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

 - Class of 1935

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Birmingham Southern College - Southern Accent Yearbook (Birmingham, AL) online collection, 1935 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 192 of the 1935 volume:

UnRARY OF BIAMINGHAii -SOUTHERN COLLEGE dV BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN COLLEGE 5 0553 01001611 8 S V } ! — -— V OF ' f r r GEORGE LONDA . . . EDITOR-IN-CHIEF HARRY WEAVER . . BUSINESS MANAGER ■ • THE 1935 • LA REVUE LA R EVU E OF 1935 VOLUME SIXTEEN A-YEAR-BOOK ( PUBLISHED BY THE STUDENTS • OF . Birmingham. Southern College BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA D E D I CAT ,s Mrs. Guy E. Snavely working side by side with President Snavely has taken an active and important part in the lives of the students of Birmingham-Southern College. In her quiet and mod- est manner she has set an example for Hilltop students an example of true graciousness and culture. This sixteenth edition of the La Revue is dedicated to MRS. GUy E. SNAVELY Lnl J aoij of xIaic yjillliop R E WO R D ilUli To present a photographic record of the year 1934-35 on the Hilltop campus, to pre- serve pictorially the events of that year at Birmingham- Southern College, and to acknowledge the complletion of another pleasant year spent in the beloved halls of Alma Mater in search of beauty and culture — that is the purpose of this issue of La Revue CO N T E N Wii ADMINISTRATION THE CLASSES FEATURES • ATHLETICS FRATERNITIES ORGANIZATIONS G DMINISTKATION Alma Mater ON THE CITY ' S WESTERN BORDER ; REARED AGAINST THE SKY, ' PROUDLY STANDS OUR ALMA MATER AS THE YEARS ROLL BY. CHERISHED BY THY SONS FOREVER ; MEM ' RIES SWEET SHALL THRONG, ' ROUND OUR HEARTS, OUR ALMA MATER i AS WE SING OUR SONG. ' FORWARD, EVER, BE OUR WATCHWORD; ' CONQUER AND PREVAIL, HAIL TO THEE, OUR ALMA MATER, BIRMINGHAM- ALL HAIL! I i President ' s Home Science Hdi. T le Libraru Munaer Memorial Hall Andrews Hdl. Student Activities Buildina M essage BOARD OF TRUSTEES OFFICERS Mrs. W. H. Stockham President O. V. Calhoun Vice-President Edgar M. Glenn Secretary Fred M. Jackson Treasurer W. A. Pattillo Assistant Treasurer • EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Robert Echols Edgar M. Elliott A. M. Freeman Fred M. Jackson, V ice-Chairman Hugh A. Locke Edward C. Moore LoNNiE P. Munger O. V. Calhoun Ed. L. Norton, Secretary Mrs. W. H. Stockham Chairman Guy E. Snavely, Ex-Officio rom Dr. S navelu Last summer we had a pleasurable visit to historical Granada, the theatre of Moorish grandeur and Castilian history. Ever will abide in fragrant memory the visits to the ruined red Moorish Palace of the Alhambra and the most beautiful gardens surrounding the ruins of the Ganeralife Palace. The Alhambra Palace lies beautifully on a high ridge. Several hundred feet below along a precipitous cliff runs a feeble little stream called the River Darro. Across this river and near its bottom can be easily seen from the Alhambra and Generalife cliffs the holes cut into the hills used for several hundred years as the homes of the Gypsies. No light or ventilation comes into these hovels e-xcept through the apertures excavated in the side of the hills and considered as doors and windows by the denizens. The contrast in outlook, ideals, and ambitions as exhibited in comparing the Gypsies ' caves with the Moorish palaces is realized daily among people living in this day and age. My prayer is that every member of this college on leaving Alma Mater ' s study halls and frequented walks will ever strive to stay on the upper level. By high thoughts, noble deeds, and lofty lives of work and service, each one can more readily approach the high ideals which he must have gained and nurtured here. When one thinks of all the vice and corruption prevalent in many sections, not only in business but also in government circles, the challenge is greater than ever to a devoted and a consecrated leadership. Every member of this college should be most gravely con- cerned in this particular. With wars threatening abroad, economic unrest and distress prevalent everywhere, and an apparent increase in crime of all sorts, even an optimist is almost persuaded that history will record that the present era is already in the penumbra of a period analogous to the Dark Ages. May each and every one of you go forth as guides on the higher road that leads to happiness and success and not be laggards who will drift to the lower road leading to misery and distress. GUY EVERETT SNAVELY A.B., PH.D., LL.D., LITT.D. PRESIDENT A.B., Johns Hopkins Tniversity, 1901,- Ph.D., J. hns Hopkins University, 190S; LL.D., Emory University, 1925; Litt.D., Southern College, 1930; Cumberland University, 1932; Studied and traveled abroad for six summers; Graduate Scholar, Columbia I ' niversity, 1 914-15; Decorated by French Government as Officer d ' Academie, 1914; Taught Romance Languages at Allegheny College, 1906-17; New York and Columbia Universities, 1914-19; Organizer and Director Southern Division, American Red Cross, 1917-19; Dean and Professor of Spanish, Converse College, 1919-21; Editor Jehan de Vignay ' s Aesopic Fables, El Capitan Veneno, V ' aldes ' Jose ; Corresponding Member, Royal Spanish-American Academy, Cadiz, Spain; Lieutenant- Colonel, Alabama National Guard, Governor ' s Staff, 1922-26; Member Cosmos Club, Washing- ton, D. C. ; Director, Kiwanis Club, Birmingham, 1925, 1926, 1930; Former Director, Birmingham 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; President, Alabama College Association, 1926-27; National President, Kappa Phi Kappa, 1927-31; Secretary-Treasurer, Southern Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools, 1926 — ; Executive Committee, American Council on Education, 1927-31, 33 — ; President Birmingham-Sou;hern College, 1921 — ; President, Association of American Colleges, 1929-30; Member, National Ad- visory Committee on Education appointed b - President Hoover; Director, American Life Insur- ance Company of Alabama; Director, Fairfield American National Bank; Member, Committee of Fifteen Directing Liberal Arts College Movement; Member, United States Commission on Teacher-Training Colleges; Director, Jefferson County Building and Loan Association; Chairman, Board of Christian Education in North Alabama Methodist Conference; Chairman. Alabama Y. M. C. A.; Member, Joint Methodist Hymnal Commission; National Vice-President of Omicron Delta Kappa. UM WYATT WALKER HALE 3.S., M.A., ED.D. DEAN AND REGISTRAR B.S. magna cum laude, Valedictorian, Birmingham-Southern Collegs, 1923; A.M., - 1926, Birmingham-Southern; Secretary to the President, Birmingham-Southern Col- lege, 1923-2+; Graduate student (one schjlarship) and Assistant, Johns Hopkins University, 1924-25; Registrar, Birmingham-Southern College, 1925-28; Graduate student (one scholarship) Columbia University, summer of 1927; Alumni Secretary, Birmingham-Southern College, 1927-28, 1928-29, 1932-33, 1933-34; Acting Director of Extension, Birmingham-Sou. hern College, 192S-29; Graduate study in Stanford University, 1929-30 and 1930-31; Holder of $1,000 Fellowship of American Associa- tion of Collegiate Registrars during 1929-30; Graduate study in University of Min- nesota, Summer of 1930; Appointed as Cubberlcy Fellow in Education, Stanford Uni- versity, for 1930-31; Holder of $2,500 Phi Delia Kappa Fellowship, 1930-31; Acting Examiner, University of Minnesota, Summer of 1930; Ed.D., Stanford University, 1932; Member of: Chi Chi, Omicron Delta Kappa, Kappa Phi Kappa, Theta Chi Delta, Sigma I ' psilon, Beta Beta Beta, Phi Delta Kappa, Fau Kappa Alpha, Amer- ican Association of Collegiate Registrars, Rotary International; Vice-President, liirmingham-Southern, 1928-30; Registrar and Professor of Education, Birmingham- Southern, 1930-33; President of Ensley, Ala., Rotary Club, 1933-34; Registrar and Dean, Birmingham-Southern, 1933; Articles published in: The Junior College Journal, The Phi Delta Kappan, Bulletin of the American Association of Collegiate Registrars. T tie FACULTY James E. Bathurst A.B., Ph.D. Professor of Psychology and Education Benjamin F. Clark B.S., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Chemistry J. Horace Couliette A.B., A.M. Professor of Physics George Currie A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Latin and Greek Thomas F. Debnam B.S., M.S. Associate Professor of Economics A.B. Hiram Benjamin Englebert Director of Athletics Marsee Fred Evans A.B., A.M., B.D., Ph.D. Professor of Speech William E. Glenn A.B., A.M. Assistant Professor of Mathematics Lillian Gregory A.B. Librarian 26 The FACULTY William T. Hammond A.B., A.M. Assistant Professor of Romance Languages Emory Q. Hawk A.B., Ph.D. Professor of Economics and Business Andrew Hemphill Director of Music William Stanley Hoole A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Associate Professor of English Douglas L. Hunt Ph.B., M.A. Associate Professor of English Ernest Victor Jones A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Chemistry John H. Malone A.B., A.M. Associate Professor of Education Charles D. Matthews A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Religion Harry E. McNeel B.Ph., A.M. Professor of Spanish 27 The FACULTY Wesley Adolphus Moore A.B., A.M., LL.D. Professor of Mathematics EoLiNE Wallace Moore A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Dean of Women and Professor of Education E. Sydnor Ownbey A.B., A.M., Pce.D. Assistant Professor of English Wilbur Dow Perry A.B., A.M., Litt.D. Mary CoUette Munger Professor of English Russell S. Poor B.S., M.S., Ph.D. Professor of Geology Walter B. Posey Ph.B., LL.B., A.M., Ph.D. Professor of History Austin Prodoehl A.B., Ph.D. Professor of German and Philosophy Barbara Ransom B.S., A.M. Assistant Professor of Physical Education Joshua P. Reynolds B.S., M.S., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Biology s ssi m The FACULTY Hubert Searcy A.B., A.M. Assistant Professor of Political Science Henry T. Shanks A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Professor of History Paul Walbert Shankweiler Ph.B., M.A., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Sociology Marion L. Smith A.B., B.D., A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Bible and Religion Paul R. Sweet A.B., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of History Robert Stanley Whitehouse A.B. Assistant Professor of Modern Languages William Alonzo Whiting B.S., Ph.D. Professor of Biology Perry W. Woodham B.S., A.M. Assistant Bursar and Lecturer in Economics Newman M. Yielding A.B. Bursar Ai Ai MEMBERS OF FACULTY (Continued) Lee Frazer Banks • ■ • A.B., A.M., LL.D. Lecturer in Education Laura Mae Cannon A.B. Instructor in Biology Claude Chamblee B.S. Graduate Assistant in Chemistry James Saxon Childers A.B., B.A., M.A. Professor of Englisli Octavus Rov Cohen Litt.D. Lecturer in English Antony CoNSTANS B. es Lettres; B. en Droit ; Ph.D. Professor of French and Italian Wynelle Doggett B.S. Instructor in Chemistry George Joseph Fertig B.S., M.A. Lecturer in Chemistry Lex Fullbright A.B. Assistant Director of Physical Education Jennings F. Gilleini University of the South Assistant Atlitelic Director Carl E. Guthe B.S., Ph.D. Visiting Professor of Achaeology Dorothy Harmer A.B., B.A. Assistant Librarian and Instructor in Library Science Ernest Henderson Chicago Academy of Fine Arts Instructor in Art Sarah McCarty A.B. Lecturer in Biology Richebourg G. McWillla.ms A.B., A.M., M.A. Associate Professor of English Stephane Henri Meyrat Bac. Philo., Lie. Droit. Instructor in French Irving Rock Obenchain A.B., Ph.D. Instructor in Education LuciLE Palmer B.S. Graduate Assistant in Chemistry Isabel Sexton A.B. Instructor in Englisli Shepherd Vincent Tovvnsend B ' ham.-Sou. Col. Instructor in Journalism Theodore R. Wright A.B., A.M. Instructor m Geography 30 v5V Otto R. Baker President John Lewis Haygood, Jr. Vice-President Katherine Ruth Kluttz Secretary Mary Louise Fell Treasurer Senior Class SENIOR CLASS William Wyatt Austin B.S. ANNISTON, ALABAMA Theta Chi Delta: Theta Sigma Lambda; Ciariosophic. Treasurer; La Soeiadad Castellana. Otto R. Baker A.B. X X BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Junior Representative to tlie Student Senate. ' 33. ' 34; Birmingham- Southern Band. ' 30. ' 31. ' 32. ' 33. ' 34. Manager Band. ' 35; Interfraternity Council. ' 33- ' 34. ■34- ' 35; Gold and Blaclt Staff. ' 32. ' 33. ' 34; Assistant Busin ss Manager Gold and Black, ' 34- ' 35; La Revue Staff. ' 30- ' 31. ' 33- ' 34; Managing Editor La Revue. ' 34.- ' 35; President of Senior Class. Robert George Ballard B.S. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA E elyn Jeanette Blackburn B.S. ALEXANDER CITY, ALABAMA Theta Sigma Lambda; Beta Beta Beta; Tri Tau; Student Volunteers President; Kappa Delta Epsilon. LiLLL- N Pauline Bradford B.S. r e BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Theta Sigma Lambda; Beta Beta Beta; Kappa Delta Epsilon. Tr as- urer; Gamma Theta. President; Pan-Hellenic, Vice-President; Glee Club, 34 ftsas. SENIOR CLASS Mary McFarland Brown B.S. K A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Lauren Edgar Brubaker A.B. X X ST. AUGUSTINE, FLORIDA Omicron Delta Kappa; Pi Gamma Mu ; Tau Kappa Alpha. President. ■34- ' 35; DebatJ Squad, ' 31- ' 35; Student Senate, ■34- ' 35; Paint and Patches, ' 31- ' 33: Ministerial Association, ■31- ' 35; B Honor Roll, ' 32, ' 35; Gold and Black Staff, ' 31- ' 33; Commencement Oratorical, ' 32. ' 33; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, ' 32- ' 35. Margaret Alice Bullock A.B. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA JOSLAH Cl.AYTON C.ARMICHAEL B.S. K A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Gordon Tho las Chappell A.B. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA SENIOR CLASS Clarita Amanda Claussen A.B. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Delta Phi Alpha, ' 33, ' 34, ' 35, Vke-I ' i-usident, ' 34- ' 35; Kappa Delta Ep- silon. ' 34- ' 35; Pi Gamma Mu. ' 35: Glee Club, ' 32, ' 33. ' 34, ' 35; Clario- sophic, ' 32, ' 33, ' 34, ' 34, Secretary, ' 33, ' 34; Classical Club, ' 33, ' 34; Al- pha Gamma, ' 35; Sophomore German Award from German Governm ' :nt, •33; B Honor Roll, ' 32, ' 33. Robert Street Clayton A.B. K A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, ' 31- ' 32; Debate Squad, ' 31- ' 32- ' 33- ' 34 ; Tau Kappa Alpha, Treasurer, ' 33- ' 34; International Relations Club, ' 32- ' 33; Student Senate, ' 33- ' 34; Nominating Board, •34- ' 35; President of Omicron Delta Kappa; Greeks, Vice-Pr- sident. ' 33- ' 34; President Interfraternity Coun- cil, ' 34- ' 35; Interfraternity Council Representative, •31- ' 32- ' 33- ' 34 ; President of Kappa Alpha, ' 33- ' 34- ' 35; Assistant Business Manager of Gold and Blaclt, ' 33- ' 34; Assistant Business Manager of La Revue, ■33- ' 34 Beamon Sherlev Coolev, Jr. B.S. X X BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Beta Beta Beta, ' 34- ' 35; Pr. sident of Beta Bsta Beta, ' 35; Freshman Track Team, ' 32; Varsity Track, ■33- ' 34- ' 36; Captain Varsity Track ' 33; Associate Theta Chi Delta. ' 33; Parade Committee, ' 33; Sports Staff of ' Gold and Black, ' 34- ' 35; Skull and Bones, ' 35; Manager Cross Coun- try, ' 33. Jane Cosper A.B. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Kappa Delta Epsilon, ' 34- ' 35; Pi Gamma Mu, ' 35; Secretary of Inter- national Relations Club, •34- ' 35; Member of Y. W, C. A. Cabinet. •34- ' 35; B lies Lettres, ' 33- ' 34- ' 35; Glee Club, ' 32- ' 33, Lois Cosper A.B. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Secretary of Sophomore Class, ' 33- ' 34; Eta Sigma Phi, ' 34- ' 35; Kappa Delta Epsilon. ' 34- ' 35; Paint and Patches ' 3J- ' 34- ' 35; Belles Lettres, ' 34- ' 35; La Revue Staff, ' 34; Gold and Black Staff, ' 34- ' 36; Clas- sical Club, ' 33- ' 34- ' 35; Assistant in Library. SENIOR CLASS M.vRGARET Ellex Cul -erhouse A.B. Z T A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Kappa Delta Epsilon; Vice-President Y. W. C. A. Cabinet. Katharine Daly A.B. n B BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA l LORED Merry Ellis A.B. K A EIRMINCHAMj ALABAMA Phi Sigma Iota; Delta Phi Alpha. IVIary Louise Fell A.B. z T A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Amazons. President, ' 33- ' 34. Vice-President, ' 34- ' 35; Kappa Delta Ep- silon; Treasurer of Senior Class. Weltox Gregory A.B. AS MORTON, ALABAMA Ministerial Association. President; Y. M. C. A., Secretary; Clariosophic; Interfraternity Council. 37 A,A yL yL % SENIOR CLASS Annie Mary Hardy A.B. BOLTON, MISSISSIPPI Clariosophic; Y. W. C. A. John Lewis Haygood A.B. n K A GREENVILLE, ALABAMA OmiiTon Delta Kappa; Freshman Football. ' 2; Varsity Football. ' 33- ■34- ' 35; Freshman Track. ' 32; Varsity Traek. ' 33- ' 34- ' 35; Varsity Track Captain; Vice-Pr. sident of Senior Class; M mber of Alabama All-Stars; Gold anil Black Staff. ■34- ' 35. Mary Gene Herren A.B. K A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Aniaiions: Pan-Hellenic. President. ' 33- ' 34; Co-Ed Council. ' 31- ' 32. ' 33- ■; ' .4; Scroll. President. ' 34- ' :!5; Alpha Lambda Delta. Senior Advisor; Gold and Black Staff, ' 31- ' 32; Belles Lettres. ' 31- ' 32. Ann Hogan A.B. n B -i BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA La Revue Staff. ' 32. ' 33; Gold and Black Staff. ' 34; Le Circle Fran- cais. ' 32, ' 33; Delta Phi Alpha. Alice Holt A.B. K A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Glee Club. ' 31- ' 32; Paint and Patches, ' 31- ' 32; Pan-Hellenic Council. ' 33, ' 34; Amazons. Treasurer. ' 33- ' 34, President, ' 34, ' 35. Jf p . m 38 ' 1 2! % ' % SENIOR CLASS Henry Howze Howell, Jr. A.B. X X BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Tennis Team ; Pi Gamma Mu. William Worthixgton Jeffries A.B. 2 A E BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Pi Gamma Mu, President: Omicron Delta Kappa; Kappa Plii Kappa; Belles L:ttres, Treasurer. 35; International Relations Club; Manager Tennis Team, ' 3 3. Ele.axor Kidd A.B. n B BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Amazons; Le Cercle Francais. Rlbv P.aulixe King B.S. r e BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Beta Beta Beta. ■34- ' 35; Theta Sigma Lambda, ■34- ' 35; Secretary of Beta Beta Beta, ' 35; Girls ' Debating Team, ' 32; Inter-Society Oratorical Contest Representative. ' 33; Instructor, ' 34- ' 35; Clariosophic, ' 32- ' 33; Honor Roll. ' 32- ' 33- ' 34- ' 35. K.4TH.ARINE RuTH KlL TTZ A.B. n B BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA a 39 AsAi yi SENIOR CLASS Elizabeth Ellen Kxopf A.B. A n BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Frederic Oilman Koenig, Jr. A.B. 2 A E BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Oniicron Delta Kappa; Tau Kappa Alpha. Vice-President. ' 34. ' 35; Stu- dent Senate. ' 34, ' 35: Belles Lettres. President. ■33- 34; Intel-national Re- lations Club. President. ' 34 - ' 35; Freshman Debate Squad; Varsity De- bate Squad, ' 32. ' 33, ' 34, ' 35; Inter-Soeiety Oratorical Medal. ' 33; Junior Class Declamation Medal. ' 34; Student Constitution Revision Commit- tee. ' 35; Glee Club. ' 32; La Revue Staff. ' 33; Gold and Black Staff, ' 34. Al:ce Eliz. ' -DETH La Foxce A.B. UNION BRIDGE, MARYLAND Sara Bell Lawrence A.B. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Little Symphony Orchestra. ' 31- ' 32- ' 33- ' 34 ; Tau Tau Tau, Vice-Pr si- dent. ' 34; Y. W. C. A.; Clariosophic, ' 34; Paint and Patches. ' 33- ' 34- ' 35; Cap and Bells. ' 33 James Love A.B. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA $ _ J SENIOR CLASS ZoE Lyon A.B. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Belles Lettr s. Secretary, ' 32- ' 33, Treasurer. ' 34. Vice-Presklent, ' 33; Classical Club. Treasurer. ' 33. President. ' 33- ' 34; Le Cercle Francais. President. •33- ' 34, Secretary. ' 34- ' 35; Eta Sigma Phi, Vice-President. ' 33- 34, President. ' 34- ' 35: Phi Sigma Iota. Vice-Pr sident, ' 33- ' 34, Secre- tary. ' 34- ' 35; Delta Phi Alpha. President. ' 33- ' 34; Gold and Black, •32: La Revue. ' 33- ' 34; Honor Roll; Italian Gold Medal from Italian Government; Latin Bronze Medal. ' 33; Athletic Numeral, ' 32; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet. ' 34- ' 35; Alpha Gamma. ' 34- ' 35; Scroll, Vice-President, ' 34- ' 35. Fr.ances Sidone Mallam A.B. n B j. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Robert Glenn Massengale A.B, 2 A E BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Omicron Delta Kappa; T. M, C. A., S:cretary, ' 33- ' 34, President, ' 34- ' 35, State Vice-President, Southern Region Executive Committee; Kappa Phi Kappa; Tau Kappa Alpha; Chairman Birmingham-Southern Relig- ious Council; Vice-President Ministerial Association; Interfraternity Council; B Honor Roll. ' 32- ' 33- ' 34; Alabama Methodist Studtnts Con- ference President. ' 33- ' 34; Varsity Debate Squad. Mary Frances Merkl A.B. r e BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Glee Club; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet; Tau Tau Tau. Vice-President. Secre- tary; Alpha Gamma. President; Theta Sigma Lambda; Theta Chi D-lta; La Revue Staff; Gold and Black Staff; Honor Rol ' . Violet Felicla. Nappi A.B. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Paint and Patches, Vice-President; Mu Alpha, Secretary; Spanish Club, Vice-President; Glee Club. SENIOR CLASS Dow McMillan Perry A.B. K A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Nannie Elizabeth Perry A.B. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA V. V. C. A.. President; Scroll, Secretary and Treasurer: Kappa Delta Epsilon; Clariosophic; Paint and Patciies; Tau Tau Tau. Anna Linton Praytor A.B. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Eta Sigma Phi. Vice-Pr sident, ■34- ' 35; Phi Sigma Iota, Vice-President, ■34- ' 35. Mary Loluse Quarles A.B. r e BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Kappa L Ita Epsilon, ' 34- ' 35; Clariosophic, •31- ' 32- ' 33- ' 34; . lpha Gam- ma, Pnsident, ' 33, Secretary, ' 35: Tau Tau Tau, President, ' 34, Secre- tary, ' 35; Honor Roll, ■34- ' 35. Ramon Espino Ramos habana, cuba Y. M. C. A.; Gold and Black, •33- ' 34; Phi Sigma Iota; Spanish Club, President, •32- ' 33- ' 34- ' 36. ►? « :-r '  u 42 SENIOR CLASS Arthur Montgoaierv Ribe A.B. e K N BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA LuciAN Caxdler Rice A.B. AS ALBERTVILLEj ALABAMA Band. ' 31. ' 32. ' 33; Member Varsity Football. ' 34; Vice-Presidi-nt Jun- ior Class. ' 33- ' 34; Manager of the Basketball T.am, ■34- 35; Member T. M. C. A. Cabinet. D0N.4LD EUGEXE RoKERTS B.S. BIRMIN ' GHAM, ALABAMA Glee Club; Band: Orchestra: Track: Baseball. J.AMES WiDXEY SCARBOROUGH B.S. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Associate Editor of ■ ' Gold and Black. ■34- ' 35. George Allen Smith B.S. 2 A E GADSDEN, ALABAMA Glee Club; La Revue Staff. ' 34; Interfraternity Council. ' 35: Chair- ma ' n of Stunt Night Committee. ' 35. J ,ilfc i 43 fe ' i Xsl T,.. SENIOR CLASS GuTii?,iE Jones Smith A.B. n K A FAVEITE, ALABAMA President Student Body. ■34- 35: Omitron D Ita Kappa. •33- ' 34- ' 35; President Kappa Phi Kappa. ■34- ' 35: Pi Gamma Mu. ■34- 35: Varsity Debate Squad, ' 32- ' 34; Student Senate. ' 33- ' 35. Gr.ace Marie Stacey A.B. r e BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Kappa Delta Epsilon. ' SI- ' SS; Claiiosophic, ■31- ' 32- ' 33- ' 34. Secretary: Tau Tau Tau. •31- ' 32- ' 33- ' 34. Piesident; A ' pha Gamma. ■31- ' 34. Vice- President; Honor Roll, ' 34- ' 35; Secretary Gamma Th ta. Louise Elizadeth Stance A.B, A o n BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Amazons. Henry M.ller Stevenson A.B, BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Mu Alpha; Ministerial Association, ■34- ' 35, Secretary, ' 34, President, ' 35; Y. M. C. A. fahinet. ' 33- ' 35; Choral and Glee Club; Hill Top Quartet, •33- ' 35. Carl Albert Stiefelmever A.B. n K A CULLMAN, ALABAMA % «. r-- ' . ff. ' yib aJLt SENIOR CLASS Brannon Guxe Stringer A.B. n K A GADSDEN, ALABAMA RoGERT ; IcLester Strong A.B. n K A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Kappa Phi Kappa; ' G Id a;itl Black. ■32. ' 33, ' 35; La Revue, ' 35. Dorothy Frances Suydam A.B. Z T A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Amazons; Paint and Patches. John Howell Talley A.B. n K A GADSDEN, ALABAMA Glee Club; La Revue ; Gold and Black Staff, ' 31- ' 34; IntLrfraternity Council. ' 35. Ernest Teel A.B n K A .MINGHAM, ALABAMA Athletic Committe ' , ' 34- ' 35; Freshman Football, ' 31; Varsity Football, ' 32- ' 33, Alternate Captain. ' 34; Baseball Team, ' 33- ' 34- ' 35; Track Team •33- ' 34- ' 35; Outstanding Athlete, ' o3- ' 34; Member of All-Southern Foot- ball Stars who played the All-Northrn Stars. 45 „ 0 SENIOR CLASS Marv Throckmorton A.B. K A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Joe Vance A.B. n K A BIRMINCHAMj ALABAMA ■■Gold and Black Staff, ■31- ' 32- ' 33- ' 34 ; Sports Editor, ' SI- ' SS; Sports Editor ■■La Revue, ■ ' •34- 35; Glee Club, ' 31- ' 32- ' 33- 34 ; ' ■Birmingham News ' Correspondent. ' 34- ' 35. Raymond Wilson Waid A.B. GAVLESVILLE, ALABAMA Freshman Basketball, ' 32-, Varsity Basketball, ' 33- 34- ' 35; Baseball, Assistant Manager, ■32, ' 33; Manager, ' 34; Varsity Baseball, ■35; Omi- tron Delta Kappa; Vice-President Sophomorj Class, ' 22; Student Sen- ate, 32, 33, ■JS, Vice-President, 35; Kappa Phi Kappa. Margaret Jane Watts A.B. BIRMINGHAM ALABAMA H. ' RRY L.AZENBY We.4VER A.B. X X BREWTON, ALABAMA Omicron Delta Kappa; Assistant Baseball Manager, 32, Manager, ' 33; Manager Freshman Football, ' 32- ' 33; Manager Varsity Football, Spring. ■34; A !Sistant Manager ■ ' Gold and Black, ' 32- ' 33, Manager, ■34- ' 35; Manager of ■■La Revue, ' ■ ' 34- 35; Managir Southern-Howard Football Programs, 34; President Junior Class, ' 33- ' 34; Interfraternity Council, ■33- ' 34- ' 35. SENIOR CLASS Oli er Cornelius Vea er, Jr. A.B. X X EREWTONj ALABAMA Freshman and Varsity Debate Squad: Ministerial Association. Vice- President, ' 33- ' 34; T. M. C. A., President. ' SS- ' Sl; Winner of Straiten Ready Debater ' s Medal. ' 33; Paint and Patches: Tau Kappa Alpha: Kappa Phi Kappa: Honor Roll: Omicron Delta Kappa. Olen.a Christine Webb A.B. Z T A EIRMINGHAMj ALABAMA Glee Club. ' 31- ' 32; Eta Sigma Phi, Treasurer. ' 33- ' 34. ■3-1-35: Phi Sigma Iota; Kappa Delta Epsilon: Paint and Patches, Vice-President, ■r-3- ' 34: La Revue Staff, ' 35; President of Co-Ed Council, •34- ' 35; Honor Roll. Scroll, ' 34- ' 35: Elections Board, ' 34- ' 35. Dolly Weiss A.B. n B BIRMIXCHAM, ALABAMA Pi Gamma Mu: International Relations Club; Amazons: Co-Ed Council. Dean Wellm.an B.S. X X DETROIT, MICHIGAN Robert James Wheeler, Jr. A.B. X X BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA r-A- SENIOR CLASS Marion Elizabeth Wilcox A.B. e T BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Virginia Kelly Wilson A.B, HARVEST, ALABAMA ScToU: President Kappa D Ita Epsilon; Vice-President Y. V. C. A.; President Clariosophic: Pi Gamma Mu, Delegate to Blue P ' dge. Jerome Alexander Winston B.S. B K BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Theta Sigma Laml-ida: La Sociadad Castellana; Gold and Black Staff; La Revue Staff: Interfraternity Council. Joseph David Womack A.B. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Pi Gamma Mu; Phi Sigma Iota, Sergeant-at-Arms. ' 34- ' 35: L,a Sociadad Castellana, Vice-President. ' 34- ' 35; Honor Roll. Mary Jo Zl per A.B. r B BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Pan-H Uenic. President, ' 35; Theta Sigma Lambda, Vice-Pr- sidcnt, ' 35; Beta Beta Beta: Co-Ed Council, ' 33- ' 34- ' 35; Amazons; Kappa Delta Epsilon; Gamma Phi Beta, President, ' 35; Scroll, ' 35; Honor Roll. SENIORS (Continued) Atkins, Stanley William . . Birmingham Barefield, Jack Grover Birmingham Barnett, Sallie Irbv Birmingham Beaird, Woodrow Wilson Fairfax Beasley, John Hansell Sipsej- Bice, Mary Frances Pinion Blount, Nannie Rasco Albany, Ga. Briner, George Fairfield Brown, Eva Williams Birmingham Brown, Mamie Birmingham Campbell, Alline Birmingham Clark, Floyd Winston Eufaula Cox, Christine Birmingham Crabbe, Maxwell Birmingham CuRRY ' , Atha Clarence Sheffield Curtis, Esper Chlora Double Springs Davis, Hermit ... Double Springs de Holl, Martina Theodora Birmingham Dickerson, Arthur Thomas Cullman Echols, Nelle Clair Jasper EviNS, Roeena Foster Birmingham Ferguson, Robert Stokes ... Birmingham Fisher, Ther on Cooper Huntsville Forbes, Mabel Birmingham Ford, Marshall Gradon Wilmer FuLLBRiGHT, DoN Seav Birmingham Gamble, Mary Frances Roanoke Goodwin, Morris Leon Birmingham Guthrie, Alice K.athleen liirmingham Hendrickson, Morris S Birmingham HOLLINGSWORTH, Ernest H Birmingham Hutchinson, Flossye Bessemer Jenkins, Ethel Ann Warrior Johnson, Ethel Blossburg Johnson, Freeman Lee Dora Johnson, Lillie Turner Birmingham King, Robert Lee Birmingham LeCrov, Falton James Birmingham Leland, Margaret McLester Birmingham LiLES, Myrtle Louise Birmingham Little, Estelle Ingram Tarrant LoFTiN, Gordon Nicholsville LoGGiNS, Gerald W., Killen McCloud, Lillian Louise Lambert, Miss. McGhee, Nettie Yolande McLaren, Mildred Louise Birmingham Mackay, Edward H Atlanta, Ga. 49 , , ,(p '  3 M SENIORS (Co?iniiui l) Maronev, Harriette Elzie Birmingham Martin, Edna Birmingham Martin, Kate Salsman Birmingham Martin, Philip Watley Milton, Fla. Mathison, Ovie Wilson Sliipperville Mitchell, Charles Dewey Tuscumhia Monaghan, Bernard Andrew Birmingham Morrison, Edmund Birmingham Moser, Katherine Jane Birmingham Parker, Itara Elizabeth Birmingham Pettus, Rosalie Birmiiigham Phillips, Amy Birmingham Posey, Carl Ralph Birmingham Powell, Maurice Green Birmingham Prickett, Thomas Watson Boaz Ramsay, Richardina Lowry Birmingham Reagan, Amy Ree ' Birmingham Reynolds, Lois Britt Birmingham Rochester, Mary Kathryn Birmingham Sadler, Octavia Birmingham Salzano, Attilio .r Birmingham Samuel, Hewell Coleman Talladega Self, Nettie Alta Birmingham Sessions, Elna Row Birmingham Shelton, Travis Lavert Birmingham Sims, John Erwin Birmingham Smith, Evelyn Birmingham Smith, Mildred Louise Birmingham Stapleton, John Calvin Birmingham Stevenson, Frank Worth Randolph Stokes, Margaret Lavinia Birmingham Strong, Robert McLester, Jr Birmingham Stubbins, Sam Gaines, Jr Birmingham Sturcess, Margaret Elizabeth Birmingham Thompson, Davis Hunt Birmingham Townsend, George Louie Saragossa Twining, Frederica Birmingham Tyler, Mary Carolyn Birmingham Vernon, Robert Orion Sumiton Wedgeworth, Walter R Guntersville WiCLEY, Naomi Birmingham Wilson, Claud Carrol Birmingham Windham, Hubert Cleveland Birmingham Wing, Mary Jane • • ■ • Birmingham Witte, John Franklin Birmingham Young, Kermit Porter Albcrtville Zeiger, Christine Louise Marianna, Ark. Zuber, Mary Jo Birmingham 50 a1 JcE Price President Walter Smith Vice-President Edith Teel Secretary Nancy Kate Gilbert Treasurer Junior Class 51 . ' - ' -f ( -r3 .. M JUNIOR CLASS GEORGE HERBERT ACTON n K A BIRMINGHAM. ALABAMA GRETCHEN GENEVA BROWN e T Theta Sigma Lambda; Amazons; Belles Let- tres; Vice-President Tlieta Tpsilon. HERBERT J. BAUM, Jr. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Theta Sigma Lambda; Paint and Patches; International Relations Club ; Debating Squad. ROBERT HART CHAPPELL n K A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Beta Beta Beta; Skull and Bones; Clario- sophic, Vice-President; Junior Representative to the Student Senate; Glee Club. BERTHA BEST BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Kappa Delta Epsilon ; Belles Lcttres; Glee Club. BONNIE BRYANT COFIELD ROANOKE, ALABAMA 52 JUNIOR CLASS JAMES AUBREY CRAWFORD e K N TARRANT, ALADAMA DOROTHY CAROLINE HORTON r B BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Glee Club; President Theta Sigma Lambda; Eta Sigma Phi; Belles Lettres; Amazons. GILBERT FRANKIN DOUGLAS, Jr. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Band; Beta Beta Beta; Orchestra; Skull and Bones; Fencing Team. JAMES LEWIS HUGHES 2 A E BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Kappa Phi Kappa, ice-President ; Tau Kap- pa Alpha; Theta Sigma Lambda; Belle Let- tres, President; Varsity Debate, ' 34.- ' 35 ; In- ternational Relations Club; Paint and Patches; B Honor Roll, ' 35. DENSON NOWLES FRANKLIN COODWATER, ALABAMA Ministerial Association, ' 34, ' 35, Chaplain, ' 34 35. Vice-President; Clariosophic, ' 33, ' 34, ' 35- JESSIE KELLER CULLMAN, ALABAMA Phi Sigma Iota; Kappa Delta Epsilon ; French Club. JUNIOR CLASS ROBERT GORDON KENDALL Z A E EVERGREEN. ALABAMA ORVILLE LUMAN LAWSON B K BIRMINGHAM ALABAMA Theta Chi Delta, Vice-President, ' 34- ' 35 ; In- terfraternity Council. RUTH KENNVBROOK WARRIOR, ALABAMA ELIZABETH LESLIE e T BIRMINGHAM ALABAMA Secretary Theta LIpsilon, ' 34- ' 35 ; Amazons. WILLIAM PAUI LANIER, Jr. e K i. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Omicron Delta Kappa; Associate Business Manager Gold and Black; Secretary La So- ciedad Castellano; Interfraternity Council, ' 33- ' 34; Secretary and Treasurer Student Sen- ate, ' 3+- ' 35. GEORGE LONDA X X NEWARK, N. J. Omicron Delta Kappa ; Associate Editor Gold and Black, ' 33- ' 3+; Editor La Revue, ' 34- ' 35; Delta Phi Alpha, ' 33- ' 34, Secretary, ' 34- ' 35; Constitution Revision Committee; Editor Gold and Black, ' 34- ' 35. O fl - - JUNIOR CLASS MILDRED DINEEN LONG MURRAY WINTERS McENIRY r B 2 A E BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA BESSEMER, ALABAMA e-President Gamma Phi Beta; Le Cercle incais; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet; Belle Let- tres. Omicron Delta Kappa; Pi Gamma Mu; Tau Kappa Alpha; Interfraternity Council; De- bate Squad; International Relations Club. BEULAH LEOLA McGILL VIRGINLA CAROLYN McCLURKIN 6 T A X n BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Gold and Bliuk Staff; La Revue Staff. ROB McNEILL A T fi WALTER McCULLA BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA n K A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Interfraternity Council, Vice-President; Stunt Night Committee, Student Senate. 55 JUNIOR CLASS RICHARDINE MASSEY BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA KATHRVN BERTHA PLAN BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA WILLIAM REDUS MILLER n K A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Freshman Basketball Manager, ' 33; Freshman Tennis Team, ' 33; Coach and Manager Fenc- ing Team, ' 33- ' 34- ' 35 ; 1 heta Chi Delta; Theta Sigma Lambda; Kappa Phi Kappa. PENELOPE PREWITT BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Co-Ed Council, Secretary, ' 34- ' 35; Radio Players, ' 33; Paint and Patches, ' 33- ' 3+- ' 35; Parade Manager, ' 34.; Treasurer Sophomore Class; Assistant Editor La Revue, ' 35; So- ciety Editor Gold and Black, ' 35 ; Y. W. C. A. RICHARD JOSEPH PHILLIPS B K BESSEMER, ALABAMA Beta Beta Be;a ; Theta Chi Delta; Skull and Bones. JOE PRICE K A BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA President Junior Class. 56 - n JUNIOR CLASS ANNIE LAURIE ROBERTS BESSEMER. ALABAMA ROY DENTON STARNES 2 A E ASHVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA Mu Alpha; Eta Sigma Phi; Kappa Phi Kappa. MILDRED EMILY RYAN A X P. BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA President Alpha Chi Omega; Pan-Hellenic; Amazons; GolJ and Black Staff. HELEN TATE r B BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Freshman Commission, ' 32- ' 33; Theta Chi Delta Essay A vard, ' 33; Vice-President Y. W. C. A., ' 34- ' 35: Clarlosophic ; Le Cercle Francais; Glee Cluh; Kappa Delta Epsilon; Co-Ed Council, ' 34- ' 35; Secretary Y ' . W. C. A., ' 35- ' 36- WALTER COUSINS SMITH e K N BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA EDITH AYRES TEAL BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Secretary Junior Class; La Revue Beauty Section, ' 34; La Revue Staff, ' 33- ' 34; GolJ and Black Staff, ' 33- ' 34- ' 35. JUNIOR CLASS MILDRED TURNER SIMEON JAMES WHATLEY BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA K A OPELIKA, ALABAMA MALCOLM LYNCH WHEELER EVELYN WALTON A X fi X X BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Gold and Black Staff, ' 3+- ' 35; E ' a Phi; Assistant Business Manager La Sigma Revue, Pi Gamma Mu, ' 35; International Relations Club, ' 34- ' 35; Debate, ' 35. ' 34- ' 35- WOOD KNIGHT WHETSTONE X X • SVLACAUGA, ALABAMA HERBERT BUELL WEST :: A E BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA 58 Ministerial Association, ' 3i- ' 35; Vice-Presi- dent, ' 35; Clariosophic, ' 3i- ' 32- ' 33; Gold and Black Staff, ' 32- ' 33; International Relations Club, ' 34- ' 35; Glee Club, ' 35; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, ' 32- ' 33- ' 34- ' 35 ; Debating Society, ' 35; Student Volunteer Group. ■ ' ' ? ..r ..- „. ,_ ...m - -%, A, JUNIOR CLASS (Conlinucii) Aeernethy, Nathan Hovt . . Anthony, Mary McKimmik . Blount, William Robert . . Braly, Tom, Jr Brooks, Charles N Carpenter, Frances Othella Chisenhall, Billie Ruth . Christian, William Fort . . CoHN, Samuel Kline . . . . Cook, Robert Dane .... CooNEY, Anne Crow, Mabel Louise . . . . CuTCLiFF, Frances Martha . . deWilion, Edward Linsmore . Dinning, Woodford W. . . . Dunn, Cecil Albert . . . . DupuY, John William . . . Durham, Selma Dale . . . Eaton, Hortense Bissell . . . Echols, Mary Julia .... Edwards, Oscar Wendall . . Enslen, Mary Anglin . . . . Farrar, Larston D.mvn . . . Finch, Virgil Curtis, Jr. . . Fuller, Idalene Gholston, Claude Augustus . Gilbert, Nancy Kate . . . . Giles, Robert Goodman, Edward Lee . . . Griffin, Tolbert Gill . . . Guthrie, McCoy Hatton, Velma Holman, Raymond Floyd . . Hood, Martha Whiteley . Hunt, Richard Clayton . . Fayette Birmingham Wilsonville Russellville . . Warrior Huntsville Birmingham Birmingham Birmiiigham . Dixiana Birmingham Birmingham Birmingham Birmingham . Birmingham . . Linden . Birmingham . Gadsden . Birmingham . . Jasper . . Marion . Birmingham . Birmingham . Birmingham . Birmingham . Birmingham . Birmingham . Birmingham . Birmingham . . Bessemer . Birmingham . . Bessemer . Evergreen . Birmingham . Birmingham Johnson, Elmer Cranford . - Birmingham Johnson, William Bulger . . Birmingham Johnston, Julius Ollie . . . t ' nion Grove Jones, Andrew Anson .... Birmingham Lewis, K.vie Porter .... Birmingham McCoMSEY, Frank Birmingham McGehee, William Newtok . . Evergreen McGl. thery, Eleanor . . . Birmingham McKay, Brice Thomas Oneonta McRimmon, Archie Birmingham Massey, RiCHARDiNE Birmingham Meagher, Vera Iris Birmingham Miller, John Carlisle Malvern Montgomery, Robert Munger . Birmingham Moss, Margery Anne .... Birmingham MvRiCK, Conrad Mobile Newman, Herbert Ellis . . . Birmingham Orr, Freeman William . . . Birmingham Overall, Mary Lou .... Birmingham Parsons, Joseph Bryant . . . Birmingham Pettus, Virginia Elizabeth . . Birmingham Rams. y, Wayne Knight . . . Birmingham Richard, Robert Frank . . . Birmingham Robb, Fellx Compton .... Birmingham Rutland, John Edward .... Haleyville Sandlin, Nell Bessemer Scott, William Woodrow . . Birmingham Sparks, H enry Claxton . . . Birmingham Stevenson, John Bluford .... Roanoke Strong, Ernest Singley . . . Birmingham Sturgess, Vanoni Sybelle .... Fairfield Thomas, Mary Elizabeth . . Birmingham Twining, Grace Eldridce . . Birmingham Waites, Bennett Taylor . . Birmingham Waldrop, Vivian Rosebud . . . Hanceville Wilson, Cullen Bryant . . . Skipperville , ' i 59 Jn lUfmnnam 4ln00 1itn? (JuarlpH Hair anb (UlaBanf 1930 Ed Neville President Jesse Drennen Vice-President Marion Mayer Secretary Katherine Lide Treasurer Lower Division I LaR evue 62 1,  , Wm a. , Mm r Ck-1. .i as . • -5. ? n . •. ' ' ' The Lower Division    FIRST ROW Mildred Adcock Birmingham, Alabama Francis Blake Atchison Opp Alabama Ernest Mobly Barnes, Jr. Huntsville, Alabama Charles William Bellows. Jr. Birmingham, Alabama Eleanor Bernhard Birmingham, Alabama SECOND ROW Lewis Cassie Boswell Burkville, Virginia Edna Pauline Brannon Birmingham, Alabama Effie Maurine Brannon Birmingham, Alabama Robert Crawford Brazeal Birmingham, Alabama Charles Sydney Brewton Birmingham, Alabama THIRD ROW Marion Frances Bruce Bessemer, Alabama Betsy Duke Bryant Birmingham, Alabama Melbourne Fortescue Cannon Berry, Alabama Tom Jennings Carter Birmingham, Alabama Martha Frances Chapman Birmingham, Alabama FOURTH ROW Paul Livingston Clem Athens, Alabama John Fletcher Comer Birmingham, Alabama Edwin Patterson Cooper Anniston, Alabama Alice Carolyn Copeland Birmingham, Alabama Charlotte Cordray Birmingham, Alabama FIFTH ROW Margaret Arden Crabtree Birmingham, Alabama Rebecca Laura Crenshaw Birmingham, Alabama Maurice Stroud Crowley Birmingham, Alabama Evelyn Mae Culverhouse Birmingham, Alabama Evelyn Bartley Currie Birmingham, Alabama 1 ' LaR evue 64 .v The Lower Division   FIRST ROW Frances Margaret Dalton Bessemer, Alabama Maytle Doggett Birmingham, Alabama Jesse Lafayette Drennen Birmingham, Alabama Sara Esther Dominick Birmingham, Alabama Andrew Jack Eaken Birmingham, Alabama SECOND ROW Evelyn Erwin Birmingham, Alabama Lucius Selwyn Evins Birmingham, Alabama Hal Spencer Fleming Birmingham, Alabama Sam Calhoun Fleming Mobile, Alabama James Irving Ford Alexander City, Alabama THIRD ROW Fidelia Mary Foster Birmingham, Alabama James Vann Garrett Birmingham, Alabama Loudel Appling Garrett Birmingham, Alabama Samuel Clyde Goodwin Birmingham, Alabama Sara Elizabeth Griffith Birmingham, Alabama FOURTH ROW Arthur Jackson Hanes Birmingham, Alabama Martha Frances Hanes Birmingham, Alabama Jane Haralson Birmingham, Alabama Page Haralson Birmingham, Alabama Sidney Johnston Hardy, Jr Alberta, Alabama FIFTH ROW William Oliver Hargett Sheffield, Alabama Arthur E. Harris Albertville, Alabama Louise Hudson Heide, Jr Birmingham, Alabama Samuel Skinner Heide Birmingham, Alabama Dora Henley Birmingham, Alabama ' n .m . k € fc ' ■ ■ . ' te ' ii .oait ia LaR evue 66 ii fe ias The Lower Division  •  FIRST ROW James Waller Herring Calvary, Georgia RuFiE Dixon Holloway Birmingham, Alabama Cora Lucille Horton Dolomite, Alabama George Gibbs Houston Bessemer, Alabama Amy Howell Birmingham, Alabama SECOND ROW Kathryn Minor Ivey Birmingham, Alabama Virginia Myrrh Jamison Birmingham, Alabama Janice Johns Birmingham, Alabama Marguerite Spradling Johnston Birmingham, Alabama Marion Elizabeth Johnson Birmingham, Alabama THIRD ROW Betty Jones Birmingham, Alabama Bettye Jones Birmingham, Alabama Elizabeth Kirby Jones Birmingham, Alabama William Curry Jones, Jr Chapman, Alabama Sue Jordan Roanoke, Alabama FOURTH ROW Cynthl Ann Kelly Birmingham, Alabama Mary Nelson Knox Birmingham, Alabama Margaret Screven Lewis Birmingham, Alabama Mary Katherine Lide Birmingham, Alabama Eugenia Ruth Little Birmingham, Alabama FIFTH ROW Irma Dozier Loehr Birmingham, Alabama Bernice Lokey Birmingham, Alabama Roy Leighton Malone Athens, Alabama Merle Massengale Birmingham, Alabama Frederic Charles Mayer Birmingham, Alabama 67 i LaR evue 68 Wm. _ . eA, Wm - . 5 4 ™ ,8m , _ . Ct3k . afEj? 1; J The Lower Division   FIRST ROW Sallie Marion Mayer Birmingham, Alabama Robert Alfred Mayer Birmingham, Alabama Gene Melton McCoy Birmingham, Alabama Emma Jane McKee Sheffield, Alabama Norman Malcolm McLeod Birmingham, Alabama SECOND ROW Walter Grey McLeod Jackson, Alabama Anderson Clayton Mercer Palestine, Alabama Jane Elizabeth Moore Birmingham, Alabama Laura Ross Moore Birmingham, Alabama Rebecca Morgan Birmingham, Alabama THIRD ROW Virginla Morgan Birmingham, Alabama Zetta Mae Morgan Birmingham, Alabama William Edward Morris Birmingham, Alabama Mary Garland Murphy Birmingham, Alabama Edwin Kimball Neville Birmingham, Alabama FOURTH ROW Ruth Miller Norvelle Birmingham, Alabama John Drury Ozier Birmingham, Alabama Kitty Neal Parker Birmingham, Alabama Louise Adele Perkins Alpine, Texas William Faust Pierce Equality, Alabama FIFTH ROW David Steiner Reinhardt Montgomery, Alabama Clara Mary Rice Anniston, Alabama James Hampton Roberts Birmingham, Alabama Catherine Blalock Rouse Birmingham, Alabama Dorothea Florence Seale Birmingham, Alabama 69 LaR evue 70 A fe.s  y By i M s3i The Lower Division    FIRST ROW Winifred Ethel Seale Birmingham, Alabama Barbara Mary Seaman Birmingham, Alabama Mary Jane Schmitt Birmingham, Alabama Jessie Mae Sheffield Calhoun City, Mississippi Robert Alan Shoop Birmingham, Alabama SECOND ROW Katherine Nichol Smith Birmingham, Alabama Mary Olive Smith Birmingham, Alabama Mary King Stall worth Thomaston, Alabama Nelle Stewart . Birmingham, Alabama Carolyn Frances Summers Leeds, Alabama THIRD ROW Martha Harriet Sutherland Taxco, Mexico Martha Christine Thaxton Birmingham, Alabama Martha Lynn Thompson Birmingham, Alabama Annette Jones Totten Birmingham, Alabama Buford Truett Notch, Alabama FOURTH ROW Mary Solemma Vann Birmingham, Alabama Charles Asberry Waits Birmingham, Alabama Claire Walker Birmingham, Alabama William Morris Walton Birmingham, Alabama Richard Jones Westbrook Birmingham, Alabama FIFTH ROW Allen D. Wilson Ashville, Alabama John Leonard Winston Birmingham, Alabama Katherine Tyler Winters Birmingham, Alabama Sara Wise Birmingham, Alabama Margie Juanita Yarborough Birmingham, Alabama Louis Justine Yelanjian Bessemer, Alabama 71 The Lower Division (Continued) SOPHOMORES Adams, Ralph Wvatt Andalusia Anderson, Ellerbe Birmingham AuFDERHAAR, Armin . . San Antonio, Tex. Baldone, James Charles . . . Birmingham Barker, Mary Anna .... Birmingham B.ates, Sara Elizabeih . . . Birmingham Beckham, Richaro Olen, Jr. . Birmingham Benedict, Samuel Ravalid, Jr. . liirmingham Best, Bert Bancroft .... Birmingham BiNZEL, Alvin John .... Birmingham Boozer, Marie Sweet Water Brantley, Euell Francis . . Birmingham Bridges, Cleveland Goodnater BuTTERi.EY, Elbert Sol ' le .... Mobile Caldwell, William Brown . . Birmingham Cartwright, Jessie . . . Cleveland, Tenn. COLMANT, Emlyn Gertrude . Birmingham Cooke, Ross Alton . . . Little Rock, Ark. CosTANZO, Jesus Ai.no .... Birmingham Courson, George W., Jr. . . Birmingham Courtney, William Edward . . . Fulton Craddock, Lvda Elizabeth . Alexander City Cranford, John Morris . . . Birmingham Cummins, Edward Graves . . Birmingham Dabney, Richard Lipscomb . . Birmingham Daly, Charlotte Birmingham DoDSON, Mildred Birmingham Dollar, Clyde Birmingham Eblen, Mary Doliska .... Birmingham Egerton, Hugh Wilmot . . . Birmingham Enslen, Sanford Perry . . . Birmingham EzELL, K.athleen Lorena . . Birmingham Fields, Corrinthie Belle . . . Birmingham Franklin, Edward Tutwtler . . . Lehigh French, Jane Gilmartin . . . Birmingham Gassman, Mary Elizabeth . . Birmingham Gholston, Charles Richard . Birmingham Gignilliat, Caroline Heyward . Birmingham Giles, Evelyn Birmingham Graves, Bonnie Birmingham Gray, Allen Gibbs Hanceville Green, Charlotte Antoinehe . Birmingham Greene, Dorothy Birmingham Greene, Emma Norene . . , Birmingham Hall, Charlotte Wesley . . Birmingham Hall, Eleanor Gray . . . Birmingham Harris, Arthur Buckner . . Birmingham Hill, Fr.aser Cale ' infield Hill, Henry Holmes .... Birmingham Hill, Lalla Roohk Birmingham Hollingsw ' orth, John Ervin . Birmingham Johnston, James Gilbert . . Birmingham Jordan, Leon Worth Roanoke Keener, Ruth Birmingham KiNCAiD, James Harrison .... Thorsby King, Henry Arnold Joppa Knapp, James Zeno Birmingham Kornfeld, Leslie .... Greenwood, Miss. Lasseiter, James Ernest . . . Birmingham LiLES, Paul von Santen . . . Birmingham Low RV, Sara Birmingham McCauley, Edward Dunlap . Birmingham McCulla, Walter Joseph . . Birmingham McCuLLEY, Jessie Mae . . . Birmingham McEniry, William Hugh .... Bessemer McGill, Beulah Leola . . . Birmingham McGlathery, Dorothy Louise . Birmingham Massev, Fred Eugene .... Birmingham M.iiTHEWs, Martha Franklin . Birmingham Miller, Virginia Augusta . . Birmingham Miller, William Thomas .... Calera Mills, Albert Lee Birmingham Mohns, Erna Mae Birmingham Morrison, Helen Groves . . . Birmingham Moslev, John C. . . . Magnolia Terminal Mosi.EV, Terry Saxton . . . Birmingham Newman, Albert E., Jr. . . . Birmingham Parham, Lois Birmingham Parker, Andrew Leroy . . . Birmingham P. iTERSON, James McCoy .... Bessemer Pennington, Dempsy F. . . Gattman, Miss. Perry, Joe Whitaker Bessemer Pow ELL, Arnold Francis . . . Birmingham PuRCELL, John Robert Gadsden Roberts, Charles Curtis . . . Birmingham Robinson, Stanley ' Hessel . . Birmingham Ryan, Mildred Emily .... Birmingham Scott, Helen Louise .... Birmingham Shugerman, Joseph Birmingham Slaughter, Dow Perry Selma Smith, Morgan Birmingham Smith, Ralph Jackson . . . Birmingham Southard, Shelby Edward .... Athens Stewart, Jan Gilbert .... Birmingham Stouch, Ben Hill .... Midland City Tatum, Sam Sylacauga Taylor, Mabel Ruth Bessemer Thomas, Amy Elizabeth . . Birmingham Thomas, James Benjamin . . . Albertville Thomason, Emmeit J Hightower Thompson, Walter Lee Lincoln Thuston, Elmer, Jr Birmingham Trotman, James Maurice, Jr. . Birmingham Wailes, J. Gorton Birmingham Wallis, Jim Moore Talladega W. TSON, Dan Talladega West, Howard Rayfiei.d .... Bessemer Whson, Woodrow Albert . . Birmingham Wood, Mildred Birmingham Wren, Woodrow Fairfield Wyait, Sarah Antoinette . . Birmingham Veildinc, Grant Birmingham Zenah, Walter Morris Gordo 2 «W_ 8k. The Lower Division (Cftnlinuid) NEW PLAN FRESHMEN Arnold, Dorothy Helen . . . Birmingham AsHMORE, Sarah Christine . . Birmingham AsHWORTH, Robert Fraser . . Birmingha?n Bishop, Brooks Hai.e .... Birmingham BovD, George Thomas . . . Birmingham Bradley, Samuel Jerry . . . Birmingham Brindley, Euclid Vernon, Jr. . CoUinsvill; BuRsON, Mary Alice .... Birmingham Christie, Tilly Birmingham CoBURN, Joy Morris .... Birmingham Crocker, Joseph Torbett . . Birmingham Daniel, William Allen . . . Birmingham Dickinson, Wilma Adeline . Birmingham Dickson, William E Birmingham Dunlap, Edward Joseph . . . Birmingham Ehtng, Eliz. beth Virginia . Birmingham Fant, Charles Eugene . . . Birmingham GiBBS, William Chadhtck . . Birmingham Gill, Andrew Wade .... Jasper, Fla. Griswold, Martha Frances . Birmingham Hargett, Oscar Sargent .... Sheffield Harris, Garrard Birmingham Henckell, Carl Clements . . Birmingham Hill, Eloise Birmingham HoLLEY, Bernard Benjamin . . Sylacauga Hughes, Grace Birmingham Hurley, Mary Fae Fairfield Hydrick, Leotta Graham ... Fairfield James, James Burton, Jr. . Greenville, N. C. Johnson, Abner Crowe . . . Birmingham Judge, Jane Birmingham Lacey, Howard Doss .... Birmingham Lane, Harry Morris .... Birmingham McGill, Martha Lou .... Birmingham McGowEN, WiLLiA.vi Henry . Birmingham McLester, Robert Gibson . . Birmingham M.-VTHISON, Edith Lee Cleveland Matthews, Sam Birmingham Mills, Dorothy Dean Bessemer Montgomery, A. C, Jr. . . . Birmingham MORING, James Luther .... Abbeville Morland, John Kenneth . . Birmingham Morris, Fred Richard .... Birmingham Morton, Alfred Luckie . . . Birmingham Mumpower, Bush Birmingham Murray, Alice Morgan . . . Birmingham O ' Neill, James Birmingham Pass, Jefferson Augustus . . West Blocton Peavy, William Roberts .... Atmore Peterson, Elmina Elizabeth . Birmingham Ponder, Corrie Melton .... Fairfield Powell, Wade Ed vard, Jr. Putnam, Myrtle Helen . Richardson, Edna Mae . Roberts, Roy Barron . . Robins, Grace Lillian . Sanders, Ide.ve . Birmingham Birmingham Birmingham Birmingham Birmingham Birmingham Smith, Allison Decat ur Smith, Daisy Dean Birmingham Sulzbv, William Dobbins . . Birmingham Sy. , Ruby Jerome Birmignham Tillman, Benagh Hobbs .... Bessemer TiMMONs, Anne Katherine . . Birmingham Turner, Reba Ann Birmingham White, Pansy Mae Birmingham Williams, Phillip Anthony . . . Fairfield Adler, Rich rd Scrugham . . Birmingham Akins, James Paul Birmingham Aldridge, Howard Culver . . Carbon Hill -Alley, Edward William . . . Birmingham Anderson, James Lawson . . Birmingham Andrews, Osa Lamar .... Birmingham Atkeison, Gordon Rush Mobile Bailey, James Sanford . . . Midland City Barnes, James Fairfax Barron, Sidney D. . . . HattieAurg, Miss. Bartlett, Virginia Birmingham Batson, Grady Bessemer B.WTER, Lionel Francis . Bay St. Louis, Miss. Bell, Mary Virginia .... Birmingham Bennett, Charles ' arrior Berry, Roger Woods .... Birmingham BiviNS, Alfred R Birmingham Black, Virginia N ll .... Birmingham Black, Robert C Detroit Boone, William Edward .... Anniston Bowman, Emily Margaret . . Birmingham Bo.x, James Franklin .... Birmingham Bovi.E, Harriet Edna .... Birmingham Bradford, Frances Lineville Bradley, Robert Wade . . . Birmingham Brandon, Forney W., Jr. . . Birmingham Brasher, Julius Logan Attalla Bratchek, Ja.mes Woodrow .... Boiling Brooks, Ben Bailey .... Birmingham Brown, Gwendolyn Estelle . Birmingham Brown, James Andrew . . . Birmingham Brown, Lois Birmingham Broyi.es, Miriam Oze .... Birmingham Bruce, Ei.dred Pearce Lanett Bryant, Christine Birmingham Bullock, Albert Franklin . . . Fairfield Burleson, Paul Woodrow . . Birmingham Burns, Alex White Gadsden Burns, Harry Anderson . . . Birmingham Cain, Elbert Vernon . . . Birmingham Calhoun, John Childress . . Birmingham Cameron, Charles Wesley ' . . Frisco City Campbell, Nell Kemp . . . Birmingham Carmichael, Charlotte . . . Birmingham Chadborne, Carey Emond . . Birmingham Chilton, Claudius Lysias . . Birmingham Chitwood, Thomas Jackson . . . McCalla Ci.E.VGE, John Henry .... Birmingham Clotfei.ter. Javiks Hodson . . Birmingham Colmant, John Milton . . . Birmingham 73 AiAs sJL yL H • The Lower Division . (Continued) NEW PLAN FRESHMEN CoRBiK, Hugh Joppa CoRBiTT, Charlfs Anson .... Hartford Cox, Rogers Birmingham Cr. kford, Ch. rles Birmingham Creel, Robert Bvrok Morris CusiCK, M.ARios ' Dolores .... Gadsden D.ANiEL, D.AViD Edward . . Birmingham Davis, Jennie Ritchev . . . Warsaw, Ky. DeLapp, J. B Birmingham DoMiNiCK, Sara Esther . . . Birmingham Dlke, Willum Ale.xander . . . Camden DuTGGiNs, Charles Anderson . Birmingham Edmonds, Eleanor Elam, Teddy Garfield . Elliott, Bernev Cooper Fain, Era Belle . . . Fant, James Amos . . Farnum, Leon Vernon Few, Martha Louise . FiNDLAv, Robert Eugene Forster, John Joseph . FoRSTER, Mary Elizabeth Frickhoeffer, Mary G.atling, James Lawrenc Gilbert, Dobbsie . . . Ginn, William Tensley GoFF, Harriet . . . Golfarb, Abe .... Grass, Melvin . . . Gray, Alan DeLeon . Green, Myra Ruth . Griffin, J. Tho.mas . Hall, James Jackson . Harper, John Cooke . Harris, Dorothy Elizabeth Harris, Samuel Thomas . Birmingham . . . Brent . Birmingham . . Ashland . Crossville . Birmingham . Birmingham . Birmingham . Birmingham . Birmingham . Birmingham . Birmingham . Birmingham . Birmingham . Birmingham . Birmingham . Birmingham . Bessemer . Birmingham . . Crossvill ' . Birmingham . Birmingham . Birmingham . Fort Pavne Harris, William M Birmingham Harrison, Arden T Birmingham Harrison, Rita Lea Birmingham Hegenbarth, Theodore . . . Birmingham Hennincer, Eugene Gaythur . . Stevenson Herrick, ' ivian Wilkins . . Birmingham Hewes, Hazel Mae .... Birmingham Hicks, Homer Gene Gadsden iiiLL, Aimous McAdoo .... Thomaston HiLTY, Lillyan Nelson . . . Birmingham Hodnett, John Wilson . . Alexander City HoRST, Omer Leo, Jr Birmingham Howard, James O ' Brien . . Autaugaville Howell, Alma Hays .... Birmingham HowiNGTON, Arthur Fletcher . . Eclectic Hubler, Winthrope R. . . . Birmingham Hudson, Helen Roberta . . . Fort Payne Hughes, Helen Hay . . Gainesville, Tex. Hunt, Julia Agnes Birmingham Jacoway-, Jenny Lind .... Birmingham Jensen, Fred Emmett .... Grove Hill Johnson, Deryl Maxine . . Alexander City Johnson, Hugh Lawler . . . Birmingham Johnson, Mary Louise Fairfield Johnston, Denny McCoy . . . Margerum Jones, James Thomas .... Darlington Jones, Margaret Elizabeth . . Birmingham Jones, Olen Thomas . . . Burrwood, La. Kay, James Randolph . . . Birmingham Kelly, May.nard Scottsboro Kent, John Edward .... Birmingham Kessler, Daniel Louis . . . Birmingham Kessler, Marguerite Louise . . Birmingham Kieffer, K.atherine .... Birmingham Kilgore, Anna Mary . Huntingdon, W. Va. Kimbrough, Lloyd Milton, Fla. King, John Argyll Gadsden Kinney, Grover C Birmingham Knox, D.avid Hanlin .... Birmingham Kruskopf, Martin Birmingham Lamar, Ch.«. Cromwell, Jr. . Birmingham Lanier, Jesse Eugene Decatur L.AW, Elmo Greenville Lawrence, Sarah Evelyn .... Ashford Lawrence, William Emory . . . Fairhope Leitman, Joe Birmingham LeNoir, K.athryn Birmingham Linn, Randolph Arab Lollar, William Burns . . . Birmingham Looney, Eugene Cornelius . Amory, Miss. Love, Henry Bruce Trafford LowRY, Curtis Grayson . LowRY, Frank Oliver, Jr. Lyle, Pauline Elizabeth McCall, Rupert Carlton McClendon, J. B. . . . mccondichie, d. h. . McCormack, Mary . . . McCoy, Guss McElroy ' , James Holman McGahev, Robert Goodloe McGowin, Carlos Jackson McKinnev, George Harris Marshall, Raymond Norma Miles, Ernest Percy, Jr. Miller. Clyde Ewing . Miller, Leon Weaver . Milton, Mishell . Montgomery, Hubert Thero Moore, Harry Edward . Morris, J mes Carter . . Morris, Sara Nell . . . Morrow, Claudie Richmon Moses, Olive Mosley, Frank Thomas, Jr. Murphy, Doris Elizabeth Murphy, Quill .... Neely, Mary Lucille . . Ni.xoN, John Thomas . . Norton, Sue Florence . Sunny South Sunny South Birmingham . Crossville . Scottsboro Jacksonville, Fla. . Birmingham . . Headland . Birmingham . Birmingham . Birmingham . Bessemer . Birmingham . Birmingham Pensacola, Fla. . . Jay, Fla. . Birmingham : . Birmingham . Birmingham . Birmingham . Birmingham . Hamilton . Birmingham . Birmingham . . Fairfield . Birmingham . . Bessemer . Birmingham . Birmingham f m m ■■ ■■■ ' ■■. - ' The Lower Division . (CojttinucA) NEW PLAN FRESHMEN Norwood, Hubert Madison . . Birmingham O ' Neal, John Carroll . . . Birmiiisham Osgood, Rollin Davis .... Birmingham Owen, Lerove, Jr Birmingham Paiterson, Robert Wvlv Pearson, Robert Blanton . Perkins, Louise Adele . . Perry, Morton Hodgson . . Perry, Rufus Elzie . . . . Petree, John DeWitt . . . PippEN, Clyde Ale.xander . Pittman, John Sydney . . Powers, James Pincknei, Jr. Ratliff, Mary Anne . . Reese, Ellen Grace . . . Reeves, George Washington Recitko, George Walter Respess, Mary Virginia Riddle, Samuel Stuart Riddle, Walter James . RiGELL, Frank Stevens . RoDGERS, Herbert Blair RuTLEDGE, Josephine . Scarbrouch, Rosalyn . . Schroeder, John Leonard Sexton, Richard Palmer Shackelford, Elizabeth V Shuff, Winifred Camille Shugerman, Abe Louis . Simmons, Henry Caroway Smith, Florence Lee . . Smith, LeRoy Cooper . Snoddy, Wm. Thuri.ow, Jr. Spake, William Thomas Sparks, Thomas Leonard . Brickevs, Arte. . Haleyville Alpine, Tex. Birmingham . . Wiiifield Birmingham Birmingham nixcm Mills Birmingham Birmingham Birmingham . Dolomite . Wildwoocl, N. J. . Birmingham . Birmingham . ' ilsonville Panama Cit ' , Fla. . Birmingham . Birmingham . Birmingham . Birmingham . Birmingham . Autaugaville . Birmingham . Birmingham , . Birmingham . Birmingham Cranford, N. J. Birmingham . Tarrant City . Birmingham Stevens, Edward Henry . Stewart, Laxvless Cutiiel Stovall, Sim Roy . . . Stoves, Valter McClay . Sy.x, Wilbur Taylor, Lucy Elizabeth . Terry, ' ernon Porter . Thom.as, Jim, Jr Thomas, Sarah Delore . Thompson, Minouise . . Thomson, Laura Caroline Thwe.att, Mary Darnall TiLLiA, Henry John . Vann, Byron Crommell . Varin, Marifrances . . . Vines, Margaret Gilmore Wade, Frank Lafayette . Walden, Jack Tillman . Walthall, William Shelby Walton, Charles V. . . W. TKiNS, Al Franklin . Weldon, Kenneth . . . Wenz, Alice Louise . . . West, Mary Kathleen . . White, Carolyn Shelton . Whitehead, Claude W., Jr, Wii.BORN, Martha . . . , Wiley, Evelyn Williams, Everett Pickard Williamson, Verna L. . . Windham, Virginia . . . . Winfield, Mildred Jo . . i ' EiLDiNG, Henry Boone . . Young, Joe S . Birmingham Birmingham . l irmingham . Bessemer . Birmingham . Fairfield . Birmingham . Lanett . Birmingham . Grad ' . Birmingham . Birmingham . Birmingham . . . Eva . Birmingham . Bessemer . Birmingham Fairfield . Birmingham Doniphon, Mn. . Birmingham l irmingham . Bessemer . Townley , Birmingham . Birmingham . Birmingham . Birmingham . Birmingham . Birmingham . Birmingham . Birmingham . Birmingham . Dadeville SKl fe, ! li i fe, LIBRARY or imim G0LLE8E vi 4 nS 1 , ' S«,. Charlotte Core MISS BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN rau Ed ith Teal Jessie Keller I Beulah McGill Christine Cox : m Dorothu Horton Maria Jeritza kDelects The Jjeaulies ' ■X, fX. ' -v. ■ Southern a Louise Stange oTKlarion lnJilcox 8lna Sessions Belles . . . ii Ol ena Wehh (fM arion (fM ayer Kath erine jBu55 Cdmpus I. Kcvue briiiHTs you in i)i tures wliat Hilltop students said witli ImHots . . . we, the staff, diselalni all respon- sibility . . . so, reading: from left to rigrlit . . . the most musical buy an«l the most musical ffirl, minus baritone voice and pia.no, pose in artistic nonchalan -e . . . that joung lady so fearlessly facing ' the camera is supposed to be the most timid . . . without scepter or crown Bob Clayton an l Olena ' ebb, kins   d ai ' een of the campus, iwse royally . . . the first picture in the se ' ond row reveals Mary Eblen,. Campus Artist, iL azing off into the distance rather pensively . . . Herbert Baum, swimmer par excellence, takes a deep breath an l allows himself tn be snapped . . . Otto Most Popu ' ar Boy Baiter un- doubltedly wishes the engraver ha l placed bis picture somewhat closer to the first picture on the top of the Personalities next i ag:e . . . that sleepy-c yed ffeiit with the drooping: litis is y iur Campus Politioian, Georffe Londu . . . that srhohir ( on can tell bj the books) is that winner of ail scliolastic x ri2es, Most Intelleetual Boy Hendriekson . . . Chinny, tlie eliieken, Jtdin ion, i)uts on his B sweater and adds n new title, Fiiotball JYeddie , . . Take jour piek, gents, here are the three partj girls — Jane Judge, IJemiee I okey, and Helen .Morrison . , . and naturally we find the oaniijus ut-up holding: hands on the sun dial with the eainpus butterfly . . . but lest we forget, that joung lady in the insert is Man-Hunter Violet Nappi . . . Beware! Or you will be taken places b the campus siren perched on the fender. That ' s Charlotte Cordray . . . No, tliat ' s not Hitler, it ' s Mu ssolini Smith, Yes Man nonpareil . . . Standing in fntnt of the sun dial is the inimitable Penny Prewitt, than of whom is none more popular . . . the dignified looking gentleman with the open mouth is K I Cummins, world ' s noisiest boy . . . fol- lowed bj his boon companion. Jesse Drennen, Biggest Windbag . . . Kuth Kenny bmok, most intellectual girl, and Arnold Powell, wittiest hoy, walk out with half the library and face the cameraman . . . John Heel Col- mant snapi ed in front of the AMiite House . . . The 220-lb. lad holding up the tree is Irm, Country Boy, Davis. Tliat lad has onlj two liobbies — touchdowns and fotid . . . Breezy Beaird, best all-round athlete, puts a book under the arm and disguises himself as a scholar . . . the wittiest girl, Sara I ickinson, to whom everyone is Charlie . . . and the female campus i)oIitician, Mary Jo Zuber, who keeps a president of the student body in tow . . . just as a lesson in modesty we put the vainest man last. Forgive us, Ed Mackay, forgive us. Around Tne egend The caiitlid (imieraiiiiin begins his quadrangle tour b sna|)i)ing the uffioial Hilltop family on Parade Day . . . MeCo.i I ' atterson and Kolj McNeill nose for a version of Just Before tlie Battle, Mother. This picture was taken just before the battle for the presidency . . . Miss Bir- niiiigrhani-Southern for Parade Day, snapped without regal gown or coronet . . . next to ice cream cones Dr, Clark likes tarpon best . . . Coach Ben smiles. Maybe because his rat team has just given Howard another lesson in and About the Quadrangle ■ L football . . . Kvelju Walton, the female who handles the busmess end of the La Uevue in 1936 . . . and a scene fntni election da . . . Four proud members of the un- beaten, untied team — Townsend, Clark, Dunn, and Loftin ... a couple of the bnj s jr t playful . . . TennjN float, whuh lent s ga, and never e en got into the parade . . . first x icture on the second pajre. illie I-umpUin Heflin — g:uidinsr liffht of the Gold and Black, and j our editor ' s companion in crime . . . Two of your edit ir ' s most popu- lar ijrot ' s, B. G. W. I. (before grades went in), Hunt and Ownbey . . . And more mementos of the parade . . . Those five handsome looking: men are just about to go into a professorial bull session . , . o, that young; looking fellow un the grass is not a freshman, yet. He ' s Lumus Langlej . Jr., the baby named by official vote itf Hilltop students . . . The gentleman leaning on the sun dial is Louis Hay- good, the end who never misses a pass . . . and in oon- c.usion . . . the Weaver brothers. Harry, who taught Bursar Yielding how to handle funds. And Oliver Cor- nelius, wh  is one rake of a ministerial student. I T si siH Tne WEARERS OF THE VARSITY FOOTBALL Raymond Wedgeworth Tom Carter Louis Townsend Falton Lecroy Floyd Clark Gordon Loftin Thereon Fisher Dewey Mitchell a. c. currie Hermit Davis VARSITY FOOTBALL Cecil Dunn Lewis Haygood Rupert McCall Bryce McKay Ernest Teel Ike Young Bill Johnson George Briner Woodrow Beaird Herbert Acton, Mgr. VARSITY BASKETBALL Robert Vernon Hubert Windham J. O. Johnston Raymond Waid Tom Braly Woodrow Beaird Jack Harper J. C. Mosely LuciAN Rice, Mgr. VARSITY BASEBALL J. C. Mosely Tom Braly Thereon Fisher Woodrow Beaird Hermit Davis Bryce McKay George Courson Jim Wallis Ernest Teel Walter Thompson, Mgr. VARSITY TRACK Arnold Powell Lewis Haygood Bryce McKay Tom Carter Willl m Austin John Purcell Hermit Davis John Stevenson 101 3y Dixie Oonference The Codches The perfect harmony that existed between Head Coac.i Jennings Gillem and his assistant, Lex FuUbright, was re- flected in an undefeated, untied Dixie Conference Cham- pionship team in the 1934 season. Ch dlTLDlOnS L{tzbealen (J nlieo The smashing 21 to victory over a traditionil grid rival gave Birmingham-Southern ' s Golden Platoon a place among the nine undefeated, untied football teams in the United States during the 1934 season. It was the first time in Panther grid history a perfect season had been completed by a Hilltop team. Coach Gillem called his team the best he ever produced. Victims of the smooth-working Panther team were Au- burn ' s Tigers, Loyola ' s Wolves, Mercer ' s Bears, Millsaps ' Majors, Murray ' s Thoroughbreds, Southwestern ' s Lynx, Spring Hill ' s Badgers, Tampa ' s Spartans, and Howard ' s Bulldogs. The undefeated, untied list follows: Birmingham- Southern, Alabama, Augustana, III., Minnesota, Kirksville (Mo.) Teachers, East Texas Teachers, Tufts, Mass., Trin- ity, Conn., Upper Iowa. The six All-Dixie players on the Panther team were Lewis Haygood, Hermit Davis, Theron Fisher, Louie Townsend, Ray Wedgeworth, and Ernest Teel. Floyd Clark was captain of the Hilltop wonder team vhich completed an unde- feated and untied season. Playing on the line, his work was outstanding — and an inspiration to his team- mates. cyina Ik e BABY PANTHERS r. ' fi— f ,J%J .J t AU UPtN-O yoUTnERN-7 B ' HAM-SOUTHERN 7. AUBURN Birmingham-Southern ' s football team sent out a storm signal to its eight remain- ing grid opponents when Coach Jenks Gil- lem ' s veteran squad opened the 1934 sea- son with a 7 to win over Coach Jack Meagher ' s Auburn Tigers. It was an old Southern way of initiating a new Auburn coach, the Panthers having beaten two previous new Tiger mentors as they made their debut. The stirring opening victory Friday night, September 21, in Crampton Bowl, Montgomery, came about in this way: Ray Resume of Wedgeworth, later to become All-Dixie center, pounced on an Auburn fumble late in the second quarter on the Auburn 29- yard line. The Panthers worked the ball to the Tiger 20-yard stripe, and on fourth down with one yard to go for a first down, Ike Young, Panther quarterback, sneaked over his left guard and dashed 18 yards before Quarterback Scarborough forced him out of bounds on the Tiger 2-yard line. Bill Johnson made a yard at center. The Tiger line was totally unable to hold the driving Young on the next play, and the Cat quarterback smashed over the first Panther touchdown. Davis converted. Auburn ' s chance to score was wasted in the second quarter; they were halted on the Panther 19-yard line. rOUTHERH l-OYOl.A-2 B ' HAM-SOUTHERN 19, LOYOLA 2 The Panthers became the South ' s sen- sation when they trounced the highly- touted Loyola Wolves, 19 to 2, Friday night, Sept. 28, on Legion Field. Coach Doc Erskine ' s boys were all they were reported to be — between the 10-yard lines; but once the Wolves advanced to the Cat danger line, they were smacked down b:- hind the scrimmage line by fighting Pan- ther linemen. The first Panther touchdown came in the second quarter when Ernest Teel passed 18 yards to Lewis Haygood — right down the middle — and the fleet Panther end sprinted the last 10 yards untouched. Passes by McKay, Teel, and Young had placed the ba ' l on the Wolves ' 28. The alert Falton Lecroy covered a Loyola fumble on their 24-yard line, starting the second scoring drive. Teel passed 20 yards to Davis, who caught the ball with the assistance of a Loyola back, and stepped off the remaining four yards. Ike Young scored the final Panther touch- down when he scooped Roy ' s pass to Daigle off his shoe-tops and dashed 66 yards untouched across the Wolf goal. Loyola scored when McKay failed to handle a low pass from center behind his own goal, giving Loyola a safety. 104 the Season B ' HAM-SOUTHERN 14, MERCER Birmingham-Southern ' s Golden Pan- thers placed themselves squarely in the middle of the Dixie Conference race wh:n they beat the Mercer Bears Friday, Oct. 13, on Legion Field, 14 to 0. Coach Gil- lem ' s team matched power with power against Coach Lake Russell ' s Bears, and won the ball game with alertness, precision and quickness. Southern took the ball at mid-field in the first quarter, after McKay had gained some 30 yards on punt exchanges. Teel received a 23-yard pass from Brice McKay and weaved his way 20 more yards to Mercer ' s 20. McKay several plays later passed 15 yards to Haygood, who took the Mercer safety man with him as he scored. The second Panther touchdown came in the second quarter when Ernest Teel dashed from the 50 to Mercer ' s 20; then ran 16 yards more to Mercer ' s 4 on another off-tackle slant. Teel then drop- ped back and passed the remaining 4 yards to Brice McKay for the score. The bril- liant Herm Davis added both extra points from placement. Mercer ' s passing combination. Blood- worth to Morris, was its best weapon. The sophomore, Allen Bloodworth, starred with his elusive ball-carrying. B-HAM-SOU. 28, MILLSAPS 13 With tricky reverses that worked with clock-like precision, Millsaps Majors piled up 13 points against the undefeated Pan- ther gridders in a night game at Legion Field, Friday, Oct. 19, before the contest was 20 minutes old. The Panthers were bewildered and scattered by this unlooked- for Major attack. Then with the lightning-like play that had characterized the Millsaps ' early at- tack, the Panthers, led by Teel and Mc- Kay, who were doing brilliant running through a demoralized crowd of Major gridders, scored their first touchdown, Da- vis converting perfectly. With only three minutes to play in the half, Gillem ' s men began another drive. Two p ' ays left only two or three seconds. Teel faded back to pass — the whistle sounded ending the first ■roUTHEP,lS-2e ' A -J- % J ' ■I3 half — but he heaved a long pass to Flay- good, who fought off two Major backs and raced for the second touchdown. The pass and run was good for 40 yards. Though the half was up. Southern cashed in on its right to try for the extra point. Teel broke the tie by adding a perfect placement. The last seven minutes of this half has been called the most exciting play ever to take place on Legion Field. Behind the excellent Panther line, McKay and Teel added two more t.d. ' s in the third quarter. lOS B ' HAM-SOUTHERN 20, MURRAY 7 The game with Murray Teachers in the Blue Grass State was only two minutes old and the battle-weary Panthers were be- hind 0-7. A fumbled opening kick-off by Southern on its own 15 and a swift 10 yard dash around the Panther right end had placed the fighting Cats in this deep hole. The All-American Cecil Kent for the Murray Thoroughbreds had carried the ball. But the game was just four minutes old and the score was 1-1 . Teel received the next kick-off and made a first down on his 48. On the next play, with the Southern Resume of team blocking to perfection, Brice McKay dashed off his left tackle over to the side- lines 52 yards for the first Southern score. Davis ' kick was good. Before the excite- ment of this play had abated, Haygood had smashed a Murray back so hard on the kick-off that he fumbled on the Mur- ray 25, Lewis recovering. Teel and Mc- Kay placed the ball on the Murray 9 with two off-tackle slants. Then Teel flipped a simple weak-side pass to Haygood for the Panthers ' second touchdown. Davis ' kick was good, but Southern was holding. The game was eight minutes old, and the Cats led 13 to 6. Southern scored again in the second half on a beautiful 29-yard pass from Teel to Haygood. B ' HAM-SOU. 7. S ' WESTERN A pass from Ernest Teel to Brice Mc- Kay over Sout.hwestern ' s goal enabled Birmingham-Southern to win its sixth straight football game and continue a dizzy pace toward a conference champion- ship and national recognition as an und;- feated, untied team. Saturday, Nov. 3, in Memphis, after being played to a stand- still by the late Jimmy Haygood ' s Lynx, Gillem emerged with a 7-0 victory. The lone score came in the second quar- ter after Southern ' s Rupert McCall had covered a Southwestern fumble on the Lynx 37-yard line. Teel showed his All- Dixie ability as he see-sawed off his left tackle 23 yards to the Lynx 14. Teel and McKay got four yards through a stiffen- ing Southwestern line, and then Teel faded back and spiraled a perfect pass to McKay, who snatched the ball from the hands of three scrambling Lynx backs and sat in the end zone for the touchdown. Mac got up and added the extra point, and scoring was over. It was McKay ' s high long spirals that kept the on-rushing Lynx at bay. Hay- good ' s Lynx were fighting their hearts out the entire afternoon attempting to spoil the Panthers ' perfect record. Haygood, Young, and Davis were given a much- needed rest in this contest, but Wedge- worth suffered a broken nose. 106 the Season B ' HAM-SOUTHERN 13, TAMPA 12 In a contest that was anything but a football game in its last minutes, Birming- ham-Southern managed to escape from Tampa ' s outlaw football team Saturday, Nov. 10, in Tampa, Fla., winning 13 to 12. Slugging, fighting, scratching, hold- ing, nine-man lines and screened passes predominated. The game ended by Bir- mingham ' s referee, Bob Shelton, barely es- caping with his life by hailing a taxi and beating it for Birmingham. The first Panther score came after Ray Wedgeworth had intercepted a Tampa pass in the first quarter and stumbled in midfield after he was loose. Teel passed 18 yards to Davis, a minute later ran 15 TAMPA-]2.. -QUTnERN-ZS more yards to the Tampa three, and then bucked over the touchdown. Davis ' kick was wide for the only time during the sea- son. The second Panther score came when Teel intercepted one of Tampa ' s 27 pasres on his own 40, ran 5 yards and fumbled; then Chinny Johnson scooped up the ball and sprinted 55 yards unmolested. Davis ' kick was good. Tampa scored first in the fourth period when Southern fumbled on its 15. A pen- alty and three thrusts at the Cat line brought the score. Screen passes resulted in the second Spartan touchdown, several minutes later. Both extra points failed. B ' HAM-SOU. 14, SPRING HILL When the high-flying Southern Pan- thers defeated the troublesome Spring Hill Badgers Saturday, Nov. 17, on Hartwell Field, Mobile, they won a place among the ten undefeated, untied football teams of the nation. The Badgers held the Cats scoreless in the first half, but were unable to conquer the running of Ernest Teel, al- ways a big threat against the Catholic lads. In the third quarter Teel passed to Herm Davis on the Badger 39. Teel cir- cled the Spring Hill left end for 1 1 yards, but the Mobile boys were so rough in stopping Teel they were penalized to their 2-yard line. Ernest wiggled over to score; Davis ' placement was good. The Cats scored again in the fourth quarter when Teel, Beaird and McKay carried the ball J . k Ul ' wi r roUTHERN- 1 ' 4, 6PBINGHILL •o from midfield to the Badger 15 in five plays. The Hillians were penalized 5 yards for extra time, and Teel negotiated the f inal 10 yards in two tries. Davis again converted, and the final score, 14 to 0, was rung up. Spring Hill ' s only scoring threat was a frantic last-minute passing attack con- ducted by Palmes — the passer — and Ruth- erford and Thompson, receivers. This vic- tory set Southern for Howard. 107 Howard Is Swampec Southern Howdrd . 21 The most overwhelming, the most decisive, the most incomparable victory ever scored by a Birmingham-Southern football team over a Howard football team was reeled off by Coach Gillem ' s undefeated, untied Panthers over Coach Shorty Propst ' s Bulldogs Saturday afternoon, Nov. 24, on Legion Field. Working as a unit, the champion Panther senior team defeated the Bulldogs 21 to 0, and every Howard letter-wearer for months after the humiliation wore his sweater bearing the proud H wrong side out. The play of the senior linemen — Hermit Davis, Theron Fisher, Dewey Mitch;ll, Falton Lecroy, Gordon Lofton, Capt. Floyd Clark, Ray Wedgworth, Louie Townsend, A. C. Curry and Lewis Haygood — was the outstanding feature of the game. It was the Bulldog line that had been heralded before the contest. Ernest Teel and Bill Johnson led the smart Pan- ther backfield both on the ground and in the air. Brice McKay averaged 42 yards with his long high spirals against the 33-yard average kicked in by Howard ' s Dan Snell and Pete Allen. The story of the great end play turned in by Big Herm Davis and Lewis Haygood is told in the game statistics. Not one inch was gained by Howard around the Panther wings — and instead, the Bulldogs lost 29 yards. Coach Propst ' s aggregation failed to smother the famed passing attack of the Panthers, and Ernest Teel passed 16 times, completing 5 for a gain of 105 yards. Teel ' s passes were completed to Davis and Haygood at critical points in the fracas and under the pressure of a swarm of opposing linemen. v-4 1 J v Southern scored in every quarter, but the last, and every score was made with the quickness and precision that characterized the Panther attack all season. Hermit Davis, big Panther end who played so well in the contest that he was signed by the Brooklyn Dodg- ers in the National Football League as soon as he stepped off the field, personally accounted for 15 of the Panther points by kicking three extra points and scoring two touchdowns. The first score came after Dan Snell of Howard had kicked to Bill Johnson, who fum- bled one of the few times of his career. The alert Panther center recovered however on How- ard ' s 44-yard line — a 10-yard gain. Teel was smothered on his first attempt to pass. Again Teel faded back to pass, coolly shaking off four or five tacklers while Davis was getting into the clear. Hermit took the ball— a 40-yard pass — off his shoetops, and carried the Howard safety man, Pete Allen, four yards across the goal. Davis added the extra point from placement. The second touchdown came in the second quarter after a sustained drive featuring plunges and off -tackle dashes by Teel, Johnson and McKay had carried Southern to How- ard ' s 15; but McKay fumbled. A few minutes later, Bill Johnson returned a punt 10 yards to Howard ' s 47. Chinny twisted and spun through center for 12 yards. Teel passed 16 yards to Lewis Haygood for a first down on Howard ' s 18. Haygood caught the pass on the dead run in the middle of the Bulldog secondary. Teel flipped another zepp pass to Davis, who was forced out of bounds on Howard ' s 3. As the fighting Panther line swept the Bulldogs before it, Ernest Teel thrust across for the score. Davis again added the ace from placement. The third touchdown resulted when Fisher and Davis blocked a punt. Davis caught the ball on first bounce and outran the speedy Allen and swift Wilcox 26 yards to cross the Howard line the third time standing up. Herm kicked the point. Howard spent the last quarter in a futile, wild passing attack that never approached the Panther goal. 109 Raymond Wedgevvorth u t k e r n ' s Heralded as the best football team ever to swoop down off the Hilltop, Birmingham-Southern ' s 1934 undefeated, untied football team, coached by Jennings Gillem and Lex Fullbright, boasted of probably the largest array of grid stirs on any one team in Panther football history. Six of the fourteen seniors on the team merited All-Dixie Conference recognition. The other eight were just as deserving. Two of the stars, Ernest Teel and Hermit Davis, received AU-American mention — the first time Hilltop football players had received national recognition. The six men who contributed in large portions play that en- abled the Golden Panthers to emerge victorious in nine hard football games, and who received All-Dixie recognition, were Ernest Teel, Hermit Davis, Raymond Wedgeworth, Theron Fisher, Louie Townsend and Lewis Haygood. Raymond Wedgeworth, weighing about 165 pounds, was named first string center. Dirty ' s great defensive work, his pi-r. defen:e as a floating center, and his accurate offensive play were factors which merited his recognition against such excellent centers as Lichter of Mercer, Spafford of Spring Hill, and Sul- livan of Loyola. Wedgeworth opened the 1934 season against Auburn with his ankle still in a cast — it having been broken in the preceding summer. Ray received a broken finger in the Tiger game. He returned to action the next week, however, against Loyola, finger and ankle still in casts. Fruits of the Wolf scrap for Dirty were a couple of cracked ribs. But these minor injuries didn ' t keep Ray out of the Mercer game the next week. He starred at center against Lichter. It was in the Southwestern game that Ray sustained his broken nose. But Gillem and Yeild- ing collaborated in raising enough money to purchase Ray a Lotus Havgood Thereon Fisher Louis Townsend no All Dixie PLAYERS special headgear-nose-guard outfit, and he kept right on playing through the Howard game. Lewis Haygood, called the fastest end in the Conference, was the high-scoring threat for the Panthers. His forte was getting down under punts, and making the tackle after he was down. His pass-receivmg ability — he led his mates in scoring — helped earn him a second string berth at end. Haygood was known as the smartest terminal man in the Conference. Together with Davis in the Howard game, Haygood allowed the Bulldogs to lose 29 yards around the Panther ends during the game, rather than gain an inch. Haygood weighed 170 pounds. Theron Fisher, 5 feet nine inches and weighing 205 in his stocking feet, was first string choice as tackle on the All-Dixie squad. It was Fisher ' s driving tackle work which enabled the Panthers to stave off such formidable attacks on the Panther goal as were made by Loyola, Auburn, Murray, Mercer and Millsaps. Fisher was picked as All-Dixie tackle in his sopho- more year, but a knee injury as a junior kept him from shining in 1933. His courage and stamina in returning to star in 1934 after a serious injury the year before was proof of his worth. Hermit Davis, strapping 210 pound Panther end was unani- mous choice for first string end position. He has been called the greatest end in Hilltop history. In the fall of 1935, Davis will join the professional ranks with the Brooklyn Dodgers in the national football league. The great Don Hutson will be his teammate. For three years, he was named All-Dixie end, proving his terminal work to be the best in the South. Had not the heralded Dixie Howell been playing football at the same time, Ernest Teel, three straight years All-Dixie half- back, would have been called the best passer in the South — pos- sibly among the nation ' s best. All teams both in and out of conference respected his rifle arm and dead eye. Teel, besides being a cool, accurate, deliberate passer, was one of t he best run- ning halfbacks in the conference. His oif-tackle slants and shifty running gained many first downs for Gillem ' s team. Teel weighed 172 pounds. Louie Townsend, weighing but 168 pounds, probably plived more steady, heady minutes at guard than any other Panther lineman. His smartness in diagnosing plavs, his speed and un- limited reserve strength earned him a rightful place as guard on the second selection. Townsend had the unique record of hiving played in every quarter of every game — witho-jt a time-out. Ernest Teel Hermit Davis I I I Johnson Beaird Windham o n t h Coach Englebert ' s Basketeets last season rung up one of the most impressive records of the last decade on the Hilltop. Clinching the Big Four Champion- ship for the fourth consecutive time, and trouncing Howard College in a five-game series to retain the City Collegiate Basketball title for the ninth con- secutive year, Coach Ben ' s cagers blazed a trail in 1934-35 for future basketball teams to shoot at. During the run of the season, the sharpshooters met and defeated such teams as Howard, Millsaps, Chattanooga, Y. M. H. A. and Boys Club. The ag- gregations which gave Southern her licking were L. P. I., Howard, Millsaps, and Chattanooga. The 1935 edition of the Gold and Black loop ma- chine was captained by Hubert Windham, all-Dixie Conference forward for two years. Captain Hube was handicapped in the first three or four games by illness, but recuperated in time to ring up 166 points for the Panthers, reaching his peak on the Plains of Auburn when he hit the hoops for 15 points. His inspirational leadership also aided materially to the cause during the course of the campaign. One of the greatest scoring duels ever recorded on the Hilltop, however, was waged between Guards Chink Vernon and Breezy Beaird, the latter finally winning out in the last game by one point. The sharpshooting Beaird rang up 110 field goals and 22 free shots for a total of 242 points, while the angular Vernon was accounting for 241 points comprised of 101 field goals and 39 free shots. ' A1D Vernon Court     J. O. Johnston, enlongated center, was also a main factor in the Panther success. Although not a high scorer, his abihty to control the tip-off and his great play under the opponents ' bas- kets helped to hold down the opposing stars. Johnston is the only member of last year ' s quintet returning. In Raymond Waid, Chink Vernon, Breezy Beaird, and Captain Hubert Windham, I have had four of the best basketball players of my career in coaching basketball at Southern, said Coach Englebert in a chapel program, paying tribute to his team. I surely hate to see these four boys graduate, he continued, because it will be a long time before I expect to have four players of their calibre on the same team again. In the 1935-36 season. Coach Englebert will have Johnston back at center and will have re- turning Tom Braly, Bill Moseley, Ed Neville, Jack Harper, and Lucius The Lick Evins. This squad will be augmented by several promising recruits from the frosh, among them Jim Thomas, Hugh Corbin, Jack McKinney, and Charles Walton. Varsity letters were awarded Captain Hubert Windham, Raymond Waid, Bill Moseley, and Tom Braly, forwards; J. O. Johnston, center; Woodrow Beaird, Chink Vernon, guards, and Lu- cian Rice, manager. The high point of the season was climaxed in the annual Howard series, which was one of the most radical in recent years. The Bulldogs got the jump, winning the first game, 36 to 30. The Panthers came back and won the second game. 34 to 28, but the Bulldogs came back strong and copped the third by a close margin. The Bulldogs cracked under the strain of playing high pressure basketball, however, and the fourth and fifth contests were routs for the Panthers. Englebert ' s boys trampled the Bulldogs 49 to 26 on their home court in the fourth encounter, and on the B. A. C. court. Southern again romped on Coach Bancroft ' s ' Dogs, winning the crown with a 52 to 36 victory. 113 Intramural By Joe Vanxe It is Indian summer two years ago and I am sitting on tlie west side of Munger Memorial Building smoking cigarettes with Ben Englebert, Birmingham-Southern ' s athletic director — who, besides being an athletic direc- tor, is a professor of mathematics, a championship bas- ketball coach and no mean baseball coach, to say noth- ing of being head freshman football coach and official scout. I say I was smoking cigarettes with Coach Ben ; what I really mean to say is I am smokijig the cigar- ettes, because Ben doesn ' t smoke, except sometimes when his teams are behind in an athletic contest. But this is seldom with Coach Ben. Ben is just returned from taking a bang-up coaching course at Northwestern University in Chicago. There he was under the instruction of some of the country ' s best coaches and sportsmen. The main reason I went to Northwestern was to outline a program of intramural sports for Birmingham- Southern, Bens says to me. Northwestern is noted for its success in handling intramural sports. This is very peculiar, Coach Ben continues, explaining, because Northwestern is in a big city, and it is a well-known fact that intramurals are a flop in colleges in big cities where there are man ' students who live in the same city. I know that Birmingham is nothing like as big as the Windy City, which Carl Sandburg claims has shoulders as big as Maxie Baer ' s, but I say nothing to Coach Ben ' s intimation that Birmingham is like Chicago. In- stead I say to him, But what has the city part of it to do vith the success of intramural sports? It ' s like this — Coach Ben is used to explaining and re-explaining things many times to athletes and sports writers — in college towns, all students, practically, are out-of-town students and they are interested in cam- pus life to a greater extent. Have you any definite plan in mind? I ask. I think I ' ll use the same plan Northwestern is using with such success. Why, do you know that up there last year they had thirteen hundred students in a ping- pong tournament? And that plan is? I act surprised, hut am dubious and am quite sure we ' ll never have that many in a ping pong tournament, because while I ' m not sure how many students are at Birmingham-Southern, I ' m sure there aren ' t thirteen hundred. First, I am going to pass out a printed card with the names of twelve or thirteen sports on it and ask the students to check the sport they are most interested in partici- pating in. Then I ' ll divide the stu- dents of the city into zones, and with each zone having a team we will form leagues within the school and thereby arouse interest and competition. What about the fraternity boys? I am quite sure they won ' t be left out of intramural doings. They ' ll go on as usual with their own teams in a .separate league, Coach Ben smiles. I never have anv trouble with the fraternity boys — they are alwavs ready to battle each other. Then the winners in the fraternity league will play the winners in the non-fraternity leagues — I get ahead, though I am aware il takes no master mind to figure this out. The plan sounds goDd in theory, I think, and should go over, I am supposing, after considering that Northwestern has done such a swell job with it. Now the above conversation was with Coach Ben in Indian summer two years ago. In the early part of the past summer I am sitting on the front veranda of Coach Ben ' s home in the swing with Wilson Heflin, who is also loafing. Coach Ben and his wife are sitting in chairs. Mrs. Ben is repairing the numbers on the back of Panther football jersies. hen we arrived, Mrs. Ben is mending the huge number 9 jersey former- ly worn by Herm Davis, and which I need not ex- plain is very much tattered. Coach Ben, I begin, what success ha ' e you had with the intramural plan which you were telling me about late last summer? Coach Ben looks worried. I glance into the drive- way and see a new automobile parked there. I sur- mize that he is looking worried because there are man ' large notes to be met on the new auto. Then again I consider that maybe his plan on intramurals has been a flop and he is not anxious to disclose the results. Heflin blandly smokes a ten-cent cigar which a salesman has sampled him with when we are attending a free picnic earlier in the afternoon. For the first time at Birmingham-Southern, I am read y to say that intramural sports have been a suc- cess. And Ben smiles. We had successful tourna- ments in golf, baseball, basketball, tennis, fencing, swimming, horseshoe pitching, and touch football, he brags. But what about ping pong? I am wondering. That was the only sport we worked with that we could not get organized, Vt installed ping pong tables in the Student Activities Building, in Simpson Building for the faculty, and in Stockham for the co-eds. Many students played on the tables, but we never cou ' .d ar- range a tournament, Ben says. This is sad news to me, because I am pulling for ping pong. According to those cards you distributed to the students, which sports were most popular with the students? I say. Football, baseball and basketball, Ben does not hesitate to say. The Kappa Alpha Fraternity won the Big Sweepstakes trophy by having the best teams in touch football and basketball, Ben adds. Sports     And the Pi Kappa Alphas won the baseball cham- pionship, I supply, because at one time I am affiliated with the Pikers. Sam Stubbins won the golf championship, and Harry Burns, Herbert Acton and Alec Montgomery were runners-up. In their ordTr, these four boys formed an intercollegiate golf team which competed with fair suc- cess, Ben goes on. Ducky Fisher came out ahead in the horseshoe pitching contest. I am not surprised that Fisher has won, because I remember the terrible pasting the big tackle has given me in the very same tournament. Fisher, I am sure, has pitched horseshoes with the sharks around the country store up near Risen and Huntsville. Ben doesn ' t need prompting any more; he goes right on reciting his program. We had t vo main league s in touch football, he says, one for the fraternities, and one for the non-fraternities. Each team was alloted three days a week to play its regularly scheduled game on Munger bowl. The frat league had eight teams: Pi Kappa Alpha, Kappa Alpha, Alpha Tau Omega, Chi Chi, Theta Kappa Nu, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Delta Sigma Phi, and Beta Kappa. Each team played the other at least two games. There were six teams in the non-frat group. This league, incidentally, was won b ' the dormitory team vhich was defeated in the championship play-otf by Kappa Alpha. The other teams were Ministerial Association, Glee Club, Owen- ton, Northside, and Ensley. I take it there was lots of interest in that sport then. I am following him closely. But what about baseball and basketball ? I expect next year to have the non-frat bunch lined up in both baseball and basketball leagues. They were not organized in these two sports this year; but the touch football league did plenty to promote the spirit of interest and competition between the non-frat boys, Ben explains. I begin to see that Ben ' s program has been a success, and I pry him for more dope on the minor sports like fencing and tennis. Intramural sports tournaments produced worthy teams in two other sports, tennis and fencing, he says. In a tennis tournament held this spring, fi- ' e out- standing players were developed into a team that de- feated several collegiate opponents in Birmingham, and on a road trip scored victories over the University of Alabama freshmen, Mississippi College, and Millsaps. The squad was fairly green, being composed of Tom Carter, Roy Starnes, and Ed Neville who had partici- pated in little match or tournament play; however. Chink Vernon, a senior veteran, and Ed Alley, ace freshman racketman, who was Alabama Junior Singles champion last year, balanced things up pretty nicely. Then Ben starts in to tell me about a French foreign exchange student who could do something besides teach conversational French and charm the ladies with an acutely antagonizing accent or a wicked dance step. This Jean Louis Mandereau fellow, who recently was acclaimed the best fencer and swordsman at Saint Cyr Military Academy, France, began fencing activities on the Hilltop last Fall— that is two years ago— teaching both men and co-eds. The main men students were Will Miller and Donnell Van der Voort. Then Man- dereau ' s leave in this country ran out; Van der Voort graduated ; and the fencing the past year was under the direction of Will Miller, whose proteges were John Ozier and Bill Miller. Th? two Millers and Ozier engaged Charleston College, Georgia Tech and the University of Alabama in matches, Ben tells me. We hope, Ben suggests, that next year we can develop a good intercollegiate swimming team. Under Bill Daniels at the B. A. C, six or eight boys worked on their strokes, speed and starts in the spring. Gorton Wailes assisted Bill Daniels. The swimming candi- dates were Zeno Knapp, Herbert Baum, Wilson Hefiin, Ed Mackev, John Tillia and Tom Sparks. This bunch of swimmers, all of whom will return next year but Heflin and Mackey, should get into competitive form for meets, Ben says, because Auburn, the University, Tech, and Emory are all clamoring for engagements. I am still worried about our deficiency in that great American indoor sport, ping pong. Coach, I inter- rupt, what ' s going to be with our ping pong sharks? Who was the best on the campus? It is here that Heflin flicks the ashes from his free ten-cent cigar and remarks rather bitterly, Every time 1 tried to plav, this guy Joe Shugarman or a guy by the name of Curtis Roberts are presiding at the table. They plav three-out-of-f ve gimes, usually: and usu- allv ' the five-game sets are just one-two-three affairs for these guvs. With this, Heflin relights his cigar and frowns because he is not used to smoking cigars— especiallv ten-cent ones-and he is getting a bit nau- seated in fact, I do not think it will be long before he will be retching. , , j „ „ , j., That about covers the entire field, ' Ben concludes, making a hastv mental note with the help of his fingers. Ben a fine fellow, buys five gallons of gasoline on credit, and carries us to the city. On the way, Heflin and I argue about which moving picture we will at- tend I argue for Lfs Miscrahln ; Wilson suggests a Ring Lardner picture at the Empire with Joe E. Brown —but I object to Joe E. We finallv wind up at the Alabama to see No More Ladies with Joan Craw- ford, Robert Montgomery, Franchot Tone, and a lit- tle bit of Gail Patrick. But the picture is lousy, and we go home with a bad taste in our mouth and sour pusses. 115 I T I b ; ° jLri ' k ' m f. ' - M ' V I I rs. c iP- . : ( - INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL Robert Clayton President Roe McNeill Vice-President Ernest Strong Secretary Walter Smith Treasurer Chi Chi — Pi Kafpa Alpha — Otto Baker Howell Talley Harry Weaver William Johnson Kappa Alpha— Theta Kappa Nu— Robert Clayton Walter Smith Fred Mayer James Garrett Alpha Tau Omega — Sigma Alpha Epsilon — Rob McNeill George A. Smith Ed Cummins Murray McEniry ' I 19 i 3 AJ! % « ■ 5 PI KAPPA ALPHA Colors: S f i, Flower: Garnet and Gold W Lily-of-the-Valley DELTA CHAPTER Establislied i yi Members in Faculty Thomas F. Deenam H. Benjamin Enci.cbert Perry W. Woouham Hubert Searcy H. T. Shanks Fratres Guthrie Smith President Robert Strong Vice-President William Redus Miller Secretary Walter McCulla Treasurer Se?iiors Brannon Stringer Carl Stiefelmeyer Ernest Teel Lewis Haygood Robert Strong Joseph C. Vance Guthrie Smith Howell Talley Hubert Windham Juniors Herbert Acton Robert Chappell William B. Johnson Bryce McKay William Miller Sophomores Cleveland Bridges Abner Johnson John R. Purcell Tom Carter Walter McCulla Norman McLeod Freshme?! William Dickson James Thomas Bill Syx Arthur E. Harris G. C. Kenney Howard Lacey Jack Eakens Founded at Publication: University of Virginia, 1868 Shield and Diamond 120 t|W sMP ,.o CHI CHI Colors: ,X X Flonver: Blue, White and Gold SEf Carnation Estabtishfd at BirminijJiam-Soutlwrji Collcf e, IQ26 Member in Faculty WvATT W. Hale Fratres Orro Baker President George Londa Vice-Presidetit Maurice Crowley Secretary Lauren Brubaker Treasurer Seniors Otto Baker Beaman Coolev . Robert Wheeler O. C. Weaver Robert Vernon Henry Howell Harry Weaver Gerald Locgins Dean Wellman Lauren Brubaker Juniors Malcolm Wheeler George Londa Zeno Knapp Sophomores Maurice Crowley George Houston Billy Henckell John Hollincsworth Freshmen Frank Mosley John Forster Pickard Williams WooDRow- Bratcher Raymond Marshall Morris Walton Founded at Birmingham-Southern r- u r Publication: Chi Chi Monthlv College, 1926 121 M jHf KAPPA ALPHA Colors: W Flowers: Crimson and White S Magnolia and Red Rose PHI CHAPTER Re-i-stablished, jQ22 Members in Faculty Wilbur Dow Perrv Andrew Hemphill Benjamin F. Clark Marion L. Smith Fratres Robert Clayton • President Ed Mackay Vice-President Edwin Cooper Secretary Fred Mayer Treasurer Seniors Robert Clayton Joe Carmichael Ed Mackay Juniors Joseph Price Bennett Waites S. L. Whatley Billy Caldwell Sophomores Richard Westbrook James Herring James Thomas Edwin Neville Jimmie Roberts Fred Mayer Edwin Cooper Perry Slaughter John Ozier Fresh ?n en Robert Brazeal John Tillia John Nixon Robert Mayer Melbourne Cannon Sidney Hardy Hubert Norwood Jim Morris Sam Fleming Robert Shoop Morton Perry Sam Heide Founded at Publication: Washington and Lee University, 1865 Kappa Alpha Journal 122 SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON Colors: Purple and Gold Flower: Violet ALABAMA IOTA CHAPTER Established 1S7S Member in Faculty Harry E. McNeel Fratres Murray W. McEniry President Frederick G. Koenig rice-President Herbert West Secretary George A. Smith Treasurer Seniors William W. Jeffries Glenn Massencale George A. Smith Fred G. Koenig Don Sims Herbert West Juniors James Hughes Murray McEkiry Alex Montgomery Wayne Ransay Robert Kendall William McGehee Robert Montgomery Roy Starnes Soplio tiores Robert Ashworth Alvtn Binzel Elmer Thuston Bert Best Sanford Enslen James James Charles Brevvton Hugh McEniry James G. Johnston Roy Malone Freshmen Sidney Barron John Hodnett Billy McGowen Harry Burns Robert McGahey Jack McGowen Blake Atchison Jim Petrie Rogers Cox John Colmant Clyde Pippen Robert Findlay Charles Dvviggins Stuart Riddle Billy Harris Jim Ford Parter Terry Claude Whitehead Founded at the University of Alabama, 1856 Publication: The Record 123 ALPHA TAU OMEGA Colors: Old Gold and Sky Blue Floivcr: White Tea Rose BETA BETA CHAPTER Eslahlislicd 1S65 Members in Faculty James S. Childers Marsee F. Evans Fratres Robert McNeill President Albert Mills Vice-President Curtis Finch Secretary Jesse Drennen Treasurer Juniors Curtis Finch Woodford Dinning Robert McNeill Ed Cummins Albert Mills Ben Stough Arden Harrison Lionel Baxter James McElroy Olin Jones Ed Morris David Daniel Richard Sexton Founded at Virginia Military Institute, 1865 Sophomores Torbett Crocker Bill Sulzby Freshmen Jim Gatlin Ned Franklin Charles CkANFORD Fletcher Comer Quill Murphv J. B. Delapp Dunlap McCauley Richard Dabney Jesse Drennen Woods Berry David Knox Lamar Andrews John Shroeder Ed Stevens Jim Powers Publication: The Palm •■ i .f 24 r Colors: Purple and White BETA KAPPA w Floiver: Red Templar Rose PSI CHAPTER Eslablishcd ig2y Memrer in Faculty James Elmer Bathurst Fratres Jerome Winston PresidcM Orville Lawson Vice-President Davis Thomi ' SON S.-crelary and Treasurer Seniors Jerome Winston Ernest Hollingsvvorth Orville Lawson Joe Phillips Davis Thompson James Stephens Junior Archie McRimmon SoJ ' homorcs George Courson Ellenbe Anderson Freshmen Sam Goodwin Leonard Winston Founded at Hamline University, 1 901 Pubticiition: Bela K-i pa Journal THETA KAPPA NU Colors: Argent, Sable and Black Floiiier: American White Rose ALABAMA BETA CHAPTER Estabtislud 1 24. Members in Faculty William T. Hammond Vincent Townsend J. Paul Reynolds William A. Whiting Fratres Walter Smith President Paul Lanier Vice-President Richard Beckham Secretary Aubrey Crawford Treasurer Seniors Arthur Ribe A. C. Curry Juniors Paul Lanier Walter Smith James Garrett Claude Gholston Aubrey Crawford Sophomores Charles Bellows Richard Beckham James O ' Neill E. V. Brindley Robert McLester Sam Tatum Lucius Evins Richard Gholston Cla ' ston Mercer Freshmen Homer Hicks Alfred Bivins William Lollar Henry Simmons John Cleace John Kent Arthur Hanes Tensley Ginn James Brown Founded at Drury College, 1924. Publication: Theta News 126 1 . . PAN-HELLENIC COUNCIL Established at Binninijhain-Soiilhrrn Collrf e, 1C)27 Mary Jo Zuber President Pauline Bradford Vice-President Nancv Kate Gilbert Secretary Marion Wilcox Treasurer .liplia Chi Omega — T ieta Cpsihn — Mildred Ryan Marion Wilcox Zetta Mae Morgan Charlotte Hall .Up ia Omicron Pi— Pi Beta Phi — Nancy Kate Gilbert Dolly Weiss Marion Bruce Edna Snow Gamma Theta — Ka ipa Delta — Pauline Bradford Mary Throckmorton Clara Rice Lallah Rookh Hill Gamma Phi Beta — Zeta Tan .Iljiha — Mary Jo Zuber Mary Louise Fell Dorothy Horton Jane Haralson ■- 128 1 !S tt _ kkV. AMAZONS Alice Holt President Mary Louise Fell J ' ice-PresiAent Mildred McLaren Secretary Mary Jo Zuber Treasurer Members Marion Mayer Patsy Knopf Dorothy Suydam Nancy Kate Gilbert Mary Gene Herren Louise Stance Mary Throckmorton Mildred Ryan Eleanor Kidd Zetta Mae Morgan Dolly Weiss Dorothy Horton Katherine Daly Selma Dale Durham Marion Wilcox Gretchen Brown Elizabeth Leslie Mary Louise Fell Mildred McLaren Mary Jo Zuber Alice Holt i ' r 129 ZETA TAU ALPHA Colors: Steel Gray and Tiir(iuoise lilue Floijser: White Violet ALPHA NU CHAPTER Eslablislud lcjj2 Mary Louise Fell President Oi.ENA Webb Vice-President Marion Maver Secretary Mary Anthony Treasurer Seniors Margaret Culverhouse Dorothy Suydam Mary Louise Fell Olena Webb Junior Mary Anthony Sophomores Jane Haralson Marion Mayer Page Haralson Annette Totten Freshmen Eleanor Edmonds Kitty Smith Evalyn Currie Marion Johnson Claire Walker Mary Jane Schmitt Mary Murphy Mildred Adcock Hal Fleming Mari ' McCormack Evelyn Culverhouse Mary Frickhoeffer Kitty Parker Jane Moore Sara Wise Founded at Virginia State Publication: Normal College, 1898 Themis 130 _ , :-f PI BETA PHI Colors: T Flower: Wine and Silver Blue - SSmS. Wine Carnation ALABAMA ALPHA CHAPTER Established igsy DoLLV Weiss President Ann- Hogax Vice-President Gene McCoy Secretary Janice Johns Treasurer Seniors Katherin ' e Daly Katherine KLunz Richardena Ramsay Ann Hocan Frances Mallam Elna Sessions Eleanor Kidd Dolly Weiss Juniors Bernice Lokey Barbara Seaman Richardena Massey Sophomores Peggy Arnette Janice Johns Gene McCoy Betsy Bryant Katherine Lide Edna Snow Freshmen Marguerite Johnson Mary Knox Harriet Goff Cynthia Kelly Olive Moses Laura Ross Moore Harriet Sutherland Virginia Bartlett Ft.undcd at Mi.ninou.h College, 1S67. Publication: The Arrow 131 lAbMlft % i.f ., l t. a«ft I8k :ili zfc-%4t..miti Mkiuu MJkJm M ALPHA CHI OMEGA Ml Colors: B m Floiuer: Scarlet and Olive Careen V ' ' Carnation, Smilax ALPHA OMEGA CHAPTER Established 11)26 .DRF.D RVAN President Mildred McLarrn ' . rice-President LOUDELL GaRREIT . . Secretary Zetta Mae Morgan Treasurer Senior Mildred McLaren Juniors Mildred Ryan Mary Enslen Evelyn Walton Anne Cooney Sophomores Zetta Mae Morgan Louise Heide Beulah McGill Edna Mae Richardson Loudell Garrett Laura Thompson Martha Hanes Amy Howell Virginia Morgan Martha McGill Freshmen Sara Dickinson Dorothea Seale Winifred Shuff Mildred Jo Winfield I I Winifred Seale Eleanor Bernard W I ' ;1 ,1 I ' ll , ' 11 Peggy Crabtree Founded at DePauw University, 1885 132 Publication: The Lvre j « , 1 5 l«4Sl?j B -m _A THETA UPSILON Colors: ' ' Flower: Rainbow Tints y c P s XI CHAPTER Eslablisliid 1 26 Marion Wilcox President Gretchen Brown rice-President Elizabeth Lesslie Secretary SoLEMMA Vann Treasurer Seniors Marion Wilcox Gretchen Brown Juniors Carolyn McClurkin Elizabeth Leslie Sophomores SoLEMMA Vann Virginia Miller Fidelia Foster Charlotte Hall Freshmen Betty Jones Virginia Jamison Marifrances Varin Bettye Jones Gwendolyn Brown Margaret Dalton Founded at the University of Publication: California, 191+ The Dial 133 . ft l HB K 1 ALPHA OMICRON PI Colors:  5MMli Flower: Cardinal Xyft£2Si9n Jacqueminot Rose TAU DELTA CHAPTER Established IQ2 Nancy Kate Gilbert President Marion Bruce Vice-President Idalene Fuller Secretary RuFiE HOLLOWAV Treasurer Seniors Louise Stance Patsv Knopf Mary Jane Wing Juniors Idalene Fuller Nancy Kate Gilbert Sophomores Cassie Boswell RuFiE Hollovvai ' Marion Bruce Freshmen Anne Ratliff Sara Dominick Ellen Grace Reese DoBBsiE Gilbert Sara Griffith Christine Bryant Sue Jordan Martha Lynn Thompson Lois Brown Founded at Barnard College, 1897 Publication: To Dragma 134 KAPPA DELTA Colors: Green and White Flo ' er: White Rose ALPHA UPSILON CHAPTER Esiahlislicd I()2Q Mary Throckmorton President Mary Elizabeth Thomas Vice-President Alice Holt Secretary Evelyn Colmant Treasurer Seniors Mari Brown Mildred Ellis Mary Throckmorton Alice Holt IVIargaret Leland Mary Gene Herren Mary E. Thomas Sophomores Evelyn Colmant Lalla Rookh Hill Wilma Dickinson Mildred Wood Idene Sanders Martha Matthews Jane Judge Fresh ten Katherine Rouse Margaret Lewis Founded at ' irginia State Normal, 1897 Puhlicatiou: Angeles 135 if z: 1 1? tfSP GAMMA PHI BETA ««■? Colors: Double Brown Floiver: Pink Carnation ALPHA RHO CHAPTER Eslahtished IQSO Mary Jo Zuber President Katherine Winters Vice-President Dorothy Horton Secretary Dora Henley Treasurer Senior Mary Jo Zuber Juniors Dorothy Horton Mildred Long Selma Dale Durham Helen Tate Sophomores Katherine Winters Jane McKee Dora Henley Caroline Gignilliat Frances Summers Harriet Boyle Evelyn Wiley Founded at Syracuse University, 1874 Freshmen Alma Hays Howell Patsy Hughes Mary Virginia Respress Katherine Kieffer 136 Jennie Ritchie Davis Adele Perkins Publication: The Crescent M GAMMA THETA Colon: Flower: Blue and Silver White Rose Foundt ' d at Bti ' minyham-Soutlurn, ig 2 Pauline Bradford President Martha Chapman Vice-President Grace Stacev Secretary Esther Vaughn Treasurer Seniors Pauline Bradford Pauline King Mary Frances Merkle Grace Stacey Mary Louise Quarles Esther Vaughn Junior Peggy Green SOPHOAIORES Martha Chapman Clara Rice Maytle Doggett Freshisien Jessie Mae Sheffield Mary Olive Smith Alice Murry Pauline Lyle 137 % t ai s 8i a % i life O R G A N I Z A T I O ' r, - ' P ' .iH ' M r- ' • ' ' ' STUDENT SENATE Guthrie Smith President Raymond Waid Vice-President Paul Lanier Secretary-Treasurer Senators • Seniors Guthrie Smith Fred Kjenig Lauren Brubaker Raymond Waid Juniors Rob McNeiii, Robert Chappell Paul Lanier Sophomores Edwin Cooper Paul Clf.m Freshmen Arthur Hanes 141 ttfi tim CO-ED COUNCIL Olena Webb President Mary Jane Wing Vice-President Penelope Prewitt Secretary Seniors Olena Webb Mary Jane Wing Dolly Weiss Mary Jo Zuber Juniors Idalene Fuller Penelope Prewitt Helen Tate Sophomores Sara Griffith Zetta Mae Morgan Freshman Winifred Seale ? i f ' ' ? s4S? 142 j 7: KAPPA DELTA EPSILON Virginia Wilson President Margaret Culverhouse ' I ' ice-Prcsident Lois Cosper Secretary Pauline Bradford Treasurer Faculty .hiviser Dean Eoline Wallace Moore Student Members Virginia Wilson Lois Cosper Clarita Clausen Elizabeth Perry Grace Stacey Mary Jo Zuber Velma Hatten Jessie Keller Mary Louise Fell Betty- La Force ToLBERT Griffin Margaret Culverhousf Pauline Bradford Jane Cosper Mary Louise Quarles Marion Wilcox Mary ' Jane Wing Helen Tate Mildred Turner Ann Moss Bertha Best Olena Webb Evelyn Blackburn 143 ,a D OMICRON DELTA KAPPA Men ' s llnnor S ' jciity Founded at Washington and Lee University, 1914. KAPPA CIRCLE ImUillicI at ISinningliam-Soullieni. March 23, i()24 Robert Clayton Presidcnl Don Sims Vice-President W. E. Glenn Secretary Harry Weaver Treasurer Active Members Lauren Brubaker Fred Koenic Glenn Massencale Lewis Havgood Paul Lanier Murray McEniry Wilson Heflin George Londa Guthrie Smith Active axd Honorary Faculty W. E. Glenn H. McNeel H. T. Shanks James Saxon Childers M. L. Smith Octavus Roy Cohen AssocuATE Faculty H. B. Englebert W. A. Moore Guy E. Snavely Wyatt W. Hale W. D. Perry R. S. Whitehouse J. M. Malone W. B. Posey W. A. Whiting Charles D. MAT HE vs Austin Prodoehl N. M. Yielding 144 mW .,. mW-. [g ' ,. , , i., ;,;; ;._ SCROLL Honor Society for Senior Girls Organized at Birmingham-Southern, 1928 .Mary Gene Herren President ZoE Lyon J ' icc-Prcsident Elizabeth Perry Secretary-Treasurer Active Members Olena Webb , Virginia Wilson Mary Jo Zuber iyf %s INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS CLUB Established at Bii iiiin jliain-Srjuthirii in i(JJO Fred Koenic President William Jeffries I ' ice-President Jane Cosper Secretary: Margaret Bullock Herbert Baum Jane Cosper C. B. Fields Denson Franklin Robert Giles A. W. Gill Leon Gray Hazel Hewes James Howard Alma Howell A. S. HOHINGTON, Jr. James Hughes Active Members Janice Johns Elmer Johnson Frances Mallam Frederick Mayer Frank McCompsey Clyde Miller Ellis Newman Ramon Ramos Wayne Ramsay Ann Ratliff David Reinhardt Mary K. Rochester Leroy Smith Carl Steiffelmeyer James Thomas Frederica Twining Dolly Weiss Malcolm Wheeler Wood Whetstone Evelyn Wiley Virginia Wilson Virginia Shackelford Woods Berry Edwin Cooper Anna Praytor Faculty Members W. B. Posey H. T. Shanks Paul R. Sweet H. S. Searcy Austin Prodoehl 146 i THETA SIGMA LAMBDA IIonoKiiy Miitht Hiatus Fniternity JosiAH Carmichael President Mary Jo Zuber Vice-President Robert King Secretary Morris Hendrickson Treasurer William Austin Herbert Baum Robert Ballard Evelyn Blackburn Gretchen Brown Mary Brown Pauline Bradford Active Members Louise Crow Katherine Daly Wynelle Doggett Peggy Greene Tolbert Griffin Ernest Hollingsworth Dorothy Horton James Hughes Andrew Jones Pauline King Katherine Kluitz Frederick Mayer Mary Frances Merkle Will Miller Freeman Orr Vanoni Sturcess Jerome Winston Esther Vauchan t ::5 « , « J. BELLES LETTRES James Hughes President Fletcher Comer [-- ' ice-President RiCHARDiNA Ramsav Secretary Wh,i.iam Jeffries Treasurer Faculty Adviser Dr. Henry T. Shanks Student Members Ho T Abernathy Virginia Bartlete Sidney Barron Gretchen Brown Gwendoly ' n Brown Betsy Bryant Jane Cosper Lois Cosper Fletcher Comer Elizabeth Ewing Herbert West Roy Starnes Mildred Long Jim Hughes Bill Jeffries Harriet Sutherland Laura Ross Moore Olive Moses Mary Frickhoeffer Caroline Gignilliat Lallah Rookh Hill Katherine Ivey Katherine LlDE Frederick Koenig Bernice Lokey Dorothy Horton Mary Knox Marguerite Johnston Mary Lou Overall Charlie Dwiggins Clyde Pippin Jim Petrie Wayne Ramsay Idene Sanders Barbara Seaman Edna Snow Daisy Dean Smith Ernest Strong Marifrances Varin Sara Dominick Richardena Ramsay Martha Hanes Virginia Miller Jim Morris Itara Parker Virginia Morgan 148 % ai3 8ii y iJ CLARIOSOPHIC Margaret Bullock President Robert Chappell Vice-President Marv Gossmak Secretary William Adstin Treasurer Dr. B. F. Clark Faculty Adviser Faculty Members Dr. B. F. Clark Dr. W. D. Perry William Austin Sara Bates Maurine Brannon Evelyn Blackburn Marie Boozer Margaret Bullock Elbert Butterly ' Student Members Nell Campbell Robert Chappell Clarita Claussen b. b. cofield Arthur Dickerson Maytle Doggette Julia Echols Corinth I a Belle Fields Mary Gossman Allen Gray Leon Gray Annie Mary Hardy Lillian Hilty Lucille Horton Katherine Le Noire Rebecca Morgan Florence Norton John O ' Neal Lois Parkam Elmina Peterson Amy Elizabeth Thomas Christine Thaxton Virginia Wilson Martha Wilborn Virginia Windham Mary Louise Quarles Helen Scott Grace Stacey Cuthel Stewart Ruth Taylor 149 i W- W F W i. Y. M. C. A. Glenn Massengale President Frederick Maver lice-President W ELTON Gregory Secretary John Ozier Treasurer Faculty Advisers Dr. M. L. Smith Mr. H. E. McNeel Cabinet Members Ralph Adams Lauren Brubaker Welton Gregory Hugh McEniry Roy Malone Frederick Mayer Ed Neville John Ozier Tom Prickett LuciAN Rice Robert Sharp Shelby Southard Henry Stevenson Ben Stough Wood Whetstone Pickard Williams Grant Yeilding Glenn Massengale Ste l 150 Y. W. C. A. Elizabeth Perrv President Virginia Wilson Vice-President Itara Parker Secretary Kathrvn Ivev Treasurer Cabinet Me.mrers Evelyn Blackburn Margaret Bullock Jane Cosper LouDELL Garrett Charlotte Green Betty LaForge Mildred Long ZoE Lyon Rebecca Morgan Mary Frances Merkl Florence Norton Mary Olive Smith Elizabeth Thomas Helen Tate Marion Wilcox Nancy Kate Gilbert Sara Griffith isr l « iJ ' il K ETA SIGMA PHI National Honorary Latin-Greek Fraternity ZOE Lyon PresUenl Anna Praytor . Vice-President Mary Jane Wing Secretary Olena Webb Treasurer Faculty Ad ' viser Dr. George Currie Faculty Members Hr. Charles Matthews Dr. Gly E. Snavely Dr. George Currie Honorary Me.mber Mrs. Clara Belle Fern Student Members Lois Cosper Zoe Lyon Anna Praytor Evelyn Walton Olena Webb Mary Jane Wing Nell Echols Hazel Hewes Dorothy Horton Janice Johns Roy Starnes Mrs. Kate F. Martin 2 w S . DELTA PHI ALPHA Honorary German Fraternity Established at Birmingham-Soiitiiern College, 1930 ZOE Lyon President George Londa Secretary Clarita Claussen Vice-President Dr. Austin Prouoehl Treasurer Active Members Mrs. Margaret Cornelson Ernest Hollingsworth Mildred Ei.i.is Murray McEniry Mary Jane Wing F.ACULTY Members B. F. Clark R. S. Whitehouse Austin Prodoehl p i 153 J J P b S fe«i wl Sfe5 .ti P PHI SIGMA IOTA Honorary Roinanci ' Language Fraternity Established at Birmingham-Southern, 1931 Dr. Austin Prodoehl President Anna Pravtor Vice-President ZoE Lyon . Secretary Prof. H. E. McNf.el Treasurer Joe Womack . Sergeant-at-Arms Faculty Adviser Dr. Austin Prodoehl Faculty Members Dr. Austin Prodoehl Mr. H, E. McNeel Mr. William T. Hammond Mr. Robert Whitehouse Dr. Charles D. Matthews Student Members Anna Pravtor Olena Webb Zqe Lyon Paul Lanier Joe Womack Morris Hendrickson Ramon Ramos Mary Lou Griswold Don Sims Mary Gossman Mildred Ellis Katherine Lide Annie Bibb Graves Virginia Miller Jessie Keller Nelle Stewart 154 LE CERCLE FRANCAIS Morris Hendrickson President Kathryn Ivey Vice-President ZoE Lyok Secretary Gene McCoy Treasurer Faculty Adviser Prof. Wu.mam T. Hammond Student Members RiCHARDENA RaMSAY Helen Tate Mildred Turner Morris Hendrickson (Catherine Lide Lillian Hilty Gene McCoy Amy Howell Eleanor Kidd Stephane Meyrat Clarita Claussen Mildred Long Kathryn Ivey- Jessie Keller ZoE Lyon % : k ' ik LA REVUE Yearbook of Bir nini liii ii-Soiithtrn College George Londa Editor-in-Chief Harrv Weaver Business Manager Ono Bakf.r Mana jing Editor Penelope PRr.wm Assistant Editor Conrad Mvrick Associate Editor EvELVK Walton ' Assistant Business Manager Joseph C. Vance Sports Editor James Herring Assistant Sports Editor Mar Ebi.en -In Editor O. C. Weaver, Jr Snapshots Publication Committee Austin Prodoehl, Chairman Newman M. Yeilding William Stanley Hoole Vincent Townsend Weekly Publication of Birmingham-Southern College George Londa Editor-in-Chief Harry Lazenby Weaver Business Manager EDITORIAL STAFF Wilson Heflin Managing Editor Floyd Green Issoeiate Editor Jack Scarborough Associate Editor Robert Shoop Associate Editor Joe Vance Sports Editor James Herring Assistant Sports Editor Penelope Prewitt ... Society Editor Ruth Kennybrook Literary Editor Arnold Powell Feature Editor BUSINESS STAFF Otto Baker .... Assistant Business Manager Ed Neville ... .... Assistant Business Manager Paul Lanier ... Associate Business Manager Evelyn Walton Associate Business Mana trr FACULTY ADVISER Newman M. Yielding MINISTERIAL ASSOCIATION Henry Stevenson ' President Wood M ' hetstone Vice-President William Blount Secretary Carlisle Miller Treasurer Faculty Members Dr. M. L. Smith Dr. C. D. Matthews Student Members J. E. Thomason O. C. Weaver Wood Whetstone CuLLEN Wilson Gordon Atchison E. M. Barnes W. R. Blount Sam Bradley Elbert Butterly Paul Clem Ross Cooke Clyde Dollar L. D. Farrar Denson Franklin Welton Gregory McCoy Guthrie Fletcher Hovvingto Elmer Johnson Denny Johnson Lloyd Kimbrough Phillip Martin Walter McLeod Carlisle Miller Harry Moore Conrad Myrick Bob Pearson John Rutland Henry Stevenson 158 f | u - — — CJ— — ' ' - 1% ' 5 TAU KAPPA ALPHA IJo iorary Forensic t ' ratcrnity Lauren Brubaker President Frederick Koenig Vice-President Murray McEniry Secretary Dr. M. F. Evans Treasurer Faculty Adviser Dr. M. F. Evans F. CULTY Me?iIRERS Dr. J. E. Bathurst Dr. W. E. Glenn Dr. M. F. Evans Dr. W. W. Hale Mr. Hubert Searcy Student Members Lauren Brubaker Wilson Heflin Murray McEniry Robert Clayton James Hughes O. C. Weaver Frederick Koenig Glenn Massengale W KAPPA PHI KAPPA Honorary Professional Educational Fraternity Founded at Dartmouth College, 1922 KAPPA CHAPTER Inslalhii April, ()j§ Guthrie Smith PresideM James Hughes Vice-President Robert J. Wheeler, Jr Secretary AcTix ' E Members Henry Howell, Jr. Floyd Clark Oi iVER C. Weaver, Jr. Gordon Chappell Raymond Wade Joe Carmichael William Jeffries Glenn Massengale Morris Hendrickson William Miller Felix Robe F. cuLTY Members Guy E. Snavely W. E. Glenn J. E. Bathurst W. W. Hale H. B. Englebert ,. r 160 j J Ij- w s! ' BIRMINGHAM - SOUTHERN COLLEGE (Co-eaucational) YOUR COLLEGE— CERTAINLY Fully Accredited Member of American and Southern Associations of Colleges and on Approved List of Association of American Universities and American Association of University Women Faculty: Christian in Character. Scholarship and Experience equal to any. Courses of study complete and liberal, leading to degrees of A.B., B.S.; work in Languages, History, Science, etc., leading to Medicine, Law, Engineering, Teaching, Ministry, Business, 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 130 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 FOOD AS WELL AS DRINK BOTTLED CARBONATED BEVERAGES c J Jylanufactured by BUFFALO ROCK COMPANY COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. NEHI BOTTLING COMPANY ORANGE CRUSH BOTTLING CO. DR. PEPPER BOTTLING CO. ROLLER CHAMPION The Flour the Best Cooks Use COSBY-HODGES MILLING COMPANY GOOD CLOTHES BLACH ' S PANSY BACON You Can Almost See the Flavor Alabama Packing Co. BIRMINGHAM, ALA. eSmblem Sfficienl School INSURANCE FOR LIFE Today the young man and young woman, because of his college training, reahzes the need for and appreciates the value of a thorough knowledge of business practices. His broader vision permits him to see the wisdom of investing time, brains, and money in a training which will pay him monthly dividends from the time of graduation, as well as assure his future advancement. In other words, the well- educated, far-seeing, wide-awake young person of today rightly in- terprets a modern business training as insurance for life. X WHEELER BUSINESS COLLEGE ELEVATOR ENTRANCE 1911 FIRST AVENUE BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA 48th Y ear Sessions Day ana Night Scientifcdlly Correct Lighting Makes Studying Easier! Bottom of shade about 19 ' ■ inches above the table level to throw light over entire surface of desk or table. Glass diffuser, which throws softened light downward and reflects light upward to elim- inate sharp contrasts of bright spots and shadows. Shade has great reflecting value to give you most light where you want it. The new I. E. S. Reading and Study Lamp is designed to make all close- seeing tasks easier and to eliminate eyestrain. Your eyes are your most valuable possession — protect them! BIRMINGHAM ELECTRIC COMPANY BIRMINGHAM ENSLEY BESSEMER Yielding Brotkers Co. WE CARRY A FULL LINE OF MEN ' S AND YOUTH ' S CLOTHING SECOND AVENUE AT TWENTY-SECOND STREET Compliments of JOE WATKINS BOB WOLFORD ODUM CLOTHING CO. 2073 THIRD AVENUE, NORTH WALTER BURSON 25 Years ' Experience BURSON GUN AND KEY CO. Umbrellas and Luggage Repaired We Repair Anything Phone 3-3645 1923 Fourth Ave, N. INDEPENDENT PRODUCE COMPANY Wholesale Produce and Commission Merchants BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA 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. C 9 GULF STATES STEEL COMPANY Brown-Marx Building BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Pig Iron Billets Slabs Wire Rods Bars Angles Welding Rods Plates — Sheared and Universal Sheets — Black, Blue, Annealed and Galvanized Wire Rods, Straightened and Cut Woven Wire Fence Staples Nails (all kinds) Bale Ties Fence Posts Bright and Annealed Wire Galvanized Wire Barbed Wire HOTEL REDMONT BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA ■ 250 ROOMS ALL WITH BATHS ■ FREE RADIO IN EVERY ROOM ■ AIR CONDITIONED COFFEE SHOP ■ FRANK PETE WOODS, Manager A. P. REICH, Director CAHEEN ' S THE SIGN OF QUALITY It ' s Style-Right and Quality-Perfect If It Came From CAHEEN ' S lit-,: ' ' 1 ' — ' n 1 t ' - ri [ iu. ill ' ' 1 1 i -J| m - WZS. T=3i 1 te% w 1 REMEMBER THE NAME PERFECTION THE NEXT TIME YOU INVEST IN REST BEDS d MATTRESSES SPRINGS City and County Officials Who Are Whole -Heart ■ edly Behind Birmingham-Southern OSA L. ANDREWS Clerk of Circuit Court W. T. HAMILTON Tax Collector FRED H. McDUFF Sheriff County Commissioners W. D. WASH BISHOP President W. A. DICKSON R. E. BOB SMITH City Commissioners JIMMIE M. JONES President W. O. DOWNS LEWEY ROBINSON E. E. McCOMBS Chief Deputy LUTHER HOLLUMS Chief of Police EUGENE HENRY Commission of Licenses MERCER H. WILSON Mr. Wilson has been acknowledged by the International Photographers ' Association of America as one of the twenty-five best photographers in the United States. Mr. Wilson has had the pleasure of photographing the Birminghatn-Southern Beauties for the 1935 La Revue HE IS NOW LOCATED AT SPIVY JOHNSON ART AND FRAME COMPANY 1922 N. Fourth Avenue Telephone 3-5061 HILL GROCERY COMPANY A STORE NEAR YOU COMPLIMENTS OF FRED S. JONES CO. 1901 Eleventh Avenue, South Five Points ICE CREAM, CAKES SALADS PHONE 3-1233 WE DELIVER TEN YEARS ' CONTINUOUS SERVICE BY Molloy Made and Smitk Crafted Covers On the La Revue Tells Its Own Story Write for Injormation and Prices to THE DAVID J. MOLLOY PLANT 2857 N. WESTERN AVENUE CHICAGO, ILLINOIS THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA CAPITAL AND SURPLUS $10,000,000.00 LOVEMAN. JOSEPH LOEB THE STORE FOR COLLEGE MEN AND WOMEN RED DIAMOND COFFEE FOR FINER FLAVOR COMPLIMENTS OF CITY PAPER CO. For Y our Convert? ence 735 Eighth Avenues, West O. W. ALLEN, Manager GET THIS MULTIGRAPHIC ADVERTISING CO. PRINTING Selling is Telling SAVE MONEY Quality, Service FELIX B. LEFTWICH, Manager 2020 4th Ave., North MULTIGRAPHING MIMEOGRAPHING MAILING TYPING Photie 3-0310 VISIT Our Sporting Goods Dept. Everything for Every Sport Wimberly and Tkomas Hamw are Co. 2011 FIRST AVENUE, NORTH COMPLIMENTS OF A FRIEND JOE ALOIA COMPLIMENTS OF ALOIA STUDIO 3108 No. 27th St. Phone 3-2621 PHOTOGRAPHER OF THE 1934-35 LA REVUE c J Thanking every student and the faculty for their patronage, we hope to have the pleasure of serving you in the future. BOOKKEEPING CIVIL SERVICE SHORTHAND OUR RECORD Every Graduate in a Position. Over 600 Students Enrolled Last Year. The Only Business College in the State With a Unit or 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. Business Men Recognize the Superior Training of Our Students. TYPEWRITING HIGHER ACCOUNTING SECRETARIAL SLACK FLOWER SHOP The Home of Beautiful Flowers 2006 THIRD AVENUE, NORTH WATTS BUILDING BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA DIAL 3-6119 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 PRESIDENT ' S HOME PHILIPS LIBRARY ANDREWS HALL There ' s Only One Genuine BRILLIANT COAL Only 2% Ash — Leaves No Clinkers LUMP, EGG, WASHED NUT AND STOKER Produced Exclusively by BRILLIANT COAL COMPANY BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA CORSAGES DESIGNS BOUQUETS CUT FLOWERS DECORATIONS TUTWILER FLOWER SHOP IN TUTWILER HOTEL LOBBY Phone 3-9747 We Telegraph Flowers to All Points THIS BOOK PRINTED BY. The world ' s LARGEST PUBLISHERS OF COLLEGE ANNUALS ENSOrJ ' IPRINTING CO.] NASHVILLE TENN COLLEGE ANNUAL HEADOtUARTERS brighi page sj j.11 Wts ? -£ that rcflGct those happy, carefree days has been our goal X J. A COLLCCL ANNUAL DIVI ION «■■ •♦ ■♦- CO.M PA.N4V BIRHiS,!CHAM  I N THE H E ART OF T t-I E ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ S O UTH ' ATLANTA-SOUTHERN DENTAL COLLEGE ATLANTA, GEORGIA FOUR-YEAR COURSE, LEADING TO THE D.D.S. DEGREE Modern Buildings and Equipment Ample Clinical Facilities Entrance Requirements One Year of College Work Or - ' Session Opens October First Cf-S For Catalogue and Information Write RALPH R. BYRNES. D.D.S., F.A.C.D. Dean apitetkLH.a i icw . For those snapshots of your college life, whether friends, political allies (or foes), Profs., Deans and what nots, the following pages will prove quite useful. A little paste and your treasured kodaks become a part of the annual. K • O • D • ft • K K • O • D • fl • K K • O • D • A • K K • O • D • A • K • S K • O • D • A • K • S K • O • D • A • K • S Li dii-i A rit OF BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN COLLEGE r


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Birmingham Southern College - Southern Accent Yearbook (Birmingham, AL) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 1

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Birmingham Southern College - Southern Accent Yearbook (Birmingham, AL) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 1

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Birmingham Southern College - Southern Accent Yearbook (Birmingham, AL) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 1

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Birmingham Southern College - Southern Accent Yearbook (Birmingham, AL) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

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Birmingham Southern College - Southern Accent Yearbook (Birmingham, AL) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

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Birmingham Southern College - Southern Accent Yearbook (Birmingham, AL) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

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