Birmingham Southern College - Southern Accent Yearbook (Birmingham, AL)
- Class of 1933
Page 1 of 238
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 238 of the 1933 volume:
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■Hi.x: v.:,. ' m ■■■' ■-;- :(■• ■' ■■m ,, ;, ' _ ,■' : ■; ' .- ■. . . - • J.-, ■V; ' i:«l mm BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN COLLEGE 5 0553 01001621 7 B- • v. ' F:r •| ;v „ - ' ■t ' ■' -■' ■B LIBRARV OF BIRIJIIEIGHAM-SQOTHERN COLLEGE ■I ' . l.lk COPYRIGHT. 1933 WILLIAM O LI yER_COX Jn Editor CHARLES LEE WESTON 2 BuTM rr REVUE x;- -y VOLUME FOURTEEN PUBLISHED BY THE STUDENT BODY OF Birmingham-Southern College BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA 933 X PURPOS O MIRROR THE HAPPENINGS OF ANOTHER EVENTFUL YEAR OF CAMPUS LIFE AT BIRMINGHAM- SOUTHERN COLLEGE AND TO MARK ANOTHER MILE- STONE IN HER STEADY MARCH OF PROGRESS m„ - ' y - l ' -.: t V.V ' IV SEQUENCE Administration The Classes Athletics Features Fraternities Organizations ' S 37657 :i i. !i T ,v m TO DR. MARION L SMITH For his splendid loyalty to birmingham-southern. his higher type of christian character which has guided and inspired us, for his smile means something more than just a smile, and because his arrow hitting one ideal always reveals his next target to be a higher one. we respectfully dedicate this the four- teenth issue of la revue. DEDICATION ' lk v, x X-., DEDICAT Whose sense of humor is as large as his heart; whose popularity is well deserved by his untiring efforts to make birmingham-southern a greater and pleasanter college; whose name shall be remembered because he made more than one stu- dent smile, and whose matchless ability of pro- fessorship has been imitated, we humbly dedicate this issue of our year book. TO DR, EMORY Q. HAWK M Qylfien come together, to build men. Standing on a higher plain, Let down their hands to us below, oAnd pull us up to them — so slow. — ■agel. ADMIN IS T R A T I O N i i L TRUSTEES Officers M- F EMAN President John E. Northcutt Vice-President Edgar M. Glenn Secretary Fred M. Jackson Treasurer W. A. Pattillo 4ssistant Treasurer Guy E. Snavely Ex-Officio Ed. L. Norton Secretary, Executive Committee Mrs. W. H. Siockham . Chairman, Executive Committee Members Rev. O. V. Calhoun Frank F. Earle J. A. Ellison Rev. John W. Frazer Tupper Lightfoot E. R. Malone Rev. R. a. Moody Rev. Ed. C. Moore M. M. McCall Rev. John E. Northcutt Rev. D. p. Slaughter L. B. Whitfield Rev. Robert Echols Hon. Edgar M. Elliott Rev. a. M. Freeman Rev. B. B. Glagow Rev. Edgar M. Glenn Hon. Fred M. Jackson Hon. Hugh A. Locke Rev. W. E. Morris lonnie munger Rev. Claude Orear L. L. Stephenson Mrs. W. H. Stockham F m ■m BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN IP 1 y;; GUY EVERETT SNAVELY A.B., Ph.D., LL.D. President A.B.. Johns Hopkins University. 1901; Ph.D., Johns Hjpkins University. 1908; LL.D., Emory Uni- versity, 11125; Litt.D., Southern College, 1930; Cumberland University, 1932; Studied and traveled abroad for six summers: Graduate Scholar. Columbia University, 1914-15; Decorated by French Gov- ernment as Officier d ' Academ ie, 1914; Taught Romance Languages at Allegheny College, 1906-17; New York and Columbia Universities 1914-15 ; Organizer and Director, Southern Division. American Red Cross. 1917-lS; Dean and Professor of Spanish. Converse College. 1919-21; Editor. Jehan de Vignay ' s Aesopic Fables. El Capitau Veneno. Valdes ' Jose ; Corresponding Member, Royal Span- ish-American Academy. Cadiz, Spain ; Lieutenant-Colonel. Alabama National Guard. Governor ' s Staff, 1922-26; Member Cosmos Club. Washington. D. C-, and Andiron Club, New York City. Kiwanis Club. Birmingham. Ala.; Director, Kiwanis Club, Birmingham. 1925, 1926. 1930; Former Director. Birming- ham Community Chest ; Director, Alabama Sunday School Association; Member and Vice-Chairman, International Sunday School Council ; Member. National Committee in Charge of Investigation of Modern Foreign Language Study; Member, Birmingham News Loving Cup Committee, 1925 ; Presi- dent. Alabama College Association, 1926-27 ; National President, Kappa Phi Kappa, 1927-31 ; Secre- tary-Treasurer. Association of Colleges and Secondary School of Southern States, 1926 ; Execu- tive Committee, American Council on Education, 1927-31 ; President. Birmingham-Southern College, 1921 ; President, Association of American Colleges, 1929-30; Member, National Advisory Commit- tee on Education, appointed by President Hoover; Director, First National Bank. Birmingham; Direc- tor. American Standard Life Insurance Company of Alabama; Director. Jefferson County Building and Loan Association; Director, Fairfield American National Bank; Member. Committee of Fifteen Direct- ing Liberal Arts College Movement; Member, United States Commission on Teacher-Training Colleges; Chairman, Board of Christian Education in North Alabama Methodist Conference; Chairman. Ala- bama Y. M. C. A.; Member, Joint Methodist Hymnal Commission; Member, National Executive Council, Omicron Delta Kappa. L THE 1933 LA REVUE GILBERT WILCOX MEAD A.B., A.M. Dean of Men A.B.. Allegheny College, 1911: A.M.. Columbia University. 1H16: Graduate Stu- dent. Columbia University, 191lj-lS; Instructor ot English and Comparative Liter- ature, Columbia University and Columbia Summer Session. 1917-23; Residence completed for Ph.D.: Special Lecturer in English. Hunter College, New York City, 1917-23: Head ot Department of English, Westminster College (Pa.). 1923-25: Dean and Professor of English, Birmingham-Southern College. 1925 : Member, Phi Gamma Delta, Phi Beta Kappa, Kappa Phi Kappa, Delta Phi Alpha, Omicron Delta Kappa; Honorary Member, Columhia Philolexian Society; Secretary, English Victorian Section. M.L.A.. 1923-28; Member, American Folklore Society; Modern Humanites Research Association (London); Vice-President. Second District. South- ern Intercollegiate Athletic Association, 1926-28; Vice-President, Methodist Episco- pal Church, South, Education Association. 1927; Chairman, Speakers ' Bureau, Bir- mingham Community Chest, 1927-28; Secretary, Birmingham Kiwanis Club, 1932 ; President, Dixie Athletic Conference. 1930 ; Member, Birmingham Press Club; Literary Editor, The Birmingham News ; President. Alabama Col- lege Association, 1930-31; Secretary, Southern Association ot Liberal Arts College Deans, 1930 . 1 |1 _ BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN 1-. , ! 5 FACULTY ■▼• Wilbur Dow Perrv A.B., A.M. Mary Collett Munijer Professor of Enijlisli George Currie A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Latin and Greek Wesley Adolphus Moore A.B., A.M. Professor of Mal iematics AusTLV Prodoehl A.B., Ph.D. Professor of German and PliilosopJiy William Alonzo Whiting ...... B.S., Ph.D. Professor of Biology J. Horace Coulliette A.B., A.M. Professor of P iysics Carev Robinson B.S. Jtlilelic Director Kenneth E. Barxhart A.B., B.D., Ph.D. Professor of Sociology Russell S. Poor B.S., M.S., Ph.D. Professor of Geology Ernest Victor Jones ........ A.B., Ph.D. Professor of C iemistry Emory Q. Hawk A.B., Ph.D. Professor of Economics and Business Marion L. Smith A.B., B.D., A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Bible and Religion James E. Bathhurst A.B., Ph.D. Professor of Psychology and Education Lillian Gregory A.B. Librarian Wyatt W. Hale ....... B.S., A.M., Ed.D. Professor of Education and Registrar Newman M. Yeilding A.B. Bursar THE 19 3 3 LA REVUE FACULTY Charles D. Matthews A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Rrliijion EoLiNE Wallace Moore A.B., A.M. Professor of Education and Dran of If ' oiiwn Douglas L. Hunt Ph.B., M.A. Associate Professor of Enijlisli Robert Stanley Whitehouse A.B. Associate Professor of Modern Lani uaejcs John M. Malone A.B., A.M. Associate Professor of Education Andrew Hemphill Director of Music Thomas F. Debnam B.S., M.S. Associate Professor of Economics Henry T. Shanks A.B., A.M. Associate Professor of History Hiram Benja.min Englebert ........ A.B. Assistant Professor of Matiiematics Harry E. McNeel B.Ph. Assistant Professor of Spanisli William T. Hammond A.B., A.M. Assistant Professor of Romance Languages William E. Glenn A.B., A.M. Assistant Professor of Matiiematics Benjamin F. Clark B.S., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Chemistry George W. Steep, Jr A.B., A.M. Assistant Professor of French Jennings F. Gillem Assistatnt Athletic Director John A. Johnson B.S. Instructor in Geology ii. 1i? ' • haa«; BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN STOCK HAM WOMAX S BUILDING FACULTY { ■■■[SS —jC Anthony Constans B. es Lettres, B. en Droit, Licencie es Lettres, Ph.D. Professor of Frciuli and Italian W.MTER B. Posey, Ph.D., LL.B. Professor of History Marsee Fred Evans, A.B., A.M., B.D., Ph.D. Professor of Sfeec i James Saxon Childers, A.B., B.A., M.A. Professor of Englis i Richebourc G. McWili.iams, A.B., A.M. Associate Professor of EnglisJi Barbara Ransom, B.S. Assistant Professor of Pliysicat Education E. Sydnor Ownbey, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Englisli Dorothy Harmer, A.B., B.A. luslruclor in Library Science and Assistant Librarian Richard A. Fennell, A.B. Assistant Professor of Biology Virginia McMahon, B.S. Instructor in Education Wyndham Souihgate, A.B., A.M. Instructor in History Vincent Townsend Instructor in Journalism THE 19 3 3 LA REVUE SliMPSOX BUILDIXG FACULTY L. Frazer Banks, A.B., A.M. Lecturer in Education I. R. Obenchain, A.B., A.M. Instructor in Education OcTAVus Rov Cohen, Litt.D. Lecturer in Enijlisli Perry W. Woobham, B.S., A.M. Assistant Bursar and Lecturer in Economics Seale Harris, M.D. Lecturer in Biology Joseph T. Ecker, A.B., A.M. Assistant Professor of History George J. Fertig, B.S., M.A. Lecturer in Chemistry Minnie McNeill Carr, B.L., A.Mus. Instructor in Piano Mrs. Earle G. McLin, A.B. Instructor in Speech Erkest M. Henderson, Jr. Instructor in Art JuLE Lamar, B.S. Instructor in Biology A. L. Bairnsfather Instructor in Painting Virginia Tillia, A.B., B.L.S. Instructor in Library Science f= -J McCOY MEMORIAL CHURCH VIEWS O F TH E CAMPUS f I PRESIDENT ' S HOME L Science Hall LIBRARV O BIRMlUGHAM-SOyTHERN GOLUI m fl  WP 1WPTH T A i-N The Library f MuNGER Memorial Hall % [■t Andrews Hall k Student Activities Building t lIF- cA. year apart, yet each stands. It seems, alike; Waiting for the time to come When it takes its place in the sun. i -s. CLASS OFFICERS 1 T Bryant Whitmire President C xm IS dlLuJu2- - Walton Wright Vice-President T T ' J tW x Kenneth Goare Treasurer Q% 1 resenlL incj THE SENIORS i I ' : y ' ill ' 1 Louis DOUGLASS Alexander ° B.RM.NGHAM, ALABAMA A.B. Association, ' 3 ' . ' 33: Debate M-.nls.er.al ' - - j • ,_. ' , Elizabeth Archibald BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA B.S. 1 ,T Le Cercle Francals; ranctub;Hono.KoU, ' 30-3.. New- RuTH Baker .ivrH M ALABAMA BlRMlNGHA.vi, A.B. ,_■, ' ,■,■Tri Tau, ' 32- ' 33- Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, 32 . Clinton D. Bishop BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA A.B. XX Phi Tau Kappa A ' . a a ;: ! Sigma lota; Greeks, r Cabinet; Treas and Patches; Y. - ' Z,- Belles Lettres. •,- ■Debating learo, urer, 3- ' Thelma Blezard BtRMlN-GHAM, ALABAMA A.B. Nathan Rov Blocker ARITON, ALABAMA A.B. Ministerial Association. •■B Honor Roll, 3 ' Pi Gamma Mu Treasurer, ' 32-33 bate Team, 3 , , S«« ' ' 5 ' - Varade Committee, ' 32. .„. Gold and Black ' - ' stum Night Committee, SENIORS Lucius Brannon °°™ ' N, ALABAMA A.B. Manager Track T bf, 3.; ' .B ' Jrc„y ' - Manager root. ' ' ' ' ; La RH |; f ' «.. Staff CJub. ' ' ' •ton- Fra - ' CIS McDonald ,, , FAIRFIELD, NER ALABAMA ' Teshman Track ' s 3 d Patches ■' „ b . ' ' ' ' Club, Sq- p .v • 3-, Radio PJa,.,„; , 9 ' ain Theod. a« tMcDona.oBuck . SEMHR, ALABAMA d.B. K A f «ED Burks BIRMINGHAM F°«bai; Man, ' ALABAMA A.B. n K A S . ' 3 ;Traine: 32. Sarah Burson ««MIN ' G„AM, ALABAMA ' a Sigma Kappa- Ph- ,. ' ' 32-33; Secretan-f Chi D l ' ' J ' ' reas- ' ' - ' Sign,,- ;J ;D e,ta Phi; A ' CE Nelson Burton ' W ' -VCHAM, ALABAM. 31, ■Co-£d dent, AthI ' c CounciJ 3 - ' 33; Pan-HeJIen ,3°;BeilesI.ettre: arsitv 30- ' Council: ' 3. ' 3 . SENIORS Margaret Bvnum OKEOJ TA, ALABAMA AM. Mercedes Cagle BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA A.B. Eta Slg:.aPW,Secre.an; ,C. A. Cab.net. Frank Cantey BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA B.S. . ,. Delta PW A ' P ' Virginia AM Clark K A Amazons ; Pan-Hellenic President, 32 President V. W. C. ' a. Cabinet, ' S - Lessie Elizabeth 3.B. e T Cb Clements iPeltaPhi G i Staff; Paint an Belles isjewtonian -- . ofvue - , . kpv Block Staff-, LA J ' co-Ed AtWencs; Ke P « ' ;-p ' ;:-Heuti ' c; Beta Beta Beta, Lettres; P J j,j Newtonian (-Iud. Martha Coffee BIRMI NGHAM, ALABAMA AM. K A Phi Pi Gamrna ' i, paSlenic; ' 30, ' 3t. 5 1 vice-president, 3 Classical Club, Vi« president, ' 31 President, Amazons; •32, Treas- . ' 31. SENIORS James Crensha BIRMIXCHAM, A T rj ALABAM, Delta Phi ai„, - - ack, Varsuy Track. Eunice Rav r. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Edw, ARD Avers Dannell ' f A, ALABAMA A B Omicron Delta K ' f. Classical ri ' u. - 3 • Newton,-,,, M. Scro Senior Class assjcal Club- a ' ' ' fonian - ger,.3o.,3,,. . A.,stant Football - - Cabin Jane Ellioit • ' HAM, ALABAMA K 4 Secretary MiN f iE Elizabeth Ell BIRMLVGHAM, -ion BIRMLVGHAM E c :s? ' f - d c:.o, ' ALABAMA ' ALABAMA freshman cS ' ' O ' ' ' rr.i!-- E--XX B ' RMLVGHAM ' ii-ABAMA A.B. SENIORS ' ecretarv ! ; Pain JOTT Una Rae Elmore SGHAM, ALABAMA A.B. aaHosopVucLite.a. oaety,W3 £|l 32. Tri Tau Vice-President, ■- • Gamma ' 32- 33. ' 33. Recording President, ' 32; Y. y ' lj r : ' S ' P irW- letic Corx. W:C f. S:ryWon,-3r-,L -- mission, 3 . MarJORIe Elms BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA A.B. . ,„ta- Scroll; Ne vtonianC b ' a Phi Sigma lota, , , „, V , Cercle Francais, ( b; A n V , .,. Chaplain ' , , Secretary, 32. 4 ' ?:;. Ne vtonlan Cln viee-Pres- KoU, 31 ' , p Cercle trauca. , Pff ' , l ' . BdlesLettres. ident, 33 • TOHN EVINS B«M1NGHAM, ALABAMA A.B. e KN Robert S. Ferguson EN ' SLEY, ALABAMA A.B. B 1 , , ' 32 Phi Kappa; Glee Club ' 30. (; „,; lintry Track, 3° ■B ,,,, .30; Varsi cooper Koad Ra«. Patches, 3 «- ?f:- -?Sc ■; 33H -: t: 3r:-r- ;v«- - Spanish Club, 3- 3 3 ' , ,.,33. ' ' ' . P K Club. Ministerial Association, P- ViROiHiA INEZ Gilbert FA .VIHW, ALABAMA . ,3,. Glee Club, ' 3 -3- Y W. C. A-. 3- ' SENIORS Clarence Howard r, S.S. I:: nicron Delta )r, , -a Be, Beet-lEef r ? ' ' ' ' • Kappa dem c l ' ■' ■■' dent Junior ri ' ' w-Presi- den. Sophoniore Class; B He rV ' -P «i- 33, President, ' ,,. n , ' fes, ' „ .„ «- ese .i ri:,£t - ' • ' ■' 3-3.;Pararc:;tC, .;: ° ' - Kenneth S. Goare PANAMA cm-, PLORmA •■M urer Senior CJa is q, ' -■■SocieVa ' dSSant ' Joe Gray ' MtXGHAM, ALABAMA 3 Beta Beta- R, , J- W. Hamilton Tr «° ' ' ' AW, ALABAMA- ' Omicron Delta jc ' f, ' !. President ' .f. ' j ' 31 ' 4 ' J° . ' ' ' - W c A r r ' °f - Ro i ' ! F ' ' P ' onship ' TJT ' ' ' ' ™-° ' en • r i°; 31 ,- Belles Lettres F ' ' ' r ' 20 ' k ,° d Castellana- ,? oon- f5 ' 30, ' 51, ' 32 , ' ' 3na, Gold and Black Award, ' ,,. p ' . 33, -La Revue, ' ,, • p f ' ' 32, i aint and Pafrh c f ' ench « ' Athletics ., ' ' ' ' 32 ■• fa- ' - , 29-31. WituAM C Hamilton U MLVGHAM, Alabama ' SbatfT ,: !Pja;}:-eron Delta Kappa- -•■-. ' .■n?;n?t- 4 i SENIORS cTcabinet, ' ,. Herschel Hamner BESSEMER, ALABAMA AM. S A E Qtniton Ready Ue- Omicron Pelta Kappa; Str Debate Squad I ;rman Debate Squad M m , datn, Vice-Pre.dent, . 5 . Secte.aO - , • T A Revue Statt, 3 i Sara Lou.se Ham u BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA TTrpnch Club ; ■•B Honor Lillian HarpeR BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA A.B. MaRV VIROINXA HA-KtNS B«M.N-GHAM, ALABAMA AM. r $ B Phi, lSle vtonian 29, ' 30. , ,„ .,. Vice-President 3° ' V ' 7, ' 2; Classical 9 ' ,, ' riosophic, ' 3 ; 31, 3- ' Amazons. UMES C. Henderson • ' .,-crHAM, ALABAMA BIRMINGHAM, B.S. Peterson Hightower YORK, ALABAMA B.S. K A a Phi Kappa; Greeks ; BetaBeta;K.appa -; ' 30, ' 3 . ' 3- ' 29: Glee SENIORS WALTER Holt « M ' .VCHAM, ALABAMA A.B. n K A Virginia Hopper B ' RMl.VGH.4 H -iubama Linda Horton B ' RMINGHAM ALABAMA - .fi. Gladys Amelia Huev «--CHAM, AMBAMA Q. AM. Sigma PW V- P„P ' Piii S,Vm, r i...Cha.man Vr.l mittee, 32. David Hutto ' COL V, ALABAMA Ministerial President- n - ' 3i, ' 52- Pnli V ' ' Presided • ' 3 S ' ' ' - ' t ' 3o 1 ' Virginia Jenkins ' - ' -CHAM, ALABAMA AM. -Ed Council ' , P ches 35 ?; ' . Treasurer, .„.n. Se fes Lettr ; PPa Pi pi ■' ' ' • ' 3 ; Cabinet rV ' J S ' gn a Phi ' w ' ' ' Committee, ' %; ,f„ fde Committe;, ' ; . ■' Com--tt.rc,LV St . ' --e Committee, May Da;;!; ' ; J Socia SENIORS I oARET S. Jones BIRMINGHAM, t BAM A.B. II B , Vice-president; Chi DeVw Pi Gamma MuV ; f ' ' pan Hd- Phi, Historian, Am p , ,,,, Pan C. A. Cabmet,Pam ident. Marshall Jones William Jordan , .M.NCHAM, ALABAMA ■y-. ' 30- 31 B K ncil, ;30, Secre - - SeSS ' c Seefr Rhverlv No un Keener ' .MtKCHAM, ALABAMA A.B. . „. Varsity foo ' ' reeS P shman F. ' ' ; ' ,! and Patches ;G«ek • = tetue ' s ' Eta Alpha Tau; Belles Lettres , :.B Club. T Albert Lambert i M.NGHAM, ALABAMA A.B. Glee Club. K ' ' ,. • . • J ' ii- Pamt PH Vice-President, 3 ' - Eta Sigma Phr- patches. SENIORS k Ted Flonmoy Lprru • ' ALABAMA B.S. ■J Alpha ' „ . ' ■' ' ' , President, % jent, ' 32 , Band, ' jj Symphony 31- 2- r„. r ' ■' ter- P b Orchestra „ - ' «or in CheZir ' ' -33 ; W ' UH Ruth Linn ' « ' «. ALABAMA ™E S, ALABAMA ■fneta Upsi nn c P . Secretary, •;,.•... „, ' 29. ■G ee Club. P OY CofilNNE Mart, , ? ' ' Beta Beta H ' ■' - J--FacSrs: .;ice-P.e.dent, V-ce-P,esidefr ' 32 ' ' ' ' PPa, Jeannette Peart u — -. ., A?AB r- Ciariosophir r ,v ' ' ' Ridge n ' ' cT ' ' ' - ' 3 ' ; De£; ' - - C - A at ' delegate to ' ° B ' ue «vr ' tai s, - ' - -ci ' PaTc :: , ,5-Ed AJpha r, ' Oman ' s Ath pt;. ' J de Committee ' . ; ' 32; Pa- • ' S ! ° Mavs ' ' Wf ' AP, ALABAMA A Rbvue, ' 33..3 ' ' 9, ' 30, ' 31; ' SENIORS : Pmily McLaughlin A.B- Gertrude Moebes ,«M1NGHAM, ALABAMA A.B. Treasurer, 3 phi Sigma «jr ;,s. ? • . .i-- ' £.s wrGv...c ' A;,!.-;« ' 3- 31. Secretary- Casteiiana, •31-32. Treasurer Socied 32- Helen H- Moore B,.MINGHAM, ALABAMA A.B. Tnta- Scroll, Ke Chi Delta Phi; P t - c ' i ' Delta P ;: President. ; ;,,;„„, 29 o ' ' , gi, Club, ' 29. 3° ' „ r MoRELAND Howard - ' ■' ,vrHAM, ALABAMA lee B.S. B K „ Treasurer, Phi s, :2Z -30, Kappa ' ' ' +feasurer, _ A., Secretar ir Council ,,,. State Stu ' X.it Staff, Gold and Black , _ ■33, ' 30; .,,; Y. M. C. Vice-President, Representative, „■,,• Parade 30- 31 ' ! ti k Carl Henrv Neal BMSTOL, TENNESSEE ■' m t ■30- ' 3t; Ne- , ;. Tau President, i Gamma Eta Alpha Tau cercle Franca.s, P tonian C , L „ P ' ? ' riariosophic Staff, 30-55 Vice-Pt ; l ' ,3 ' ' jr.eshman ond Honor Ro . ,5 . SENIORS ° Ellen Nettles RU.VCTCV, ALABAMA Theta Chi De)f„ ■5- cictv ' - t ran  ,o. J°HN B«.NsEo«o Nichols •ORK, ALABAMA dent, V ' -! ' % ' « ' ' ' -i fit Classical ' ' - ' 3 --Ro|;ofHol; ' .-:--.presi. o , 50 N, ; ' ' A Honor fy Section ' ' V ' p ' ' ' C°mm,ttee, ta S-t . -iT ' ' ■' resident r • 32, ,ce-President • ' iJfT. ' Ph ide Marguewte Page ' ' ' W- W, ALABAMA Pjii Sigma Iota- Eta ? ' ' 3 . ' 33 .-Honor r:,,! - -. ' 31. SENIORS LouLiE Jean Norman ' ' ' -VCHAM, ALABAMA R.. . ' _. ! ' Trio: Par, . ■31, Glee Club ■. f mJV;c--  1 I 1., : EVELVN LOUISE PHAR ' • ,.,RnEU . ALABAMA A.B. r e . j pa, Mu Pi Gamma Mu; S S- C.T ' S- S ' ' , dent Gamma A ' lce-President Co Ed _, . Alpha, ' 32-33. c. A. CabMt. i _ T jeasurer, 3 5 „aio Committee, _ .;, Chairman R ' ' ? q I, Blue Ridge N e ' sident Traimug V Ridge, ' 3f. ,, M«v R- , sr BIRMINGHAM, ALAB J.B. , , • Sigma = ' ' ,r „ President, 5 , | Council, Scroll, V.ce-P« , rer; Co-td net, ' 30-3- ' OncFY Louise Po , x-rHAM, ALABAMA BIRMINGHAM, Rifl.J: Staff; W ; Belles l- „,,ncil; Honor Ko - -• ratcVie L; R vue Staff. T- CT L REDUS ' rSAM ---A BIRMINGHAM, ' • ; Vice-President, Xn Tau, •3- ' 33, P-V ! h.r society, :3r: k ' ,1 ' 1-; fresiu ' - ' — cocietv, 3 - Tri Tau, 5 i ' pw Literary So . . Secretary , , . . ,„; Chaplain- 33, ..33. LUCIL '  ABAMA BIRMINGHAM, ALAB A-B- 1 ' ® v- Belles 1 Trancais; oei ' i. ma Sigma KapP SENIORS WooD«ow Wilson Simmons B.S. S -J ' ' y ' 3 ' - ' 3.: Th ESTON Harmon Stead « ' «M,XGHAM, ALABAMA e K lY Phi Sigma Iota- r Council; GoU W S ' star ' T ' - - James Bhnham Stewart - ' -VCHAM, ALABAMA B.S. «a Clii Delta; Gl ee Club, 3i- ' 32. Greeks, ' ,rJr ' a; Stray George D. Sulz B ' RMJ.VGHAM BV ALABAMA .B. John Aubrv Thomas ■- ' UH, ALABAMA Varsity £;, ,.!, ' ,,, ' Football. -,„ . ' ? ' ' ' , S ' tJ Baseball a? „ ' ' - -ele; ' 3i: SENIORS oHN Veal Thompson Jr- A.B. 2 X BIRMINGHAM, ALAB A.B. r B T.U- Treasurer, ' 3° ' 3 ' ' Vtn Sigma Pli ' ' i nU- Amazonb. Second Honor Ro l , Scroll, Sarah Fra « ° ' ' ' T.M.SCHAM, ALABAMA .■J.B. r j B , „ Commission, Freshman Co-wi p ench Club, ' j? V ir i? .c w a o; -r ' M., ' 3-. % ' :SsTaV ' 3 - ' 3- TUUUS M. TURNER ■Lo.TGOM.aV, ALABAMA Chi, B.S. B K Or- 9- ' °V She ' - ' ° Pi Slgn X ; ' . Symphony -dllCastellana. ' rtlt . ' - ' ' SENIORS Andrew Spencer Tv MO.VTGOMERv RNIPSEED ALABAMA Om A.B. K A L-micron DeJfi i. ' Pi Gamma M. ' Pf ' .. Kappa Alpha President Iniio aT ' S ' • ' ' '  ° - ermanen Werdna Vau. BIRMI.VGHAM GHAN ' ILABAM.A Sigma CI Sigma AM. e r Kappa; Sec. retarv. ' ' 3 , 33,- Feature Editor ' . V, ' ' h ' ' ' ' ' = ' ' 33, Honor Roll. Jesse Eugene Walters S ' RMI.VCHAM, ALABAMA A.B. A T Q E As Calvin Watson Tr ' ' ■' •VCHAM, alabam ■A.B. Ele. BIKMI.VCHAM, A.B. K4 ANOR West ALABAMA SENIORS Robert Westbrook BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA A.B. president V M. C. Student Senate, 3- l ' Cabinet, ' 29- 33- A., ' 31- 32. • UMES Whitehead BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA A.B. AS Lettres, 3 ' _ ,,, Treasurer, 33. r ' ; ' i •International aCK, 3 ' ' ' i-i. al Relations CluD, i ANDREW WHITMIRE LEEDS, ALABAMA S A E . President p; Gamma Mu. -. Senator, Semo. _ fnrpS -.- ' Barbara Williams 3,RM..CHAM, ALABAMA A.B. A n t ;pa;G «5 ' ' . ' . ' : YW.C. A. cabinet, or Roll, ' 29, 31. K . ' 2. HAROLD WiNFlELD B.S. . , , .,2 President, Clarisopbic Lit aj _, _ SENIORS Ike Newton Winst, B ' RMI.VCHAM ' II-ABAMA ON, Jr. Track; CJ B K ' ° ophic,. Glee Club. Will: lAM Frederick Witt B ' RMI.VGHAM ' ALABAMA Eta Alpha Tau. Walton Wrj ' «SBLLVa,H, ALABAMA 5 ' ' ; Kappa Ph; K • ' V ' arsity Basebfli! ' ' ' P ' ««- ' -VCHAM, ALABAMA ■nt and Patch ,- Belles Lettre -UM E,,,,, y « ' = ' -MA, ALABAMA £ta Alpha Tau. SENIORS Z - ' 7 yil CLASS OFFICERS Ay Laurie Battle Presidem X -O ' V ' Arthur McFarland Vice-PresidenP ' ' f r : „-o .    ' Margaret Peterson Secretary - t f ly l ' i Mary Bonfield Treasurer ' L. ' T ' -. f Q% -o JrresenUnci THE JUNIORS BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN JUNIORS Velma Arnold r B BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Leslie Barnett B K BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Glee Club. Laurie Battle K A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA OAK: Varsity Football. Ba.sketball. Baseball; Freshman Football. Captain Freshman Basketball; Y. M. C. A. Cabi- net: President Junior Class; Student Senate. Maurice F. Bishop X X BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA President T K A. •32- ' 33; Secretary T K A, •31- ' 32: Debat- ing Team. ' 30. ' SI. ' 32; Debate Manager, ' 31. ' 32, ' 33; La Revue Staff. ' 31. ' 32, ' 33 ; Assistant Manager Basketball, ' 32; Manager Basketball. ' 33; Winner Sophomore Dec- lamation Contest. ' 32; Winner Intrasociety Oratorical Contest. ' 32; Junior Senator. ' 32; Member Belles Lettres, ' 31. ' 32. ' 33; Paint and Patches. ■32- ' 33; Secretary-Treas- urer Student Senate. ' 32; Parade Manager, ' 32; O A K. Mary Bonfield birmingham, alabama Z S K; President A T. ' 31; Clariosophic Literary Society. ' 31- ' 32; Winner Intrasociety Commencement Debate. ' 31; French Club. ' 31- ' 32; La Revue Staff. ' 31- ' 32; Treasurer Junior Class; Treasurer T T T. ' 31; Debate Squad, ' 32: Junior Representative Co-Ed Council. ' 32; Honor Roll Every Semester. Cecil L. Bradford n K A SELMA, ALABAMA Freshman Basketball; Secretary-Treasurer Freshman and Sophomore Classes. Samuel Sidney Carpenter, Jr. birmingham, alabama National Harmon Foundation Scholarship. 30; II I X. ' SO; Clariosophic Literary Society, ' 30- ' 31 Rosemary Carroll r B BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Paint and Patches, ' 30; Clarioscopic Literary Society, ' 30; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, ' 31- ' 32. Robert Henry Do ' wnes B K BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Captain Tennis Team; Spanish Society. Charles Pledger Carter A I TARRANT, ALABAMA Paint and Patches. THE 19 3 3 LA REVUE JUNIORS Oliver Cox S A E BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA n r M; Assistant Business Manager La Revue. ' 30- ' 31; Assistant Editor. ■31- ' 32; Editor. •32- ' 33; Paint and Patches, ' 30, ' 31. ' 32; Varsity Cheer Leader. ' 31- ' 32; T. M. C. A. Cabinet. ' 32. James H. Clendinen X X THOMASVILLE, ALABAMA Albert Fairley A T a birmingham, alabama Margaret Louise Edwards birmi gh; m, alabama Glee Club; Clariosophic Literary Society: T T T: President A T; Second Honor Roll, ■30- ' 31. Olga Franke BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA T T T: Girls- Glee Club; Belles Lettres. Murray Creight Fincher brundidge, alabama n r M; Glee Club; ■■Gold and Black Staff. Morris Leon Goodwin B K BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Varsity Track. Florence Augusta B. Freeman birmingham, alabama Le Cercle Francais; T T T; Caps and Bells; Glee Club; Clariosophic Literary Society; Y. W. C. A.; Honor Roll. ' 30. ' SI. ' 32. Hyatt Hagan 2 A E BIRMINGHAM , ALABAMA Wilson L. Heflin X X Associate Editor Gold and Black ; Varsity Debate Squad. ' 33; ■■La Revue. 33; Belles Lettres; Newspaper Corre- spondent for the ■■Birmingham Post and the ■■Birmins- ham Daily Mirror. ' BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN JUNIORS Mary Claire Heath e T BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Bellfs Lettres Society; Junior Representative on Athletic Council: Pan-Hellenic Representative. Bonnie Hill J A A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Walter Earle Hooper, Jr. K A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Pi Gamma Mu; Greeks. Frances Horton Z T A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA DuARD Le Grand i S EUFAULA, ALABAMA Paint and Patches. Joe Killough AS PINSON, ALABAMA Paint and Patches. Martha Jane Kluttz II B BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Art Editor La Revue ; i) S I. Rauzelle M. Johnson tuscaloosa, alabama Mini.sterial . ssociation ; T. M. C. A. Cabinet; Spanish Club. COTESWORTH PiNCKNEY LeWIS BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA M A; Belles Lettres: Glee Club; Orchestra: Business Man- ager Paint and Patches, ' 32. Lee MacArthur birmingham, alabama Music: Dramatics. TT THE 19 3 3 LA REVUE JUNIORS Inez Mason r f B birmingham, alabama Frances Caroline McCabe A X dora, alabama Arthur L. McFarland S A E ST. CLAIRSVILLE, OHIO Vice-President Junior Class; Associate Editor Gold and Black ; Freshman Football. Louis Meier X X NEW MADRID, MISSOURI Freshman Track, ' 31; Varsity Track. ' 33; Newtonian Club; Student Senate, ' 32- ' 33. Eloise Murray AAA DADEVILLE, ALABAMA Pan-Hellenic Council; Glee Club. Mary Julia Minto BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Z I; La Sociedad Castellana. Margaret Earle Peterson A X S3 birming ham, alabama George Nagel 2 A E BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Editorial Stall Gold and Black ; Editorial .Staff La Revue ; Greelvs. Zack Schuessler 2 A E LAFAYETTE, ALABAMA Freshman Baseball; Varsity Baseball James Ragland n K A PELL CITY, ALABAMA K K BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN JUNIORS Mary E. Shively A n BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Linda Moore Sessions A n birmingham, alabama Johnnie Belle Smith birmingham, alabama Critic Clariosophic Literary Society; Sophomore Declama- tion: Glee Club; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet; Honor Roll, ' 30- ' 31; Junior Representative Co-Ed Council; Paint and Patches; Debate Squad; Women ' s Intramural Athletic Commission; Eta Sigma Phi. John B. Smyth BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Lydia Taylor n B BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA X A ; La Revue ; Gold and Black. Bill Stubbins BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Theta Chi Delta. Mary Carolyn Tyler birmingham, alabama Z I; La Sociedad Castellana. Paul Taylor e K N BIRMINGHAM. ALABAMA Freshman Basketball. ' 30; Varsity Basketball. •31- ' 32; Baseball. Harriet Throckmorton K A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Assistant Secretary K A ; Belles Lettres Literary Society. Florence Vance n B i ' BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA X A !■; Gold and Black ; La Revue ; Amazons. Leo Donnell Van de Voort A T B WOODWARD, ALABAMA THE 19 3 3 LA REVUE JUNIORS Davis Hunt Thompson G X A; Newtonian. VIXCEXT, ALABAMA ' 31- ' 32 Treasurer. Chenii.stry. Instructor in Esther Charline Vaughn birmingham, alabama e X A; Secretary Newtonian Club; Assistant in Cliemistry Laboratory. Walter Carl Wann, Jr. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Clario: ophic Society. Margaret Weaver r B BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Le Cercle Francais; Glee Club, ' 31- Literary Society. ' 33; Clariosophic ' 33; Treasurer Raymond West X X SHANNON, MISSISSIPPI Business Manager Gold and Black, ' 32, Interfraternity Council. Charles L. Weston A T S2 LOUISVILLE, ALABAMA Debating Team. ' 31- ' 33; Interfraternity Council. ' 31; Vice- President, ■32- ' 33; Paint and Patches; Gold and Black, ' 31- 33; Y. M. C. A. Council; Assistant Business Manager La Revue, ■31- ' 32. Business Manager, ' 33. Floyd A. White, Jr. e K N BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA McCoy Whitmire 2 A E LEEDS, ALABAMA Manager Freshman Football Team. Katherine Idella Windham r e BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA y. W. C. A. Cabinet, ' 32; Clariosophic Literary Society, •31- ' 32; Glee Club. ' 31- ' 32; Cap and Bells; Vice-President College Epworth League. Carolyn Worthington e T BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Co-Ed Council; Athletic Council; Secretary Y. W. C. A.; La Revue Staff; Clariosophic Literary Society: B Honor Roll. Christine Louise Zieger r B MARIANNA, ARKANSAS ' -% • ' ► cjKmmmmKKiM f4 . CLASS OFFICERS Capers Smith President Raymond Waid Vice-President ? v C r . 6 Louise Liles Secretary c . ( f J -y Mary Gene Herren ' ' ' ' ' ' ' U,,f --R JL O ' rT; ( VJ JrresenlL incj .y THE SOPHS |i BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN SOPHOMORES i ' Margaret Assell r e birmingham, alabama Joe Akin e K N birmingham, alabama Jack Barefield BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Paint and Patches, President, ' 32- ' 33; Suppressed Desires ; Darlc Holiday : Eirniinghani Post College Correspondent, ' 31- ' 32; College Correspon d- ent Birmingham News. ' 32- ' 33: Stage Manager The Fourth Mrs. Phillips. The Jade God ; Belles Lettres. ■32--3S; Paint and Patches Radio Players; Gold and Black Staff, ' 31- ' 32; Story, College Bulletin, Ten Short Stories. Mary Frances Bice birmingham, alabama Pauline Bradford r e BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Tom Anderson A T n BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Shirley Brother new castle, alabama Eva Williams Brown A o n BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Mary McFarland Brown K A birmingham, alabama Louis Francis Busenlener B K birmingham, alabama Lauren Brubaker, Jr. X X ST. AUGUSTINE, FLORIDA Freshman Debate Squad ■31- ' 32; Varsity Debate Squad. ' 32- ' 33; Ministerial Association. ' 31, ' 32, ' 33; Paint and Patches, ' 31- ' 32, ' 32- ' 33; Commencement Oratorical Contest, ' 32; Gold and Black Staff ' 31- ' 32, ■32- ' 33; La Revue Staff, ' 31- ' 32, ' 32- ' 33; B Honor Roll, ' 32; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, ' 32- ' 33. Rscnina s is nntnMB THE 19 3 3 LA REVUE SOPHOMORES Earl Calhoun BESSEMER, ALABAMA Joe Carmichael AS BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Glee Club; Belles Lettres: Paint and Patches; Assistant Manager Track; Gold and Black ; La Revue. LiNNA Cheney A X n ALLGOOD, ALABAMA Belles Lettres. Clarita Claussen birmingham, alabama Glee Club. ' 32- ' 33; Clariosophic Literary Society; Y. W. C. A., ' 32. Robert S. Clayton K A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Secretary Interfraternity Council. Beaman Sherley Cooley, Jr. X X BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Track Team, ' 32; Parade Committee, ' 32. Anne Cooney A X a BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA George M. Davenport, Jr. 2 A E BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Gold and Black. Business Staff, ' 31- ' 32, Glee Club, ' 32. Arthur Dickerson birmingham, alabama Glee Club; Ministerial Association; Classical Club; Clariosophic Literary Society; P. IC. Club; Y. M. C. A. Fred Dunlap e K N BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Mary Dunn birmingham, alabama Secretary Paint and Patches Club, ' 32; Belles Let- tres Literary Society; Paint and Patches Radio Players; Girls ' Glee Club. 3 BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN SOPHOMORES Mildred Merry Ellis K A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Belles Lettres; Le Cercle Francais; Gold and Black Staff; ' La Revue Staff. Mary Anglin Enslen A X n BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Vice-Pri-sirtent Belles Letties Literary Society. Ramon Ramos Espino SANTA CLARA, CUBA Vice-President Spani -h Club, •32- ' 33. Robena Foster Evins n B ■! BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Belles Lettres; Glee Club; International Relations Club. Shelley Finegan A T birmingham, alabama Annie Lou Fitch r B SLILLICENT, ALABAMA Paint and Patches: Girls ' Glee Club; Freshman Commission of Y. W. C. A.; Band Sponsor; La Revue Staff; Gold and Black Staff. Jean Eraser K A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Howard A. Friedel BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Paint and Patches Mary Gene FiERREN K A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Mary Louise Fell Z T A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Morris F endrickson A S ■! BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA THE 19 3 3 LA REVUE SOPHOMORES Ann Hogan HE BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Le Cercle Francais; La Revue Staff. Alice Holt K A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA E. C. Hopping, Jr. e K N BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Parade Committee; Gold and Elaclc Staff. Jack Jarvis K A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA William W. Jeffries B K BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Helen Virginia Johns A X S2 BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Girls ' Glee Chib. Barbara Keener birmingham, alabama Henry Howell X X BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Band and Orchestra. Katherine Kluttz n B BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Dorothy Hurlbert birmingham, alabama Roberta Knowles K A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Paint and Patches; Belles Lettres. BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN SOPHOMORES Francis B. Lemont e K N EN ' SLEV, ALABAMA Fred Koenig S A E BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Betty La Forge r H UNION BRIDGE, MARYLAND Glee Club. Sara Lawrence ENSLEV, ALABAMA ZoE Lyon BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Delta Phi Alpha; Phi Sigma Iota; Belles Lettres. Secretary, ' 32; Classical Club, Treasurer, ' 32; La RevuG ; Le Cercle Francais: Honor Roll; Athletic Numeral; Gold and Black. Frances Mallam n B BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Hugh Martin A T s; BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Mu Alpha Orville Lawson B K BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Paint and Patches. Louise Lilee Z T A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Secretary Sophomore Class. Glenn Massengale S A E birmingham, alabama Agnes Mandy r ENSLEV, ALABAMA Cl.irin.sophic; Glee Club; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet; .•Mpli.i Gamma; Cap and Bells; Secretary, ' 32- ' 33. THE 19 3 3 LA REVUE mmjf SOPHOMORES Betty McHugh e T BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Belles Lettres; Glee Club; Cap and Bells. Ebba Lou Moon birmin ' cham, alabama Glee Club, ' 31; Alpha Gamma ■31- ' 32; T, Cabinet. ' 32. OviE W. Mathison SKIPPERVILLE, ALABAMA Ministerial Association; Clariosophic Literary Society. Mary Frances Merkel PRATT CITY, ALABAMA V. W. C. A. Cabinet; President Alpha Gamma; Girls ' Glee Club; ■Gold and Black Staff; Tri Tau; Cap and Bells; Honor Roll. Violet Pankey Z T A EIR.MINGHAM, ALABAMA Itara Elizabeth Parker A n BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Reporter for Alpha Gamma. 31; Artist for T. W. C. A.. ' 32; B S. Monogram with Star, ' 31; Treas- urer Alpha Omicron Pi Pledges. ' 32. Carlisle Miller malvern ' , alabama Ministerial Association. Barney A. Monaghan A T !2 BIRMIN ' GHAM, ALABAMA Cecile Minisman birmingham, alabama Paint and Patches; Gold and Black Staff; La Kevue Staff; Clariosophic Literary Society; Le Cercle Francais. Mildred Esther Peacock e T BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Sophomore Co-Ed Council Representative: Critic, Secretary, Clariosophic Literary Society; Business Manager State Y. W. C. A., ' 32- ' 33: Y. W. C. A. Cabinet ; Cliairman of Dramatics; Paint and Patches; La Revue Staff. ' 32- ' 33; Glee Club; Athletic Let- ter; Freshman Debating Team. 31; Girls ' Varsity Debating Team. ' 32; Cap and Bells, President: Tri Tau. Violet Felicia Nappi BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Mu Alpha; Belles Lettres; Paint and Patches. Glee Club BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN SOPHOMORES Richmond Earl Perry MALOXE, ALABAMA Rosalie Pettus n B BIRMLVGHAM, ALABAMA Paint and Patches. Marguerite Porter A X a BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Glee Club. Richard Joe Phillips B K BESSEMER, ALABAMA Elizabeth Perry BIRMINGHAM, ALABA.MA Richardena Lowry Ramsey n B BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Belles Lettres; I e Cercle Francais. Thomas Prickett AS BOAZ, ALABAMA Glee Club. Alfred Pugh A T Q BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA LuciEN Rice K A ALBERTVILLE, ALABAMA Band Louise Powers BIRMINGHAM, ALABA.MA Glee Club. Mary Riley r B BESSEMER, ALABAMA THE 19 3 3 LA REVUE SOPHOMORES Capers Smith X A E COLUMBUS, GEORGIA Student Senate; President Sophomore Class. Elna Sessions n B birmingham, alabama Anne Shackelford birmingham, alabama Glee Club. ' :!l- ' 32; Belle.s Lettres, ' 32; Co-Ed Athletic Council, ' ?,2. Frances Sheffield AAA SHELLMAN, GEORGIA Vici-Prtsident Delta Delta Delta. Ida Rutherford Z T A FRANKLIN, ALABAMA Elizabeth Smith A n BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Ferdinand Arthur Smith A T U BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Mary Allen Smith A n BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA J. T. Smith BIRMINGHAM. ALAB. MA John Erwin Sims i: A E BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Grace Marie Storey r G BIRMI.VCHAM. ALABAMA Clariosophlc Literary Society. BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN SOPHOMORES Joe Vance birmingham, alabama Robert Vernon X X SUMITON, ALABAMA Freshman Football, EasketbalL Dorothy Suydam Z T A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Paint and Patches. Raymond Waid A 2 BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Vice-President Sophomore Class. Jack Mason Teal birmingham, alabama Glee Club; Intramuial Tennis. Harry L. Weaver s X BSEWTON, ALABAMA Mary Throckmorton K A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Le Cercle Francais; La Revue. ' 33; Gold and Black, ' 33; Belles Lettres. Mary Ella Suter birmingham, alabama S. I. Whatley K A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA O. C. Weaver, Jr. X X BREWTON, ALABAMA Y. M. C. A. Cabinet; Ministerial Association; La Revue Staff; Freshman Debate Team. faA E THE 1933 LA REVUE SOPHOMORES Robert J. Wheeler, Jr. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Wood Whetstone X X SYLACAUGA, ALABAMA Gold and Black Staff; Cldriosophic Literary So- ciety: Ministerial Association, Y, jM. C. A. Cabinet. Marian Wilcox e T BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Norman H. Winston B K BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA La Sociedad Castellana. John F. Witte birmixgham, alabama Gold and Black Staff, ' 32- ' 33; La Revue Staff, ' 32- ' 33; International Relations Club. ' 31- ' 33. Vice- President, ■32- 33; Belles Lettres Literary Society, ' 33; Le Cercle Francais, ' 33; Paint and Patches. ' 33. Ed ' ward L. deWilton birmingham, alabama Mary Jane Wing BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Classical Club; Y. W. C. A. Mary Jo Zuber r B BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Mu Alpha; Glee Cltib, ' 31- ' 32; T. W. C. A. Cabinet. ' 31- ' 32; Clariosophic Literary Society, ' 31- ' 32; Hon- or Roll. ' 31- ' 32; Athletic Numeral. ' 32. Jerome Winston B K BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Olee Club; Track; La Sociedad Castellana. Robert Woodrow e K N BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Le Cercle Francais. — CLASS OFFICERS Drummond Gaines President Cameron Moreno Vice-Presidents ZoLiTE Johnson Secretary J Ui -, Ruth Weiss Treasurer r . . ■.4C- 1 resenli YlCj yO THE FROSH I ¥ :5 BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN s s Hi FRESHMEN Herbert Acton Birmingham, Ala. BovcE Adams Headland, Ala. Alma Alexander, OX.... Birmingham, Ala. Mary McK. Anthony, Z T A . Birmingham, Ala. William W. Austin Birmingham, Ala. Josephine Bailey , A X f! . . . Birmingham, Ala. Robin Banks, A T n Birmingham, Ala. Weldon Barker, B K . . . . Birmingham, Ala. Herbert J. Baum, Jr Birmingham, Ala. Marie Boozer ........ Sweetwater, Ala. Louise Blow, r ■! B Cordova, Ala. George Bicgers, A T r . . . . Birmingham, x ' Ma. William Cady, XX Birmingham, Ala. Mary Friel Brown, r B . . Birmingham, Ala. Constance Brown Birmingham, Ala. William Caldwell, K A . . . Birmingham, Ala. Evelyn Carr Birmingham, Ala. Marjorie E. Cheatham, K A . Birmingham, Ala. Samuel Cohn Birmingham, Ala. Caroline Clay ' ton, n B . . Birmingham, Ala. Henry Frank Chunn Jackson, Ala. Jack Connell, A Z . . . . Birmingham, Ala. Louis Cole, B K Birmingham, Ala. THE 1933 i LA REVUE FRESHMEN Margaret Culverhouse Z T A Charles Crouch, XX. . Betit Crawford, n B . Theresa Davenport, r B Frances Cutcliff, e T . . Clarence Dannellv, A T f Robert Davis, A T .Q . . . Sara Denton, re Barclay Dillo.n, Z A E . . Gilbert Douglas James Drake Ethel Dillon, 6 T . . . . Selma Dale Durham, r B . John William Dupuy, Z A E Carroll Eddins Roberta Farrar, r B . . . ROSWELL Falkenberry, 2 A E Larston Farrar Drummond Gaines, K A . . Denson N. Franklin . . . . James Garreit, G K N . . . Claude Gholston, e K N . . Woodford Dinning, A T fi . . Birmingham, Ala. . Birmingham, Ala. . Birmingham, Ala. . Birmingham, Ala. . Birmingham, Ala. . . Camden, Conn. . Birmingham, Ala. . Loudon, Tenn. . Birmingham, Ala. . Birmingham, Ala. . Brundidge, Ala. . Birmingham, Ala. . Birmingham, Ala. . Birmingham, Ala. . . . Siluria, Ala. . Birmingham, Ala. . . . Selma, Ala. . Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Binningham, Ala. . Birmingham, Ala. . Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN FRESHMEN ToLBERT Griffin Birmingham, Ala. Sarah Hammons, 9 T Brunswick, Ga. Pecgv Greene Birmingham, Ala. Joe Hannum Birmingham, Ala. Jane Haralson, Z T A . . . . Birmingham, Ala. Annie Laurie ?Iarrell, Z T . . Birmingham, Ala. Bessie Scott Harris, A II . . Birmingham, Ala. Annette L. Hatcher, A A Ji . . Birmingham, Ala. Evelyn Harrison, F B . . . Birmingham, Ala. Franklin Hewes, B K . . . . Birmingham, Ala. Heflin Havnes Sylacauga, Ala. Martha Herndon, A O n . . . Birmingham, Ala. Mary Earle Hiden, K A . . . Birmingham, Ala. R. F. Holman, 2 a E Evergreen, Ala. Elmer Hobbs, 9 K X Sunbury, N. C. David Hudson, i; A E Selma, Ala. Katrina Howell, T $ B . . . . Haleyville, Ala. James Hughes, - A E . . . . Birmingham, Ala. Maxwell R. Johnson Harriman, N. C. Frank Johnson, AS . . . . Birmingham, Ala. ZoLiTE Johnson, A X fi . . . . Birmingham, Ala. Jessie Keller, AAA Cullman, Ala. Edith Johnston, K A . . . • Birmingham, Ala. THE 19 3 3 LA REVUE FRESHMEN Russell Kersev, n K A . . . . Monticello, Fla. Eleanor Kidd, n B ■I ' . . . . Birmingham, Ala. Bob Kendall, 2 A E Evergreen, Ala. Ira J. King Birmingham, Ala. Hazel Kinzer Tuscumbia, Ala. Paul Lanier, T K N Birmingham, Ala. Bernice Lokev, n B . . . . Birmingham, Ala. Mildred Long, r B . . . . Birmingham, Ala. Cornelius Walton Lowrv . . . Sunny South, Ala. James Alfred Martin .... Birmingham, Ala. Margaret Lyman, K A . . . . Birmingham, Ala. Helio Ruiz Madrigal .... Cienluegos, Cuba RlCHARDlNE Massey, KB . . Birmingham, Ala. Jack H. Massey-, Jr., AS . . Birmingham, Ala. Marvin R. Martin, A 2 . . Birmingham, Ala. Jessie Mae McCulley Blocton, Ala. Murray McEniry ' , I: A E . . . . Bessemer, Ala. William McGehee, 2 .1 E . . . Evergreen, Ala. Daphne McLendon, Z T A . . Birmingham, Ala. Mae McIntosh, n B I . . . . Birmingham, Ala. Martha McGill, 9 T . . . . Birmingham, Ala. Virginia Miller, 6 T . . . . Birmingham, Ala. Richard W. Meacham .... Birmingham, Ala. BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN FRESHMEN Will Miller, n K A . . . . Birmingham, Ala. Erna Mae Mohns Birmingham, Ala. A. C. Montgomery, Jr., !; A E . Birmingham, Ala. Bob Montgomery, 2 A E . , . Birmingham, Ala. Cameron Moreno, Jr Birmingham, Ala. John O. Mosley .... Magnolia Terminal, Ala. Martha Louise Parker, . Ft . Birmingham, Ala. Howell Parrish, B K . . . . Birmingham, Ala. Kathryn Plan Birmingham, Ala. Penelope Prewitt, A X fi . . . Birmingham, Ala. Richard Presley Parrish, Ala. Elbert Ponder, A Z i Cullman, Ala. Wayne Knight Ramsay ' , 2 A E . Birmingham, Ala. Richard Spain Riley, 2 A E . . Birmingham, Ala. Arthur Ribe, T K N . . . . Birmingham, Ala. Felix Robb Birmingham, Ala. James Roberts, B K Birmingham, Ala. Dave Rucks, n K A Birmingham, Ala. Mildred Ryan, A X Q . . . . Birmingham, Ala. Frank Sattler, n K A Momicello, Fla. John H. Schoppert, II K . . . Birmingham, Ala. DeWitt Seay, B K Birmingham, Ala. Maybeth Shepard, A it . . . Birmingham, Ala. THE 19 3 3 LA REVUE FRESHMEN Maclin F. Smith, Z A E . . . Birmingham, Ala. Margaret E. Smith, r B . . Birmingham, Ala. Robert Smith, A T n . . . . Birmingham, Ala. Winston Smith, A T n . . . . Birmingham, Ala. William Sutherlin, n K A . . Kirmingham, Ala. Louise Strawbricce Sulligent, Ala. Edith Avres Teal, A X n . . . Birmingham, Ala. Helen Tate, T j B Birmingham, Ala. Edith Taylor, Z T A . . . . Birmingham, Ala. Virginia Thompson, K A Selma, Ala. Annette Totten Birmingham, Ala. Sam Totum Sylacauga, Ala. Julia Wallace, K A Birmingham, Ala. Henderson Walker, B K . . . Birmingham, Ala. Ann Turner, AAA Anniston, Ala. En Warren, Jr., 2 A E . . . . Birmingham, Ala. Evelyn Walton, A X fJ . . . Birmingham, Ala. Ruth Weiss, II B Birmingham, Ala. Grethel Mae White .... Birmingham, Ala. Malcolm Wheeler Birmingham, Ala. Herbert West, - A E . . . . Birmingham, Ala. LuLA Jeannette Wright, 9 T . . Bessemer, Ala. LIBRARY -T BlRMiaGllUH-SflUTHEBH OOLUfit dEan ' FDDT BktL THE B CLUB Three-Year Men: H. L. Allbrooks Beaird Tw H. w 0-1 Cran ' ford . Wright ' ear Men A. L. Thomas Vaughn W . Holt c. Harper M . O ' Neal G. Briner E. Owens L. Bowers B. Johnson ' E. Moore J. McBee OxE- ' ear Men L. Battle H. Davis J. Norris A. Curry J- Warner R. ' edge vorth F. Burks D. Mitchell K Young N. Keener L. Havgooc L. Meier F. Clark M Mays L. TOWNSEND D. Perry E. Teel Z. Scheussler F. Lecroy J- Crenshaw RESUME OF 1932 FOOTBALL SEASON The Golden Cat gridmen from Sunshine Slopes opened the season by taking one of the worst lickings ever administered to a Gillem-coached eleven, but staged a remark- able comeback to win the Dixie Conference Crown. Coaches Gillem and Robinson were confronted with the problem of moulding a grid machine from a squad composed pri- marily of green sophomores and light lettermen. However, when the season came to a close, the Hilltop mentors had a smooth-functioning, well-balanced eleven, composed ot stellar performers, but with no outstanding stars. Two Panther players were placed on the Associated Press All-Dixie Conference Eleven, these being Captain Lewis Beard, cen- ter, and Hubert Allbrooks, end. With the end of the season Birmingham-Southern had a record of five wins and one loss with Dixie Conference teams. The Auburn Plains- men and Lyola Wolves were the non-conference elevens that set back the Gold and Black Panthers. Th gridiron year opened for the Cats in the annual clash with the Auburn Tigers at the capital city, Montgomery. The Mighty Sleeping Giants unleashed a powerful running attack which ran up a 61-0 score on the Methodist inexperienced squad. About six of the starters were first-year varsity men, while the exponents of the Notre Dame system were practically all veterans and hefty, too. When the season came to a close, Chet Wynn ' s Cohorts had a record of six victories and not a single loss in the South- ern Conference. This crushing defeat was of course a bitter dose to swallow, but it did not discour- age the fighting Panthers. The following week-end a squad of twenty-five journeyed to New Orleans and held the strong Lyola Wolf pack to a 12-0 victory in their own stadium under the arc lights. ri FOOTBALL COACHES CAREY ROBINSON JENKS GILLEM - ' I When a limitetl coaching staff takes a green hunch of sophoinore football players and, after losing a most disheartening game at the first of the season, wins the first Dixie Conference football championship for Birmingham-Southern, that ' s a good sign there ' s plenty of quality in the staff. That ' s also a sign that the sophomores had excellent training when they were freshmen. This is exactly what Athletic Director Carey Robinson and Head Football Coach Jenks Gillem did in 1932 in the way of football. Coach Robinson trained a line, reputed by many sports scribes as the best in the Dixie Conference. The line was made up mostly of inexperienced men from the freshman ranks. Three members of this forward vall were ranked on All-Dixie Conference elevens. Jenks Gillem built a backfield that, as a whole, was unparred in the con- ference. Two of its members were All-D. C. backs. Coach Robinson, a former All-Southern lineman at Auburn, also coached freshman basket- ball and varsity baseball in a manner that was a credit to Birmingham-Southern. With the aid of the Simpson gymnasium, Coach Robinson initiated a well-rounded physical training schedu ' e for the freshmen. Members of the football squad helped him in carrying out this fine program. Hailing from Sewanee, where he was known as their best punter, Jenks Gillem emphasizes blocking as most vital in an offensive attack. And naturally he uses punt-formation frequently. The quick-kick is conservative Gillem ' s most effective and demoralizing defensive weapon. Freshman Football Coach Ben Englebert was handicapped by materia ' , but did a remarkably good job. Besides turning out a track team of some repute almost single-handedly, he as varsitv basketball coach, won the City Collegiate and Big Four basketball championships. The City Collegiate crown was the seventh title in succession. While title-grabbing. Coach Eiiglebert took time out long enough to teach mathematics. The professor has a degree from Birmingham- Southern, and has been a valuab ' e asset to his alma mater both athletically and scholastically. Though, as stated, the coaching staff was limited, Birmingham-Southern was represented by top-notch teams in football, basketball, track, baseball, and tennis. Coaches Gillem, Robinson, and Englebert, with the co-operation of former star athletes, made this fine athletic record. It is suggested and approved by many that 1932 was one of the greatest years in Birmingham- Southern ' s athletic history. THE MIGHTY TRIO ' It ' ll , LEWIS BEAIRD. To the lot of this husky pivotman fell the captaincy of 1932 ' s great eleven. Always a tower of strength in the line, Beaird came into his own this year, p ' aying a hranil of ball that earned for him a guard position on the mythical All- Dixie Conference team. LOY VAUGHN. Regarded as the fastest man in the Cat rearworks, this fleet halfback was a constant threat to the enemy. The long suit of this gentleman was lugging back ene- my kicks and was he good — ask Millsaps and Southwestern. Loy is a senior and will be sorely missed when football roll is called next year. ED OWENS. This blond flankman alternated ith Haygood in handling the punting duties and his long spirals frequently drove the ene- my back into their own territory and set the stage for a Panther touchdown. Ed is a junior and will be counted on heavily next year to aid in the defense of the newly-won grid crown. SEASON REVUE. 1932 (Continued) The sophomores were steadier under fire, and with more experience added they ex- hibited potential power. Lewis Haygood, sophomore end, booted the ball twelve times for an average of forty yards. Louis Townsend and Ernest Teel, also first year men, played creditable games. Little Masten O ' Neal made the longest run of this second contest when he galloped twenty-five yards on an off-tackle play. In the rain, sleet, and storm the Panthers won their opening Dixie Conference tilt. Their first touchdown trimmed the Mississippi Choctaws, 6-4. On a dry field the Hill- toppers would have scored two or more touchdowns. AUbrooks, Southern ' s All-Dixie flankman and pass receiver deluxe, scored a touchdown which the referee claimed he did not see in the blinding rain. Quarterback O ' Neal gave the Indians a safety and two points late in the game, but probably kept them from chalking up six or seven points. The colorful Centre Colonels, of Danville, Kentucky, were next on the Cats ' sched- ule. These Mountaineers gave the Golden Cats their only Dixie Conference defeat. Late in the fourth quarter a bad pass from center, on the third down, lost fifteen yards for the Methodist eleven, and on the fourth down another bad pass caused Bulldog Johnson to be tackled behind his goal line. Early in the game the Giliem machine drove to the five-yard line, only to lose the ball on a fumble. This was a tough game to lose, and should have been a victory for the Dixie champs. Two sophomore teams battled at Legion the next Saturday, when the Millsaps Majors did battle with the Panthers. The Purple and White squad had eight second year men in their opening line-up, while Coach Giliem had seven. The Davis Bros. were held in bay, and Vaughn, O ' Neal, LJrm Davis and company were victorious by a 13-0 score. These Mississippians later trounced the Howard Dogs, 19-0. The third home game for the Panthers saw them topple the Southwestern favorites. The Lynxs were favored to win easily, but Chicken High was a marked man and Flash Newton was out with injuries, while Vaughn and Dog Johnson hit their stride. Captain-elect Johnson plowed through the Memphis team ' s line for long gains and short gains. Every Panther played like a real champ and worked together as one. SPONSORS Floy Martin and Violet Nap- pi were the sponsors who graced the Southern bench at the Howard game and added their beauty and charm to the Victory March of the Panthers. ■' — -— • - ■TT VARSITY SQUAD They are saying this is the greatest squad in Hilltop history — this squad that brought to Sunshine Slopes its first championship. To no one man or group of men can be attributed the brilliant success of this mighty machine. A never-say-die spirit, an un- selfish co-operation, and an uncanny alertness were the factors which made the South- ern Panthers 1932 Dixie Champions. CHEERLEADERS Back of the success of every championship team is the spirit of an interested student body. Arousing the student bo dy to the highest pitch of enthusiasm and thereby encouraging the men vho were fighting their heart cut on the field, was the part these men played in the success of the 1932 Dixie Conference champions. A typical shot of a Panther ball-carrier in action — this scene shows a fleet halfback skirting an enemy flank while Gold and Black blockers pre- pare the way. Built around a group of fast backs, the Hilltop flank attack was a steady ground-gainer. FOOTBALL LETTERMEN URM DAVIS, rated as the best prospect among the sophomores, was out most of the season with a broken ankle. He is a 195 pounder who asks no quarter and gives no quarter to those attempting to traverse the end he plays. Watch this lad step for the next two years. DIRTY WEDGWORTH had the hard luck to play the same position as Captain Beaird, but in spite of this he was used a great deal at both center and guard. Those who saw the Southwestern game will never forget the way he stopped a scoring threat by intercepting a pass and returning it thirty yards. THERON FISHER is the other half of the man-killing duet which played at the tackle positions. The stump 195 pounder received many first choice votes for Dixie Con- ference tackle, and was placed on the second team. He means only two more years of woe for opponents who think they can go over tackle. FALTON LECROY is probably the fastest guard on the squad and one of the lightest. Although he weighed but 165 pounds, he did better than hold his own against opposi- tion. His speed in starting enables him to lead interference for the ball carriers. HI IJ J FOOTBALL LETTERMEN SLOPPY O ' NEAL. Alternate captain and quarter- back is the burden he carried, but they rested lightly on the back of this 135-pound Panther. Sloppy did most of the passing and broken fi;ld running for the squad and handled both capably. His pass for a touchdown in the Howard game will long be remembered. BIFF BRINER is probably the champion hard-luck artist of the school. He was rendered hoi-s de combat by a broken jaw, which kept him incapacitated most of the season. His fierce blocking and tackling as well as his line plunging will he available for another year provided he can fight shy of the injury jinx. LEWIS HAYGOOD is another of those flaming sopho- mores. This lad pla ed a wonderful game at end and did most of the punting. His punts brought us out of many holes. His only need is a little experience to make him one of the best ends in the South. FLOYD CLARK is one of that crop of sophomores who flashed so brilliantly last Fall. His tackling is so vicious the spectators can hear it in the stands. After much shifting Watson has finally found his place at guard. He will deal plenty of misery to the opposition next year. JOE NORRIS is another husky Junior linesman who should come into his own next year. Handicapped by in- juries, this stalwart pivotman was confined to the bench a good portion of the season through the consistently bril- liant play of Captain B;aird. Jce will be in the thick of the fight for the center position next year. IKE YOUNG was the first string quarterback on the varsity and blocker deluxe until injured in the South- western game. With two more 5 ' ears to play he should be one of the best quarterbacks in the South. His block- ing led the way on practically every long run made by the Panthers last season. = 1 ' lyi C i: a FOOTBALL LETTERMEN CAPTAIN BEAIRD has made one of the greatest lead- ers the Hilltop has ever known. His inspiration and leadership has been a major factor in bringing the Dixie Conference championship here. Although Lewis played center, he was nam;d All-Dixie guard because of his sterl- ing work at this position while on the defense. CLIFFORD HARPER. One of those able ends who had so much to do with the success of the team, Pineapple is a husky who wrecked many end runs around his posi- tion. He is one of the surest pass receivers on the squad and a power on defense. He is a junior. DEWEY MITCHELL. Another one of those bruising sophomore tackles. Dewey, among the heaviest men on the squad, was a hard driving tackle who should be heard from next Fall. He was a shining light on the defense and a good man at opening holes for Johnson and Thomas. JOHN AUBREY THOMAS. This senior will be missed when the whistle is blown for the opening kick-off next Fall. On these kicks he consistently booted the oval 50 and 55 yards. On this phase of the game he was one of the best in the South. He was an excellent blocker and a good line buster. He will leave quite a hole at fullback. JOHN McBEE. This senior will be hard to replace at one guard position, but harder to replace as a defensive center. His value is attested by the fact that he failed to play in only one quarter, and that in a game already won. He is a good blocker and one of the most vicious tacklers on the squad. EDWIN OWENS. This gentleman reached up two feet in the Howard game to snag a pass for the winning touchdown. Cue-Ball, besides playing a good game at end, alternated with Johnson and Haygood for the punt- ing duties. This lad has another year to serve for his Alma Mater. Another stirring example of champion Panthers ' vicious brand of football is this shot which shows one reason why Cat opponents were foiled in so many of their attempts to gain the promised land. FOOTBALL LETTERMEN LOYAL BOWERS. Speedy is another senior who has proved his worth time and again. This husky was a terror to the opposition by reason of his yeoman service at a tackle berth. The giant blond has been somewhat handicapped by injuries, but has managed to stay in the thick of the fight in spite of this. LUCIUS BRANNON. Contributing yeoman service to the success of the champion- ship team was Manager Lucius Brannon, who handled the managerial reins with efficiency and conducted the business end of the Panther campaign without a Haw. LOY VAUGHN. This senior, after being out of school for a year, returned better than ever, to sew up one halfback position. His return of kick-offs and punts helped to place the team in scoring position many times. He was probably one of the shiftiest men on the squad, and one of the b;st blockers. VJ ■n ' m ' f ' m FOOTBALL LETTERMEN ERNEST TEEL. Ernest is a sophomore back who is iKitcii tor his passing ability and spsed. He is a hard man to haul down once he has passed the scrimmage line, be- cause of his speed and tremendous leg-drive. As a de- fensi e halfback he has no equal on the squad. A. C. CURRY. This lad is probably the most im- proved player on the squad. At the beginning of the sea- son he was given only an outside chance at a tackle berth, but he made history in the Centre game and has been a regular tackle since that time. He is another one of those sophomores. NOWLIN KEENER. Nowlin is another hard worker who will he missing when the roll is called next year. Lack of experience in high school handicapped this lad, who has become a good tackle. What he lacked in expe- rience he made up in hard work and perse erance. LOUIE TOWNSEND. Louie is following in the steps of his brother as an accomplished footballer. This sopho- more guard had fought his way to a regular position by the middle of the season. He weighs only 170, but every pound is fighting meat. HUBERT ALLBROOKS. Chesty Allbrooks proved his value as an end by being named for his second con- secutive year for the All-Dixie team. He is a deadly pass receiver and probably has no equal for his weight in the South in his ability to break up plays. His 150 pounds of dynamite will be sorely missed next fall. FREEMAN JOHNSON. Bulldog has proved his worth by being almost unanimously selected as captain for the coming ear. Probably the hardest worker on the squad, this junior should be an inspiration to his mates. A good blocker and the hardest driving back on the squad, he made the second All-Dixie team at fullback. SEASON REVUE. 1932 Overconfident and expecting a set-up, the Big City Champs were nearly upset by the Springhill Badgers, the following week in the Gulf city. The Jesuits scored first and threatened throughout the game. After a hard fight the Panthers emerged victorious by the score of 14-6. Urm Davis kicked both the extra points before going out of the game with a broken leg. Then came the Marne. The traditional struggle was fiercely fought, as usual, and the score does not represent the comparative strength of the two arch rivals. Birming- ham-Southern won by a one touchdown margin, and came close to scoring two other times. A pass, O ' Neal to Owens, scored the winning marker, and Davis hobbled out and kicked the extra point, then returned to the bench. This climaxed a successful season for the Hilltop gridmen. Nine Gold and Black wearers finished their careers this year and will be hard to replace. Captain Beaird, Thomas, O ' Neal, Allbrooks, McBee, Bowers, Keener, and Vaughn were the ones to write finis to their football career. Fifteen sophomores earned letters this year and with a letterman available for every position and likely prospects to graduate from the frosh ranks, a good season will be expected again next year. Two Dixie Conference crowns in a row! Why not? RESULTS Southern 0; Auburn 61 Southern 0; Loyola 12 Southern 6; Mississippi A. and M 4 Southern 0; Centre 2 Southern 13; Millsaps Southern 20; Southwestern 6 Southern 14; Springhill 6 Southern 7; Howard 1932 FRESHMAN FOOTBALL Over sixtey new students turned out as prospective candidates for the Rat football team of 1932. Coach Ben Englebert was confronted with a real difficulty in having to designate eleven men as the first team because of the presence of many former high school captains and All-State gridmen. The Cubs started the season in fine style by tieing the strong Auburn Rodents, 6-6, thus gaining for themselves a moral victory. In their second appearance the baby Panthers bowed to the University of Alabama ' s powerful and heavy freshman eleven on the Tuscaloosa gridiron. The Hilltop lads encountered several smaller and less versatile teams, among which were Fairfield, Southern Military Academy, and Phillips High. The Englebertmen were returned victors in each of these combats. In their final game, plajed at Legion Field, the Cubs were defeated by the Howard Bullpups, 6-2. The stalwart line of the Howardites proved to be the imdoing of the Hilltoppers, the menacing enemy forward wall never giving the Kitten backs an opportunity to show their power. The success of the Gold and Black freshman eleven on the grid is greatly increased by the fact that many of the players gave promise of capably filling the vacancies in the varsity squad created by the graduation of several of the Panther stars. Spud Holman, brilliant center, was elected captain by his mates. He filled the position most effectively until rendered hors de combat by a broken jaw. Henry Frank Chunn was given the captaincy after Holman ' s injury. Russell Kersey, back, served as alternate captain. The following were awarded 1936 numerals: R. F. Holman, Henry Chunn, New- man Strawbridge, Russell Kersey, B. B. Coefield, Tom Carter, Roy Bolin, Richard Boyd, Clyde Tindell, Roswell Faulkenberry, John C. Mosley, Samuel Loftin, Frank Hughes, Clewis Trucks. IK 3 TRACKSTERS JOE NORRIS. This athlete believes in all-year training. For after a very tough football season and a tiring period with the basketeers, he turned his efforts towards track — and did good, too. With Bowers, Joe excelled as a field man. His best work was done with the shot and the discus. If experience is a helper, we will read about this man in the 1933 season. ' BEAMON COOLE ' ' . Curly surprised the old men when he turned out to be a natural-born miler. This was his first year, but he made those cinders feel like he ' d known them from ' way back. The ability ot this neophyte to get around that mile was very noticeable; he showed his heels to the others in the Howard meet. LEO EDGE. Though this sprightly trackster had allowed a year ' s lay-off to accu- mulate, he came back in fine shape. As a broad jumper, Leo has always been able to get over twenty feet — and that ' s some distance. We ae looking forward to watch- ing him this Spring, for it is rumored that he also possesses an uncanny stride for dashes. LEWIS HAYGOOD. Here is another freshman who will be heard from this season. Although he was a first year man last Spring, his splendid form and perseverance promises that plenty of scores will come from Haygood way in future meets. Lewis participated in that fine mile relay team. ARNOLD POWELL. Again the inexperienced usher forward a fine trackster. This sophomore turned out to be one of the best high hurdlers ever to grace the Hilltop. Arnold was right in form and frame of mind. TRACKSTERS PRICE McKENZIE, A Butler County product, Pip was a revelation at both the furlong and the quarter mile. This bald-headed gentleman played quite an important role as a member of the relay team. LOYAL BOWERS. This hefty fellow furnished the back-bone of that group known as weight men. Speedy displayed ersatility by both tossing the shot and hurling the discus. When he stepped into the heaving circle, the scorers would get their pencils ready, for Bowers ' efforts meant points to the Gold and Black men. LESTER FOSSICK. Though small and light, he did more than his share when it came to running in points. Not satisfied with starring at one position, Lester was listed for three positions. He excelled in broad jump, was among the fastest in the dashes, and helped the half-mile relay team. JAMES CRENSHAW. Pos is a veteran quarter-miler and he really knows his pace. This pre-med student took time off from his labs to help the cmdermen. Not only does he place in his specialty, but also in the 880 dash. His value as anchor man on the victorious mile relay team will never be forgotten. PETE GOODWIN. We saw quite a bit of this fellow in the Howard meet, where his presence was quite noticeable — the effects being shown on the score board. Pete earned his position as a distance man when he placed in both the half-mile and the mile. We expect to hear more from him this Spring. TRACK RESUME The clarion call sounded for track aspirants in the Spring of 1932 was answered hy a throng of enthusiastic candidates, numbered among whom were both freshmen and upperclassmen. After the particular talent of each candidate had been ascertained, practice was immediately begun and the cinder season was on. Upon the shoulders of the new mentor, Coach Englebert, fell the difficult task of developing this large crew into a strong, versatile machine, and no time was lost in bringing out the latent power of the tracksters. Beginning the season none too auspiciously by close victories over several high school aggre- gations, the scantily-clad warriors improved as the season wore on, the newcomers filling rapidly the gaps left by last year ' s graduates. Arrangements for a Dixie Conference meet failed to mature and as a consequence Hilltop cinder activities were confined to strictly local competition. With the Dixie Conference meet out of the question, the Englebertmen pointed to the event which promised to be the season ' s climax, the dual meet with the Bulldogs from Howard. The Crimsons came out of the East boasting several scintillating individual stars who had competed in the Southern Olympic trials held at Tuscaloosa. To match these performers the Hilltoppers presented a well-balanced, versatile machine. These two ancient enemies met on the cinder-sprinkled turf of Legion Field and the Golden Panthers from Sunshine Slopes were returned victors by the conclusive count, 75-55. Although the Englebertmen encountered but few true tests of their real power during the season, their potential strength, along with the prevalence of first year performers among their number, aroused high hopes among Cat followers and pointed to successful seasons to come. Coach Englebert awarded varsity letters to the following: Al Blanton, Loyal Bowers, James Crenshaw, Leo Edge, Pete Goodwin, Louis Meier, Joe Norris, Masten O ' Neal, Arnold Powell, Carl Wright, and Manager Lucius Brannon. Numerals were awarded the ensuing freshmen: Beamon Cooley, Frank Day, Lester Fossick, Lewis Haygood, Horace Lucas, Price MacKenzie, Ernest Teel, James Walker, and Kermit Young. BK E BK[[ BAS E BALL PLAYERS Jimmy was a capable utility man and turned in some good performances. This closed out his career on the Sunshine Slopes. Starting at the hot corner, but playing most of the season in the outfield, Jelly Cranford was a dependable hitter, batting either left- handed or right-handed. This will be his last season on the Hilltop nine, and he should do much damage with his stickwork. Zach Lefty Scheussler was the ace of the pitching stafi and played in the outfield part of the time. This is the little man ' s first year on the varsity slab, and will go places before his col- lege career is over. Gran ' ma was somewhat slow on the bases, but a nifty first sacker and a dependable hitter. This was his first year on the varsity and with that year of experience he should develop into a polished performer this Spring. When Cranford was shifted to the outfield, Frank Stevenson took over the hot corner and filled the place in a very capable manner. A good throwing arm, fast on the bases, and a fair hitter — all these things may be said of the sopho- more. Midget Walton Wright had tough luck throughout the season, but finished with a bat- ting average well above three hundred. Wright ' s regular position is short, but he ended the season behind the plate, taking over the post left vacant by Bullo Williams. This little man has a bul- let-like peg, both from short and behind the bat- ter, also running the bases in fine style. He played the last few games of the season with a broken thumb. BAS E BALL PLAYERS Al led the Panther horsehiders in both hitting and fielding. He was a dependable outfielder, usually holding down the sun garden. His bat- ting average was above the five hundred mark. In the batting order Pinky was the lead-off man. Batting in the clean-up position and handling the rightfield were the tasks accomplished by this hefty diamond star. Fot is captain-elect for this year ' s Panther team. He was the home run king for the squad and will make a capable leader for Coach Robinson ' s men. Another new-comer to the varsity ranks was Don Sparks, who turned in a neat job in the outfield against the University of Alabama and also at the plate with his bludgeon. He also saw service in other games and well earned his letter. ■' ' --■' %• • ' Although not a mighty slugger, Hubert was a valuable asset to the team with his fielding and chatting. He kept the ole pep up on the infield and against F. H. Benning he handled thirteen chances without an error. He is a senior and will complete his three years on the varsity squad this spring. With a hip-pocket delivery and much speed, Owens, South Alabama product, served as a re- lief hurler. Against Vanderbilt and Millsaps he did some good hurling, even though he was cred- ited with a loss. A diminutive hurler, but with good control, O ' Neal aided the pitching staff. He turned back the Alabama City team, 3-2, hurling a heady game. 1 i!? VARSITY BASEBALL m The Panther diamondeers undertook the most com- prehensive schedule ever arranged for a Hilltop base- ball squad. The season closed with a record of four wins and four losses in Dixie Conference competition and a record of seven wins and thirteen defeats for all games played, which included Birmingham Barons, Montgomery Lions, and two Southern Conference teams. Seven lettermen reported for practice as the season opened, with several likely frosh prospects also on the list. After practice games with the Birmingham Barons and Acipco, the Hilltop men journeyed to the University of Alabama where they met the strong Tide team on A Day. This was a well-played game, though Alabama finally won 6-3. The Cats had ten men stranded on bases and several times had chances to annex the tilt. Blanton led at bat with three hits out of five times up. Sparks, who started in right field for the first time, made a sensational catch in the third which drew a great applause from the stands. The Millsaps Majors offered Dixie Conference compe- tition for the Panthers in a two-game series at Mc- Lendon Park. The first tilt was a 7-4 victory for the Mississippians. Five double plays were executed by the Cat infielders. while Williams and Stewart ham- mered out four Ijaggers for the Robinson team. The following afternoon Birmingham-Southern won over the Majors in the ninth inning, S-7. Lefty Zack Scheuss- ler hurled a beautiful game, allowing the visitors seven scattered hits and whiffing eleven batsmen. On April 15 a road jaunt to Montgomery and Fort Benning. Georgia, was made by the Panther baseball- ers. The Montgomery Professionsals won handily, but the two- game series with the army team was split. Southern copping the opener 6-1. and Fort Benning the second, 10-4. In the first contest Chesty Allbrooks handled thirteen chances at the keystone bag without a miscue. Lefty Scheussler pitched another master- ful game limiting LTncle Sam ' s boys to fewer scattered singles. Returning home, the Hilltoppers engaged the Mis- sissippi Choctaws in two games filled full of hits and runs. Twenty -one hits were garnered by the Panther nine in the opening game with the final score being 14-4. Battle and Wright socked homers, while Capt. Al Blanton secured three hits out of five trips to the plate. In the second, the heavy bat work continued, with the Panthers collecting seventeen hits and thir- teen runs as the Choctaws were blasting out t%velve hits and twelve runs. Lefty Scheussler got credit for beating Mississippi College twice in as many days when he went in during the eighth and rode out a 13-12 victory. On a week ' s tour through Mississippi, Mississippi College won two games froni the Panthers and Millsaps split a two- game series. Thomas, captain-elect, and Cranford led the Panthers at bat on this trip which brought the season to a close. Blanton led the team in batting, with an average of .442, and Thomas ran a close second with an average above the four-hundred mark. Scheussler, a sopho- more southpaw hurler, was the leading pitcher for the Hilltoppers. The following men received letters for their work on the diamond: Capt. Al Blanton, Cap- tain-elect Thomas, Allbrooks. Battle, Cranford. Dunn, Oneal, Owens. Scheussler, Sparks, Stevenson, Stewart, ' right. and Manager McCoy Mays. RESULTS Birm Birm Binn Birm Birm Birm Birm Birm Birm Birm Birm Birm Birm Birm Birm ingham ngliam ngliani ingham ingham ingham ■ingham ingham- ingham ingham- ingham ingham- ingham- inghnm- ingliam- Southern . Southern. Southern. ■Southern. Southern. Southern. Southern. Southern. Southern . Southern . Southern. Southern. Southern. Southern . Southern . 3 ; Alabama 6 , 4 ; Millsaps 7 , S; Millsaps 7 , 6; Fort Benning 1 . 4 ; Fort Benning 10 , 9; Shadyside 1 .14; Miss. College 4 13; Miss. College 12 3 : Alabama City 2 7; Alabama 11 1 ; Vanderbilt 14 9; Millsaps 3 3; Millsaps 4 4 ; Miss. College 6 5 ; Miss. College 5 — - — - ' BKIKET BKLL Varsilii JjaskeihaLL SEASON SUMMARY shortly after the close of the football season, Coach Englebert issued his annual call for cage team aspirants, and practices were held daily at the Birm- ingham Athletic Club. The graduation of Captain Waller and the failure of Frank Stevenson and Cap- tain-elect Jackson to return to school left gaping holes to be filled in this year ' s varsity line-up. To offset the loss of these men, last year ' s champion Frosh team returned almost to a man and gloom turned to cheer in the Panther camp. Building his team around the nucleus of his re- turning letter-men. Captain Wright, Holt, and Bat- tle, Coach Englebert lost no time in whipping his squad into shape, at the same time outlin.ng an am- bitious schedule for them. Beginning the season with this group of lightweights, he capitalized their lack of height and weight and groomed his midgets into a versatile combination possessing a fast-breaking, be- wildering offensive that swept all before it. Three members of last year ' s powerful Freshman quintet PLAYERS CAPTAIN WALTON WRIGHT. Succeeding to the post of leadership vacated by Captain- elect Roy Jackson, this diminutive forward has proven himself to be a capable leader and basket sharpshooter. As the hub of the be- wildering offense of the Panthers the Bat- tler has shown himself to be brilliant and inspiring. His absence from the ranks next year will leave a hole difficult to fill. WALTER HOLT. Generally regarded as one of the most capable guards ever to wear the Gold and Black, Holt is a man feared by all Panther opponents. With the appearance of an opposing high point man Walter is im- mediately assigned the job of covering him and, as a consequence, the said high point man ' s total for the night is practically nil. Always calm and cool. Holt will be sorely missed next jear. LAURIE BATTLE. By clever defensive work and steady all-round play Laurie has earned for himself a position in many starting line- ups this season. HUBERT WINDHAM. Another one of South- ern ' s mighty mites is this former Boys ' Club star who, as a sophomore, has earned for himself a regular starting berth. Little but loud, this forward, with his accurate shoot- ing and flashy floorwork, was an indispen- sable cog in the Panther machine. With two more years in which to develop, this lightweight should prove to be one of the most capable forwards to cavort on Panther hardwood. ROBERT VERNON. Another graduate from last year ' s powerful freshman team is Chink, who, after a bitter fight has earned the starting pivot position. This husky center is the largest man on the squad and his heady floor game and handling of the tip-oflf made him valuable on both offense and defense. PLAYERS WOODROW BEARD. Possessor of both speed and eye for the basket, Snozzle covers the court with remarkable expertness. Versatile and colorful, Beard should develop remark- ably in his two more years of competition at the running guard position. PAUL TAYLOR. Another member of the re- serve is Taylor, powerful pivotman, who al- ternated with Vernon. Taylor, particularly adept at snatching ' em from the boards, is equally dangerous on the offense and defense. He is a junior. BRAWLEY. Another promising recruit from the freshman team is Brawiey, who plays a steady game at guard. He will be going places after gaining this year ' s experience. LOUIE TOWNSEND. Supplying gameness where he lacked experience, Little Baldy held an important position on this year ' s re- serve list. He has two more years of com- petition and his ability to play guard should be greatly improved for next year. RAYMOND WAID. Improving with the sea- son ' s play, this junior forward displayed a nice brand of ball. And after serving his time as a substitute, he should come through in fine style. SEASON SUMMARY (Cijnlinuid) won starting berths on the varsity and the others are giving the veterans a bitter fight. Each start- ing hne-up was chosen from the following six: Cap- tain Walton Wright and Soph Hubert Windham, high-point man to date, at the forwards; Chink Vernon, hefty soph at center; and Breezy Beard, Laurie Battle and Walter Holt alternating at the guards. With plenty of capable reserve talent in Taylor, Waid, Brawiey, and Townsend, substitutions were made without seriously weakening the five. Prior to the Christmas holidays, the Panthers made their annual trek into East Alabama, trouncing Russell Mills, 39-16, and Lanett Athletic Club, 46-19, on successive days. After the conclusion of this ex- cursion, the team disbanded for the holidays, resum- ing practice immediately after the reconvening of school. Continuing their schedule, the Hilltoppers met the John Bollas Greenies, a group of profes- sionals and former college luminaries. After a slow start, the Gold and Black machine gained momentum and soundly whipped the pros, 39-26. As the first of their encounters within the Big Four, city cage league, the Englebertmen engaged the crack Boy ' s Club five. Due to a substantial lead built up in the first few minutes, they beat the Comets, 38-35, although the Clubbers had made a sensational come-back. With four victories over powerful foes already in the bag, Southern followers were hailing this year ' s mighty aggregation as the strongest to represent the Hilltop in years. iHanmtfw Tr fiasmr, i . illi FRESHMAN BASKETBALL In his efforts to evolve a successful edition of the 1932-33 freshman basketball team, Coach Carey Robinson initiated a new system for the selection of likely prospects for his quintet. With the aid of members of the varsity athletic teams who served as coaches, Mentor Robinson intro- duced the idea of a series of combats between the freshman physical education classes. A league was formed and the outstanding performers in the league were encouraged to report for the early season practices. Consequently, when the call for frosh basketeers was sounded. Coach Robinson was greeted by a host of hopefuls, one of the largest squads ever to assemble on the Hilltop. But the work had only begun. Having assembled his likeliest crew, Coach Robinson was now faced with the task of molding together a winning combination. Immediately after the resumption of classes following the Christmas holidays, hard scrimmages were dished out to the candidates, until finally this combination asserted itself: Moseley and Haynes, forwards; Johnson, center; Ricketts and Martin, guards. McNiell, Eddins, Warren, Lowry, and Orr form a strong reserve corp capable of re-enforcing weak units in the starting five. Almost maintaining the blazing pace set by last year ' s championship frosh five, this year ' s Cub machine has swept aside opponent after opponent in the Men ' s City League and with the addition of a little more steam bids fair to cop the bunting. In this year ' s first of the traditional clashes with the Bullpups of Howard College, the Baby Panthers were drubbed to the tune of 38-22, the encounter serving as a prelude to the third battle between the varsity fives of the two colleges. Battling on the floor of the Birmingham Athletic Club gym, the Rodents trimmed the Junior Crimsons, 35-31, by virtue of a spirited rally in the dying moments of the game, featuring the long-range shooting of Moseley and Johnson, the latter ringing sixteen points for his night ' s total. Boasting several performers of varsity calibre, this year ' s Rat squad is expected to provide the veterans with strong competition in the battle for next year ' s varsity berths. II lli«Wi Other Sports rmr a igT,--r?gTi- ' gwsaMM TENNIS SUMMARY Handicapped by inexperience and lack of a full- time coach, the 1932 Panther tennis machine failed to enjoy the unbounded prosperity which has been the lot of Hilltop racqueteers in seasons past. Only one letterman returned from the 1931 S. I. A. A. championship team and upon this man, Captain Stewart, fell the burden of coaching, captaining, and managing the 1932 aggregation. In addition to Captain Stewart, the most able of the hopefuls to report for practice were Downes, Brummal, Wat- son, and Elliott. Engagements with the champion Hilltoppers were much in demand among the South ' s teams, but lack of fluids necessitated the curtailment of what or- dinarily would have b;en an extensive schedule. As a season ' s opener the Gold and Black courtmen met defeat at the hands of Centre ' s Colonels, 6-1, this defeat being followed by a setback at the hands of Louisiana State University, 4-2. Aroused by these two stinging defeats, the Panthers, paced by Downs and Watson, held the strong Mississippi College squad to a 2 draw. Cheered by the return to form of Captain Stewart, who copped his singles match and then teamed with Brummal to annex a doubles match, the Cat racqueteers battled the Auburn Plainsmm furiously only to lose, 4-2. Captain Stew- art ' s cohorts reached their p;ak of play against the Howard Bulldogs and swept the hapless Eastsiders from their path, 6-0. Prospects for a successful 1933 team are very bright. Captain-elect Downes, Watson, Elliott, and Cox will return to form a nucleus around which the team will be built, and with the addition of several sterling performers up from the frosh ranks, a for- midable team is expected to represent the Hilltop on the courts. Stewart Watson Elliott Downes CO-ED SPORTS CO-ED athletics were resumed this year under new management, as Miss Barbara Ransom had just returned from a very profitable trip tj New York. On her journey she received quite a few ideas about the whole arrangement of athletics. This very enthusiastic worker has taken over the orange romper girls and, with th; aid of an energetic Athletic Council, has intro- duced several unique features in which the girls of every class are participating. This is the first time that an effort has been made to get the entire group of co-eds partaking of our physical educa- tion department. In the selection of the 1932-33 Athletic Council, great pains were taken to acquire young women from every class and group represented on the Hilltop, so that through them co-ed athletics would be- come a well-rounded activity. The members of the council chosen are: Alice Burton, Sarah Sterrett, Johnnie B. Smith, Martha Key Caldwell, Bessie Scott Harris, Edith Johnston, Evelyn Andrews, Mary Claire Heath, Jeanette Maynor, Una Rae Elmore, and Caroline Worthington. Under the leadership of Miss Alice Burton, their president, we had already noted a greater interest prevailing among the fair sex towards the various sports. As inducements, the department has secured letters, monograms, and numerals, which will be awarded those who take very active parts and excel In the various games. The three major games offered are basketball, volley ball and tennis. But for those who desire something different, or addi- tional activities, the following have been included under the name of minor sports: baseball, hockey, touch football, track, swimming, horseback riding, g lf, and archery. Tournaments in each of these have been staged. Each sorority was represented by a tejm, and Alpha Gamma sponsored several non-soror- iiy teams in every event. The first sport to be stressed this year was tennis. Quite a number turned out when this call to the courts was made. It has been noticeable that a great many girls play this game all year round. After tennis, attention was given to volley ball. This brought even more enthusiasm than ever be- fore and competition was great. It happened tha: the sororities came out with the winning teams in this event. Theta Upsilon and Gamma Phi Beta seemed the best adapted to volley ball. After this came basketball, the crowning sport of them all. It brought more girls to the Simpson gym than any other one. Not just one, but several afternoons were spent practicing, so great was the enthusiasm of the various teams for being better prepared when the tournament arrived. This took place in the early part of the Spring. All entries were worthy of much praise, in as much as they had trained and really made a sport of the affair. The best players, it is reputed, were found on the squad fighting for the Alpha Omicron Pi sorority. As the weather allowed, the minor activities came into prominence. Warm climate seems to be most fitting for these. The Athletic Council sponsored the whole program and mapped it out so that every girl was given a chance to take part in at least one form. Congratulations are In order for the splendid success of Miss Ransom, the director. In getting the Interest of so many of the co-eds. Jjeauty played and Troy burned, beauty lied and Sden jell. She cares nought for law nor creed; beauty caught — is quickly freed. The — LA REVUE presen h J lssJfaeJfc nlosk f Jnhs ane CyLiioll yytiss J ouLse lilies iiss l ouLie J ean C xorman yMiss CykrisUne Uox f Jniss J osepkine JjaiUij B T HESE PAGES PRESENT ONE BEAUTY EACH FROM SEVEN OF ALABAMA ' S COLLEGES. THESE YOUNG LADIES REPRESENT EITHER THE BEAUTY SECTION LEADER OF HER RESPECTIVE SCHOOL, OR A REPRE SENTATIVE CHOSEN PARTICULARLY FOR THIS STATE WIDE EXCHANGE. WE, THE EDITORS, IN ALL PAR- TICIPATING SCHOOLS, PRESENT FOR YOUR APPROVAL SEVEN OF THE SOUTH ' S MOST BEAUTIFUL GENTLEWOMEN. ynlsi Ofiauatna C OiLCCjC MISS MARY KATE TROUP J Us QYo. MISS JOSEPHINE BAILEY onuau K oLLeqe MISS CAROLYN JENNINGS MISS EVELYN CLEMENTS yHisi utowaro MISS HAZEL JOHNSON • TO • MR. HUBBARD KIRKPATRICK WHO HAS TAKEN TIME FROM HIS BIR- MINGHAM LITTLE THEATER ACHIEVE- MENTS TO SELECT THESE SIX BEAUTIES, THE MANAGEMENT WISHES TO EX- TEND ITS MOST HUMBLE APPRECIATION AND TO ACKNOWLEDGE THE SPLEN- DID CHARACTER OF HIS FINE ARTS. - ' ' n the typical polit- ical manner ol buying votes, stuffing the ballot, paid advertisements, and fraternity line-up, these few indi- viduals were able to get themselves elected to that select group which we beg you to accept as the CAMPUS CHARACTERS CAMPUS CHARACTERS JOE COLLEGE. A man of pipes, pins, and pride, who has an air about him that seems to say: I am carried on the shoulders of fads, and am a voice of many in the world. BARONESS NUISANCE. She is a baby-faced girl look- ing not a day older than 10. Always running around like a lost child and making appearances at times and places when it would be a gawd-send if she just wasn ' t there. BARON NUISANCE. Always in the way. So clumsy that he is scarcely able to get out of his own way. Out- side of talking too much about things entirely unnecessary, he might do ... as a pansy. LADY LOVE. Qh yeah! She gives you that impression only because she doesn ' t have a car and thereby is unable to cart the College Hot around during vacant periods. With a Ford Phaeton and a tight skirt we guarantee a Flipping Flapper. MR. HANDSOME. Listen, youse guys! Dis is the only living descendant of Tarzan. Now, he may be a bit brawny and unpolished, but the women fall by the scores for the chump. In fact, dey all sneered when dey heard the name. Hicks, but when dey got a squint of the brute — he ' s held them spellbound ever since. ON THE HILLTOP WILL U. LOAN ME. Like his grandpa, One-eye Connelly, he ' s the only one in his circle, or in any circle, that can go to all the parties and make all the functions, sans centimes. With his personality and good company, he pays all his debts. Now if you think his creditors are satisfied, take a look at some of these long, sour faces around here. I. M. GOOD. A band leader hardly worthy of mention. He would do lots better as an advertisement for tooth paste. Outside of being the daredevil at handstands, he is by his own confession the best baton juggler in Alabama. LUCY DRESSWELL. Clothes make the man. Eve knew and used it against Adam, and from that time on man has been handed the apple (core) . Today at Ol ' Southern, maker of men, we find the modern Eves still dishing out the applesauce, and making ' em like it. FRANK DRESSWELL. A Lord Chesterfield in modern garb. Really he should be in gay Paris fashioning clothes. For outside reading, he is an all-time subscriber to Vogue, Butterick Patterns, and Lady ' s Home Journal. He is a man with a place for everything, even to the last hair on his head. JUSTO GISGILO. Boy, he slays ' em! His best bit of gigging was done on a certain K. A. function down at the Thomas Jefferson. There, a woozy women wound in wed fairly embarrassed our best gigger when she snatched him from the Knights and made a lowly Vassal of him. X. UR CAMPUS CHARACTERS AL A. LONE. He wanders around in a stupor and acts about as out of place as Dr. Hawk at a Technocrat Con- vention. Evidently he doesn ' t fully realize that this is col- lege, for his formality is killing. Will someone pleas; re- lieve the gentleman of the board up his back? U. R. WRONG. A traveling information bureau. For questions to be answered or corrected, problems to be solved — if you are in doubt about anything — see him. In fact, he ' s so nice and nosey he ' ll even answer your questions and tell you what to do when his b(p)ig brains are not needed. JENNY APPLEGRABBER. She ' s a gabbing grabber from ' way back. It is rumored, and we believe it, that Cleo taught her the ropes. When it comes to getting the big juicy pommes, her fruit basket is always full.- Watch out, you suckers! BEN BROWSING. What he doesn ' t find, can ' t be found. A regular hound after useless information. If all his knowledge were run through a meat chopper, it would make good stuffing for frankfurters. And any way you slice It. . . . SAMMY VOTEGETTER. With that golden, waved hair and his ear-to-ear smile, it ' s no wonder he ' s responsible for so many uninterested students trudging up to the polls. The great mystery that we would like to cash-in on is to find out the e.xact type of bull he shoots the profs, because it is a known fact that his social calendar leaves not one opening for study. ON THE HILLTOP WILBER WARBLER. His appearance on the stage is one of the few legitimate excuses for cutting chapel. It is ru- mored around that his atrocious abuse of high C is the direct reason for Prof. Hemphill ' s loss of a one-time goodly stock of hair. We nominate Wilber for Hog- Caller No. 1 on Southern ' s campus . . . may he very early learn to dodge and duck. GOODTIME CHARLIE. With two choruses of the gang ' s all here, and a couple of hail good fellows, well met, we introduce Goodtime Charlie, our play-boy and man-about-town. Ever ready for a fight or a frolic. He is active president, without a doubt, of the largest organi- zation on the campus — The United Auto Sitters Associa- tion of America. ANNA BELLE ACTRESS. You ' ve seen her in chapeL Ain ' t she swell? Did you know that she was the one who did all the fiddling while Rome burned — poor Rome? Nero called her his little grapefruit — what an eyeful! ♦ ARCHIBALD ACTEUR. A Shakespeare, a Drinkwater and a Shaw, rolled into one. As happy on the stage as a kitten in a sandpile . .. . and as playful. Don ' t let the first impression fool you. For really he is a brute at heart. FREDDIE FACULTY. Selected the Preferred Prof of the campus, we think so much of his dignity that we ' re placing him in our character section. An ice cream cone and a tacky-looking cap are his distinguishable features. And is he crazy about Kla.xon horns!!! ' all dark men of pride and pipes, Sophisticated sisters, they — ound in groups by secret grace, oAs one, within a larger space. ■UIBRARV or BIBM HAM-SOyTIIEeH COLLEGE R N I ii INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL Bud Watson President Charles Weston . Vice-President John Aubrey Thomas . . Secretary Raymond West Treasurer Pi Kappa Alpha Theta Kappa Nu Sigma Alpha Epsilon Lewis Beaird Elias Watson Bryant Whitmire Cecil Bradford Eston Stead Edward Dannelly Chi Chi Alpha Tau Omega Kappa Alpha McCoy Mays Charles Weston Andrew Turnipseed Raymond West Ferdinand Smith Aubrey Thomas Beta Kappa Delta Sigma Phi John McBee Clarence Glover Robert Ferguson Duard Le Grand Founded at the University of Virginia, 1868. Publication: Shield and Diamond. ' PI KAPPA ALPHA Colors: Garnet and Gold Floiver: Lily of the Valley DELTA CHAPTER Established jSyi Lewis Beaird . . Fred Burks . . . Walter Holt . . Maston O ' Neal . Walton Wright Cecil Bradford . J. H. Debnam . . James Raglan ' d . . Tom Brawley . . . William Johxsox . Gastox McGavock Wilbur Smith . Brannon Stringer . Robert Strong . CovD Travlor Fratres ' 33 Howell Tally ■• • ' 35 ' 33 Emmett White ' 35 ' 33 Hubert Windham ' 35 ' 33 Bill Dickinson ' 36 ' 33 James Jones ' 36 ' 34 Russell Kersey ' 36 ' 3+ Norman McCloud ' 36 ' 34 Will Miller ' 36 ' 35 David Rucks ' 36 ' 35 Frank Sattler ' 36 ' 35 Henry Schoppert ' 36 ' 35 Bill Spradley ' 36 ' 35 William Sutherlin ' 36 ' 35 Clyde Tindell ' 36 ' 36 Founded at the University of Alabama, 1856. Publication: The Record. ' SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON Colors: Purple and Old Gold ALABAMA IOTA CHAPTER Lslablislicii 1S7S Flonuer: Violet Ed Dannelly . . . J. W. Hamilton . . Herschel Hamner . Ted Leigh .... Bryant Whitmire . Oliver Cox .... John Glass .... Hyatt Hacan . . . Arthur McFarland George Nacel . . . Zack Schuessler . McCoy Whitmire . Floyd Clark . . . Fred Koenig . . . Glenn Massengale . Hewell Samuel . . Don Sims .... Herbert West Fratres ' 33 Capers Smith ' 35 ' 33 Barclay Dillon ' 36 ' 33 Bill Dupuy ' 36 ' 33 RoswELL Falkenberry ' 36 ' 33 Ed Hanahan ' 36 ' 3+ R. F. Holman ' 36 ' 34 David Hudson ' 36 ' 34 Jim Hughes ' 36 ' 34 Bob Kendall ' 36 ' 34 Murray McEniry ' 36 ' 34 Bill McGehee ' 36 ' 34 Alec Montgomery ' 36 ' 35 Bob Montgomery ' 36 ' 35 Wayne Ramsay ' 36 ' 35 Dick Riley ' 36 ' 35 Maclin S.mith ' 36 ' 35 Ed Warren ' 36 ' 36 Founded at Virginia Mili- tary Institute, i?65. Publicaii in: The Palm. ' ALPHA TAU OMEGA Colors: Old Gold and Skv Blue Flo White Tea Rose BETA BETA CHAPTER Eslithlished iS6s James Crenshaw ' 33 Jess Walters ' 33 Rlifus Elliott ' 34 Albert Fairlev ' 34 Elmer Sanders ' 34 DoNNELL Van de Voort ' 34 Charles Weston ' 31. Shelley Finnegan ' 35 Lester Fossick ' 35 Hugh Martin ' 35 Ferdinand Smith ' 35 Robert Wharton ' 35 Winston Smith . . Fratres Tom B, Anderson ' 36 Robin Banks . ' 36 George Biggers ' 36 Ted Cottrell ' 36 Clarence Dannellv ' 36 Bob Davis ' 36 Woodford Dinning ' 36 Robert McNeil ' 36 Barney Monagham ' 36 Alfred Pugh ' 36 Thomas Savage ' 36 Robert Smith ' 36 ' 36 Founded at Washington and Lee University, 1865. Publication: Kappa Alpha Journal. ' KAPPA ALPHA Colors: Crimson and Old Gold Flowers: Magnolia and Red Rose PHI CHAPTER Established 1 S82 Fratres Joe Gray ' 33 Peterson Hightower ' 33 John Aubrey Thomas . ....... ' 33 as ' drew turnipseed ' 33 Laurie Battle ' 34 HuRSTON Heslington ' 34 Walter Hooper ' 34 Harold Lyons ' 34 George Macatee ' 34 Edward Mackay ' 34 Dow Perry ' 34 Robert Clayton ' 35 Jack Jarvis ' 35 John L. McConnell ' 35 LuCLAN Rice ' 35 Bennett Waites ' 35 Billy Caldwell ' 36 Drummond Gaines ' 36 Henry Martin ' 36 Landon Smith ' 36 James Turnipseed ' 36 MosE Whatley ' 36 Founded at Drury College, 1924. Publication: Theta News. ' THETA KAPPA NU Colors: Argent, Sable, and Black Floivir: American White Rose ALABAMA BETA CHAPTER Eilablished H)2 John Evins .... EsTON ' Stead . . . Elias Bud Wat so .v Paul Taylor . . Floyd White . . . Joe Akin Fred Dunlap . Leo Edge Ed Hopping . . . Fratres ' 33 Francis Lemont ' 35 ' 33 Bob Shaul ' 35 ' 33 Robert Woodrow ' 35 ' 34 James Garrett ' 36 ' 34 Claude Gholston ' 36 ' 35 Elmer Hobbs ' 36 ' 35 Paul Lanier ' 36 ' 35 Falton Lecroy ' 36 ' 35 Arthur Ribe ' 36 Founded at Hamline University, 1901. Fublicatwn: Beta Kappa Journal. Colors: Purple and Gold BETA KAPPA PSI CHAPTER Esiablislird ii)2 ' Flower: Sed Templar Rose Lucius Brankon ' . . Robert Ferguson . William Jordon . , John McBee . . Howard Moreland Julius Turner . Ike Winston . . Leslie Barnett . George Briner . Robert Downes . Ernest Seay . Lamar Bivings . Louis Busenlener , Davis Thompson . Fratres William Jefferies ' 35 Orville Lawson ' 35 Joe Phillips • ■' 35 Jerome Winston ' 35 Norman Winston ' 35 William Austin ' 36 Robert Barber ' 36 Weldon Barker ... ' 36 Louis Cole ' 36 J. Franklin Hewes ' 36 Robert James ... ' 36 Howell Parrish ' 36 DeWitt Seav ' 36 Karl E. Thelander ' 34. ' 33 ' 33 ' 33 ' 33 ' 33 ' 33 ' 33 ' 3 + ' 34 ' 34 ' 34 ' 35 ' 35 ' 34 Founded at the City Col- lege of Neiv York, 1898. Publication: The Carnation. ' DELTA SIGMA PHI Colors: Nile Green and White BETA DELTA CHAPTER Establisliid IQ2S Flowrr: White Carnation Joe Brown .... Pache Bruner . Frank Caxtey . Clarence Glover . James Whitehead . Pledger Carter . . DuARD Le Grand . Roland Short . . . Bill Tucker . . . Joe Carmichael . . Ed Goodman . . . Morris Hendrickson Jack Massey . . . Tom Prickett . . . J. L. Smith .... Fr.atres ' 33 Carl Stiefelmever ' 35 ' 33 Walter Thomas ' 35 ' 33 Raymond Waid ' 35 ' 33 Raymond Wedceworth ' 35 ' 33 Kermit Young ' 35 ' 34 James Allen ' 36 ' 34 Jack Connell ' 36 ' 34 Howard Edge ' 36 ' 34 Frank Hughes ' 36 ' 35 Frank Johnson ' 36 ' 35 Joe Laxgston ' 36 ' 35 Claude Lavender ' 36 ' 35 Marion Martin ' 36 . . . ... . . ' 35 Elbert Ponder ' 36 ' 35 Earnest Strong ' 36 Clewis Trucks ' 36 CHI CHI Colors: Blue, White, and C5olcl Flower: Red Carnation Founded at Birmingham-Southern College, 1926. Fratres Clinton Bishop ' 33 Kenneth Goare ' 33 NowLiN Kee ner ' 33 McCoy Mays ' 33 Maurice Bishop ' 34 Wilson Heflin ' 34 Louis Meier ' 34. Raymond West ' 34 Lauren Brubaker ' 35 Ceamon Cooley ' 35 James Clendinnen ' 35 Henry Howell ' 35 Robert Vernon ' 35 Harry Weaver ' 35 O. C. Weaver ' 35 Wood Whetstone ' 35 Otto Baker ' 36 Elbert Butterly ' 36 J. B. Nichols ' 33 Bill Cady ' 36 Frank McComsey ' 36 Cameron Moreno ' 36 B. B. Coefield ' 36 Sam Tatum ' 36 r gfUMIBGIMM-irumiTcfltLFfiP u m FLOP-HOUSES PI KAPPA ALPHA. Just off the campus stands the white mansion of the Power Knights of Alcohol. Here is the hangout of football players and Shine Bradford. Perhaps the fact that one of the brothers is Deacon Reaves ' right-hand man enables them to pay the rent. SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON. A creaking, old frame house overlooking the Hilltop. A place for Zetas to eat lunch on the front porch. Politics and more politics is their motto for campus elections. It is rumored that Minerva ' s sons are considering leasing the Auditorium or Legion Field for chapter meetings. CHI CHI. Ma Hale ' s big happy family. Famous for high grades, shady politicians, and the Bishop Brothers. The only lodge on the Hill not spend- ing their hard-earned iron men on traveling secretaries . . . and proud of it. Really not a bad bunch of Coca-Cola drinkers. KAPPA ALPHA. Dieu et Les Dames, God help the women, especially K. D. ' s. A rambling cottage in the east, presided over by Chief Battle-axe Turnipseed. Sometimes the young knights are seen walking about the campus casting furtive glances behind them. Yes, Watson, it ' s only the chapter treas- urer on their trail. These lads are renown for pre-med. students and the quality of their Aqua Pura. DELTA SIGMA PHI. This lodge is also to the east. No disgruntled poli- ticians here. These boys whupped the clique, putting one man in office. And are they proud? Fll say they are; but one wonders about what. Maybe it ' s Brother Husk O ' Hare who is trying to outcroon the pride and joy of the S. A. E. ' s. ALPHA TAU OMEGA. To the north, perched on a mud bank, squats the abode of the Among The Outcasts. Dirty Politics is the theme of th?ir chapter meetings — and their alibi. During Rush Week they lock in a closet their F. W. F. (Finnegin, Wharton, Fossick) trio. It is whispered that Gracie Allen expects to find her lost brother among these. THETA KAPPA NU. Across from Legion Field stands the once imposing old Southern colonial house, home of Those Klucky Numbskulls. These lads spend their time arguing over international peace. No, Oscar. That ' s not Cyreno de Bergerac ; it ' s Floyd White. BETA KAPPA. The little yellow bungalow just off the campus. But what about it? PAN-HELLENIC COUNCIL Margaret Jones President ' iRCi iA Clark Vice-President LouLiE Jean Norman Secretary Marv Carolyn Farrell Treasurer Zcta Tail Alpha Marv C. Farrell Frances Horton Pi Beta Pill Margaret Jones Marv Chappell Alpha Oiiiicron Pi Alice Burton RowENA Smith Kappa Delta Virginia Clark Martha Coffee Alpha (jhi Omega Margaret Peterson Caroline McCaee Gainina Phi Beta LouLiE Jean Nor.man Marv Ruth Pippen Theta Upsilon Elizabeth Cle.vients Mary Claire Heath Delta Omega Club Bonnie Hill Eloise Murray Gamma Theta Mercedes Cagle Evelyn Pharr ! ZETA TAU ALPHA Founded at Mrginia State Normal College, 1898. Colors: Steel Gray and Tur iuoise Blue Flower: White ' iolet Publication: Themis ALPHA NU CHAPTER Establislird IQ22 ' 93+ Mary C. Farrell Birmingham, Alabama Frances Horto.v Birmingham, Alabama 1935 Mary Louise Fell Birmingham, Alabama Louise Liles Birmingham, Alabama Violet Pankey Birmingham, Alabama Ida Rutherford Birmingham, Alabama Dorothy Suydam Birmingham, Alabama 1936 Mary Anthony Birmingham, Alabama DoLiSKA Brown Birmingham, Alabama Margaret Culverhouse Birmingham, Alabama Mildred Eastburn Birmingham, Alabama Jane Haralson Birmingham, Alabama Annie L. Harrell Birmingham, Alabama Daphne McLendon Birmingham, Alabama EiLLiE Stull Birmingham, Alabama Edith Taylor Birmingham, Alabama Olena Webb Birmingham, Alabama Color: Cardinal ALPHA OMICRON PI Founded at Bernard College, 1879. Publication: To Dragma TAU DELTA CHAPTER Es ahlis irJ iqj§ Floivtr: Jacquemot Rose 1933 Alice N. Burton Birmingham, Alabama Minnie Elliott Birmingham, Alabama Helen Moore Birmingham, Alabama Barbara Williams Birmingham, Alabama ' 934 Martha K. Caldwell Birmingham, Alabama Mary E. Duke Birmingham, Alabama Linda M. Sessions Birmingham, Alabama Rowena Smith ... ... Birmingham, Alabama 1935 Eva Brown ... ... Birmingham, Alabama Itara Parker Birmingham, Alabama Elizabeth Smith Birmingham, Alabama Mary A. Smith ■. Birmingham, Alabama 1936 Idalene Fuller ... ... Birmingham, Alabama Bessie S. Harris ... ... Birmingham, Alabama Martha Herndon . . ... ... Birmingham, Alabama Martha Parker ... ... Birmingham, Alabama Maybeth Shepard ... ... Birmingham, Alabama Marjorie Stafford . ■... . . . Birmingham, Alabama Brown , Burtox, Elliott, Harris Herxdox, Moore, I. Parker M. Parker, Sessions, Shepherd E. Smith, M. Smith, Williams ALPHA CHI OMEGA FcuiKied at DePa%y rnlversity, 18S5 Colors: Scarlet and Olive Green Flo ujers: Red Carnation, Sinilax Puhlication: The Lvre Virginia Jenkins . ALPHA OMEGA CHAPTER Esiablislifd igsb 1933 . Birmingham, Ala. Martha Sue Mowry Louise Posey ..... Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. 193+ Sarah Adolphus . Marguerite Healey Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Josephine Bailey Frances Brouch Anne Cooney . ZoLiTE Johnson . Helen Johns . Caroline McCabe . Margaret Peterson Linna Cheney Birmingham, Ala. Louise Duffee Birmingham, Ala. Mary Enslen Birmingham, Ala. Doris Lassiter Birmingham, Ala. 1936 . Birmingham, Ala. . Birmingham, Ala. . Birmingham, Ala. . Birmingham, Ala, . Birmingham, Ala. Evelyn Walton . . . . Dora, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. 1935 Elizabeth McGregor . . Birmingham, Ala. Mildred McLaren . . Birmingham, Ala. Mildred Russell .... Birmingham, Ala. Jane Claypoole Woodward, Ala. Sarah Newell Birmingham, Ala. Marguerite Porter . . . Birmingham, Ala. Penelope Prewitt . . . Birmingham, Ala. Mildred Ryan Birmingham, Ala. Edith Teal Birmingham, Ala. . Birmingham, Ala. Bailey, Cheney, Coon ' ey, Enslen Jenkins, Johns, Johnson McCabe, Peterson, Porter, Prewitt Ryan, Teel, Walton THETA UPSILON Founded at the University of California, 1914. Colors: Rainbow Tints Ftoiaers: Iris, Fleur-de-lis g XI CHAPTER Established Ig36 1933 Elizabeth Clements ... ... Birmingham, Alabama M.ARjoRiE Elms Birmingham, Alabama Elizabeth Malone Athens, Alabama Werdna Vaughan ... ... Birmingham, Alabama 1934 Marv C. Heath Birmingham, Alabama Lillian Matthews Birmingham, Alabama Margaret Moore Birmingham, Alabama Doris Stainton Birmingham, Alabama Carolyn Wheeler Birmingham, Alabama 1935 Gretchen Brown Birmingham, Alabama Ethel Dillon ... ... Birmingham, Alabama Bettv McHugh Birmingham, Alabama Mildred Peacock Birmingham, Alabama Marion Wilcox ... Birmingham, Alabama Carolyn Worthington . Birmingham, Alabama Nell Robicheaux liirmingham, Alabama 1936 Alma Alexander Birmingham, Alabama Frances Cutcliff Birmingham, Alabama Virginia Miller Birmingham, Alabama Martha McGill Birmingham, Alabama Lula Wright Bessemer, Alabama Tolbert Griffin Bessemer, Alabama Alexanoer, Clements, Cutliff, Dillon Elms, Heath, Malone McGiLL, McHucH, Miller, Peacock ' AucHAx, Wilcox, Worthincton PI BETA PHI Founded at Monmouth College, 1867. Colors: Wine and Silver Blue Flcwer: Wine Carnation Publication: The Arrow ALABAMA ALPHA CHAPTER Established lQ2y 1933 Margaret Jones Birmingham, Alabama 1934 Martha Jaxe Kluttz Birmingham, Alabama Lydia Taylor Birmingham, Alabama Sarah Sterrett Birmingham, Alabama Florence Vance Birmingham, Alabama 1935 Mary Chappell Birmingham, Alabama Ann Hogan Birmingham, Alabama Katherin-e Kluttz Birmingham, Alabama RiCHARDiN-E Massey Birmingham, Alabama Rosalie Pettus Birmingham, Alabama Elna Sessions Birmingham, Alabama Robena Evins Birmingham, Alabama Eleanor Kidd Birmingham, Alabama Frances Mallam Birmingham, Alabama Mae McIntosh Birmingham, Alabama RiCHARDiNA Ramsay Birmingham, Alabama Dolly Weiss Birmingham, Alabama 1936 Caroline Clayton Eufaula, Alabama Bernice Lokey Birmingham, Alabama Betty- Crawford Birmingham, Alabama Katherine Bauman Birmingham, Alabama Clayton, Crawford, Evins, Hocax Jones, Kidd, K. Kluttz M. J. Kluttz, Lokev, Mallam, Massey McIntosh, Pettus, Ramsay Sessions, Taylor, Vance, Weiss KAPPA DELTA Founded at ' irginia State Normal, 1S97. Colors: Green and White Flowfr: White Rose Publiiation: Angelos ALPHA UPSILON CHAPTER Hslahlulitd 11)21) 1933 Evelyn Andrews . . Martha Coffee . . Margaret Lanning . Sue Woodruff . . . . Birmingham, Ala. . Birmingham, Ala. . Birmingham, Ala. . Birmingham, Ala. Virginia Clark Birmingham, Ala. Jane Elliott ..... Birmingham, Ala. Eleanor West Birmingham, Ala. Sallie Lee Woodall . . Birmingham, Ala. Dorothy Schultz . . Birmingham, Ala. Nell Williams . 193+ Harriet Throckmorton . Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham. Ala. 1935 Mary Brown . . . • . Birmingham, Ala. Mildred Ellis ..... Birmingham, Ala. Mary Gene Herren . . Birmingham, Ala. Mary Katherine Hood . Birmingham, Ala. Roberta Knowles .... Birmingham, Ala. Helen Mason Birmingham, Ala. Mary Throckmorton . . Birmingham, . Ma. Marjorie Cabaniss . Jean Frazer . . . Alice Holt . . . . LuciLE Judge . Margaret Leland . Mary K. Rochester Dorothea Warren . Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. 1936 Marjorie Cheatham . . Birmingham, Ala. Mary Hiden ..... Birmingham, Ala. Jane Judge Birmingham, Ala. Eleanor Sibley .... Birmingham, Ala. Mabel Thuston .... Birmingham, Ala. Frances Evans Birmingham, Ala. Edith Johnston .... Birmingham, Ala. Margaret Lyman . . . . Birmingham, Ala. Virginia Thompson Selma, Ala. Julia Wallace .... Birmingham, Ala. Brown, Cheatham, Clark, Coffee Elliott, Ellis, Frazer, Herren HiDEN, Holt, Johxsok, Knowles Lanning, Lyman, Thompson, H. Throckmorton- M. Throckmorton, Wallace, West, Woodruff Colors: Double Bro vn GAMMA PHI BETA Founded at Syracuse I ' niversity, 1874. Publication: The Crescent ALPHA RHO CHAPTER Established 1930 Floiver: Pink Carnation LuciLE Griffin . . . LouLiE Jeak Norman Sarah Totten . . . 1933 Birmingham, Ala. Mary Virginika Hawkins . Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Mary Ruth Pippen . . . Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Margaret Toeien . . . Birmingham, Ala. 1934 Velma Arnold . Inez Mason . . . Birmingham, Ala. . Birmingham, Ala. Margaret Weaver . Christine Zeiger . Rosemary Carroll . Birmingham, Ala. . Marianna, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Annie Lou Fitch 1935 . . Sulligent, Ala. Mary Jo Zuber . Mary Riley Bessemer, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. 1936 Louise Blow . ■. Theresa Davenpori Roberta Farrar . Katrika Howell . Margaret Smith . . . Cordova, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. . Hanceville, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Mildred Turner . . Mary Friel Browx . Sei.ma Dale Durham Evelyn Harrison . . Mildred Long . . . Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. . . Gadsden, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Helen Tate Birmingham, Ala. .:s=B««««Ht4 lE _ Arnold, Blow, Brow , Carroll, Davenport Durham, Fitch, Harrison, Hawkins Howell, Long, Mason, Norman PippEN, RiLEV, Smith, Tate TObien, Totten, Weaver, Zeiger, Zuber GAMMA THETA m Founded at Birmingham-SDiithcrn College, 1932. Colon: Blue and Silver Floiver: White Rose 1933 Mercedes Cagle Birmingham, Alabama Evelyn Pharr Birmingham, Alabama LuciLE Reese Birmingham, Alabama 193+ Katherine Windham Birmingham, Alabama Esther Vaughn Birmingham, Alabama 1935 Margaret Assell . . . . ' Birmingham, Alabama Marv Frances Bice Birmingham, Alabama Pauline Bradford Birmingham, Alabama Betti- LeForge Union Bridge, Maryland Edxa Martin Birmingham, Alabama Acnes Mandv Birmingham, Alabama Grace Stacey Birmingham, Alabama 1936 Evelyn Carr Birmingham, Alabama Sara Denton Loudon, Tennessee Katherine Plan Birmingham, Alabama Jamie Robinson Birmingham, Alabam:i AssELL, Bradford, Cagle Denton, LaForge, Ma dy Pharr, Plan Reese, Stacey, Windham AMAZONS Margaret Jones President Martha Coffee Vice-President RowENA Smith Secretary Margaret Tobien Treasurer Minnie Elliott Florence Vance Margaret Moore Sarah Sterrett Mary Ellen Saunders Marv Ruth Pippen Margaret Peterson Carolyn McCabe Virginia Clark Lucille Judge Mary Virginia Hawkins Martha Key Caldwell Margaret Jones Martha Coffee RowENA Smith Margaret Tobien --- INMATES OF THE STOCKHAM BUILDING Kappa Delta Debutants are Kappa Deltas. Join us and learn to handle gigolos. We stand for everything, even the repeal of the eighteenth amendment. (See Hiden.) Kappa Deltas 99 44 100 pure and untouched. Pi Beta Phi Pi Phis are intelligent! Ask the man who dates one! Here is the true literary talent of the campus. Ask: Childers. WE recommend Pi Phi kisses. Alpha Chi Omega Girls of the Golden Lyre. Singing, Dancing, and Piano lessons taught. If you are talented, be an Alpha Chi. We don ' t ask much. For example, Edith Teel ! Zeta Tau Alpha Be a Zeta and tame Minerva ' s lions! Zetas are EXCLUSIVE, so much so we have only three active members. Delta Omega We stay off the campus ! No tenement house for us ! Tri Delts are nice girls! Just ask us, you cynics! Alpha Omicron Pi We are quiet and refined ! Our horrible examples: Claxton Caldwell and Hellraiser Harris. Be an A. O. Pi and learn the K. A. grip. Gamma Phi Beta Gamma Phis are swell at Goucher! Why not at Southern? Don ' t ask us. Be a Gamma Phi and keep away those awful Blue Shadows. Theta Upsilon Be a book-store gigolette. We know the dope ! Each Theta U. one of Peacock ' s gaudy plumes. Wright boys. Here are Moore Brown Peacocks, but you must leave theMalone. Gamma Theta Y a Southern Sorority ? Pianist politician Pharr keeps us Christian. We even snob football players! (By request.) 1 1 i i I i 1 ( 1 THIS IS not A PAID POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT. 1 i T ' 1 }■Jelect circles, that rise above the rest. Holding the high principle of the group, %eward the efforts of the true, y showing what each one can do. LIBRARV OF O RGAN IZATIO THE 19 3 3 LA REVUE ni il i i ' MINISTERIAL ASSOCIATION David Hlitto President Herschel Hamner rice-President Rauzelle Johnson Secretary Rov Blocker . Treasurer Rov Blocker Pianist Cameron Moreno Son Director OviE Mathison Cliaplain Drs. Evans and Smith Faculty Advisors Members Rov Blocker Selman Bradley Lauren Brueaker Elbert Butterly Henrv Chunn Coleman Cooper L. D. Farrar Marshall Ford Denson Franklin Brooks Fulmer McCoy Guthrie Herschel Hamner David Hutto Rauzelle Johnson OviE Mathison Philip Martin Cameron Moreno Carlisle Miller Conrad Myrick John B. Nichols Irby Tranum O. C. Weaver Robert Westbrook Wood Whetstone i 1i- BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN I STUDENT SENATE Andrew Turnipseed Pn-siJenl Clarence Glover Fice-President Maurice Bishop Secretary Senators Sexiors Andrew Turnipseed Robert Westbrook Clarence Glover Bryant Whitmire JuxiORS Laurie Battle Maurice Bishop Louis Meier Sophomores Capers Smith Raymond Waid Freshman Henry Schoppert THE 19 3 3 LA REVUE OMICRON DELTA KAPPA jMen ' s Honor Society Founded at Washington and Lee Universitj ' , 1914 KAPPA CIRCLE Installed at Birmingham-Southern, March 22, 1924. Bryant Whitmire President McCoy Mays Vice-President Wyatt W. Hale Secretary J. B. Nichols Treasurer Active Members Associate Faculty Laurie Battle H. B. Englebert Lewis Beaird J. M. Malone Maurice Bishop Charles D. Matthews Frank Cantey ' Gilbert W. Mead Edward Dannelly W. A. Moore Clarence Glover W. D. Perry Bill Hamilton Walter B. Posey Herschel Hamner Austin Prodoehl McCoy Mays Guy E. Snavely J. B. Nichols Robert S. Whitehouse Andrew Turnipseed William A. Whiting Bryant Whitmire N. M. Yeilding Active and Hoxorarv Faculty William E. Glenn Russell S. Poor James Saxov Childers Wyatt W. Hale Henry T. Shanks Octavus Roy Cohen BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN CO-ED COUNCIL Minnie Elliott President Evelyn Pharr I ' ice-President Sarah Sterrett Secretary Jeanette Mavnor Treasurer Seniors Minnie Elliott Jeanette Mavnor Virginia Jenkins Evelyn Pharr Juniors Mary Bonfield Johnnie B. Smith Sarah Sterrett Sophomores MiLBRED Peacock Caroline Worthington Freshman Bessie Scott Harris ■fW THE 19 3 3 LA REVUE SCROLL Honor Society for Senior Girls Organized at Birmingham-Southern, 1928 Francena Hamiltox President Mary Ruth Pippen I ' ice-PresiJeril Helex Moore Recording Secretary Barbara Williams Corresponding Secretary Martha Coffee Treasurer Members Sarah Burson Marjorie Elms Martha Coffee Francen-a Hamilton ' Jaxe Elliott Helex Moore LouLiE Jeax Norman Mary Ruth Pippex Margaret Tobiex Barbara Williams BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN KAPPA PHI KAPPA Honorary Professional Etliitational Fraternity Founded at Dartmouth College, 1922 KAPPA CHAPTER InsiaUid, April, iq2 Clinton Bishop President McCoy Mays I ' ice-President James Racland Secretary Howard Moreland Treasurer Active Members Hubert Allbrooks Clinton Bishop George Briner James Crenshaw Edward Dannelly Robert Furgeson Clarence Glover Pete Hightower George Hunter John Johnston McCoy Mays Howard Moreland James Racland Rex Sullivan Charles Winfield Walton Wright Aubrey Thomas LoY Vaughn James Whitehead Guy E. Snavely Gilbert W. Mead J. E. Bathurst R. W. Whitehousf Austin Prodoehl Faculty Members W. h. Clift Hubert Searcy J. O. PlNKSTON H. B. Englebert W. E. Glenn .Lu. :ij — UA-i ' UJUia THE 1933 LA REVUE Y. M. C. A. J. W. Hamilton, Jr President Howard Moreland Vice-President Herschel Hamner Secretary Clinton- Bishop Treasurer Prof. Harry E. McNeel Faculty Advisor Cabinet Members Robert Westbrook J. W. Hamilton, Jr. John B. Nichols Howard Moreland Oliver Co.x Herschel Hamner Charles Weston Clinton Bishop David Hutto Wood Whetstone Lauren Brubaker McCoy Whitmire O. C. Weaver Arthur Ribe Laurie Battle Elmer Key Sanders Roy Blocker Elbert Butterly BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN SIGMA SIGMA KAPPA lloniirary E lnftitioiial Fr itcr iity Founclecl at Birmlngliam-Soiuliern College, 1928. Barbara Williams Presidtnl Flov Martin- Vice-President Werdxa Vauchan Secrriary Mary Rum Pippex Treasurer Sarah Bursov C iaf ltiin AcTivK Members Elizabeth Archibald Ruth Baker Mary Bonfield Sarah Bursox Mercedes C. gle Bartow Crowder Gladys Huey Floy Marti.v Gertrude Moebcs Helen Moore Lou Ellex Nettles Evelyn Pharr Mary Ruth Pippen Lucille Reese Werdxa Vaughan Eleaxor West Barbara Willlams L-L? — A-w --j ' . ' : a n THE 19 3 3 LA REVUE Y. W. C. A. Evelyn Pharr President Jea.vette Mavnor First Vice-President Rosemary Carroll Second [ ' ice-President Carolyn Wortiiin ' Gton Secretary Sarah Burson Treasurer Sarah Ton en Co-Editor of Y Handbook Cabinet Members Velma Arnold Ruth Baker Elizabeth Bullock Mercedes Cacle Virginia Clark Bartow Crowder Una Rae Elmore Mary Lou Griswold Francena Hamilton Franxes Horton Margaret Jon ' es Agnes Mandy Mary Frances Merkel Ebba Lou Moon Katherine Margaret Culverhouse Helen Moore Lou Ellen Nettles Itara Parker Mildred Peacock Elizabeth Perry Mary Ruth Pippen Marjorie Redus Lucille Reese Nell Robicheauk Johnnie B. Smith Sarah Sterrett Elizabeth Webb Barbara Williams Windham BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN BETA BETA BETA Honorary Biology Fraternity NU CHAPTER Established at Btrmingham-Soulhcrn College, IQ28 J. W. Hamilton President Floy Martin Vice-President James Crenshaw Secretary Pete Hightower Treasurer Active Members Elizabeth Archibald Harold Johnson Elizabeth Clements Alford Lovejoy James Crenshaw Ted Leigh Richard Glasgow Floy Martin Clarence Glover Bruce Nelson Joe Gray Louise Posey J. W. Hamilton J. W. Scarborough Pete Heslin ' gton Elmer K. Sanders Pete Hightower Alline Sandlin Faculty Members Dr. W. a. Whiting Jules Lamar Prof. R. A. Finnell Nelwyn Huff John Johnson i K a rrr i ' T-i I 1 . i -ftti m . ixjiMmvmt THE 19 3 3 LA REVUE THETA CHI DELTA Honorary Chemistry Fraternity Charles Harold Winfield President William M. Stubbins Vice-President HURSTON Heslincton Secretary-Treasurer Dr. Benjamin F. Clark Mr. George J. Fertig Faculty Members Dr. Wvatt W. Hale Dr. Ernest Victor Jones Dr. Guy E. Snavely Dr. William A. Whiting Mr. Perry W. Woodham Active Richard D. Glasgow Jack Jarvis George Macatee Lou Ellen Nettles Joe Phillips Elmer Key Sanders J. Benham Stewart Davis Hunt Thompson Esther C. Vaughn Hewell Samuel Associate Wynelle Doggett Mary Patricia Eddins Hyman Gordon Ernest Hollinsworth Ted F. Leigh Orville Lawson Mary ' Merkel David Newman Maurice Powell Vi ir-f i BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN DELTA PHI ALPHA J loiior iry German Fraternity THETA CHAPTER Establislicd al Birminijliam-Soullirrn Collryc, IQJO Bill Hamilton President Francena Hamilton Vice-President Austin Prodoehl Secretary James Crenshaw Treasurer David Newman Catherine Anzovino Joseph Bieker Fran;; Cantey Active Meimbers James Crenshaw William Crunk Bill Hamilton Francen ' a Hamilton ZOE LVON Sarah Minick Bruce Nelson Elmer Sanders Faculty Members Dr. Clark Professor Fennell Dean Mead Dr. Prodoehl Professor Steep Professor Whitehouse ' TrtTi ' t ' a ' hh ' iiimHBaiii • giMilllllK— MMiga THE i 1933 LA REVUE PHI SIGMA IOTA Dr. Anthony Constaxs President Prof. Harry McNeel I ' iee-President Prof. George Steep Secretary Clinton Bishop Treasurer Active Members Elizabeth Archibald Clinton Bishop Flora Buell Anthony Constans Marjorie Elms Jane Elliott Elizabeth Fikes Beverly Gaston Francena Hamilton William Hammond Sarah Hanlin Mary Harsh Gladys Huey Martha Jane Kluttz Zoe Lyon Harry McNeel Charles Matthews Mary Julia Minto Gertrude Moebes Margaret Page Austin Prodoehl Lucile Reese Mary Rosenau EsTON Stead George Steep Mary Caroline Tyler Caroly ' n Wheeler James Whitehead Robert Whitehouse Barbara Williams HoNOR.ARY MeiSIBERS Margaret Hamilton Mrs. a. Hemphill Gertrude Moore Dr. Guy E. Snavely Mrs. a. Upman a .1 BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN LE CERCLE FRANCAIS Francena Hamilton President Marjorie Elms Fice-President John Campbell Secretary James Whitehead Treasurer AcTHE Members Evelyn Blackburn Mary Bonfield John Campbell Mary Edwards Mildred Ellis Marjorie Elms Augusta Freeman Beverly Gaston Francena Hamilton John Hamilton Sarah Louise Hanlin Morris Hendrickson Ann Hocan DoRRis Lassiter Robert Woodrow Margaret Lyman ZoE Lyon Edna Martin Lee MacArthur Walter McCoy Cecile Minisman Carl Neal Richardena Ramsay Lucile Reese Nell Robicheaux Mary Throckmorton Margaret Weaver James Whiiehead Barbara Williams Dr. Constans Faculty Members Professor Hammond Professor Steep THE 1933 LA REVUE PI GAMMA MU Honorary Social Science Fraternity Founded at College of William and Mary, 1924. ALABAMA ALPHA CHAPTER Established at Binniiuj uim-Soiil icni College, October, IQS Bryant Whitmire President Margaret Jones lice-President H. T. Shanks Secretary-Treasurer Faculty Members K. E. Barnhart T. F. Debxam W. D. Perry J. E. Bathurst Theresa D. Ellington Austin Prodoehl George Curry H. T. Shanks Active Members Virginia Clark Bry ' Ant Whitmire Martha Coffee Clinton Bishop Bartow Crowder Roy Blocker Emma Evins Huston Cranford Margaret Jones Oliver Cox, Jr. Evelyn Pharr Murray Fincher Robert Sadler Alice Burton Andrew Turnipseed Allen Gamble Margaret Mockin irnumamrwnrrmim BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN BAND Wii.LiAM Nappi Director William Cruxk Assistant Director Jack Jarvis Manager Sydney Carpenter Drum Major Ted Leigh Beknett Waites Donald Roberts Robert Shaul LuciEN Rice Seneca Powell Clarence Dannelly James Colbert Jack Conxell Earl Stewart William Cady Joe Gray Otto Baker Elbert Butterly Louis Busenlexer Freeman Orr Newton Ingram Maxwell Johnston Watts Davis Jack Jarvis Claude Wilson James Roberts Harry Deffenback Julius Turner THE 1933 LA REVUE LITTLE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Ted Leigh Prrsidcnt Evelyn Pharr Sfcretary-Trcasiiiir Rov J. De Maris Director Ted Leigh David Newman John Pvron Dr. W. A. Currie John Hamilton Cotesworth Lewis Jack Jarvis Bernard Colev Lee MacArthur Josephine Tamblvn Watts Davis Evelyn Pharr Alfred Martin Gladys Cain Jesse Keller Sarah Lawrence Mary L. Ozier Travis Shelton John Hamilton Hilltop Quartet . First Tenor Hugh Thomas First Bass Second Tenor Lee MacArthur Second Bass BRBsr:; I ' i BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN i l yfi 111 1  -.f-tf tv f - i-iiiiiii MEN ' S GLEE CLUB Hugh Thomas President Ed Morrison Vice-President Travis Shelton Secretary Andrew Hemphill . Bob Fercl ' SON Business Manager John Hamilton Librarian Hugh Thomas Accompanist Director Leslie Barnett Cecil Bradford Billy Caldwell Joe Carmichael Jack Connell Bill Crunk Arthur Dickerson James Drake Coleman Cooper Robert Furgeson Marshall Ford Murray Fincher John Hamilton Pete Hichtower Frank Johnson J. A. Lambert Paul Lanier Lee MacArthur Murray McEniry Walter McCoy Cotesworth Lewis George Macatee • Ed Mackey- Byron Marsh Max Johnson Cameron Moreno Ed Morrison Freeman Orr Tom Prickett Albert Rutledge Benham Stewart Attilio Salzano Kelly ' Scott Henry Sparks Haldane Strain J. C. Stapelton Travis Shelton ' i; l ' T ' , r ' .l-i.LU,IL -A. LUJiw — iui.Hia ■' wii.in ..■iUJ, ' .„Aij ., Ill ■«■THE 19 3 3 LA REVUE WOMEN ' S GLEE CLUB Gladys Cain President Mary Jo Zuber Vice-President Mary Lou Griswold Secretary Violet Nappi Business Manager Johnnie Smith Librarian Andrew Hemphill ....... Director Thelma Blezard Constance Brown Mary F. Brown Elizabeth Bullock Margaret Bullock Mercedes Cagle Gladys Cain Alline Campbell Clarita Claussen Caroline Clayton Elizabeth Clements Jane Cosper Bartow Crowder Mary Dunn Selma D. Durham Margaret Edwards Roberta Farrar Olga Franke Augusta Freeman Idalene Fuller Peggy Greene Charlotte Green Mary L. Griswolu Sarah Hammons Evelyn Harrison Martha Herndon Dorothy Horton Katrina Howell Katherine Jackson Ruth Kennybrook Sara M. Kieffer Betty LaForge Marjorie McLaughlin Agnes Mandy Edna Martin Mary F. Merkel Gertrude Moebes Ebba Lou Moon Helen Moore Eloise Murray Violet Nappi Loulie J. Norman Evelyn Pharr Kathryn Plan Marguerite Porter Louise Powers Nell Robicheaux RosiLAND Roebuck Linda M. Sessions Lois Sharpe Evelyn Smith Johnnie Smith Margaret Smith Mildred Smith Louise Strawbidge Margaret Sturcess Annette Totten Mildred Turner Ann Turner Grace Twining Rosebud Waldrop Audrey Watrous Margaret Weaver Grethel White Barbara Williams Katherine Windham Christine Zeiger Mary Jo Zuber t u BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN MU ALPHA Ej ' tablished Birminghaiii-Soiiihcrn College, 1930. Iloiior iry Aliisicdl Fritttrnity Evelyn Pharr President Loui.iE J. Norman- Vice-President Travis Shei.tox Secretary Lee MacArthur Business Manatjer Violet Nappi Reporter Gladys Calv Coleman Cooper Mary L. Griswold John Hamilton Ted Leigh cotesworth lewis Lee MacArthur Peter Hamilton Zeno Knapp Hugh Martin ' i0LET Nappi LouLiE Norman Evelyn Pharr Travis Shelton Hugh Thomas Mary Jo Zuber Selma Dale Durha.m THE 19 3 3 LA REVUE TAU KAPPA ALPHA Honorary Forensic Fraternity Maurice Bishop President Andrew Turnipseed Vice-President Brvaxt Whitmire Secretary-Treasurer Maurice Bishop Debate Manager Active Faculty Clinton Bishop William Scott Gilbert W. Mead W. E. Glenn Maurice Bishop Andrew Turnipseed J. E. Bathurst Hubert Searcy Bryant Whitmire BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN BELLES LETTRES !!n James Whitehead PresiJi-nt Mary Enslen Vice-President ZoE Lyon Elizabeth McGregor . Secretary Treasurer Faculty Sponsors Dr. Henry Shanks Prof. George Steep Mary Anthony Jack Barfield Maurice Bishop Gretchen Brown Margaret Bynum LiNNA Cheney Elizabeth Clements Coleman Cooper Annie Davenport Louise Duffee Mary Dunn Selma Dale Durham Sarah Elliott Mildred Ellis Marjorie Elms Robena Evins Olga Franke Clarence Glover Francena Hamilton Active Members Mary Claire Heath Wilson Heflin Eric James Maxwell Johnson Fred Koenig Doris Lassiter Margaret Leland Cotesworth Lewis Mildred Long ZoE Lyon Marvin Martin Caroline McCabe Elizabeth McGregor Betty McHugh MoLLiE Miller Virginia Miller Violet Nappi Margaret Peterson Daphne McLendon Violet Pankey Louise Posey Ramon Ramos RicHARDiNA Ramsay Katherine Robbins Ida Rutherford Mildred Ryan OcTAViA Sadler Anne Shackelford Roland Short Margaret Smith Doris Stanton Sarah Sterrett Ernest Strong Harriet Throckmorton Mary Throckmorton Caroline Wheeler Grethel Mae White James Whitehead Marion Wilcox Sue Woodruff • xtassmsKm THE 19 3 3 LA REVUE CLARIOSOPHIC Jeanette Maynor Presideni Una Rae Elmore Vice-President Mildred Peacock Secretary Johnnie B. Smith Critic Carl Neal Correspondent Harold Winfield Treasurer Dr. Clark Evelyn Blackburn Roy Blocker Louise Blow Mary Bonfield Dick Boyd Elizabeth Bullock Margaret Bullock Sidney Carpenter Clarita Claussen Bartow Crowder Lee Crump Sarah Denton Arthur Dickinson Wy ' nelle Dogget Mary Eddins Margaret Edwards Una Rae Elmore Robert Ferguson Faculty Sponsors Active Members Augusta Freeman Sarah Louise Hanlin Dorothy Hortentine Katrina Howell Jessie Keller Ruth Kennybrook Pauline King Paul Lanier Acnes Mandy Jeanette Maynor Carl Neal Lou Ellen Nettles Sarah Newell David Newman Mildred Peacock Elizabeth Perry Mary Louise Quarles Amie Reagan Professor Perry flUUUbJLAilPLliV. .■JU UU.MJU Marjorie Redus Helio Ruiz Mamie Lou Self Johnnie B. Smith Grace Marie Stagey Louise Strawbridge Brannon Stringer Helen Tate Walter Wann Margaret Weaver Wood Whetstone Virginia Wilson Katherine Windham Harold Winfield Ike Winston Joseph Womack Caroline Worthington Mary Jo Zuber BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN NEWTONIAN CLUB Marjorie Elms President Frank Cantey Vice-President Esther Vaughn Secretary David Thompson Treasurer Elizabeth Archibald Elizabeth Bullock Frank Cantey Elizabeth Clements Emmett Cloud Edward Dannelly ' Marjorie Elms Christine Hampton Mary V. Hawkins Carolyn Johnson Marshall Jones Walter McCoy Lewis Meier Helen Moore Carl Neal Lou Nettles Harold Smith David Thompson Mary Till Esther Vaughn Harold Winfield . ■UJJM. ' . W MiM l tH i .lg THE 19 3 3 LA REVUE PAINT AND PATCHES Jack Barefield President Frances Horton Vice-President Mary Dukn Secretary CoTESWORTH LEWIS . Business Manager Jack Barefield Herbert Baum Pache Bruner Elizabeth Clements Mary Dunn Jane Elliott Drummond Gaines Bill Hamilton EoNNiE Hill Frances Horton Virginia Jenkins Zolite Johnson Margaret Jones Roberta Knowles Sara Lawrence Duard Le Grande Evelyn Pharr Charles Weston cotesworth lewis Lee MacArthur MoLLiE Miller Carl Neal Mildred Peacock Elizabeth Perry Violet Pankey Polly Paul Penelope Prewitt Nell Robicheaux Guthrie Smith JoHN ' NiE Smith Doris Stainton Mary Edna Travis Sally Lee Woodall Frank Johnson Murray- McEniry ' Mary Ella Suter BIRMIHSHJM-lS nirfiirc ' oiiEBE -yf. ,,  ,  w BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN ETA SIGMA PHI PI CHAPTER Martha Coffee President Gladys Huey Vice-President Mercedes Cagle Secretary Gertrude Moebes • Treasurer Mercedes Cagle Martha Coffee Ruth Davis Nell Echols Mary V. Hawkins Linda Horton Glady ' s Huey Fo.xYE Lanning McCoy Mays Gertrude Moebes Marguerite Page Johnnie Smith Sarah Sterrett Margaret Tobien I hose slaves of pub- lic fancy ever with a finger on the pulse of time gathering the loose threads of fast moving lives and spreading them on a printed page Yes those spenders of your money ' Nj iXj ' Nj THE PUBLICATIONS m,- .-j .r - «w««-  — .- Mi THE 1933 LA REVUE Ull ii I!; J BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN ®I|p dolh mh Hark Weekly Publication of Birmingham-Southern College Edward A. Dannelly • • Editor Barclay Dillon, Wilsox Heflin Associate Editors Raymond West . Business Manager NEWS Evelyn Pharr, Bill Hamilton, Mary Throckmorton, David Hudson, Lester Foss ick, Mary Frances Merkle, Zoe Lyon, Dolly Weiss, Woody Simmons, John Witte, Cecile Minisman, Jean Battle, Mae McIntosh, Eleanor Kidd, Frakcena Ha.miiton, Richardina Massey, Ruth Ansley, Wood Whetstone, J. B. Nichols, Herschel Hamner, Mollie Miller, Mary Claire Heath, Mildred Ellis, Mary Gene Herren, Frances Mallam. FEATURES George Nagel, Alford Lovejoy, Walter McCoy, Donnell Van de Voort, Jack Barefield, Joe Carmichael, John L. McConnell. SPORTS James McCoy Mays, James Drake, Murray Fincher, Hewell Samuel, Joe Vance, Ed Hopping, Harry Weaver, Cecil Bradford, Robert Strong BUSINESS STAFF Richard Walker Circulation Manager Richard Glasgow, McCoy Whitmire, Robert Strong, James Clendinen, J. W. Scarborough, George Davenport Associates ■■■i r, t.. ; ' ; M V fa« ' toi w;;h. i g i ififci t wnrt wii THE 19 3 3 LA REVUE LA REVUE Jnnunl Puhlication of Biniiint ham-Soutliern College Oliver Cox, Jr Editor Charles Weston Businrss Manager McCoy Whitmore, George Nacel, Herschel Hamner . Associate Editors McCoy Mays, Sports Editor Murray Fincher, Lucius Brannon, Joe Vance, Wilson Heflin, Lester Fossick Martha Jane Ki.uttz, Art Editor George Nagel Katherine Kluttz Werdna Vaughn, Feature Editor Caroly ' n Worthington Joe Carmichael Compiling Staff John L. McConnell, Eleanor Kidd, Alford Lovejoy, Morris Bishop, Floyd White, Robert Downes, Hyatt Hagan, Fred Dunlap, Louise McLandon, Joe Vance, Jack Barefield, Harry Weaver, Irv- ing Fish, Zoe Lyon, Marjorie Cabaniss, Ruth Kennybrook, Elizabeth Clements, Florence Vance, Linda Moore Sessions, Mary Chappell, Marjorie McLaughlin, Martha Key Caldwell, Elizabeth Stainton, Mary Throckmorton, Alice Burton, Frank Williams, Carl Neal, Virginia Jenkins, Bebe Fell, Arthur McFarland, Sarah Sterrett, Mildred Ellis, Richardina Ramsey, Anne Hogan, Cecile Minisman, Mary Bonfield, Helen Tate, Mildred Peacock, Jeanette Maynor, O. C. Weaver, Doris Stainton, Molly Miller, Margaret Healey, Evelyn Pharr, Mary Frances Merkle, Lydia Taylor, Francena Hamilton, John Witte, Joe Killough, Betty Crawford, Lauren Brubaker, Olena Webb, Harriet Throckmorton, Loulie Jean Norman, Dick Riley, Curtis Finch, Ed Hanahan, George Smith, Walter Hooper. Business Staff Clarence Dannelly ' Assistant Business Manager Ruth Davis, Mary Bonfield, Jimmie Holeman, Roy Blocker .... Solicitors I ' , ' j ' 1 9 (She dark alone is heavy; let ' s have light! We tire of all one color. We ' ll slide into a new dimension, oAnd pull away from all this tension. — ' agel. I TO THE SOPHOMORES: Those Deans in the School oF Hard Knocks ... we humbly dedicate this PAMPHLET STABLE AND Contents 1. Fessors. 2. Slightly used texts. 3. Miss Pan E. Lyme 4. Bookstore Bunk. 5. Sneaks or perhaps it s Greeks. 6. Gypsies and Gypers. 7. Proctors. 8. Pent-house Prowlers. 9. Rail-sitters. 10. Cannibal Hash. 11. W. C. T. U., A. W. O. L., B. P. O. E., D. A. R. 12. Billboards. MORE LILIES FOR FRANCES By James Alfred Lambert Solomon Sokko stalked over the tender greensward, a bucket and a trowel swinging from his hands. He was taking a short cut across the darkened campus of a small college. It was late in May, and the herbaceous odors were making the big fellow a bit home-sick for the pines of his country hills. Solomon had worked about the campus for four years. Thrice he had watched the annual commence- ment procession, watched it from a distance and from a pair of worn overalls. But tomorrow Solomon would be among those who marched into their beloved chapel to receive sheep skins. But before tomorrow, before commencement dawned, Solomon had a couple of jobs to do. An overworked chemistry student, rushing to complete the year ' s assignment had forgotten to drain his vat: it had overflown. In the room beneath the lab, there was danger of plaster falling. Besides the mess in the lab, a pipe in the basement of the women ' s dorm had sprung a leak. Solomon had a couple of jobs to do. And on his way to them, he trudged across the campus, a trowel and a bucket swinging from his hands. Hello, Janitor Boy — she gave him a nice grin — grin, not smile — hello. She was re- turning from a late movie, alone. Hello, Frances — his mother had taught him to be polite, even when he wanted to do a nice, bloody murder. You going my way. Janitor Boy? Sokko answered, No, I ' m going the other way. Which is your way? Mr. Sokko neither bowed, smiled, or even looked pleasant as he left her in the moonlight and whistled his way along to Science Hall. He remembered that during his first year at school, Frances had asked him for a date and he had refused to be kidded. Ever since that time, she had been trying to loop him — the point was that it pained her to miss even one man, even a janitor boy — but Solomon refused to be looped, particularly since Frances was the only person in college who razzed his menial tasks and his persistent air of aspiration. Knocking down the wet plaster, Solomon was glad that he had his sooty hat on his head, was pleased with the shield-like defense of his horn-rims against the flying mortar. He mused upon the way that Frances had dropped football men after the season was over. And he pon- dered that spring night when a senate leader had fallen into the lily pond beneath Frances ' balcony. When asked by the night watchman why he had been there so late at night, the senator insisted that he ' d been picking lilies from the pond ' s surface. After that, whenever a new male came to college, he was referred to as more lilies for Frances. Every gent on the campus had either willingly or not willingly be- come a slave to her blue gaze — e.xcept Solomon Sokko. It was even whispered that a professor, inspired by blue and gold, had been seen parked on several dark roads. Sitting on the floor with legs pushing hard against the wall, Solomon twisted and strained at the water pipe. The heavy Stillson slipped and gave misery to his thumb; but he worked steadily on — Solomon Solcko was a man who would work steadily on. Hello, Janitor Boy. She was sitting on a step, wearing her mulberry gown. Anyone but Mr. Sokko would have answered the call of the wild and let the basement in the girls ' dormitory flood to its fullest; but Solomon al- lowed evil to remain perched on the step above him, and wrestled on with his wrench. Hey, Janitor Boy, how come you do me like you do? Solomon reminded himself of the maternal admonition: Always be polite, my darling boy, always be polite. Don ' t knock little girls in mulberry dressing gowns on the head with big Stillson wrenches — always be polite. Solomon tugged at the pipe, agonizing under the re- straint imposed by his dear old mother. How come. Janitor Boy? She pouted the question down to him and stretched in satin rhythm. Or is this your night of silence? It was. Frances uncurled and, standing, drew tight the dressing gown until it moulded her in silken curves. Languorously she sleeked down the steps. And once she was close to Solomon she dreamed from beneath mascaraed eyelids and shook the perfume from her hair. Aren ' t you ever going to let me help you, Janitor Boy? Her finger-tips, tipped with little pink shells, slid down his coat sleeve. I could help you a lot, she murmured with her lips and with her eyes. Solomon put down his wrench and got up. He went out of the basement of the girl ' s dorm, crossed the campus, and entered his own room. There he assembled a pile of old rags, a frayed rug, and a pair of worn-out overalls. These he put in a large tub, went out of his room, crossed the campus, and entered the basement of the girls ' dorm. Passing through the basement, he came to the steps. These he climbed. He opened the door at the top and walked along the hallway looking at names on the room panels. Finally, he came to a name and placed his tub before it. He struck a match to the rags and tended the young flame, smothering it just enough. Once it was smoking nicely, Sol- omon went outside and waited. It was mid- night. Fifteen minutes later, after screams from the girls ' dorm had alarmed the campus and assembled a crowd, a girl in a mulberry dress- ing gown appeared on the balcony outside the window of her room. She stretched forth her silken clad arms. Save me, she screamed piteously. And scores of males responded to that call. Scores of males leapt forward to mount to the balcony of the terrified Frances. But before them all was Solomon Sokko. By some ap- parent coincidence, Solomon Sokko had been standing immediately beneath the stricken lady ' s balcony; and Solomon had the right of way. Nimbly he mounted to her side. Frances called and cooed her encouragement. The multitude answered back. And Solomon swung himself stalwartly upward. Oh, Janitor Boy! she cried, and before the assembled populace encompassed him within silken arms. And Solomon, polite to the last, asked her pardon as he disentangled her arms; he even asked her pardon as before the startled eyes of the mob he lifted little Frances over the rail- ing of the balcony, poised her there a moment, whispered: With love from the Janitor Boy, and politely, tenderly dropped her ker-plunk in the middle of the lily pond. After which, Mr. Sokko removed the tub of rags, returned to the basement, picked up his Stillson wrench; and, planting himself so that his legs pushed hard against the wall, he twisted and strained — but now Mr. Sokko whistled a merry, a lilting tune. 1. Uygay MacAvelysnay 2. Ottyscay MacIeldingyay 3. Nesteray V. MacOnesjay 4. Immyjay Macilderschay 5. ICHEBOURGRAY MacMcIlLIAMSWAY 6. Ilbertgay MacEadmay 7. Yattway MacAlehay 8. Ustinaay MacRodoehlpay 9. Ontay Onstanscay 10. Ennethkay Arnhartbay CAMPUS GEOGRAPHY OUR MONASTERY. The newly acquired Simpson Edifice reminds us of an old, discarded and dilapidated club- house for monks, way away from civilization. The effect is noticeable — very much so. We forget all worldly matters on those too frequent pilgrimages there to visit Saint Patron of Edu- cation. THE COY McCOY. Herein are the offices of Hutto, Hutto, and Hutto, courteous custodians of Christianity. In vain they seek the Collegians as clients. The only ones they can rope in are members of the Ministerial Association, and why should they pay attention. They know more than the preacher — or think they do. SUNDIAL. A gift of the Class of ' 28. Claimed by some old grads to have once shown the correct time. But now, placed among the other traditions, only a lonely pillar in the center of a grassy waste, serving as an inspiration to initial en- gravers and a brace for lean to Freshmen. MUNGER BOWL. A big hole filled with cinders, weeds, mud, and fresh air. The well known prowling place of the panther. A big gift from a big man. LIBRARY. The home of industrious students and a hing- cut for the society set on cool mornings. Here among shelves of ancient and undigestible books the anaemic students delve into subjects un- known to anyone. PRESIDENT ' S HOME. Situated a little behind and a little to the right of Munger Memorial. Here in this beautiful English colonial mansion dwells the Kingbee, ruler over all the little Bumbles whose honey makes possible the existence of this noble school. STOCKHAM WOMEN ' S BUILDING. The newest building on the campus, and fur- nishing a meeting place for all our beautiful wenches. A Greek harem, very alluring to the men students, but forbidden to them by college rules— very unnecessary rules in the opinion of all the gigolos and many of the more enter- prising gigolets. MUNGER MEMORIAL. The hive wherein all the little bumbles store their honey— or else get stung. Between Red Yeilding ' s and Ma Hale ' s windows, many a pair of shoes are worn to shreds by slow think- ing, slow moving, slow paying, wall-eyed and bleary-eyed students. SCIENCE HALL. A tower of brick, leaky pipes, and acid fumes, where men of science dwell. Great rows of bottles, tubes, flasks, and cries in the night. A place well known for the torture of students and cats, and a place of scientific data. Through Science to faith. BOOKSTORE. Better known as Deacon ' s Den. Here man unsuspecting studes are put on the spot. One of the big rackets on the campus run by Buch Reeves and the Pi K. A. boys from across the Arkadelphia. The rapid growth of this enter- prise is due to the motto: Don ' t worry why the black hen lays the white egg — get the egg. DORMITORY. Nestled in simple, sylvian beauty; a museum of college heirlooms, wall paintings, and antique furnishings. Here one sees queer things, hears queer noises, and is surprised at nothing. Truly a man ' s house — gawd knows he can have it. Parade By bishop This is a story of many va- rieties. Herein are floats, our own Belles, pretty cars, signs, stunts, dogs and everything. There is Sid and the boys. Here come more signs, cars and stunts — all adding to the color of this event we ' ll never forget. Misses Brown and Pet- tus, on bosses; our interpreta- tion of Howard faculty; Sen- ator Meier guarding the tro- phy; some more chapters in our story. .Bringing it to an end, we present the Panther what scratched. Hail the Pan- ther! qA Mystery Unsolved By ' Photos This page reveals the success of our secret cameraman who, after many diligent hours of snooping, has made it possible for us to know the truth. How many times do we stammer around trying to smooth over or evade that age-old interrog- ative — Who was that lady I seen you with? At last the naked facts are presented in answer to requests of both par- ties. Since it is the huth that trurts, I mean the trurth that huts, anyhow, we hope you can fact the faces — you under- stand. Kliittz is seen giving Brute the air. That sad picture was taken the day Alice beat me at Battleship. P. Taylor even gets a thrill out of embracing Miss Coca Cola. The rest we will let you figure out, it ' s more fun that way. J SemtoriaEs Dear Editor, (Ollie lion): — I know that you think it seems funny for me to write you like this, but I was afraid that you might have forgotten what you told me that night after the dance. I know that you will keep your word. While I was having my picture taken I thought of you, and I know that is the reason it was so good. I can ' t wait for the book to come out. Then you and I can be together more when you don ' t have to put so much time on your work. Ollie, sweet, I hope that you don ' t have too much trouble picking out the other girls for the Beauty section, ' cause there are some more girls who are cute too. I am thinking of you, dear, and I hope I can see you soon. Love and kisses, Louise Liles. P.S.: Remember that night after the dance. Dear Editor: Sir, it has been brought to my attention that you want my picture for the La Revue. Of course I know that you are trying to make a good book, and that you want the best representatives from the stu- dent body; considering this fact and being always ready to do my part to help 01 ' Southern, I have had twenty-five snap-shots made and I am sending them to you. If you find that these are not plain enough, or that they are too small, please inform me and I will have some more made. And remember, if you have anything that I could help you out on, just let me know. I have always been willing to do my part in the activity for the students. In case 3 ' ou want any more pictures, please tell me. I can get some more poses or I have some pic- tures of myself when I was a baby. Yours truly, Sidney Carpenter. your beauty section. Sir, that was my girl and I resent that remark. There ain ' t no beauty section that my gal can ' t crash, and I expect to see her pic- ture in the La Revue I You know who I mean and if I hear that you say anything else about her, I am going to see that your name is put in the In Me- moriam space. I hope that you take this hint and act before it is too late. I mean business, NowLiN Keener. Dear Editor: I feel that my son is not getting the best instruc- tion in his history. I understand that his teacher is a certain Dr. Turnipseed, whose character is not of the best repute. I feel that since I am paying my money for an education, I expect him to teach more history and spend less time filling my son ' s mind with stories of a shady nature. I am writing to you, Mr. Editor, because I feel that you are in a position to open the eyes of the student body to this matter. I have never met this Turnipseed, but I gather from the reports brought home by my son that he is the proverbial fly in the ointment in the pure and wholesome life on the college campus. Sincerely, A Southern E.vthusiast. Editor: I just heard that you made the statement that a certain girl wasn ' t good-looking enough to be in Dear Editor: I understand you are contemplating running my picture in the Who ' s Who section of La Revue. I would advise you not to do so. Otherwise I SHALL BE FORCED to print the details of the party which was thrown at the Shades Tavern the night of December the thirty-first (31). Knowing as you do, how the reputation of the staff would sufier, I believe you will follow my advice. Yours truly, A. Friend. NOTE: The Staff decided that it would be unwise to run Ed Dannelly ' s picture. Little ff ' illie, being funny, Kicked the prof in the bunny. Noii , little ff ' illie ' s not in school. He should have known, the little fool. Little PFillie, just for looks, Tore pages from some Library books. Miss Gregory, though in vain. Said: Don ' t do that again. Little Willie on a spree. Got as lit as a Christinas tree. Papa caught him, but you can bet Willie ain ' t had no dessert till yet. Little M illie greic quite chilly. And pulled the cover from his brother. Billy. The north wind bleiv, and Billy froze; But Pf illie was warm from head to toes. Little Willie, to make a name, Set the Science Hall aflame. When the fire had burned to the ground, Willie caught a ride to toivn. When little Willie pledged a frat. He bought himself a shiny gat. And ivhen they beat him all in fun. Little Willie used his gun. There luas an old man called Dean Whom the student thought ivas mean, The girls say he ' s fickle. And the goatee, it tickle And still they call him mean. We know a young editor named Ed Whose success has gone to his head. He seems so demure But you can be sure He even snores in his bed. Little Willie, for fun, he said. Beat in another student ' s head. The Dean said, it sure was tough. And asked (f illie not to play so rough. Little Willie, wild icith gore. Pinned the instructor to the floor. All the studes yelled: Hurray, We ivon ' t have any class today. Little M ' illie, on a lark. Crashed the gate at High land Park. A little bored, he sighed: Ho hum. And started kicking a hole in the drum. Little M- ' illie, just for fun. Held up the bookstore ivith a gun. Now, little ff ' illie is far from here, Doivn in Kilby, doing a year. Little fFillie ' s sister, Kate, ff ' orked in the gym very late. The boys never told what they had seen. But this we knoic, Kate made the team. Little ff ' illie, playing mean, Pulled the whiskers of the dean. Deany laughed ivith childish glee And said: By hang, that ' s on me. ' ' There ivas a young artist named Nagel ff ' ho dreiv on his books and his table. Noiv just a glance At his baggy ole pants. Will convince you that he is able. Here ' s a toast to the football squad, They work and slave and try very hardj To dodge Coach Gillem For fear he ' ll fill ' em With songs and talks of duties of the squad. 3 Deta Iota Vj a m m a National Sorority of Oversized Girls FounJcii at ll ' omen ' s Coltcije, Monlyomcry, iSg2 One Active Chapter (Thank Goodness) Colors: Broad and Broader Flower: Cabbage Motto: Sturdy and Buxom TAU ETA CHAPTER Established at Southern, Election Day Officers Helen Mason Grand iriznrd Edith Johxson J ' icc-U ' izarel Evelyn Pharr Biff Jl ' izard Evelyn Andrews Recording Wizard Minnie Elliott Left Boiver Lucille Reese Aee High Mary Katherine Rochester Deuces Wild Betty McHlgh In Charge of Dates OcTAViA Sadler Neic Wizard SORORES IN FaCULTATE Too many qualified Class of 1933 Margaret Healey Foxy Lannixg Mary R. Pippen Sarah Totten Class of 1934 Mary Bonfield Margaret Edwards Elizabeth Bullock Clare Menninger Class of 1933 Violet Pankey Katherine Moser Mildred Russell Ann Hogan Pledges ? All passed with Honors Sorores Undesired Pan-Hellenic Herbert Hoover Y Open Houses Miss Gregory Co-Ed Council Packard Roadsters Bull-shooters Miss Ransom Sorority Presidents Lady Lou Sorority Hops Orange Rompers xlpha Oigma digma National Fraternity of ' ' Outstanding Men Founded at Hoiuard College, IQ2 Two Active Chapters Colors: Greener and Green PiihUcation: Itcha Palm Flower: Self-rising DELTA CHAPTER Established iQjJ Officers TiLLiE VALKER President Lester Fossick . . Secretary-Treasurer Arthur Rire lice-President Dick Weacham . . . Alumni Secretary Rat Miller Sergeant-at-Arms Fratres in Facultate Not a single one qualified Fratres in Universitate Class of 1933 Bob Ferguson Pete Hightower Bill Scott Clarence Glover Kenneth GoARE SpenceTurnipseed Bryant Whitmire Jess Walters Class of 1934 Ossie Bennett Richard Glasglow James Whitehead Richard Walker John Campbell Brute Hooper D. Van de Voort Raymond West Elmer K. Sanders Louis Meier Bud Watson ALaurice Bishop Class of 1933 Lauren Brubaker Capers Smith Howell Talley Gas McGavock Shelley Finegan Howard Fredel Wood Whetstone Fred Dunlap Class of 1936 DrummOxNd Gaines Cameron ALareno Tilio Salzano All others flunked out. Fratres Unclaimed Carey Robinson Jules Lamar Jimmy Henderson Shine Bradford Sloppy O ' Neal Coteworth Lewis Jack Barefield Bill Dickinson Fratres Undesired Ma Hale Student Publications Rattler Burks Lily Damita Lee MacArthur Hawk-eye Dannelly Co-eds Tri-Delt House Musical Clubs Deacon Reeves Jean Harlow Gilbert Mead B ' BM« HSfl Ss°;(f H. e. Men By ' irth We begin with a M. D. (mighty drowsy) chapter, first the Doctor; then a To-Be-Doc- tor, a Hope T. B. Doctor. Til- lie breaks into print wearing the hat that won the Howard g ame — he says. Isn ' t that just too ducky — two Lac (Lock) en- thusiasts afloat. And now — Eh. O. Uney. Ask Brute what he ' s hiding, we ' ve been paid for not telling. Some of the boys. Bob Davis aloft, Delmar (a little bear), and Coy Mc- Coy fall in line. Look! Sir Sid at his best, and the form — notice, girls. The manage- ment (two disgusted million- aires) and next the other Ed. Forsooth, the Captain, at ease. Yumps and hurdles by Wright then comes Pete busting the tape. These four main Claws kept that egg up by Howard ' s score. yust Girls By ISlature The Three D ' s are first to he portrayed in this story. Fol- lowing close, come Grade Liles and Millie, who seems chilly. Here are three of the romper queens, also members of the Athletic Council. More D ' s , then a romping Daven- port. Sister Pharr, and some cohorts, are caught in session. Now, my gal Nell, of faculty fame — same ole smile. More of Miss Ransom ' s little helpers. Look! a Klultz clutches a Mc- Allister. We ' ll have none of that, young ladies. One of the brightest things around here, red-on-head Stool. The last of the council, they did fine this year, Congrats, girls. As this started,so it ends, — the rest of the tri-diddys. J FRAGMENTS OF GOSSIP By I. Ben Snoopin Ah! that eternal triangle — Billie, Bob and Mae. . : . Life for me is no bed of roses, says Millie. Where ' s my Henry? . . . It was thought that a turtle had joined our midst, but on second look, it was discovered to be Tillie Walker — under the hat. . . . I wonder why Dr. Hawk is always placing Doyle Perry on an island unprotected, with Clara Bow. . . . Another eternal triangle lifts its beastly head. It consists of: Margaret, Dolly, and Donnell (for- merly Donald, accent on Don — now Donnell, ac- cent on ELL). . . . If you want to get in on the latest gossip, see Jane Judge. It wasn ' t told to me, I only heard. Clin- ton Bishop certainly courts a sweet girl — Dot Cide. Virginia Jenkins would like to know if people are judged by the company they keep, because if they are, some guy is going to get dropped. . . . If you ever see a huge Cadillac drive up and it is overloaded with our he-men athletes, you can bet it is just a vulgar display of Miss McHugh ' s power. . . . Being interested in the betterment of charac- ter, spunk, vitality and football sweaters — take it upon myself to warn the boys to be careful when they get their next sweater. Be sure and examine it carefully, because you can never tell what Spud Holman will be knitting next. . . . The senators are like a family of cats (lit- erally). Mother Turnipseed leads the bunch ' caus: she has the goods. What we want is more con- structive Meows and less of this running around, or Papa Student Body will have to attend to Tabby. . . . So sweet is devotion. You should picture the charming little Smith girl as she waits over a hor- rible radiator while ole Mr. Hemphill helps her ONLY learn a bit more concerning musick. . . . Miss Harmer is really harmless. She tries to act so mean. I bet she even comes to the table on Hallowe ' en with a mask on, just trying to scare someone. . . . Well girls, any of you who are courting A. T. O. ' s, you might as well start on another fraternity because Minnie Elliott has copped the only om possessing full ownership of a jeweled chest-pro- tector. Now we know why Minnie ' s shoulders have become a bit humped, such a load. . . . Pardon if I become a little sentimental. Evelyn Pbarr has that effect upon me. If you will but glance at her honors and then those of Dr. Snave- ly, you will find that she is surpassed by two. To think that she is leaving us with such a record nearly drives me to tears. It seems that for any- one who tried as hard as she and then to miss by two, something could be done. Every effort was made to get her the position of Pi K. A. house- mother, then she could have coasted into the Presi- dent ' s seat, but they refused to consent on the grounds that none should occupy the chief ' s seat except a chief, no squaws. . . . Jo Bailey seems to be the sweetheart of th? city. When the American Legion, Police Band and all the rest take time off to select a queen and even escort her to Washington — there must be something to the little girl. What is it, young lady, that can make the ole boys come to atten- tion? . . . Grade Sibley is so dumb she thinks Alma Mater is a musical comedy. . . . Margaret Healey is getting a little Keener about who she goes around with. Someone told me that they are the co-presidents of the American National Auto-Sitters Associa- tion — 7 believe it, too. . . . Mist — white foam — a swirling sensation of bil- lowing waves — where is he? L. Beaird blundered against something hard and cold — a blinding, stinging sensation in his eyes — he gasped and choked — involuntarily he reached forward — the thing was within his grasp — at last, a towel — and the soap was wiped from his eyes. . . . Clayton hasn ' t had the same security and faith in little Teel ever since she got loose and attended the Amazons Dance, where she seemed to enjoy seeing what the other boys were like. . . . The maid came into the house and said: Miss Hamilton, there ' s a woman outside with a man. To which old-maid Francena replied (to our surpise): Tell her to send him in. I ' ll take him. . . . J ALWAYS A GOOD SHOW RITZ THEATRE BIRMINGHAM ' S FAVORITE PLAY HOUSE IS RIGHT OUT IN FRONT EVERY DAY IN EVERY V AY WITH THE GREATEST ARRAY OF FEATURE ATTRACTIONS! OURS IS THE BUSINESS OF MAKING PEOPLE HAPPY. WHAT A PRIVILEGE TO BE SO ENGAGED! HIGHLAND ICE CREAM CREAMERY COMPANY ALL-CREAM ICE CREAM AT COLLEGE BOOKSTORE COMPLIMENTS COLLEGE CLEANERS AND HILL TOP SHOE SHOP PHONE 6-9104 729 EIGHTH AVENUE, WEST COMPLIMENTS OF JOE WATKINS BOB WOLFORD ODUMCLOHINGCO. 2073 THIRD AVENUE, NORTH BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN COLLEGE (CO-EDUCATIONAL) YOUR COLLEGE— CERTAINLY FULLY ACCREDITED MEMBER OF AMERICAN AND SOUTHERN ASSOCIATIONS OF COLLEGES, AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF UNIVERSITY WOMEN, AND ON APPROVED LIST OF ASSOCIATION OF AMERICAN UNIVERSITIES Faculty: Christian in Character. Scholarship and Ex. equal to any. Courses of study complete and liberal, leading to degrees of A.B., B.S., M.A., work in Languages, His- tory, Science, etc., leading to Medicine, Law, Engineering, Teaching, Ministry, Busi- ness, etc. Department 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 of 125 acres, on wooded hill overlooking famous Jones Valley of Birmingham, unsur- passed for healthful climate. Students ' building, largely contributed to by them, now headquarters for student activi- ties. Student publication 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 Movement. Endowment increased materially by drive in spring of 1926. 250,000 Munger Administration Building and Auditorium now crowns the campus. Genuine college advantages within reach of all. Necessary expenses under 350. Opportunities of self-help in the city. For Further Information, Address GUY E. SNAVELY, Ph.D., LL.D., President BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN COLLEGE BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA SUCCESS CREATE AN ESTATE IMMEDIATELY QUALITY AND EXCELLENCE IN LIFE INSURANCE MASSACHUSETTS MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE CO. FRANK W. DRAKE, AGENCY 2004-2012 COMER BUILDING BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA MILLER MARTIN ARCHITECTS J. A. LEWIS ENGINEER INCORPORATED ♦ DESIGNERS OF STOCKHAM WOMAN ' S BUILDING MUNGER MEMORIAL HALL McCOY MEMORIAL STUDENT ACTIVITY BUILDING MUNGER BOWL STADIUM PRESIDENTS HOME PHILLIPS LIBRARY ANDREWS HALL BIRMINGHAM ELECTRIC COMPANY INVEST IN AN ELECTRIC REFRIGERATOR BIRMINGHAM ENSLEY BESSEMER 3-4266 PHONES 6-6969 ADAMS COAL CO, 900 NORTH THIRTEENTH STREET 321 SOUTH TWELFTH STREET (WEST END) THE PLACE TO BUY YOUR COAL AND COKE O. p. ADAMS V. L. ADAMS HILL GROCERY COMPANY A STORE NEAR YOU [- i MISS KATHLEEN CROSS GRADUATED FROM BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN GRADUATED FROM MASSEY BUSINESS COLLEGE THIS COMBINED TRAINING HAS FITTED MISS CROSS FOR A SPLENDID POSITION FOR 45 YEARS MASSEY HAS BEEN TRAINING YOUNG MEN AND YOUNG WOMEN FOR EXECUTIVE POSITIONS. THEY CAN TRAIN YOU. CALL 3-7278 MASSEY BUSINESS COLLEGE ASK FOR INFORMATION ATLANTA-SOUTHERN DENTAL COLLEGE ATLANTA, GEORGIA FOUR-YEAR COURSE, LEADING TO THE D.D.S. DEGREE NEW COLLEGE BUILDINGS MODERN EQUIPMENT AMPLE CLINICAL FACILITIES DENTAL CLINICS OPEN THE ENTIRE CALENDAR YEAR ENTRANCE REQUIREMENTS ONE YEAR OF COLLEGE WORK SESSION OPENS OCTOBER FIRST FOR CATALOGUE AND INFORMATION WRITE RALPH R. BYRNES, D.D.S., F.A.C.D., DEAN COMPLIMETS OF EAST BIRMINGHAM COAL CO. 3904 TENTH AVE, N. 9-2196 AND WITTICHEN COAL COKE CO. WE SERVE THE DISTRICT WITH COAL AND COKE 1600 AVENUE C, SOUTH 3-2266 EMPIRE l o ' o COAL A YARD CONVENIENTLY LOCATED (I TELEPHONE |1 j ALL YARDS i [ 4-2440 I EMPIRE COAL YARDS COMPLIMENTS OF WIMBERLY-THOMAS HARDWARE LIFE INSURANCE SHOULD BE YOUR FIRST INVESTMENT YOU WILL NEVER BE THRIFTY TOMORROW IF YOU AREN ' T THRIFTY TODAY ASK ABOUT OUR EDUCATION POLICY GRADY MILLER (CLASS ' 23), AGENT NEW YORK LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY JACKSON BUILDING PHONE 3-7261 FLOWERS FOR EVERY OCCASION CHANNELL, Florist 1719 SECOND AVENUE. NORTH, BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA PHONES: BUSINESS 3-4889, RESIDENCE 6-5135 MANAGER, MRS. L CHANNELL assistant manager, miss REBA CHANNELL GOOD CLOTHES BLACH ' S WALTER BURSON 24 YEARS ' EXPERIENCE BURSON GUN AND KEY CO. umbrellas and luggage repaired we repair anything PHONE 3-3645 1923 FOURTH AVE. -Vi COMPLIMENTS OF DE LUXE STUDIO LA REVUE PHOTOGRAPHER FOR FOURTEEN YEARS THANKING EVERY STUDENT AND THE FACULTY FOR THEIR PATRONAGE, WE HOPE TO HAVE THE PLEASURE OF SERVING YOU IN THE FUTURE RUN-A-FORD CO., Inc. NEW CARS FOR RENT PHONE 3-1457 H. R. BERK 1819 FIFTH AVENUE, NORTH COLLEGE BARBER SHOP HAIRCUT 35c SHAVE 20c S. V. HUDSON J. B. JOHNSON PHONE 3-2576 BIRMINGHAM PRINTING COMPANY INCORPORATED LARGEST IN ALABAMA 1700 SECOND AVE. BIRMINGHAM, ALA. F DIXIE DRIVE- IT-YOURSELF SYSTEM BETTER CARS-BETTER SERVICE 1917 FIFTH AVENUE, NORTH PHONE 3-7181 YEILDING BROTHERS COMPANY OLDEST DEPARTMENT STORE IN BIRMINGHAM SECOND AVENUE AT TWENTY-SECOND STREET INDEPENDENT PRODUCE COMPANY WHOLESALE PRODUCE AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA COMPLIMENTS OF CITY PAPER CO. PANSY BACON YOU CAN ALMOST SEE THE FLAVOR ALABAMA PACKING CO. BIRMINGHAM CORSAGES BOUQUETS CUT FLOWERS DESIGNS TUTWILER FLOWER SHOP IN TUTWILER HOTEL DECORATIONS PHONE 3-9747 WE TELEGRAPH FLOWERS TO ALL POINTS BOOKKEEPING CIVIL SERVICE SHORTHAND ::c DUC DEC DEC DEC OUR RECORD EVERr GRADUATE IN A POSITION. OVER 600 STUDENTS ENROLLED LAST YEAR. THE ONLY BUSINESS COLLEGE IN THE STATE WITH A UNIT CREDIT SYSTEM. THE ONLY BUSINESS SCHOOL IN THE CITY TO CONDUCT ANNUAL PUBLIC GRADUATION EXERCISES. ALABAMA ' S LARGEST BUSINESS COLLEGE ALVERSON BUSINESS COLLEGE 2021 FIRST AVENUE BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA 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. BUSI- NESS MEN RECOGNIZE THE SUPERIOR TRAINING OF OUR STUDENTS. TYPEV RITING DEC DEC DEC DEC HIGHER ACCOUNTING SECRETARIAL y ii rmiiyiml e ' GULFSTEEL is one of the few self-contained units in the steel industry owning and operating its own coal and ore mines, limestone quarries, etc. The absolute control, thus afforded, of every manufacturing process enables us to guarantee the quality of our products. GULFSTEEL is now the largest independent manufacturer of finished steel products in the South. This steady growth in the demand for GULFSTEEL products is the very strongest testimonial that we can have of the quality of our products and the satisfaction of our service. GULF STATES STEEL COMPANY BROWN-MARX BUILDING BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Pig Iron Welding Rods Staples Billets Plages — Sheared and Universal Nails (all kinds) Slabs Sheets — Black, Blue Bale Ties Wire Rods Annealed and Galvanized Wire Fence Posts Bars ' ' ' Rods, Straightened and Bright and Annealed Wire Angles Galvanized Wire Copperas ' ° ' Barbed Wire COMPLIMENTS OF BRILLIANT COAL COMPANY BRILLIANT COAL IS THE BEST GENERAL OFFICES: BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA GET THIS ■■SELLING IS TELLING ' ' f Z j f SAVE MONEY J mimeographing QUALITY, SERVICE 1 ' y W ' MULTIGRAPHIC ADVERTISING COMPANY FELIX B. LEFTWICH, Manager Phone 3-0310 2015 FOURTH AVENUE, NORTH COMPLIMENTS OF FRED S. JONES CO. 1901 ELEVENTH AVENUE, SOUTH ICE CREAM, CAKES SALADS PHONE 4-1100 WE DELIVER SNAPPY CLOTHES FOR COLLEGE MEN POPULAR PRICES— MADE TO WEAR DECK DECKER  The Coliesc Tailor BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA CAHEEN ' S THE SIGN OF QUALITY IT ' S STYLE-RIGHT AND QUALITY-PERFECT IF IT CAME FROM CAHEEN ' S BIRMINGHAM CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC CHARTERED UNDER THE LAWS OF THE STATE OF ALABAMA DORSEY WHITTINGTON, DIRECTOR COURSES LEADING TO CERTIFICATES, DIPLOMAS AND DEGREES FACULTY JUNIOR AND PREPARATORY DEPARTMENT MISS ETHEL ABBOTT MRS. REBA TOLHURST MRS. ANNA BERNHARD MISS LOIS GREENE MR. GLENN NICHOLS MISS CELESTE POOLE MRS. JANE HAMILL-WESTBROOK MISS HELEN WRIGHT MISS LOUISE BATES MISS ALLEN ORTON PIANO MR. DORSEY WHITTINGTON MRS. C. W. PHILLIPS MRS. FRANCES WHITTINGTON MRS. MINNIE McNEILL-CARR MRS. ETHEL COFFIN-KING ORGAN MR. JESSE WALKER MRS. MINNIE McNEILL-CARR VIOLIN MR. GEORGES RYKEN MRS. SARAH GOFF VIOLONCELLO MR. HAROLD CADEK VOICE MR. ALEXANDER SAVINE MRS. RUTH Y. CHANDLER MRS. OLIVE CHEEK HUMPHREY MR. VERNON NOAH DOUBLE BASS MR. FRANK RAY WIND INSTRUMENTS MR. PASQUALE BRIA MR. ANGELO SILVA CATALOGUE SENT ON REQUEST 2323 SEVENTH AVENUE, NORTH TELEPHONE 7-4913 (OPPOSITE PHILLIPS HIGH SCHOOL) T I I WHO WOULDN ' T BE A PRIVATE SECRETARY THE LIFE OF A PRIVATE SECRE- TARY IS A CONTINUOUS ADVEN- TURE; EACH DAY USHERS IN NEW CONTACTS, NEW ACTIVITIES, AND NEW PROBLEMS TO CHAL- LENGE ONE ' S INGENUITY AND ABILITY. THOUSANDS OF OUR MOST SUC- CESSFUL MEN AND WOMEN STARTED THEIR BUSINESS CAREERS AS PRIVATE SECRETARIES. WHEEL- ER SPECIALIZES IN THIS TYPE OF TRAINING. MANY BIRMINGHAM- SOUTHERN GRADUATES AND UN- DERGRADUATES HAVE STARTED ON THE ROAD TO SUCCESS THE WHEELER WAY. CALL, WRITE, OR PHONE WHEELER BUSINESS COLLEGE BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA ELEVATOR ENTRANCE, 1911 FIRST AVENUE TELEPHONE 3-4251 + — 1 I I I .„■}. H -• — DAY AND NIGHT SERVICE AT CARR BROS. FLORIST 601 SIXTH AVENUE, SOUTH EVERYTHING IN FLOWERS ' OUR SPECIALTIES CORSAGES, WEDDINGS FUNERAL DESIGNS REASONABLE PRICES ALWAYS PHONE 7-2930 THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA CAPITAL AND SURPLUS 10,000,000 ROLLER CHAMPION THE FLOUR THE BEST COOKS USE COSBY HODGES MILLING COMPANY DONOVAN ' S RED DIAMOND COFFEE FOR FINER FLAVOR M. L WARREN COMPANY REDMONT MARKET AVENUE G 24TH STREET FOOD AS WELL AS DRINK BOTTLED CARBONATED BEVERAGES MANUFACTURED BY BUFFALO ROCK COMPANY COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. NEHI BOTTLING COMPANY ORANGE CRUSH BOTTLING CO. DR. PEPPER BOTTLING CO. SLACK FLORAL COMPANY THE HOME OF BEAUTIFUL FLOWERS 2006 THIRD AVENUE, NORTH WATTS BUILDING BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA DIAL 3-6110 COMPLIMENTS OF EMPIRE. CAPITOL AND GALAX THEATRES L G. BALFOUR CO. FRATERNITY JEWELRY BIRMINGHAM BRANCH OFFICE 2104 FIFTH AVENUE, NORTH ENOCH B. BENSON, JR., Manager am REGAL SHOES CUSTOM REPRODUCTION FOR COLLEGE MEN CHARLES L. WESTON, COLLEGE REPRESENTATIVE 303 NORTH TWENTIETH STREET COMPLIMENTS OF HUGH A. LOCKE ATTORNEY-AT-LAW 923-4-5-6 First National Banli BIdg. Birmingham, Ala. COMPLIMENTS OF DR. G. E. CLARK BURGER PHILLIPS DR. M. L SMITH HEAD DEPARTMENT RELIGION COMPLIMENTS OF BEN F. RAY ATTORNEY-AT-LAW 206-10 Birmingham Bank BIdg. Birmingham, Ala. COMPLIMENTS OF THE BIRMINGHAM RECORD JAMES F. SMITH JOHN SHELBY CHADWICK North Alabama Conference Appointment, General Organ Methodist Church, South 810 BROADWAY NASHVILLE, TENN. LOVEMAN, JOSEPH LOEB THE STORE FOR COLLEGE MEN AND WOM EN H K n Ofo n of orton9loratCo. CUT FLOWERS. PLANTS CORSAGES BOUQUETS YOU WILL LIKE THE FLOWERS YOU GET YOU WILL GET THE FLOWERS YOU LIKE AT NORTON FLORAL CO. I 128 NORTH 26TH STREET 3-0557 3-3953 WE TELEGRAPH FLOWERS MOLTON HOTEL BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA EUROPEAN PLAN RATES: $1.50 TO $3.00 T. A. DRIVER MANAGER EIGHT YEARS CONTINUOUS SERVICE BY MOLLOy MADE AND SMITH CRAFTED COVERS ON THE LA REVUE TELLS ITS OWN STORY Write for Information and Prices to THE DAVID J. MOLLOY PLANT 2857 N. WESTERN AVENUE   CHICAGO, ILLINOIS A. P. FOOD STORES BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA COMPLIMENTS OF MOUNTAIN BROOK RIDING ACADEMY PHONE 2-2175 brighi page s jt 5 that reflect those happy, carefree days has been our oal ± ± A college: annual divi ion ♦ -c- - ■■■if ■ ENCRAVINC COM PAN-V- BiRMLS CHAM r N THE H E A. RT OF XP-I E S O UTH ' THIS BOOK PRINTED BY. The world ' s LARGEST PUBLISHERS OF CO LLEG E ANNUALS ENSOIsI ' iPRINTING CO.] NASHVILLE TENN COLLEGE ANNUAL HEAOaUARTERS cHto ieAiQuauh tryoA i nanmLa upeA.iQA. Qixhn io -M Oyice ' 3 --l  ' -• ■■yj ' ■;■M -yS i -U --, ' ' V .- ■■; t, ' ' ..-•.■l ' .- ' ■' ■-,- 7 ' -J ,■iV V J, . ' . , . ■- ■: :-:;
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