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

 - Class of 1926

Page 1 of 274

 

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



Page 6, 1926 Edition, Birmingham Southern College - Southern Accent Yearbook (Birmingham, AL) online collectionPage 7, 1926 Edition, Birmingham Southern College - Southern Accent Yearbook (Birmingham, AL) online collection
Pages 6 - 7

Page 10, 1926 Edition, Birmingham Southern College - Southern Accent Yearbook (Birmingham, AL) online collectionPage 11, 1926 Edition, Birmingham Southern College - Southern Accent Yearbook (Birmingham, AL) online collection
Pages 10 - 11

Page 14, 1926 Edition, Birmingham Southern College - Southern Accent Yearbook (Birmingham, AL) online collectionPage 15, 1926 Edition, Birmingham Southern College - Southern Accent Yearbook (Birmingham, AL) online collection
Pages 14 - 15

Page 8, 1926 Edition, Birmingham Southern College - Southern Accent Yearbook (Birmingham, AL) online collectionPage 9, 1926 Edition, Birmingham Southern College - Southern Accent Yearbook (Birmingham, AL) online collection
Pages 8 - 9
Page 12, 1926 Edition, Birmingham Southern College - Southern Accent Yearbook (Birmingham, AL) online collectionPage 13, 1926 Edition, Birmingham Southern College - Southern Accent Yearbook (Birmingham, AL) online collection
Pages 12 - 13
Page 16, 1926 Edition, Birmingham Southern College - Southern Accent Yearbook (Birmingham, AL) online collectionPage 17, 1926 Edition, Birmingham Southern College - Southern Accent Yearbook (Birmingham, AL) online collection
Pages 16 - 17

Text from Pages 1 - 274 of the 1926 volume:

LIBRARY OF BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN COLLEGE ■ ' . ' K. ' , ' ■ , Ili!r, ' l OAeye arbook BIRMINGHAM SOUTHERN COLLEGE J BIRMINGHAM I ALA- 1926 III I ' M il ' lili mill ' Prologue T f NSEEN, yet heard; intang- M j ihle, yet cogent ana mighty; directing the affairs of men; annihilating s ace; linking land ivith sea, nation ivith nation, knowl- edge, the greatest force-control, is typified in the quiet, efficient, yet ■potent spirit of progress that is he- ing felt this year at Birmingham- Southern hy faculty and student body alike. For this reason, and to the end that the fortoard-looking, vision-in- spired atmosphere of Birmingham- Southern s greatest year may he •preserved for those ivho come after us, we have adopted knowledge as symbolic of the greatest dynamic force which is notu in full siuay at our Alma ?dater. ir ' jil ' l College Classes (Athletics Organizations features Contents m m Dedication M J OR the broad vision of g progress and service to education do tve most loyally dedicate this volume of La Revue to our friend and benefactor, l lr. Erskine Ramsay. It IS not so much an attrib- ute of tvisdom to accumulate tvealth as it is to bestoiu it as to accomplish the greatest good; and to him tvho has en- circled the hearts of all Birm- ingham-Southern men and loomen ivith highest ideals of our best traditions do we most devotedly give our a ' - recia- tion for his character. ■. i.. .. ., .. .. ,. c t : ■c - rvjs, c i,.i,.i,.i,.i,.i, ..-. ! 3 ih pplpmbpr 2. 1925 3]3:_jnniiinnimuniniiniiTJiiiim he faculty r t lO THE fair and ym artial m leaders, to the honest and upright men, hrilhant and lovable teachers of our college xve owe what knoivledge it may he our lot to carry from the campus. They serve well and faithful- ly, day in and day out, and the sum of their ivork is that toe shall go forth as the leaders of the coming generation. Guided hy no mercenary mo- tives, actuated hy the highest ideals of culture and attain- ment, let the honor which is justly due he theirs! ' I I) I ! ' a GUY EVERETT SNAVELY, A.B., Ph.D., LL.D. President m in • •) ! ' l! l - i ' il ' Tm President 5naT ef} ' A.B., Johns Hopkins University, 1901; Pli.D., Johns Hopkins University, 1908; LL.D., Emory University, 1925; Honorary Scholar in Educa- tional Administration, Teachers ' College ; Colum- bia University 1914-15; Instructor, Professor and Registrar, Allegheny College, 1906-19; Visit- ing Professor, Ne v York University, 191+-15; Organizer and Director, Southern Division, American Red Cross, 1917-19; Dean and Pro- fessor of Spanish, Converse College, 1919-21; Editor of Je ' han de Vignay ' s Aesopic Fables, ' ■El Capitan Veneno, Valdes Jose ; Decorated as Officer d ' Academie by French government; Corresponding Member, Spanish-American Acad- emy, Cadiz, Spain; Lieutenant-Colonel, Ala- bama National Guard, Governor ' s Staff; Mem- ber Cosmos Club, Washington, D. C. ; Andiron Club, New York City; Kiwanis Club and Quid Pro Quo Club, Birmingham, Alabama; Director of Birmingham Kiwanis Club, 1925; Director of Alabama Sunday School Association; Vice-Chair- man, Birmingham Sunday School Association; Alabama Member and Vice-Chairman, Interna- tional Sunday School Council; Member Nation- al Committee in Charge of Investigation of Mod- ern Foreign Language Study; Member Birm- ingham News Loving Cup Committee, 1925; President, Birmingham-Southern College, 1921- GILBERT WILCOX MEAD, A.B., A.M. Dean and Professor of English Dean (fTtlead A.B., Al legheny College, 1911; M.A., Colum- bia University, 1916; Graduate Student, Co- lumbia University, 1915-18; Instructor, De- partment of English and Comparative Liter- ature, Columbia University and Columbia Summer Session, 1917-23; Special Lecturer in English, Hunter College, New York City, 1917-23; Head of Department of English, Westminster College (Pa.), 1923-25; Dean and Professor of English, Birmingham-South- ern College, 1925- Member, Phi Gamma Delta, Phi Beta Kap- pa, Omicron Delta Kappa, Tau Kappa Alpha, Kiwanis International; Honorary Member, Columbia Philoxexian Society; Member of Modern Language Association of America; Secretary, English Victorian Section, M. L. A., 1923- ; Member, American Folk Lore So- ciety, Modern Humanities Research Associa- tion (London). -■V., ,. -A,A.A. Cfv:s g!i- . c I.J,.I,.I,.I.,I.U ii:s:, e i;j£ « :;c e% ■4 IS ■.- J:. rS) (3 Si ft Faculty C. C. Alexander, A.B., A.M., Th.B. Professor of Biblical Literature Marvin McHendree Black, Jr.. A.B., M.A. Instructor in History and Economics Aldex Kixxey Boor, B.S., M.S. Professor of Chemistry B.S., John B. Stetson Universitv. 1914; Graduate Work, Harvard L ' niversity. 1914; M.S., University of Chicago, 1915. George W. Currie, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Latin and Greek A.B., a.m.. Ph.D., Indiana University, 1908-11. F. B. Daxiel, A.B., A.M., LL.B. Instructor in History and Law Russell Dick, B.A. Instructor in Frencli and Spanish R. H. Eliassen, M.A. Instructor in Education •Pictures of several faculty members unobtain- 16 Faculty H. B. Englebert, A.B. Instructor in Mathematics Lillian Gregory, A.B. Librarian Wyatt W. Hale, B.S. Reghtrar B.S., Birmingham-Southern College; Graduate Work, Johns Hopkins University; Candidate lor M.A. degree, Birmingham-Southern College. Roy Edward Hoke, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Education and Psychology M. C. Huntley, A.B., A.M. Instructor in English Walter Clinton Jones, A.B., A.M., M.D. Professor of Biology and College Physician Allen G. Loehr, A.B. Assistant Professor of English : ' ■ ' ■ ' - - ' ■ ' ikskj ' ' ■ i.i ). Us. C ' v.i. v2 Faculty Charles D. Matthews, A.B., M.A. Instructor in English Literature and Languages EoLixE Wallace Moore, A.B., A.M. Instructor in Education A.B.. A.M., Birmingham-Southern College. Wesley Adolphus Moore, A.B., A.M. Professor of Mathematics Johx Wiley Perry, Jr., A.B., M.S. Instructor in Chemistry and Physics Wilbur Dow Perry, A.B., A.M. Professor of English A.B,. Southern University, 1905: A.M.. Vanderbilt University, 1909-10; Graduate Work, University ot Chicago, 1922-23. W. B. Posey, Ph.B., M.A., LL.B. .Assistant Professor of History Douglas C. Pritchett, A.B. Graduate Manager of Athletics and Student J ctivities A.B,. Birniingham-Southern College, 1925. ♦Re. ' iigned. Faculty Austin Prodoehl, A.B., Ph.D. Professor of Modern Languages A.B.. Dubuque College, 1907: Graduate Student, University of Fribourg; University of Lausanne, 1909; Ph.D., University of Fribourg, Switzerland, 1908-10. Barb.ara Ransom Director IFomen ' s Physical Training Candidate for A.B. Degree, Birmingham-Southe N. Gilbert Riddle, A.B. Professor of Business A dministration and Bursar A.B., West Virginia University, 1922; Work, Columbia University. Harrison A. Trexler, A.B., Ph.D. Professor of History and Political Science A.B., Bellevue College, 1906; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University, 1914; Graduate Work, University of Chicago and Gernianj ' . Robert S. Whitehouse, A.B. Instructor in Spanish A.B.. Birmingham-Southern College. William Alonzo Whiting, B.S., Ph.D. Professor of Biology and Geology B.S., Allegheny College, 1906; Ph.D., Cornell Uni- versity, 1921. Ethel May Wilson, A.B., A.M. Assistant Professor of Romance Languages and Dean of IV omen A.B., Hendrix College. 1909; A.M., Vanderbllt Uni- versity, 1911; Graduate Work, University of Wis- consin, 1916, 1923-24; Diplome de I ' Unlversite de 1 ■grc r EXOTIC 7 ' Ae moon tonight is a tvhite Damascus scimitar — Ana the shadows of ines are the moods of a Futurist pastel. Sombre in lengthening greyness. Stars behind ines and the ivavenng tremor of branches; The stars are fireflies dancing with the toind ' s stvee . And you eyes as I luatch them in silence : They are two flames that fierce me — like ivhite hot needles of ain. —R.B. SENIORS From The End Of The Trail. By James Earl Eraser %r QL- , 3 1 ' •v 5f fe ( OON the tram of feet in these halls of our Alma Mater luill resound by us unheard. Our task 7S done — it has just begun! For the labor here is but the •preparation for the future. Our successes have been those of our oivn choosing. We have set aside the foibles of youth; uoe have struck the shackles of the un- learned from our minds; lue gaze into the stern future and are unafraid — Alma Mater, fear not for us in the days as yet unborn, we are ready to do battle and to turn! (C; (fi Si? 3 w. ' Ri Senior Class Officers Richmond Beatty President Leon Stevenson I ' ice-President S. ' RA McKenzie Secretary Herbert Weaver Treasurer %0 ■a %l c ! r Abercrombie Abernathy Allman Arnett Acton Allev Bailey Bayliss Senior Class Joe Albert Abercrombie, B.S. Erin Jean Allman, A.B. ENSLEV, ALA. GUIN, ALA. Hugh Alston Abernethy, A.B. Alton B. Arnett, A.B. NEWBERN, TENN. S A E BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Eleanor Dillard Atwood. A.B. BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Paul Hammond Acton, A.B. Walter Harry Bailey, A.B. BIRMINGHAM, ALA. NEWBERN, ALA. Honor Roll, •22- ' 23, •23- ' 24: Belles Lettres Liter- ary Society, ' 22- ' 23; Math Medal, ' 24; Kappa Phi Kappa; Secretary-Treasurer Simpson-South- ern Club, ' 24- ' 25. Debating Club, ' 24- ' 25; Vice-President Clario- sophic Literary Society. ' 25; Manager of Ten- nies, •25- ' 2G; Associate Editor La Revue, ' SS- ' Se. BALL. ' iRD B. Bayliss, B.S. J. Leonard Alley, A.B. e K N BIRMINGHAM, ALA. BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Glee Cluli, •24- ' 25, •25- ' 26; Theta Chi Delta. Beal Branscomb Beatty Brock Bellexcer Carder Blake Cooke Clc Myra Beal, A.B. e T BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Women ' s Pan-Hellenic Council, ■24- ' 25; La Revue Staff. ' 23- ' 24; ■ ' Gold and Blauk Staff, ' 24- ' 25; Bnsley-Southern Club. Richmond Crooms Beatty, A.B. n K A BIRMINGHAM, ALA. President Senior Class; Intercollegiate Debat- ing Team, ' 23- ' 24, ' 24- ' 25; Captain Track Team, ' 24; Freshman Declamation Medal, ' 23; Presi- dent Belles Lettres Literary Society, ' 24; Dra- matic Club, ' 24- ' 25; B Club; Student Senate, ■24- ' 25; Vice-President Student Senate. ' 25- ' 26; Omicron Delta Kappa; Kappa Phi Kappa; Sigma Upsilon. James Oscar Bellenger, A.B. TARRANT, ALA. Clariosophic Literary Society; Assistant Librari- an, ■24- ' 25; Honor Roll, ' 24- ' 25. Marion E. Blake, B.S. A MOBILE, ALA. Student Senate, ' 22- ' 23; Gold and Black Staff. ' 22- ' 23; Scholarship Medal. ' 32; President Radio Club; President Clarisophic Literary Society; President Biology Club; Tulane University En- gineers, ' 23- ' 24; Junior Faculty, ' 25- ' 26. Lamar Branscomb, 2 A E A.B. ANNISTON, ALA. Belles Lettres Literary Society; Winner Tennis Doubles, ' 23- ' 25; Tennis Team, ' 23, ' 24, ' 25; Man- ager of Tennis, ' 23- ' 24; Assistant Manager Pootbball, ' 22- ' 23; Manager Freshman Football, ' 24; Glee Club, ' 24, ' 25, ' 26; B Club; Simpson- Southern Club; Omicron Delta Kappa; Manager of Football, ' 25; Pan-Hellenic Representative, ' 25- ' 20; Vice-Chairman Student Board of Stew- ards, ' 25- ' 26; Classical Club; Y. M. C. A. Cab- inet, ' 24- ' 25; Class Football, ' 24- ' 25; Track Squad, ' 22, ' 23, ' 24. HoYT McClain Brock, B.S. e K N BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Biology Club, Simpson Club; Instructor, Physi- cal Education, ' 24. Ora Carder, B.S. TARRANT CITY, ALA. Pi Gamma Mu; Theta Chi Delta; Jefferson-Southern Club, ' 25. Paul Cooke, A.B. CULLMAN, ALA. Omicron Delta Kappa; President Student Body. ' 25; Editor La Revue. ' 25; Editor Gold and Black. ' 24; Chairman Dormitory Government Committee; T. M. C. A. Cabinet. ' 23. ' 24, ' 25; Ministerial -Association; Belles Lettres Literary Society; Le Cercle Francais; Winner Freshman Short Story Contest, ' 23; Poet ' s Council; Belles Lettres Poetry Medal, ' 24; Sigma Upsilon. ' ii -s m ' - Cole Cousins Cummins Curtis I. Cross K. Cross Davis Duncan Senior Class John Robert Cole, A.B. Bertha Jane Cummins, A.B. A T fi K A BIRMINGHAM, ALA. BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Rebecca Snow Cousins, A.B. A n BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Chi Delta Phi; Treasurer Belles Lettres Literary Society, ' 25; Paints and Patches Club, ' 23. ' 24, ' 25; Girl ' s Glee Club. ' 22. ' 23, ' 24; Honor Roll, •23- ' 24; Phillips-Southern Club; Yomen ' s Pan- Hellenic Council, ' 23. Clariosophic Literary Society; Girl ' s Glee Club, ' 24- ' 25; Girl ' s Tennis Club; ' Women ' s Pan- Hellenic Council. ' 24- ' 25; Cen tral-Southern Club; Chi Delta PI; Co-ed Basketball; La Revue Staff, ' 24- ' 25. Lorene Curtis, A.B. jasper, ALA. Inez Cross, A.B. K A Nelson Edward D.avis, A.B. BIRMINGHAM, ALA. BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Girls ' Glee Club; Girl ' s Pan-Hellenic Council. •25; Belles Lettres Literary Society; Ensley- Southern Club; Pi Gamma Mu; Y. W. C. A. Belles Lettres Literary Society. ' 23; Glee Club. •24, ' 25; DeMoIay CTub; Central-Southern Club. Katherine Cross, A.B. K A BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Pi Gamma Mu; Paints and Patches Club. ' 2-1- ■25; Girl ' s Glee Club; Belles-Lettres Literary Society; Ensley-Southern Club. William John Duncan. B.S. S A E BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Band, •22- ' 23; Glee Club. •24- ' 25; Philliiis-South- ern Club; Simpson-Southern Club. z Echols Elliott Eddins Ellisor Edmondsov Etheridge Ellington Farr Senior CL Edith Katherine Echols, A.B. BIRMINGHAM, ALA. William Young Elliott, B.S. BIRMINGHAM, ALA. James Samuel Eddins, A.B. BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Thelma Edmondson, A.B. A n ANNISTON, ALA. Howard Ellington. B.S. A T 12 BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Soloist, Glee Club, ■23- ' 24- ' 25- ' 26; Band, ■23- ' 2-l- ' 25- ' 26; Manager Band, ' 25- ' 26; Secretary Y. M. C. A., ' 24: Assistant Business Manager La Revue, ' 24; Track Team, ' 25; Omicron Delta Kappa; Spikes Club, ' 25- ' 26; Art Guild. ' 25. John Thaddeus Ellisor, A.B. e K N ANDALUSIA, ALA. Debating Club, ' 24- ' 25, ' 25- ' 26; Class Football, ' 22, ' 23; Clarlosophic Literary Society. Garland K. Etheridge, A.B. SWEETWATER, ALA. ■Varsity Football, ' 23, ' 24, ' 25; Junior I aculty, Mildred Farr, A.B. BIRMINGHAM, ALA. mmmmML. FoSSETT Hanes fullington Hardy Goodman Harris Greene Harrison Senior Ch Clarence Louis Fossett A.B. e K N BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Oniicron Delta Kappa; President Phillips- Southern Club, ' 23- ' 24; Freshman-Sophomore Declamation Contest, ' 24- ' 25: Ministerial Asso- ciation; Secretary Debating Club, ' 25; President Debating Club, ' 25- ' 26; intercollegiate Debater, ' 25, ' 26; President Paints and Patches Club, ' 25- ' 26; La Revue Staff, ' 24- ' 25- ' 26; DeMolay Club; Pan-Hellenic Council, ' 25- ' 26; Assistant Business Manager Y Handbook, ' 25- ' 2B. Irving Eastburn Fullington, A.B. GADSDEN, ALA. Omicron Delta Kappa; Kappa Phi Kappa; Pi Gamma Mu; Sigma Upsilon; La Revue Staff. ' 23- ' 24; Associate Editor La Revue, ' 24- ' 25; La Revue Feature Editor, ■25- ' 26; DeMolay Club, ' 24- ' 25; Latin Club; President Clario- sophic Literary Society, ' 24; Co-winner Inter- society Debate, ' 23- ' 25; Sophomore Declama- tion Contest, ' 24; Junior Oratorical Contest, ' 25; Treasurer Junior Class, ' 24- ' 25; Vice-President Student Senate, ' 25; Secretary-Treasurer Stu- dent S enate, •25- ' 26; Debating Club; Commit- tee on Activities Building Campaign; Build- ing Committee Students Activities Building, ' 25- ' 2G; Senior Class Ring Committee. Stella Winner Goodman, B.S. BIRMINGHAM, ALA. First Honor Roll. ' 24; Belles Lettres Literary Society, ' 24; Gold and Black Staff, ' 24; Biol- ogy Club, ' 24, ' 25; Ensley-Southern Club; Sem- inary-Southern Club; Le Cercle Francais; Junior Faculty, ' 24, ' 25. Paul Trumbull Greene, A.B. BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Kappa Phi Kappa; Glee Club, ■23- ' 24- ' 25, ' 2 Band, ' 25- ' 26; Tennis Team, ' 25; Winner Doubles Tournament, ' 25; Class Football, ' 25. Margaret Hanes, A.B. K A BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Miles Hardy, Jr., A.B. n K A SELMA, ALA. Reserve Baseball. ' 24; Varsity Baseball. ' 25: Gold and Black Staff, ■2-f--25- ' 26 ; Class Foot- ball, ' 24; La Revue Staff. ■25- ' 2e. Thomas S. Harris, A.B. EDWARDSVILLE, ALA. Secretary Ministerial Association, ' 25; Business Manager Y Handbook, ' 25; Gold and Black Staff. ' 24; Editor Student Directory, ' 26; Pres- ident Ministerial Association, ' 26. Wallace Benton H.arrison, Jr., A.B. K A BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Pi Gamma Mu; Class Football, ' 24. ' 25; Gold and Black Stallf, ' 23. ' 24, ' 25; Band, •23- ' 24- ' 25. iU Hicks J. Hill J. Hodges Hurlbert R. Hill H. Hodges Jaggers Jenkins Senior Class Zelphia Mae Hicks, A.B. E. Julian Hodges, A.B. BIRMINGHAM, ALA. WOODVILLE, ALA. Classical Club; Howard College. •23- ' 24; Shel- burne Literary Society; Freshman Marshal; Honor Roll, ' 24. Janie Rebecca Hill, A. B. Helen Milo Hurlbert, A.B. A n BIRMINGHAM, ALA. A A n (Howard College) . jjjjjijjjj ENSLEY, ALA. ' WH Phillips-Southern Club; Treasurer Le Cercle Francais, ' 24- ' 25. Hi Rogers Lee Hill, B.S. winfield, ala. Beaker Club; Theta Chi Delta; Scrub Baseball, ■25; Biology Club. Lemuel Oscar Jaggers, A.B. SULLIGENT, ALA. CBBam Charles Hubert Hodges, B.S. e K N MoLLiE Beck Jenkins, A.B. YORK, ALA. Z T A Band, ' 25; Gold and Black Staff. ' 24; Basket- ball, ' 25; Freshman Baseball; Pan-Hellenic Council, ■24- ' 25; Biology Club. Belles Lettres Literary Society. ' 23, ' 24; Secre- tary Phillips-Southern Club, ■23- ' 24; Le Cercle Francais, ' 24; Pi Gamma Mu. Ul illWMIKlKIIA.. ' ■ 2 : :s. Johnson E. Kennedy Jones Landers Keenon Laney C. Kennedy Lappage Senior Clj Russell Foster Johnson, A.B. A BESSEMER, ALA. Omicron Delta Kappa; Pi Gamma Mu; Varsity Cheer Leader, ' 25; Honor Roll, ' 23, ' 24, ' 26; President Dramatic Club, ' 25; Pan-Hellenic Council, ' 25- ' 26; Intercollegiate Debates, ' 23, ' 25; Vice-President Debating Club, ' 25; President Bessemer-Southern Club, ' 25: Vice-President Belles Lettres Literary Society, ' 23; Intersociety Debate. ' 24; Secretary Political Club, ' 23; Biol- ogy Club; Classical Club; Intersociety Oratori- cal Medals, ' 23, ' 24; Junior Oratorical Medal, ' 25; Straiten Ready Debater ' s Medal, ' 25; Freshman-Sophomore Declamation Contest, ' 23. ' 24; Class Football, ' 23, ' 24, ' 25, ' 20; Scrub Base- ball, ' 23; Scrub Basketball. ' 25. ' 2G; Track Team. ' 23; Ministerial Association. Marguerite Johnston. A.B. BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Evelyn Jones, A.B. AMERICA, ALA. Woman ' s College, ' 22- ' 23. Marguerite Keenon, A.B. ENSLEY, ALA. Jacksonville Normal, ' 21- ' 22; Clariosophic Liter- ary Society, ' 23, ' 24; Girl ' s Glee Club, ' 23- ' 24. Caroline Heath Kennedy, A.B. BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Elsie J. Kennedy, A.B. BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Graduate Alabama College, ' 23; Teacher Birm- ingham Public Schools; Captain Girl Scouts. Harrison Jaen Laney, A.B. BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Elsie Landers, A.B. A o n BIRMING HAM, ALA. Mary McSwean Laney. A.B. BIRMINGHAM, ALA. J. Edward Lapp.-vge, A.B. A BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Belles Lettres Literary Society; Basketball Squad. ' 24; Scrub Football. ' 23. ' 24, ' 25; Assist- ant Basketball Manager, ' 25; Manager Basket- ball, ' 26. LiPSEY McNuTT Lynch Mantel McCONANTHA Marable McKenzie Massie Ch Richard Cameron Lipsey, A.B. A TUSCALOOSA, ALA. Spikes Club, ' 25, ' 26; Classical Club, ' 25; Pi Gamma Mu; B Club: DeMolay Club. ' 25, ' 26; Scrub Football, ' 23- ' 24- ' 25; ' Varsity Football, ' 2(); Track Team, ' 23- ' 24- ' 25. Andrew Gladys Lynch, A.B. ELMORE, ALA. Gladys McConatha, A.B. BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Roll, 24, Velma McNutt, A.B. BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Leon Charles Mantel, A.B. BREWTON, ALA. Debaters Club, ' 24- ' 25- ' 26; Assistant Librarian. ' 25, ' 26; Intercollegiate Debate, ' 25; Student Dormitory Committee, ' 20; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, ' 20; Dramatic Club, ' 26; Belles Lettres Literary Society, ' 24. S.adie Douglas Marable, A.B. BIRMINGHAM, ALA. 25; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet; Chi Sarah Elizabeth Mackenzie, B.S. z T A BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Vice-President Y. W. C. A., ' 25- ' 26; Theta Chi Delta; Biology Club; Pan-Hellenic Council, ' 24- ' 25- ' 2e; Secretary Senior Class. Maxine Virginia Massie, A.B. K A BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Classical Club; Secretary-Treasurer Simpson- Southern Club; Girl ' s Glee Club; Clariosophic Literary Society. m a fiS ■a •m Mays Newton Meigs Orr MORAN Overall MULLINS Pace Ch Mildred Emeline Mays, A.B. TUSCALOOSA, ALA. Assistant Librarian. ' 24- ' 25- ' 26: Secretary Sophomore Class. ' 24- ' 25; Women ' s Council. ' 24- ' 25; President T. W. C. A.. ' 25; T. W. C. A. Cabinet, ' 25- ' 26; Pi Gamma Mu. Jamie Song Meigs, B.S. e K N CENTREVILLE, ALA. Biology Club; Gold and Black Staff. Mrs. Neva Renegar Moran, A.B. BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Mildred Gregory Mullixs, A.B. A n BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Pi Gamma Mu; Chi Delta Phi; Vice-President T. W. C. A.. ■25- ' 2G; Secretary Le Cercle Fran- cais, ' 25- ' 26; Manager Girls ' Tennis Club. ' 24- ' 25; Junior Faculty. ' 25- ' 26; First Honor Roll. ■24- ' 25. John Oscar Newton, B.S. A T fi BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Mount Union College. ' 23. ' 24. ' 25; Band. ' 26; Glee Club, ' 26; Advertising Manager Glee Club. ' 26. Mary Elsie Orr, A.B. BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Co-ed Council. ' 24; President Co-ed Council. ' 25- ' 28; Girls ' Glee Club. ' 23- ' 24; Vice-President Clariosophic Literary Society. ' 24- ' 25; Second Vice-President T. W. C. A.. ' 24; Central-South- ern Club. Beatrice N.atalie Overall, A.B. K A BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Belles Lettres Literary Society. ' 23- ' 24.- ' 25; T. W. C. A. Cabinet. ■24- ' 25; Dramatic Club. ' 24- ' 25; Glee Club. •24- ' 25; Gold and Blacl Staff. ' 24-25: La Revue ' Staff. 24-25; Honor Roll. 25; Chi Delta Phi. Eddie J. ckson Pace. A.B. K A GROVE HILL, ALA. Football. ' 24. ' 2.1 : Basketball. ' 24. ' 25: Baseball. R. Pearson PiNEL T. Pearson PiNKSTON Pegues Ransom Perdue Rawls Ch Ruth Pearson, A.B. ALEXANDER CITY, ALA. Theodore Bowling Pearson, A.B. S A E LEROY, ALA. Omicron Delta Kappa; Manager of Baseball, ' 25, ' 26; Varsity Baseball, ' 25; Student Senate, ' 24, ' 25- ' 26; Assistant Manager Football. ' 24; V. M. C. A. Cabinet; B Club; Class Football, ' 23, ' 24; Class Baseball, ' 23. ' 24; Kappa Pi Kappa. Virginia Lee Pegues, A.B. A n BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Chi Delta Phi; Le Cercle Francais. Ralph Ignacio Pinel, A.B. CHOLUTECA, HONDURAS Normal School Graduate, Tegucigalpa, Hon- duras; Junior Faculty, ' 25- ' 26; Gold and Black Staff, ' 25- ' 2G. James Oliver Pinkston, B.S. A DADEVILLE, ALA. Theta Chi Delta; Vice-President Biology Club, ' 24; President Biology Club, ' 25; Secretary- Treasurer Beaker Club. ' 24; Class Football, ' 22, ' 23; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, ' 24; Honor Roll, ' 24; Junior Faculty, ' 24, ' 25; Secretary Pan-Hellenic Council; Chairman Senior Class Ring Commit- tee. Barbara RansojiI, B.S. BIRMINGHAM, ALA. J. E. Rawls, A.B. Carlton Lom.ax Perdue, A.B. K A MINTER, ALA. Scrub Baseball, ' 24; Varsity Baseball, ' 25; Pan- Hellenic Council, ' 25- ' 26. A T n enterprise, ALA. Varsity Football. ' 22,- ' 23- ' 24- ' 25: B Club; Clarlosophic Literary Society, ' 23; Pan-Hellenic CounciL ' 25- ' 26; Vice-President Rifle Club, ' 24. € Ray Renfro Robinson Roebuck Rice Roberts Rush Rutledge Senior Class John O. Ray, A.B. John Huel Robinson, B.S. RAGLAND, ALA. ROCKFORD, ALA. J. Thomas Renfro, B.S. Ceha Elizabeth Roebuck, A.B. A n FAYETTE, ALA. BIRMINGHAM, ALA. ■Woman ' s College, ' 22, ' 23; Belles Lettres Liter- ary Society; Girl ' s Glee Club; Tennis Club. Edmond Lee Rice, A.B. ALBERTVILLE, ALA. La Revue Staff, ' 24, ' 25; Gold and Black Staff. ' 25; Secretary Junior Class; Scrub Foot- ball; Debating Club; Ministerial Association, John Edwin Rush, A.B. BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Ready Debater ' s Contest, ' 23; Intersociety De- hate, ' 23; Editor Ministerial Edition Gold and Black. ' 24; Freshman Declamation, ' 23; Ora- torical Contest, ' 24: Glee Club, ' 24: Pi Gamma Mu; Intercollegiate Debate, ' 25; Y . M. C. A. Cabinet, ' 25. Flora Joy Roberts, A.B. BESSEMER, ALA. M.ATTiE Wood Rutledge, A.B, Honor Roll, ' 22, ' 23; Clariosophic Literary So- ciety, ' 22, ' 23, ' 24; Girl Scouts. ' 24; Co-ed Coun- cil, ' 26; Bnsley-Southern Club; Le Cercle Fran- cais, 25. ENSLEY, ALA. Ensley-Soutlicrn Cluh; Clariosophic Literary Society. Sands Sherwood Sapp Simmons Scott Smith Self Smyer Ch Pauline Sands, A.B. ABANDA, ALA. Robert William Sapp, Jr., A.B. CULLMAN, ALA. Track Team, ' 23; Intersociety Debating Team, ' 24; Secretary Debating Club, ' 24- ' 25; Student Senate, ' 25; Dormitory Committee, ' 26; Assist- ant Manager College Bookstore. ' 26. Joseph Rogers Sherwood, A.B. BRUNDIDGE, ALA. Omicron Delta Kappa; Sigma Upsilon; Editor La Revue, ' 26; Editor Gold and Black, ' 24- ' 25; Assistant Editor Gold and Black, ' 24; Ciiairman Senior Invitation Committee; Presi- dent Journalism Class, ' 24- ' 25; Political Club, ' 23- ' 24. Edward Dewey Simmons, B.S. MINTS, N. C. Pierce Turner Scott, A.B. n K A GADSDEN, ALA. ' 24; Alternate-Captain Mildred Self, A.B. SOMERSET, KV. Boyd Youngblood Smith, A.B. FULTON, MISS. Omicron Delta Kappa; Manager Gold and Black, ' 24- ' 25; Manager La Revue, ' 25- ' 26; Class Football, ' 22, ' 23; A.ssistant BaselJall Manager. ' 23; Dormitory Committee, ' 24, ' 25; Committee on Activities Building Campaign, ' 24- ' 25. Mary Walter Smyer, A.B. K A BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Secretary Y. W. C. A., ' 24; President Y. W. C. A., ' 25; Treasurer Clariosophic Literary So- Girls ' Glee Club; Phillips-Southern mi (I -J ft Spradley Watkins Stevenson Weaver Stewart Wilkes Temple Williams Senior CL Lewis Harold Spradley A.B. easonville, ala. Honor Roll, ' 24- ' 25; Secretary Ministerial As- sociation, ' 25- ' 26: Belles Lettres Literary So- ciety; Associate Editor Student Directory, ' 25. Leon McCoy Stevenson, A.B. A T n jasper, ALA. Omicron Delta Kappa; Kappa Phi Kappa; B Club; Vice-President Senior Class; Vice-Presi- dent Paint and Patches Club, ■23- ' 24, ' 25; Vice- President Simpson-Southern Club, •24- ' 25; Scrub Football, ■22- ' 23; Class Football, ■22- ' 23: Var- sity Football, ' 24, ' 25: Scrub Baseball, ' 23- ' 34; Class Baseball, •23- ' 24; Varsity Baseball, ' 25; Gold and Black Staff, ' 23, ' 24; La Revue Staff, ' 26- ' 26; Pan-Hellenic Council, •25- ' 26; Simpson Faculty, ■25- ' 26. Clarence Howard Stewart, A.B. COLLBRON, ALA. Classical Club; Clariosophic Literary Society; Ministerial Association; Librarian Student Volunteers: Y. M. C. A. Cabinet; Treasurer Masonic Club. Thomas Temple, Jr., A.B. s A E FAIRFIELD, ALA. Glee Club. ' 22- ' 23- ' 24- ' 25; Gle Stanley P. Watkins, A.B. QUINTON, ALA. Scrub Football, ' 21, ' 32; La Revue Staff. ' 21- ■22- ' 23; Theta Chi Delta, ' 24- ' 25. Herbert Weaver, A.B. BREWTON, ALA. B Club; Track. ' 25; Honor Roll. ' 24- ' 25; Le Cercle Francais. ' 25; Scrub -Football, ' 26; Belles Lettres Literary Society; Y. M. C. A. Coun- cil, ' 25- ' 26. Nora Ethel Wilkes, A.B. BESSEMER, ALA. Life Service Band; Belles Lettres Literary So- ciety: Loulie Compton Seminary-Southern Club, Henry Earl Williams, A.B. S A E LINDEN, ALA. T. Williams WOODROW L. Williams Wright Willis Yielding Wood Young Ch Thomas Loren Williams, A.B. K A SCOTTSBORO, ALA. Football, ■22- ' 23- ' 24- ' 25; Captain Football, ' 25; Baseball, ' 2 ' 4- ' 25; Track, ' 24- ' 25; Vice-President Pan-Hellenic Council: La Revue Elections, ' 24, ' 25; Vice-President Junior Class. LuciLE Lyle Williams, A.B. Z T A BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Secretary Freshman Class, ' 23; Co-ed Basket- ball, ' 23, ' 24, ' 25, ' 26; Manager Co-ed Basket- ball, ' 23- ' 24; Captain Co-ed basketball, •25- ' 26; Belles Lettres Literary Society; Senior Repre- sentative Women ' s Council. Flora Willis, A.B. birmingham, ala. Catherine Richards Wood, z T A BIRMINGHAM, ALA, B.S. Walter H. Woodrow, A.B. ENSLEY, ALA. Hugh E. Wright, A.B. BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Lewis Milton Yielding, A.B. 2 A E BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Maryland Virginia Young, A.B. BIRMINGHAM, ALA, Ensley-South- (I is i AFTER Thanhs, God — for unansiverea prayers. For restless frail dreams that found the far foot of Thy throne. Only to perish, lacking Thy hand to revive them. Thanhs — for their cold, dead forms. And thanks, God, for Beauty — In its millions of fragile shades, each bathed in moonsilver- Crushed hy Thy hand at dawn. Thanks for it all God. Teaching the vastness of Thine unknown, shadow ways. I ho- e no more — Send no more dreams to find the far foot of Thy throne. —R.B. ♦8 %J r O. iORDOn HIM5ELF AS THE 50N9STER5 SAW f Here and There CLASSIFY ' EM J 3 ?s : ! ;s c m 3 I HAiVE VERY TEWTRIENDjI (LADYJHESE OARDi ARE TUST THE THING TO T EMEMBER YOUR TRIENDJ 1 WiTK CHRiSTMft . IT 16 CHEAPER THAN SENPINCi ' fr! i v Gifts f p ffjim TO ' S JUNIORS From The Thinker.By Rodin mc 6. (I r ' ' j f c?aj 75 nearly s- ent, our course tvill soon reach 7ts end. Thrice has the calendar changed its face, hut once more and we, too, shall he of the historic ast. Diligently have xve striven to uphold the many nohle traditions and ideals of our college — the flesh is loeak — in some have xve failed, and ve tvee ' ; in others have ive most nohly suc- ceeded, ive glory in our triumphs, and ardon- ahly so. To those ivho come after ive fling the chal- lenge gauntlet u on the stone of our sacred halls, inscnhed thereon the line — Ye, too, carry on! 0 i 5C - u Junior Class Officers Richard Fennell President T. O. Cox I ' ice-President Edmund Rice Secretary Louise Averyt Treasurer ' € %! ' Earnest Forbes Adams BIRMINGHAM, ALA. William Brunson Atkinson graceville, fla. President Freshman Class, ' 23; Editor Y Handbook. ' 24; Associate Editor Gold and Black, ' 24; Advertising Manager La Revue, ' 24; Business Manager Student Directory, ' 25; Simpson-Southern Club; Clariosophic Literary Society. Louise Averyt BIRMINGHAM, ALA. La Revue Staff. ' 23, ' 24; Gold and Black Staff. ' 23. ' 24; Clariosophic Literary Society; Co-ed Council, ' 25; Director of Co-ed Rela- tionships. ' 2 5. DoNNAVE Baker FAIRFIELD, ALA. WiLIU RN XORMAN BaKER HARPERSVILLE, ALA. William Lee Barber Band, Belles chestra Auburn. ' 22, Lettres Liter vertising Man Football, ' 2G. BIRMINGHAM, ALA. 24, ' 25; Ministerial Joe Davis Bell I ' K A (Auburn) ALBANY, ALA. ' 24; Class Football, rarv Society; Biology Gold and Black, Belles i; .Ad- ; Class Robert Loraixe Black BIRMINGHAM, AL.i. Captain-Elect Football; Varsitv Football, ' 24. ■26; B Club; Varsity Baseball, ' 24; Student Senate, ' 24- ' 25. Albert Blavlock .V ENSLEY, ALA. JosEi ' H ALartix Briscoe A UNION GROVE, ALA. Thcta Chi Dslta; Junior Faculty; Business Staff. Gold and Black. ' 24; Editor Freshman Gold and Black, ' 23- ' 24. Arthur Edward Brown e K N BIRMINGHAM, AL.4. Phillips-Southern Club; Paints and Patches Club, ' 23; L)ramatic Club Play, ' 24: Debating Club; Biology Club, ' 25; Intercollegiate Debating Team, ' 25, ' 2(i. Claude J. T. Brown CULLMAN, ALA. r- Junior Class Gerald Jero?.ie Bryan LATHROP, ALA. Omicron Delta Kappa; Sigma Upsllon; Editor Gold and Black, ' 23; Sports Editor Gold and Black, ' 22- ' 23; Sports Editor La Revue. ' 22- ' 23- ' 24; Associate Editor La Revue, ' 25- ' 26- Student Senate, ' 25; Class Football, ' 22. •25; Class Baseball, ' 22; Varsity Baseball, ' 25; Junior Oratorical Contest, ' 25. Sara Bryant BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Woodson Corley Burchfiel s A E BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Band. ' 22. ' 23, ' 24, ' 25; Glee Club. ' 25; Orches- tra. ' 25. Frank Gilaiore Cairns K A BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Tennis Team. ' 23- ' 24; Football. ' 24. ' 25; B Club; Track, ' 25; Central-Southern Club, Wilbur Orlando Calhoun GROVE HILL, ALA. Treasurer Ministerial Association, ' 23- ' 25; Vice- President Y. M, C. A., ' 24- ' 25; Vice-President Ministerial Association, ' 25- ' 26; T. M. C. A. Cabinet, •25- ' 26. Lucile Cannon Z T A BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Theron O. Cox BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Theta Chi Delta; High Honor Roll. ' 23. ' 24. ■25: Honor Book. ' 23. ' 24, ' 25: Student Sen- ate. ' 25- ' 2(i; Simpson-Southern Club; Eva Comer Math Medal. ' 25. Helen Lillian Crain A o n BIRMINGHAM, ALA. President Women ' s Pan-Hellenic Council. ' 25- ■26; Manager Co-ed Basketball. ' 24- ' 25; Co-ed Basketball. ' 23. ' 24. ' 25. ' 26; Queen of Col- lege. ' 23; Girls ' Glee Club. ' 24. ' 25; Vice-Presi- dent Phillips-Southern Club. ' 24- ' 25. Charles Augustus Craven, Jr. BIRMINGHAM, ALA. L.AwsoN Davidson K A albany, ala. Lucile D.avis K A BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Gesina Deholl BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Si- I . J i If (3 « r? Junior Class I Ross P. DODDS K A HOUSTON, MISS. ■■Gold and Black ' Staff, ■23; Class Fc •23- ' 24; Scrub Baseball. ' 23, ■24; Y. M. Cabinet, ' 24; Dixie Sunflower Minstrels, ' i IvEY Noah Drixkard LIN ' DEN, AL.A. JoHX Wesley Drixkard n K A LINDEN ' , ALA. Charlotte Elizabeth Dugger K A ENSLEY, ALA. Belles Lettres Literary Society; Art Staff ' Revue, ' 24- ' 25; Le Cercle Francais; Gi Glee Club. C. L. Ellis BESSEMER, ALA. riosophic Literary Society, ' Bessie Elrod dawson ' , ala. Velma Mary Fallon ENSLEY, ALA. Richard Adams Fexxell A ALBANY, ALA. ;iilent Junior Class; Sophomore Declam Medal, ' 25; Dramatic Club; Biology Clu or Faculty; Gold and Black ' Staff, ■; Kate Floyd birmingham, ala. Athens College, ' 23- ' 24, ■24- ' 25. LUCIEX PiXKARD GiDDEXS, Jr. K A BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Gleo Club, ■24- ' 25; ■ ' La Revue Staff, •2. ■Gold and Black Staff. ' 25: Pan-Hellen Council, ' 25; Manager Freshman Baseball, ' 2; .Assistant Manager Football, ' 24; Freshma Basketball, ' 25; Assistant Manager Baseba] ' 25; Simpson-Southern Club. Grace Godfrey BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Le Cercle Francais; Ensley-Southern Club. W. D. Grayes, Jr. 2 A E ALE.XANDER CITY, ALA. Junior Class Frances Anna Greene e T BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Etoyle Heitlinger e T BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Ensley-Southern Club; Dramatic Club; W( Mattie Will Guthrie inverness, ala. Virginia Hagood e T Woman ' s College. ' 21- ' 22. ■22- ' 23. Doris Haigler BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Roll. ■24- ' 25; B.lles Lettres Lit.TP J. B. Hill BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Kappa Phi Kappa; Track Team. ' 23, Treasurer Y. M. C. A.; Class Football, Club, ' 26; B Club. Douglas Mooreland Humphries OXFORD, ALA. University of Virgi ' 25; Masonic Club, ern Club. ' 25; President Amy Hinds BIRMINGHAM, ALA. John King Hall VALLEY HEAD, ALA. Omicron Delta Kappa; President Y . M. C. A., ' 25- ' 2G; Track Team, ' 25; Football. •24- ' 25; Basketball, ' 25; Captain Basketball, ' 26; Pres- ident Hanes-Southern Club; Ministerial Asso- ciation. Carl Hanna rockfokd, ala. Nannie Lou Jenkins adamsville, ala. William Harrison Jenkins n K A LAFAYETTE, ALA. Omicron Delta Kappa: Kappa Phi Kappa; La Revue Stalt. ' 23; Class Football, ' 23. ' 24; Band. •23; Baseball. ' 25; Basketball. ' 25; President Sophomore Class ' 24- ' 25; Dramatic Club. ' 25; Gold and Black Staff. ' 25. t %. «% %| r? 3 Junior Class Claude Collier Keathlev delrose, tex.v. SpEXCER T. KlMHROLGH A T n dadeville, ala. Robert Irvi ' G Lawrexce randolph, ala. dent Belle Intersociety Debate. ' 25 Lettres Literary Soclet Association. ' 24. -25; Mi: Fraxces Ledbetter birmingham, al.a. Clarexce Lesslie AIcDormax e K N BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Omicron Delt.n, Kappa: Winner Inter.=iociety Oratorical Contest. ■24- ' 25; Business Manager Dramatic Club, ' 25- ' 2G; Editor T Handbook, ' 25; Track Team. ' 24- ' 25; President Clario- sophic Literary Society, ' 24- ' 25: Simpson-South- ern Club; Business Manager Gold and Black, ' 23- ' 24; Editorial Staft Gold and Black, ' 25; La Revue Staff, ' 24. ' 25. ' 26; Basketball. ' 24. ' 25, ' 26; Freshman Declamation Contest. ' 23- ' 24; Debating Club. Noble Ralph McEwex A OVERTON, ALA. Kappa Phi Kappa; Manager of Track. ' 25; B Club; Paint and Patches Club, •24- ' 25; Spikes Club; Debating Club; Sophomore Declamation Contest, ' 25; La Revue Staff, ' 23- ' 24; Belles Lettres Literary Society. Bessie Bell McGee carrolton, ala. La Revue ' Staff, ' 25. ' 26. Mary Louise McGee e n CORONA, ALA. Treasurer Seminarv-Southern Club, ' 25; T. TV. C. A. Cabinet; Vice-President Belles Lettres Literary Society, ' 25- ' 26. M.ary Alice IVIcLarex K A birmingham, ala. -Alva Lewis McPhersox tarr ant, ala. Band. ' 23, ' 25; Biology Club; Jefferson-South- ern Club. Zet. McTyeire BESSEMER, ALA. JOHX SiDXEY ] LaLLOY BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Varsity Football, ' 24, ' 25; Student Senate, ' 2. ,- Junior Class Robert S. Mamar n K A AKRON, ALA. James Br axt Morgan birmingham, ala. Charles D. Miller n K A EAST HAVEN, CONN. HOWLETT MlXTO BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Willie Gay Worgax DORA, ALA. Frank Robinson Morris A T fi BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Julia Moorer birmingham, ala. Regina Angela Moreno K a BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Cecil Calvin Morgan a GREENVILLE, ALA. Gester Lamar Mullendore e K N ROANOKE, ALA. Kauua Phi Kappa; La Revue Staff, ' 24, ' 25. Paul Nickerson SILURIA, ALA. Ollie Gray Pope KIMBERLY, ALA. m m B SJ o d Junior Class m Margaret Raxdle BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Mary Ben Rumsey BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Mamie Dolores Reed birmingham, ala. Y. W. C. A. Cabinet; Clariosophic Literary So- ciety; Gold and Black Staff; Chi Delta Phi. Mildred Reed EfMINGHAM, ALA. RoBERSON Rudolph Scott ELKMONT, ALA. Freshman Baseball Coach, •22- ' 23: Football. ' 23; Masonic Club; Ministerial Association; Belles Lettres Literary Society. 1 Fermax Richev ALBERTVILLE, ALA. Cleon Louis Rogers DANVILLE, ALA. Thomas Wesley Rogers BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Editor Gold and Black. ■25- ' 26; Deba Club; Pi Gamma Mu; Sigma Upsilon. Ralph H. Segrest pixckard, ala. John Ashbury Selman. Jr. e K X BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Gold and Black Staff. ■24- ' 25; Pan-Hellenic Council. ' 25- 2li; DeMolav Club; Simpson-South- ern Club; Biology Club; La Revue Staff. ' 2G; Assistant Editor Y Handbook, ' 25. WiLLETT RuDULPH ::: a e BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Price Shirley winfield, ala. Junior Class Laura Edna Smith BIRiMINGHAM, ALA. J. D. Smith TUNICA, MISS, comb College. ■23- ' 24, Paul Stephenson OAKMAN, ALA. Class Football. ' 24. ' 25: Belles Letti-e.s Liter- ary Society; Track Team, ' 25, ' 2B; Assistant Manager Track. ' 24- ' 25; Manager of Track, •26; La Revue Staff, ' 26. Rosc3E Eli Stevens MONTGOMERV, ALA. Chi Delta; Class Football, ' 24, ' 25. Guv Everett Snavely, Jr. A T fi BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Manager-Elect Football, ' 26; Assistant Man- ager Football, ' 23, ' 25; Manager Freshman Football, ' 25; Assistant Manager Basketball, ' 2 5; Simpson-Southern Club. William Hamilton Snell A BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Editor Freshman Gold and Black. Classical Club: Intercollegiate Debating Te ' 25; Debating Club. Thomas Vernon Stinson GEORCIANA, ALA. Oris Marvin Sullivaj. ' CASTLEBERRV, ALA. Dramatic Club. John B. Tate, Jr. pine hill, ala. Belles Lettres Literary Society; Track. ' : ' 25; Band, ' 24, ' 25: Ministerial Assoc B Club; Glee Club, ' 24, Sam Shields Taylor FAIRFIELD, ALA. University of Alabama, ' 23, ' 24; DeMolay Club. Edith Gertrude Starnes PELL CITV, ALA. Nellie Townsend BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Junior Class g m |x H Ruth Wilkixsox Ticker e n BIRMINGHAM, ALA. President Le Cercle Francais; Chi Delta Pill ■•Gold and Blaclt Staff, ■24- ' 25. ■25- ' 26; Honoi Roll, ■23- ' 24; La Revue Staff, 25-26. C. M. Tyndal GRACEVILLE, FLA. Ministerial Association; Vice-President Belles Lettres Literary Society, 24- ' 25; Advertisinj, Manager Gold and Black, ■24- ' 26; Business Managjr Gold and Black, ■ ' 25- ' 2(). Thomas Richard AValker, Jr. n K A WVLAM, ALA. Floyd Weed Jr. BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Theta Chi Delta; First Honor Roll, •23- ' 24; Sec- retary Y. M. C. A., ■2.i--2li; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet. Edward Hamilton West 2 A E itic Club, ■23- ' 24--2i;; Band, ■24- ' 2,-,- ' 2r,. Maurine White birmingham, ala. Iariox Bright Whitixg e n BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Biology Club; Chi Delta Phi. William Floyd Wilsox havana, ala. President Clariosophic Literary Society, ' 24- ' 25; President Spikes Club; B Club; Athletic Com- mittee; Captain Track Team, ' 24- ' 25; Coach Fall Track, ' 25; Ministerial Association. Isabel Byrd Wlsox e T birmingham, ala. Thomas F. Wolford n K A IRONDALE, ALA. Simpson-Southern Club; Dixieland Sunflower Minstrels. •24- ' 25. Leva ' ouxg selma, ala. Jacksox M. Wiuxg, Jr. st. petersburg, fla. Theta Chi Delta. ' :¥:%■ ' SOPHOMORES From Atlas. Antique Sculpture IS, o ly not ive are roud and ca ncjous of rmnd! Rather have the gentie hands of our Alma Mater softened our hearts and enlightened our minds to a clearer understanding of life. Chasten us not for our childish pranks — tis our last fling at youth; let us he merry while vue may. And xuhen the morrotu shall disclose the far- reaching vistas of grim reality, he not afraid — the challenge is not unheard — We shall he re ared! S ' 64 Soph pnomore CL Officers Robert Sudderth President Palmer Portis J ' ice-President Alice Weed Secretary Perry Woodhaai Treasurer (? - Ae ' {iiX M. 3 eii ?vi n: fe % ' ; 6% (5 Soph phomore Clc JiMMiE Dink Adams HEFLIN, ALA. Frank M. Allen Myrtle Benton e T BIRMINGHAM, ALA. H. Harland Bishop BIRMINGHAM, ALA. ' m (3 f Ruby M. Allgood birmingham, ala. Thomas F. Anthony CLIO, ALA. Freshman Baseball, ■25. Helen Ashwander STEPPVILLE, ALA. Herman Aufderharr Frs Arthur David Barham bridgeport, ala. Belles Lettres Literary Soeietv; Gold Black Staff; ■25- ' 26; Ministerial Associat Dramatic Club. James Aulsie Baswell coal city ' , ala. Trade, •24- ' 25; Ministerial Association; Cla sopbic Literarv Soeietv; President J. O. Ha Southern Club, •25--26. Veva Baswell coal city, ala. Harold Bowden Beck A T Q ALA. TUSCUMBIA Varsity Football, -2,1; !■ Baseball. Track, ■25. Bhr Basketball, Jefferson Davis Boling castleberrv, ala. William Daniel Boling lenox, ala. Ministerial Association; ■•L; Peter Edward Bostick birmingham, ala. Varsity Football. ' 25; Freshman Football, ' 24; Freshman Track, ' 25; Student Senate, •25- ' 2G; Second Honor Roll, ' 25; Biology Club; Assist- ant in Biology Labratorv, ' 25- ' 26; Phillips- Southern Club; •■B ' Club. Robert Bowden i; A E BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Varsity Football, ■25; Freshman Football, ' 24; Freshman Track. •25: B ' - Club. James Dawson Boyd ! A BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Freshman Baseball. ' 25; Freshman Tennis. ' 25. William Taylor Boyd scottsboro, ala. Soph phomore Ch ?J John Gerald Bradford DICKINSON, ALA. Freshman Poothall. ' 24; Freshman Track, ' 26; Varsity Football, ' 25; B Club. Frank Woodard Brandon, Jr. 2 A E montgomery, ala. Gladys Louise Brasfield shannon, ala. John M. Breckenridge samson, ala. Clariosophic Literary Society; Debating Club; T eshman Declamation Contest, ' 25; Intercol- legiate Debating Team, ' 25. Walter R. Britt 2 A E birmingham, ala. Elizabeth Brock birmingham, ala. Lois Frances Butler e n BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Girls ' Glee Club, ' 24- ' 25; President Seminary- Southern Club, ' 25- ' 26; Le Cercle Francais, •24- ' 25, ' 25- ' 26; Belles Lettres Literary Society; T. W. C. A. Treasurer, ■25- ' 26; Women ' s Coun- cil, ' 25- ' 26; Golcl and Black Staff. ' 25- ' 26; Women ' s Pan-Hellenic Council, ' 25- ' 26; Presi- dent Chi Delta Phi. Anna Cannon lynnville, tenn. Elizabeth Lucile Carraway birmingham, ala. Edward Herbert Childs K A HARTFORD, ALA. Freshman Football, ' 24; Varsity Football, B Club. Lela Clark birmingham, ala. Secretary ' Clariosophic Literary Society, Jefferson-Southern Club; Girls ' Glee Club, ' 25; Co-ed Basketball, •24- ' 25- ' 26; Gold 25- ' : iident Chi Delta Hunt Cleveland Z . E CENTREVILLE, ALA. Lettres Literary Society; I ; Biology Club. William Hord Clift A Edna Jane Cofield ensley, ala. Frances Cordray warrior, ala. Le Cercle Francais; Seminary-Soutbirn C Girl ' s Glee Club, ' 24- ' 25. Harriet Cox Cottingham A O n BIRMINGHAM, ALA. J. Homer Crim 2 A E holt, ALA. Dorothy Claire Cross birmingham, ala. Phillips-Southern Club; Le Cercle Fran. Dramatic Club; Belles Lettres Literary ciety. %% Sophomore Class Marjorie Culligan birmingham, ala. J. P. Dannelly CAMUEN , ALA. DoziER Herx Dri.vkard N ' ICHOLEVILLE, ALA. •■Gold and Blaik ' - Staff, •24- ' : Verlie Belle Dudley scooba, miss. IS 4 g: Paul Barnett Dansby verbena, ala. Clariosolillic Literary Sotiuty. Tennie Erwin Daugette e n BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Rum Beatrice Davidson K A birmingham, ala. Harold Deloach THOMASVILLE, ALA. William Harry Dewyer birmingham, ala. Ralph Lawrence Dill,. Jr. birmingham, ala. Howard Owenton Draper LANGDALE, ALA. Rebecca Louise Echols birmingham, ala. Ethel Pearl Fallon ensley, ala. Ensley-Southern Club. Elizabeth McMillan Farley columbiana, ala. Hubert Wesley Farley birmingham, ala. James Emrick Faulk n K A birmingha.m, ala. Edna Floyd birmingham, ala. Charlie Brown Fowler A PELL CIT , ALA. V7V P ( ' f?- Sopn ophomore lass Ch -,. 1 Edna Franke birmingham, ala. Lex C. Fullbright 2 A E ALA. Football, •: Ruth Nowlin Garrett birmingham, ala. Le Cercle Francals; Dramatic Club; Y. W. A. Cabinet. Byron Hall Gibson cullman, ala. Freshman Tenni.s Team. ' 25; Assistant Ma agtr Tennis, ■25- ' 2(i; Honor Roll, •24- ' 25. Ben Glasgow n K A BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Freshman Basketball, ' 25. Robert S. Glasgow, Jr. adamsville, ala. Alberta Lucile Grant blountstown, fla. Charles M. Graves birmingham, ala. Walter Forest Gravlee n K A BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Varsity Football, ' 25; B Club. ' erlie Lenert Green foley, ala. Annalee Green birmingham, ala. Lois Greene A O n birmingham, ala. William Nelson Guthrie birmingham, ala. Cecil Fain Hackney A T n BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Sigma ITpsilon; Gold and Black Staff, ' 25- ' ■ ■ ' ■- - ophic Literary So- JoHN Ralph Hackney A T O BIRMINGHAM, ALA. BuRK Allen Hargrave ensley, ala. Miriam Harris carbon hill, ala. Tyson Ercell Harrison fulton, ala. (1 (I Soph phomore Ch Nannie Dean Hayes adamsville, ala. John William Howard K A c- sk €|: cm Robert Brvce Henderson Jefferson Davis Henry n K A ATLANTA, CA. 3 Club, ■25, ' 26; Band. ' 2J Taylor Hill Henry n K A Otis Sa.vilel Howington LENO.X, ALA. Fenton Seay ' Jackson K A birmingham, al. . Lola Eva Jacobs e t Leon Hicks shady ' grove, ala. Richard Gerald Hicks fairfield. ala. John Horace Hildreth new brocton, ala. Ivan Kennedy Hill winfield, ala. Roy Embry Hitchcock birmingham, ala. Jesse William Hollingsworth whigham, ala. Girls ' Southcrr Council. Evelyn Flora Johnson K A BIRMINGHAII, ALA. luncll, ' 24; Secretary Woodlav Club, ' 24; YVomen ' s Pan-Hellc Charles Glenn Jones opelika, ala. Freshman Football. ' 24; Scrub Football, Clariosophic Literary Society; Soconrt 1- Roll. ' 24- ' 25. Joseph Newton Jones enslev, ala. J. Ward Keener BIRMINGHAM, ALA. 0S€ i Soph pnomore Ch Elizabeth Louise Keily birmingham, ala. Clariosophic Literary Society; Tennis Club; Phillips-Southern Club; Y. V. C. A. Cabinet; Gold and Black Staff; Girls ' Glee Club; Women ' s Council, •25- ' 26. Charles Anderson Kelley maben, ala. Jean Lang Kitchell birmingham, ala. Co-ed Basketball, ' 25; Phillips-Southern Club; Classical Club. James Hubert Lavies n K A BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Varsity Football, ' 25; B Club. Ralph Lazenby K A MONROEVILLE, ALA. Varsity Football. ' 25; B Club. Bessie Lewis e T BIRMINGHAM, ALA. ' 25; I, ALA. ■1 ; Freshn B Club. Joel William Lowery THOMASVILLE, ALA. Freshman Football, ' 24; Varsity Football. B Club; Student Senate, •25- ' 26. Robert Lebern Lucas lid Blacl. William Pickett McCarty MCWILLIAMS, ALA. Dorothea McDonald fairfield, ala. Wilbur M. McDonald flat rock, ala. Robert Polk McGregor !• A Carl Thomas McLaughlin n K A Francis Thomas McTrottes n K A NEW haven, conn. Joe Carmelo Angelo Macgio birmingham, ala. ' 24- ' 25; Orchestra, ' 25; Glee Cll y Club. Devalse Mann A birmingham, ala. John Ardis M.athison n IC A ONEONTA, ALA. n i v ' A ?f a: N ' :c S ' Soph phomore Ch I e ' m (s (I Carlos A. Memereno tegucigalpa, hon ' duras Gladys Augusta Miller KOBERTSnALE, ALA. ViRGLVLA Miller e n BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Women ' s Pan-Hellenic Council. ■25- ' 26; Roll. •24- ' 25: Le Cercle Francals; Gc Black Staff. ' 25: Belles Lettres Literal ety; Phillips-Southern CIul). Alice Mivis Z T A BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Taylor Herbert Minca nettleton, miss. 1 A.-i-sociation; Secretary Maso Frances Mitchell Z T A birmingham, ala. Maude Alice Moore K A birmingham, ala. Fred M. Mooty A BIRMINGHAM, ALA. W. L. Morris ASHVILLE, ALA. Karl Morrison birmingham, ala. AlLEEN MOSELEY ' Z T A albany ' , ala. Ma re Elizabeth Moulton Z T A birmingham, ala. Elizabeth Murray ' adamsville, ala. Cluh; Secretary-Treasurer Minn h. Sallie Nell Nicholson ensley ' , ala. John Otway Noble tuskegee, ala. John Heflin Nolen K A alexander city ' , ala. Clarence O ' Brien pratt city ' , ala. Estelle Berta Palmer blassburg, ala. Sophomore Class Theodore D. Parish vernon, fla. Curtis Wayne Pearce GUIN, ALA. Richmond Greer Pearson 2 A E LEROY, ALA. Freshman Baseball, •2.I. Fletcher Kirkpatrick Perrovv, Jr. 2 A E ANNISTON, ALA. Dixieland Sunflower Minstrels, ■24- ' 25. Adele Pharo birmingham, ala. Claudius Baker Pinkston dadeville, ala. Clariosophic Literary Society; A.ssistant Track Manager, ' 25- ' 2G. Mable Ponder e T ENSLEY, ALA. Palmer Portis e K N BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Intercollegiate Debate, ' 25; Vice-Presideni Sophomore Class; Vice-President Debating Club; President DeMolay Club. Cornelia Evelyn Price Z T A BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Luther Earnest Price e K N BIRMINGHAM, ALA. DeMolav Club; Ministerial Associatic Basketball, ' 26, ' 26; B Club. Mamie Pritchett thomasville, ala. Joe Harrison Ray hanceville, ala. Varsity Football, ' 25; Freshman Fool ball, •24- ' 25; B Club. Laura Virginia Ray woodstock, ala. Paints and Patches Club. Robert Frank Richard n K A birmingham, ala. Charles Elton Richards new madrid, mo. Barney Hilton Roberts CLAIRMONT springs, ALA. Band, ' 24, ' 25. Walter Lee Roe e K N BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Honor Roll, ■24- ' 25; Junior Faculty, Class Football, ' 24; Debating Club. Lafayette Earnest Rogers morris, ala. 3, ' Xj ' m.3 £ %0 s h il i (i ? Sophomore Class Robert Russell bessemer, ala. Christine Orme Saunders A O n birmingham, ala. Frank Rvburn Schuessler, Jr. WADLEV, ALA. Edward Barnes Seagers e K N ft. lauderdale, fla. Alvin Cates Shelley A T fi tuscumbia, ala. David Frederick Short adamsvili.e, ala. Tli.il..u. Assistant Editor •■Gold am :• . ' ., ' GDld and Black StalT. ■24- ' 2r I Literary Society; Debating Clul. s.iin li.iu Club. David Fred Simpson lebanon, tenn. H. Earl Slve enslev, ala. Brant Riitenhouse Snavely i; A E Walter Scott Sowell, Jr. A T n BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Midget Football, ' 24; Simpson-Southe Nettie Springfield sulligent, ala. Josephine Frances Stevens e n birmingham, ala. Ruth Roberta Stith Lit BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Club; Phillips-Southern Club; Cla erary Society. Eliza Boulware Stokes birmingham, ala. Robert Jamison Sudderth 2 A E CHATTANOOGA, TENN. e Club, ' 25. ' 26; President Sophomori shman Track, ' 25. Thomas Meriwether Sutter n K A Mark Louis Taliaferro A birmingham, ala. Samuel Ralph Terhune birmingham, ala. Soph phomore Clc David W. Thomas enslev, ala. G. B. TiMBERLAKE STEVENSON, ALA. B. F. Tingle birmingham, ala. Guy Otis Travis 2 A E birmingham, ala. Joe Travis birmingham, ala. Opal Inez Treadway langdale, ala. George Hollin Wakefield A T .Q oxford, ALA. Assistant Baseball Manager. ' 24- ' 25; Gold and Black Staff, ' 24- ' 25, •25- ' 26; Treasurer A. O.- Southern Club. Floy Ward birmingham, ala. Forest Gillespie Ward A T Q PRATTVILLE, ALA. Frank Nall Ward K A EDNA, ALA. Herman Watson gadsden, ala. Football Squad. ' 2. ). G. Curtis Webb Alice Edith Weed A n BIRMINGHAM, ALA. cretary Sophomore Cla Edith Buell West Z T A Trudie Whisenant Thomas Otis White Kathleen Wilkins powderlv, ala. Edwin Moore Williams birmingham, ala. Simpson-Southern Club; Ministerial H Sopn pnomore i lass CL Gerald Williams DAE LINDEN, ALA. Biology Club. Martha Ruth Williams birmingham, ala. James Harvey Williamson n K A BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Varsity Football, ' 25; B Club. Carman Ercelle Wilson fairfield, ala. Edith Does Wingard birmingham, ala. Perry Wilson Woodham n K A OPP, ALA. President Freshman Class. ' 24- ' 25; La Revue Staff, ' 25: Gold and Black Staff. ' 25: Glee Club, ' 2i; Sinlpson-Southern Club; Biology Club; Clariosophic Literary Society; Treasurtr Sopho- If Us) Arnold Wilson quinton, ala. J. Harwell Wilson, Jr. 2 A E ANNISTON, ALA. William Leon Yielding birmingham, ala. Edwin Ferrell Young A BIRMINGHAM, ALA. PeMolay Club; .A. M. I-Southcrn Club; Classical Club; Ministerial . ssociation. FRESHMEN From Meditation. By Ghiloni ftr $i id f C p 1 FRESHMEN ' T HE acmevements of those ivho have suc- ceeded before us shall be but a thorn rn our sides to goad us on, for lue, too, ivould carve our names in honor m these immortal halls. we ash the hel of those more learned than ive not for the selfish ur ose of our advance- ment, but rather that through our accomplish- ments may the glory of our college redound throughout all lands. p 78 %) f Freshman Class Officers R. P. Tyler President John Bartlett Vice-President Leola Armstrong Secretary Walter Moore Treasurer Top Roiv: R. Abrams, J. Akers, H. Albert, M. Alley, W. Alspaugh, V. Ambersov, J. Anderson ' Second Row: E. Armstrong, L. Armstrong, F. Arn, C. Atkins, E. Baglev, M. Baglev, C. Bailey Third Row: C. Baker, M. Barnes, T. Barrett, G. Barrovy, J. Bartlett, H. Beagle, J. Beal Fourili Row: E. Berry, R. Bice, N. Birch, P. Bishop, R. Black, R. Blair, F. Blair Fifth Row: I. Blake, A. Brooks. J. Brooks, B. Brown, H. Brownlie, H. Burgess, H. Caldwell Sixth Row: V. Calhoun, E. Camp, N. Cantrell, R. Cantrell, R. Capell, H. Capley, M. Carmichael Seventh Row: D. Caraway, O. Carter, M. Chappell, J. Chitwood, V. Clements. T. Cline, J. Cooper i t Top Row: E. Crandall, B. C urrie, W. Darnell, O. Davidson, W. Dean, M. Dick, N. Dickey Second Roiv: J. Dickinson, J. Dickson, C. Dill, C. Dismukes, W. Dobbs, T. Donovan, W. Dot - T iiid Row: H. Dowdey, T. Drumheller, F. Duke, T. Tvkes, O. Edwards, H. Elliot, L. Elliot Fourth Row: T. Ellis, C. Ellisor, F. Emerson, W. Evans, W. B. Evans, M. Everett, M. Ezell Fijtii Row: D. Fahav, F. Feagin, J. Fendlev, C. Ferrebee, S. Ferrell, J. Fields, D. Finch Sixth Row: H. Finney, J. Finney, J. Floyd, R. Floyd, C. Folmar, B. Fossett, B. Fraser Seventh Row: R. Freeze, M. Fulton, H. Feusch, T. Garst, T. Giles, F. Gillespie, A. Gilmer im: im M f S - To : Rolu: C. Gilmer, M. Glass, A. Goodard, C. Grant, B. Gravlee, H. Green, R. Green Second Rou-: A. Greene, F. Greene, R. Griffith, L. Grimes , L. Griswold, T. Hand, C. Hair T iirJ Rov. - H. Hall, S. Hall, J. Harden, R. Hargreave, D. Harmer, J. Harmon, C. Head Fourth Roil-: V. Henckell, O. Hewlett, T. Hightower, G. Hill, M. Hilton, A. Hinton, E. Hogg Fifth Roii;: J. Holcombe, H. A. Holdridge, A. Holmes, F. Howard, E. Hubbard, B. Hlghen, G. Hunter Sixth Roix:: M. Hurlbert, R. Hurley, D. Hutto, J. Hutto, E. Jenkins, G. Jenkins, C. Johnson Seventli Roil-: A. Kelly, B. Kell-s ' , J. King, B. Kirby, V. Kirby, P. Krebs, R. Lacey Top Roiv: J. Lamar, H. Lanckord, E. Lasseter, J. Lawrence, C. Lazenby, C. Lockwood, M. Logan Second Row: E. Lott, D. Lovell, C. McLendon, J. McLendon, W. McCon ' Aughy, H. McConnell E. McCORMACK T iird Row: C. McCov, M. McCullough, E. McDonald, E. McGraw, A. McIntosh, J. Mc- Kelvev, p. McLexdox Fourth Row: W. McNeill, E. Mackev, E. Maxx, M. Marable, E. Martin, F. Martin, M. Martin Fifth Row: M. Martin, H. Massie, M. Mays, M. Miller, M. Millican, J. Miner, L Mitchell Sixth Row: C. Moebes, A. Moody, E. Moore, A. Morefield, Mrs. L. Morris, E. Morrow, J. MUNROE Seventh Row: C. Murray, M. Neil, E. Neipp, E. Nesbitt, K. Neville, W. Neville, P. Newbold f: 1 ' ' ' m 5) To i Roii:: C. Newman, P. Nolan. E. O ' Brien, T. O ' Brien, H. Ogle, M. O ' Neal Second Roil-: M. Ormand, E. Orr, Y. Pace, A. Palmer, A. Patterson, M. Pea - Third Roix;: J. Perry, A. Phillips, L. Phillips, E. Pippen, L. Poole fourth Row: C. Ponder, L. Powell, E. Powers, R. Powers. M. Prince, C. Propst Fift i Roiu: G. Putnam, R. Ragland, O. Ramev, I. Reous, S. Riggs, A. Roberson Sixth Roii-: C. Ro beris, E. Roberts, 1. Roberts, M. Robison. S. Roe, A. Roebuck 84 Top Row: F. RowE, L. Rowland, E. Russell, R. Sanuers, V. Sandusky, M. Saver Second Row: Miriam Saver, J. Shale, H. Searcv, W. Sellers, M. Shannon, M. Shelly Third Row: M. Shepherd, R. Shepherd, W. Simmons, B. Sims, M. Sowell Fouit i Row: L. Speaks, H. Spruell, L. Stabler, G. Stafford, J. Stalcup, T. Starnes Fifl i Row: M. Stead, H. Stevens, S. Stevens, L. Sternschuss, O. Strickland, W. Sullins Sixl i Row: M. Sullivan, V. Taunton, J. Thomas, M. Thweatt, O. Thomas, R. Trammell .1 (f 1 ' To Roif.- F. Treherne, E. Trotter, L. Tube, P. Tyler, J. Vak Sant, L. Varnox Second Roic: F. Waldrop, W. Walker, E. Walker, E. Walker, L. Waller, J. Ward Third Row: C. Warren, C. Waters, A. Watwood, A. Webb, V. Webb, E. Wells Fourtli Row: J. Westbrook, D. White, M. White, R. Whitfield, A. Whittle, F. Whittle Fift i Row: G. Wiggins, W. Wilhite, S. Williams, L. Williams, W. Williams, A. Wilson Sixi i Row: H. Wingate, W. Wood, M. Wright, S. Wvnn, C. Yielding, L. York SJ CINC A CORPORATION PRODUCERS DISTRIBUTING DE- MILLE STUDIO CULVER CITX CALIFORNIA Deo. , 8th 1925 Mr. Rogers Sherwood, Blrmineham Southern College, Blrmlnghan, Alabama, Dear llr. Sherwood: It is always hard to Judge beauty merely from photographs. Personality is an even greater aid toward feminine charm than special physical endowment. And, of course, personality is absent in still photographs. It is with pleasure, however, that I name Mabel Nesbitt first of the six girls. The other five girls are: ] Florence Green, Louise Averyt, Elva Roberts, Mary Frances | Sowell, Ruth Tucker, in that order. ] Miss Nesbitt has in good measure beauty of the finely intelligent sort. The other fire members of this ] sextette are all different in their beauty but each one of ) them had some outstanding characteristic which lead to their choice. As E former resident of the South myself it has ] been a special pleasure to me to Judge this contest for J Birmingham Southern College. j Tith kindest regards, j You: CO - - ' - (r:: uf jV ' II VI .- ' X J, I: iCT { fH. :« Allen Beatty Beck Black, L. BosriCK BOWDEN Bradford Branscomb Bryant, B. Cairns Childs Cole Davidson Etheridge fulbricht, l. Gravlee, W. Greene, P. Hall, J. Hill, J. B. Jenkins, W. Kimbrough Lavies, H. Lazenby, R. Lipsey Long Lower Y McDorman McEwEN Manar M alloy Miller O ' Brien, C. Pace, E. Pearson, Perdue Price, E. Rawls T. Ray, J. Scott, T. Stephenson Stevenson, H. Stevenson, L. Sutter Tate TiMBERLAKE Weaver WiLLIAMSj L. Williamson Yielding, L. Yielding, M. LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX St ars God stabbed the black sky ivith a ivhite light. And called it — star. But li ' c have seen them — Making end runs — smashing tackles — kicking goals — Fielding — batting — dribbling — jumping hurdles — Leering — faltering — falling-in — peaked, petered and pale — Rounding the last long stretch on the murderous shank of a mile race. Yes, they have sweated and sivorn; tasted the chalice of victory — And swalloii ' ed icith a ivincing gulp the hellish dregs of defeat. But as iL ' c see them here all pondered and slicked up and shaded ; Blended under gray half-lights, iL ' atching an ass take a picture — Yes, as ive see them now we hardly can think of their proicess — — So much have they changed — grown docile and gentle and silent — Yet these men are our stars. —R. B. LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX ■ ..• ' ■ ' •■ ■.■v i ' fi?, ' iei--- ' . ,r,?-: :. :■ ,:-;;; .: . MiinnnnnnnrTl IF ir ir innr Ilinr ;i I[II ir 1[ iri ■ • • i, ii ll ir ii ii n ii ir imu Hllirir iMnnnii LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Williams Captain, I02f: IlKhW, ClKuh Varsity Squad ]- LAl-K Captain, igib When Coach Drew issued the clarion call for varsity football candid:;t:s last fall Snithern ' s hopes were high. After the Thanksgiving game at Lakeland, vhen he di harided the team, Southern ' s hopes were still high, for the college knows that i:i Drew it hjs a dependable coach and a loyal supporter. LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Resume of tne S eason [ITH only nine lettermen back in the fold, Coach Drew started out on September I to mold a team capable of giving its opponents of the 1925 season a good fight and one that would not be left demolished after another graduation had passed. The record made by the team is silent testimony that he accomplished his first aim. The nineteen lettermen who will return next year seem to point to the success of the campaign ahead. With only a little more than two weeks ' practice, the Hilltoppers engaged the Cadets from Marion Institute in a game that became a slaughter before it was over. The lighter opponents could not withstand the company of charging backs and the larger linemen, with the result that they were defeated 46-0. The next opponent was Auburn and the Tigers proved too strong for the Panthers in a thrilling game that was played before packed stands. The battle was waged for the most part in the air with the Southerners coming out second best, 25-6. The offense that showed up in the Auburn game also flashed in the conflict with ' Bama ' s Crimson Tide and resulted in the boys from Sunshine Slopes scoring the only touchdown made against Alabama during the regular season. S. P. U. was defeated by the fast-moving Panthers at Memphis on October 16, 10-3. Captain ' Bullo Williams produced a seventy-five-yard dash that accounted for the only touchdown, while I.ex Fulbright pushed over a dropkick from the field, and accounted for the extra point after touchdown as well. The team continued its great offensive when it met the Choctaws from Mississippi College in the Bowl, but its defense faltered at crucial moments and the invaders took advantage of a passing attack and the breaks of the game to tie the score, 25-25. The come-back next week was complete when the Loyola Wolves, who had nosed out the Indians by one point, were routed in their own stadium at New Orleans, the score being 38-0. ' ' Curly Black was back in harness and seemed to have his old stuff. He led the attack the following Saturday that downed the Jacksonville State Normal Teachers on a sloppy gridiron, 33-0- The next week the Panthers won their second S. I. A. A. victory from Chattanooga at Gadsden. Yank Miller slipped around left end for the only tally of the contest and put Birm- ingham-Southern in the running for Association honors. Captain Bullo continued his spectac- ular playing in this game. It was, however, in the game at Jackson, Miss., the following week that his presence was felt most. After putting his team ahead by three touchdowns at the end of the first half, he retired and allowed the second team to play during the second period. Black again played in stellar fashion, ably seconded by members of the second string outfit. The final score of 19-6 was looked upon as a big upset in dope, but it was only because the Panthers reached their heights that afternoon. Returning from the Delta State, the Hilltoppers put in one of their hardest week ' s practice, but the defeat of Millsaps had ruled them as favorites over Howard and again the dope ran true to form. That is to say, it was reversed. Howard ' s aerial attack was too much for the Drewmen, and, though they played one of their best games, and though Captain Williams reached the peak of his career, the Bulldogs won, 20-16. It was the closest and most exciting game staged in the Steel City during the year. The Thanksgiving Day game with Southern College, Lakeland, Fla., came after two days of riding on the part of the Birmingham boys, and the lighter Floridians almost took their meas- ure. Yank Miller pulled the game from the fire with a drop-kick in the last two minutes, the final score being 9-6. This closed the season for the Panthers with a record of seven games won, three lost and one tied. They piled up 215 points to 135 by their opponents, being able to score on every team that they played. Panther leaders! And here ' s three men that have given their all to the team, and have in turn received due recognition for service rendered. Curly Black, Caplain-Elc-tl Pride of the Class of ' 28. Taters Etheridge Will Not Be Forgottev. Another Picture of THE Loyola Fray. The Mainstay of the Froxt Wall, and A Flashy Half Throwx in ' . Left: The Howard Game at Rickwood Right, middle: Yank Miller, Ai.ternate-Captaix for 1926 Here ' s Four Giants of the Line AND A Great Liti ' le Quarterback for You. Rip and Strvie Will Be Missed. The Panthers Ran Wild at New Orleans and Crushed Loyola ' s Wolves, 38 to o. LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX COACHES Michel C. Huntley Baseball Coach Coach Huntley is new to the Hilltop, this being his first year. He was signed as assistant Freshman coach in haskethall and football and varsity coach of baseball. The record that the teams have made under his tutelage speaks well for his ability. He made his letter in three sports at Millsaps College, showing up especially well in baseball. He also took part in athletics at Emory University, leaving there to take his present position. J. W. Perry, Jr., Freshman Coach Coach Perry has served two years as Freshman coach on Sunshine Slopes and has made a great success of the job. He played three years at halfback for Emory and Henry, and was captain in his Senior year. He also took part in basketball and baseball and is well qualified to teach the struggling and ambitious young freshmen in these branches of the athletic curriculum. Coach Perry has had several years ' experience at his profession, coming to Southern from Troy State Normal. Douglas Wixgo. Assistant Football Coach Coach Wingo is a scout par excellence, one of the best in the South. He always brought back all the plays put on by the future opponents of the Panther that they showed on the par- ticular afternoon that he visited them. In addition to this he knew the game well enough to put it on with the Freshman acting as the enemy, and to point out the weak and strong points. He has a wonderful personality which he gets across to the men under him and he made a fine assistant to Drew. Coach Wingo has been with us through two campaigns and we hope that he can be retained. He did his playing at Marion Institute and Washington and Lee, performing at the quarterback position. He coached at Marion before coming to the Slopes. Harold Drew. Director of Athletics Coach Harold D. ( Spud ) Drew came to the Hill from Trinity College in Connecticut, and brought with him the famous Rockne style of football science. Since his arrival on the Hill Coach Drew has made the Panther a foe to be feared in football and basketball, and has worked a transformation in Spring track that has placed it almost on a par with the other major sports. Spud is able to impart his fiery spirit into a team that gives them an eagerness abilitx to go up against almost any kind of odds. He is a keen and thorough student of all the branches of athletics, has taken part in most of them for varying numbers of years, and holds a degree of Bachelor of Physical Education from Springfield College. LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Freshman Football The class of 1929 had one of the best defensive Freshman elevens in the South and showed up well in that department throughout the season. However, they did not find themselves offensively until the fag end of the year. There were several brilliant stars on the team during the year and these should give some of the varsity men trouble next autumn. Every game seemed to produce a new satellite to take his place with the rest. Ineligibility of some of these stars in a few of the games hurt the team. The first game of the campaign was taken from the Blountsville Aggies by a count of 19-0 in a game in which everyone got a chance. The playing of Captain Murray, O ' Brien, Stephens, Brown and Ogle stood out from that of their teammates. Following this tilt the Alabama Freshmen were held to two touchdowns by the fighting Cubs. Pace rose to great heights in punting against this crew. The Chat- tanooga first-year men were defeated the next week in a great defensive game by the margin of a safety. Pace again punted well on a gridiron that was covered with water, while Barnes put up a great exhibition at tackle. Huntsville College was taken into camp, 20-6, in another sloppy battle. This one was staged in the Bowl and the playing of Ogle and Lott was the chief feature. The game with the Howard College Bullpups was evenly fought, but the Cubs went down to a glorious 6-0 defeat. Three days later they held the Auburn Tiger Cubs to a 12-7 score. The season was closed with a crashing 59-7 victory over the Hamil- ton Aggies. LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Birmin; Birmiii! Birmin! Birmiiii Birmini Birmiiii Birmiiij Birmiii] Birmin] Birmini Rirmini Birmini Birmini Birmin Birmin Birmini Birmin Birmin Birmin Birmini Birmin] Birmin] Birmini Birmin Birmini Birmini Birmin Birmin Birmin Birmin Results m TKree Baseball ;ham-Southern i jham-Southern 2 jham-Southern 5 rham-Southern O ham-Southern 6 ;ham-Southern 6 ;ham-Southern 8 !;ham-Southern 6 fham-Southern i rham-Southern 9 ;ham-Southern 7 ;ham-Southern 3 ham-Southern 2 ham-Southsrn ij ;ham-Southern 6 jham-Southern i ;ham-Southern O jham-Southern 2 diam-Southern i Football jham-Southern 46; ;ham-Southern 6 ; ham-Southern 7 ; ;ham-Southern 10; jham-Southern 25 ; ham-Southern 38 ; ham-Southern i;i; ' ham-Southern 6 ; jham-Southern 19; ham-Southern 16; jham-Southern 9 ; Pantker Sports 1925 Alabama 3 Alabama 11 Auburn 14 Auburn 7 Tusculum College 2 Tusculum College 5 Howard College 7 Mississippi College 10 Mississippi College 10 Millsaps College 2 Howard College 5 Howard College 7 Howard College I Tusculum College 5 Tusculum College I AVashington and Lee 2 V. M. 1 8 Roanoke College 9 Emory and Henry 4 , 1925 Marion Institute O Auburn 25 Alabama 50 S. P.U. 3 Mississippi College 25 Loyola L niversity O Jacksonville Normal o Chattanooga o ] Iillsaps College . ....... 6 Howard College 20 Southern College 6 Basketball, ' 25- ' 26 (Through January 22 Birmingham-Southern 17; Auburn Birmingham-Southern 12; Birmingham-Southern 9 ; Birmingham-Southern 22 ; Birmingham-Southern 24; Birmingham-Southern 6; Birmingham-Southern 17; Birmingham-Southern 20; Alabama 18 ] Iississippi A. and M 27 Mississippi College 42 Millsaps College 1 B. A. C 38 Chattanooga 28 ] Liyfield College 30 ( inriiin[ i i u ii i i ii ]i i i i [ n i i u ii ii i [ i i i i i[ i r ii irj - ■ ■ jjcn irir ii nr i mijm, ' J!I TnniJrg 2 ' • l OD LA REVUE, NINETEEN T W E N T Y - S I X l. ' -t l Jlft r t l%o JicbLfWibS Over Class Football The class football series was the closest and most interesting that has ever been played on the Hill. There were four good teams entered and the winning Sopho- mores really deserve their title and their siher footballs. They worked hard to earn them. The first game was between the Juniors and Freshmen, the former eliminating the underclassmen by one touchdown. The Senior-Soph game had the same result, except that by a burst of strength at the last the Seniors were able to count two points on a safety. The Sophs defeated the Juniors in an extremsly torrid battle for the championship. The line plunging of Dee Thomas was too much for the losers. The inevitable six showed up again, the score being 6-0. Onii - . ■ j II II inriiirini lllf ir if i i inr n | | | | nil 11 i nf i nfil l LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Freshmax Managers — Varsity Managers l UiniTririiiiini n ii ir u ii :r i i i Linr ii iLii ii ii i it, ' ■ ■ LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX CuACH Drew ' s Si .m.mer I-uuiball II iririnririririi II II M II II n irii inr II ir ir ir i ' - ■ gr-n-mr-n-i i ii ii ll ll u ir innru n l[ ;i,l ;i ll IC ir  in LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX PANTHERS SWAMP mARION CADETS poutliern Panthers Win Panther Football Teams From Southwestern, 10-3 Face Tough Assignments ICaptain Bullo Will,, (hruv . Invade Y ' fjlT ' ' Action rnda And bat i dn iPANTHERS ORK , FOR S.PJ] GAME :-:,immiie( I luit ful On Sunshine ' 1 i Thi Panther Cub: Defeat Stockham, .,pg ht Institute Eleven I; No Match For Drewmen 37 Hill- ' oppf-r Take Part In Contest— Todi St rs Dt tcnst e For Loser ' ? . . PAiNTlRSBEAT MARION, 46 TOO Pantheis Win From Millsaps Southern s Soul hern on Oct 16, 1920 The 41arm Oock l li HOW ShO B riij PANTHERSDRRE FOR S. P. U. GAME As Toi.n in ' the Press J y I 11 lrirT7irii II i II inr 11 II 11 ir II if - . ■ tTrmnrmT-mi ii ii ii ii ii irini ii ii ii ir ii ii ir if ir in LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX BASKETBALL Riadiiui Lett to Rn lit Coach Drew, Je m ' s, Pace, McDormw, Kimbrough, Price, Stevenson Review of the Season, 1925-26 (Note: This story was written January 25, 192C.) The thinly-clad cagesters did not get off to their usual flying start this year and as a consequence they were just rounding into form as the annual went to press. The team showed up well on the defense in most of the games and a good offense was in the making at the above date. The best games that have been played so far vere against the University of Ala- bama, Mississippi A. M. and Millsaps. In the last of these the Panthers of the court registered their lone victory of the season thus far. However, the best part of the schedule is just ahead and the boys from Sunshine Slopes are being prepped to do their stuff upon the occasion of the meeting with their ancient rivals, the Bulldogs. Games with Sewanee, Chattanooga, Auburn and the Birmingham Athletic Club are still on the card in addition to the battles with Howard. The five has been changing but it seems that a combination just formed, consisting of Beck and Stevenson, for- wards; Kimbrough, center; McDorman and Hall, guards, is the best one that has taken the floor yet. With practice they should round into an excellent team. LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Varsity Basketball Team (Note: This article written January 26, 1926.) Fran ' k Allen, Guard — Frank has stepped up from last year ' s Frosh team, of which he was captain and is giving a good account of himself. BowDEN Beck, Forv.-ard — The ace of the Freshmen was Kinliy and he is fast becoming one of the dependables of the varsity. John Hall, Guard — Jal e got some mighty good basketball out of his system last year and is counted on strong at the back guard berth. James Harris, Center — Harris is another one of Coach Perry ' s graduates and. has been substituting at center regularly. Bill Jenkins, Forivard — A letterman of last year, Bill has been seeing much service this season and has been showing a fine brand of basketball. S. T. KiMBROUGH — The man with the eye for the basket, Stee registered thirty-one points in two consecutive games and has been the main offense that the Panthers have offered. Clarence McDormax, Guard — Mack has performed for two years at the sentinel post and is a real veteran on the team. Charles Miller, Forward — Yank is a nifty little forward who plays a neat floor game and shoots with the best. He was going good at mid-season. Eddie Pace, Guard — With a year of service behind him, Eddie is beginning to show promise of developing into a great basketball player. He has worked in good style. Ernest Price, Guard — A star in last year ' s S. I. A. A. tournament, Ernest is making it hard for opponents this year with his flashy playing. Hugh Stevenson, Forivard — While he is one of the smallest men on the squad, Stevie is a good shot and is tending to one of the sharp-shooting posts regularlv. Herbert Weaver, Forward — Considered as just a scrub last year, Bo has won a place on the regular squad this year. He was playing regularly until a wrenched ankle forced him to the bench. LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Rcadintj Left to Right: Cojti i;ham, McDonald, Whisenant, Grain, Kitchell, Williams, Cannon, Clark, Cousins, Webb, Rowland, Hanes. Coach: Englebert standing behind Captain Williams Co-ed Basketball (Note: This article written January 20, 1926.) With six veterans back out of a possible seven, and with an abundance of Freshman material, the Co-eds have built up a machine that has proved to be one of the most powerful in the state. The} ' opened the campaign by dropping a hotly contested scrap to the lassies from Woman ' s College by a very narrow margin. The Pantherettes were coming strong when the final whistle stopped the contest. With their defeat still strong in their memory the girls next encountered the Athens College misses and this time they made victory certain at the start by piling up a huge score in the first quarter. Trudie Whisenant led the way. This time she ran up the almost unbelievable score of 57 points. The final tally was 89 to 22. Again the Co-eds started out by gaining an early lead when they tackled the Alabama College girls. They were leading at the end of the first half, only to see their margin whittled down by the spectacular shooting of their opponents, and to come in the losers by 29 to 23. However, this put them in good mood for the slaughter that they were to make of the Howard College Co-eds two nights later. In this game they went along rather erratically until well into the second quarter, when they broke out with several field goals in succession. In the second half they came back to complete the annihilation and won by the overwhelming score of 38 to 2. There remain several games still to be played, including return engagements with both of the teams that have defeated the Pantherettes and revenge on them is the one thought in the minds of the Southern lassies. LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Co-ed Basketball Team euu sent to printc E ' i:i VN- Armstrong, ForiL-ard — Coming on the Hill a high school star, Evelyn lived up tn her reputation by forcing her way through the abundant material and gaining a regular berth. She took Lucile Camion ' s place when the latter was in- jured and filled right into the niche. Lucile Cannon, Forward — Lucile was going along nicely in her third college season when she wrenched her ankle and had to take a place on the bench. It is hoped that she will be able to get back in the game before the campaign is over. Lela Clark, Guard — Lela made her letter in 1925, filling in at guard and doing her work nicely. She is seeing more service this year but is still handicapped in seeking the position occupied by the captain. Harriet Cottingham, Guard — Althmigh only a midget in size, Harriet makes up for it in fight and ability to play the ball. She stepped into ex-Captain Manar ' s shoes and is making them fit. Helen Grain, Center — Helen has shone through two seasons and this year is outshining all previous attempts. In the game with the Howard girls she was high scorer with fourteen points. Margaret Hanes, Guard — Lucile is another guard who has been giving her best to the team for two years. She has gotten in several games this year and is perform- ing nobly. Gladys Miller, Guard — Gladys comes from an athletic family and it was no surprise to the school to find her on the varsity squad in her Freshman year. If she follows the example set by her brother she is destined to become a star. Florence Quiglev, Forijjard — Another high school star who is still in the as- cendancv. Florence made her letter at guard last year but due to her unfailing eye for the netting she has been used at forward this year. She shoots baskets with abandon. Louise Rowland, Center — Louise is following in the footsteps of Cannon and Quiglev, being also a graduate of Ensle She is one of the Freshman satellites who is playing her first season on the varsity. Trudie Whisenant, Forward — Trudie has been the sharpshooter of the team for two seasons. She has piled up innumerable points since her first game and only once or twice has she been held below ten points in a game. Captain Lucile Williams, Guard — Last, but far from least, the second Wil- liams to be captain of one of Birmingham-Southern ' s teams for the present year, Lucile is playing her fourth and final year at guard. She has given long and faithful service at the sentinel post, and it is taking nothing from her seasons past to say that this is her best year. LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Bach Rihzv, 1.1 fl to Rujlit: Ogle, Finnev. Standing: Coach Perry, Clements, Akers, Neipp, Trammell, Sterxschuss, Kirey, Beagle, Elliott, Manager McNeill. Front Row: Currie, Captain O ' Brien, Fultcn. Freshman Basketball The basketball team of the class of 1929, under the leadership of Coach Perry, was by far the most remarkable Freshman team in the history of the college. Cham- pions of both the City League and the Boys ' Club League, at the close of the January playing period, the Frosh quintet was truly the record-making athletic combine from the Hilltop for the year 1925-26. More individual stars were on the team than ever before, and they were welded into the best and smoothest running machine that could be produced. Eight wins and no defeats had been registered by the Freshmen at the end of the first period, such teams as Howard Rats, Fairfield Y, Stockham Y, Birmi ngham Y, Phillips and Sneads Seminary being put in the defeated column. The Howard outfit was beaten twice and scores of the other games gave the Freshmen such safe margins, in most cases, that they were never in danger, generally leading the opposition through the entire contest. LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX FresKman Baskettall Team Shklton ' Akers, Guard — Cheese was one of the most consistent players on the team, and saw service in several of the games. He was especially good at keeping the hall in home territory. Harold Beacle, Guard — Here ' s a Connecticut Hall man for you, and he ' s one that gave his all to the team during the entire season. Daniel Clement, Forii-ard — This Freshman believes in teamwork above all else, and he carried out that doctrine in his season ' s play. Brand Clrrie, Guard — Currie was a regular guard on the Frosh quintet, and was a fighter all the way. He was one of the shiniiig lights of the team. Clinton Elliott, Guard — After having played great ball on the gridiron all season, as a member of the Rat eleven, Elliott kept up his athletic record by becoming a vital cog in the basketball machine. Jack Finney, Guard — A volume could be written about Finney ' s play and still all might not be said. He is a wonderful defensive man and made first team with- out |uestion. Marhurv FuLiox, Forward — At passing the ball Fulton was expert, and in every other department of the game he came up to standard. He was regular all season. William Kirbv, forziard — Another good passer, and a player who was always in the heat of the fight. Ernest Neipp, Cenlcr — Neipp was right there from the time of the toss-up until the final whistle. He was a heavy scorer. yoiiN O ' Brien, Fuyn.vard — Father was captain of the team, and the best little leader ever to pilot a Freshman quintet. He was truly a sensational player all season, and those words mean more than they say. Hugh Ogle, Center — Long Boy never had to stretch himself at the toss-up and was expert at getting the ball from the backboard. Lewis Sternschuss, For ' ward — For floor work, a better man can ' t be found than this boy Sternschuss. He ' s all right, though, at any post on the team. Ralph Trammell, Guard — Trammell is last but not least by a large margin. His pla on the defensive received favorable comment all season. rr;nT ;_ 11 I I i r i r ii w ii iillirn ir ir iriri i i i |[ IHHI If U If If  J LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX BASEBALL Standing. Left In Rujlil Sittinff, Left to Rirjht N ' oKioN, Mahmson, Jenkins, Dodds, Hrvani-, I kvan, Uiack, Pace, O ' Brien, Nelson, Wakefield. DeLoach, Caldwell, Purdue, Stevenson, Pearson. Englebert. The 1925 Season While the 1925 diamond squad was not the best in the South, it was the best in the Magic City, winning three out of four games from its across-town rivals, the Howard Bulldogs. This was a very closely played series in which only one game had a margin of more than one score. Babe Graham proved to be the hero by winning the last game in a pitchers ' duel, with the tally- sheet reading 2 to i. This was the best game put up by the Panthers during the season. Other high lights of the campaign were the narrow escape of Washington and Lee from the Panther claws, the four-game series taken from Tusculum College, and the defeat of Millsaps. The University of Alabama was held to a 3 to i victory in the first game of the season and the Hillmen also made a good showing against the Birmingham Barons. The trip into Tennessee and Virginia was declared to be the best ever taken by a Birming- ham-Southern team. The tour extended over a week ' s time and six games were played. Tus- culum College furnished the opposition for two days; then Washington and Lee, V. M. L, Roanoke College and Emory and Henry were played. The Panthers won the first two games but dropped the rest, two by very thin margins. Taken all in all, the season was about even, the ledger holding only three more losses than victories. Only five of the fourteen lettermen will be lost to the team by graduation or for other reasons. This leaves a fine nucleus for the 1926 team. LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX ,|;4- ' :; Baseball Team Eddie Pace, Pi f riser Playing ill the outfield one da.v and tak- ing his turn in the box the next was a small matter to Eddie. He did both equally well. Clarence O ' Briex, Catcher Mickey, the fightin ' Irishman, was the regular catcher and the team ' s leading hit- ter. He broke up several games with timely •wallops. Price Howell, Ritjht Field Another swatting outfielder was Price. He kept his average up with the best and used his speed in getting down to first on infield taps. Carlton Perdue, Shortstop Hub batted in hard luck all season. He hit more drives into the hands of fielders than most players send to vacant spots. At that he was well up in the percentages. Leox Stevexsox, Second Base Stevie worked at the other side of the keystone, and was the sacrificial artist in the batting order. Maxager T. B. Pearson, Center Field Mange was a great little defensive out- fielder, and arranged three nifty trips for the team. His re-election was met with cheers by his teammates. William Jexkixs, Pitcher Bill proved to be a fine relief worker on the mound, and especially will his pitching against the Auburn Tigers be remembered bv the fans who saw that game. LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Baseball Tc LORRAIN BlACKj Left Field Curley was a slugger and at the same time a good lead-off man. His batting av- erage was close around the .300 mark all during the season. He was also a fine out- fielder, being able to range far and wide. Paul Norton Coach Taking up the team after the season started, Mike put the fight and baseball lore into the hearts and heads of his pro- teges. Much of the credit for the success of the season goes to him. Jerry Bryan, Infield A happy combination of substitute infielder and sports writer, Jerry made the trips and supplied the fun for the love-sick boys. Byron DeLoach, Catcher Frog was understudy to O ' Brien, the reg- ular backstop, his willingness to work win- ning him a place on the squad. Hubert Caldwell, First Base As soon as Skeebe doffs his basketball unie he dons his baseball suit and is ready for more fun. He was captain of the team and a dangerous batter. Ben Englebert, Third Base Ex-Captain Ben was shifted back to his natural position at the hot corner, and his playing during the season was consistently good. Bertram Bryant, Catcher A consistent player — this Bryant boy. He was second to O ' Brien in the catching de- partment, and was used in several games, where his performance came up to varsity style in every respect. Pictures of Earl Graham, pitcher; Robert Manar, pitcher, and Ernest Shelton, outfield- er, unobtainable. LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Fresh resnman Basel) all HE Freshman diamond aggregation of 1925 ' ' was able to tal:e most of its opponents into camp, some by rather healthy scores. The Howard Rats were disposed of in the only game between the two ri als. The Ensley High boys were able to halve a two-game series, as were the lads from Phillips High School The good work of several Freshmen stood out during the season and they should make strong bids for the varsity in 1926. Among these were Pinkie McTrottis, pitcher ; McLaughlin, second base ; Boyd, shortstop ; Beck, third base, and Ray, outfield. These boys combined hitting ability with fielding strength and should prove them- selves well-rounded players when the time comes for their varsity try-outs. Coach Perry deserves credit for molding this machine that proved that team-work coimts more than individual prowess. p- ' .-ffl- « LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX + + TRACK + + + Standing, Left to Riglit: Manager McEwen , Teacue, Beatti;, Williams, Farr, Cairns, Hall, Coach Drew. Second Row, Kneeling: Wilson, Tate, McDorman, Mallov. Front Roiv: Weaver, Lipsey, Hill, Davidson. Spring Track, 1925 Under the tutelage of Coach Harold Drew, Birmingham-Southern ' s varsity track team experienced probably its most successful season last spring. The fiery Panther mentor revived interest in the sport and placed it in front as one of the Hilltop ' s major branches of athletics. Practically every track man in college answered the clarion call for practice March 3. After several weeks of drill in every phase of track, the team began its intercollegiate meets, and brought home satisfying results from every contest. After losing the openers with Auburn and Alabama, the Panther squad romped over Chattanooga ' s Moccasins, 78-37. Interclass meets, especially with the Freshman barriers, furnished plenty of work for the varsitv between those meets. It was, however, in the big S. I. A. A. meet on Munger Bowl, May 9, that the Panthers showed their true strength. Winning second place by running up a total of 39 points was a noteworthy achievement, especially with such teams as Furman, Center, Mississippi College, Millsaps and Mercer competing. The varsity squad: Dick Beatty, Jake Hall, Herbert Weaver, Sid Malloy. Howard Elling- ton, j. B. Hill, Frank Morris, Richard Lipsey, Floyd Wilson, Garland Etheridge, O. A. Favr, Frank Cairns, Turner Scott, Cecil Hackney and Loren Williams. LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX iJ Standing, Li-ft to R ' ujht: Frank Ward, Claudias Pin kston, Otis White, Bob Bowdex, Ed Bostick, Rov Long, Fred Mooit, John Bradford. KnccViny, Left to Right: Bowden Beck, Joe Lowerv, Powell Thompson, William McCARTi . Freshman Track The Freshman track team last spring was a winner from the start, it being directly under Coach Drew ' s coaching, and well supplied with material of the sort that makes for victories. In three high school meets, Bessemer, Woodlawn and Simpson, the Freshmen emerged easy victors. It was in these contests that they paved the way for recognition from the entire school, and made ready for keener competition, which was to come from the varsity a little later in the season. In the interclass and varsity meets, the Freshman team flashed brilliant and won several first places. That it will furnish the nucleus for the varsity track team this year is a certainty, since from its ranks emerged a specialty in every branch of track. The Freshman squad: John Bradford, Bob Sudderth, Harold DeLoach, Ed Bos- tick, Bob Bowden, Joe Ray, Herbert Childs, Otis White, Powell Thompson and Joe Lowery. LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX The S. I. A. A. Track Meet on Munger Bowl LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX t anager  nd Assistant Tennis It ' s a whole school ' s game — tennis. In all except three months in the year, the three courts are in active use, with more students participating in the game, at one time or another, than take part in any other form of athletic endeavor on the Hill. Manager Harry Bailey and his able assistants have seen to it that the courts are Icept in the best of condition, and were instrumental in promoting several tournaments during the fall season. Last year, a number of intercollegiate matches were brought about, and although new courts may be necessary in the near future, due to the imposing site of the old ones in the middle of the college quadrangle, yet it is a certainty that tennis is on the Slopes to stay. Seniors on the march! And what a significant procession this is each year, with over a hundred students on their farewell tramp ' to the chapel. But commencement on the Hill- top does not mean a lull in ac- tivities at the college, for ere the graduating exercises are over the North Alabama Conference Ep- worth Leaguers are assembling on the Slopes for their annual conven- tion. Miss Lee — the students ' friend. Her smile is one of the college ' s traditions. An ' there ' s Cullman. ilr. Dowling is a candidate for the M.A. this 5 ' ear. Everybody ' s Friend The realization of a student body ' s dream was this ground- breaking of the Student Activities Building last Spring. It was left to Mr. F. M. Jack- son to start the fire-works. He slipped out to the site of the ground-breaking and, in the pres- ence of the photographer and one or two others, lifted the first dirt. Students, trustees and faculty were all represented in the cere- monies of the occasion. The two- student groups shown were the leaders in the campaign for funds and had as their captains, Jerry Bryan and Verman Kimbrough, respectively. Dr. Stuart S YS A Shovel-fll Our President Takes to THE Stump. Mr. Elliott Flashes Eloquent. A big day at Southern ! The Auburn game, for the sec- ond successive year, brought out the largest crowd of the season to Munger Bowl. It was at that time that the new Student Activ- ities Building corner-stone was laid. Speakers included President Snavely, Mr. F. M. Jackson, Mrs. Stockham, Mr. Edgar M. Elliott and Paul Cooke, representing the student body. Southern ' s band struts ! With a solid student body oc- cupying the frame bleachers, and the best college band in Dixie parading the playing field between halves, spectators at this contested gridiron struggle were given an idea of Panther pep. It was a gala event. mM JL Hats Off to the Spoxsors ' jr : Class Football AND Frosh Pole-Rushers. iJk Inter-ciass athletic contests have come to be recognized at Birmingham-Southern as a means of developing a keener spirit of sportsmanship, and the college fosters many events of this nature. The annual flag rush betvi een male mem- bers of the Sophomore and Freshman classes is the season-opener for this type of athletic endeavor, and was won last Fall by the Rats, who, however, had no easy time in overcoming the small group of Sophs. Class football is participated in by the four classes, and comes after the close of the varsity season. ife w f ' jML k ' ' ' HK ' ' Up a Tree! A red-letter day of the football season! The game with Howard each year comes as a grand climax to the Panthers ' gridiron activities, and it is truly the Marne of Foot- ball for Magic City fandom. Each year, on the day before the big game, it is the custom to spring a surprise on the student body at chapel, and the banner pictured on this page was the instrument of pep-raising on the last occasion. It was designed and presented by Prof. Robert S. Whitehouse, one of the most popular members of the college faculty-. TOUCHDOWN ! At the Loyola Game. Birmingham-Southern and Loyola are colleges separated by sec- tional boundaries more than anything else, and it was only last Fall that the two came to know each other. And what an acquaintance was made at that time! The Panther football team, a handful of rooters, and the band, proved such effective instruments of introduc- tion till old New Orleans is still talking about the day Southern played. The library steps. What a mecca for campus luminaries. And there ' s a parade picture or two. Brings back fleeting memories of that November day when the Panthers proved their glory in defeat. A Basket o ' Peaches. A Quintet of Ramblers who Take Everything IN Their Wake. ■ ' , w tifM ' ' M fs ki T H E M n 1 •K M 1 Campus life! And it ' s the best, after all, ac- cording to the verdict of the ma- jority of Hilltop students. And the parking problem is no prob- lem at all, eh, what? A pair of Oxford bags for you. Skipper Morgan became famous overnight as a flapper of no mean repute, and set even his closest rivals in the shade with his 3i-inch specials. There goes Sally Roe and her gang. But look at Sir Sid, would you. An ' yet they voted him the biggest woman hater in school. How some folks can be deceived. -T The Booster Puts in a Word or So. Tate and Company, for your once-o er, folks. The are as traditional to the college as Rat Johnson is to the dollar. A near-dozen slingers of dining hall delicacies out for your ap- gentle readers. And they didn ' t fade out of the pictuie with the old dinner bell, either, when the cafeteria came into being, b ut rather hoisted themselves to places of greater dignity. Rudolph Scott wants to say a woid, but lookout, Joe Tiavis in- tervenes with one of his famous whistling solos. The Library steps again. You just can ' t get around ' em. Knights of the Dining-Hall. j Charlif Fowler Yelled to 38 10 o ' icroRY AT Loyola. Some more memories of that New Orleans trip. And as a few echoes from the track season to liven things up a bit. The Cooper Road Race Winners: Wilson, Perry and Stephenson, fin- ished in the order named. These men formed the nucleus of the Fall tiack team and were participants in the B. A. C. meet, as well as a ci OSS-country run in Atlanta, in which the Birmingham-Southern harriers came out second. Two luminaries on the Freshman track team last Spring. B ob Bowden looms as one of the school ' s futures in the field events, while Barleycorn Bradford has already made for himself a name, b bieaking the college ' s record for the mile run. The Y. W. ' s kid party proved to be one of the most unique social affairs of the early school year. The boys on this oc- casion made favorable comparison with the girls of glee club fame. Intelligence tests ! And what an eye- opener they proved to some of the know- it-all Freshmen. Dr. Hoke certainly showed the Frosh up in psychological fashion. Off to Gadsden for the ' Nooga game. The team hurried off ahead of the special by means of busses, and felt good enough over the trip to trim the Moccasins in nice style. Top: T. C. I. Exhibit Case IN THE Library. The Librarians Take a Minute Off. Wonder if Lucile Williams thinks she can get away with it. Elva was right there at the Howard game. Miscellaneous — who said miscel- laneous? This is a perfectly good page, but that must be the trouble. — it represents so much. From chapel to the Howard game is quite a jump, and the editor of Pan- therland frankh admitted his in- ability to link the two topics to- gether in appropriate style. And there ' s the library steps — page Fisk (yes — it ' s time to re- tire). But sympathizing readers, feel with the writer for a few sec- onds, for truly there ' s that glee club page that is yet to be written, and those song-birds demand every adjective that this scribbler can command. fn ' Jt - There they go ! King Olaf and his glee songsters — on a jaunt through the Canadian Rockies, on to the Pacific Coast, and back for a record tour through the great Southwest. An ' it was some trip, the boys say. A concert by night, and sight-seeing by day. Much of a repetition of the ' 24 summer tour, only on a bigger scale. It was a second education for the glee club members, who took advantage of their every opportunity for seeing the wonders of the West. That travel broadens was vouchsd for by all who made the trip. Some Canada Stuff at the Left The Flapper Is ON THE Road to Suc- cess, She Says. Exclusive Writer for THE G. B. Jake Was Awful Modest, But He Was Forcer into It— We Mean This Pose. Bob Said They Weren ' t So Very Large, at That. Some more Revue election dope. Bullo Williams was slightly selfish in this contest for campus fame, being elected the college ' s most popular athlete, best all-round man, and fashion plate. Irving Fullington retained his old hold on the title of South- ern ' s shrewdest politician, and Helen Grain is still the school ' s best all-round co-ed. Rudolph Scott remains the college booster, and Lex Full- bright the drugstore cowboy. Dr. Whiting received the high vote for most popular professor. Jack Finney is undoubtedly the freshest Rat on the Hill, the election showed. And Bob Bowden still has big feet. LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Student Senate Paul Cooke President RiCHMOXD C. Beatty rUe-Presidcitt Irving E. Fullixcton- Secretary-Treasurer Members Senior Representatives Richmond C. Beatty Jerry Brya ' i Paul Cooke Irving E. Fullington Junior Representatives Theron O. Cox Theodore B. Pearson John Sidney Malloy Sophomore Representatives Peter Edward Bostick Joel W. Lowery Freshman Representative Van Buren Taunton •Bryan and Lowery resigned; eded by J. K. Hall and Koy Long, respectively. 147 LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Co-ed Council Elsie Orr Presidenl EvELVN Price ricc-Prcsidrnl Lucii.E Williams Srcrrtary-Tn-asurir Louise Averyt Members Senior Represi-ntatiiu Elsie Orr Flora Roberts Junior Rtprcstntatives Charlotte Ducger Sophomore Representatives Louise Keily Evelyx Price Freshman Representative Louise Rowlan ' u LuciLE Williams Etoyle Heitlinger 1+8 LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Omicron Delta Kappa (Honor Soiirly) Founded at Washington and Lee University, 1914. KAPPA CIRCLE Installed at Birmingham-Southern College, 1923. Membership open to those who have attained eminence in scholarship and college activ- ities. Ideals: Recognition, Inspiration, Opportunity, Character. Faculty Members AusTix Prodoehl Harrison ' A. Trexler Associate Faculty IMemkers W. W. Hale HoxoRARY Faculty Memrer Roy E. Hoke Student Members Gilbert W. Mead H. B. Englebert W. A. Whiting Guv E. Snavelv Richmond C. Beattv Lamar Branscomb Jerry Bryan Paul Cooke Howard Ellington Clarence Fossett W. H. Jenkins Russell F. Johnson Boyd Smith Rogers Sherwood Irving E. Fullincton Clarence McDorman Leon M. Stevenson John K. Hall Theodore B. Pearson InitiatL ' LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWE NTY-SIX Xjmjt- . ■ hr-n-n ii ji ]i ii ii ii ii ii irii inni ii ii n ii ii ir irir :r ir i LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX ROGERS SHERWOOD BOYD V. SMITH LaR. Staff Rogers Sherwood Boyd Smith . . . Editor-in-CJiief Business Manager Associate Editors W. Harry Bailey Jerry Bryan Fraternities John Selman Photographic Staff Paul Stephenson Lamar Mullendore Bessie Bell McGee Organization Editor Miles Hardy Editorial Staff Assistant Editor Seph Hall Sports Leon Stevenson Feature Editor Irving Fullikgton Art Editors Raymond Green Ray Black Class Editors Edmond Rice Mabel Joe Smith Sororities Ruth Tucker Assistant Feature Editors Velma McNutt Claud Johnson Harbin Singleton Photographic Editor Edmond Rice Circulation Manager Ross P. DODDS Business Staff Advertising Manager Claude J. T. Brown Assistant Advertising Manager Clarence McDorman W. D. BOLING Advertising Solicitors Clarence Fossett Caroline Bruner Thaddeus Farr g - ■ .g lll iri[J[||)lll ]lllll ll l linril n ir im inr i LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Gold and Black. Staff LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Otlj (g0l mh Hack Entered as second-class matter at Birmingham, Ala., under Act of Congress, March 6. 1879. Subscription Rates $2.50 a Year Single Copy 10 Cents PUBLISHED WEEKLY BY THE STUDENTS OF BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN COLLEGE EDITORIAL STAFF THOS. W. ROGERS Editor-in-Chief Fred Short Assistant Editor A. C. Shelley Associate Editor Cecil Hackney Sports Editor Seph Hall News Editor Miles Hardy Assistant Sports Editor Louise Keily Y. W. C. A. William Jenkins Fraternity and Club Virginia Miller Sorority and Club Society and Features Louise Averyt, Jimmie Dink Adams, Adele Pharo, Mamie Reed, Lela Clark, Ruth Tucker, Clarence McDorman, A. D. Darham Special Writers and Contributors Ralph Pinel, Lois Butler, Claude Keathly, Edmund Rice DEAN GILBERT W. MEAD Faculty Adviser BUSINESS STAFF C. M. TYNDAL .--. Business Manager J. D. Beli Advertising Manager Richard Fennell Asst. Advertising Manager G. H. Wakefield Asst. Advertising Manager William H. ClifT Advertising Solicitor Nelson Guthrie Asst. Advertising Manager Harold DeLoach Asst. Advertising Manager Myra Beal Advertising Solicitor Myrtle Benton Advertising Solicitor R. L. Lucas Circulation Manager DoziER H. Drinkard Asst. Circulation Manager J. A. Stalcup Asst. Circulation Manager Furman Blair, Jr. Secretary to Manager LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Purpose : Pi Gamma Mu (Honorary Social Science Fraternity) Founded at the College of William and Mary in 1924. ALABAMA ALPHA CHAPTER Established at Birmingham-Southern College, October, 1924. To promote interest in the social sciences. Open to Seniors who have attained eminence in the Department of Social Sciences. Dr. Currie Prof. Daniel Prof. Leake Ora Carder Inez Cross Katherine Cross J. R. Edmondson Irving Fullington Faculty IXIemkers Prof. Loehr Prof. Perrv Prof. Posev Student Members Benton Harrison Mollie Beck Jenkins Russell Johnson Elsie Landers Richard Lipsey MiLDRED Mays Dr. Prodoehl Prof. Riddle Dr. Trexler Mildred Mullins Mary Elsie Orr T. W. Rogers J. E. Rush Earle Williams LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Kappa Phi Kappa (Honorary Eduiatlonal Fraternity) Founded at Dartmouth College, 1922. KAPPA CHAPTER Installed April 5, 1923. Purpose: To promote interest and scholarship among undergraduate male students in the Department of Education. Faculty Members Dr. Roy E. Hoke Professor R. H. Eliassen Paul Acton Leonard Alley Richmond Beaity Paul Green Student Members J. B. Hill Julian Hodges T. B. PlERSON W. H. Jenkins Irving Fullington Noble R. McEwen Lamar Mullendore Cleon Rogers Leon M. Stevenson LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Color Green and Gold Guv E. Snavelv Gilbert W. Mead V. n. Perry Si ma Upsilon Honorary Literary Friitrrnily THE ELZEVIRS Faculty Members Charles D. Mathews WvATT W. Hale Allen G. Loehr Flo=u:er: Jonquil J. Saxon Childers Clark C. Alexander Michel C. Huntley Student Members Richmond B eatty Cecil Hackney Jerry Bryan Seph Hall Paul Cooke Claud Keathley Irving Fullington T. W. Rogers LUCIEN GiDDENS ROGERS ShERWOOD Fred Short Honorary Member Octavus Roy Cohen LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Theta Chi Delta (National Honorary Chemical Fraternity) Founded at Lombard College in 1921. ALPHA EPSILON CHAPTER Established at Birmingham-Southern College, April, 1925. A. K. Boor Walter Clinton Jones Joe Abercrombie Ballard Bayliss Martin Briscoe Theron O. Cox Faculty Members J. W. Perry, Jr. Stidext Members Rogers Hill Sara McKenzie J. O. PiNKSTON Guy E. Snavely- W. A. Whiting RoscoE Stevens Stanley Watkins Floyd Weed Catherine Wood LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Cki Delta Phi Installed at Birmingham-Southern College, October, 1925. Purpose: To foster literary development among College and University Women. It is open to upper-class women of literary ability. Officers Lois Butler President Sadie Marahle Secretary Lei. A Ci.ARK rice-Presidciit Bertha Cummins Treasurer Ruth Tucker Corresponditi ; Secretary Faculty Advisors Guv E. Snavelv Gilbert Mead Gradi ' ate Member Beatrice Overall Members Lois Butler Caroline Kennedv Virginia Pegues Lela Clark Sadie Marable Mamie Reed Rebecca Cousins Mildred Mullins Ruth Tucker Bertha Cummins NL rion B. Whiting 158 7 ' QIlcu::iOPQQ3QP- i r-1 r-nr-rg LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Spikes Club Officers Richard C. Lipsey President Floyd Wilson Vice-President Sidney Malloy Secretary-Treasurer Honorary Member Coach Harold D. Drew Alumni Members Herston Cooper Otis Kirby Oscr Machado HoYT Levie Members Richmond C. Beatti ' J. B. Hill John B. Tate Howard Ellington Richard C. Lipsey Loren Williams John K. Hall Sidney Malloy Floyd Wilson Noble R. McEwen 159 :il ini ir Hit 11 UirilH H It II ir ir II irir ]i ir ir ir II Tq ■ ■ m ir 11 i[ i[ n II ii ii ir II II inni ii ii ii ir ii ir inr inrj LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Student and Life Service Volunteers Officers J. Thomas Renfro Presuit-nt Helen Ashwander ricc-Prrs ' ulinl Mamie Reed Secretary-Treasurer Members Helen Ashwander Ethel Fallon Thomas V. Stinson J. A. Baswell Mamie Reed Elsie Trotter Emelia Cavalier J. Thomas Renfro C. O. Waters Paul Cooke Edmund Rice Ethel Wilkes Teresa Drumheller Sara Riggs Leva Young C. H. Stewart LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Y. M. C. A. Officers John- K. Hall Pnsutcnt J. E. Rush l uc-Prcsidcnt Flovo Weed Si-crrtary J. B. Hill Treasurer Cabinet Members W O. Calhoun T. S. Harris Robert Sapp T. O. Cox Leon Mantel C. H. Stewart LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Y. W. C. A. Officers Mary Walter Smver .... President Mildred Mulli.vs . . First lice-President Mildred Mays Secretary Sarah Mackenzie . Second J ' ice-President Lois Butler Treasurer Annie Phillips V ndergraduate Representative Ruth Stith . Ruth Garrett Committee Chairmen Recreation Louise Keily . . Music Mary McGee . . Mamie Reed Social Service Alice Mims Membership Elsie Orr World Frlloius iip Mattie Will Guthrie . . . Felloivs iip Publicity Finance LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Bookstore Personnel An organization of eight students and the manager, born and conceived in co-opera- tion. To serve the student body as its slogan, the bookstore has proven a profitable asset to Birmingham-Southern, as all funds are turned directly over to the college. Manager Prof. W. B. Posey Assistant Majiagers R. W. Sapp J. W. LowERY J. G. Bradford Postmasler Bookkeeper Owen: Nelson J. O. Edwards Clerks Clint Elliot Elton Richards Ercelle Harrison James Munroe Olin Strickland 163 LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Ministerial Association ' Members ,fi+ ill Ullinillinr 11 II 11 II IM; H l!ll inill llir It lurji,- ■ ll  ll  lllllMlllir ll ll inm n w ll ll ll uinrirTrj LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Ministerial Association Officers T. S. Harris Presideni W. O. Calhoun ' .... Vice-President Harold Spradley Secretary W. D. Boling Treasurer E. M. Williams Cnrresponding Secretary C. H. Stewart Chaplain Members Q. V. Amberson S. T. Kimbrough Lon-nie Stabler W. B. Atkinson B. H. Kirby C. H. Stewart I.EE Barber R. I. Lawrence T. V. Stinson J. A. Baswell Floyd Lipsey O. M. Sullivan W. O. Calhoun W. O. Lynch John B. Tate W. L. Capps W. p. McCartv B. F. Tingle J. H. Chitwood J. S. Malloy C. M. Tyndall Elmer T. Clark Herbert Minga L. W. Tubes Paul Cooke W. L. Morris C. O. Waters C. L. Ellis O. G. Pope E H. West Cecil Ellisor L. E. Price Seay Wildsmith J. T. Ellisor G. A. Putnam E. M. Williams J. M. Floyd E. K. Reagan C. E. Wilson C. L. Fossett J. T. Renfro F. W. Wilson R. C. Lipsey Ferman Richey H. E. Wright J. K. Hall J. E. Rush E. F. Young T. H. Harris Ed Simmons Claude Keathly Ted Hightower Harold Spradley Edmund Rice J. H. Holdridge Nelson Guthrie 1 6s LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Clariosophic Literary Society Officers C. L. Ellis President Elsie Orr Vice-President Louise Keily Secretary Horace Hildreth Treasurer Helen Ashwaxder Clay Bailey Harry Bailey James Baswell Veva Baswell Myrtle Benton Paul Bishop j. d. boling W. D. Boling Max Breckenridce Jerry Bryan Wilbur Calhoun Lela Clark Frances Cordray Paul Dansby Camillius Dismukes Rebecca Echols Members C. L. Ellis Bessie Elrod Irving Fullington Mattie Will Guthrie Nelson Guthrie Bert Hargraves Myrium Harris Ted Hightower Horace Hildreth Amy Hynes David Hutto Charles G. Jones Louise Keily Clarence McDorman Bessie Bell McGee Irma Redus Mamie Reed Ferman Richey Mary Elsie Orr Aleta Robertson Virginia Sandusky Mary Walter Smyer T. V. Stinson Ruth Stith C. B. Pinkston Mamie Pritchett Nell Townsend Ruth Williams Floyd Wilson Harwell Wilson Andy Wissinger Leon Yielding Leva Young LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Belles Lettres Literary Society Officers Robert I. Lawrence President Mary McGee Vice-President Nettie Springfield Secretary Virginia Miller Treasurer JiMMiE Dink Adams Arthur Barham Glenn Barrow Lee Barber Lois Butler Charles Copeland Dorothy Cross Karl Morrison O. G. Pope Mildred Reed Sara Riggs Hendon Salter Hubert Searcy Members Inez Cross Katherine Cross Marjorie Cullican Alma Greene Florence Green Lois Green Doris Haigler Bryce Henderson L. O. Jaggers Edward Jenkins Thomas Mackey Mary McGee Margaret McGuire Virginia Miller Rudolph Scoit Mable Joe Smith Fred Short Harold Spradley Nettie Springfield John B. Tate C. M. Tyndall C. O. Waters Ethel Wilkes Avrill Wynn Virginia Young 167 LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Biology Club Officers J. O. PiNKSTON PrcsUnu J. A. Abercrombie rice-PrrsiJcnl E. D. Simmons Secretary C. H. Hodges Treasurer Prof. A. K. Boor Dr. Rov E. Hoke HOXOR.ARV MeMRKRS Dr. W. C. Jones Prof. . ' . G. Loehr Dr. Guv E. Snavelv Dr. W. a. Whiting Members J. A. Abercro.mbie p. E. Bostick E. F. Adams Hqyt M. Brock Joe Davis Bell Arthur Brown Hunt Cleveland R. A. FiNNELL Stella Goodman R. L. Hill C. H. Hodges J. W. HOLLINGSWORTH R. F. Johnson Sarah Mackenzie J. T. McPherson J. C. A. Macgio Jamie Meigs Elizabeth Murray J. O. Pinkston Ralph Segrest J. A. Selman E. D. SiM.MONS Mrs. V. a. ' HITING Gerald Williams Catherine Wood Perry Woodham LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX The Dramatic Club Mrs. Earle McLix, Director Officers Clarence Fossett President Leon Steven-son Vice-President Ann Phillips Secretary Clarence McDorman Business Manager LuciEN Allgood Leola Armstrong Richmond Beattv Albert Blaylock Arthur Brown Ruth Hill Carr Dorothy Cross Inez Cross Bertha Cummins Thelma Edmondson Clarence Fossett Ruth Garrett Florence Greene Members Etoyle Heitlinger Russell Johnson S. T. KiMBROUGH Elizabeth Logan Thomas Mackay DeValse Mann Leon Mantel AlLEEN Mosely Mary Moulton Clarence McDorman Noble McEwen Robert McGregor Ann Phillips Margaret Powell Virginia Ray Mabel Joe Smith Mary Frances Sowell Edith Starnes Leon Stevenson Ruth Stith Oris Sullivan Th omas R. Walker, Jr. Forrest Ward Edith West Hamilton West Catherine Wood ; 11 iriMnnni ir u nil II It ir ir ir ii ir ir II ir ir if ll ir| - . ■ LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Le Cercle Francais Purpose: To promote interest in the French language and acquaint students with French customs and culture, as well as the modern currents of French thought. Officers Ruth Tucker President Lois Butler Vice-President Mildred Mullin ' s Secretary Elizabeth Stone Treasurer Members Leola Armstrong Dorothy Cross Evelyn Price Elizabeth Brock Tennie Daugette Elizabeth Stone Lois Butler Charlotte Ducger Ruth Tucker Nena Joe Cantrell Ruth Garrett Clara Warren Ruth Hill Carr Grace Godfrey Alice Weed Frances Cordray Marion ' Hurlbert Virginia White Harriett Cottingham Louise Keily Leva Young Carlos Membreno Virginia Millicax Mildred Mullins Adele Pharo Edith Pippen iinnMriiiririniii II ir mnr-n- II ir II 11 II ir ir ii ir-f - . • boEmi ir iririi iririnni ii ir ii irii ii it ii ir if J LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Masonic Club May brotherly love prevail, and every moral and social virtue cement us. Officers Rudolph Scott President Harold D. Drew Vice-President Herbert Minga Secretary C. H. Stewart Treasurer Faculty Members Coach Harold D. Drew Prof. Allen G. Loehr Prof. R. S. Whitehouse Dr. Guy E. Snavely Dr. H. a. Trexler Members R. E. Bice Ralph Powers B. F. Tingle Eugene L. Camp Rudulph Scott Joe Travis C. L. Ellis C. H. Stewart C. M. Tyndal Douglas Humphries T. V. Stinson Herman A. Watson Herbert Minga V. B. Taunton Leon Yielding LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX DeMolay Club Officers Palmer Portis Presidt-ni Ernest Price rice-President Alex Patterson Secretary-Treasurer Thomas Barreit j. d. boling Harold Caldwell J. M. Ball, Jr. Brand Currie, Jr. Cecil Folmar Clarence Fosseit Members Thomas Giles Robert S. Glasgow, Jr. R. B. Henckell Edward Hopping Allen Harcrave Richard Hicks Harold Jett Leon Livingston DeValse Mann Alex Patterson Palmer Portis Ernest Price Albert Ray Charles Richardson Barney Roberts Walter Roe Sam Taylor Seay Wildsmith Wilmont Wood Earle Slye Clyde Yielding E. F. Young Harbin Singleton Robert Guthrie LA REVUE. NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Classical Club Organized at Birmingham-Southern College, November, 1921. Membership consists of students studying the classics. Officers Ruth Tucker PresiJrnl Velma Fallon ricr-Prrshiint Margaret Hanes Secif lary-Tn-asurer Gladys Brasfield Elizabeth Brock Emilio Cavalerio Alice Goddard Frances Green Members Margaret Hamilton Zelphia Hicks FouNTAiNE Howard Amy Hinds Claude Keathly Jean Kitchell Richard Lipsey Leon Livingston Mrs. Fay Lonnberg Maxine Massie Frances Mitchell Elsie Nesbitt Thomas Pettus Palmer Portis Walter Roe Cleon Rogers Mary- Rumsey Marjorie Sayer Harold Spradley Clarence Stewart William Snell Isabel Wilson H. E. Wright Jennie Mickle Wood Edwin Young LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Student Directory A booklet issued b - the Ministerial Association and presented to the students free of charge. That it will take its proper place among college traditions is almost a certainty. Staff T. S. Harris Editor L. H. Spradlev Assistant Editor W. B. Atkinson Business Manager Advertising Managers F. H. Searcy G. 15. Barrow LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Y. M. C. A. and Y. W. C. A. Students ' Handbook This booklet, commonly called the Rat Bible, is the real information publica- tion of the college. It is issued at the opening of school each year, and in it are pub- lished all of Birmingham-Southern ' s traditions, in addition to other facts of especial interest to new students. The Staff, 1925 Clarence L. McDorman .... Editor John Selmak -Issociatc Editor Leox Stevenson Sports Editor C. M. Small .... Business Manager James W. Thornton Assistant Business Manager Clarence L. Fossett Assistant Business Manager II irvinnrirviril II ir u ir ll ir ii ir ir il ir ir ifJmA, ■ ' LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX w,um mi;iUM ii,mnu ,iim UMiuinM- Debating Club Officers Clarence Fossett President Palmer Portis J ' ice-PresLient Irving Fullixgtox Secretary-Treasurer Faculty Member Professor W. D. Perry John Breckenridge Arthur Brown Glenn Barrow Harold Caldwell Camillus Dismukes Thad Ellisor Clarence Fossett Irving Fullincton Cecil Hackney Burk Harcrave Members Ted Hightower Robert Hinkle Paul Krebs Leon Livingston Candler Lazenby Leon Mantel Noble McEwen Percy Nolen Palmer Portis Edmond Rice Walter Roe Thomas Rogers J. E. Rush Robert Sapp Fred Short William Snell George Stafford Ralph Starkey Curtis Webb Charles White C. E. Wilson 176 LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Birmingkam-Southern Glee Club, 1926 O. Gordon Erickson , Director Officers Thomas D. Temple, Jr. John ' O. Newtox . . Business Manager Publicity Agent Woodson Burchfiel Victor Calhoun Wayne Dean Frank Brandon, Jr. A. D. Brown Lamar Branscomb Talbot Ellis Charles Fowler Thomas Barrett R. E. Rice Douglas Humphries Cecil Folmar Jeff Henry Taylor Henry T enors Camellius Dismukes Howard Ellington Clem Ferebee Paul Green Second Tenors J. B. Hill Roy Hitchcock J. D. Mann Jack Martin Baritoties J. Ward Keener C. C. Morgan Robert Russell Basses Hawthorne Massey John O. Newton Accompanist Ballard B. Bayliss Edward Jenkins LuDWiG A. Smith James Waggoner Edgar Moore Milton Speer Robert Sudderth John B. Tate, Jr. Thomas F. Walker, Jr. Rushton Smith Ralph Terhuxe Thomas D. Temple, Jr. Archie Phillips James Westbrook Clyde Yielding ■ ■ ■ . Unririr ir iiirir iiirv n uinnrii ii ii ii ii ii irii it ii i LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Ensley-Southern Club Composed of former students of Eiisley High School. Officers ACK YOUN ' C Preside Bradley Dehaney rice-President Jack Cowan Secretary Clara Warrei Treasurer Joe Abercrombie Louise Averyt Myra Beal Albert Blaylock J. M. Ball Jewel Beal Thomas Barrett Myrtle Benton Inez Cross Catherine Cross James B. Cowan Charlotte Duccer Wayne Dean Thomas Dykes J. W. Cantrell Velma Fallon Ethel Fallon Doris Finch Cecil Folmar Thomas David Grace Godfrey Members Hubert Green Robert Guthrie Doris Haigler James Harden Burke Hargreave Robert Hargreave Fountain Hair Helen Hurlbert Glady ' s McConatha Sarah McKenzie Mary ' McLaren Clarence O ' Brien Hubert Lavies Bessie Lewis Mable Ponder Cecil Ponder Alexander Patterson Cadle Propst Archie Phillips Florence Quigley Elva Roberts Mattie Wood Rutledge Sarah Rigcs Louise Roebuck Melvin Russel Helen Ransom Fred Short Earle Slye Miriam Sayers Charles Sanders Margaret Shepherd Joe Sellers Cecil Spearman John Thomas Loraine Varnon James Waggoner Lottie Williams Walter Woodrow Thomas R. Walker Clara Warren J. M. Young Virginia Young .78 LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Simpson-Soutkern Club Composed of former students of Simpson High School. Officers Perry W. Woodham President ViRGiKiA Webb Vice-President Maxixe Massie Secretary-Treasurer Members Paul Acton J. C. Anderson W. B. Atkinson R. L. Black Lamar Branscomb Bradley Brown Woodson Burchfiel John O. Cooper Charles A. Craven Brand Currie R. L. Dill, Jr. W. J. Duncan, James S. Dupuy Edith Echols Rebecca Echols LuciLE Elliott Elizabeth Farley Jr. LUCIEN P. GiDDENS Amelia Gilmer Cordelia Gilmer Charles Green Lois Greene Paul Greene Fulton Guthrie James E. Harris Martha Bell Hilton Anice Hinton B. L Hughen Candler Lazenby Edgar Lott Russell Malloy- Sidney Malloy Hawthorn Massie Maxine Massie Frank Morris W. P. McClendon Frank McConnell Wilbur McDonald Clarence McDorman Margaret Neill W. V. Neville Phillip Newbold Paul Nickerson Aubrey Palmer Catherine Phifer Lathem Pattie Elizabeth Powers Alfred Roebuck Cleo Rogers Hansom Sanders John A. Selman Brant Snavely Everett Snavely Walter S. Sowell C. H. Stewart Leon M. Stevenson Robert J. Sudderth H. A. Turner Percy R. Tyler C. M. Tyndall C. O. Waters Virginia Webb Adolph Whittle E. M. Williams August Winters Thomas F. Wolford Perry W. Woodham LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX ofc j-Jo! c i:ot c o ' g5l ' Mmor-Soutnern Club Composfd of Formrr Studcnis of Minor lliyli Scliool. Officers Rav Black Prrsidnit Harrv Dewver I ' icc-Prcsiili-nl Elizabeth Murray Secretary-Treasurer Ray Black Harry Drwyer Members Nannie Deav Hayes Robert Glasgow Nannie Lou Jenkins Clyde Starnes LoRiNE Varnon Elizabeth Murray Berta Palmer Lawson A ' ansant LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Hanes-Southern Club Composrd of former students of .1. 0. Hancs Higli School Officers James A. Baswell President B. F. Tingle Vice-President Herbert Hall Secretary-Treasurer Members J. A. Baswell F. L. Gillespie J. L. Baswell W. N. Guthrie Eucexe Freeze Herbert Hall John K. Hall J. T. Re.nfro B. F. Tingle Floyd Waldrop LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX A. -O. -Southern Club Composed of former sliuieiils of Oxford and A iiiislon High Scliools Officers D. M. Humphries President Homer Laxgford J ' icc-President Millard Glass Scerelary G. H. Wakefield Treasurer Members Frank Brandon Clement Ferebee Homer Lancford Lamar Branscomb Marbury Fulton Kirk Perrow Charles Dill Millard Glass G. H. Wakefield Thelma Edmondson Douglas Humphries Dean Walker LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Tke Greeks, 1925-1926 Organized October, 1922 An Interfraternity Social Organization OFFICERS LOREN Williams President Thomas R. Walker, Jr J ' ice-President Richard Fennell Secretary-Treasurer Homer Crim Social Secretary HoYT Brock Frank Cairns Homer Crim Richard Fennell Charles Fowler W. D. Graves Ralph Hackney Henry Hancock Hubert Hodges Fenton Jackson John Jenkins William Jenkins MEMBERS E. K. Mann John Mathison C. C. Morgan Frank Morris Frank McConnell Robert McGregor Japeth Rawls John Selman Walter Sowell Robert Sudderth Thomas R. Walker, Jr. LoREN Williams LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX 1 8+ LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Men ' s Pan-Hellenic Council Officers Thomas R. Walker, Jr., Pi Kappa Alpha PrrsiAent LoRE Williams, Kappa Alpha I ' lcc-Pifsident J. O. PiNKSTON, Phi Alpha Secretary-Treasurer Members Alplui Tau Omei a Kappa Alplia Phi Alpha Japeth E. Rawls Loren- Williams J. O. Pinkston Leon M. Stevenson Carlton L. Perdue Russell F. Johnson Pi Kappa Alpha Sigma Alpha Epsilon Theia Kappa Mit Thomas R. Walker, Jr. Hugh Abernethv Clarence Fossett William H. Jenkins Lamar Branscomb John Selman ■ ' ■ ' ■■,.,■,..„.. „,. ■■ 1. M .. 1. .. .1 11 ir r n II ir ir inr - . • ytunEnilJUI 11 11 mill 11 11 inriMI 11 Jljm mtir JtltJ LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Women ' s Pan-Hellenic Council Officers Helen Grain, Alpha Omicron Pi President EroYLE Heitlixcer, Alpha Alpha Alpha J ' ice- President Sarah Mackenzie, Zeta Tau Alpha Secretary Mary McLaren, Kappa Lambda Treasurer Etovle Heitlin ' ger Myra Beal Lola Jacobs Helen Grain Alice Weed Ghristine Saunders Members Alpha Alpha Alpha Margaret Hanes Alpha Alpha Alpha Alpha Alpha Alpha Alpha Omicron Pi Alpha Omicron Pi Alpha Omicron Pi Sarah McKenzie Garolyn Lockwood Elizabeth Stone Evelyn Johnson . Mary McLaren . Virginia Miller . Ruth Tucker . Lois Butler . . . Zeta Tau Alpha . Zeta Tau Alpha . Zeta Tau Alpha Kappa Lambda Kappa Lambda Kappa Lambda . . Theta Pi . . Theta Pi . . Theta Pi 187 LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Pi K appa Alpha Founded at the University of Virginia, March i, 1868 Colors: Garnet and Gold Publicalion: Shield and Diamond Delta Chapter Established 1871 Flower: Lily of the Valley H. B. Englebert Members in Faculty Allen G. Loehr Mike Huntley Richmond C. Beatti- Miles Hardy, Jr. John W. Drinkard William H. Jenkins Active Chapter Class of 1Q26 Robert S. Manar P. Turner Scott Class of ig2j John A. Mathison Frank G. McConnell Holmes A. Turner Thomas R. Walker Charles D. Miller Thomas F. Wolford Otto L. Ekwurzel J. Emrick Faulk Benjamin E. Glasgow Walter F. Gravlee Class of IQ2S, Jefferson D. Henry Taylor H. Henry J. Hubert Lavies Carl T. McLaughlin Francais T. McTrottes Frank Richard LuDwiG A. Smith Thomas M. Sutter J. Harvey Williamson ' Perry W. Woodham Harold Beagle Harold Finney ' Jackson Finney Class of ig2g Ralph Gravlee John Holcombe Edward Jenkins Robert Lacey Edgar Lott Oscar Martin Cecil Murray Ernest Neippe 189 LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX ♦ Sigma Alpha Epsilon Founded at the Universit ' of Alabama, March 9, 1856 Colors: Royal Purple and Old Gold Publication: The Record Floiver: Violet ALABAMA IOTA CHAPTER Established 1S78 Hugh Abernethy Lamar Branscomb Active Chapter Class of 1Q26 W. J. Duncan Don ' Fullbright Theodore Pearson Thomas Temple Earl Williams Milton Yielding Walter Britt Woodsen Buchfiel Class of igsy Willett Rudulph Homer Crim William D. Graves Hamilton West Joe Akin Robert Bowden Frank Brandon Hunt Clev eland Class of 1Q28 Lex Fullbright R. G. Pearson Kirk Perrow Brant Snavely Robert J. Sudderth Guy Travis Gerald Williams J. H. Wilson John Bartlett Bradley Brown Class of JQ2Q R. a. Hurley Edgar Moore Hanson Sanders Hugh Spruell Percy Tyler x DOLPH Whittle LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Alpka Tau Omega Colors: Old Gold and Sky Blue Flowe Publication: The Palm of Alpha Tau Omega White Tea Rose Beta Beta Chapter Established in 1883 Member ix Faculty J. W. Perry, Jr. LUCIAN Allgood John Robert Cole Active Chapter Class of 1926 Howard Ellington John Newton Japeth Rawls Leon Stevenson Charles W. White Cecil Hackney Class of 1927 S. T. KiMEROUGH Frank Morris Thomas Pettus Guy E. Snavely, Jr. BowDEN Beck Class of 1928 Ralph Hackney Walter Sowell G. H. Wakefield Forrest Ward Thomas Barrett James Cooper Class of ig2g Joe Cooper Walter McNeil, Jr Jim Simmons A. C. Shelley Harris Stephens Sloan Williams LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Kappa Alpka Founded at Washington and Lee ITniversity, 1865 Colors: Crimson and Old Gold Floiucrs: Magnolia and Red Rose Puhlicalinn: Kappa Alpha Journal Phi Chapter Re-established 1922 Members in Faculty M. M. Black, Jr. W. D. Perry AcTivE Chapter Class of 1926 Eddie J. Pace W. B. Harrison, Jr. LOREN Williams Carlton L. Perdue Frank Cairns Class of jg2 ' Lawson Davidson Ross P. DODDS Owen Nelson LuciEN Giddens Herbert E. Childs Jack Howard Class of 1928 Fenton Jackson Ralph Lazenby Heflin Nolen Frank Ward Henry Feusch James Dickinson William Donnell Fontain Howard Class of IQ2Q John Jenkins Bruce Kelly Candler Lazenby Homer Langford Elbert Martin Fred Martin Arthur Moody C. C. McCoy Ira Mitchell Yuilee J. Pace James Westbrooks LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX 196 LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Tketa Kappa Nu Founded at Drury College, June 9-10, 1924 Colors: Crimson, Silver and Black Floivcr: White American Beauty Rose Publication: Tlieta News of Theta Kappa Nu Alabama Beta Ckapter Established 1924 Member in Faculty William A. Whitixg Ballard Bayliss HoYT Brock Arthur Brown Active Chapter Class of 1926 J. Thaddeus Ellisor Claren ' ce L. Fossett Class of ig y Clarence McDorman Lamar Mullendore C. H. Hodges Jamie Meics John A. Selman, Jr. Gilmer Phillips Palmer Portis Class of ig28 Ernest Price Walter Roe Edward Seagers Melvin Thweatt T. B. White Conrad Baker Brand Currie Camillus Dismukes Class of ig2Q Cecil Ellisor Ted Hightower Horace Holdridge Frank Hughes Ernest K. Mann, Jr. Milton Speer LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Pki Alpka Founded at Birmingham-Southern College September 29, 1921 Colors: Blue and White White Carnation Members ix Faculty Roy E. Hoke Robert S. Whitehouse M. E. Blake Russell Johnson Active Chapter Class of 1926 Edward Lappage Richard Lipsey Cecil Morgan J. O. PiNKSTON Hugh Stevenson Martin Briscoe William H. Clift Class of 1 027 Richard Fennell Charlie Fowler Albert Blaylock Noble McEwen Fred Mooty James D. Boyd DeValse Mann Class of ig S Robert McGregor William Snell Mark Taliaferro Edwin Young Walker Berry Charles Dill Class of ig2Q Clement Ferebee Millard Glass Tom O ' Brien John E. O ' Brien William Kirby Carl Moebes ' LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Ml II II II If lllliriiiiiriii[ ; LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Zeta Tau Alpha Founded at Virginia State Normal College, 1898 Colors: Steel Gray and Turquoise Blue Publication: Themis Flower: White Violet MoLLiE Beck Jenkins Alpha Nu Chapter Established 1922 Active Chapter Class of ig26 Sarah Mackenzie LuciLE Williams Catherine Wood Lucile Cannon Class of ig2j Carmelite Jackson Mildred Lenard Elizabeth Stone Carolyn Lockwood Alice Mims Class of 1028 AlLEEN MOSLEY May ' re Moultok Frances Mitchell Evelyn Price Edith West Grace Bennett Marie Dick Class of ig2Q Martha Belle Hilton Marion Hurlbert Elva Roberts Frances Rowe Sara Stephens Mildred Wright LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX nn n r ' ri ' M Mni ' i M ' ' ' ii ' ' iTS ' i ' PiTmriMv;i- M ' ' ' ' vin ' riTiT:TnM ' iTi ' mTiTrrrriv.v Th LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Color: Cardinal Alplia Omicron Pi Founded at Barnard College, 1897 Publication: To Drazma Flower: Jacqueminot Rose Helen Grain Rebecca Cousins Tau Delta Chapter Established in 1925 Active Chapter CAass of 1926 Thelma Edmondson Janie Hill Mildred Mullins Class of igz-j Rebecca Williamson ' Virginia Pegues Celia Roebuck Ruth Hill Carr Harriet Cottingham Class of IQ28 Lois Greene Marion Ormand Christine Saunders Annie Sue Stansell Eliza Stokes Alice Weed Elizabeth Logan Mildred Miller Class of ig2g Mary Frances Sowell Mary Stead Virginia Webb Tennie Wood LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX I II irvinfinnrn II II |[ 11 n II II II irw II II ir UTTTT LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Kappa Lambda Founded at Birmingham-Southern College, November, 1922 (Granted Cliapler of Alpha Chi Omega, February 8, 1926) Roval Blue and Grav Floiver: Inez Cross Katherine Cross Active Chapter Class of 1Q26 Bertha Cummins Margaret Hanes Maxine MassIe Regina Moreno Mary Walter Smyer LuciLE Davis Charlotte Dugcer Class of 192 Grace Godfrey Virginia Hill Evelyn Johnson Mary McLaren Mable Nesbitt Ruth Davidson Class of IQ3S Margaret Martin Maude Moore Mildred Orr Annie Phillips Helen Albert May ' me Bagley Mary Carmichael Class of iQ2g Bessie Fossett Elsie Nesbitt Sallye Roe Louise Rowland Marjorie Sayer Clara Warren Grace Wiggins LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Alpka Alpka Alpka Founded at Southern I ' niversity, 1907 (Inslalted as Xi Chapter of T ieta V psilon, Frbruary 20, JQ26,) Re-established at Birmingham-Southern College, 1922 Colors: Myrtle and Gold Flower: Marechal Neil Rose Active Chapter Class of 1926 Myra Beal Frances Green Class of ig2y Etoyle Heitlikcer Virginia Hagood Isabelle Wilson Kathleen Barksdale Myrtle Benton Class of IQ28 Lola Jacobs Bessie Lewis Mable Ponder Agnes Ray Jewel Beal Class of 1920 Anice Hinton Margarite Prince Miriam Sayer Leo Williams HI U ir inMrmriiiriir ,r 1[ 1[ II Hinr II i[ ir iijuij - . ■ . |]tl[ ini II wir If iiilir iiiMririiini iiii irinrif in LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Tketa Pi Founded at Birmingham-Southern College, 1925 Colors: Sapphire and Gold Ftonucr: Duchess of Wellington Rose Active Chapter Class of ig2y Mary McGee Ruth Tucker (Mrs.) Marion Whiting Ten ' nie Daugette Class of 192S Virginia Miller Josephine Stephens Leola Armstrong Alice Goddard Class of I92g Alice Morefield Edith Pippen Cadle Propst Margaret Shepard Virginia White Y i ii i I I I I ]r 1 1 II 11 jni 11 11 H I PT P - i - ■ ' gE ini ir WHK null irinr niii II ;iil J1J11I1[ i: J LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Ju mpmnrtam, 3lnlitt (Sullnir latnn Si April 24. 1925 iHruibrr yiii Alplm iFratrniilu HI iiviriilf ir ir li IT i 1. 1IJIKI.MIL II II M ll , U LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Staged Sent It BtJRNT HAJs I S?OtJP COLIv CS- ' Jfi£V £ C :: A. ' ' v£, SH Pf= c- Cj-£ s .M.7 Af o TDf =7: PREAMBLE F olloivmg u tne custom of Sears-Roe- buck, New York Bargain House ana many other eminent husiness estahhsnments dealing with the general public, Burnt Ham Sou College is presenting herexuith a re- ■ ort drawn w by the Steived and Sent It, executive body, for the perusal of customers and prospective victims. The re ' ort is dratvn u{) every twenty-five years, this one marking the close of the first quarter of the Tiuentieth century. LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX StetVed Sent H B G- CHEESe ASSOC AT OjV Burnt Haj i S?otJp Coi r G-K -7 £i A?£ GOA A , Sh PF I I 3- Cj. S k ' . H. T PA = ' R G T Dff . O o v T M ss- M , vs cyroA? -G-JSA V Afe v Z_, US V£ R QUARTER-CENTENNIAL REPORT ON COLLEGE ' S PROGRESS Classes were disbanded on New Year ' s Day. A ballot cast by faculty members overwhelmingly favored a holiday. A meeting of the instructors brought out the fact that many were on the Anti-Saloon League drive to rid the city of the liquor pestilence, and a lengthy session held in one of Birmmgham ' s leading saloons left a large per- centage of them indisposed. The new year was ushered in gloriously. Hank Lisen- hucker enrolled for classes at mid-term wearmg the latest thmg m high toppers. The eleven won a great victory over Prmceton and easily defeated Harvard, while Marion won a close game from the B. S. H. C. boys. The reserve strength was badly crippled when he sprained his ankle alighting from his horse, Sealem. Enrollment has increased apace. Two new fellows enrolled at opening, while one more entered at mid-year. Coach Weesqushum was elated at the number of men reporting for the football team, having two extra players, one of the regular men, however, being crippled with both legs broken. A new set of nose guards was oidered for the team. The team this year journeyed to Hongkong and played the Honkkonk Geese. Seasick- ness caused considerable indisposure among the players. The president bought a new horse and had his buggy repainted. The Christmas holidays were prolonged when someone stole the bell from the belfry and there was nothing to ring to start classes. One of the students was graduated this year and will take up postgraduate work at Bryce Institute, Tuscaloosa, Ala. Reports by the post-rider have it that he is progressing nicely with his work. 1 !)( « Crops were good this year in this district and many of the students remained on the campus during the summer hoeing cotton and many of them made their expenses for the year at pulling fodder. The highway at the fo ot of the hill was bad and many of the students left their wagons and mules at home and walked to school. LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX It B G- CHGESe ASSOC j4T G Btjrnt Hajm: S?oxjp Cgi x g-i ' TWSVX?. G 0 A V£ ' , Sh PPIA O- Cl.e S .M. 7 PAPJ= AT£ jEPr Another student enrolled. 190S Regret to report a serious loss in enrollment. Cy Parsintuck mistook the kerosine jug for his corn container and drank too deeply and not wisely. 1909 A great change has come over the campus. The new president, having a daughter of colege age, started her to school and two other young ladies immediately joined. This addition drew attention in ail sections of the state. Three students came from the prep school over on the other side of town, while at least four others have avowed their intention of coming to B. H. S. C. Enrollment jumped from 15 to 21, including the three co-eds. A faculty ruling has forced the co-eds to sit on the back seat. Their hoops flying up in the faces of faculty and students obstruct the view. With the number of female students increased to five the advent of celluloid collars has been noted. The Bear Grease Club was formed to stimulate social functions on the campus. This club is advocatmg revolutionary changes in attire in which high-top boots, overalls and old hickory shirts would be changed to white shirts, stiff collars and straight-legs. The smell of goose oil and other grease on hirsute adornment has a peculiar rancid odor. LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX StcstVed It B G- Cneese Ass oc tr OA Burnt Hajsa: s?otJp Coli Kcs-e: ' JH£ ?£ Goa zv ' , Sh ppi wo- CJ- JS t T .M. l Af R G tDbPT. A waiting list for the Bear Grease Club has been formed and rumors of the founding of another rival club are abroad. Social functions have become quite promiscuous. Several members of the Bear Grease Club made calls on young lady students during the year and reported back favorably to their fellow members, with the result that several of the co-eds have become quite popular. 1913 This year was a land-mark in the history of the institution. One of the new gas buggies, which the professors told the students about, came on the campus, bringing a new young lady student. A new club was immediately formed, Slickumback and Shinem being its handle. I9l;5 Old grads would hardly know their Alma Mater. The enrollment this year numbered 30, with 1 of the students being young ladies. Much competition is being put up by the two social clubs for the favors of the co-eds. A riot was staged when a member of the Bear Grease Club threw away his bottle of grease and changed over to the Slickumback and Shinem Club by using candle-stick tallow and bee ' s wax on his hair. The Bear Grease Club charged that he was intimidated. A faculty announcement that examinations would be discontinued and that class attendance would be optional drew immediate response. The enrollment this year was 2500. 1916 Another increase in enrollment brought the total up to 3000. The football team had a great season, playing a hard schedule. The boys encountered Jacksonville State Normal, Albertville Aggies, Marion, and Pratt City. A dancing pavillion was built on the campus and enrollment went up to 4000. A swimming pool, race track, and several bootleg joints are under construction. The Bear Grease Club and Slickumback and Shinem Club have now branched out into exceedingly active social fraternities, of which there are 20 now, and it is due to their valuable aid that the college can boast of so many modern improvements. 1918 The advent of the shimmy has all but wrecked the school. A shimmy dance in the college pavillion crashed in the floor and it is now in the hands of the salvagers. Enrollment dropped off 500 this year. LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX StetVed Seiit It BURNT HAJS t S?OtJP C0I.I K S-E; The faculty has decided to resume the custom of holding regular tests and a mid-term examination. Enrollment is now down to 250. 1920 The race track is gone — enrollment 237. 1921 Class attendance was reinstalled as a compulsory matter this year and only three cuts are allowed for each class. September found the registrar not so busy as in past years, 38 being enrolled. 1922 A dean was hired to check up on absences — 14 students immediately left school. 1923 Due to the decreased enrollment the spacious and roomy gymnasium was torn down. The honor system was inaugurated by the Stewed and Sent It, seven students were shipped for handing in papers already written before class time. 1924 Fees and room rent were increased. Enrollment dropped off 1 more. 1925 The seven students who are daily attending classes at Burnt Ham Soup College have come to a deadlock over the fraternity question and due to their inability to agree as to whether the college should be non-frat or ultra-frat they have decided to drop their class work and take to the platform to argue their cause. TTie college president has a nice crop of turnip-greens growing on the campus and the buildings make good store houses. 1926 The president was buried in his front yard. An appropriate selection from The Deserted Village was inscribed on his tombstone. He died of starvation. FINIS. FRATERNITY DIRECTORY AND MEMBERSHIP QUALIFICATIONS The fraternity group is limited according to home office rules, but the various chapters here are constantly expanding under a special grant of larger numbers until they can gain back their former political dominance and get enough money in their treasuries to build and furnish their various private klaverns. LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX It B G- Chsess Ass 0C 4T 0 Burnt Hajvi goup CoLXvKg-g ' ' 7 jEiy ' ?£ GC VA ' , ShiPP I WG- Cl.E ' fSSi ' —- . M. TfPAPR__ rp£ The system of pledging new members is unique at our college. The freshmen who appear to be the best dressed for the first five or six days and are willing to take certain senior members to the various theaters and buy them a voluminous supper at Britling ' s afterwards are first investigated. Of course the step now taken is common to all fra- ternities all over the land, but for the benefit of those who are ignorant of the system the plan is here given. A letter is written back to an alumni member of the chapter that is about to pledge the victim at the home town of the victim. If the alumnus reports favorable the chap is conscripted. The differences that are deemed favorable are as follows: First, if his father has any money, no further questions are asked. Second, if he has no money, but can play any one of the sports to perfection, the fraternities can get him a job working for the college at room and board a month. Third, if he was in the first three scholastically at his high school and also has a rich relative, no questions are asked (there are very few of this type found). Fourth, if the pursued victim was the home town sheik and had his hair marcelled every week and his eyebrows pulled to the proper number, and possessed winning ways with the females, owned two work shirts of the backwoods type, or still possessed his grandfather ' s old corduroy breeches and a possible extra pair of shoes of the clodhopper variety, and had a figuratively speaking sweet but dumb look, then he was judged an excellent prospective pledge. Fifth, if his brother or father or uncle had been a sorry member, then it was naturally decided that the offspring was a chip off the old block, and would be good enough as a member. Sixth, if the relatives of the besought had ever held any ofhce in the village, from court- house lounger and constable up to judge and sheriff, then he will be automatically selected. If a fellow can ' t come up to these qualifications, he is judged haud sufficiens. In order that the candidates may know which fraternity to make overtures to, the list of their respective desires of new member qualifications is given as follows: A. T. O. — We crave athletics, dramaticists, beauty, and Money. Pi K. A. — We want only athletes, suitable political material, no scholarship desired, and, of course, MONEY. 5. A. E. — We are trying to build up our athletic group, our panti-y uith the favorite jellies, and need members who can help us pay off the mortgage with Money. T. K. N. — Our house needs furnishing badly, our scholars nearly equal the num ' ber of the Pi K. A. ' s (TWO) ; if you can wear your clothes well and put up a good front that is all that is necessary. K. A. — We are out for quantity, not quality; our athletes easily become captains; our alumni at last are making money, but we want men with Money. Phi A. — We also hope to be national some day. If your father is a furniture dealer — all right, we need some furniture to replace our burnt pieces. Money is the least of our worries since we pledged Mark. You know Mark ' s father is a Banker. Yet we like Money. Application blanks may be secured at the bursar ' s office or from any of the fraternity members. Step up before the quota for this term is filled. LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX StcsiVed B G- CHeESB ASS C AT OAf ■ ' 7yc=v ?i= G =) V V . Sh ppia g- Cu. 3a —- ■ - ' ' ' JS Z-Pf, STUDENTS ' COMMON BUILDING This handsome structure, just completed this year, 1926, the Stewed and Sent It are very proud of. Feeling that it was alone their untiring effort which put across this masterful stroke of development across, the governing body took much pride m staging the dedication of the building, at which many prominent members of the Stewed and Sent It spoke. In this spacious Common Building there is ample room to study. In- dividual booths are made for those who like seclusion and they are very roomy for two. This is calculated to relieve the library of much congestion and give more space for those students who wish to use the table to study. PRIDE OF THE CAMPUS The front steps of this proud edifice, it will be noted, are widened unduly. This is to provide bountiful standing room for the sheiks who park on the heights and look out over the campus for their sheikesses. This, too, is figured to assist the librarian in her work of providing studying and reference facilities for students in the library. The traffic at the front of the library building will be greatly diminished. In this building will also be placed the pay telephone station. This move was made in order to enable the bookstore clerks to have room to wait on the customers without interference from nickel- diggers, who spend the day calling for busy numbers, hoping the operator will open the flood gates of coin and let the change roll. This handsome building is a creation of a peculiar blend of Spanish, Gothic, and Venetian architecture, and is one of the most modern Students ' Common Buildings in the South. It is located on Burnt Ham Soup College campus. -£ ]1 ;i II I Lint II II II irjmj,- . ■ Ql H iril iiwir ir iimr ii ii inm im ii  n ir it inrgj LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX St€stVed Sent It B G- Chbesb Assoc AT oa Burnt Hajs i s?oup CoivtvKcs-s; 7! e=v j== G z v£, Sh pp zwg- Cj-e g t - - .M. TJPAPR G tD pt: YE COLLEGE LIFE IN WHICH THE AUTHOR RELATES STARTLING CHARACTERISTICS OF THE MEMBERS OF THE FOUR ACADEMIC CLASSES A soap-bubble bursts wben it is touched; a mirage van pursued, and the blue of the sky is colorless at close rans the celebrities assert that fame is empty. Vanity of vanities, saith the preacher, all is vanity. There is no pot of gold at the end of the rainbow. shes whe ;. The 1 )roached ; the horizon ay that wealth is dece azed at the apathy of upper class manhood, he he deems to have been under-pnvileged. The iophomores reduce his ego and the world of solid How tragical to be always the discoverer! Behold the freshman. Confident of his world, i proceeds to unveil knowledoe for the beneht of the sole response is sighs of long-suffering patience. TTiei realities begins to crumble. The first shock of seeing himself as the victim of delusions is sickening, but he convalesces with a voracious appetite for more. About that time the seepage of knowledge begins its deadly work, and ere long his mountain of conceit avalanches Inio a bottomless pit. The universe appears in danger of collapse. He is seized with panicky fears. Old ambitions lose their cutting edge and dreams their glamor. He flounders onward because the present region Is too ghastly for a stopping place. As a sophomore he discovers thai the world moves on despite, and develops a degree of cynicism. By mid-term he ha3 grown a mania for iconoclasm, and wonders constantly how the world lives under such clouds of falsity. But ever and anon he inwardly trembles a; some cherished tradition topples over the brink and is swept toward the port of missing ideas. He is eternally hungry for something and knows not that for which he yearns. The junior becomes strongly suspicious that the whole thing is a mirage — this chaotic jumble called knowledge — and hastens to remove the traces of hysteria from his personality. It behooves him to make up his second year flunks and wrest a little respect from the erslwhile despicable instructors. It is here that all hope ceases. Because of the inexorable routine of a world loo well established, the would-be bolshevik must become a well-oiled cog or be ground out. In this process of conformity the spark of greatness wanes and dies. The junior year is a belt of fire through which the embryo hero cannot pass. If the world would find a deliverer it must take a sophomore — crude, raw. and unpolished though he be! Juniors are notorious Intellectual cowards— not only refusing to accept the consequences of their thinking, but refusing to think any further. With a blase altitude they pour the cold waler of insincere contempt on the moiling sophomores and reach out a hand of brotherhood to the freshman, whose verdant conceit they secretly envy, and whose disillusionment ihey vaguely deplore. There is no hope for the juniors, nor can there ever be; they must needs become the fatted bourgeoisie that prop up the collegiate commonwealth. Commg as a glorious climax lo four years of a prescribed and pr we have named it wrong — it is an anti-climax. Behold the conqueror going forth to conquer. Leaving behind responsibilities, and unmastered technique, he goes out to become Leavmg student life the same as it was when Cain out to revamp the world. For a more ludicrous figui But lei us can stand il fo that your hour cribed process is the senior. trail of deserted ideals, shirked builder of the social structure, nd Abel had the first Pan-Hellenic row. he goes search the comics in vain. ot blame the senior too bitterly, nor withhold his commencement laurels. Anyone who years ought to have the flowers. And lest you should laugh at him loo much, remember ship hav ill come, with all the embellishments that lii Poor fish, you will merely be a later model! nd Billike ontribute. -R. Z. — g :( i P s illiriMrniriiwMii I. ir I I ir i r ii ii ir i f ii ir ir ] lTrTT ;Jj_| i rTrTririrTnr II If I I I I I I If ' ■ ' ' ■■ ■■ ■■ ' ■ TT LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Ste d S ii It Burnt HAis t s?otjp Ooh zj g-- ■ TviE v-Ci GcD vA , Sh ppi g- Cj-s sm M. 77PAPR r_p = 7: po v t: M ssjEyVi , vs jsarro ? -GjeA v ' FS ' J—, USM£ ALL-AMERICAN FACULTY TEAM Lifl End Prof. Riddle: He receives everything from alibis to bum checks, and is often left at that. Left Tackle — Dr. Snavely: He tackles anybody who has the dinero. Lefl Guar J— Dr. Trexler: He left Walla Walla, Washington, but the guard must have preceded him. Center Prof. Black: He plays a roving game not confined to solitary hikes to Red Mountain. Right Cuard — Miss Gregory: She guards right conduct in the library with fierceness and tenacity. Right Tackle — Prof. Posey: He tackles anything right in history and throws it for a loss. Right End — Dean Mead: He ends many collegiate careers. Quarterback — Prof. Alexander (Captain): He would lead us all to Glory. Left Halfback — Prof. Loehr: If he got any closer the malleus would hop on the incus and hammer out more vibrations than the stapes could carry off. (For reference work: Breese ' s Psychology). Right Halfback — Prof. Moore: He runs excellent interference; his work in the Sopho- more-Freshman conflict is especially noteworthy. Fullback — Miss Wilson: (At a formal social function). Profs ' . Team Best Ever Realizing the tremendousness of the task and even hesitating to presume to select from the host of excellent material on hand a picked eleven which wrould rank higher than any other eleven in the squad, the Stev ed and Sent It, after careful consideration and minute investigation, aimounces its choice of an All-American Faculty Eleven from our squad of knowledge dispensers. Tliough in trembling we chose them, in loud praise we proclaim them, and defy any all-star faculty eleven from coast to coast to excel our selections in their picked fields. Though we feared, in making our choice, that some worthy candidate would be over- looked, if such be the case we promise that on our next quarter-centennial report the error will be rectified, but we fear no competition from outside. miniinnrinnrii ]l l[ it ll n w n inr n ir ir ir 1 ' - ■ ■ LA REVUE, NI NETEEN TWENTY-SIX SteiVed Sent It B G- Chbesb Assoc At oa Burnt Hajsa: s?otjp Oouu c i ' 7 £i GCD V V , Sh P I WC- Cj-£ 3 r . M. 7 PAPP, G T D PT. At ends there is probably no bursar in the world who can boast of more alibis and bum checks received than Prof. Riddle, while he is selected especially for left end on account of being left flat on many occasions. At right end Dean Mead is no exponent of the proverb, Everything is well that ends well (if there is any such) for though he does a good job at ending collegiate careers, it is not always well for the endee. Certainly at tackles our team cannot be surpassed. Undoubtedly, Dr. Snavely is the outstanding tackle of the year, never missing the money-carrier, and throwing him for loss after loss. There is no competition in Prof. Posey ' s class for tackling the right in history. If ever America put over a deal with fairness and faithfulness of policy, if ever an Amer- ican historical figure was an upright gentleman, if ever a history writer put down in his works a correct account of a historical event, Posey ' s American History class will never discover the secret. At guards we have chosen two strong candidates. Dr. Trexler, for left guard, is the outstanding choice, for the guards of his ward must have left before he departed from Walla Walla, or else how come he ' s here? If any proof is needed as to Miss Gregory ' s qualifications at right guard, start a hoarse-whisper conversation in the library. At center we selected a small man, but one who is well qualified. Prof. Black plays a wide-range game, and his hikes to Red Mountain of a Sunday are not his main merits as a nominee for choice as a rover. The only selection possible at quarterback and the outstanding bid for captain is Prof. Alexander. He is a veritable Moses attempting to lead the modem children of darkness from out a social wilderness by his inspirational talks and sermons in Bible I. Left halfback goes to Prof. Loehr. We could not allow him closer range, for the prevalence of deafness where unduly loud noises are continually heard, forbids it. Public Speaking Class members are either immune or stone deaf. Right halfback is an important position on the team. Prof. Moore wins the berth by his great ability as an interferes As chairman of the Society of Prevention of Cruelty to New Students, he ranks as leader of the interference against the Sophs in the Freshman- Sophomore melees. The fullback position is awarded to Miss Wilson, for present-day styles demand a full back. LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Sieved Sent It B G- CHeSSE ASSOC AT GA Burnt Uajstl gotrp CoivX Kcs- ; 7;Vi==V € i GO Vn £v Sh PPIAIG- 0 £ ' € c ' .M.T PAf O T Dj pt. NEW SORORITY HOUSE One of the greatest moves for the betterment of social life on the campus has been made during the past year in the movement of the sororities from out of the rooms m the college buildings on the campus and placmg them m the fine new buildmgi situated at the corner of Eighth Avenue and College Street. BOAST OF THE SORORITIES As shown in the picture above, an architect ' s drawing (the architect was hired by the Stewed and Sent It) , the new Sorority House is one of the most modem chicken houses in this district. Well ventilated with convenient communication with the outside world, plenty of liberty for spying on the next door neighbor or looking out to see whom the rival sorority girl is rushing, the new building is a masterpiece of artistry. Tlie Stewed and Sent It feel well pleased over their work in furnishing the co-eds with such a well-appointed Sorority House. The removal from the classroom halls will insure against blocking of the hallways by the college sheiks, and having the sororities all in the same house together will better facilitate their fighting. It will not be necessary to seek long for the sought-for rival, and restricting the battle ground to one house should make the war wax warmer. Then catty remarks can be more easily overheard, and thus the battle will be better stimulated. Truly, this was a masterful move by the Stewed and Sent It. ■ — LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX StB Wed Sent It B G- CneEss As.soc Ar 0 Burnt HAJs t SfotJP Coi ivKcs- ynS f C D VA £, SH Pf= AIC- CJS S ri - - .Ai. T PAf f , S T D£J . SPECIAL INTELLIGENCE TEST Note: The Sfewed and Sent It is conducting this lest in order to deter- mine the percentage of morons and imbeciles to be found m the modern co-educational college. Please answer questions backwards, turning the tops of all letters down, on the back side of this pag;. using only one side of the paper. The questions are taken from history, current events, and vital statistics. 1 . Isn ' t it a proof of greater patriotism in our present day for the fact that if Paul Revere should ride down any road in the dead of night crying, To Arms! To Arms! that he would find ambushed automobiles all along the way with people already u p in arms? 6. If Nero had used a Scixophone instead of a fiddle at the Burning of Rome wouldn ' t have been a hotter affair if so how many? 3. If fifteen pirates on a man ' s chest in olden days killed him instead the modern flapper proof that piracy has passed from our midst? 1 7. What is a giraffe party, if so who is it? 9. If a bear raid on the markets runs stocks down and a bullish movement tends to make them ascend should any student who can bear the bull shot in classrooms without ; change be ineligible for the Carnegie Hero Medal? 77. If Sally was found at three o ' clock in the morning ' all alone singing cheating on me doing the tramp, tramp, tramp act near the end of the long dusty road would it necessarily influence the current quotations on roller skates? 1 3. If the course of true love never runs straight and a cross-eyed gril may be straight but looks crooked isn ' t it evidence enough that it ' s a lucky man who entices a pop-eyed girl to the altar? LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX StetVed Sent It B G- Chsesb Assoc At oa ' Jh£)= :?£ CcD v v . SH Pf=-i Cj- Oj.s ' s .M.77PAf = G T DffV. AT THE THEATRES bOK TKJU ' I.K Fifth Week, and Still Driving tlie Town Wild STKVK TYNDAI, ami THOMAS « ' . HOGKKS ' THE GREAT DIVIDE ' Added Vaudeville Hit: John Tate ' s His Name Was Not McCormack, But He Yeo-odleJ. (Sung- by tile Author) Hear Ye! Just Released! On Sale Now! Tlie l ullt7,i ' r Prize ISook— Liberty ' s HiSO.OOO Winner What I Learned From Women or The Trials and Tribulations of a Handsome Halfback an.l The True Confessions of an Office Seel(er All in One Mammoth Volume, by ■■Bullo Williams and Irving Fullington Two different stories under one cover, relating cold facts, with special chapters on Punk Gravelee, Yank Miller and, of course, tht authors. Sole Sale Rights, PoseXi ' s Emporium Gel V.iur I ' lqiy n-Jtlinut Hesitation X f yC ' , f ' 7i-- -- Ct- t— - --  --j - ' ' 7Tl -- -i l- __ Ut H Jl irmr n irn innry LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX StetVed Seiit It B Cr CHeESB A SOC Ar OAf Burnt Hajs i sJoup CoLi Kcs-g ' 7h£ ?£ Ccd v vs, Sh ppia o- 2jl£ s —- AM. T papr tD FINANCIAL REPORT, LA REVUE, 1926 Compiled by BoYD Y. Smith, Business Manager, and RoGERS SherwoOD, Editor. Audited by Felix Feacin, Staff Auditor. Receipts Student fees and activities — - $ 600,000.00 Advertising - -- -- 50,000.00 Organizations and fraternities — - - - -20 College --- 1-34 Donations from kind friends Sale of books . - -- 1,000,000.00 Total $1,650,001.54 Expenses Benson Printing Company ' - $ ' 09 Alabama Engraving Company --- ----- 2.18 Taxicabs for staff to and from classes — - — - 400.00 Drinking v ' ater for staff — - 550.00 Bromo seltzers for staff --- - -- — - — - 35.00 Co-ed hush money - 101.00 U-Drive-Its for Wylam Brown 78.00 Monogram stationery, colored stamps, and purple glue-.- 213.00 Use of staff ' s mind — 16.31 Court costs on beauty contest 811.11 Composing the feature section _ - Student Senate entertains staff at final banquet (paid for by staff) 1 .000.00 Total _.-_$ 3,207.69 Profit ... - -- -- - $1,646,793.85 (Nole: Profit rvill be used for Educational Trip to Europe.) LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX StetVed a Seiit It B G- CneesB Assoc At oa BtJRNT HAJs I S?0XJP 0C L,XJ G-1£, yH£i ?£ _C : v v£, Sm = a g- e ev .Ai.T Af P, Q tD FINANCIAL REPORT (College Bookstore, Current Year, 1925) Plenty Profit. Total Loss. 3 French Grammars 8.231 2 $ 5 Secondhand Books 241.63 1 American History 13.13 2516 Frosh Caps 2.37 Car for Manager 2.98 3482 Copies Plastic Age 2,006.53 Gas for Manager ' s Car 21,038.41 1263 Copies IngersoH ' s Age of Reason. 5,784.37 Daylight Savings Cards 647.83 Train Fare, Roanoke, Ala. (Bob Sapp) 58,437.84 Saturday Night Steak Suppers, Force.. 5,899.62 Polish for Manager ' s Car 72,574.99 Subscriptions to College Humor 45,789.92 Whiz Bang 55,843.01 Tires for Manager ' s Car 99,887.78 Salary for Force 00.000.63 Fixtures for Manager ' s Car 42,622.33 Suits for Alienation of Affection 874,432.98 Postage (John Bradford) 5,783.76 Overhead Expenses 0,000.04 Total .....$ 4.98 $ 1.79 ComijilecT Januarj ' 7, 1920. LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX It ' ' 7 £b ?£ GO V V , SH P = WG- CJ-£ 3 -—. ,Ai.7}PAf ,__ TD£f -G-zSA Y F£ .£ ' J_ US £ P THUMB-NAIL SKETCHES OF A FOOTBALL TRIP TO FLORIDA Station: Kiss all the girls good-bye. Several hundred of the fair sex saw us off (but they didn ' t come especially for that). Few tears are shed. Grating sound, as rending of coarse cloth, as hearts are torn at parting. Lovelorn seek secluded corners. Pullman: Will bring suit for false pretense. Alleged Pullman was formerly used as a barn on large form in South Alabama, but high wind blew structure on railroad track and the agility shown by it in navigating induced the Pullman people to put wheels under it. Manager Branscomb highly complimented on all sides for excellent selection. Baggage Car: Many players retired to baggage car to further investigate eccen- tricities of a railroad man ' s life. Several Howard College players (who had presumed to stick a car on the end of the train just before leaving time) joined in the inspection of the baggage room. Inspection cost several players heavily. Anniston: 7 P.M. Everybody in bed sleeping soundly in Manager Branscomb ' s home town. Atlanta: Bananas and apples in station. Town not impressing. Berth: No accidents reported in players climbing to uppers, though Roy Long refused to ascend to his bunking quarters, giving as his reason that only chickens, where he came from, roosted at night. Jacksonville: Trains backed up for miles. Railroad traffic jammed. While whiling away the hours someone thoughtlessly brought out a football and began throwing it around — a footfall on a trip to Florida! Observation Car: Plenty of scenery sprayed with Spanish moss. Lakeland: Nice looking little city. Dean Spivey at the station. Good looking girls at Southern College! Came: Not so good. Backfleld men doing Charleston too much behind line of scrimmage. Sand plenty deep. The Aftermath: It ' s cheaper down here and has a wonderful kick, even in the smell. Time called out on six regulars. Return: A day in Jacksonville; trip to St. Augustine; dip in the ocean, sans clothes, sans bathing suits, duck under water at approach of automobile ; porpoises mistaken for sharks, general rout. Glad to be home. ®If ®0l6 mi Ikrk (.Iftrr Next IVeek The Yellow and Dirty) RED ELLIOTT IN STARTLING MEMORIAL SERVICES MARKED CONFESSION TO HILLTOPPERS PASSING OF McSWEENEY HALL SORREL-TOPPED STUDENT SPRINGS INTO NATIONAL RECOGNITION OVER NIGHT One of the epoch-making reve- lations oC the age was recently given to mankind when Mr. Barnes Elliott, appropriately called Red, revealed to his fel- low coUegemates the causes and effects of his capillus flammeus (Latin for sorrel top). In a dis- sertation on Hair and Hair Col- ors, written as a term paper for Dr. W. C. Jones ' Genetics Class, Mr Elliott disproved all the com- monly accepted theories of the au- thoritative biologists and geneti- :i5ts olor, nd pr gated his theory that will prob- ably revolutionize the hair-dyeing industry. Mr. Elliott goes into ex- planatory accounts of his acqui- sition of a sorrel top, and makes several startling disclosures of his early experiments in his research laboratory. This masterpiece is too voluminous to be given in de- tail here, so the Rogers-Short Campus Gazette has purchased the pupblication rights and will col- laborate with the American So- ciety for the Advancement of Sci- ence and the American Genetic Society in the publication of the thesis in book form. Only a brief summary of the main features will be given here. Mr. Elliott states that in his early youth his hair had a sort of Scandinavian exposure to it, com- monly called towhead or chestnut top in the near-rural circles. Be- ing a precocious child, as all gen- iuses are the common ru Moundville, Ala., of five developed rly ■ithdrew from 3f ignats of d at the age athe rlet colored hail With his far adv set about to find nently change his hair tiful sunburst prismat :;ed intellect he way to perma- Bor colo The he took before the nterest- in the effect. lionized steps great find was made ing. His first step bareheaded all day This gave a brilliant er he carefully le locks with citric juice a deeper tint. Perox cured and the hair This gave a pretty : feet commonly called a country sand. Ho then found the marvel. He accidentally fell down in his vegetable garden and 1 struck and became the ipooed. 3ke ef- head of ripe lato vhich spread its lucious juices iver his cranium. He was unable move for about an hour, so his head was exposed to the sun When he came to, he went to the mirror and lo, he beheld his hair possessed a glorious blood red color, the kind he had always de- sired. He tried to wash the to- mato congealment from his scalp, but only a part was removable ; the other remaining as pigments. At last the discovery was made ; the color effect was permanent. Disliking the dull red, he next rubbed listerine, the annihilator of halitosis, into his gory locks, and the beautiful color you now see emblazoned on the campus was the sensational result. For this use of listerine, the Lambert Phar- maceutical Company has paid him $50,000, and a royalty of two cents on each bottle sold henceforth. This revealed secret that Mr. El- liott has made to science will soon replace the henna industry. It is much cheaper to buy a bottle of Listerinated Catsup from your neighborhood druggist than pay the cost of a beauty parlor treat- ment. Dr. Snavely has announced that Mr. Elliott may receive his B.S. degree without further study or class work or examinations as a reward for the publicity the col- As : Mr Elliott has sold enough of his new patent hairdressing to amount to several million dollars. Dr. Snave- ly will confer on him, provided he makes the usual donation of $100,- 000 to the college, the degree of Doctor of Cinerarius. PROF. RIDDLE WAS ABSCONDER OF ENORM- Ors PROFITS, IN ESTIGATION SHOWS Conclave non plus est. so pass- eth the old dining hall. The new year ushered in more than the customary new year resolutions, inventories and season greetings. With the passing of the dining hall came the advent of the new cafeteria. The old yields place to the new. One of the war centers of the college life for years ceased to ex- ist at the beginning of the new year when the old scrambling house called McSweeney Hall was abandoned as an eating place The abandonment of McSweeney Hall came almost coincident with the marriage of Dr. Harris, Pro- fessor of Landscape Gardening and Boiler Repairing. Doc said that he was so grieved at the passing of his old pal that he decided to start a hash house of his own. There is a tone of sadness and re- gret that comes over the campus as our thoughts go drifting back to that old hash house of ours: This spirit was so manifest that the Dormitory Committee decided to commemorate the passing with a fitting program. This exercise was held January 5, 1926, A. D. The poor athletes once more wore their soiled togas of one- time white duck. The boarding students, after practicing for a day, groomed themselves with their hungriest countenances. Their brows were bedecked with wrinkles of reckless anticipation, and expectant appetites awaiting disappointment. At 12:40 p.m., as FULLINGTON NOT TO SUCCEED SNAVELY Rumors that Irving E. Fullington had accepted an offer to succeed Dr. Guy E. Snavely as president of the college were vigorously denied tonight by Mr. Fullington. I am not in a position to say whether such an overture has been made to me, Mr. Fullington told the reporter, but I would not think of accepting it. Mr. Snavely tries hard and, while he may lack my natural ability, he has done very well. Furthermore, Mr. Snavely is a man in the prime of life, with a large family. I am still in my early thirties. W hen I gave up my commissions in the Boy Scouts, con- tinued Mr. Fullington, or ' Senator, ' as he is known to his host of friends and well wishers, I was made a very flattering offer by a large jewelry firm. But I knew I was needed at Birming- ham-Southern and, now that I have put the student body upon a sound basis, I am going to devote my time to adjusting the business affairs of the nation. late, th lU dinner bell t. ollud its ghastly ca ,11 to i all starving , cua- tomers to form in line. To the tune oC Ch opin ' s Fu neral March, the dine ;rs march ed i n to their re- pla .ited the blessing. It was thanks that we had lived thus long. To get up an appetite. Professor Marvin Mau- rice Black led the boys in singing that old familiar hymn. We ' re Fasting on the Mountain. As the nickelware began to clank. Baby Childs. erstwhile head waiter, called on different ones to give selected speeches and the group to sing the favorite songs. Reverend Rudolph Scott gave an indigestible dissertation on hash. This was followed by the group singing That Old Hash House of Mine. Next on the program was a financial report of the enormous profits that were thought to have been made. To the utter amaze- ment of the college students, it was learned that the profit, that was to have been given to the Unmarried Teachers ' Fund. had been absconded The first thought was that our arch profiteer, Steve Tyndal, was the guilty scoundrel. Upon further investi- gation by that genius of all sleuths, Bishop Calhoun, Chairman of the Dormitory Committee, it was found that the money had been paid to Dr. Alexander as the first payment on his $10,000 Stude- baker car. It was also discovered that the absconder of the profits was none other than our own Natalie Gilbert Riddle, the bur- the The grand jury, ' cted from late city ( ha little the present members of the Board of Revenue go unmolested and uncon- victed. The next number on the pro- gram, after the excitement had subsided, was a reading, Pota- toes, Potatoes. We Ate Thee Ev- ery Hour. A chaser for this se- lection was another feeling song entitled, Dessert, Oh, How I Miss You Today. Then came the part- ing of this melancholy party. Wubberly Wubberly Ma Hale led us in singing our latest parody, a few verses of which are given be- the da when my food skimp and slack. Gone are the days whe stomach met my back Gone are my friends to a place I know — I hear a gentler voice call Cafeterio! LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX t ( yyARNING JUST FOR ' VOuK y EhINE SL ES IWOINES AT T,ME6 THAT HE IS .N ra SUN ISl Eb A NEWSPAPER OFFICE, TURNWO OUT ■OEMAND TOR HIS STUFF SJ CEEOJ vTHE •aUPfl.Y.IN CUNE5 WAOINATON LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX lJaij -_ 11 II |[ II iMiiril llinr iiiiirinill ll]Lil II II It II I D LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX if-k y, BiRMIXGHAM acksoxville Nashville New Orleans LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN COLLEGE (Co-educational) YOUR COLLEGE! CERTAINLY! Fully Accredited Member of American and Southern Associations of Colleges, Association of American Universities, American Association of University Women. Total Enrollment, 25- 26, over 2,000 Faculty: Character, Christian. Scholarship and experience equal to any in the state. Courses of study complete and liberal, leading to degrees of A.B., B.S., M.A. Languages, History, Sciences, etc., work leading to Medicine, Law, Engineering, Teaching, Ministry, Business, etc. Depart- ment of Education recognized by State Board. Successful teams develop student athletics. Experienced coaches. Courses in coaching various branches of sports. Physical education for both men and women. Campus, 125 acres, on wooded hill overlooking famous Jones Valley of Birmingham ; unsurpassed for healthful climate. New Students ' Building, largely contributed to by them, now headquar- ters for student activities. Student publications and clubs promote interest in literary effort. Y. M. C. A., Y. W. C. A., and other groups develop the best in the students religiously and socially. $1,000,000 added to resources by recent Christian Education Move- ment. Endowment increased materially by drive, spring of 1926. $250,000 Munger Administration Building and Auditorium soon to crown the campus. Genuine college advantages within reach of all. Necessary expenses under $350. Innumerable opportunities of self-help in the city. For Further Information Address GUY E. SNAVELY, Ph.D., LL.D., President BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN COLLEGE BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA LA REVUE. NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX AGENTS A. J. Reach Co. Stall a Dean Mfg. Co. A. G. Spalding B Bros. OWNERS OF BIRMINGHAM ARMS 8 CYCLE CO. 3MiSfLe noa elAfiSo: Wholesale and Retail SPORTING GOODS BIRMINGHAM. ALABAMA LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX GULF STATES STEEL COMPANY MAKERS OF SOUTHERN FENCE General Offices BIRMINGHAM. ALABAMA Mills ALABAMA CITY, ALABAMA LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX 37 SUCCESSFUL YEARS Wheeler Business College has rendered a distinct service, not only to Birmingham proper, but the entire South for the past thirty-seven years. Today we can give you the same efficient training as always, aided by expert specialists as teachers, modern methods and complete and up-to-date equipment. WHEELER BUSINESS COLLEGE (1911 to 1921 First Avenue) sends out annually into the business world over seven hundred students, and receives between nine hundred and a thousand ap- plications for office help each year. Wheeler is the only busmess college m the State of Alabama duly authorized by law to grant degrees m busmess, and is accred- ited by the National Association of Ac- credited Commercial Schools. Tens of thousands of former students attest the fact that it pays to get a Wheeler business tram- ing. ' ' Wkeeler Students Get tne Best Positions LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX 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 saving stock of this Association pays the highest return commensurate with safety. Jefferson County Builamg G Loan Association 113 NORTH TWENTY-FIRST BIRMINGHAM, ALA. After a N.igh,t s Slee on an Original PERFECTION MATTRESS ON A GENUINE PERFECTION SPRING Y our Studies Will All Be Easy COMPLIMENTS OF Perfection Mattress Spring Co. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA LA REVUE. NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Birmingham ' s Only Cash Store for Men and Boys ?B-eini - i i fcj « fej -  =fc - ' ■-■J.y giuiifcm tuteii j; l auUD3flcjnip onco g«eaiT Ta nj ifeii iB5i¥  :j-- •■ ' ■- 2009 Second Avenue. Next to Burger ' s Exclusive Outfitters to the College Man Ask the Boys at the School — They Know From Service Comes Strength Resources Over $2,000,000.00 4 Paid on Savings Compounded Quarterly 55l -? BANK PERSONAl, OflT Nt ' - ' North Birmingham Trust Savings Bank R. H. Wharton, President G. C. BRYANT. Cashier W. F. McCLURE. Asst. Cashier LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX $300,000 TO EDUCATION Do you know what becomes of the money which you pay Alabama Power Company for your light, gas and street car service? In 1924, Alabama Power Company paid into state, county and city treasuiies $672,838 IN TAXES In addition to taxes, this amount included various license fees and other items of expense necessary to secure the right to do businss in Alabama. Of this amount $251,597 WENT TO EDUCATION Added to this were certain portions of the $208,832 paid by this company into the state and 33 county general funds, special contri- butions to schools and colleges, operation and maintenance of com- pany schools, free scholarships and city school taxes, making the total paid by this company to the cause of education approximately $300,000. STOCKHAM PIPE « FITTINGS COMPANY General Offices and Factory BIRMINGHAM, ALA, Stockham Fittings are furnished in cast iron or malleable, for steam, water, gas, oil or air — screwed, flanged and drainage. Warehouses with complete stocks Bush Terminal Building BROOKLYN, N. Y. 3 6th and Iron Streets CHICAGO, ILL. 2417 East 24th Street LOS ANGELES, CAL, 3 24 Townsend Street SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. Quality Is Demonstrated by Their Performance LA REVUE. NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX COLLEGE HILLS Two blocks cast of Birmingham-Southern College, one block north of the Owen- ton-Ensley car line, and near Graymont Grammar School and Simpson High, offers an ideal location for the family with children, for the accessibility of these edu- cational institutes is very desirable. Fully restricted, all utilities, paved streets, lots ranging from $1,250 up. Liberal terms arranged. Sudduth Realty Co., Inc. 110 N. 21st Street Main 3402 Real Estate and Insurance ALABAMA BY-PRODUCTS CORPORATION Coal Tar, Sulphate of Ammonia, Benzol Foundry, Furnace, Water Gas ana Domestic Coke Steam, Bunker, Domestic ana Smithing Coal GENERAL OFFICES: AMERICAN TRUST BUILDING BIRMINGHAM. ALABAMA LA REVUE. NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Com hments of Km LUMBER CO. Southern Pine Lumht We Have Made Pkotos for La Revue FOR THE LAST EIGHT YEARS We Tr ) to Please Ever bod Thanking Every Sludenl and ihe Faculty for Their Patronage, We H Pleasure of Serving You in the Future DE LUXE STUDIO jpe to Hav : the 19181 2 SECOND AVENUE BIRMINGHAM, ALA. LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX BOOKKEEPING SHORTHAND CIVIL SERVICE OUR RECORD Every graduate placed in a position. Over 700 students en- rolled during past year. The only Business College in the state with a Credit System. The only Business School in the city to con- duct Public Graduation Exercises. ALVERSON 2019-21 FIRST AVENUE BUSINESS BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA COLLEGE Robert E. Alverson, President WRITE OR CALL FOR CATALOGUE Open the Year Around — Fully Accredited It Pays to Attend a Modern, Progressive, Up-to-Date Business College. Business Men Recognize the Superior Training of Our Students TYPEWRITING SECRETARIAL HIGHER ACCOUNTING LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX BUY- TYLER ' S BEST Canned Fruits, Canned Vegetables and Coffee TYLER GROCER CO. Wholesale BIRMINGHAM, TUSCALOOSA, JASPER, FAYETTE THERE ' S A LOT OF SATISFACTION IN TRADING WITH A STORE THAT GUARANTEES SATISFACTION OR YOUR MONEY BACK WE DO! Sf cond Avenue ot EiyhloontU Sli ' eet LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX MERITA BREAD CAKES AND CRACKERS •I American Bakeries Company IF ITS FROM MOORE ' S ITS GUARANTEED You Can ' t Go Wrong If You Go to Moore Jewelry Co. 420 No. 19th Street. Birmingham Everything in the jewelry line Repairing and Manufacturing a Specialty Phone: Main 3559 Schools Catalogs and Illustrations Dance Programs and invitations Leather Dance Favors and Covers Fraternity and Class Stationery The Chas. H, Elliott Co The Largest College Engtaving House in the World Commencement Invitations. Class Day Programs, Class Pins and Rings Seventeenth Street and Lehigh Avenue PHILADELPHIA Wedding Invitations Calling Cards. Menus Fraternity and Class Inserts for Annuals ITjmA- ■ • jmi Ifliimmr imir ii ii inril H]I JL)[ Jl lliril B LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX MILLER AND MARTIN ARCHITECTS Designers of Following Buildings at BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN Munger Bowl Stadium Andrews Hall Phillips Library President ' s Home Student Activities Building AT YOUR SERVICE ST. JOHN THE PHOTOGRAPHER 519 North 18th Street Phone Main 3487 Birmingham, Alabama LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX HALL-FOSTER DRUG CO. THE COLLEGE DRUG STORE OPPOSITE CAMPUS We Are Not Satisfied Unless You Ace LUNCHES, STATIONERY CIGARETTES. CIGARS, TOBACCOS, DRINKS KODAK SUPPLIES And. in Fact, Everything a Modern Drug Store Should Have A REGISTERED PHARMACIST ON DUTY AT ALL TIMES HALL-FOSTER DRUG CO. ' The House of Service Plus Accommodation Telephone W. E. 1434 737 Eighth Avenue, West Quality and Value Are Your First Considerations We Offer Botfj Reid Lawson, Inc. Jewelers 308 North 20th Street Wfjat We Say It Is— It Is Today to be successful good clothes are just as necessary as a good education and just as Birmingham-Southern can give you a good education. Pizitz can give you the good clothes. The boys and girls of the Birm- ingham-Southern and their friends will always find a warm welcome here. One of America ' s great wslilulions Wc Sell As IVe AJverlise anj Aluyavs For Less 111 II Ji miiriiiriii ' ■ ' ' ■ ; I II ]1 inr II inr ir ii t - ■ ■ LA REVUE. NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX School Furniture and Sckool Supplies We carry in stock in our Bir- mingham warehouse at all times of the year School Desks, Teach- ers ' Desks and Chairs, Assem- bly Folding and Opera Chairs, Tablet Arm Chairs and School Supplies of every character of the highest grade for prompt service. Write for our large illustrated catalogue. EDUCATIONAL EXCHANGE COMPANY BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA COMPLIMENTS OF FIRST NATIONAL BANK Birmingham, Alabama COMPLIMENTS OF KIRKPATRICK SAND AND CEMENT COMPANY 316 North Twenty-first St. BIRMINGHAM, ALA. ?7l; ; %■ ■ • SlI mU[l[ l llH[ innnrwii iilLll JUL ' ■ LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX BECO SERVICE Used Over 1,000,000 Times Each Day in Birmingham Become a Partner Our Preferred Stock Pays $7.00 per Share. BIRMINGHAM ELECTRIC COMPANY The Best Recommendation We Can Make for Our Products is the Fact That Birmingham-Southern College IS One of Our Patrons Dixie Ckemical Products Co., INCORPORATED lyianufacturing Chemists BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA — Large enough to serve you — Small enough to l noiv you — Strong enough to protect you BANK OF ENSLEY Ramsay t McCormack, Incorporated Resources More Than $4,500,000 R. E, CHADWICK PRESIDENT S. C. KING VICE-PRESIDENT AND CASHIER W. C. MAXWELL ASSISTANT CASHIER H. J. CUN4M1NGS MANAGER WYLAM BRANCH ENSLEY AND WYLAM ALABAMA People Wko Kno Good Coffee DEMAND RED DIAMOND The Coffee With the Taste That Thrills LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Twenty-three Years ' Identity with Birmingham ' s De- velopment BECCO Potato Chips BECCO Peanut Butter Sandwiches BECCO Peanut Butter Fresh Daily BECK CANDY GROCERY COMPANY Manufacturers 1605-7 First Avenue Gw in-Williams Grocery Co. DISTRIBUTORS Lily-oi-the-Valley Fancy Canned Fruits AND Vegetables WHITE CREST FLOUR Plain and Self-Rising Phone Ensley 1600 or 1601 ENSLEY, ALABAMA THE ENSLEY FIRST METHODIST CHURCH Is Interested in Birmingham-South- ern. Our Doors Are Always Open to the Students FINE FELLOWSHIP HEARTY WELCOME Phone Ensley 18S1 Avenue G at Twentieth Street Wm. H. Mansfield, Pastor LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX BAMBY BREAD Made with Pure Creamery Butter McGOUGH BAKERIES 2113 Second Avenue 725-731 No. 26th St. FOR COMPLEXION SAKE ISIS CREAM Cola ana Vanishing COMPLIMENTS OF GOLDSTEIN COHEN Ensle ' s Department Store ENSLEY, ALABAMA Caheen Brothers 1924-1926 Second Avenue ALL KINDS OF Wearables for Girls and Women Phone Main 7953 Scnrartts Elines AN UNBEATABLE COMBINATION Levine-Abelson Candy Grocery Co. Distributors 2306 First Ave. Birmingham. . ' la. I II II II II If llllirii iiinrir f T LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX AFTER COUNTING ALL OF THE PEOPLE IN THIS PICTURE. YOU MAY COME AROUND AND GET AN EXTRA COPY OF LA REVUE FREE EAT BLUE RIBBON ICE CREAM DRINK OUR PASTEURIZED MILK IT ' S BEST EAT ESKIMO PIES Boy, They ' re Good JEFFERSON DAIRY COMPANY MAIN 607-608 LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX PAINT AND GLASS COMPANY solve all your Home and Fraternity troubles By Blotting Out i iKl Inharmonious and Clashing Colors 1 ' Paint, Glass. Mirrors, Wax, Transfers, Brushes, Etc. Our store is headquarters for leading contract pajntcrs, decorators and paperbangers More people use Moore ' s paint HYNDS-UPSHAW PAINT « GLASS COMPANY 2118 2ND AVENUE NORTH BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Phone Main 8049 Alabama ' s Big Family Shoe Store Guarantee Shoe Co. BIRMINGHAM BESSEMER ENSLEY ANNISTON EARLY MOTOR SERVICE 1625-31 Third Avenue FOR EARLY SERVICE Phone Main 64 7 COLLEGE BOOK STORE WE PUT THE SERVICE IN SERVICE Books, Soft Drinks, Toilet Articles Candy, Felt Goods, and Novelties THE HOME OF COLLEGE STUDENTS SATISFACTION GUARANTEED r J u ti jri i II I I II II m ill II II II ir ■■Mil ]i ii ii ■■ ir ii int i LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX CORONA FOUR Standard Keyboard Portable TYPEWRITER $60.00 With Carrying Case Terms if Desired Alabama Typewriter Company 1911 Fifth Avenue BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Fred Klein ' s Saxophone Shoppe and Music House 204 N. 20th St. Featuring BUESCHER Band Instruments TRUE TONE LUDWIG DRUMS AND BANJOS LEEDY DRUMS AND TRAPS VEGA BANJOS MARTIN UKULELES We have the best repair shop in the South. Wc carry the latest sheet music and orchestrations. (Member of Better Business Bureau) McCULLA « TYLER BAKERY HOME MADE AND QUALITY BREAD DISTRIBUTORS OF GRENNAN ' S DELICIOUS CAKES Sixes Do Beat Fours PAIGE and JEWETT Distributed by Detroit Motor Car Co. 619 South Twentieth Street Phone Main 8288 USE DIXIE CLUB COFFEE AND TEA LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX IMPORTANT INFORMATION ON THE NEW STANDARD ' ' SENIOR-GRADUATE CLASS RING Birmingham Southern can now boast of having a class ring surpassed in beauty and quality by no other college in the countr -, a ring truly representative of our good school. They are now built by Herff-Jones Co., Indianapolis, Indiana, exclusive college and school jewelers of excellent reputation. They come in two types, the large or regular for the fellows and co-ed, or miniature for the girls. Every senior and graduate should wear this distinguished class ring as a lasting and always visible class emblem, not only recognized by our students, but by others. Only Seniors and Alumni are allowed to wear this ring, thus possessing real significance and distinction. ALUMNI Arrangements have been made to furnish rings to any alumnus any time after gradua- tion. Just write the Secretary of the senior class or direct to the company, giving graduation date, degree, size, and name to be engraved inside. GUARANTEE Every ring is permanently guaranteed against imperfect workmanship and material, in which case repair is made, no charge. If injury is the fault of the student, repair is made at actual cost of materials. The factory earnestly requests that any ring re- quiring service be sent to them to insure satisfaction and saving. Kaufman 5 213-15 N. 19th St. Third Floor Apparel and Furs for Ladies and Misses, Dresses Skirts, Suits and Sweaters Underthings of Silk. Come Look — Compare Qual- ity. Style and Price. No urging to buy. they speak of lo Say il with Flou. And say it with ( MONTGOMERY ' S 6 N. 5th Av Main 3115 The First National Bank of Fairfield The National Bank of the Pay Roll District FAIRFIELD. ALA. LA REVUE. NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Thirty Hours From Mew York ' Fashions for College Men and Women LOVEMAN, JOSEPH LOEB Tyler Jevi elry Co. Diamonds J evuelry your interest is our interest Phone Ensley 1427 P. H. Tyler, President ensl ey, alabama Avenue E and 19th Street Go to INMAN S for your pressing and barber work Boys, It ' s on the Race Track for Your Convenience Press While-U-Wait, 25c Inman ' s Pressing Parlor AND Barber Shop 2211 2 North Nineteenth Street COMPLIMENTS OF American Trust G? Savings Bank Birmingham, Ala. 1st Avenue at 20th Street RESOURCES (OVER) $15,000,000.00 COMPLIMENTS OF THE OWENTON CREAMERY DAIRY AND BAKERY PRODUCTS HIRSCHS The Largest Exclusive Millinery Sho IN Birmingham and Alabama LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX P oiler Ckampioi The riour hhe besb Cooks use. When some particularly distinctive baking task is planned — such as fine cakes — it is significant that the flour most often ho-rn by particular housewives is ROLlli CHAM- PION! M. W. Cosby Flour K Grain Company Distributors Ti f pASTEUI ZED ■ ICECkeAM ' ' Made its way, Sj the way lis Nadd AT COLLEGE BOOK STORE LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Lucas Tinted Gloss Paint Lu-Co Flat Paint Pratt y Lambert ' s No. 61 Floor Varnish Everything our name implies to preserve and beautify the home BIRMINGHAM PAINT « GLASS CO. 202 I Fourth Ave. Telephone Main 147 Pryor Motor Co- Inc. PHONE MAIN 6327 500 SOUTH TWENTY-FIRST STREET BIRMINGHAM SPECIALIZING IN TWO-PANTS SUITS KLOTHES SHOPPE UPSTAIRS 207% North Nineteenth Street BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Phones Hem. 67 and Main 8503 ADAMS COAL COMPANY 900 NO. 13TH STREET THE PLACE TO BUY YOUR COAL O. p. Adams V. L. Adams HI II Jl 11 ' 11 mniirif irif 1 I II iniirnn u ini II II II w n ;i II II ini II TT ir ir M - ■ gui ini j[  ir ir iiinr niiinrn n  im ji irif inrTH LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Fire alarms are not answered any more promptly than our service calls and what a whale of a difference DRENNEN ' S SERVICE MAKES Tires D AT 20th M. 5000 CORRECT STYLES For College Men and Women LOmS SAKSs WHEN YOU Say It With Flowers Say It With Ours FOR ALL OCCASIONS Parties, Weddings. Hospitals Dances, Corsages SPECIAL WREATHS With College Colors 4 SHOPS Fraser-Townes Floral Company TUTWILER FLOWER SHOP Main 447 ELMWOOD FLOWER SHOP W. E, 900 MARIE LOUISE FLOWER SHOP Main 2755 BESSEMER BRANCH Bessemer SS9 LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX PICCADILLY Birmingham ' s Newest Moving Picture Theatre HOME OF De Mille Pictures first Run Pictures News Reels and Comedies ALSO WATCH FOR ADDED ATTRACTIONS ODUM, BOWERS « WHITE Heed the Request of COLLEGE MEN You Won ' t Be Disappointed Here IN STYLE, SERVICE OR PRICE The cover for this annual was created by The DAVID J. MOLLOY CO. 2857 N. Western Avenue Chicago, Illinois Makers of Your Calling Cards for 1926 DEWBERRY « MONTGOMERY Stationers Engravers Printers OFFICE FURNITURE 2014 FIRST AVENUE LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX WHEN YOU THINK OF PICTURES THINK OF The Strand HOME OF PARAMOUNT PICTURES How Did You Like Your Howard Parade? WE MADE IT Let Us Serve You Next Year MEEHAN-GIBSON DECORATING CO. Flags, Floats Window Displays 809 N. 2 I St St. Phone Hem. 2190 FOR THE GRADUATE CANDY TOILET SETS STATIONERY J. B WOOTEN DRUG CO. 5101 Valley Road. Fairfield | PHONE ?:NSLEY 2743 CURB SERVICE We are always ready to help our boys and gir s. Call on us and sec. EARL BROTHERS Wholesale GROCERS 1801-03 First Ave. BIRMINGHAM, ALA. ZAC SMITH STATIONERY COMPANY 2012 FIRST AVENUE Printing Engraving Office Furniture LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX FOREMOST IN FASHION Far Most In Value CLOTHIERS TO YOUNG MEN „,... 1,„ „ ... ' - APPRECIATION Where each Customer ' s Patronage is Genuinely Appreciated TRADER ' S NATIONAL BANK John H. FRYE _ President JNO. G. FARLEY Vice-President J. L. COOPER .„_ Cashier R. H. BOTTERS...- Assistant Cashier S. H. Tanner Assistant Cashier Carl Grantham , Assistant Cashier Fred A. DURAN Assistant Cashier THERE ISN T MUCH MORE You ' re right, Ignatz, this ol ' book is about run out. But where, gentle reader, you may ask. ' That ' si your question, though, and since we ' ve had to account for everything up to here, you ' ll have to saunter elsewhere for the answer. Anyhow, it ' s like this: We ' re running short of material for this ending, and can ' t find a bit of extra copy floating around any place. So Smith (he ' s the boy that looked after the ' rake-off of this aforesaid book) says to yours sincerely, Sherwood, why in the name of space (uh-huh, those were his words, exactly) don ' t you write something, and fill up this page? And this is the result. Anyhow, if we ' ve fooled you this far, console yourself and turn over and read the ending, and you will have finished the 1926 REVUE. THIS BOOK PRINTED BY BENSON K0 LARGEST COLLEGE ANNUAL PUBLISHERS IN THE WORLD HIGHEST QUALITY WORKMANSHIP SUPERIOR EXTENSIVE SERVICE COLLEGE ANNUAL HEADQUARTERS miAbAMA ENGRAVING Ca BIRMINGHAM Soi llijoavs- COLLEGE C HIGH SCHOOL ANNUML SPECIALISTS, LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX inis Last page turned. Rest well earned. Flame loiv-burned. Wavers; Wan worn life. Spent with strife. Flares, yet rife — Quavers? ' i - ' ■ Hope, still siL ' eet, Naught complete. Dreams replete — Living ; This retreat Spells defeat. Life so fleet — Giving! .% Back, dull night. Death of sight, Vision ' s blight. Vanish! Flare, faint light! Flare, flame, bright! Vision ' s blight Banish! Softly the dawn steals over the trees. Shell-pint and rosy it colors the breeze; Breeze scatters light where darkness had been, Shadoivs retreat to the murky fen; Stars fade out ivith the coming of morn. Better the day than their gleam forlorn! —P. c. LA REVUE. NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Autograpks ♦S • LA REVUE, NINETEEN TWENTY-SIX Autograpns f •?. ■« : c ♦ ' ' ' NGHAM SOUTM. COLLEGE N


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

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

1923

Birmingham Southern College - Southern Accent Yearbook (Birmingham, AL) online collection, 1924 Edition, Page 1

1924

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

1925

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

1927

Birmingham Southern College - Southern Accent Yearbook (Birmingham, AL) online collection, 1928 Edition, Page 1

1928

Birmingham Southern College - Southern Accent Yearbook (Birmingham, AL) online collection, 1929 Edition, Page 1

1929


Searching for more yearbooks in Alabama?
Try looking in the e-Yearbook.com online Alabama yearbook catalog.



1985 Edition online 1970 Edition online 1972 Edition online 1965 Edition online 1983 Edition online 1983 Edition online
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES GENEALOGY ARCHIVE REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today! Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly! Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.