assistant Cheer Leader. RUFUS WILLIAM OAKEY FORREST, MISSISSIPPI CLARENCE ARTHUR O ' BRIEN PRATT CITY, ALABAMA It Senate; Picsiflent Ensley-Southern WILLIAM ALBERT OWENS AN ' D ERSOS ' , ALABAMA GRACE PARSONS BESSEMER, ALABAMA HAROLD PARTRIDGE BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA VIRGINIA LEE PEGUES, T A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA ALFRED BYRD PHILLIPS DORA, ALABAMA Simpson-Southern Club. TRl ' MAN MITCHELL PIERCE EQUALITY, ALABAMA ELIZABETH PITTMAN BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA WATSON POTTS, 2 A E BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA PETER PREER, JR., 3 A F. TUSKEGEE, ALABAMA MAMIE ELLA PRITCHETT THOMASVILLE, ALABAMA NORA GAVLE PRITCHETT THOMASVILLE, ALABA.VIA HERBERT CHARLES PUGH HUNTSVILLE, ALABAMA CLARA Pl ' RDY BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Page eighty LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Freshman Class ALICE MILDRED QIEHL WYLAM, ALABAMA Glee Club. ALBERT WILLIAM RAY VINCENT, ALABAMA SYLVESTER RAY HEIBERGER, ALABAMA JAMES WISON REINHARDT, JR. MONTGOMERY, ALABAMA Glee Club; Simpson-Southern Club. J. THOMAS RENFRO, JR. FAYETTE, ALABAMA EDMOND LEE RICE ALBERTVILLE, ALABAMA FERMAN p. RICHEY ALBERTVILLE, ALABAMA EDMOND LOUIS DANIEL ROBERTS SUGGSVILLE, ALABAMA JOHN HUEL ROBINSON ROCKFORD, ALABAMA CLEO LOIS ROGERS DANVILLE, ALABAMA LAFAYETTE ERNEST ROGERS MORRIS, ALABAMA REBECCA PEGUES ROGERS BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA SUSIE ROSSER BESSEMER, ALABAMA WILLIAM ARTHUR ROTON MONTGOMERY, ALABAMA JOHN ROBERT ROWE, K A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA WILLETT RUDULPH, 2 A E BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Page eiyhiy-ont LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-FOUR resnma n Clc LOIS SACKRIDER BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Ensley-Southern Club. ROKERT WILLIAM SAPP, JR. CULLMAN, ALABAMA Tiaek. -l ' : ' .; Intur-Society Debating Tt ' am. ROBERT KNEIS3Y SAUNDERS, K A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA WILLIAM HARRY SEAY BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA RALPH H. SEGREST PINCHARD, ALABAMA EUGENE OLIVER SELF, n K A TRUSSVILLE, ALABAMA MILDRED KATE SELF BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA JOHN ASBURY SELMAN, JR., A 2 BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Gold and Black Staff, ' 2 3. HERNDON TURNER SESSIONS BELLVIEW, ALABAMA JOSEPH RODGERS SHERWOOD BRUNDIDGE, ALABAMA Gold and Black Staff, ' 23; Political Club. LEONARD D. SHIVERS CRACEVILLE, FLORIDA Track, ' 23. ELDA R. SKELTON, A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA JOHN GUTHRIE SLATON, A GADSDEN, ALABAMA EDNA SMITH BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Glee Club. SIBYL SMITH BIR.MINGHAM, ALABAMA MARY WALTER SMVER, K A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Page etguly-tiuo LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-FOUR ' reshma n CI ass GUY EVERETT SNAVELV, JR., A T o BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Assistant Footljall Manager. CORDA FLO STANSBURY, r n LOCKWOOD, MISSOURI PAUL STEPHENSON OAKMAN, ALABAMA ROSCOE ELI STEVENS EVERGREEN, ALABAMA CLARENCE HOWARD STEWART COLLBRAX, ALABAMA FORREST C. STINSON VALLEY HEAD, ALABAMA ELIZABETH STONE, Z T A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Glee Club, ' 23. DAVID BENJAMIN TALIAFERRO BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA JOHN BIBB TATE PHOEXIX CITV, ALABAMA k, ' 23: Winner Cooper Road Race; Glee Club, SAMUEL RALPH TERHUNE BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA ALBERT ROSS THOMAS ALE.XANDER C:TV, ALABAMA JESSIE DEAN THOMPSON BIRMI.VGHAM, ALABAMA Orchestra, ' 23. MARY LUCILE THOMPSON, r n BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Revue Elections. FRANK SAMUEL TROTTER, A 2 SHEFFIELD, ALABAMA RUTH TUCKER BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA HOLLIE TURMAN BESSEMER, ALABAMA Pat e eiijhty-three LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-FOUR ' resnma n CU CARLOS MOZEL TYNDAL GRACEVIIXE, FLORIDA IRA CRUMP UNDERWOOD SYCAMORE, ALABAMA Glee Club, ' 23. MARY VANCE BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Glee Club. LILLIAN AMANDA WAITS LINCOLN, ALABAMA JAMES CHAPPELLE WALLER BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA CLARA AGNES WALTON, r n JASPER, ALABAMA JOSEPH FLETCHER WATKINS BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Central-Southern Club. HERBERT WEAVER BREWTON, ALABAMA FLOYD WEED, JR. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA EDWARD HAMILTON WEST BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Dramatic Club. MAURINE THURMAN WHITE BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA LOIS WHITLOCK BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Glee Club. ERNEST WILLIAMS FAIRFAX, ALABAMA WILLIAM WESLEY WILLIAMS EUFAULA, ALABAMA REBECCA DICKERSON WILLIAMSON, T .: BHSSEMER, ALABAMA WILLIAM DOUGLAS WILLIS, JR., K . LAMBERT, MISSISSIPPI Page eigliiy-four LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Freshman Class ISABEL BYRD WILSON BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA WILLIAM FLOYD WILSON HAVANA, ALABAMA Track, ' 23. THOMAS FOXWORTH WOLFORD, n K A IRONDALE, ALABAMA HAZEL CLEVELAND WOOLLEY BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Central-Southern Club; Secretary Freshman Class. BOBBIE YORK BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Ensley-Southern Club. Every Freskman Believes in Birmingham-Southern. Xdolizes the faculty. Resolves to pass all work. ]V ' Jeans well. Is somebody ' s ideal. ever forgets his place. GfCts what is coming to him. JJas some good qualities. A.lways speaks well for the school. Makes friends with everybody. Studies occasionally. Ought to wear his golden crown. I pholds the Honor System. Thinks first before speaking. IJas an equal chance to win. Expects to be a success. Reads the Gold and Black. Naturally loves tradition. Consumes a bit of learning. Outgrows his freshness. Leaves an impression. Xjoves his Alma Mater. Earnestly turns over a new leaf. (Jreets others with a smile. Eventually passes on. Page eiglity-jive LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY- FOUR Birmingkam-Soutliern Summer School, 1923 The Summer Session is divided into two terms of six weeks each. Its plan is to give work that will meet primarily the needs of the following classes of students: (i) Teachers who desire a better training for their work in the class room, and who wish to secure, extend or renew certificates ; or to prepare for state examinations. (2) Candidates for admission to college or those who desire to obtain advanced college credit; (3) and all persons qualified to pursue with profit any course offered, whether or not they are engaged in study or teaching. The courses given by the heads of the arious departments include the languages, the sciences, mathematics, history, psychology, sociology, and education. The enrollment for the 1923 session was double that of the preceding year, and it is thought that an even larger number will be enrolled in the 1924 session. Page eighty-six c Dl q| A |f J| K 5 il -J IW dl I HHy jHH 3B T D w 1 ' m i a ' iwwyg,— 1 y 6 Uilelics LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN COACHING STAFF Charlie Brown, Head Coach; Douglas Wingo, Assistant Football; Charles K. Zeilman, Physical Director; Otis Kirby, Track; Ben Englebert, Co-ed Basketball; Mike Norton, Reserve Football. Page eiglity-nine LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Staff oi Cheer Leaders Porter Florence Head Cheer Leader R. E. MooTY Assistant Cheer Leader J. A. Nixon Assistant Cheer Leader O. T. DoziER Assistant Cheer Leader O. Stanton Gandy, Captain On the page opposite is pictured Captain Big Hoss Gaudy, end de luxe and Panther star extraordinary, who led the 1923 campaign of the gridiron team. Big Hoss is the only man that ever played on a Gold and Black eleven and won recognition as All-Southern material. He received many mentions in 1922 as All-Southern end, and several last season. Injuries, however, handicapped him severely during the past season, and he was not able to do his best work in a large number of the games. Hoss was the outstanding defensive player in practically every game in which he participated during the past three years. Going down under punts, he was at his best and, backing up the line, he was invincible. He closed out his brilliant career on Sunshine Slopes in the great Howard-Birmingham-Southern battle November 23. His name will go down among the Panther immortals in athletics. Page ninety LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-FOUR FOOUBnLL THE KING OF THE PANTHERS Page ninety-one LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-FOUR SQUAD Vn. ' al K e r MciTicjOer- elect DTclLlocwinO f Sb1 S l er - - g Page nhiely-Uvo ' 1923 Letter Men Julian T. Anderson, Quarterback He is June to some and Jelly to others, but is a brainy little field general when he is in the game. June is a veteran on the Panther squad, and has done good work on the team. Despite his smallness in statue, he has won letters for two years in football. He still has one year in the fore in which to capture his third B on the gridiron. Charles L. Ashwander, Guard One of those fortunate individuals who performs on the gridiron for his Alma Mater and has not been dubbed with some ridicu- lous moniker. Ashwander got the oppor- tunity to do his stuff in a large percentage of the games last season and played con- sistent football. He has the size, and should be one of the best linemen for the Gold and Black in 1924. He has one more season with the Panthers. R. Lorraine Black, Fullback Curly, the boy with the pretty hair, got his big chance late in the year. Playing but little in the earlier games, although he showed up well in all, he was reserved as the big gun for the Howard game — he produced. Smashing the line for good gains on every attempt, he was the outstanding line plunger of the day. Curly has two more years in which to make a great grid star for the Panthers. Garland K. Etheridge, Guard A boy with a cognomen such as was swung onto Big ' Un some time after his advent into this now jazzy universe might be ex- pected to be held down by such a handicap, but not so with Big ' Un. He went out for the Hilltop eleven and made it. He is a husky little chap and presents a bulk that is hard to move aside. During the remaining two 3ears of his college career he should make a linesman of first rank. Page ninety-iliree 1923 Letter Men Dave E ' axs, Guard What does Dave care even if they did vote him the most handsome man? And, ladies, hear ye this: He is also a handsome football player. He has %von the recognition of being one of the best guards that ever played at Birmingham-Southern. In the game, a glance do vn the line, when the opponent has the ball, invariably «ill find Dave behind the line of the opposition snag- ging the runner. Still t«o years more are left for his work to stand out on the football field. OsBORXE Ar.LEX Farr, Fullback Captain-Elect Red, that ' s his title. Carry- ing some 185 or 190 pounds of brawn and inuscle through the opponents ' line was the small task assigned Red on the football field. Howard felt the smashing rush of those pounds again and again in that historic battle at Rickwood and helplessly fell aside. At the helm of the Panther grid machine next year Red should lead on to victory. It is his last year that he is serving in the capacity as captain of the team. JoHX M. Gaxdy, End The sporting world has known a number of famous turf performers, Zev and Sarazen, for instance, but Birmingham-Southern has a stable that is also renowned. Big Hoss and Little Hoss — they ' re the Panthers ' bid for honors among famous horses. John is the Little Hoss and, like his brother, plays an end. He performed in stellar fashion on the flank of the Panther line last season. He has two vears more with the (lold and Black. Erxest Price Howell, End Another boy burdened with his name. Price was used in a good many games at flank in 1923. In the Howard game he was a big performer. Many who saw him play say that he will be in position next year to fill the shoes of Big Hoss at end without loss of strength to the team. He is an aggres- sive player and a fast man. He earned his first letter this year, and has two more years to play. Page ninety-four 1923 Letter Men Wilbur G. Howell, Tackle Dad is what they call him and, although his hair is a little thin on tnp and his joints a bit stiff, he ' s a darn good man for the fix he ' s in. Dad has been one of the out- standing tackles on the squad since his coming to the Slopes two years ago- He broke his ankle during his first year, but went through the last season in good shape and played great ball. He also plays at end, as well as tackle. He has one more year with the team. HoYT B. Levie, Center He is the center on the football eleven and the center of attraction where the ladies con- gregate. Sheik is one of the fightin ' est little centers that has performed on Panther teams since the first one, somewhere back in the ' 90 ' s. In every game of the year, which he played, he was mentioned as a star, and despite the fact that he pulls the beam at the comparatively low mark of 155, for a center, he has bucked the biggest opponents with suc- cess. His football career for his Alma Mater closed in a great game with Howard. Aubrey A. Miller, Quarterback Some years ago, when Aubrey first made his appearance on Sunshine Slopes, somebody dubbed him Frog. It is a bit of history that has almost been forgotten, but the ability that was so marked in his first game with the Panthers was just as outstanding in the last. In many of the games, Miller was half the Panther offensive, and his running and gen- eralship on the field were the winning factors in many games during his career. The cur- tain dropped on his life, as a college football player, at the signal of the final whistle in the Howard game. Douglas C. Pritchett, Tackle Doug broke into varsity football during the past season. His rugged playing was marked even during his year on the Freshman team, and he was promoted to a regular on his second annual attempt at the great col- lege sport. Two more years are before the Big Chief to show that in him that fighting blood of America ' s first inhabitants, which in slight strains courses through his veins, is still a dominant factor. He is expected to be one of the Panthers ' best before his career shall have terminated. Page ninety-five . .:- .% -J5BiE?3 1923 Letter Men Japheth E. Rawls, Center They s ay he slept the clock around, so they dubbed him Rip. This trait, however, was not brought out in his football playing, for Rip is a wide-awake pivot man. He made the team on his first attempt and, with the loss of Levie, will be the Panthers ' main- stay at center next year. He is an accurate snapper-back and an aggressive linesman. He has one more year with the Panthers. William Richardson, Halfback A veteran who played in practically all of the games. Red closed his career this sea- son on the gridiron. He has seen a long term of service in athletics on Sunshine Slopes, and has taken an acti ' e part in three sports — foot- ball, basketball and track. Pierce Tlrxer Scott, Tackle A smiling countenance is changed for a fighting mien and a sunny disposition is lost when Pealus takes the field. He is a rug- ged player and a fighter from the first to the last. He played great football on the Fresh- man squad and made the varsity from the first day out during the past season. With two more years in the offing, Pealus should make a great record for himself with the Gold and Black. John Rogers Thompson, fullback When the name of John Rogers is brought up there is no student of Birmingham- Southern but will recall that eventful day, November 23, as the half neared its close and the Panthers trailed the Bulldogs by three points. A pause in the play; time out; a man is sent to the side lines, another takes his place. The stillness of death reigns. Signals, the ball snaps back, a diminutive player receives it on the 15-yard line, a kick — the field goal — the half ends. The play earned for John Rogers Thompson a glamour that will ever surround his name on Sunshine Slopes. That game closed his career. Page mnciy-six 1923 Letter Men Oscar T. Weeks Guard Ham, the love-sick, who, having won his letter both years of his career on the grid- iron, sought new worlds to conquer — the heart of a fair damsel. His full name is Big Ham, but a more suitable title, in the opinion of students following his years on the foot- ball team, might be Big Bertha, for he is a large factor in the smashing of opponents lines. He played a wonderful game against Howard and was the most outstanding lines- man on the field that day. He has one more year on the team. Joseph F. Whiteside, End Joe got into many of the games during the year and acquitted himself well. He played stellar ball in several games at end. Joe has another year at Birmingham-Southern and, with the passing of Gandy, will give some- bodv a hard run for the berth at a flank. Thom.as Lorex Williams, Halfback Bullo, Iron-Head, and then voted the fashion plate of the college. He is a titled youngster for his age and, though he may be the fashion plate, there are many young football aspirants that would do well to copy his playing on the grid. As for Iron-Head, he renounced his claim for that title in the Howard game when, called upon to direct the team upon short notice, he displayed remark- able generalship. He was the outstanding player in the annual Bulldog-Panther scrap, and though he is charged with reading his signals from his helmet, he led the Panthers to a tie score on that never-to-be-forgotten day. He has one more year of football. He was elected alternate captain for 1924. Lewis Milton Yieldixg, Halfback The last alphabetically, but among the first in ranking on the gridiron, Pig completes the list of letter men. He played good foot- ball, in the games that he got in, and will be one of the outstanding players before his graduation, if predictions are worth anything. He has two more years with the Panther eleven. Page ninety-seven LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-FOUR THE PAXTHERS WAIT AXXIOUSLV FOR THE CJ.MPLETIOX OF ML XGER BOWL Page nineiy-clght LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Vage ninety-nine LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-FOUR JUNIOR CLASS FOOTBALL SQUAD— INTER-CLASS CHAMPS Reading from left to right — Top row: Red Farr, coach: Kirby. Shelton, Stead, McCreary. Reneau. Anderson. Martin, Hanchey, and Charles Ashwander, coach. Second row: Teague, Alexander, Price, Gritiin, Graham, Beavers, Howell, and Echols. SUl ' lIUMURt CLASS lUUTDALL SQUAD— RUNNER-UP TOR CIIAMPIONSHir Reading from left to right — Top row: Turner Scott, coach; Mooty, Bryan, Bell, Elliott, Johnson, Pinkston, Rooney, Green, Turner, Smith, Muchado, Thornburg, and BuUo W ' illiams, coach. Second row: Thornton, Pearson, Osborne, Stevenson, Lahan, Willis, Watkins, Manar, and Hodges. Page one hundred LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-FOUR FRESHMAN CLASS FOOIHAI.L SUrAP— 1 II IKl) IN lOl RNAMKNT Reading from left to right — Top row: Dave Evans, coach; Craven, Atkinson. Cairns, Fowler. Abercombie, Dobbs, Kimbrough, Willis. Thomas. Stogner, Pug-h. Bonner, Sid Malloy, coach, and Curly Black, coach. Second row: Bailey. Jenkins. McSpadrten, Dozier, Underwood, Rentro. Holder, Mooty. and Reinhardt. Third row; Boggs, Nelson, Hamilton, Segrest. Lipsey, and Mattison. SENIOR CLASS FOOTBALL SQUAD— FOURTH IN TOURNAMENT Page one hundred one LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-FOUR Reading from left to riglit — Top roii:: Hodge, Kimbrough, Englehert, Manar, Caldivell, Graham, Williams, and W. Howell. Bottom roiv: .Norton, E. Howell, Anderson, Wheeler, Godbee, Mitchell, and Golson. Panther Baseball Squad, 1923 The Panthers put out a baseball team in 1923 that was, at times, a brilliant machine and, at others, one that failed to function smoothly. However, a good showing was made in the face of handicaps, and one game in particular is outstanding — the trouncing of the Bulldogs in a sensation of the baseball season. It was a 12-inning battle. Baseball Results Panthers 5 ■■Panthers 5 Panthers 2 Panthers 2 Panthers o Panthers 4 Panthers 22 Panthers 3 Panthers 2 Panthers 10 Panthers 13 Panthers 4 tPanthers 6 Panthers 3 Union 7 Union 5 Cumberland o Vanderbilt 5 Vanderbilt 14 Mercer 7 Marion 2 Clemson 5 Howard 7 Union 6 Union 6 Howard 8 Howard 2 Howard 5 Eleven innings. ( Twelve innings. Page one hundred tv o LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-FOUR ED BOLLO ■RON DCkD VEPWAN m m JOE 31D LEPTY gireeV. ' PLAY BALL! , E.£ ., 1 GRSirJ Page one hundred three LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY- FOUR Reaiiinij from Iffi to rii ht — Front row: Smith, Manager; Sapp, Watkins, Mellown, Davidson, Stevenson, Wilson, and Kirby, Coach. Back row: Moore, Johnson, Price, Muchado, Shivers, and Tate. Fall Track Squad, 1923 Track athletics at Biriniiighani-Southern have advanced far since the advent of Coach Otis Kirby on Sunshine Slopes. Coming from the University of Alabama, where he was an outstanding track star. Coach Kirby took over the direction of track and field work on the Hill and has done good work. The cross-country team has run in several dual and inter-collegiate meets and has shown up well. The Cooper Road Race is an annual event that attracts much attention among the Panther distance runners. The inter-class meet is another event of much importance. A methodical system of awarding letters has been inaugurated and men who better previous track records in official timed e ents get their B ' s . The following are record-holders for the respective events: Otis Kirby, loo-yard dash, 220-yard dash, 440-yard dash; Earl McBee, half-mile run ; Elgin Mellown, one-mile run, two-mile run, three-mile run; Virgil Hawkins, high jump; William Richardson, broad jump, javelin throw, shot put; Richmond Heatty, pole vault, 120 high hurdles, 220 low hurdles; Stanton Gandy, discus throw. Page one hundred jour LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Page one hundred fi ' ve LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-FOUR t ' LS. Dormsri ' ARS1TV BASKETBALL TEAAI Page one hundred six LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-FOUR Reading from left to right — Top row: Grain, Cousins, Coach Ben Englebert, Cannon, and Ford. Bottom row: Stansbury, Green, Brinskelle, Williams, Manar, and Clark. Co-Ed Basketball Squad Under the tutelage of Coach Ben Englebert, the co-ed quintet of Birmingham- Southern has risen to near-major sport proportions on Sunshine Slopes. Starting with the basketball season of 1922-23, Coach Englebert put out a team that made a good showing as the first real representative five from the Panther lair in girls ' cage circles. The team encountered a number of the strongest girls ' teams in this section of the South and came out of the contest with flying colors. A number of scintillating stars have been developed on the Hill and have done good work for the team. The team that represented the college on the court during the past season was even stronger than the team of the season before and indications are that, with the present rate of advancement, Birmingham-Southern girls ' team bids fair to become one of Dixie ' s leading aggregations within the next year or so. The co-eds are conscientious workers, and Coach Englebert is a relentless driver. This combination is bound to bring results. Page one hundred seven LA REVUE. NINETEEN TWENTY-FOUR j ' mM m w 1923 Tennis Although tennis has never taken on inter-collegiate proportions at Birmingham- Southern, it has been a popular form of athletics on the Hill, and inter-fraternity clashes and other intra-collegiate tournaments have made it one of much interest. The inter-fraternity tournament last year was an exceptionally hard-fought meet. A scene from the court is shown above and some of the leading adherents of the game on Sunshine Slopes. In the picture from left to right are Aubrey Miller, veteran tennis star; jMcCurdy, a faithful follower of the court; Lamar Branscombe, manager, and winner of the doubles, with Edwin Branscomb, in the inter-fraternity tournament; D. O. Wright, assistant manager; John Rogers Thompson, also a keen tennis player, and Bowling Barnes, another lover of the sport. Page one hundred c ' lghl LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R OUR n HIVE Page one hundred nine LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Harold D. Dre v New Coach ax Director of Athletics Coach Harold D. Drew obtained his degree and his experience as an athlete at Bates College. Follouing his graduation, he attended the Springfield Training School for Coaches. In addition to his work there he has also had work under the famous Knute Rockne, mentor of the nationally-known Notre Dame football team. He went to Trinity College as football coach, and was later made director of athletics. He comes to the Panthers recommended highly by some of the most outstanding athletic figures in American collegiate circles. He resigned at Trinity in order to enter a broader field of work. Authorities of the college recommend him highly, and state that it was with regret that they accepted his resignation. He will have full charge of all athletics at Birmingham-Southern to succeed Coach Charlie Brown. Page one hundred ten Southern Life IN WHICH WE ENDEAVOR TO REMIND YOU OF SOME OF THE MOST INTER- ESTING EVENTS DURING THE YEAR. 1J DEDICATION OF ANDREWS HALL GOVERNOR BRANDON UNVEILS MEMORIAL TABLET ARMISTICE DAY EXERCISES BEHIND THAT TEAM— MAN FOR MAN! HELEN CE IN— QUEEN OF B. S. C. RECEIVING GOLDEN-BLACKS THE COVERED WAGON— FOR CRIPPLED BULLDOGS MONTGOMERY SPECIAL— AUBURN (20) VS. BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN (0). Y. W. KID PARTY — WHEN DO WE EAT? SOUTHERN ' S FLOAT— WHERE THE FIGHT STARTED TO WHOM THE FRESHMEN CAPS ARE TIPPED Y. W. STUNT NIGHT— WITH APOLOGIES TO KEITH Y. M. STUNT NIGHT— WITH APOLOGIES TO DEMPSEY AND FIRPO OFF TO HOLLYWOOD! GRAMMAR SCHOOL FIELD DAY ON MUNGER BOWL BLACK FACE MINSTREL FLAG RUSH— SOPHS VS. FROSH SOUTHERN HOLDS SWAY OVER MAGIC CITY OUR PRESIDENT WAS IN EVERY PLAY THE LIGHT THAT LIES IN OUR BEAUTIES ' EYES — REVUE BEAUTY CONTEST. BISHOP CANDLER BREAKS GROUND FOR McCOY MEMORIAL CHURCH BAND HEADS PARADE FRESHMEN UPHOLD STANDARDS SOUTHERN PEP RUNS RIOT! ma Ocganijalions IS LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Tke Student Senate Officers H. B. Enclebekt President Karv Beavers Ike-PrrsUcnt Douglas Pritchett Sccriiary-Tnasurcr Members Senior Representatives Benjamin- Beaird Porter Florenxe Cull Revel WiLLLAM Richardson ' Junior Representatives Kary Beavers H. B. Ekglebert Osborne Farr Sophomore Representatives Douglas Pritchett Oscar Weeks Freshman Representative Clarence Obrien I ' pge one liundred iiienty-one LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-FOUR LA REVUE STAFF, 1924 Paffe one liundrcd tiventy-tivo LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R (Ji.n u sif CuRRUTH R. Smith Edilor-in-Cliiej Raymond D. Hurlbert Business Manager Editorial Staff William Edward Morris . Associale Editor Paul Cooke hsociate Editor Alfred Lusk Typist William B. Atkinson . Pliotograpliic Editor Anne Greene .... Senior Class Editor Elgin W. Mellown Class Editor Herschel Smith Class. Editor Alton W. Davidson .... Organizations Jerry Bryan -It iletics Lila May Cantey Features Louise Averyt Features Irving Fullington Features Elizabeth Reid Mildred Mims Features Art Staff Stanley P. Watkins Art Contributor Myra Beal (Cover Design) Pauline Sands F. C. Green Cull Revel Charlotte Dugcar Laurence K. Benson, Jr. Stella Goodman Business Staff Howard Ellington Assistant Business Manager Earl McBee Circulation Manager William Jenkins Assistant Circulation Manager Page one hundred twenty-three LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R BE BBRia IHE BlflOfi (£!jc € iilt nnt pU d J- ' ■ — - d tliern Six, Howard) x Paffe one hundred izventy-four LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Jerry Brvam Jewell C. Hall The Gold and Black, 1923-1924 Jerry Bryan Edilor-in-Cltui Jewell C. Hall Business Manaijcr Editorial Staff Benjamin E. Dis.viukes Assistant Editor John A. Selman News Editor Rodgers Sherwood Issislant Neivs Editor O. R. Grimes ithletic Editor Mildred Mims Co-ed Editor W. O. Barrow Library Editor Maxagixg Staff Bertram F. Bryant Assistant Manager Alton W. Davidson Advertising Manaijer Walter O. Stead Ad ' vertising Solicitor Hubert C. Hodges Circulation Manaijcr Page one liundred twenty-five LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R __Ji f Belles Lettres Literary Society Officers i iri ; Period V. O. Barrow PrcsiJi-nt R. F. Johnson Vice-President Bertha Cummins Secretary Porter Florence Treasurer W. L. Tatom Cliaplain Second Period R. C. Beatti- President E. M. Elliot Vice-President R. F. Johnson Secretary W. O. Barrow Treasurer Porter Florence , Critic W. L. Tatom Chaplain Page one hundred tv:enty-six LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Clariosopnic Literary Society Officers First Period 0. D. Thomas President Hele-V Hasty Vice-President 1. W. May Secretary Oscar Machado Treasurer Esther Merrell Corresponding Secretary A. L. LUSK First Censor EowLxiG Barnes Second Censor Floyd Wilson! Sergeant-at-Arms Chapman Curry Chaplain Rosa Mae Warren Critic Second Period L. L. Patterson President Elizabeth Colvin rice-President Rosa Mae Warren Secretary Oscar Machado •- Treasurer I. W. May Corresponding Secretary Chapman Curry First Censor Ruth Pearson Second Censor Irving Fullington Sergeant-at-Arms J. E. Rush Chaplain A. L. LusK Critic Page one hundred tnuenty-seven LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY- FOUR T i DEBATING TEAmE 5 U Intercollegiate Debaters, 1923 ] s. Iloivanl College russel john ' sov Clarence Small Vs. Millsaps College RiCHMON ' n Beattv John L. Jenkins The Birmingham-Southern debating teams passed through a most successful season last year, having won all the contests in which they participated. Y. M. C. A. and Y. W. C. A. Students ' Handbook The Staff, 192,3 Elgin W. Mellown Editor Thaddeus Ferrell Manager Louise Averyt Associate Editor Bowling Barnes . . . .Issistant Manager Page one hundred tivenly-cig it LA REVUE. NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R The College Sunday School Class Birmingham-Southern College is the only college in the South which gives college credit for work done on Sunday. The realization of the fact that it is not enough to give the student information about the various phases of life, to make his mind more keen, is the cause of this progressive step in the establishment of a standard college Sunday School. Five courses are offered in this branch of the Department of Religious Education. The courses, with the teachers, who are full-time professors, are as follows: The Church and Modern Problems, taught by Dr. W. A. Whiting; The Worker and His Bible, taught by Dr. H. A. Trexler; Organization in Religious Education, taught by Professor Keith E. Powlison; The Study of the Pupil, taught by Dr. Roy E. Hoke, and The Life and Letters of Paul, taught by Dean Ludd M. Spivey. Page one Inmdred iii-enty-nine LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Young Men ' s Christian Association Officers T. H. KiRBY President O. T. Weeks Fice-President HowARn Ellington ' Secretary-Treasurer W. O. Barrow Devotional Cliairman I. W. May Cliainnan Program Committee Chapman Curry Adviser Faculty Advisers Dr. Whiting Professor Spivey Professor Powlison Page one hundred thirty LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-FOUR Young Women ' s Ckristian Association Officers Sarah Latham President Lois Caldwell J ' ice-Prrsident Anne Greene Secretary Esther Merrell Treasurer Cabinet Committee Chairmen Helen Hasty Social Bertha Cummins Social Service Sarah Pritchett Publicity Miriam Baker JForld Fellowship Sarah Mackenzie Undergraduate Representative Page one Imndred thirty-one LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R wr,:irffi . n -i. t ' -r lJlT ' - ' ■:-- ' ' w Page one hu idred thirly-tv;o LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-FOUR MINISTERIAL ASSOCIATION Officers Chapman- Curry President I. W. May I ' ice-Presidenl T. H. KiREY Secretary Oscar Machado Corresponding Secretary Paul Cook Treasurer W. B. Atkin ' SON Leo Barber W. O. Barrow JOHX L. Baswell John- H. Black Wm. O. Bolinc W. O. Calhoun J. M. Clark Paul Cook Chapman ' Curry William H. Curl Clarence Fossett Robert Echols Porter Florence J. M. Gibes J. K. Hall I. P. Hammond T. S. Harris E. A. Howell J. L. Jenkins Russell Jones G. C. Keadle Members Carl Key ' G. L. King Otis Kirby T. H. Kirby R. I. Lawrence R. C. LiPSEY A. H. Ly ' nch A. G. Lynch G. B. McGowan Oscar Machado J. S. Malloy I ' . L. Martin J. C. Maske L W. May E. W. Mellown W. C. Nelson R. W. Oakey C. D. Patterson C. N. PlNKARD S. V. Ray L. W. Reneau J. T. Renfro P. G. Rice F. P. Ritchey C. L. Rogers W. A. Roton J. E. Rush L. D. Shivers C. M. Small R. W. Sapp Rudolph Scott Harold Spradley Clarence Stewart F. C. Stinson J. B. Tate R. H. Timberlake O. D. Thomas F. S. Trotter C. M. Tykdal H. C. Walton Hamilton West J. M. WiCLEY R. T. Whittle J. L. Williamson Floyd Wilson H. E. Wright Page one liundred thirty-three LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Tke Simpson-Southern Club Colors: Purple and CJoid Motto: Simpson for Southern Officers H. B. ExGLEBERT President J. B. Beaird Vice-President Joseph Holcombe Secretary Page one hundred tliirly-four LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R ' gf ' r 1 Tke PKillips-Southern Club Colors: Crimson and White Officers Clarence Fossett President Miriam Baker Vice-President MoLLiE Beck Jenkins Secretary Henry Richard Treasurer Page one liundred tJiirty-five LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-FOUR Page one liundred tliirty-six LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R S S3 The Bessemer-Soutliern Club Colors: Purple and White Officers Howard Bailey President Helen ' Hasty Vice-President RussEL Johnson Secretary Members Senior Helen Hasty J unirjrs Lizzie Mae Hartline Elizabeth Reid Elizabeth Hays Osborne Farr Leverke Preston Sophomores Josephine Hawkins Russel Johnson Freshmen Howard Bailey Allie H. Laird Claude Clowdus Rebecca Williamson Page one hundred thirly-se ' ven LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY- FOUR Tke JeUerson-Southern Club Colors: Gold and Blue Officers Alton- Daviuson President Oliver Self Vice-President Elizabeth Green Secretary Members Juniors William Coggin s Robert B. Newton Sophomores Alton- Davidson Jewel Hexdrix Freshmen Ora a. Cardei; Elizabeth Green OsiE V. Chapman Alva L. McPherson Lela Clark Marion- Pearson- Oliver E. Self Ira Underwood Walton Varnon Page one hundred thirty-eight LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R ± ' S? -i Delta XI Club alias Buj jers k hohhieYork Flora Roberts Leverne Preston Jev sl Hendricl s HolUe Turman Sue I osser Mattie Rutledoe Cloise Coxy Elhe] Abernathy MoltoJ Bu-z-j: orBtist Faffe one hundred thirty-nine LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-FOUR BIULUGIL L .SOClETi Page one hundred forty LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Biological Society Officers J. B. Beaird President P. L. McCreary Vice-Fresidenl L. G. ALBRrnoN Seeretary-Treasurer Honorary Members Professor Boor Dr. Jones Dr. Snavelv Dr. Hoke Professor Loehr Dr. Whitixg Members L. G. Albrittox Mary Howard W. L. Tatom J. G. Alexander R. F. Hill W. H. Vansant J. B. Beaird C. L. Harris A. W. Varnon C. C. BuRTON ' R. W. Mellown Nina Williams R. R. Crow P. L. McCreary J. D. Bell R. E. Griffin Sarah McKenzie M. W. Jones W. W. Hale J. O. Pinkston R. F. Johnson J. W. Hanchey a. B. Robinson O B. Ellis J. B. Shelton E. D. Simmons Page one Iiundred forty-one LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Tne Classical Club Organized November, 1921. Membersliip consists of students studying the classics. Ofmcers Bowling Barnes President Marv Hamilton Hortox Vice-President Esther Merrell Secretary Members Mildred Baker Paljl Greene Esther Merrell Miriam Baker Andrew Griffin C. D. Patterson Bowling Barnes Lucile Hanes Thomas Pettus J. N. Black Mary Hamilton Horton Leverne Preston Lamar Branscomb Russel Johnson Eula Pritchett J. M. Clark G. L. King Sara Pritchett Edith Echols Sarah Lathem L. W. Reneau Velma Fallon I. W. Mav J. E. Rush Thaddeus Ferrel G. B. McGowan O. D. Thomas Irving Fullincton Ruth Tucker Page one hundred forty-tivo LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Le Cercle Francais Colors: Blue and Black Flower: Fleiir-de-lis Purpose: To promote interest in the French language and acquaint students ith French customs as «ell as the modern currents of French thought. Officers Marjorie Ormond President Anne Greene Secretary Knoxie Faulk Vice-President B. E. Dismukes Treasurer Members Eugene Armistead Mildred Baker MiRLJiM Baker Ellen Barnett Lawrence Benson Benjamin Dismukes Benjamin Englebert Robert Echols Frank Echols Knoxie Faulk Anne Greene Clifford Green Paul Greene Elizabeth Haves Janie Hill MoLLiE Beck Jenkins Marjorie Ormon ViviENNE Lewis Leona Lewis Mildred Mays Mildred Mims Oscar Machado Mary Newton Beatrice Overall Elizabeth Pittman Leverne Preston Eula Fritchett Sarah Pritchett Kathrine Wood Page one hundred forty-three LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-FOUR Tke Political Science Club Organized September, 1923 The Political Science Cluh came into being during the past year as a result of the interest manifested by the students in national and international problems. The purpose of the organization is to study problems of government and politics under the direction of the head of the Department of History and Political Science. Any student or member of the faculty is eligible for membership. Dr. Harrison- A. Trhxler, Faculty Adviser Officers L. L. Patterson President R. F. Hill Vice-President R. F. Johnson Secretary Page one hundred forty-four LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Contemporary Club Founded February, 1923. Membership limited to twelve Upperclassmen Officers OHN L. Jenkins President Karv Beavers Vice-President Henry Richard Secretary-Treasurer Faculty Members K. E. PowLisoN LuDD M. Spivey W. a. Whiting UXDERGRADUATE ]VIE] IBERS Eugene Armistead Jewell C. Hall Kary Beavers John Hawkins H. B. Englebert John L. Jenkins I. W. May Henry Richard C. R. Smith Page one hundred forty-five LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R THE PAINTS AND PATCHES CLUB Ali,e G. Lof.hr, Diiiitor-Miuia fi-r Officers Henry Richaro Pri-siJcnt Leon Stevexson rice-President Elizabeth Smith Secretary Members Se?iiors Henry Richard Marjorie Craic George Stuart Ruth Williams Juniors Edward Morris Corinn ' e Travis ' Joseph Whiteside Theolene Woodruff John Hardin- Richmond Beatty Elizabeth Crow Howard Bailey Arthur Brown Sophomores Bertha Cummins Russell Johnson Verman Kimbrough Freshman Etoyle Heitlinger Ralph McEwen Elizabeth Smith Leon Stevenson Hamilton West Catherine Wood Paije one hundred forty-six LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Girls Scout Club Officers Mrs. Paige Sloss Captain I Chairman Scout Il ' ork Rosa Mae Warren- ■ n , , r j I Patrol Leadrr Members Ruth Warrex Inez Fritts Elsie Orr Mamie Buttram Amelia Montgomery Pauline Sands Nora Pritchett Margaret McGuire Lucile Cannon Helen Whorton Katherine Wood Alice Quehl Flora Roberts Page one liunJred forty-seven LA REVUE. NINETEEN TWENTY-FOUR w T WT m ' -- ' — - ?£S. w THE 1924 GLEE CLUB O. Gordon ' Erickson ' Director Page one liundred forty-eight LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-FOUR O. GoRUON ' Erickson , Director George R. Stuart, Jr., Manaijer First Tenors Ellington Grimes Hanchey Kelly Ferrell GiBBS M. W. Second Tenors Jones Rush Bailey P. M. Jones S. B. Morris Florence Mattison Moor P. T. Green C. E. Morris Tate F. B. Yeilding, Jr. Tatom Baritones Barnes S. T. KiMBROUCH Myatt DiSMUKES V. T. KiMBROUGH Watkins J. L. Jenkins Otis Kirby Basses Whiteside Ayers Reinhardt Saunders Berry Rice Stuart Small Accompanist — Henry Richard Soloists — Thaddeus Ferrei.l, Verman Kimbrough J ' iolin Soloist — Howard Ellington Trumpet Soloist — Carl Moor M. W. Jones Ferrell Ayers f ' nrsiiy Double Quartette Baile-j Florence V. T. Kimbrough Stuart Kirby Page one liundred forty-nine LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Birmingham-Soutkern Band and Orchestra O. Gordon Ericksox. Dim lor Ban J Elizabeth Colvin, Dirntor Orthcslra Page one liundred fifty LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R The Didaxontes Club Honorary Organized October 15, 1923 Purpose: To Promote Interest in the Subjects of Education Faculty Members Guy E. Snavely Roy E. Hoke WvATT W. Hale J. M. Malone Alumnae Members R. V. Allgood H. G. DowuNG Leon Howard E. E. Smith Student Members W. O. Barrow John L. Jenkins B. E. DiSMUKES T. H. KiRBY Irving Fullington W. E. Morris John Hawkins Earl McBee Henry Richard C. R. Smith William Richardson John R. Thompson Page one hundred fifty-one LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-FOUR Page one hundred fifly-fivo LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-FOUR Tke Greeks, 1923-1924 Organized October, 1932. An Inter-fraternity Social Organization Officers Hexrv Richard, 2 A E President Julian- Anderson, A T O Vice-President LoREN Williams, K A Recording Secretary Terry Teagoe, 2 A E Treasurer Hubert Caldwell, n K A . Social Secretary Members Howard Bailey, K A Vern Maery, K A Donald Fullbright, 2 A E William Mann, S A E John Hardin, A T John Mathison, n K A William Jenkins, n K A William Mattison, A T O Broderick Lahan, 2 A E Ed Morris, A T O Peter Freer, 2 A E Bo Self, n K A John Thompson, K a Joe Whitside, A T D. O. Wright, 2 A E Douglas Willis, K A Page one hundred fifty-three LA REVUE. NINETEEN TWENTY-FOUR Omicron Delta Kappa (Honorary Fraternit ) Founded at Washington and Lee University, 1914 KAPPA CIRCLE Established at Birmingham-Southern College, 1924 Membership open to those who have attained eminence in scholarship and college activities. Ideals: Recognition, inspiration, opportunity, character. Guy E. Snavelv Faculty Members LuDD M. Spivey Wyatt W. Hale Keith E. Powliso.v Student Members Kary Beavers H. B. Englebert Gerald Bryan John Hawkins Raymond Hurlbert Otis Kirby DOLCLAS PrITCHETT Henry Richard Page one hundred fifty-four LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Page one hundred fifty-five LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Men ' s Pan-Hellenic Council JoH.v Hawkins President H. B. Englebert Vice-President J. K. Beavers Secretary Representatives A T n Edward Morris, Verman Kimbrough K A John Hawkins, J. R. Thompson n K A H. B. Englebert, Richmond Beatty 2 A E J. K. Beavers, George R. Stuart f A . . George Thigpen, J. O. Pinkston I A 2 B. E. DiSMUKES, C. H. Hodges Girls ' Pan-Hellenic Council Margaret McCall President Anne Greene Vice-President Miriam Baker Secretary-Treasurer Representatives Z T A . . . . Marjorie Craig, Margaret McCall, Ruth Williams T A Anne Greene, Elsie Landers, Esther Merrell K A Miriam Baker, Bertha Cummins, Sarah Lathem Page one hundred fifty-six LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Page one liundred fifiy-scven LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-FOUR Page one hunircd fifty-eight LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Pi Kappa Alpka Founded at the I ' niversity of Virginia March i, 1865 Colors: Garnet and Old Gold Floiucr: Lily-of-the-Valley Publication: Shield and Diamond Delta Chapter Established 1871 Frater IX Facultate Allen G. Loehr Fratres in Collegio Seniors Aubrey Miller William Richardson Juniors Ben Englebert John L. Jenkins Edgar Howell James Shelton Thomas Walker Richmond Beattv Hubert Caldwell Melton Collins Sophomores Alton Davidson Wilbur Howell Robert Manar Alton B. Robinson Turner Scott Holmes Turner Joseph Wheeler IQ24 Pledges Joseph Holcomb William Jenkins John Mathison Frank McConnell Oliver Self Thomas Wolford Bryan Faircloth rage one hundred fifty-nine LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-FOUR w ' l S - W Page one hundrci sixty LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-FOUR Sigma Alpka Epsilon Founded at the University of Alabama, March 9, 1856 Colors: Royal Purple and Old Gold Puhlication: Record of Sigma Alpha Epsilon Floiver: Violet Alabama Iota Chapter Established 1884 FrATRES IX COLLEGIO Senior George Stuart, Jr. Kary Beaver3 Juniors William Mann Terry Teague Henry Richard Sophomores Hugh Abernathy Don Fullbright Lamar Branscomb Durward Wright W. J. Duncan, Jr. Frank Yielding Milton Yielding 1924 Pledges Homer Crim William Graves Russel Holder Peter Preer, Jr. Joseph Lahan Theodore Pearson J. W. Potts WiLBETT RUDULPH Page one hundred sixty-one LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R 1 y sf ' _.ii_V- ' -%l Page one liundieA sixly-tii-o LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Page one hundred slxly-tlirce LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Page one liunJred sixty-four LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-FOUR w Alpka Tau Omega Founded at Virginia Military Institute, 1865 Colors: Old Gold and Sky Blue Floiver: White Tea Rose Publication: Palm of Alpha Tau Omega Beta Beta Chapter Established 1885 Fratres in Collegio Seniors Stanton Gandv Raymond Hurlbert HoYT Levie Julian Anderson Juniors John Hardin Joseph Whiteside Edward Morris Sophomores BovvLixc Barnes Howard Ellington Robert Cole Edgar Elliot Lee Crumley Verman Kimbrough Thomas Pettu- Japeth Rawls Leon Stevenson jg24 Pledges John Gandy S. T. Kimbrough William Mattison Charles Morris Francis R. Morris Joseph S. Morris Guy E. Snavely, Jr. Page one hundred sixty-fi ' ve LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Page one hundred sixty-six LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Kappa Alpka Founded at Washington and Lee University 1865 Colors: Crimson and Old Gold Flowers: Magnolia and Red Rose Publication: Kappa Alpha Journal Phi Chapter Re-established 1923 Edward G. Mackay Fratres in Facultate Wilbur Dow Perry LuDD M. Spivey Fratres ix Collegio Seniors John Hawkins John Thompson Sophomore Loren Williams Freshmen Howard Bailey Ross DODDS Benjamin Harrison Vern Mabry Robert Rowe Robert Saunders Douglas Willis Page one hundred sixty-seven LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-FOUR Page one InuidreJ sixly-cit lit LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Page one hundred sixty-nine LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-FOUR Page one liundred sd ' enty LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-FOUR PKi Alpha Founded at Birmingham-Southern College September 29, 1921 Colors: Blue and White Flower: White Carnation Fratres in Facultate Roy E. Hoke Wvatt Walker Hale Sam Berry Thaddeus Ferrell Fratres in Collegio Seniors Otis Kirby George Thicpen Taylor Kirbv Juniors Eugene Armistead Grier Alexander Sophomores Nelson Davis Ward Mooty RussEL Johnson James Pinkston Clifford Green 1924 Pledges William Adams Martin Briscoe Richard Fennell Edward Lappage Fred Mooty Charlie Fowler Ralph McEwen Frank Moore Richard Lipsey Elda Skelton John Slaton Page one hundred seventy-one LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Page one hundred se-venty-tii-o LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY- FOUR Pki Delta Sigma Founder at Birmingham-Southern College March 26, 1923 Colors: Old Gold and White Flower: Chrysanthemum P ' rater IX Facultate William Alonzo Whiti.vc FrATRES IX COLLEGIO Seniors Benjamin- Dismukes Elgin Mellown Junior Ormond Grimes Sophomores John Ellisor Sidney Morris Hubert Hodges Clarence Small Jamie Meigs William Tatom ig24 Pledges Howard Clark James CRAWFor.a Clarence Fossett EwiNG Mellown Lamar Mullendore John Selman Frank Trotter Page one hundred sevcnly-ihrce LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Page one hundred seventy-four LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-FOUR Square and Compass (Freemasons) Founded at Washington and Lee l ' niversit - May 12, 1917 Colors: . Navy Blue and Silver Gray Floivcr: White Rose Publication: The College Mason BIRMLNGHAM-SOUTHERN SQUARE Established 1923 Fratres in Facultate Guy E. Snavely Allen G. Loehr B. Beaird M. COUSIN ' S A. Clark B. Gulp Fratres in Collegio J. L. Jenkins John Price S. V. Ray L. W. Reneau A. B. Robinson C. H. Stewart H. C. Walton J. M. WiGLEY Page one hundred seventy-five LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Page one hundred se-venly-six LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Zeta Tau Alpha Founded at ' irginia State Normal College, 1898 Colors: Steel Gray and Turquoise Blue Flower: White Violet Puhlication: Themis Alpha Nu Ckapter Established 1922 ' SORORES IX COLLEGIO Seniors Marjorie Craig Ruth Williams Margaret McCall Juniors Josephine Hawkins Doris Marler Nelle Henry Corrine Travis Theolene Woodruff Sophomores Elizabeth Crow Sarah Mackenzie MoLLiE Beck Jenkins Mildred Mims Marianne Lyles Elizabeth Smith 1924 Pledges Helen Allgood LuciLE Cannon Dorothy Davis Elizabeth Stone Katherine Wood Page one hundred seventy-seven LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Page one hundred seventy-eight LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-FOUR Tau Delta Founded at Birmingham-Southern College, September 15, 1919 Colors: Black and White Flower: White Carnation SORORES IN FaCULTATE Amelia Jackson Lorena Norton Elizabeth Colvin Seniors Anne Greene Marjorie Ormond Helen Hasty J un ' i Ellen Harnett Knoxie Faulk Mary Hamilton Horton Esther Merrell Sophomores LiLA Mae Cantey Elsie Landers Janie Hill Mary Tyler 1924 Pledges Rebecca Cousins Helen Crain Mildred Mullins Virginia Pegues Rebecca Williamson Page one hundred seventy-nine LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R m wzif) ' ,; — •.■ .: w Page one huudrt-d eighty LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Kappa Lambda Founded at Birmingham-Southern College, November, 1923 Colors: Roval Blue and Gray Flo ' wcr: Sweet Pea Mildred Baker SORORES IX COLLEGIO Seniors Miriam Baker Sarah Laihem Emily Nesbit Lucile Hanes Junior Louise Nesbit Sophomores Mary Brinskelle Katherine Cross Inez Cross Maxine Massie Beatrice Overall 1924 Pledges Margaret Calhoun Bertha Cummins Charlotte Dugcar Margaret Hanes Virginia Hill Mary McLaren Mabel Nesbit Marvinee Newton Mary Walter Smyer Page one hundred eighty-one LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R : srl , : ' gf-f-M Page one liundred eighty-t ' Vi-o LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Alpka Alpka Alpka Founded at Southern T_ ' ni ' ersity, 1907 Colors: Mvrtle and Gold Flower: American Beautv Rose Re-established, Birmingham-Southern College 1923 SOROR IN FaCULTATE Ruth Andrews Patronesses Mrs. R. S. Muvcer Mrs. E. T. Fields SoRORES IN C01.LEGIO Senior EuLA Pritchett Lois Caldwell Juniors Elizabeth Haves Mary Newton Sophomores LuciLE Clowdus Vivienne Lewis Sara Pritchett ig24 Pledges Ora Carder Elizabeth Green Etoyle Heitlinger Corda Stansbury LuciLE Thompson Clara Walion Page one hundred eighty-three LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R THEV ALSO SERVE WHO STAND AXD WAIT ' Page one Iiundred eighty-four Qea ums LA REVUE. NINETEEN TWENTY-FOUR GOUrQCQ(N) tOOHCIMCC nC G 0Q£On GCQCS Paffe one Iiundred eigJity-seven 1 ' raxci;s Ledbetter . Marjorie Craig LuciLE Thompson Dorothy Davis .M, K(; RET Crane Mabel Nesbitt Mary Tyler LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R W H O S WHO LA REVUE ELECTIONS, 1924 Superlatively Speaking Most Popular Student — A title anyone would covet. Porter Florence now claims this as his own. He has served well as cheer leader, his friendliness is unequalled, his energy is such that it cannot be easily used up, and his line is un- breakable — as is evidenced by the fact that he was also judged man with the best line. Ben Englebert received the next number of votes for most popular student, and Jack Stuart has some line himself. Most Popular Co-Ed — Helen Grain, blonde conqueror of hearts, swept all others aside in her quest for this honor. Individuals and groups fall alike. Next! Mildred Mims, with her winning smile, was second only to Helen ' s charms. Most Popular Athlete — O. Stanton Gandy. For several years Big Hoss has laid away honors, especially on the gridiron, which have brought fame to his Alma Mater. The best and most popular athlete of all. Aubrey Miller is the onl} ' rival worthy of his steel. Most Intellectual Student — Mary Hamilton Horton will be conceded to fill this place most capably — even by the profs. From Latin trans- lation to weather forecasting, Mary is given a wide margin. Upon Russell Johnson, upholding the honor of his sex, the votes piled thick and fast. Best All-Round and Most Talented Stu- dent — Can mortal man ask for more? With so much to offer the world, where would the end of Verman Kimbrough ' s influence be? Engle- bert, one of our great, was the closest candidate for best all-round. Best All-Round Co-Ed — The dependable feminine! To Lois Caldwell comes the high honor of filling that niche; and, needless to say, she will do it. Anne Greene, with her ability and resourcefulness, was second. Pai;e cne hundred ninety-fi ' ve LA REVUE. NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Hardest Worker — The world will make a lieaten path to the door of Ben Englebert, with this distinction now added to his others. A well- deserved merit! A Freshman, Cleo Rogers, also aspires to this distinction. Best MusiciAX -Elton Morris, red hair, sunny smile, and super-producer of music. A wonder- ful combination! — and, by the way, the music is produced by anything which is capable of such. Howard Ellington, musical to the finger-tips, fully deserves to be his runner-up. Best Writer — A sports editor and pilot of the good ship. Gold and Black, the possessor of keen wit and nimble fingers, Jerry Bryan is given the writers ' plume. C. R. Smith, capable in every way, was forced to take the second step on this Ladder of Fame. Best Speaker — Russell Johnson, winner of many debates, a student of much ability, and a personage with the much-quoted eloquence, was easily the speaker of our fair slopes. Most Modest Student — John Hawkins, mod- est always, comes into his own in the eyes of his classmates when he is chosen to supercede even Anne (ireeiie in this capacity. Most Frien ' dlv Student — ' Tis a distinction that goes to Helen Hasty, and a trait that fol- lows one through life after campus days are over. Kary Beavers leads the eds. Best Sport — Mike Norton. This year and last his fellows and ( ?) have picked him. To Mike, in his last year, goes the hope that he will always be the good fellow that he now is. Porter was close behind him in the race. Most Dignified Student — We have always thought that the most dignified should be a ministerial student. Guy McGowan has caused our thoughts along that line to materialize. J. M. Clark, another follower of Wesley, nearly took this honor away from the winner. Page one hundred ninety-six LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Most Popular Professor — This term and the Dean are synonomous. Dean Spivey has won a place in the heart of the student body which will last for aye. Most Attractive Co-Ed — ' ' Bitsy still reigns supreme! For this place we needed a small and winsome bit of femininity, and Bitsy certainly fills the bill. Helen Grain was forced to make concessions to the brunette, here. Fashion Plate — When Bullo takes off his coat Spring comes, and when he dons it again, his fellow students begin to shiver. Yes! Loren Williams is our style-setter, and Marianne Lyies is his assistant. Time is required, for he loafs as he fulfills the duties of a fashion plate. NUN ' XALLIEST COWEOV ANSWERS FlAPPER ' s Dream — A Flapper dreamed. Do tliey? — and her Hero answered the plea. What would be more natural than for our Fair ' n Handsome Johnnie to respond to the charms of the typical Miss Payne. Biggest Woman Hater — John Rogers Thomp- son; but who would have imagined this? Surely this is some trick of fate. It is, however, re- corded and so let it be known. All who have aspirations for a Leap Year trick — beware — and include Guy McGowan in the list of ineligibles. Ugliest Man — By a vote, he wins! And Ed Morris learns he is considered the ugliest man. Associated with him in the crime is Barnes Eliott. Remember — the fair sex says, Looks don ' t count — much ! Biggest Bum — Thomas Pettus is now a full- fledged member of the newly-organized Give me! Let me have! Have you got! Club — and rumor has it that he is the president. Inci- dentally, the same rumor states that Piggy Mitchell is the vice-president. Biggest Eater — The way to a man ' s heart is through his stomach. A trite saying, but O. B. Ellis, here, rises to state that it is most certainly true. As we go to print we have not been able to find out definitely which cook is trying to find the way. Rat Jones is quite a Beau Brummel in this line himself. Faffe one hundred ninety-seven LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Freshest Rat — Orion Dozier. Nervy! Funny! Fresh! It is even said that he sometimes draws humor, and the results of homor, from pine boards. Surely, he is the freshest of the late victims of the proverbial trap. Rat Mooty seems to think along the same lines. Laziest Man — The dictionary has been searched for the definition of this term, and the most correct one given is Dad Howell. (He thought only the home folks knew it). Fatty Cole was also judged suitable. Most Handsome Man — (You ' re caught, girls! But don ' t blush. We knew you would be the ones to turn to this first). Dave Evans would a ' sheiking go, and leave the flappers ' hearts in a broken row. This is he! — a ' alentino -Nevarro model. Joe Whiteside was next, but we can ' t decide which one to call him. Wittiest Man — Wit and humnr are so synony- mous with the spice of life, and Jack Stuart, the inimitable, so synonomous with them all that we do not wonder at the rich seasoning our college life has had. Porter helped spread the said spice. Biggest Spendthrift — A Rat and his money are soon parted. That is a new axiom, and has grown out of the fact that Hutchie Hooten seems to gather and part with his iron men with equal celerity and cheerfulness. Thomas Pettus has also memorized this new axiom. Souls, so few, and far between. Sleepiest Sleeper — They may call him Sleepy — but very few things escape him. He works while he sleeps. Terry Teague, like Rip ' an Winkle, sleeps with one eye open. Ed Howell, Jewell Hall and Sam Berry do quite a bit of dozing themselves. Most Desperately in Love — Fatty Cole is most desperately in love. No young man ' s fancy in Spring can account for it, for several seasons have waxed and waned since Cupid pierced Cole with the fatal arrow, and it seems this is the lone wound he will receive at the hands of the little bow-bearer. His only rival, as a long-lived Romeo, is Jeune. Man With Brightest Future — Oscar Machado has accomplished a unique feat in making him- self capable of bearing the weight which this title carries with it — and that, in his Sophomore year. Luck to you, Machado! Kary Beavers also sees a ray of light. Page one hundred ninetyeiglit LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Page one hundred ninety-nine LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-FOUR ' .;.a 1 HiOtaLEOCE TelliTiO ' epT at Gads 3 en New Home o£ PresidieriT ' a(7(r la-o hundred WUXTRY! ®l|f OlolbPH-lIark HOT STUFF There Are No Fences WUXTRY! Volume Unknown Number — We ' ve Got Yours ' ' SOUTHERN SOON TO HAVE NEW HUGHES-HALOGEN ELOPEMENT BRIDGE OVER SLEEPY HOLLOW ENDS IN TERRIBLE TRAGEDY Maffuificent Arch to Span Chasm Between :Mt. Jlorpheus Popular Co-Ed fleets Death in Attempted Runaway niiH frftweeiiev Hall. Marriage With Prominent Jimior. A great deal of excitement has been aroused by the recent an- nouncement of plans for the con- struction of a mammoth bridge across Sleepy Hollow. Work is to begin immediately, according- to information given out by Miss Eloise Cary, of the Dean ' s office. The contract has been let to Beaird Ashwander. constructing engineers, who secured the deal only after some very shady bar- gaining with the bursar, it is al- leged. The cost of the project will be all out of reason, amount- ing to $100,000.00. This is be- cause of the choice of contractors. The bridge is a gift from Rat Karl Trombone Key, and will be known as the Key Memorial Bridge. Mr K.ey inherited an im- mense fortune during the winter and his favor has since that time been assiduously courted by the college at large. In recognition of his munificence the donor is to be presented with a pass in Relig- ious Education I and an allow- ance of five extra chapel cuts. It is rumored that he will be given a fellowship if he will establish an endowment sufficient to maintain it and employ someone to look after the duties. The design of the structure is classic throughout, being of the Greek fruit-stand -type of archi- tecture, with just the faintest trace of iambic tetrameter inter- mingled to insure regularity of detail. It will be built of rein- forced concrete, supported by sculptured columns, and braced on either side by flying buttresses which have been thoroughly do- mesticated to keep them from fly- ing away. The supporting col- umns will be statuesque, each de- picting a waiter with uplifted arm holding aloft a tray of hash. Models for these statues have been chosen from famous waiters of the past, among whom are Eig-Un Hodges, Ham Weeks, Ben Englebert, Cleo Rogers, Lightnin ' Hughes, and others. The figures will be dressed in regulation waiter garb, wMth spots of gravy  n their aprons to make them more realistic. The walkway of the bridge will be wide enough to accommodate one person of ordinary rotundity, with bay-window benches to pro- vide for passing and loaflng. The floor will be of white tile, inlaid with pictorial representations of the daily menu at the dining hall, such as bacon, patriarchal eggs, spaghetti, cornbread, cowpeas, zip and water. Over the entire span ■will be a glass roof with similar walls. Glass was chosen because its transparency will insure against summer school scandals. There will be a number of memo- rial windows which will be sold to seekers of immortality. At the latest report the only bidders were the Phi Delta Sigma fraternity and the Belles Lettres Literary Society. (Continued on page 3.) A wave of inexpressible sorrow swept over the campus yesterday as news of the tragic death of Miss Fluorine Halogen spread over the college community. The gay life of Sunshine Slopes was ab- ruptly halted and the spirit of the student body was plunged in deep- est gloom. A melancholy air hangs over the quadrangle and an unnatural hush pervades the dor- The class in Bible I received a very s evere shock las t Wednesday morni aK wh en. upon reporting for elass. they found th e room in a great conf usion an d Professor JIackav, ve ry much agitated, in a hea eel a with Mr. Os- car •« eeks— -better kr own as Ham nd Mi! atri( all. It seems that Professor Mackay, who is pastor of the O went on Methodist Church, was supposed to have been at his church some thirty minutes previous to perform the wedding ceremony of this popular couple and, having- be- come thoroughly engrossed in his class work, had forgotten the ap- itor F rater iber sile the ity Ro of the dead. The tragedy occurred late Sun- day night, when Hugh L. Hughes, of the Junior Class, allowed Miss Halogen to fall from the top of a sixty-foot ladder which was propped against a W ' indow of the chemistry laboratory of Science Hall. The body struck on the rocks below and was so horribly mutilated as to be almost beyond recognition. Death ensued almost instantly, according to BIBLE CLASS IS GADFLY PRODS BADLY SHOCKED THE UNIVERSE Down with the pin-heads! Away with the flappers! Hang the jelly-beans! Let the thinking men rule! The world is whirling, swirling, and twirling itself into a mad. jazz-besotted, supersaturated or- gy out of which it must ere long awake with a dark brown taste and a dizzy headache. It has taken unto itself license for a pro- tracted season of debauchery with no intention of quitting when the time expires. The world is in for a crash, a wreck, and an attack of sickened remorse when the Women have gone wild and the gray matter of men has turnefl to stump-water. No brains! No brains! saith Rube Goldberg. Vanity of vanities, all is vanity! said the preacher. La Revue has ceased to revue; the Golden-Black has ceased to gild and has gone a-blacking. The student senate has lost its pep and the literary societies have gone in for pink tea. The co-eds have learned to smoke and forgot ho v to sweep. The faculty has forsaken the clas- sic illustrations of Rome and has taken to lecturing on safety matches. Mah Jongg is displac- ing poker and The Whiz-Bang has become the mentor of polite so- ciety. The rabble of the drawing room clamors loudly for Muscle Shoals, thinking it to be a new th e lady livir K o nly long enough i° gasp out. il aid wa Oh, Hugh— mmoned Med- rti ately, but arri ved too iate to be of servi ce, except to Mr. H jghes, who was suffering severe- lY from nerve us prostratio n. The couple we -e in the act of eloping, it is stated, havi as been se cretly engaged for som e time. Tl is. howeve r, V vas not learned until after the tragedy. It was generally believed that Mr. Hughes would marry Miss Gladys Lynch, to whom he has been known to be engaged for the past year. In fact, he had just re- turned from Miss Lynch ' s dormi- tory, having accompanied her to church that night. Miss Lynch refused to see a reporter this morning, but she is said to be in a state of hysteria and is being closely watched to prevent an at- tempt at suicide. Mr. Wyatt Hale, who was an eye-witness of the tragedy, stated that Hughes aroused him from a nap in the president ' s office by throwing pebbles against the win- dow. He went to the window to investigate the noise and saw Hughes on the ground looking up The atte nts. ipatii It. had left the -be the , ' ard speak, a laborato As he the about to stry wn resources and had fled. ilr. Weeks was very insistent hat Professor Mackay make rep- ration to himself and his afli- nced: and the venerable minister nd professor came to the decision hat there was only one solution, ■hich he began to act on as tlie en-thirty class reported for the all Hugh. the thr itca So the following of how the Bible ch ly shocked, and Mr was appeased : Mr. Verman Ki The Song of Lo Thaddeus Ferrell (; ly) sang At Da- (Continued on account nbrough sang ■■e. and Mr. Tjseni mlnded- ming. Both brella. and a Mah Jongg set out of the window. all of which Hughes caught deftly. He then raised, with considerable difficulty, the sixty-foot ladder and leaned it against the window-sill, calling in a husky whisper for Miss Halogen to come down. She climbed out of the window and on to the lad- but id to the dan (Continued on page 4.) nt when it swayed and rom her weight. Hughes I ' ously up the ladder to She gave herself into but he did not hold to itinued on page 3.) THE GOLDEN-BLACK THE G OLDEN-BLACK Published before breakfast, on rare occasions, by the Waitei-s ' Inion. Entered in the Dean ' s Office by Special rerniission. Rev. J. II. Clark. .Editor-in-Chief Hazel Wooley Ass ' t. Editor C. C. Burton Lexicographer Eloise Carry Gossip Helen Hasty Office Cat Cliford Green Printer ' s Devil Rudolph Scott Chaplain J. W. Thornton. .. .Financial Agt. A. G Re! SALUTATORIAL heyday of nd Sht skii ime lau Prof. A. G. Loehr.Facul ty Advis er Not Responsiliie For IVcIints. Tender It ■ith that the staff pr its re gggqz unall pie Daniel Webster. President Gar- field. Dr. Tanner. George Eliot. Benjamin Dismukes. John Mar- shall Hardin, and Jack Stuart, ■were all. at one time, poor boys. They had to start at the foot of the ladder and climb upward. But they have rustled. They have peeled their coats and made Rome howl. While the great world throbs on. you sigh and refuse to throb. While other young men put on their seal brown overalls, and wrench the laurel wreath and other vegetables from cruel fate, you are idle and hang, like a gi-eat wart upon the face of na- You can do the same. You can win some laurels, too, if you will and secure them while HUMORISQUE BULL CONNOR SEZ He gives us lumbago from caroU- ing song. He makes us go shopping in per- ilous throngs. The gifts that he brings us and puts in our socks Are enough to make people got crazy in flocks: Collapsible derbies, com plasters, trained fleas. Red ties, fur ear-muffs, and li: burger cheese. ' the ■ipe. commend it youre ca refull pe- rusal. konshu s that it ls ful of bullszcqxctyu -literal V t nd other boshnmzcehdkt. Wo ha e spaired no panes sm utknz i Lir efforts the best bubbletuttut stst edishun of the year. Although our intenshuns from the jskrbfjuvtrskfhnx beginning have ben the best bunkknub we have not had the slitest cooper- ation from the darnedgshktify- brmckfu regular staff of the pa- per, they have onlie beeped dif- iculties in our bcmldjytfbhoftge dlco pathway. It was even necessary for us to execute a cleverfa.idoyegnec coupe-detat bajfyrxydkfovtdhfk to get this issue out. We were determined however that no bull- morethanabencjfh should ba Will you bristle up and win a deathless name and owe almost everybody, and give your parents a large wad of glad surprise, or will you cause a prolonged wail of anguish to go up from broken hearts, while a sombre pall hangs in the gladsome sky like a pair of pants with only one suspender? Some of you know only to re- pay rudeness with rudeness, and cold, preserved gall with a large ■ight yrh good as the i pilots, sbcazxcvbn fkg, Selah!? naturalmxkdhdtebnkv put our dumbncfcgd together and are this oshkoshncgdrer spite of them. We ■self as daggondjfkgu the rats or the sky- fkfhryersesg SOME EARNEST THOUGHTS The power of a handsome young man. like the author of these lines, for good or evil, is untold. I sometimes wish that I had not been constructed with so much dazzling beauty to the square inch. When I think of the per- sonal appearance of such men as Ham AVeeks. Blalock. and Ben- son, I am tempted to go and dis- Today the nr ui V vhich CO mes to those who ha ve n lore wealth than thes kno v what to do vith settles dc wn u po n me and I de- Eire to gi ve ad vie e to some of the young me n of jur cour try. who do not know the d fferer ce betw een a quo varrantc ar d the ery- sipelas. As I th nk of m y ow n past there to id. yet trusting, though evanescent in- tangibility, which softly lingers in the untroubled air like the sub- dued murmur of a hoarse donkey about nine miles up the gulch. In my boyhood days, aside from the gentle pattes of tlie maternal slipper upon my overalls, every- thing moved along with me like the silent oleaginous flow of the ordinary goose grease. My future at that time was a little doubtful, as yours is today, and it was hard to prognosticate whether I would fracture limestone for the streets have the remorseless ignorance of a stump-tail cow in a dahlia bed. When you pick out a young lady companion, choose one whose general appearance will not kill the vegetation, one with hair like the soft tresses of a bald-headed shoe brush, a voice like the sad refrain of a planing mill, a sweet young creature with dewy eyes, and breath like timothy hay, one whose merry laugh echoes out upon the summer air like the joyful music of a bald-headed bobolink, one whose wild and pe- culiar beauty would stop a clock. Are you going to be in igno- rance of the world of science, or will you be a great chemist like Test Tube Cameron, and know what substances to bring together to cause a mixture of iron pro- toxide of nitrogen, rhombohedral glucose indications of valedictory and free-milling oxide of anti-fat? Are you going to shut out the beauty of the landscape and scat- ter a large two-doUar gloom over the glad green earth, or will you be another sad-eyed genius like myself, whose pants are too short, and who manifests other signs of greatness? If you will only fol- low in my footsteps you will be fi ' led with sacred pleasure and lavender colored tranquility. Wi ' l you get busy, or are you going to continue to fritter away your existence in chasing the fol- lies of this .day and generation, and have nought to look back upon but a choice assortment of robust regrets? Kary Beavers (after hearing Bryan ' s lecture on evolution) : Ed. did you know that your great - great - great - grandfather threw a cocoanut at my great- great- great -grandfather? Ed Rush: No, but what a pitv he didn ' t hit him! A very large lady entered a street car and gallant Rat Slat- ton arose and said: Lady, may I be one of the three to give you a seat? The desire of the liilltopper is to do less, learn a little, and re- ceive more than the next fellow. About the only way to achieve it is to stay home, do lots, and re- To have fun, and be sufficient unto himself, is not synonymous in the college man ' s career. The co-Gd has an idea often, but to gain favor with her fellows, she keeps it to herself, oftener. There are no fences in life, but freshmen find there are many in the suburbs. Walking is good outdoor exer- cise, but when he came to Sun- shine Slopes, he had no idea that a puddle-jumper would be such an aid in gaining this extra-curricula hour. Some interesting captures may be predicted when everyone is in- oculated with the spring fever germ. Its only vaccine is common sense. An epidemic is feared. Seen in an alcove: A tall blonde, holding forth with a small, cowed brunette in the art of argumenta- tion. Wonder what the dust in Cupid ' s eyes can be? Popularity is the art of saving the same thing in a different way to every different fellow you meet. Playin ' his role, as it were. If anybody wears a new tie, the co-eds rave forth, but let a girl wear a new frat pin, and the si- lence says louder than mere words, How did she do it? I ' d be more than satisfied if I could while away awhile talking with a co-ed. Cars parked to look at, a la campus, n est-ce-pas? When you hear, issuing from the bookstore, a voice proclaim- line — , it is — yes, you guessed it — Benson. Porter, Stewart, Andy, and so on, ad infinitum. Saint Nicholas, shux say I. A demoniac roue- Claus guv. A rascal, ' Tis Santa The following was accidentally dropped by John Hawkins a few- days before Senior Class election: For President — John Harper Hawkins. For Vice-President— John H. Hawkins. For Secretary — J. Harper Haw- kins. For Treasurer — J. H. Hawkins. For Historian— Hawkins. For Poet— Hawkins. J. H. For Prophet — Hawkins, J. Har- per. For Statistician — Hawkins, John H. For Lawyer — Hawkins, John Harper. W. 0. BARROW 1. Twinology — Russell F. John- 2. My Life As a Ministerial Stu- 4. How to Becom Ed Morris. 5. Success — Doctor Guy McGowan. Become Beautiful — s — Gerald Lightfoot To forecast who will fall for S. Imitations of In morality— whom is so dangerous that no one does it except in private among Rev. Bruno Scott. 9. Ratmosphere — . lfr d Lusk. The triangle is an old phenom- enon in geometry, but a new for- mation on the hill. 10. Amor Omnia V Anderson. 11. Heretics — Dean ncit — June Spivey. To linger in one place is not difficult unless someone else de- 12. Artistic Reminis Remote Ancestors — Dr cences of Roy E. cides to linger, too, and then you Hoke. decide some other corner of the library is far more enchanting. 13. Mastication — Rat Jones. 14. How I Won the Hubert Basketball Ruth: When we are married I ' ll share all your troubles and Game— Rat Shivers. 15. Silence — Porter Florence, Turner Scott (in restaurant); I want to try the new dish you have advertised so highly in the papers. Waiter: What ' s that, sir? Turner S. : Bring me a double portion of Mah Jongg. 16. Six Seconds — Segrest. 17. Why Giraffes Have Long Xecks — Jim Clark. IS. My School Teacher in At- talUa — Rudolph Scott. 19. The Red Sheik — Mr. Rat Red Elliott. 20. Jellyisms — Bishop Calhoun. 21. How to Square Dance — Rat Brown and Stanly Watkins. 22. Speeding — Dean Spivej . THE GOLDEN-BLACK SOl ' THEKN SOON TO HAVE ' KW BRIDGE OVEK SLEEPY HOLLOW RAT SHIVERS GETS PORTER LOVING CUP Hl ' GHES-HALOGEX ELOPEMENT (Conlinued from pag:e 1.) Prof. George Curry is the proud designer of tfiis classic arch, which is peculiar and unique in collegiate architecture, according to the unanimous verdict of au- thorities on this subject. The completion of this master- piece of engineering and artistic endeavor will go down as a mo- mentous event in the history of Birmingham-Southern. A mass dedication will be held immedi- ately after the opening of the fall term. Special trains from all points of the United States and some parts of East Lake will bring prominent and other speci- mens of alumni to the scene. The following program has been ar- Invocation — Rev. Earl Babe Ruth Graham. D.D. Solo. The Bridge — Miss Gladys Lynch. Speech — E. J. Harris. Ph.D.. Professor of Landscape Garden- ing and Boiler Repairing. Another Speech — Rat Leonard Shivers (assisted by Alonzo C. Speed.) Speech of Acceptance (for Col- lege) — Hazel Wooley. Parade of Waiters, clad in ki- monos and bedroom slippers. Song. ■•Alma, Mat Her — Glee Club. Collection — Dean Spivey. Dismissal — Herschel Smith, Chaplain. The Committee on Awards for the Porter Loving Cup made their report yesterday to the athletic editor of the Golden-Black. This report stated that the 1924 Lov- ing Cup should go to Rat Shivers, Class of ' 27. Mr. Shivers has made for him- self a very enviable record since his arrival on the hill. He distin- guished himself first by his re- markable agility on the parallel Y, M. C. A. Stunt Night. His grace and ability was rewarded shortly afterwards by the offer sent him by Ted Shawn to .ioin his company of antiseptic dancers. This really shows off Mr. Shivers ' physique to the advantage it de- serves. Perhaps Pavlowa will want him— who knows? Jack Stuart: Say. Porter, I ' ' Porter Florence (much inter- ested) : What ' s her name Jack (wisely): I call her post- Porter F. : Er-er— w ly? Jack: Her name s Adali ' ■ ' = ' , , , Jerry B. : My roomn late kiss girl last Christmas a Id it ma m sick. Mildred M. : How c ome? Jerry B. : Mistletomame po ling. I suppose. PRITCHET ' S PLACE Hot Lunches Served Cold Cold Drinks Served Hot School Books, Razor Blades Hair Nets Note Books (ready to hand inl Candy and Mail Grafting Done Gently and irithout Pain DOUGLAS PRITCHET, _ Proprietor In football. basketball. and baseball this unique hero shines with equal brilliancy. He is a streak on the basketball floor and a mere flash on the baseball dia- mond. In addition to this. Mr. Shivers ' crowning achievement has been ' his selection by Rube Goldberg on the composite All- Hysterical eleven. Such a man could not be over- looked by the committee, even with such athletes as Hoss Gandy. Andy Smith. Aubrey Miller. Frank Echols, Hoyt Levie, and Peter Freer in the race. It is reported, as we go to press, that these men are unearthing a revolution to tar and feather the committee which made the award. tight and fell Hale. RAT HARRIS In Remarkable Ste heart Hoffman onviUe. Ala., Feb. 31, 1924. )f Jacksonville beat imultuous today as her favorite son. the Rev. Rat Red Harris of Birmingham-Southern College, bestrode a mighty sermon and galloped gloriously into na- tional fame. The occasion was that of the baccalaureate sermon for the graduation class of the state school for the sub-normal, which is located at Jacksonville. The noted divine had for his subject, The Amelioration of Amelia, and chose for his text that inspiring passage, All men ai ' e liars. ' At intervals during news spread quickly and an- mobs gathered. seemingly n nowhere, to discuss the issue and con on the downtown cor- !. Wild rumors are afloat to effect that the Ku Klux Klan , ' take a hand in the affair. reports from a reliable source e reached this office that Port- 1 Cement and other corpora- s will bring suit. ibrace. He le ng scream, according to Mr. descended to the ground. halt sliding and half climbing. Taking up the mangled form in his arms, he moaned pit- eously, Oh, Fluorine, Fluorine, my own Fluorine! At this junc- ture Miss Halogen ' s twin sister. Miss Chlorine Halogen, stuck her head out of the window and be- gan to scream hysterically, weep- ing torrents on Hughes below. Hughes moved over about a yard and continued his inoaning. The scene was soon packed with stu- dents, who were aroused by the cries of the sister. By this time the other sisters. Bromine and Io- dine, were up and fully dressed. They descended by the ladder to the group below. Bromine, the elder sister, appeared considerably angry and said roughly to Hughes Why didn ' t you hold on, you careless boob? Walking over to the suitcase, she opened it and ex- amined the contents. I thought so. she snapped, the hussy was trying to swipe my Black Cats! She then gave directions for the undertaker, gathered up the suit- case and other ai-ticles and climbed back up the ladder, fol- the deli- to !nt heights and broke the Sabbath quiet of the village with thundering echoes. The thing n ' e must determine. said the speaker, passionately, is the whichness of what. We must bring the abstract into the sphere of relativity and resolve the meta- physical into the concrete, regard- less of sinister threats from the cement trust. Here the remarks of Rev. Har- i-is grew so pointed that the presi- dent of the local hod-carriers ' union walked out in high indigna- tion. He was followed shortly by the colored janitor, but it was afterwards learned that he was BIBLE CLASS IS lowed by htr two sisters. BADLY SHOCKED Elaborate plans ai-e being made for the funeral, but have not vet been announced in detail. ' The distinguished Halogen family, a rianne Lyles. name of great renown in the To the impressive strains of chemical world. The deceased Mendelssohn ' s Wedding March the and her twin sister. Chlorine, were lovely bridesmaids and grooms- charter members of the Alpha men entered. Beta Quatta sorority. The other Mrs. John Robert Cole was be- sisters belong to the Tau Deltas. comingly gowned in blue georg- All were the very last word in so- ette crepe, which contrasted gro- cial circles. The family crest tesquely -with her pink chrysan- bears the image of a wash-bottle themums. (Mrs. Cole was closely with the motto, Acids, Bases, and follo ved by the jealous glances of Salts etched on it. The four the pompous Mr. Cole.) were temporarily doing light Mrs. Albert Blaylock was love- housekeeping in the chemistry laboratory because of crowded Her flowers were lavender chry- rely goii the fur The Associated Press had their noted correspondent, O. R. Grimes, on the scene to relay the sermon to them hot from the pul- pit. A few hours after its deliv- ery it was streaked in flashing headlines across the front page of the Birmingham Reporter, which was vended by newsboys on the streets of Birmingham with rau- cous cries of Extra! Extra! Mrs. William Richardson was prettily clad in a hand-embroid- ered middy suit. She carried pink chrysanthemums. Mrs. Milton Yeilding was very attractive in cream colored taf- feta. Her flowers were orchid chrysanthemums. Mrs. Julian Anderson, as ma- tron of honor, entered handsomely gowned in crepe trimmed witli beechnuts. Her corsage was of pink rosebuds, to which was at- tached, with flowing ribbon, the struggling Mr. Anderson. he pall-bearers will be Profes- Alden Kalium Boor, George ruvia Thigpen. and Skinny Co- Cameron. Wreaths of sul- ide have been dona ted bv friends troi n the Che nistrv cla s. The col ege ill celebi ate th e occa- sior of th e tu leral with a holiday. The Mr. E. J. LESSONS IN LOVE-M. KING DAN ' S OWN TE-iCHElt JEUXE ANDERSON IS RUE D ' AMOUR Andrew Smith. Mr. Oscar Machado, and Mr. I. W. May. The attractive little twins, Inez and Catherine Cross, were the flower girls. They scattered fig leaves from their tiny baskets. Preceding the bride came the adorable little ring-bearer. Master Peter Freer. He wore a suit of white satin and carried the ring ingeniousl: heart of a rose. The bride was more beautiful than when she en- tered on the coat sleeve of her father. Mr. N. T. Overall. Her wedding dress was of white duchess satin, trimmed in gen- uine lace. Her beautiful veil was caught daintily in her hair by a wreath of Italian Brier. Her flowers were white rosebuds and Jones valley lilies. She was met at the altar by the cealed it 5 certainly groom and the best man. Mr. Benjamin Dismukes. Mr. and Mrs. Weeks were en- tertained at an elaborate recep- tion, following the wedding, at Pritchet ' s Place. Immediately after the reception, the happy couple left for an extended honey- moon to all points in the Birming- ham district. They were accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. John Robert Cole. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Blaylock. Mr. and Mrs. William Richardson. Mr. and Mrs. Milton Yeilding. and Mr. and Mrs. Julian Anderson. It was only then that it was discovered that these couples had, just the evening previous, received their M.R. and M.R.S. degrees, respec- tively. So it was thus that the Bible I class received such a very severe shock on last Wednesday inorning, when, upon reporting for class, they found the room in a great confusion and Professor Mackay. very much agitated, in a heated discussion with Mr. Oscar Weeks — better known as Ham — and Miss Beatrice Overall. THE GOLDEN-BLACK VOTE FOR ANDY AMUSEMENTS THE OBITUARY CLASSIFIED AD ' OF FRATERNITIES DEPARTMENT KEITH-POWLISON ixiwit-ni VAUDEVILLE Local Management Y. W. C. A. Tickets on Sale at Bursar ' s Office Alpha Tau Omegra-Becomo an R tes accorrting to weight ot Playing Stdctly Big-Time Acts M .rs ' fV l ' i Z l i n i . ' o enter siuaent activities. Special leum-Elmwood 1313 grudge against musicians. Pledge pins are unusually bee blue clothes. Kappa Alpha — Lost! Conspicu- ous position on campus. Liberal reward for its return. Present members warranted harmless. We have some all-round fellows and one or two with remarkable abil- PHI ALPHA STOCK COMPANY Presents Its Breezy Musical Comedy Cl. riss,4, Take ' our Feet Ix. Now Playing at the Champion. S on WILL sell or exchange meal tick- ets at slight profit. Will also take a few select boarders DUG PRITCHETT, TATER ETHRIDGE, RAT NELSON. life. EARL I sub- profs, n the lOO ' J FOR THE PEOPLE He wears no man ' s collar. School For Politicians Motto : ' All ' s Fair in Love and Politics Steam Roller Methods Success -Assured KARY BEAVERS Sole Instr Y. M. C. A. Building ana Loan Co. STOCKS AND BONDS NOW AT PREMIUM Purchase Early PAUL COOKE District Representative B. S. C. DRAMATIC CLUB Presents The Dori i.4ncy of THE DraM.a A Satirical Skit in Four Cantos (Round Notes or Shaped) FRIENDS? YES. Ruth had a little friend. She thot he was the stuff, And everywhere that Ruth went He was with her sure enuff. She knew her lesson fine, But June looked at six time: And called it twenty-nine. Alas, the teacher turned him But still he lingered near. And waited nervously about Until Ruth did appear. ity. Phi Alpha — Capacious convenient to Simpson a line, affording quicli Freshmen. Will guarantet stantial standing with th land a national standing near(?) future). Pi Kappa Alpha — Join the old- est fraternity on the campus — so old that everybody has forgotten lit its existence. If you played on any high school baseball, basket- ball, or football team, write us be- ' gistering and we will remit FOR SALE — One bottle of slight- ly used hair tonic. See DAD HOWELL. by retu PRIVATE lessons in square-danc- ing and harpistry. Extra cur- ricula credit. Register earlv MT. MORPHEUS ACADEMT OP AESTHETICS. Bishop Cal- houn, Dean. Rat Sapp, Bursar Third Floor, St. Andrew ' s Hall. WANTED — To buy one combina- tion Latin-Greek-French-Span- ish-Italian-Tiddish lack appendix for English I MAR BRANSCOMB, S. House. and Delta Sig:ma — L ' pper men who have accomplished thing cheerfully taken in upc quest. Tennis players or aspirants to positions on the Gold and Black SARA — Meet staff are assured success with our Sigma Alpha Ei)Silon — Big drive now on! Slogan, One thousand men for our chapter by October 1st. No objections to outcasts from other colleges. We pledge both night and day, although we have only a few chapters. Zeta Tau Alpha — We are the onesi Our rushing has been un- ruffled for numerous seasons. Join us and become a literary light as well as an Honor-Roll student. WANTED — A pub! th LA- t 2:30 p.m. at Odeon One. Bring ticket carfare. ROBERT. LOST, STRAYED OR STOLEN— One hour of extra-curricula credit. If found, please return to Belles-Lettres and Clario- sophic Literary Societies. WANTED — A Sleepy Hollo HALL GANG. bridg History Prof, (coldly) : examination pape SHOPPE DE CHAPEAUX ALL CREATION ' S DESIGXED BY MME. JEANNE MARCHALE HARDIN References: Tau Delta Sorority Tau Delta — We teach a special course in Jazzmania. Members mu. ' t smoke, dance, pet, and drink. All our other rules may be broken, but these are our prime requisites. Those disagreeing needn ' t apply. Alpha Alpha Alpha — TV ' e were founded before all others were put on paper. Our former prestige, 1 w-hich, we admit, is a thing of the pa past, should give us the prefer- fai ence. Call at our room. We have lar two chairs and a telephone. th: Kapxia Lanihda — Headquarters for all elections. Our leaders sponsor all candidates. The Y. W. C. A. and Literary Societies are ours, by choice. Freshmen must learn Mah Jongg by mid-term; taught daily in our spacious suite in the Science Apartments. June (during a quarrel) talk like an idiotl Ruth: I ' ve got to talk can understand me! vard Ellington (to his fond t): Father, I think it ' s only o tell you I need fifty dol- Ray Hurlbert Dialogue bet-n and Mr. DeLux I don ' t like my proofs, an- nounced Ray, taking out several glossy plates. Why not? asked the photog. GADFLY PRODS THE VERSE f (Contin Students ed fr. glibly quote pungent phrases from fanatics and call themselves thinkers, but scramble wildly for cover when asked a pointed question. Sideline ath- letes talk knowingly of punts and letter formations, but cannot hear when asked what down it is. Hulking giants stiff-arm brigades of thugs, but flunk a course be- cause of a headache. Bunkum! Bluff! Bull! Beefers! Bounders! Babies! But let us be of good cheer. If nter the spr not far behi id. ' The quickest -n av to recov 2ry is to carry gaily until we stack up an equal ana contrary rea ction. After all, life IS a ser es of ups and down 5 — feastings and fastii gs, as it wu z. Man -n-a nts but lit tie here bek w Nor wa nts that little long — • The trc ubl e is he wants it all at once. THE GADFLY ' Well, look the instance. It ' s cracked So it is. so it is, (comparing it with original). But, of course, he added quickly, if you don ' t like it — ' one new nose ' . he murmured, writing it down on a pad. Ray took out another proof. There! he cried, indignantly, look at that profile! Did you ever see anything like it? Never! (emphatically). Look at the chin, continued Ray, disregarding him. I know mine doesn ' t recede like that. No, agreed Monsieur DeLuxe, it recedes more. But, of course, if you don ' t like it — ' add fifty per cent to chin ' , he scribbled on his pad. Look here! shouted the busi- ness manager, fiercely. I ' ll be darned if I ' m going to stand for another sitting again. When that final picture is ready I want it to look like something. It will. said the bulb-squeez- er, amiably. You can bet on that. You won ' t recognize yourself. LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-FOUR LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Birmingham Jacksonville Nashville New Orleans Where {yle cu?c Qualdi Prei om n e ' ' d RMINGHAM, ALABAMA ' LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Birmingham ' s Only Cash Store for Men and Boys j n ■mrmiifcjiifcin ■ ■bA Kaii£!S92cjmp o co '  aHani-«ifcj ' fc n gEE3 i = ipy 2009 Second Ave. Next to Burger ' s Exclusive Outfitters to the College Man Ask the Boys at the School — They Know The Ensley First Methodist Church Is Interested in Birmingham-Southern College When needed we are at your service A Welcome Awaiti You at Our Services Ave. I at 20th St., Ensley WM. H. MANSFIELD, Pastor TURNER STUDIO COMPANY C. R. Hatcher, Manager PHOTOS OF THE BETTER KIND Phone M. 1509 228 Clark BMg. 20th Street and 4th Avenue Butler-Garrett Real Estate and Insurance Co. REALTORS 222 North Twenty-First Street Birmingham, Alabama LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-FOUR We Make Your Watch Run on Time ELLIS JEWELRY COMPANY Reliable Jewelers and Opticians 608 NINETEENTH STREET Just across from the B. R. L. P. Co. Phone Ensley 36 The Home of Satisfied Eyeglasi Weareri Wood Fruitticher WHOLESALE GROCER 2030 Morris Ave. Phone M. 8114 Distributors of White Pearl Mac- aroni and Spaghetti, Red Crown Meats, Doathala and Wire Grass Syrup, Carnation Milk, White Lilly Oats. C tationery and Q l3 chool supplie jj THE COLLEGE DRUG STORE Owenton Drug Co. 837 8th Ave., West THE COLLEGE BOOK STORE OWEN HALL BASEMENT This Is Your Store, Patronize It Candy, Cakes, Fruit, Ice Cream Books, School Supplies Pies, Sandwiches DOUGLASS PRITCHETT, Manager W. A. SMITH, Assistant OWEN NELSON, Assistant G. K. ETHERIDGE, Assistant T. B. PEARSON, Assistant LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R French Plate Mirrors in Polychrome Frames Medicine Cabinets, Artists ' Materials Glass and Glazing of Every Description Paints, Oils, Varnishes, Painters ' Supplies Floor Waxes, Furniture and Automobile Polishes HYNDS-UPSHAW Headquarters for Leading Contract Painter and Decorators 2118 Second Avenue Phone Main 8049 1880 — Over 40 Years of Honorable Service — 1924 Harris Transfer Warehouse Co. Storage, Moving, Packing Shipping I HAVE THE 3EST Let Me Furnish You With Absolute Protection Through the NEW YORK LIFE INSURANCE CO. A. H. SAWYER. Agent Wylam, Alabama P. O. Box 613 COMPLIMENTS OF ROLLER CHAMPION THE FLOUR THE BEST COOKS USE LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Gwin-Williams Grocery Co. DISTRIBUTORS Lily of the Valley Fancy Canned Fruits and Vegetables White Crest Flour Sweet Rose Plain and Self-Rising Flour Phone Ensley 383 or 272 ENSLEY, ALA. BIRMINGHAM ARMS CYCLE CO. Rejoices in Nearly Half a Century ' s Faithful Service to Southern Sportdom WE INVITE YOUR INSPECTION Everything for Every Sport Mail Orders Promptly Filled BIRMINGHAM ARMS CYCLE CO. Established 1880 2017 Third Avenue The Birminsham Home of A. G. SPALDING BROS. Celebrated Athletic Goods Better Bread McGOUGH BAKERIES 2113 Second Avenue 729-31 North 26th Street Bell-Rogers Produce Co., Inc. Wholesale Produce and Commission Merchants BIRMINGHAM, ALA. COMPLIMENTS OF PIGGLY WIGGLY Incorporated BIRMINGHAM LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R BIRMINGHAM SOUTHERN COLLEGE YOUR COLLEGE ! CERTAINLY ! It Will Be Unwise for You to Decide on a College Until You Have Investigated the Advantages Offered Here The Faculty: In Character, Christian; in Scholarship and Experience, the equal of any in the State. Its course of study, including Languages, History, Science, etc., is complete and liberal, leading to the degrees of A.B. and B.S. Its recognized Department of Education secures complete recognition for its graduates from the State Board. Its successful athletic teams develop boys into men of physical stam- ina; experienced coaches with excellent material for each team. In addition to those already in use, there is a new three-story brick and steel dormitory. The new $60,000.00 three-story, fireproof brick — M. Paul Phillips — library is now in use. It has student publications, which promotes an interest in literary effort. Its Y. M. C. A. and Y. W. C. A. develop the best in the students; fifteen minutes ' prayer service each evening after supper. Campus situated on a hill, unsurpassed for healthful climate and grandeur of rugged scenery. $1,000,000 added to its financial resources by the recent drive of the Education Movement. Genuine college advantages within reach of all the young men. Neces- sary expenses under $300. Fully accredited member of both American and Southern Associations of Colleges. For additional information, address GUY E. SNAVELY, President Birmingham-Southern College BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R THE THINKING FELLOW RIDES A YELLOW Main 4500 Main 4500 YELLOW CAB COMPANY Every Passenger Insured A. C. KEILY COMMERCIAL VIEW MAN The man who does the group picture work for La Revue. Phone Main 5090 and West End 85-W Produce Exchange Building I2IV2 N. 21st St. Birmingham, Ala Chas. A. Craven RED MOUNTAIN WHOLE WHEAT FLOUR Phone Main 6713 Birmingham, Alahama Made in Birmingham Goldenrod Hams and Bacon Carnation Lard Peerless Sausage Inspected and Passed by U. S. Government BIRMINGHAM PACKING COMPANY BIRMINGHAIVI, ALABAMA Davis Printing Company Printing, Publishing Advertising 216 North 22nd Street Phone Main 6972 LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Arrant Juauranrr Agrnry Fire, Tornado, Automobile Compensation Burglary, Plate Glass Accident and Health Elevator, Teams Public THE AGE HERALD BUILDING BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-FOUR We cordially invite you to visit the EMPIRE BAR- BER SHOP. You should not overlook the fact that we are Nationally Known. We serve people from every state in the UNION, and we get the NEWEST and BEST first. You should take advantage of our SUPERIOR SERVICE, which costs you no more. EMPIRE BARBER SHOP 106 North 20th Street Birmingham, Alabama COLLEGE MEN ' S HAIR CUT IN A COLLEGE MAN ' S STYLE MORRIS HOTEL BARBER SHOP HUFFMAN BROS., Proprietors 1903 FIRST AVENUE IF YOU WANT THE BEST TRY US LA REVUE. NINETEEN TWENTY-FOUR We Have Kept Faith With the People of Birming- ham and Alabama for 25 Years — ALWAYS SELLING FOR LESS And we are going to con- tinue doing it. LOUIS PIZITZ The Busy Corner 2nd Ave. and 19th St. BIRMINGHAM, ALA. BOB WOLFORD WILL BE GLAD TO SERVE YOU College Clothes And Accessories Are shown here in all the last minute styles. Let Bob assist you in YOUR SELECTION The S or« of 9pecial y ?h«ps Birmingham, Alabama COMPLIMENTS OF YEILDING BROTHERS COMPANY 22ND STREET AND 2ND AVENUE DRY GOODS, CLOTHING, SHOES GROCERIES AND FARM IMPLEMENTS Telephone Main 1 LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R FAIR AND SQUARE FOR 66 YEARS D. . ' Clothiers to Young Men THE TASTE Exercised in the Selection of Gifts Reflects to a large degree the character of the giver. Let Us Be Your Gift Counselor REID LAWSON Incorporated JEWELERS 308 NORTH 20TH ST. What we say it is — It is COMPLIMENTS OF DEWBERRY MONTGOMERY STATIONERS, ENGRAVERS PRINTERS Office Furniture 2014 FIRST AVENUE BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-FOUR JAFFE ' S WHEN IN NEED OF JEWELRY FOR ANY OCCASION Quality Jewelrly and Gifts of Lasting Satisfaction Class Pins and Rings Medals, Loving Cups EVERYTHING IN SCHOOL JEWELRY JAFFE JEWELRY COMPANY 1900 SECOND AVENUE SPECIALIZING IN TWO-PANTS SUITS KLOTHES SHOPPE 207 4 North Nineteenth Street BIRMINGHAM, ALA. COLLINS CO. Incorporated Wholesale Grocers Exclusive Distributors for Stanwix Canned Fruits and Vegetables Diamond Crystal Salt Paul ' s Preserves and Jams Any Many Other Leading Brands of Food Products LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R M. H. WILSON Your photograph as a college student will mean much to you in the years to come. STEPHENSON STUDIO MAKE YOURS 410 N. Twentieth Street Telephone Main 4937 COMPLIMENTS OF Tyler Grocery Co. WHOLESALE BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Compliments of FRANKLIN STILES GROCERY CO. WHOLESALE 2114-16 Morris Avenue Phones Main 102 and 685 ISIS CREAMS Cold and Vanishing NEVER DISAPPOINTS AT ALL DRUG STORES LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R DON ' T SPEND ALL YOU EARN Keeping money is usually harder than making it, but we can help you to keep it. Regular systematic saving, though in small amounts, will be the most successful plan. The monthly Savings Stock of this Association pays the highest return commensurate with safety. Jefferson County Building Loan Association 113 NORTH TWENTY-FIRST BIRMINGHAM, ALA. After a Night ' s Sleep on an ORIGINAL PERFEaiON MAHRESS ON A GENUINE PERFECTION SPRING Your Studies Will All Be Easy COMPLIMENTS OF Perfection Mattress Spring Co. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R EVERYTHING OUR NAME IMPLIES TO PRESERVE AND BEAUTIFY THE HOME Birmingham Paint Glass Co. 2021 FOURTH AVENUE BIRMINGHAM, ALA. COMPLIMENTS OF THE Laundry Coupon Sales Office 2008 First Ave. Biriningham, Alabama Moore Jewelry Company WE SELL FOR LESS Anything: in the Jewelry Line 420 North 19th St. Birmingham, Ala. ALABAMA POWER COMPANY Cumulative Preferred Stock Dividends paid every three months. The opportunity is here for the people of this territory to make a safe and conservative investment in an essential in- dustry — A business with an unlimited opportunity for con- tinuous growth and achievement. For the saver, an easy payment plan. $5 down and $5 per share a month. For Further Information Write INVESTMENT DEPARTMENT ALABAMA POWER COMPANY Brown Marx Building BIRMINGHAM. ALABAMA LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R SOUTHERN YELLOW PINE LUMBER CO. eiUMINQflAM AlAf HER DELIGHT A BOX OF HEBER ' S CANDY ' Tis the Taste That Tells Greater Birmingham ' s Great Shoe Store GUARANTEE SHOE COMPANY Birmingham Ensley Bessemer Wynn-Knox Candy Co. 2304 FIRST AVE. WHOLESALE ONLY Our Bookstore Carries Their Full Line LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R ABRAHAM LINCOLN SAID I once steered a raft down the Mississippi River. It went delight- fully with the current; but I didn ' t meet any rafts going up-stream, they were all steamboats. YOUNG COLLEGE MAN Which are You, a Raft or a Steamboat? To obtain success in life you cannot drift, but must fight the current of difficulties. RESPECTFULLY STEEL CITY LUMBER COMPANY BIRMINGHAM, ALA. By M. P. PHILLIPS, President COMPLIMENTS OF BIRMINGHAM CHERO-COLA BOTTLING CO. DRINfC CherD ' Coia 5 ' THE COLLEGE DRINK LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-FOUR TAILORED AT From our Factory cJ.B. Strauss Co-Mokcra. BIRMINGHAM BRANCH, 2007 THIRD AVENUE, NORTH STOCKHAM FITTINGS The extensive use of pipe fittings in heat- ing and drainage installations in homes, schools, factories, hotels, office and munici- pal buildings makes it advisable for stu- dents, especially those who are contemplat- ing becoming contractors, engineers, archi- tects or connected in any way with the building trades, to become familiar with the best pipe fittings for all purposes, such as the Stockham line of screwed, flanged malleable, and drainage fittings. STOCKHAM PIPE AND FITTINGS CO. BROOKLYN BIRMINGHAM CHICAGO LOS ANGELES EARLY MOTOR SERVICE COMPANY 1625-31 Third Ave. FOR EARLY SERVICE Phone Main 647 FRIENDS LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Those who Serve Themselves Are Served Best — In Birmingham — In Atlanta — In Memphis — In Dallas The best place to eat when your thoughts turn to South- ern Home Cooking is the BRITLING CAFETERIA The Southern Home of Southern Home Cooking COMPLIMENTS OF KIRKPATRICK SAND AND CEMENT COMPANY 316 North Twenty-First St. BIRMINGHAM, ALA. COMPLIMENTS OF Ridout ' s Funeral Home LADY ATTENDANT INSTANT AMBULANCE SERVICE Phones Main 6 or 9 2117 North Fifth Avenue BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Flowers For Her at commencement Corsage Bouquets Arm Bouquets The Most Artistic Floral Creations ARE FROM THE BLOSSOM SHOP D. L. SMITH. Manager Molton Hotel, 505 N. 20th St. Phone Main 8091 LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R TRAIN YOUR DOLLARS TO HAVE MORE CENTS Ignorant and wasteful dollars will never amount to anything. Send them to school in our bank. We give them a careful financial education and pay you 4 ' ' interest while they are learning to become sensible dollars. , -!S . NORTH BIRMINGHAM TRUST SAVINGS BANK BOB WHARTON, Pr J. H. BERRY, Vlce-Pr. GEO. B. TARRANT, Vi. G. C. BRYANT, Cashiei W. F. McCLURE, Assl. Cashii You, Too, Will Need 0. B. W s Service Year after year graduates are turning to this store to care for their apparel needs through life, recognizing that dress has a great deal to do with attainment. Dress may not make the man or the woman, but the man or woman who is not properly dressed is working under an unnecessary handicap and certainly has not learned that it costs no more to be well and attractively attired than otherwise if the clothing comes from 1915-1917 THIRD AVE. Head to Foot Apparel (or Men and Women LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R PRATT CONSOLIDATED COAL COMPANY American Trust Savings Bank Build ' ng BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA MINERS AND SHIPPERS STEAM, COKING AND DOMESTIC COAL AND MANUFACTURERS OF COKE MINES LOCATED ON Louisville Nashville Railroad Southern Railway St. Louis-San Francisco Railroad Ensley Southern Railway Northern Alabama Railway Nashville, Chattanooga St. Louis Railroad LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R ZAC SMITH STATIONERY COMPANY 2012 FIRST AVENUE Printing Engraving Office Furniture Graduation Presents Presents Which are Un- usual and Appropriate, Yet Inexpensive Bromberg Co. Birmingham Jewelers 3ril Ave. and 20th St. OMEGA FLOUR Absolutely the Best Earle BrotKers Wholesale Distributors BIRMINGHAM, ALA. DRENNEN ' S Birmingham ' s BEST Department Store for OVER HALF A CENTURY LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-FOUR BUILDER OF PRESIDENT ' S NEW HOME P. G. WILLIAMS CONTRACTOR Phone West End 324-J The Uhrig Optical Company your opticians 1923 1st Ave. Phone M. 3855 Birmingham, Alabama WE HAVE MADE PHOTOS FOR LA REVUE FOR THE LAST SIX YEARS We Strive to Please Everybody Thanking every student and the faculty for their patronage, we hope to have the pleasure of serving- you in the future. DELUXE STUDIO 1910I2 SECOND AVE. BIRMINGHAM, ALA. COMPLIMENTS OF FIRST NATIONAL BANK LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R SIXES DO BEAT FOURS Paige Jewett Distributed by DETROIT MOTOR CAR CO. 619 South Twentieth Street Phone Main 8288 GOODYEAR MEANS GOODWEAR Goodyear Shoe Hospital 418 North 20th St. You ' ll Find Here Double-Trouser Suits For Almost Double Wear That Look Almost Double the Money LOVEMAN, JOSEPH LOEB BIRMINGHAM AMERICAN TRUST AND SAVINGS BANK BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Resources (Over) $14,000,000 General BanJ ing Service 4% PAID ON SAVINGS LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-FOUR — Large Enough to Serve You —Small Enough to Know You — Strong Enough to Protect You BANK OF ENSLEY Ramsay McCormack, Incorporated Resources More Than $4,000,000 R. E. CHADWICK President S. C. KING Vice President and Cashier W. C. MAXWELL Assistant Cashier H. J. CUMMINGS Manager Wylam Branch W. D. SUPPLER Assistant Cashier ENSLEY AND WYLAM ALABAMA COMPLIMENTS OF GOLDSTEIN AND COHEN ENSLEY ' S DEPARTMENT STORE ENSLEY, ALABAMA It ' s the Blend That Makes Morning Star Coffee So popular with the homes and large users of quality coffee. Scientifically Roasted and Blended by Southern Coffee Spice Co. BIRMINGHAM, ALA. COME TO SEE J. A. CLARK Senior ' 24 R. B. BROYLES FURNITURE COMPANY 2021-8 2nd Ave. LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R Twenty-one Years of Activity in the Progress of Birmingham B. M. Chenoweth Company THE VERY BEST SPORTING GOODS Golf Accessories Sport Clothing Fishing Tackle Guns and Ammunition Cutlery Flashlights Athletic Equipment Play Ground Equipment WHOLESALE AND RETAIL 103 North Twentieth Street Phone Main 1590 BIRMINGHAM THE BEST THE MARKET AFFORDS SWIFT ' S PREMIUM HAMS Not Necessary to Parboil CAHEEN BROTHERS BIRMINGHAM SERVICE Quality Economy THIS BOOK PRINT LARGEST COLLEGE ANNUAL PUBLISHERS IN THE WORLD HIGHEST QUALITY WORKMANSHIP SUPERIOR EXTENSIVE SERVICE COLLEGE ANNUAL HEADQUARTERS I LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R WE MAY NOT BE AS BIG AS OTHERS But We Are Just as Square FAIRFIELD ICE AND FUEL COMPANY FAIRFIELD, ALABAMA READ THE BIRMINGHAM AGE HERALD FOR THE FRESHEST NEWS OF YOUR HOME STATE— THE NATION-THE WORLD More Than 1,000 Miles of Leased Wires in Alabama Carry State News DIRECT to the Age Herald Independent — Fearless — Dependable Only Morning Paper in Birmingham District Brings You the News before the Day ' s Activities Have Dulled Your Appetite for It! LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R STUDENTS OF BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN COLLEGE LEST YOU FORGET! LEST YOU FORGET! Be reminded that you are now in one of Life ' s great literary filling stations — Here, knowledge, the greatest known Motive, is stored in quantities, and Variety Awaits your taking. Soon Officer Time will hustle you along your way. Therefore, NOW, with this fuel, fill to the full your res- ervoir, lest you GO DEAD and be tossed and forgotten upon the great highway of life, where the world and your loved ones confidently expect you to show speed and Just this reminder LEST YOU FORGET! LEST YOU FORGET! Your Friend, EDGAR M. ELLIOT MERITA BRAND BREAD AND CRACKERS AMERICAN BAKERIES COMPANY LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY- FOUR GO! REGARDLESS OF THE WEATHER RAIN OR SHINE! DAY OR NIGHT! For Business For Pleasure You can go wherever and whenever you wish — at lower cost and with more privacy, convenience, and satisfaction, if you RENT A NEW CAR DRIVE IT YOURSELF ,„ , SAUNDERS SYSTEM (Drive It Yourself) (Drive It Yourself) 1917 5th Ave. — Phone Main 3301 ,„ 1701 2nd Ave. — Phone Main 177 LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-FOUR f! % Fords ' 3Vlf O p r f ri T _ : . nn O Rates for Grays 5(irf HA • Commercial ColumbiaS n A_ Purposes .fc. SERVICE GOES IN BEFORE OUR CARS GO OUT Fone Four Four Four for FORDS WIER BROTHERS 528 NORTH TWENTIETH STREET BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - F O U R It Is a Long Lane That Has No Turning Acknow ledgments Our task is done, and we pause to express our humble gratitude to those who have so kindly assisted us in the compilation of this volume of La Revue. Especially do we want to thank Mr. Ganster, of the Alabama Engraving Com- pany, for his invaluable aid in helping us to secure photographs, and for his many courtesies and considerations in every department of the work. To Benson Printing Company we are very grateful for the excellent service they have rendered and the thoughtful attentions they have given. We owe much to Deluxe Studio and to Turner Studio for their efficient efforts and unfaltering patience. To Mr. Paul Pirn we offer thanks for aid he so freely gave in oiu ' art department. We extend our regards to Dr. Snavely and Professor Powlison for the very fine co-operation and personal interest they have shown to all of our solicitations. We want to express our sincere appreciation to every one who has in any way contributed to make this publication possible. To lenient professors and to all who have loaned their efforts in making our work lighter, we are indebted. :%i ' P«M ' ' ' lii0■. if ' i UrBRARY BIRMircC :OUTHERN COLLEGE


Suggestions in the Birmingham Southern College - Southern Accent Yearbook (Birmingham, AL) collection:

Birmingham Southern College - Southern Accent Yearbook (Birmingham, AL) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 1

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Birmingham Southern College - Southern Accent Yearbook (Birmingham, AL) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 1

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Birmingham Southern College - Southern Accent Yearbook (Birmingham, AL) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 1

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Birmingham Southern College - Southern Accent Yearbook (Birmingham, AL) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 1

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Birmingham Southern College - Southern Accent Yearbook (Birmingham, AL) online collection, 1926 Edition, Page 1

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Birmingham Southern College - Southern Accent Yearbook (Birmingham, AL) online collection, 1927 Edition, Page 1

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