Birmingham Southern College - Southern Accent Yearbook (Birmingham, AL) - Class of 1936 Page 1 of 212
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- ' ,: ■' ■■■SJtcTi LIBRARY. Of aiRMINGHAivl SOUTHERN COLLEGE ;• M tL t kteJi NINETEEN HUNDRED THIRTY-SIX PENELOPE PREWITT, EDITOR-IN-CHIEF EVELYN WALTON, BUSINESS MANAGER ■' :.:.■. ' ' ■' ■■.■■' . ' •■■' ■.■:■■■' ■■.. ' .■' ■■■■' ■■WE, THE STUDENTS OF BIRMINGHAM-SOUTH- ERN COLLEGE, LOCATED IN BIRMINGHAM, ALA- BAMA, PRESENT THE SEVENTEENTH VOLUME OF OUR YEAR BOOK, evue DEDICATION -o DR. JAMES E. BATHURST, WHO STANDS HIGH ON THE HILLTOP AND WHOSE FRIENDLY PERSONALITY HAS ENDEARED HIM TO ALL, THIS ANNUAL IS PROUDLY DEDICATED POSSESSED OF A KEEN, DISCRIMINATING INSIGHT, PATIENT, SYMPATHETIC UNDERSTAND- ING, AND A MIND ACUTELY RESPON- SIVE TO STUDENT PROBLEMS, HE HAS WON OUR DEEPEST ADMIRATION. I - . ' - ' :; ;..;, ¥?; ,-. |: v,, ., ; ;. : i , OPl lllti 7 OVERLOOKING BIRMINGHAM FROM A CAMPUS OF 125 ACRES, BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN STANDS AS ONE OF THE SHOWPLACES OF A GREAT CITY ... A PICTURE OF WOOD- LAND BEAUTY IN AN URBAN SETTING . . . ETCHED FOREVER IN THE HEARTS OF HER STUDENTS AS WELL AS PRESERVED IN THESE ENGRAVINGS. HERE WE ARE LOOKING UP THE HILLTOP AT BEAUTIFUL MUNGER MEMORIAL. mMPMp WBKWMl. 1 ■■■, .■' 0 s r M,K£C. X,e eatx EIGHTY YEARS OLD THIS SPRING, BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN COLLEGE (FORMERLY BIRMINGHAM COLLEGE AND SOUTH- ERN UNIVERSITY AT GREENSBORO) HAS AN ENVIABLE REC- ORD OF ACHIEVEMENT — A RICH LEGACY WHICH THE CLASSES OF TODAY BEOUEATH TO THE CLASSES OF TO- MORROW. ON THE RIGHT IS THE GEORGIAN COLONIAL HOME OF PRESIDENT SNAVELY. V s- X V 1 v .i % Wb mn nj«i : r c e THE STAFF HAS ENDEAVORED TO PRESENT INFORMALLY AN ACCURATE PICTORIAL RECORD OF THE ACTIVITIES AND ACHIEVEMENTS OF BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN COLLEGE DUR- ING THE YEAR 1935-36. IT IS HOPED THAT MANY PLEASANT MEMORIES WILL BE STIRRED AS THE READER TURNS THE PAGES OF THE VARIOUS SECTIONS. AMONG THE BEAUTY SPOTS TO BE REMEMBERED IS THE M. PAUL PHILLIPS LIBRARY. SHOWN ON THE RIGHT. wm M Bmw wMWMMSMMWBXMMMMi C °, JO-O ■ ' V , BOB ...,, .s«« esC BiBr ' Dr. BD«W ' rat ulate you «•  ' Deal ur. cote 1 ? Clrttioay . ., of 1 am e 3 ?y tto  C 8 ° l0O e for £ T MB ,j P £_ « -srjsi -5JSS .-rsssrc-s a e «a facultV this co « tw you ° t  J lV! i - nai x ° He3 oi u ' a ini«6 • t0 note - u „.Tious a s !.Too uon iso sUi« consP . cb no t « your ,_ T.ie. ..tension ei r.. D rese the ii ° a«flntaf- „f our c -t ,d WW y °f , 1 fcT ■R you o, vour-f v, «U« ls0 cougraWla  t it « .ttfiH co rpora« n a e l otU- ••••• B «..r. C E iory 0l , tt cu Lite tit JAMES MARION JONES, JR., BETTER KNOWN AS JIMMY JONES, IS A NATIVE OF ALABAMA, AND IS SERVING HIS THIRD CONSECUTIVE FOUR-YEAR TERM AS PRESIDENT OF THE BIRMINGHAM CITY COMMISSION. HE IS, THEREFORE, IN A POSITION TO KNOW WHAT BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN COLLEGE MEANS TO HIS CITY. ONE OF THE MANY REA- SONS FOR HIS ENTHUSIASM IS SHOWN ON THE RIGHT— STOCKHAM WOMAN ' S BUILDING. r£ . • ' ., ' ■..••. ' ; ' •,;-? ' JinumMati an THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES OFFICERS Mrs. W. O. V. Calhoun Vice-President Edgar M . Glenn Secretary Fred M. Jackson W. A. Pattillo Assistant Treasurer EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Robert Echols Claude Orear 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 LIBRARY OF I1RN11N0HU1-S0UIHEBH COLLEGE it V GUY EVERETT S N A V E L Y A.B., John Hopkins University . . . Ph.D., John Hopkins Uni- versity . . . LL.D., Emory Univer- sity . . . Litt.D., Southern College. SALUTE CUR PRESIDENT % uring the past fifteen years Birmingham-Southern Col- lege has been under the wise leadership of Dr. Guy Everett Snavely, a President whose capabilities seem unlimited, whose resources seem inexhaustible, and whose spiritual and intellectual standards have been a true inspiration to every student. czn t Ithough Dr. Snavely has been accorded international recognition on many occasions, and although the list of honors bestowed upon him in civic, state and national affairs, as well as in cultural fields, is a most lengthy one, it is his personal interest in his students and the numerous benefits which he has secured for them which make him such a beloved and ideal President. WYATT WALKER HALE .S.. M.A., ED.D. DEAN AND REGISTRAR Birmingham-Southern students are proud of the fact that their Dean is an alumnus of their own Alma Mater. • Graduating magna cum laude in 1923, he has been an important factor in Birmingham-Southern ' s progress for the past thirteen years, serving as secretary to the president, registrar, alumni secretary, acting Director of Extension, Vice-President and Professor of Education. He shouldered the responsibilities of Dean in 1933, and the stu- dents have found in him a real friend, one who is close enough to campus affairs to have a sympathetic comprehension of their daily problems. Dean Hale is a member of Omi- cron Delta Kappa, Kappa Phi Kappa, Beta Beta Beta, Sigma Upsilon, Tau Kappa Alpha, Theta Chi Delta, Phi Delta Kappa, Chi Chi, and the American Association of Collegiate Registrars. EOLINE WALLACE MOORE DEAN OF WOMEN A.B., A.M., PH.D. Dr. Eoline Wallace Moore, Dean of Women, has been the guiding spirit of the women stu- dents since 1929. She has the exacting responsibilities of directing the social activities of the college as well as serving as general adviser to the women students, helping them to become ad- justed to new contacts, promoting their participation in campus activities, and developing their love of the ideals and traditions of their Alma Mater. • Dr. Moore is also Professor of Education and the author of numerous articles appearing in educational journals. A keen observer, she has spent several vacations in the principal countries of Europe and the Near East, gathering new material for her writings. • She is included in Who ' s Who in American Education, holds honorary membership in Mortar Board, and is an active memb3r of Kappa Delta Epsilon, Delta Kappa Gamma, Business and Professional Women, the Altrusa Club, and the American Association of University Women. Wilbur Dow Perry A.B., A.M., Litt.D. Mary Collet Hunger Professor of English George Washington Currie . . A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Latin and Greek Wesley Adolphus Moore . . . A.B., A.M., LL.D. Professor of Mathematics Austin Prodoehl A.B., Ph.D. Professor of German and Philosophy William Alonzo Whiting B.S., Ph.D. Professor of Biology James Horace Coulliette A.B., A.M. Professor of Physics Russell Spurgeon Poor .... B.S., M.S., Ph.D. Professor of Geology Antony Constans . B.es Lettres, B.en Droi t, Ph.D. Professor of French and Italian Ernest Victor Jones .... A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Chemistry Emory Quinter Hawk A.B., Ph.D. Professor of Economies and Business Marion Lofton Smith . . A.B., B.D., A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Bible and Religion James E. Bathurst A.B., Ph.D. Professor of Education and Psychology Lillian Gregory A.B. Librarian James Saxon Guilders .... A.B., M.A., B.A. Professor of English Charles D. Matthews .... A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Professor of Religion Walter Brownlow Posey . Ph.B.,LL.B., A.M., Ph.D. Professor of History Marsee Fred Evans . . . A.B., A.M., B.D., Ph.D. Professor of Speech Henry Thomas Shanks .... A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Professor of History Douglas Lucas Hunt Ph.B., M.A. Associate Professor of English OF THE FACULTY Robert Stanley Whitehouse A.B. Associate Professor of Modern Languages John Milton Malone A.B., A.M. Associate Professor of Education Andrew Hemphill Southwestern Director of Music Thomas Finley Debnam B.S., M.S. Associate Professor of Economics Richebourc G. McWilliams . . A.B., A.M., A.M. Associate Professor of English Hiran Benjamin Englebert A.B. Director of Athletics Leon Sensabaugh A.B., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of History Barbara Ranson B.S., A.M. Assistant Professor of Physical Education Harry Earl McNeel B.Ph., A.M. Assistant Professor of Spanish Dorothy Harmer A.B., B.A., M.A. Jennings Frederick Gillem . Univ. of the South Assistant Athletic Director Georce Joseph Fertig B.S., M.A. Lecturer in Chemistry Irving Rock Obenchain .... A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Instructor in Education Ernest Henderson . . Chicago Acad, of Fine Arts Instructor in Art Shepherd Vincent Townsend Birmingham-Southern College Instructor in Journalism Lex Fullbright A.B. Assistant Director of Physical Education Isabel Sexton A.B. Instructor in English William Tilden Hammond A.B., A.M. Assistant Professor of Romance Languages William Ellis Glenn A.B., A.M. Assistant Professor of Mathematics Perry Wilson Woodham B.S., A.M. Assistant Bursar and Lecturer in Economics Egbert Sydnor Ownbey . . . A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of English Benjamin Franklin Clark B.S., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Chemistry Hubert Searcy A.B., A.M. Paul Robinson Sweet A.B., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of History William Stanley Hoole . . . A.B., A.M., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of English Joshua Paul Reynolds .... B.S., M.S., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Biology Paul Walbert Shankweiler . Ph.B., M.A., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Sociology Theodore Rogers Wright A.B., A.M. Instructor in Geography Sarah McCarty A.B. Lecturer in Biology Wynelle Dogcett B.S. Instructor in Chemistry L. R. Hanna LL.B. Lecturer in Economics Ervin Jackson Lecturer in Econon Augusta Sledge A.B., A.M. Lecturer in Sociology DORSEY WHITINGTON . . . . Damrosch Institution of Musical Arts Director of Birmingham Conservatory of Music Dolores Rodriguez A.B., D.Ped. Instructor in Spanish Louis Justine Yelanjian B.D. Birmingham-Southern College Instructor in Religion LIBRARY OF BIRfMGH -SOOTHERH G0LLE06 OFF THE RECORD Informal moments with members of the faculty riding their hobbies: Gardening is Dr. Whiting ' s chief recreation and drying dishes is something Dr. Bathurs ' would rather do than wash them. Dr. Ownbey is really that studious, evident- ly enjoying Shakespeare, and — Marsee! That ' s Dr. Evans standing on his head — a new angle in speech. Reading the Master Detective is Voice Teacher Dr. Hemphill. On the second row we see Dr. Perry, a tennis shark (what, no ten- nis shoes!) Coach Englebert a golf ad- dict. Next we have our Novelist-Globe- Trotting ■English - Prof. James Saxon Childers on a bird hunt. More dogs with Professor Hunt, whose English bulls don ' t have a thing to do with his de- partment. And Student Jessie Cart- wright with her famous uncle, E. Q. Hawk, eminent horseshoe pitcher. Third row: Dr. Poor, genial geologist, in his field uniform; Bursar Yielding dishing out some of his own chicken feed, and Dr. Currie sculpturing a plaque. And now, shsh! But that ' s all right, they ' re all awake: Dr. Posey, Dr. Hoole and Dr. Shankweiler are the three fond fathers. Page 24 WITH THE FACULTY Continuing our picto-analyses of the faculty, we see Dr. Constans demonstrat- ing Archimedes ' principle of the lever. The scientific Dr. Clark, however, goes completely omniverous, ice cream cones being his specialty. Spanish Professor McNeel tunes up with a Spinach fork while French Teacher Hammond picks his mandolin. Next, Prof. Moore wa- tering his favorite hibiscus bush. Be- ginning the second row, we see Profes- sor McWilliams (right) with Alumnus M. C. Huntley and a string of fish. You ' re now looking at the youthful Dr. J. Paul Reynolds, whose hobby is sing- ing. Wynelle Doggett comes along to brighten the page. Next, Prof. Huber Searcy, a newly-wed, showing how a new broom sweeps. Our tall fr ' .end is Prof. Coulliette looking for the birdie in physics. The booming voice of Prof. W hitehouse can ' t be heard, but it ' s down there in his larynx. Miss Ransom, girls ' gym teacher, who smiles for La Revue. Prof. Malone at work . . . too busy to go fishing. Last row, Mr. Woodfa his adding machine . . . Dr. Matthews putting a Palestinian touch to his lawn and Dr. Sweet smiling appropriately. McCOY PATTERSON President of the Student Body SM embers First Row: Patterson. Myrick, McNeill, Coope Edwards. Second Row: Howard, Clem, Schroeder, Ford, Walton. Ike S T U D E N T Membership of the Student Senate, governing group for men students, is composed of five representatives from the upper division, four from the lower division, and the president of the student body who presides over the Senate. In order to be eligible for membership, a candidate must have attained an honor point ratio of i for the preceding semester and must be approved by the Board of Nominations. The Board of Nominations, whose duty it is to approve or reject candidates for the Senate, Co-ed Council and other campus offices, is composed of the College President, the Dean, President of the Student Body, President of the Co-ed Coun- cil, President of Omicron Delta Kappa, President of Mortar Board, and one faculty member who is chosen by the Senate. The duties of the Senate are to aid in the preservation of the customs and traditions of the college, to assist in the orientation and adjustment of men students, and direct the government and regulate the conduct of men students. A loving cup is awarded annually by the Senate to the male student who has rendered the greatest service to Bir- mingham-Southern during his college career. The present members of the Senate are: McCoy Patterson, president; Rob McNeill, vice-president; Ed Cooper, Paul Clem, James Howard, James Allen, who succeeded Conrad Myrick, a February graduate, John Schroeder, Jim Ford, Bill Edwards and Morris Walton. EN ATE a vl CO-ED € U N The Co-ed Council, governing body for women students, is composed of ten members, six from the upper division and four from the lower. The Council has the same duties in regard to the women students as the Senate has towards the men, and it also has the same election requirements excepting the honor point ratio, which is 1.5. During the past year the Council has sponsored the At Home teas in Stockham Woman ' s Building on Sunday after- noons to which the entire student body, faculty and friends of the college are invited. Celebration of May Day with a colorful pageant and the customary festivities was another activity of the Council in addition to the regular duties of orientation week each semester, regulation and supervision of the conduct of the women students. The Council awards a loving cup each year to the senior co-ed who, in the opinion of the faculty, has accomplished the most good for her Alma Mater. Members of the Co-ed Council are: Penelope Prewitt, president; Gene McCoy, vice-president; Vera Meagher, secre- tary; Sara Dominick, treasurer; Kathryn Ivey, Loudel Gar- rett, Evelyn Walton, Hal Fleming, Sara Griffith, and Mary Knox. SM em b er s Second Rov: Walton, Ivey, Knox, Griffith, Fleming. cAlnia SVIater On the city ' s western border, Reared against the sky, Proudly stands our Alma Mater, As the years go by. chorus: Forward ever, be our watchword; Conquer and prevail, Hail to thee, our Alma Mater! Birmingham, all hail! Cherished by thy sons forever, Mem ' ries sweet shall throng Round our hearts our Alma Mater As we sing our song. BIBMGHmGUTeiTGOUEGt 1 OFFICERS Tom Braly President Felix Robb Vice-President Vera Meagher Secretary Robert Montgomery Treasurer SEN O R S R M I N G H A M SENIOR CLASS Page 30 u H N FIRST ROW HOYT ABERNATHY, II K A « Although Hoyt came from Fayette to Southern for the express purpose of getting an A.B. in Economics, his activities suggest everything from grand opera to and through diplomacy. For he was a member of the Glee Club, Belles Lettres, Y. M. C. A., Debate Team, Theta Sigma Lambda, and the International Relations Club. THOMAS BRALY, JR. • Hail the President— of the senior class! Tom ( Buddy, if you live in the dormitory) was not satisfied with combining good looks and scholarship, but brought in athletics as well. Baseball and basketball four years, being alternate captain of varsity basketball and baseball; member of the Athletic Committee of ' 35 and ' 36; Omicron Delta Kappa. From Russelville, famous for its oolitic limestone, Dr. Poor. HERBERT ACTON, II K A • The thing about Herbert which intrigued us most was the magnificent cake in his pipe, (so sayeth one of the male contribs). This, along with his plus fours and drawl, made him a marked man whether on the golf course, campus, race track or tennis court. Next to the cake in his pipe, he probably considered his greatest accom- plishment being manager of the untied, undefeated Panther football team of 1934. Golf team. Glee Club. ELBERT SOULE BUTTERLY 9 Elbert was president of the Ministerial Association during his senior year. He is easily recognized by his basso profundo, and was credited with being one of the half-mile fire-alarm sprinters of ye Yuletide fire. However, he says that his act of heroism was only a newspaper man ' s pipe dream . . . dreamt after his belated departure to Memphis for the Youth Conference . . . and that his only con- tribution was his personal wardrobe! Mobile. MARY ANTHONY, Z T A • When one thinks of Mary, one thinks of the quiet dignity and poise which she possesses. Besides keeping her name perpetually on the honor roll, she took an active part in the Y. W. C. A., Belles Lettres and Paint and Patches, in which she made her last appearance, figuratively if not literally, when she fell on the ice in the snow of December. HERBERT J. BAUM, JR. « With Herbert ' s advent on the Hilltop, he entered into activities with such energy and willing- ness to help that he received more than his share of honors. Was president of Theta Sigma Lambda, co-captain of the swimming team, business manager of Paint and Patches, and member of the Debate Team, International Relations Club, Kappa Phi Kappa and Tau Kappa Alpha. SECOND ROW BERTHA BEST • Bertha, pretty protector of the Informa- tion Office, has about anything you might want, from telephones, lost articles, found articles, apples and peanuts, to good looks and brains. Whatever you want to know, go to Bertha, for she knows Best. In between telephone calls, she acted as vice- president of the Glee Club in ' 35, secretary of Kappa Delta Epsilon, was a member of La Revue staff of ' 36, and made the honor roll regularly. MARIE BOOZER • What ' s in a name? Nothing, says Miss Boozer of Sweet Water. And now, to get on with the story: Marie has the distinction of being the only red-headed co-ed in the senior class. She is also distinguished for bolting the party — that is, she tried Alabama College for a couple of semesters, but came back in time to get her sheepskin at South- ern. Member of Tau Tau Tau, Y. W. C. A. and Clariosophic Literary Society. THIRD ROW ROI3ERT HART CHAPPELL, IT K A a Robert was on • of our mighty men bobbing around Science Hall. He was president of his sophomore class, a student senator for a year, a track man in ' 32, a member of Beta Beta Beta, Theta Chi Delta, Skull and Bones and Clariosophic, as well as an in- structor in lab. He ' s tall, dark and handsome, and many of the co-eds seemed to think there should be an e in his middle name. BONNIE BRYANT COFIELD, 9 K N • B. B. was famed on the campus for his very friendly smile. His easy-going per- sonality belied his whiz-bang ability at ambulance driving. He was a member of the Clariosophic Literary Society, Ministerial Association, and sauntered up from Roanoke. SAMUEL COHN • Sammy, our little Einstein, was another of those distinguished looking studes who could always be found around Science Hall. For two years he was president of Skull and Bones, bringing it up to be one of the most active and prominent organizations on the Hilltop. He was also a member of Beta Beta Beta, the Glee Club, and the very good but not so well-known Singing Scientific Syncopators. ROBERT DANE COOK • Robert came from Dixiana to prepare himself for the ministry. Because of his ministerial activities outside of the college, he could not attend the meet- ings of the Ministerial Association, so he helped to organize the Pastors ' Union for all such as he, and was elected its first president. Page 31 M N H M E N I O R LAS Page 32 H N FIRST ROW ANNE COONEV, A X fi • A winning way, a pleasant smile, dressed so neat but quite in style, Little Annie Rooney — pardon, Cooney — is all that. Brown eyes. One of the prettiest girls on the campus. However, between h?r work at the North Birmingham Library and in Science Hall, she did not have much time for campus courses. SELMA DALE DURHAM, r B « Spud, in this case, is the berries, not the potatoes. Now, if she were a tuber of a different variety, we ' d call her Sweet, not that she isn ' t, for she is, if you get what we mean. Singularly attractive, and, as might be surmised, widely cultivated. Elected Miss Bir- mingham-Southern in 1934 and will be remembered as the most musical girl of the Class of ' 36, being a member of the Glee Club and the Hilltop Trio, as well as the regular chapel piano player. From Gadsden. WILLIAM E. COURTNEY • It has been difficult to keep up with this student: Auburn a year, out a year, here a year, and so on, off again, on again, Finnegnn. At this writing he ' s teaching in Henry County High, at Headland, which indicates that he ' s gotten ahead of himself somewhere along the route. Remembered as a diligent worker. Home town, Fulton. MARY JULIA ECHOLS o Always willing to help her groping college mates, Julia will be remembered for her friendly smile and cheerful help in the library. She was a member of the library staff, the Clariosophic Literary Society, a delegate to the Auburn Conference and an active worker in the McCoy Memorial Church of which her father is pastor. AUBREY CRAWFORD, 6 K N e Stuffy is small, dark and very handsome, and had there been a male beauty con- test, he would surely have been one of the winners. Very mus- ical, as evidenced by the patch which he wore en his chin dur- ing his junior year . . . occasioned by excessive fiddling. Member of the orchestra, of course; also, Glee Club. President of Mu Alpha. THERESA ELLEN DAVENPORT, V B • Theresa is one of the celebrities of the senior class, and we wonder when we see her walking around the Quadrangle if her stylish clothes have any connection with the fact that she spent her junior year studying in France. She was the gavel-wielder of Gamma Phi Beta, a member of Belles Lettres, Le Cercle Fran- cais, Paint and Patches, La Revue staff of ' 36, and Kappa Delta Epsilon and Phi Sigma Iota, honor societies. SECOND ROW WOODFORD WYNDHAM DINNING, A T • Though not so big, Woof- Woof was certainly mighty enough to hold his own against any of the A. T. O. Iron Cross Men. If you ever sorta slipped up on Woodford you would probably hear him whistling or singing. Besides brawn, Woodford has brains, as shown by his grades and his election to Pi Gamma Mu, honor social science fraternity. Vice-president of his sophomore class. THIRD ROW WENDELL EDWARDS e Wendell h the type of fellow one must know well to appreciate. His quiet diligence and natural ability made him one of our best science students. Many of you will remember him for his work in the library. He was also a member of Kappa Phi Kappa, Theta Sigma Lambda, and wended his way from Marion. MARY ANGLIN ENSLEN • Mary is another feminine scientist and a good one, too, being a member of Beta Beta Beta and also head biology lab instructor. Aside from being scientific, she is domestic, musical, attractive, and remarkable for her versatility and originality. Mary was a Glee Club songster, a member of the Y. W. C. A., Alpha Gamma, Kappa Delta Epsilon and Belles Lettres, serving as vice-president in ' 3i- ' 32- KATHLEEN EZELL o Kathleen wants to be a social wel- fare worker (despite, or because of the New Deal, depending on whether you are a Democrat, Republican, or just plain For- gotten Man). Majored in Sociology. Member of Tau Tau Tau, Glee Club and Clariosophic Literary Society. GILBERT F. DOUGLAS, JR. • Gilbert spent most of his time between Science Hall and his trombone. However, he managed to find time in his career of pre-med to make the fencing team, the band, orchestra, Y Cabinet, Beta Beta Beta, and Skull and Bones. Another Dr. Douglas coming along as sure as you live. CURTIS FINCH, A T O n Curtis spent most of his college career alternating between Auburn and Southern. He came to Southern as a freshman, went back to Auburn the next year; but at Auburn they cut off his hair, so he came back to Southern to finish. He was a member of the International Relations Club, Spanish Club, La Revue staff in ' 32 and the Political Club. M N H M SENIOR CLASS H N FIRST ROW IDALENE FULLER, A O n c Whenever Idalene ' s name is spoken, it brings to mind the picture of an ambitious and ener- getic student. Her honors were many and varied, including election to Mortar Board, and membership in Phi Sigma Iota, Paint and Patches, Le Cercle Francais, Co-Ed Council in ' 34 and the Glee Club. JAMES GARRETT, K N • James, better known as Tunney, is a by-product of West End and is what we might call a real sport. His unfailing good humor made friends for him of every one he met. He was a member of La Sociedad Castellano, La Revue staff in ' 36 and served as secretary of the Interfraternity Council. TOLBERT GILL GRIFFIN • Tall, blond, efficient, very smart, quiet and lots of fun, is the way we would describe Tol- bert. Mortar Board, Kappa Delta Epsilon, Beta Beta Beta, Theta Sigma Lambda, Treasurer Y. W. C. A., Glee Club, La Revue staff, ' 36. . . .Distinctions which speak for themselves. One of Bessemer ' s sweetest contributions to Southern. JOHN BOWEN HAMILTON • One of the most pleasant memories many of us will take from the Hilltop is that of John B. ' s rendition of Flow Gently Sweet Afton to the ac- companiment o f Hugh Thomas. It doesn ' t really matter what else he did, but for the sake of the record: Member of the Glee Club, Glee Club Quartet, the Orchestra, Mu Alpha, and — let ' s see — Pi Gamma Mu, Le Cercle Francais, tennis team and Kappa Phi Kappa, Honor Roll. MARY GASSMAN, A X Q • Here ' s a girl to our own lik- ing, serious but jolly, as paradoxical as this may seem. Her appreciation of a joke and laughing manner were outstanding characteristics. Finished in three years! Artistic as well as smart, one example being her note books, which were models of hand-printing. President of Clariosophic Literary Society in ' 36, and member of Phi Sigma Iota and Tau Tau Tau. CLAUDE GHOLSTON, 9 K N • Step right up, ladies and gentlemen, and see the one and only walking, living, breathing song sheet. Sees all, hears all, knows all — the words to those popular songs you ' ve always wanted to sing . . . like a clair- voyant. Well, some are famous for one thing, some another. Other achievements: La Sociedad Castellano, the International Relations Club, and Gold and Black and La Revue in ' 33. THIRD ROW JANE HARALSON, Z T A • The president of the Pan- Hellenic Council and of the Zetas is a little girl of many charming attributes. Besides having personality plus, she is an attractive blue-eyed brunette and is considered the epitome of what the well-dressed young co-ed should wear. Jane was also a member of Paint and Patches, Belles Lettres, Y. W. C. A., the Amazons and La Revue staff of ' 36. OWEN HOPE • Owen ' s remarkable fortitude in conducting services at four churches at once during his senior year, every week, makes us feel that he should be, not Owen Hope, but very hopeful indeed. His classmates hope that his diligence and determination will carry him to success in life as they have at Southern. SECOND ROW CHARLOTTE ANTOINETTE GREEN • If you attended chapel much at all this year, you knew Charlotte as a student who was very enthusiastic and energetic — especially where the Memphis Conference was concerned. A very busy person, too, serving as Dean Moore ' s secretary in addition to being president of Tau Tau Tau and a member of the Y. W. Cabinet. Other honors: Glee Club, Clariosophic, Religious Council and a dele- gate to the Auburn and Memphis conferences. AMY FRANCES HOWELL, A X 9. • It is amazing that anyone could be so invariably, so unfailingly, so habitually congenial as we have known Amy to be during her four years at Southern. It may be her infectious laugh that accounts for her popularity, and then it may be just Amy, which explan ation we think more likely. She was a member of Le Cercle Fran- cais, Kappa Delta Epsilon, Phi Sigma Iota, La Revue staff of ' 36, and she adores jonquils. PEGGY GREENE • On her birth certificate it ' s Emma No- rene Greene, with a final e , but in Monsieur LeClercq ' s Con- versational French, it is Peg o ' My Heart, which, of course, you mustn ' t take too seriously, for Peggy was an excellent French student anyway. Was graduated from Simpson High, and simply stepped up the Hill. Member of Theta Sigma Lambda and the Glee Club, and coached Mathematics on the side. JAMES LEWIS HUGHES, 2 A E • He of the amazingly- curly locks and stupendous list of activities: President of the S. A. E. ' s; president of Kappa Phi Kappa; Omicron Delta Kappa; vice-president of Theta Sigma Lambda; Tau Kappa Alpha; president of Belles Lettres in ' 34; International Rela- tions Club; Interfraternity Council; Paint and Patches; Who ' s Who in American Colleges and Universities; La Revue staff in ' 33; Glee Club; and Varsity Debate Team. Mighty fine, Jim, mighty fine. BIRMINGHAM SEN O R CLASS u H N FIRST ROW COBERN HULLETT • All this stuff about four years ago a very timid freshman entered our portals is out as far as Cobern is concerned, for he entered our halls a very seasoned collegian. His more timid years were spent at Florence State Teachers College. Member of the Ministerial Association and International Relations Club. PAUL LANIER, JR., 9 K X • Paul, Jr., made the headlines in a big way just before Christmas by being two bats of an evelash too slow in a filling station hold-up — and got a bullet in the leg. However, it didn ' t affect his standing — scholastically or otherwise. Besides this heroic role, Paul was secretary of the Student Senate, member of Phi Sigma Iota, Kappa Phi Kappa, and Omicron Delta Kappa. Famous, also, for his Southern drawl. RICHARD HUNT • Collegiately speaking, Richard is a man of parts. Three years at Annapolis, a semester at the Uni- versity of Alabama, and now graduating at Southern! Heave, ho, and a couple of Aye, Aye, sirs, which means he ' s on his way, that is, anchors away. His most publicized accomplish- ments were those in the Birmingham Little Theatre. He is an expert bridge player, red headed, a member of Pi Gamma Mu and Kappa Phi Kappa. Ll ' MAN ORVILLE LAWSON, B K • We should like to set this in some special font of type, in honor of our modern young Johann Gutenberg. For Orville is the only student printer ever to grace the Hilltop . . . with a fully equipped plant of his own in the hasement of his home. Besides printing, Orville was vice-president of the Interfraternity Council, vice-president of Theta Chi Delta, member of Paint and Patches, and president of the Beta Kappas. ELMER C. JOHNSON • But he ' s so carefree-looking to be a preacher. Of course he ' s carefree-loTking. All he has to worry about now is preaching, because he is already married. Elmer, whose home is in Bessemer, came to the Hilltop from Bob Jones College, which he attended his freshman year. He was a member of the Ministerial Association. WILLIAM BULGER JOHNSON, II K A • Many were the sore throats acquired by cheering Football Freddie, alias Chinny, alias Beagle, who will be remembered for his methodical, clear-headed ball-carrying, and keen foresight in executing plays as co-captain of our varsity football team. Some say that he will also be remembered for his accomplish- ments with the ladies, but some of the rest of us can hardly believe this, knowing his bashfulness. He was a member of the Interfraternitv Council. SECOND ROW J. O. JOHNSTON • J. O. made the varsity football team the first time he stepped on the gridiron, but it was his excellent play on the basketball ccurt that made him famous throughout this section. His height, agility and adeptness have long been a winning factor for the Panther quint. J. O. also starred in baseball. The t in his name seemed to supply just the proper amount of power for some heavy stick work. Union Grove, Alabama. JESSIE KELLER, AAA • Always sweet, friendly and un- assuming, Jessie has the distinction of being one of the truly natural beauties of the campus and was elected to the beauty section of the 1935 La Revue. A student of the highest type, too, as shown by her election to Mortar Board, of which she was secretary. She was also treasurer of Le Cercle Francais, member of Phi Sigma Iota and vice-president of Kappa Delta Epsilon. From Cullman . . . Oh, wait! As we close the forms of this book, news comes that she is one of the four senior girls elected to the May Day court. THIRD ROW HENRI GUSTAVE LECLERCQ • Fifty Million French- men Can ' t Be Wrong, but a lot of American newspaper editors are, according to Monsieur LeClercq. For France ' s represent- ative at Birmingham-Southern found his greatest task trying to get the newspapers to spell his name correctly. He taught classes in conversational French. German, and Spanish, and was a member of International Relations Club. Home town, Paris. ELIZABETH LESLIE, e T c She got a ring for Christmas, but he got a bracelet at the Amazon dance, and a bouquet. Elizabeth was president of the only organization on the Hilltop which was capable of making male students stay sweet for several weeks together. When it was announced that the Amazons would have their annual girl-break dance, the boys on the campus underwent a severe sugaring. GEORGE LONDA, X X • The big city boy who made good in the country. George, coming from Newark, a complete stranger four years ago, has taken some of the highest honors on the Hilltop He was a member of Omicron Delta Kappa, Constitution Revision Committee, secretary of Delta Phi Alpha, and editor of both La Revue and Gold and Black in 1935. Seems headed for the Fourth Estate, being employed as a news- hawk at the present moment. MILDRED LONG, F B • There are some whose qualities are never fully appreciated because of an unassuming exterior. Such a girl is Mildred, who served as secretary of Le Francais Cercle, vice-president of the Gamma Phi Betas, and was a member of Paint and Patches. A shark in English. Hrsfe M N H M N I O R H N FIRST ROW FRANK McCOMSEY, 8 K X • The name McComsey some- how makes us think of Tecumseh. Most appropriately, too, when we come to realize that Frank was the big chief of the Theta Kappa Nus this year. He was also vice-president of three other tribes, to-wit: Tau Kappa Alpha, Pi Gamma Mu, and International Relations. Member of Omicron Delta Kappa, Varsity Debate Team, the 1935 parade committee, and Honor Roll. MURRAY WINTERS McENIRY. 2 A E a Were there a law against interlocking directorates at Southern, Murray would be ruled out, for he was president of three organizations during his senior year — Omicron Delta Kappa, Delta Phi Alpha, and Tau Kappa Alpha — after having been president of the S. A. E. ' s. Other honors: Student Senate in ' 33, Paint and Patches (and a good one), Pi Gamma Mu, Y Cabinet, Debate Team, associate editor of 1936 La Revue, Nominations Board and Who ' s Who in American Colleges and Universities. One of the highest I. Q. ' s on campus and an Adonis, too. BRICE McCAY, II K A • Please note the spelling — for once it ' s correct. Poor Brice went through college being someb d else — a guy named Bryce McKay, according to all the news- papers. ' Twouldn ' t have been so bad if he hadn ' t been such a famous person. Oh, well, let ' s hope Who ' s Who in American Colleges and Universities emulates La Revue and gets it righ:. In addition, Brice was co-captain of the 1935 football team, chosen on the All-Dixie Conference eleven, and starred at track and basketball. Oneonta. ROBERT MCNEILL, A T • Here we have a Scotsman who is the philosophical Mr. Student Activity, himself, whose drollness sometimes surprises even the most alert of us. Rob was a member of the varsity basketball team for three years and played freshman footbali. Member of the Student Senate of ' 35, treasurer of Interfraternity Council in ' 34 and vice- president in ' 35; Stunt Night Committee in ' 35; and president of the A. T. O. ' s for two years, to say nothing of being a pros- pective nominee of a prospective male beauty section. tional Relations Club, Pi Gamma Mu, Nominations Board, Glee Club ; assistant lab instructor and head botany instructor in ' 3+, ' 35 and ' 36; Who ' s Who in American Colleges and Universi- ties ; also captured honors in tennis, volley ball and basketball. Vera good, we c alls it. VIRGINIA MILLER, 9 T • Virginia has done so much work in Spanish that she looks almost Spanish. She has taken every Spanish course on the Hilltop, besides making them add a few just for her. Guess it ' s just an old Spanish custom. She was a member of La Sociedad Castellano (vice-president in ' 35), Phi Sigma Iota and Belles Lettres. WILLIAM REDUS MILLER, n K A © Will ' s interest in a French major naturally led to fencing, which he managed, cap- tained and coached for three years. He was president of the Pi K. A. ' s, vice-president of Kappa Phi Kappa, president of Theta Chi Delta, secretary of Theta Sigma Lambda, assistant football manager three years, and member of the Glee Club, freshman basketball team, tennis team of ' 35, and Interfraternity Council. THIRD ROW EBBA LOU MOON • The greatest disappointment Ebba Lou found on the Hilltop was the absence of a course in Home Economics. She dropped out of school for a year (possibly to look for a course in Home Economics), but returned to get her degree this year. She was a member of the Glee Club and the Y. W. C. A. Cabinet. JOHN C. MOSLEY • Since his name is John C, they call him Bill. Queer sort of logic unless you take into consideration how he filled the bill as an athlete (other ways, too, of course). During his freshman year he made the football, basketball, and baseball teams, and later the varsity basketball (two years) and varsity baseball (three years), being captain of the latter in ' 36. From Magnolia Terminal. SECOND ROW SUE MATHISON • Sue had the happy knack of being con- sistent in her classroom work without becoming labeled a book- worm. We can ' t imagine a disposition better suited for a pleasant college career. She has already taught school for three years, one at Ashville, and two at Cleveland. She went to Auburn one summer semester, but came back to Southern to finish. Member of the Clariosophic. ROBERT MONTGOMERY, 2 A E o The registrar ' s office will never be the same after this year, for there was hardly a morning that Bob didn ' t start the day off right by going into the registrar ' s office to sharpen his pencil. He was treasurer of the senior class and the S. A. E. ' s. Yankees who wish to know the meaning of true Southern hospitality should see Bob. VERA IRIS MEAGHER • Vera ' s activities cover the cam- pus from the Simpson building to the S. A. E. house, (figurative- ly speaking) : President of Mortar Board, secretary of Co-Ed Council, secretary of senior class, president of Alpha Gamma, delegate to Youth Conference in ' 35, Y. W. Cabinet, Interna- MARGARET ANNE MOSS • A familiar sight is that of the petite and dainty Anne Moss riding around the campus in her Betsy auto. If you should ever happen to ride with her, don ' t tell any funny jokes or stories, for she is apt to start laugh- ing and run off the road. Anne was a member of Paint and Patches, Kappa Delta Epsilon, and the present La Revue staff. B I M N H M SENIOR CLASS H N FIRST ROW CONRAD MYRICK • It is hard to write about Conrad without tending toward that flattery which has become so stock with the average annual. We probably would employ- such phrases as: lovable character, fine spirit or even handsome, all of which would be true, but instead we simply say: Member of the Ministerial Association, Classical Club, Gold and Black staff in ' 35, La Revue staff in ' 35 and ' 36, Stu- dent Senate in ' 36, Student Volunteers and Omicron Delta Kappa; vice-president of V, Who ' s Who in American Col- leges and Universities. Graduated in February and was im- mediately assigned to a splendid pastorate in the Mobile dis- trict. ELLIS NEWMAN • A student, or perhaps we should put the A in quotes like that. At any rate, it makes a fairly com- plete description of Ellis, if his historical interests are added. Besides studving, he was a member of the International Rela- tions Club and Pi Gamma Mu. Honor roll. KATHRYN PLAN • Dr. Hempill lost one of his most de- pendable cohorts when Kathryn departed these slopes in Feb- ruary; and Tau Tau Tau lost a perennial officer. She held three offices in Tri Tau: president, vice-president, and secretary. She was also a member of the Glee Club and the Y. W. C. A. Cabinet. ARNOLD FRANCIS POWELL o Well, folks, here ' s one of the archest of the arch conspirators in these crimes against the King ' s English which we call the senior write-ups. Although you might question his veracity (in some of th write-ups), you can ' t question his versatility, for he ' s a brilliant journalist, a pleasing vocalist, a clever actor and a — er scintillating track star. Otherwise: Editor of Gold and Black, assistant editor of La Revue, and member of Omicron Delta Kappa and P int and Patches. Knows more about pipes than Mr. Drinkwoodie himself. THIRD ROW FREEMAN WILLIAM ORR e Freeman has had more than his share of honors at Birmingham-Siuthern. His musical in- terests won him a place in the Band, Orchestra, and Glee Club. His interest and ability in things mathematical brought him membership in Theta Sigma Lambda, and his scholarship in things educational landed him his second key as a member of Kappa Phi Kappa, of which he was treasurer in ' 35. PENELOPE PREWITT, Z T A • Editor of 1936 La Re- vue; Mortar Board, treasurer; Co-Ed Council member for three years, serving as president in ' 3 5 - ' 3 6 and secretary in ' 3+- ' 35; Parade Manager in ' 34; society editor of Gold and Black, two years; assistant editor, 1935 La Revue; treasurer of sophomore class; chairman of sophomore stunt; Paint and Patches; Radio Players; Y. W. cabinet, J 32- ' 33; delegate to Auburn Confer- ence- Nominations Board, secr-t.iry : Pi Delta Psi : Who ' s Who in American Colleges and Universities And ro:.e enrly to be Queen 0 ' the May. MARY LOU OVERALL e Perhaps Mary Lou ' s puttering around with rocks in the great out-of-doors (being something of a geologist, y ' know) accounts for her complexion. Then again it might have been her being a member of Belles Lettres, Glee Club, Kappa Delta Ep.ilon or Phi Sigma Iota. Or maybe it was because her cheeks were rosy. JOE PRICE, K A e Joe likes hirr.burgers, so he chose a pre- med course. A natural leader, he served as president of the junior class, inaugurating activities which had not been carried on before. He was also a member of La Revue staff and has been of great assistance in pinning bouquets on departing seniors. Member of Omicron Delta Kappa, Skull and Bones, and the freshman football team. To enumerate all of his good qualities would be a job for a biographer and not the editor of an annual. SECOND ROW LOIS PARHAM • We nominate Lois for the position of the most modest co-ed (we would go so far as to say the most modest student) on the Hilltop. She wouldn ' t even list her honors-received-during-her-college-career on the La Revue card for that purpose. However, we know that she has been active in the Clariosophic, Y. W. C. A. and Epworth League at McCoy Memorial Church. WAYNE KNIGHT RAMSAY, 2 A E 9 In addition to be- ing a Knight, Wayne is Birmingham-Southern ' s rather active Greek god. His accomplu.hments consist of: bowling over every co-ed in every fre:hman class, being president of Belles Lettres, and member of Omicron Delta Kappa, Tau Kanoa Alpha and varsity debate team, which proves that he Ins something besides looks. Hold! Word comes as we go to press that he has been elected May King, which also proves our topic sentence, except that the Greek god . . . and Knight . . . now becomes a king. McCOY PATTERSON c And here ' s the president of the Student Body, who ' s the real McCoy. His career, both before he came to the Hilltop and during his stay here, has been both colorful and varied. He was born in China. Since being at Southern, his interests have ranged from perfecting a masterful technique in boxing, which jibes with his first name, to being a whiz in chemistry. Member of Skull and Bones, Nominations Board, Gold and Black staff, and elected to Who ' s Who in American Colleges and Universities. Decatur. FELIX ROBB • This sorrel top is something more than just a student — something more than Omicron Delta Kappa, and Kappa Phi Kappa and Theta Sigma Lambda, to which he be- longs. He ' s an inspiration to those who seek the highways and by-ways of life that lead in the right direction. In the O. D. K. ' s he was treasurer, and in the Kappa Phi Kappa, secretary. Also Gold and Blacked. M N H M N I O R L A u H N FIRST ROW JOHN EDWARD RUTLAND e John ' s versatility cropped out in his being a student of theology and referee of the inter- fraternity basketball games one and all at the same time. He was a member of the Ministerial Association, Pastors ' Union, and Paint and Patches. It is our guess that John will make a very human sort of minister. Hails from Halevville. MILDRED EMILY RYAN, iXD o This, my children, is the reason why I signed up for lab six days a week. Besides being a lab instructor, Mildred was elected Miss Birmingham- Southern twice during her senior year, first, by the parade com- mittee, to lead the annual Southern parade, and, second, by the judges, to lead the Beauty Section of the 1936 La Revue. Other honors: Paint and Patches, Amazons, Pan-Hellenic, Pi Delta Psi, associate editor of La Revue, and 1934-35 president of Alpha Chi Omega. And now — elected member of the 1936 Mav Court! son shows up next year? Before coming here, John B. went two years to Bob Jones College, where he made as good a scholastic record as he did here. While here, he was a member of the Glee Club and Pi Gamma Mu. From Roanoke. ERNEST STRONG, A 2 © The silent Strong man who had a penchant for Marys (three of them, as a matter of fact). Ernest was a member of Kappa Phi Kappa, Pi Delta Psi, Belles Lettres and president of the Delta Sigs in his junior year. He made the grade with scholarship as well as with the Marys. VANONI STURGESS— Vanoni is the second Sturgess to grace our Sunshine Slopes, but has long since become the only Sturgess for those who really know her. She was a member of Theta Sigma Lambda, Tau Tan Tan and Alpha Gamma, which activities show her versatility ranging from mathematics to sports. She plans to teach school after getting her degree. SHELBY E. SOUTHARD o The Colonel ' s outstanding phase in activity has been his newspaper work. His outstand- ing phase in a crowd is his head and shoulders (six feet three, we think). He has had a number of articles published in maga- zines with nation-wide circulation, and was paid for them, what ' s more. He served for three years as college reporter for the Birmingham Post, and was a member of Y Cabinet in ' 35. Appropriately enough, his home is Athens, seat of culture. HENRY C. SPARKS e Our editorial hat is off to Henry. Our editorial hat would ccme off to anybody who could dupli- cate his accomplishment of working forty hours a week during his senior year and never make a grade below B. And we do not consider ourselves in danger of catching a cold in our editorial head . . . none of us . . . regardless of the kind cf chapeau which we doff. Member of G ' ee Club and Kappa Phi Kappa. THIRD ROW MARY ELLA SCTER, 8 T e In later years when her class- mates think back on their associations with Mary Ella, these characteristics will be foremost in their minds: her methodical studiousness, her nostalgic humor and her enviable disposition. She came to us from Texas, where she attended school last year. Member of Y. W. C. A., Pi Gamma Mu, and Kappa Delta Epsilon. HELEN TATE, T B © The weight Helen placed on schol- arship and results of scholarship is indicated by the chagrin she showed when she got a B on a quiz . . . one time. She was a member of Paint and Patches, freshman commission, secretary of the Y. W. C. A., Le Cercle Francais, Co-Ed Council, treasurer of Kappa Delta Epsilon, and vioe-president of Mortar Board. SECOND ROW ROY D. STARNES, 2 A E • Roy combines the abilities of an honor student, a truly good musician and a good tennis player. These interests are shown by his membership in Kappa Phi Kappa, Mu Alpha, Eta Sigma Phi (vice-president), Belles Lettres, Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, Classical Club, and the tennis team. We expect to hear him on the concert stage some day. An acquisition from Asheville, N. C. JOHN B. STEVENSON • The Stevenson represented by Henry and Thomas reached their Birmingham-Southern climax with John B. . . . Now won ' t we be surprised if another Steven- EDITH AYRES TEAL, II B © Regardez! Behind the mild exterior of Edith, we see a bit of coquetry. Always a favorite, her delicate beauty has graced the beauty section of La Revue for two years. She was secretary of the junior class and a member of both the Gold and Black and La Revue staffs, serving three years each. MILDRED TURNER, V B • One of the knitting Turners, or turning Knitters; anyway, she knits and knits and knits, to say nothing of being an incessant Turner. Mildred was a mem- ber of the freshman commission, Glee Club, Le Cercle Fran- cais, president of Kappa Delta Epsilon, and Y. W. C. A. cabinet. She was graduated in February. H N FIRST ROW J. E. THOMASON, JR., A 2 • J. E. worked into three years a school career which would take care of several four year seniors. He was a member of Kappa Phi Kappa, presi- dent of the Ministerial Association, secretary of the Y. M. C. A., and made the Honor Roll regularly. GRACE TWINING e Living up to the record of an elder sister is sometimes hard to accomplish, but Grace has suc- ceeded in this as in many other endeavors on the Hill. Her interest in chemistry is nothing short of phenomenal, and her accomplishments in it a bit long of phenomenal ; and she has coached many a student into a more advanced stage of learn- ing as well as better grades in the field of chemistry. SECOND ROW J. GORTON WAILES • When such men as Johnnie Weis- muller and Buster Crabbe came into popularity as heartthrobs, Gorton ' s stock with the ladies rose immeasurably; not that it needed it, of course, but his swimming added what little he lacked. He was swimming instructor at the B. A. C. He was also a member of the Band and the Orchestra for three years each, and the Gold and Black staff for two years. EVELYN WALTON, A X SI o The little girl who turned out to he a go-getter in the business world as well as a shark in Greek and Latin; in other words, the Business Manager of the 1936 La Revue. Evelyn began La RsvuE-ing and Gold and Black-ing in ' 34, serving as assistant business manager of La Revue and associate business manager of the Gold and Black. Other honors included: national vice-president of Eta Sigma Phi and vice-president and secretary of Pi Chapter; delegate to Eta Sigma Phi conventions in Bethlehem, Pa., and Chicago, and to Peace Conference in Washington; Paint and Patches; Belles Lettres; Y. W., ' 32- ' 33; Co-Ed Council, ' 36; May Day Court; Who ' s Who in American Colleges and Universities. THIRD ROW MALCOLM WHEELER, A 2 • And when these great pillars have crumbled to dust and been scattered by gentle Zephyrus, let him be remembered . . . for that he headed an organization which made it a pleasure to attend chapel. For, in truth, chapel seats were at a premium when it became known that Pi Gamma Mu was in charge. Malcolm was president of Pi Gamma Mu and the Chi Chn, member of Omicron Delta Kappa, Tau Kappa Alpha, Varsity Debate Team, Golf Team and International Relations. He was parade manager in 1936, for which task the editor ' s sympathies were with him. SENIOR WOOD KNIGHT WHETSTONE • And now we switch to our most rugged typewriter, one that can stand up under the strain of listing Wood ' s honors. He has been a perennial mem- ber of the Ministerial Association, of which he was vice-presi- dent in ' 35, and secretary in ' 36. He was also a member of Eta Sigma Phi; Varsity Debate Team in ' 3+; Glee Club, ' 34; Clariosophic; Gold and Black staff, ' 32; La Revue staff in ' 36; International Relations, and the Y. M. C. A. Cabinet. And a bit of all right personally. From Sylacauga. m a OFFICERS Kathryn Ivey President Ed Cooper Vice-President Florence Norton Secretary Edwin Neville Treasurer J U N O R S B I R M N HAM JUNIOR CLASS u H R N Ralph W. Adams Birmingham T. M. C. A. Cabinet. ' 34, ' 35: Assistant Brsiness Manager Gold and Black: International Relations Club; Boxing Team. Louise Aland Birmingham Paint and Patches. James Edward Allen - Birmingham A 2 Interfraternity Council, ' 35. Sara Bates Birmingham A X P. Paint and Patches; Clariosophic. Richard Beckham, Jr Birmingham 9 K N Mu Alpha; Glee Club; Paint and Patches; Freshman Debate Team. ' 33. Charles Bellows Birmingham e k x Joe Benson Birmingham 2 N Bert Best Birmingham 2 A E Alvin Binzel Birmingham 2 A E Head Cheer Leader, ' 34. Edna Brannon Birmingham Clariosophic. ' 35; Alpha Gamma. ' 35; Tri Tau ' 34 ' 35, ' 36, Sec- retary and Treasurer; Glee Club, ' 35, ' 36. Maurine Brannon Birmingham Clariosophic, ' 34 Critic, ' 35: Alpha Gamma. ' 35; Tri Tau, ' 33, ' 34, ' 35; Glee Club ' 34. ' 35. Cleveland Eridges Goodwater n k a F.oiball Freshman. ' 33 Varsity, ' 34. ' 35. E. V. Brindlev, Jr Collinsville e k n International Relations Club; Paint and Patches. Marian Bruce Bessemer A n Pan-Hellenic Council, Vice-President, ' 35; Amazons, Treasurer, ' 35; Gold and Black Staff. Betsy Bryant Birmingham n b Amazons; Belles Lettres. Alice Buchanan Birmingham Z T A Belles Lettres; Y. W. C. A. Thomas Carter Birmingham n k a Varsity Football, ' 34. ' 35; Athl.tic Committee; S ' .iull and Bones. Jessie Cartwright Cleveland, Term. Carey Chadbourne Birmingham Theta Chi Delta, Vice-President, ' 35; Clariosophic; Glee Club. Martha Frances Chapman Birmingham Glee Club; Clariosophic. Paul Clem Athens Football, ' 33, ' 34, ' 35: Ministerial Association Treasurer. ' 35; Student Senate. ' 34 ' 35; Freshman Track. ' 34; O-nicron Delta Kappa; Religious Council. President, ' 35. Jessie Howell Collier Birmingham Emlyn Colmant Birmingham K A Amazons; Paint and Patches. Ross Alton Cooke Birmingham Ministerial Association. Edwin Patterson Cooper Anniston K A Student Senate. ' 34, Secretary-Treasurer ' 35: Pi Gamma Mu- Football. Freshman ' 33. Varsity. ' 34. ' 35: La Revue Staff; Omicron Delta Kappa; Vice-Pr sident Junior Class. Al Costanzo Birmingham Maurice Stroud Crowley Birmingham A 2 •3 Gold and Black Staff. ' 34: Choir, ' 35; La Revue Staff ' 34- Glee Club. ' 33. ' 34; Choral Club, ' 33. ' 34. ' 35; Freshman Track. ' 34. Manager and Assistant Coach, ' 35; Paint and Patches ' 34 ' 35; Parade Committee ' 35; Clariosophic; Interlj-ateriiitv Coun- cil. ' 35. Edward Cummins Birmingham A T Q Cheer Leader, ' 34. Mildred Dodson Birmingham Gold and Black Staff, ' 35. Maytle Docgett Birmingham r e Glee Club, ' 34, ' 35; Clariosophic, ' 33, ' 34, ' 35. Page 47 B I R M N H M JUNIOR CLASS Page 48 H N Hugh Egerton Birmingham Sanford Enslen Springfield, Mo. 2 A E Varsity Football, Baseball, and Track. Lucius Evins Birmingham 6 KN Varsity Basketball. Dee Foster Birmingham 6 T Pan-Hellenic Council, Secretary, ' 35: Amazons, ' 35; Paint and Patches. ' 33. ' 34, ' 35; Gold and Black Staff, ' 33, ' 34, ' 35; La Revue Staff ' 33. 34, ' 35. Arthur Merriman Freeman, Jr Birmingham K A Clariosophic; Gold and Black Staff; Glee Club. Jane French Birmingham Y. W. C. A. Cabinet. ' 35; Alpha Lambda Delta; Glee Club. ' 34. Loudel Garrett Birmingham A X Q Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, ' 34, ' 35; Co-Ed Council ' 35; La Revue Staff, ' 35; Pan-Hellenic Council, Treasurer, ' 34, ' 35; Freshman Commission, ' 33. Richard Gholston Birmingham B K N Tau Kappa Alpha; Varrlty Debate Team; International Relations Club; Belles Lettres. Caroline Gicnilliat ' Birmingham T B Glee Club; Belles Lettres; International Relations Club. Sam Goodwin Birmingham B K Theta Sigma Lambda. Allen G. Gray Cullman Treasurer, Clariosophic; Secretary and Treasurer, Theta Chi Delta, ' 35; Theta Sigma Lambda; Glee Club, ' 34. Charlotte Wesley Hall Birmingham 9 T Amazons. Martha Frances Hanes Birmingham AX Page Haralson Birmingham Z T A Y. W. C. A. Cabinet; Paint and Patches. Dora Henley Birmingham r B Anne Hettrick Birmingham n b Associate Editor. La Revue, ' 35. Holmes Hill Birmingham L-illa Rookh Hill Birmingham K A Paint and Patches, Secretary. ' 35; Amazons. Vice-President, ' 35; Pan-Hellenic Council; La Revue Staff. ' 36. Rufie Dixon Holloway Birmingham A LT Amazons, ' 35, ' 36; Belles Lettres. ' 34. ' 35. Lucille Horton Dolomite Glee Club; Tri Tau; Clariosophic. Tames Howard Autaugaville Band, ' 33, ' 34; International Relations Club; Assistant Football Manager, ' 34. Mary Moore Hurst Columbiana A X n Glee Club; Paint and Patches: Y. W. C. A. Kathryn Ivey Birmingham Member of Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, ' 33. Treasurer, ' 34, President, ' 35; President of Freshman Commission, ' 33; Alpha Lambda Delta, ' 33; Paint and Patches. ' 33, ' 34. Vice-President- ' 35: Le Cercle Francais. ' 34. President, ' 35; Belles Lettres. ' 34; President of Junior Class, ' 35; Phi Sigma Iota, 35; Co-Ed Council, ' 35. Janice Johns Birmingham n B J Eta Sigma Phi, ' 34, ' 35. James Johnston Birmingham 2 A E Martha Jordan Birmingham Orchestra. Ruth Keener Birmingham A n Y. W. C. A.; Belles Lettres. James Kincaid Birmingham Vice-President. Skull and Bones, ' 35; Vice-President, Beta Beta Beta, ' 35; Associate Member, Theta Chi Delta, ' 35; Parade Com- mittee, ' 34. Arnold King J°PP a Zeno Knapp Birmingham X X Mu Alpna. ' 33, ' 34. ' 35; Swimming Team. M I N H M JUNIOR C LAS S u H N Charles Lamar Birmingham Katherine Lide Birmingham n b $ Vice-President Phi Sigma Iota, ' 35; Treasurer Theta Sigma Lambda, ' 35; Secretary Le Cercle Francais, ' 35; Treasurer Belles Lettres, ' 35. Paul Von Santen Liles Birmingham Hi) Associate Member Theta Chi Delta. Randolph Linn Arab Eugenia Little Birmingham T. w. c. A. C. W. Lowry Sunny South Freshman Basketball, ' 33. Rupert McCali Andalusia Varsity Football. ' 34 ' 35: Freshman Football, ' 33; Freshman Basketball, ' 33; Freshman Track, ' 33. Gene McCoy Birmingham rr b Vice-President Le Cercle Francais, ' 35; Vice-President Co-Ed Council, ' 35; President Alpha Gamma. ' 35; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet. ' 35; Theta Sigma Lambda. Jessie Mae Mc Culley West Blocton Alpha Gamma; T. W. C. A. Hugh McEniry, Jr Bessemer 2 A E Debate Team, ' 34, ' 35; Tau Kappa Alpha; Kappa Phi Kappa; Freshman Oratorical Medal. ' 34; T. M. C. A. Cabinet. Dorothy McGi.ath.ery Birmingham Jane McKee Birmingham T B Norman McLeod Birmingham n k a Swimming Team. Robert McLester Birmingham e k n Frank Machen Alabama City Glee Club, ' 35; Choral Club, ' 35: Little Symphony Orchestra, ' 35; International Relations Club, ' 35. Roy Mai.one, Jr Athens 2 A E Varsity Football Manager, ' 35; Interfraternity Council, ' 35; Glee Club, ' 33; T. M. C. A. Cabinet, ' 34. Fred E. Massey Birmingham IT K A Martha Matthews Birmingham K A Amazons; Alpha Lambda Delta; Pan-Hellenic Council. ' 35- T. W. C. A. Cabinet; Belles Lettres; Paint and Patches. Frederic Mayer Birmingham K A Vice-President Delta Phi Alpha. ' 35; Vic e-President T. M. C. A., ' 34; President Interfraternity Council. ' 35; Theta Sigma Lambda; Track. ' 33. ' 34: Omicron Delta Kappa. E. P. Miles, Jr Birmingham Theta Sigma Lambda. William Thomas Miller Calera Skull and Bones. Rebecca Morgan Birmingham Glee Club, ' 33. ' 34, President, ' 35: Chairman Memphis Delega- tion; Tau Tau Tau 33, Vice-President. ' 34: Clariosophie; State Secretary Y. W. C. A.; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet; Religious Council. Virginia Morgan Birmingham Alpha Lambda Delta: Belles Lettres: Glee Club; Gold and Black Staff, ' 34; La Revue Staff, ' 35; Alpha Gamma. Alice Murray Birmingham Treasurer Alpha Lambda Delta; Glee Club; Pi Gamma Mu. Edwin Neville Birmingham K A Freshman Basketball. ' 33; Varsity Basketball, ' 35; Tennis Team- President Lower Division. ' :14- Assistant Busin.-ss Manam-r Gold and Black. ' 34, Business Manager, ' 35; Treasurer Junior Class ' 35; Interfraternity Council ' 35- ' 36; Straiton Ready Debaters Medal. ' 33; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet. Albert E. Newman Birmingham Florence Norton Birmingham Vice-President T. W. C. A.. ' 35; T. W. C. A. Cabinet. ' 34. ' 35- Tau Tau Tau, ' 33, ' 34, ' 35. President. ' 34; Religious Council ' 35 Clariosophie; chairman Auburn Delegation: State Vice-President Methodist Conference; Glee Club; Paint and Patches. Leroy Parker Birmingham Treasurer Skull and Bones, ' 35. Joe Perry Bessemer 2 N Secretary Skull and Bones, ' 35. Rebecca Phillips Lexington Gold and Black Staff, ' 35; La Revue Staff, ' 35. Page 51 B I R M N G H A M JUNIOR CLASS u H N Edna Mae Richardson Birmingham A X Q Alpha Lambda Delta; T. W. C. A. Cabinet. Clara Rice Anniston Beta Beta Beta, Secretary, ' 35: Tau Tau Tan; Secretary-Treas- urer Orchestra, ' 34. Chari.es Curtis Roberts Birmingham Glee Club. JAME3 Roberts Birmingham K A Grace Lillian Robins Birmingham Alpha Lambda D Ita ' 35; Debating, ' 35: Y. W. C. A. Cabinet. ' 35- Glee Club, ' 35. Vice-President. ' 35; Student Volunteers, ' 35: Classical Club. Stanley Robinson Birmingham John James Rooks Green Cave Springs Ministerial Association. Helen Scott . . Birmingham Y. W. C. A., ' 33. ' 34. ' 35; Secretary Clariosophic, ' 35. Barbara Seaman Birmingham n b Amazons; Pi Gamma Mil, ' 35. Perry Slaughter Selma K A Jack Smith Birmingham Skull and Bones. Mary Olive Smith Birmingham r e Y. W. C. A. Cabinet; Glee Club; Alpha Gamma; Clariosophic. Nelle Stewart Birmingham Glee Club; Phi Sigma Iota. Ben Stough Midland City A T fi William Sulzby Birmingham A T T. M. G. A. Christine Thaxton Birmingham Tau Tau Tau, President, ' 35; Clariosophic. Amy Elizabeth Thomas Birmingham President Clariosophic, ' 35; Kappa Delta Epsilon; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet. James B. Thomas Albertville K A Theta Sigma Lambda; Interfraternity Council, ' 34. James M. Trotman Ensley B K Belles Lettres; Y. M. C. A. Reba Turner Birmingham Glee Club, ' 33. ' 34, ' 35. Solemma Vann Birmingham Clariosophic; Debate. Henderson Walker Birmingham A 2 Paint and Patches. Howard West Bessemer Skull and Bones. Pansy White Birmingham Glee Club; Tau Tau Tau; Alpha Gamma; Theta Sigma Lambda. John Wiley Williams Anniston K A Katherine Winters Birmingham r $ B Pan-Hellenic Council; Amazons; Le Cercle Francais. Sarah Wyatt Birmingham Alpha Lambda Delta; Glee Club; Secretary, ' 35. Virginia Yeilding Birmingham William Grant Yeildinc Birmingham 2 A E Glee Club; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet; La Revue Staff. Louis Tustine Yelanjian Birmingham Kappa Phi Kappa, ' 35; President of Pi Delta Psi. UPPER DIVISION STUDENTS WHOSE PICTURES DO NOT APPEAR IN THE ANNUAL SENIORS Elizabeth Aust Birmingham Thelma Barton Cordova Woodrow Beaird Fairfax Nell Bell Birmingham Maude Best Birmingham William Blount Wilsonville Gretchen Brown Birmingham Steve Christian Bessemer William F. Cristian .... Birmingham Louise Crow Birmingham Frances Cutcliff Birmingham Martina deHoll Birmingham Hortense Eaton Birmingham Janie May Eppes Dayton Marian Everett Birmingham Denson Franklin Goodwater Robert Giles Birmingham Edward Goodman Birmingham Mittie Griffith Shannon Neil Hanson Detroit, Mich. Velma Hatton Bessemer Walter Holt Birmingham Martha Hood Birmingham May Kennedy Bessemer Wilbur Wilson . Gertrude Knab Birmingham Betty Lyon Beattyville, Ky. William McGehee Evergreen Eleanor McGlathery .... Birmingham Archie McRimmon Birmingham John Carlisle Miller Malvern Mary Acnes Murphee Oneonta George Nacel Birmingham Violet Nappi Birmingham Vircinia Pettus Birmingham John Pryon Birmingham Robert F. Richard Birmingham Ethel C Roberts Birmingham William Scott Birmingham Charley M. Self Birmingham Travis Shelton Birmingham Don Sims Birmingham Vircinia C. Smith Adamsville James W. Stephens .... Birmingham Mary Elizabeth Thomas . . . Birmingham Fannye M. Thompson Bessemer Elsie Thum Birmingham Mamie West Adamsville Cullen B. Wilson Skipperville Florence Mary Anna Barker B Verna Beene B John David Crim B Charles Fant B Corrinthie B. Fields . . . . B Virgil Curtis Finch B Hazel Hewes B James Lassetter B JUNIORS rmingham Sara Lowry Birmingham rmingham Clayton Mercer Borden Springs rmingham Morgan Smith Birmingham rmingham Walter Thompson Lincoln rmingham Katherine Timmons .... Birmingham rmingham Wade Howard Whitley . . . Birmingham rmingham Woodrow Wilson Birmingham rmingham Mildred Wood Birmingham 7L LOWER DIVISION B I R M I N H M H W o u H N Grace Adams Leeds Mary Adams Birmingham Z T A Mildred Adcock Birmingham Z T A Richard Adler Ensley Howard Aldridce Gaylesville Klyde Allbritton Birmingham Mary Franxes Amiss Carbon Hill Samuel Edwards Andrew Birmingham B E Osa Lamar Andrews Birmingham A T O Peccy Arnett Birmingham n b Dorothy Arnold Birmingham Kathryn Blair Ash Birmingham Z T A Miriam Louise Bacley Birmingham r II B Thomas Milburn Bailey Birmingham B K Robbie Lee Baker Birmingham Sara Lee Banks Birmingham n b Micheal Baranei.li Birmingham John William Barksdale Powderly A T O Albert Charles Barnes Fairfield A I E. M. Barnes, Jr Huntsville Virginia Bartlett Birmingham II B Marcaret Basenberg Birmingham K A Margaret Carolyn Bates Birmingham A n Walter Batson Sylacauga AsHTON Baugh Birmingham A T Ruth Beason Fairfield Mary Vircinia Bell Ensley William Bennett Summerdale Eleanor Bernhard Birmingham A X P. Joan Bernheim Birmingham Pocer Woods Berry Birmingham A T O Elenita Biard Birmingham n b Alfred R. Bivins Birmingham K X Mildred Blair Birmingham II B Fred Blanton Birmingham Marjorie Bi.oomfield Birmingham Mary Louise Blount Wilsonville Herbert Booth Birmingham A T O Sam Jerry Bradley Birmingham Robert Wade Bradley Birmingham Forney Brandon Birmingham A T Renwick Wallace Brannon Birmingham Charles William Brasfield Fairfield James Woodrow Bratcher Rolling A I Houston Brice Birmingham A. R. Brindley Collir.sville e K X Constance Brown Birmingham a o n Genevieve Brown Birmingham Gwendolyn Brown Birmingham Page 57 N M N H M m K Jmk i  H W u H N Lois Brown Birmingham a o n Pearce Bruce Lanett Christine Bryant Birmingham A n Robert Buchanan Birmingham Hugh Buck Bessemer Ruth Bullock Birmingham a x a Paul Burleson Birmingham Robert Burr Birmingham George Cabaniss Birmingham S A E Weatherly Cabaniss Birmingham Z A E Vernon Cain Birmingham A T John Calhoun Birmingham Charles Calkins Bessemer Melbourne Cannon Berry K A Mary Margaret Carr Fairfield Porter Carty ' Birmingham K A Mary ' Louise Cash Birmingham K A Robert Johnson Chandler Moundville Billy Frank Chappell Birmingham B K Roy Newton Cheatham Haleyville Thomas Alfred Cheatham Birmingham Hal Childers, Jr Birmingham Z A E Norman Childs Troy Cecil Chilton Birmingham Thomas Jackson Chitwood McCalla Jane Claybrooke Albertville Z T A William Cleage Birmingham Z A E James Clotff.lter Birmingham K A Paxton Coleman Birmingham 2 A E Mary Perry Collier Birmingham IT B John Colmant Birmingham S A e John Fletcher Comer Birmingham A T O Arthur Cook Ensley Alice Carolyn Copeland Birmingham Hugh Corbin Joppa Charles Anson Corbitt Hartford a z Robert Henry Cordell Valley Head II K A Charlotte Cordray Birmingham Errante Corina Birmingham Georce W. Courson, Jr Birmingham Ella Will Cowan Birmingham A X 9. Martfia Cowart Birmingham a o n Peggy Crabtree Birmingham Rebecca Laura Crenshaw Birmingham George Edward Cruit Brewton B K Evelyn Culverhouse Birmingham Z T A Evalyn Currie Birmingham Z ' T A Mary Elizabeth Curtis Birmingham Grace Cutler Birmingham A X Q Page 59 N B I R M N H M H W u H N William Dalrymple Birmingham A T Margaret Dalton Bessemer e t David Dakiei Birmingham A T O William Allen Daniel Birmingham Tracy P. Davidson Birmingham Jennie Ritchey Davis Warsaw, Ky. r B Mamie Myrtis Davis Birmingham Thomas Waldo Davis Birmingham A 1 + Hei.oise DeLamotte Moss Point, Miss. r + b T. B. DeLapp Birmingham A T Sara Dickinson Birmingham A X Q Jewell Dell Dobbs Decatur a. x a Sara Dominick Birmingham A II V. W. Dorough Dunavant Louise Douglas Birmingham A X 1! Alene Dowda Cullman William Oscar Downs, Jr ' . Birmingham A T O Idamae Drake Collinsville Elizabeth Duke Birmingham A II Norvil Duncan Quinton Talmadge Wille Duncan Section Sara Frances Dupuy Birmingham K A Charles Dwiggins Birmingham 2 A E Eleanor Dyson Gaines City, Fla. a x a James Eaton Birmingham 2 A E Eloise Echols Birmingham Thomas Allen Edgar Butler Leo Edge Birmingham e k n Eleanor Edmonds Birmingham z T a Thomas Marvin Edwards Birmingham 2 A E William Edwards Birmingham 6 K N Ruth Ethel Ehrensperger Cullman Phyllis Elms Birmingham Evelyn Erwin Birmingham Elizabeth Evving Birmingham K A Era Belle Fain Ashland 9 T Leon Vernon Farnum Birmingham Josephine Finke Birmingham A X 9. Minnie Watt Fite Birmingham K A Arva Fitzpatrick Collinsville DeDee Fitzpatrick Bessemer Ellis B. Flanican Sylacauga Hal Fleminc Birmingham Z T A Sam Fleming Panama City, Fla. K A James Irving Ford, Jr Alexander City 1 A E Mary Elizabeth Forster Birmingham r B Edward Franklin Lehigh Mary Frickhoeffer Birmingham Z T a Sara Helen Gandy Birmingham A X a N M N H M H W u H N Emily Ruth Garry Pell City George Calvin Gibson Bessemer Wallace Gibson Birmingham Dobbsie Gilbert Birmingham A n Leon Gillespie Powhatan Matthew Gillespie Powhatan Alan DeLeon Gray Bessemer Myra Ruth Green Birmingham J. Thomas Griffin Crossville K A Clara Griffith Birmingham Sara Elizabeth Griffith Birmingham A II ngham Martha Griswold . . Joel Brown Guin . . Irene Hampton . . . Arthur Jackson Hanes Amy Haney ngham ngham ngham Enslev Martha Haralson . Birmingham Sidney Hardy Alberta K A Oscar S. Harcett, Jr Sheffield £ A E Clarence Harless Birmingham Eric Harris Birmingham Josephine Harris Birmingham K A Margaret Harris Birmingham Sam Harris Fort Payne William Monroe Harris, Jr Birmingham 2 A E Arden T. Harrison Birmingham A T O Rita Lea Harrison Birmingham r B Mary Agnes Hartley Ensley Sarah Hauchton Birmingham Maurice Hayes Piper Sam Heide Birmingham K a Carl Henckell Birmingham X X James Waller Herrinc Calvary, Ga. K A Marion H. Hill Bessemer Odein Hili Birmingham Lillyan Nelson Hilty Birmingham Mary Hobson Alden z T a Alma Hayes Howell Birmingham r l B Fletcher Howington Beatrice LaVerne Howton McCalla Margaret Hubbard Birmingham A X Winthrope Hubler Birmingham Robin Huckstep ' . . . Gadsden Roberta Hudson Fort Payne Grace Hughes Birmingham Herbert Huie Dratsville Acnes Hunt Birmingham Pat Hutto Oakman Mary Charles Illingworth Birmingham n B Page (3 N B I R M N H M Page 64 H W H N Elizabeth Jackson Birmingham n B Lucy James Greenville, N. C. K A Virginia Jamison Birmingham T T Fred Jensen Grove Hill Huch Lawler Johnson Ensley Luuise Johnson Ensley Marion Johnson Birmingham Z T A Maxine Johnson Birmingham Maxwell Johnson Harriman, Tenn. K X Sara Louise Johnson Ensley 6 T Denny Johnston Margarum Marguerite Johnston Birmingham n B Bettve Jones Ensley T T Eleanor Jones Birmingham A X Q Elizabeth Jones Birmingham Kirby Jones Birmingham William Curry Jones, Jr Chapman Wallace Journey Birmingham E a James Kay Birmingham AS J. D. Kaylor Sycamore Lillian Keener Birmingham A n Hazel Kennybrook Birmingham John Kent Ensley K N WlLBURTA Kerr Birmingham Charles R. Kessler B B K Daniel Kessler B Marcuerite Kessler B Hazyl Kile Ta Ben King B K A Curtis L. Kincsbery Pens G. C. Kinney B IT K A Louise Klyce B David Knox . . . n K A a o n A T O Mary Knox B II B Philip Kreis B A X Q Kitty Lacy . . . Sara Frances Lacy B Annye Beauchamp Laney B William Latimer B ngham ngham ngham rrant City rmi ngham acola, Fla. rmingham rmingham rmingham rmingham rmingham rmingham rmingham rmingham rmingham 2 A E Elmo Law Greenville William E. Lawrence Fairhope Duff Leaver Pratt City Fred Lewis Hanceville Margaret Lewis Birmingham K A Ruth Lewis Ensley Martin Lide Birmingham Billy Lively Ensley S A e James A. Livingston Birmingham X A E William Lollar Birmingham 9 K N N B I R M N H M H W H N Eugene Looney Amory, Miss. A 2 Eve James Lovelace Birmingham 9 T Curtis G. Lovvry Sunny South Frank 0. Lovvry, Jr Sunny South rmingham rmingham rmingham rmingham K A Robert Luckie . . . Pauline Lyle B Johnson McCall B William McCall J. B. McClendon Scottsbor n K A Murray McCluskey Sylacaug Mac McDonald B James Holman McElroy B Robert G. McGahey B Z A E Mary Catherine McGough II B Jack McGowin Bi 1 A E George H. McKinney Bessemer rmingham rmingham rmingham rmingham rmingham Mary Leila McLeod Jackson Walter Grey McLeod Jackson Fannie Sue McNeely Vina 9 T Anne MacDonald Jada Frances Maddox e T Lula Makris John Louis Malone Martha Malone Edith Manley rmingham rmingham rmingham rmingham rmingham rmingham Meredith J. Marlowe Raymon Marshall . . Clarence Mason . . Julian Mason ... Merle Massenc.ale . . Edith Mathigon . . . Margaret Matthews . Robert Mayer . . . . Isabel Meade . . . . Norman Mehr . . . . Pope Meagher . . . . a o n K A II B 4 rmingham rmingham rmingham rmingham rmingham Bessemer rmingham rmingham rmingham rmingham rmingham Nat Mewhinney Birmingham 2 A E Josephine Ann Michaelson Grand Rapids, Mich. r $ b Clyde E. Miller Pensacola, Fla. Annette Mitchell Birmingham n b Earline Moore Bessemer Jane Moore Birmingham Z T A Laura Ross Moore Birmingham n b Pat Moore Bessemer Theron Montgomery Birmingham Perry A. Morgan, Jr Ensley B K Tom Moriarty Birmingham Kenneth Morland Birmingham K A Edward Morris Birmingham A T Q o N B I M I N H A M Page 68 H W o H N James C. Morris . Sara Nell Morris Martha Moseley . Birm Birm Birm Joe Mac Murphree ngham ngham ngham Oneonta Doris Murphy Mary Murphy William H. Myers . . . William Newby . . . . Joseph Newton .... Arthur Nichols . . . . John Nixon Ruth Norvell Hubert Norwood . . . . William U. O ' Ferrall . Rollin Osgood Frederick B. Outlaw . . Mary Catherine Outlaw Sara Helen Overton . . John Drury Ozier . . . Kitty Parker Lucia Meade Patton . . Bob Pearson Sarah Peay Morton Perry .... Rufus Perry Birm Birm Birm ngham ngham ngham Lannett Birm Birm Birm Birm Birm Birm Birm Birm Birm Birm Birm Birm Birm ngham ngham ngham ngham ngham ngham ngham ngham ngham ngham ngham ngham ngham . Haleyville Birmingham Birmingham . . Fairfield Kitty Peters B Elmina Elizabeth Peterson B Jim Petrie B John S. Phillips . . A E rmingham rmingham rmingham rmingham Clyde Pippen Ensley S A e John Sidney Pittman Dixons Mills A T O Sarah Margaret Postelle Birmingham a o n Dewey Powell Fyffe James P. Powers, Jr Birmingham A t o William Powers Birmingham Carl Preer Marianna, Fla. John D. Prince, Jr Birmingham S A E Anne Ratliff Birmingham a o n Ben Ray Ensley S A E Eugene Allen Reagan Birmingham David Reinhardt Montgomery e K N Eloise Reynolds Birmingham Frank S. Rigell Panama City, Fla. Patricia Robarts Birmingham Bobbie Robbins Sayre Ralston Robertson Mobile George Robinette Oneonta Grace Robins Birmingham Dan Robinson Alexander City 2 A E N B I M I N H M H W u H N Josephine Rutledge Birmingham Hugh Sager Bessemer Naman Sam Saliba Ozark Ola Mae Sargent Dora John L. Schroeder Birmingham A T Dorothea Seale Birmingham A x a Winifred Seale Birmingham Richard Sexton Birmingham A T O Vincent G. Shields, Jr Birmingham A T Howard B. Shirley Birmingham Carrie Frances Short Birmingham Robert Alan Shoop Birmingham K A Abe Shugerman Birmingham Charles Sands Simons Birmingham X A E Catherine Sims Birmingham Mildred Sims Birmingham Theron Sisson Birmingham Jack Skelding Ensley K A James Sledge Greensboro Carl Screws, Jr Birmingham B K Mary Jane Schmitt Birmingham z T A Virginia Shackelford Autaugaville Winifred Shuff Birmingham A X S! Allison Smith Decatur 9 K N Daisy Dean Smith Birmingham n B i Frances Smith Birmingham K A Jean Smith Birmingham Joe Wheeler Smith Stevenson LeRoy Cooper Smith Cranford, N. J. William Snoddy Birmingham S A E Edna Snow Birmingham ir B Chester Sparks Russellville Adrian Spidle Birmingham 1! K Katherine Spradley Birmingham a x a Ed Stevens Birmingham A T Thomas Stevenson Birmingham Cuthel Stewart Birmingham AS Mary Blanche Sumner Chicago, 111. A X Q Lucy Taylor Birmingham Sarah A. Taylor Birmingham A O II Porter Terry Birmingham I A E James Thomas Lannett Ruth Alden Thomas Birmingham K A Emmett M. Thompson Powderly Laura Thomson Birmingham A x a Margaret Nell Thompson Birmingham Margaret A. Thompson Birmingham T Minouise Thompson Grady Morris Thompson Siluria N B I M N H M H W H N Nancy Thompson John Tillia . . Mildred Tippen . Dave Todd . . . Norma Jean Tomlinson Harry A. Trevarthen Jewell Trotman . Buford Truett . . Rogers Tubbs . . Hurshell Turner Robert Tyler . . John E. Tyson . . Fred Vance . . . Marvin Vickers . Charles Vines . . Birmingham rmingham rmingham rmingham rmingham . Pratt City Birmingham . . . Notch Moundville B rmi B rmi B rmi B rmi Margaret Gii.more Vines Charles A. Waits Jack Walden . . Lee Waldrup . . R. V. Waldrep, Jr. Charles Walton . Morris Walton . Betty Weaver . . Myram Webster . Horace Weissinger ingham ingham ingham ingham . . . Linden . . Bessemer . . . Bessemer . . Birmingham . Fairfield . Birmingham . . Red Bay Doniphon, Mo. . Birmingham . Birmingham . West Sayre . Birmingham L. A. Weissinger Birmingham Kenneth Weldon Birmingham Alice L. Wenz Bessemer Richard Westbrook Birmingham K A Claude Whitehead Birmingham 2 A E Bill Whetstone Sylacauga Evelyn Wiley Birmingham Genevieve Williams Birmingham K A Philip A. Williams Fairfield John Williamson Birmingham K A Margaret Anne Wilmore Birmingham IT B Allen Wilson Ashville Emily Wilson Birmingham Billy Wilson Dolomite Felonese Wilson Birmingham Mildred Jo Winfield Birmingham A X S3 Frank Wingate Birmingham Walter Wintter Brighton AS E. Pickard Williams Birmingham A 2 Leonard Winston Birmingham B K Sara Wise Birmingham Z T a Harold Wood Birmingham A T Si Edna Woodrow Bessemer K A Mildred Worthington Birmingham A O n Henry Yeilding Birmingham Sidney Yeilding Birmingham N LOWER DIVISION STUDENTS WHOSE PICTURES DO NOT APPEAR IN THE ANNUAL Gordon - Atkeison . Lawerence BARNES . Lionel Baxter . . . William Bickerstaff . . Mobile . Fairfield Birmingham . Enterprise Hugh Birdsonc Birmingham Rile Blackwood Parrish Sidney Blaikie B William Blakeney B Frances Bradford Eucene Bridges Ben Brooks B James Brown B John Brown B Harry Burns B Robert P. Burns B Warner Camp B Nell Campbeli B Robert Corley Charles Copei.and B Rogers Cox B Everette Craig B Charles Cranford B Walter Davidson B Edward Dunlap B Frances Durick Martha Louise Few . B Johnny Forster ...... B Chadwick Gibbs B Dorothy Gilliland rmingham rmingham Lineville . Sipsey rmingham rmingham rmingham rmingham rmingham rmingham rmingham Anniston rmingham rmingham rmingham rmingham rmingham rmingham Bessemer rmingham rmingham rmingham . Tarrant Harriet Goff Birmingham Harry Graves Tuscaloosa Ernest Green Floyd Greene Garrad Harris B Theo Hegenbarth B Ed Hocan B rmingham rmingham rmingham rmingham rmingham Riley Howington Beatrice Ester Hudson Hackleburg Lewis Hunter Birmingham Abner Johnson Birmingham David Jones Flomaton Margaret Jones Birmingham Martha Jordan Birmingham Bill Kibbey Fairfield Walton Kicker Birmingham {CATHERINE Kieffer Birmingham Lloyd Kimbrough Milton, Fla. Martin Kruskopf Birmingham Catherine LeNoir Birmingham Uriel Logan Brilliant Clarence Mize Birmingham Robert Mooney Wilsonville Harry Moore Birmingham Eldridge Mote Birmingham Quill Murphy ' Birmingham John O ' Neal Miami, Fla. Frank Osment Birmingham Mildred Peacock Birmingham Joe Perry Bessemer George Bernice Pugh .... Birmingham Walter Riddle Wilsonville Claude Ritter Birmingham Arnold Royal Birmingham Elbert Sanders Birmingham Margaret Shelby Birmingham Carrie Short Fairfield John O. Smith Birmingham Thomas C. Sparks Birmingham Betty Stewart Birmingham Joe E. Todd Birmingham Frank Wade Birmingham Claire Walker Birmingham Luther Williams Birmingham IN MEMORIAM Dr. Claude Orear tl 111-11. HUM II 15, 1936 dtLLti a , r . ■■■■■■' ' : •. ■v - ' : WEARERS OF THE Officers Brice McCay President Bill Johnson Vice-President Paul Clem . . Secretary-Treasurer Herbert Acton Woodrow Beaird Tom Braly Cleveland Bridges Vernon Cain Tom Carter Paul Clem Ed Cooper Hugh Corbin George Courson James Ford Members Arthur Hanes Sidney Hardy Oscar Hargett Fred Jensen Babe Jones Bill Johnson J. O. Johnston Arnold King Elmo Law Eugene Looney Rupert McCall Brice McCay J. B. McClendon Rob McNeill Roy Malone Kenneth Morland Bill Mosley Rufus Perry Walter Riddle Tom Sparks Jim Thomas Walter Thompson Charles Walton Ray Wedgeworth nTliirrmrfll L Ju COACH GILLEM Win, lose, or draw, Head Football Coach Jennings ( Jenks ) Gillem has the confidence and respect of the entire student body. . . . Tops with his players and rates high with press and public. FOOTBALL AT Faced with the difficult task of replacing such important cogs in last year ' s championship football machine as Teel, Davis, Wedgeworth, Fisher, Haygood and Townsend, each an All-Dixie Conference performer, Coaches Gillem and Full- bright sounded the call to practice this year with the knowl- edge that they had a couple of men ' s-sized jobs on their hands, which is something more than a man ' s-sized job. To fill the shoes of departed seniors the mentors were greeted by a com- paratively small squad, consisting chiefly of prospects from the freshman ranks, with only a handful of veterans returning. Nothing to turn handsprings about, you ' ll admit, with only four lettermen and five reserves from the 1934 untied, unde- feated team answering the call to practice . . . along with the freshies, who, while promising and likely, were as yet un- seasoned as well as untried. But the Hilltop coaches were not dismayed. They set to work to mold a team which would make up in fight what it lacked in experience. And to say that this one ambition was realized is putting it mildly, for the Panthers ' fighting spirit was not excelled by any team in the eight-game schedule. When their experience was sufficient to enable them to utilize their entire ability and to work together as a unit, they began to click, and by the end of the season were nobody ' s set-up. The great example of play in the last three games of the season was very gratifying to coaches and fans alike. MR. F. M. JACKSON HOLDING HIS GRANDSON. AND GIVING OUT CHEWING GUM SOUTHERN... Another factor which contributed in no small way to the Panthers ' slow start was the large number of out-of-town en- gagements at the beginning of the season. After the open- ing game with Auburn at Montgomery, the Hilltoppers played consecutive games at New Orleans, Macon, Jackson, and Chattanooga before meeting the Southwestern Lynx in the Magic City on November 9th. The Panthers ' reception at some of these cities was none too jubilant; they had no well- wishers to cheer them on to victory, and no stand-bys to back them when the going got tough. However, when the squad made its first appearance in Birmingham, and against a sup- posedly stronger eleven, the well-known Lynx, coached by Shorty Propst, the players took matters into their own hands, rang up touchdowns in the first and last quarters while holding their opponents scoreless, and won a glorious victory. Then, in Mobile the following week, having gotten a taste of victory and remembering the backing local fans had given them, they went on to score another triumph against Spring Hill. After this late season spurt, the Panthers got a well- deserved week-end rest and were in tip-top shape for the an- nual Battle of The Marne with the Howard Bulldogs on Turkey Day, but alas and alack, were defeated, 7-0, which is another storoy, recounted elsewhere. But after all, lest we forget, It isn ' t whether you won or lost, but how you played the game. COACH FULLBRIGHT Line Coach Lex Fullbright, whose fine work in season and out with the for- ward wall helps to keep the Panther ' s claws sharpened. A beloved member of the coaching fraternity, he also tutors the rat cage squad. VARSITY FOOTBALL TEAM. ITS COACHES AND MANAGER J k ' A RESUME OF ana VARSITY Four veterans and seven newcomers lined up in Cramton Bowl Friday night, September 27, to usher in a rather hap- hazard football season. Inexperience and greenness were the glaring handicaps which the Hilltop mentors must overcome. Yet, when the season was nearing completion, the Cats were rounded into a formidable combination, highly creditable to the earnest efforts of the coaching staff. Auburn received the opening kick-off and in three plays had put over a touchdown, climaxed by Kilgore ' s 35-yard dash behind a mass of Blue interference. Almost before the Au- burn cheers had died down, the Tigers had scored again. McCay ' s punt was partially blocked on the 45-yard stripe, was recovered by Auburn, and then Karam cut back through tackle and raced 55 yards to a score. The Panthers were next to score, McCay featuring a long down-field drive with a short but masterful run for a tally. This was to go down as the only touchdown through the Bengal line for the entire year. Morris and Kilgore added two Auburn scores in the last half. McCay, Cooper and Carter played great games for the Pan- ther cause. Final score: A. P. I., 25; B. S. C, 7. The Hilltoppers met their second reversal under the flood- lights in the Crescent City, bowing to the Loyola Wolves, 20- 13. The Panthers scored first on a reverse by McCay. The Catholic boys then ran up two touchdowns before the half to hold a 13-7 lead at the midway point. A disastrous fumble CO-CAPTAIN BILL JOHNSON Bill Johnson, co-captain and stellar halfback of the 1935 team. A fullback on the 1934 championship eleven, Bill was shifted to a running back position last fall by Coach Gillem and given the additional duties of signal calling. O THE SEASON PLAYERS of the kick-off by a Southern back led directly to a Loyola score at the beginning of the second half. The Wolves re- covered on the three-yard line and scored on the first try tackle. The attempt at extra point was good and the Pan- thers were trailing, 20-7. McCall received the next kick-off, brought it back 35 yards, and then McCay took a lateral from Perry, swung to his left and behind some beautiful block- ing ran 64 yards for the Cats ' second score. This ended the night ' s scoring for both teams and left the Methodists on the short end of another tally sheet, 20-13. McCay, Perry, Law, and Carter starred for Southern. The third loss came from the hands of the strong Mercer eleven, an old Panther nemesis. The Cats made their most serious scoring threat in the earlier moments of the game when, behind the alternate running of McCay and Perry, they reached the 20-yard line, only to have a last attempt for- ward pass grounded. In the first play of the second half, Bloodworth ran 82 yards to the Panthers ' four, and on the next try scored. Allen scored the other Bear marker on a 76-yard touchdown jaunt. The punting duel between McCay and Bloodworth was outstanding. Perry, Cain and Carter turned in creditable performances. Millsaps finally shook off the Panther jinx and after 13 lean years ' grid relations became the first major aggregation ever to win over the Hilltoppers. Talla Jones thrilled the CO-CAPTAIN BRICE McCAY Brice McCay, sensational halfback and co-captain of the 1935 Panther squad. McCay terminated his collegiate career with a sterling performance in each of the season ' s eight games. His great play merited his selection on the All- Conference team. % ft RESUME OF ana VARSITY stands with a spectacular 85-yard return of the opening kick- off behind perfect interference. Bosarge added the extra point which proved to be the winning margin. Art Hanes rang up the Southern score on a 61 -yard run, but the attempted place- ment was unsuccessful. Miscues were very costly to the Pan- ther cause. Displaying one of the smoothest running offenses the Panthers encountered all season, Chattanooga struck in the second, third and fourth periods to overcome an early 7-0 Southern lead. In this game, the Panthers showed that they were rapidly approaching their peak. Only through the run- ning of Ring and Hinds were the Moccasins able to overcome Southern ' s halftime lead of 14-13. The absence of McCay in the last half was keenly felt. Final score: Panthers, 14; Moccasins, 26. On Saturday, November 9, the tide turned and Southern emerged with a well-earned victory over Southwestern, 12-0. Making their 1935 debut in the Magic City, the Panthers seemed to find themselves, springing upon the charges of Coach Propst with true Cat-like ferocity and licking their chops accordingly. The Panthers scored in the first and last quarters on passes to McClendon, end, to gain the first vic- tory. The running of Bill Johnson, the kicking of McCay and the good all-round work of Ford and Cain aided the vic- tory march. RUPERT McCALL Quarterback £ THE SEASON PLAYERS The Panthers continued their splurge at the expense of Spring Hill, dispossessing the Badgers of their lead in the Dixie Conference race. Taking advantage of two costly Hil- lian fumbles, the Cats scored in the first and last frames. McCay ' s pass to McClendon and McCall ' s smash through tackle accounted for the Panther scores and a 13-6 win. Then came the classic struggle with our cross-town rivals. For the twenty-seventh time, the two teams met, and for the thirteenth time, the Panther bowed to the Bulldog. But only after being considerably embarrassed for three periods were the East Lake gridmen able to engineer an aerial score in the final stanza. Southern ' s big scoring chance came early in the first quarter, when McCay ' s pass to Sparks was ruled com- plete. On the next play there was a mix-up in formation and the Panthers lost nine yards, being thrown back to the 13-yard stripe. The Hilltoppers came back after losing the ball and advanced to the 10-yard marker, only to have an attempted field goal sail widely of the uprights. Howard ' s score was the result of a long and sustained drive, culminated by Harbin ' s pass to Snell. The entire Panther team looked great in defeat. By virtue of his great playing during the entire schedule, Brice McCay was chosen on the Associated Press All-Dixie eleven and awarded a card of merit from the All-America Board of Football. McCLENDON «« M - .ER ROY MAI.ONK Go Get Roy Malone served as student manager of the 1935 varsity football squad. Malone combined all the qualities necessary for a good manager, putting in long and strenuous hours in an at- tempt to keep the Gillem charges in condition. Besides being a competent watchdog of all the Panther football equipment, he learned, after many afternoons of practice, to apply tape with the skill of an experienced doctor. Reliable and ever on the job, Malone was Southern ' s candidate for All-Dixie manager. Although the number of local engagements was quite small, the Hilltop cheering, under the direction of Cheerleader John Schroeder and his assistants, Ed Cummins, Theoron Sisson and Lisbon Carlton, dispelled all rumors that Southern had no school spirit. The cheering squad was very much in evidence at the Auburn game and played no small part in enabling the Panthers to hold the Bengals to a three touchdown victory. Prior to the Hilltoppers ' departure in the remaining out-of-town games, a large major- ity of the students gathered to give the boys a rousing send-off. The incessant noise at the Southwestern game and the clamor from the East stands at the Howard tilt gave fur- ther proof of the Hilltop spirit and of the excellent work done by Cheerleader Schroe- der and his aides. Birmingham-Southern ' s varsity football teams surely have their share of famous back- ers. Dr. Guy E. Snavely, genial president, THERON SISSON. JOHN SCHROEDER. ED CUMMINS BILL JOHNSON RUNNING AROUND RIGHT END IN HOWARD GAME fZ i e m  and Mr. F. M. Jackson, prominent member of the board of trustees, stuck with the Panther gridders during the entire 1935 season as faithfully as they did the previous year when the Hill- toppers were riding the waves of a conferenc: championship. Mr. Jackson never misses a game, at home or abroad, or even a single day ' s practice, following the players to the field each afternoon with chewing gum and reassuring pats on the back. Mr. Rocke- feller, with his dimes, could do no more. President Snavely, with all sorts of other functions to attend, runs him a close second. And then, when the season ends! The Jackson dinner! Ha, we ' ll say right here that the Democrats ' famous Jackson Day din- ners have nothing on this one. For Mr. Jackson (F. M., not Andrew) really puts the nose bag on — on the boys. This year, to make the feast more complete, he invited the Southern sponsors of the Howard-Southern game, which meant r that the co-captains, Messrs. Bill Johnson and Brice McCay, were in the money, for who can deny that a Penny is real Cash? Inci- dentally, Miss Prewitt ( Penny ) and Miss Cash (Mary Louise) were beautifully pre- sented to the public in Malcolm Wheeler ' s parade, as well as at the game, along with their maids, Misses Edna Mae Richardson and Eleanor Bernhard. But, as we were say- ing, Mr. Jackson is a r:al sport . . . and so ' s our prexy. DR. SNAVELY and MR. F. M. JACKSON On the Sideline SOUTHERN TACKLER IN ACTION BASKETBALL . SOUTHERN CAPTAIN J. O. JOHNSTON Captain J. O. Johnston, lone senior of the 1936 Gold and Black quintet. Johnston came to the Hilltop from Snead Seminary, where he won all-state honors. He was a member of two Big Four championship squads and two city titleholding outfits. J. O. also played on the football team this year, hold- ing down an end. The Birmingham-Southern basketball team experienced one of its worst seasons in years during the 1936 campaign, winning only four of nineteen contests. But that was to be expected . . . with only three lettermen from last year returning for active duty to join a green squad of freshman graduates. So what? Nothing, except that Coach Englebert finally succeeded in de- veloping a team which looked great even in defeat, thereby serving notice that Southern will render a good account of itself next season. Incidentally, Coach Ben again proved that he is the ace of Alabama basketball coaches — at least that is how we see it from this angle. Captain J. O. Johnston, lanky center, was the lone member of last year ' s squad available for service this season. The re- maining monogram winners of the ' 35 outfit were two reserves, Buddy Braly, forward and alternate captain, and Bill Mosley, a junior guard. Braly was the victim of a bothersome injury to his foot at the beginning of the season, a handicap which kept him out of the starting line-up entirely. Mosley, however, fitted into the picture admirably and gave a good account of himself all year. Johnston paced the offensive of the squad all during the campaign, using his lankiness to take the ball off both back- boards, and also make his share of the points. Kenneth Morland, a star in the local Sunday School League for several years, answered Coach Ben ' s call and came through in a big way for the Panthers. Morland operated at one of the forward positions and proved one of the most consistent scorers in the Hilltop camp. He always turned in a beautiful floor game and held his man to a minimum of points. Charles Walton, another soph, performed at the other forward post and turned in some nice games for the cause. Jim Thomas, a scrapper from the word go, teamed with Mosley at guard, proving a good floor man. Hugh Corbin, Arnold King and Rob McNeill proved themselves capable substitutes when they were needed. So it was that the Panthers surrendered the city champion- ship to the Howard Bulldogs, who finally came through after a ten-year drouth. The Eastsiders returned experienced men for every position and won the title in three straight games. The Page Elding, McNeill, King, Morland, Walto Kneeling: Mosley, Johnston, Braly, Tl opening battle of the three-out-of-five series was scheduled for the Howard Gym and resulted in a Bulldog victory, 44-27. The Baptists came through with another nicely played game to win, 49-35, on the B. A. C. floor, but two nights later, on the same court, they had to extend themselves to conquer the fighting Panthers, 25-23. Bill Mosley won individual scoring honors with a total of 133 points compiled in 19 games. That young sophomore forward, Kenneth Mor- land, accounted for 117 markers in 17 engage- ments, followed by Captain Johnston with 96. At the end of the campaign, varsity letters were awarded to Johnston, Mosley, Morland, Walton, Thomas, Corbin, King, McNeill, and Sidney Hardy, manager. Prospects for a successful season next winter are very bright. From the 1936 edition, Coach Englebert will have Morland, Walton and Cor- bin returning at the forward posts; King at center, and Mosley and Thomas at guards. This squad will be augmented by several prom- ising recruits from a fine freshman team coached by Breezy Beaird, himself an old Panther star. Heading this list will be Eldridge Mote, local prep ace and a member of the Boys ' Club quin- tet which captured the Big Five title this year. Ester Hudson and Frank Osment are also ex- pected to come through in a big way. All in all, it looks like a big year. FRESHMAN BASKETBALL TEAM OSMENT. CHILDERS. NEVILLE. LIDE COACH LEX FULLBRIGHT spent the 1935 track season weeding out good material from his group of harriers and building for the coming season — or is it the other way round? Anyhow, with rein- forcements coming up, plus his returning performers, the Hilltop mentor is counting on having the best team that has represented Southern in many cinder seasons. The 1935 season was a mediocre one, as may be sur- mised. The squad met three out-of-conference foes and one Dixie Conference contender, losing to all four, r an- derbilt, Auburn, and the University of Alabama frosh scoring wins, followed by the Mississippi Choctaws, who made it unanimous. The Methodists gave the Baby Tigers the best out-of-conference battle, dropping a hard-fought meet in rain and sleet at Legion Field, TRACK 60-44. The stronger teams of Vandy and Auburn scored more decisive wins. The Panthers came near winning their only meet when they met the Choctaws on Munger Bowl, in an- other rain-and-wind-swept encounter. The winner was not decided until the final event, the mile relay, which was won by the Mississippians. The score was sgl4 to 67J 2, the Panthers losing after being in the lead all afternoon. Southern ' s harriers included Tom Carter, Leroy Smith, Bill Austin, Ed Morris, Brice McCay, Arnold Powell, Tom Sparks. Elmo Law, George Courson, Capt. Lewis Haygood, Rufus Perry, Charles Walton, Hermit Davis, John Purcell and Henry Stevenson. New additions to the 1936 team are: Enslen, An- drews, Gillespie, Prince, Patterson, Freeman, Osment, Kingsberry, Stevenson and Crwley. The ' 36 harriers met Vandy r , Chattanooga, Auburn, and the University of Alabama freshmen in dual meets and contested in a triangular meet with Mississippi College, Millsaps and Birmingham-Southern. . . . To the sports chronicler of the 1937 La Revue we leave the results . . . and our happy forecast. THE matriculation of Ed Alley at Birmingham- Southern gave the Hilltop institution a topnotch racquet wielder to captain and coach the 1935 in- stallment of the Panther tennis squad. Alley, a former state prep singles champion, and Ed Neville organized a team and scheduled several matches with other col- lege outfits. An elimination tourney was staged and a team se- lected from the champion and runners-up. The No. 1 and No. 2 positions were manned by Alley and Neville, respectively; No. 3 bv Rov Stirpes and four by Tom Carter. Others who took part in the matches were Will Miller, Chink Vernon, Rollin Osgood, and Billy Henckle. Top ran: Carter, McCall, Cain m rov: McCay, Sparks. Law, Walton GOLF ani TENNIS The opening of the season saw Mississippi State trounce the Hilltop netmen, 4-2. Millsaps was next in line and repeated the above score in handling the Panthers their second defeat. The Crimson Tide frosh followed and were whitewashed, 5-0. Then Millsaps came through with another 4-2 win, following which the tables were turned on Mississippi State, which was blanked, 5-0. Auburn closed out the season, winning 4-2. Due to the enrollment of several outstanding high school stars since last season, prospects for the 1936 team were considered very bright, especially as Neville and Carter were back for another year ' s service. A stiffer schedule was also in prospect, the promising ma- terial on hand making the athletic officials anxious to show off their wares. Numbered among the freshmen who were available for duty were Martin Lide, acting coach and captain of the squad; Hal Childers, Frank Osment, Nat Meh- whinney, Ed Tyson and Brooks Shirley. Several of these hopefuls were members of the Ramsay High School team, prep champions of Alabama last year, while others are representatives of other outstanding ag- gregations. PROSPECTS for a banner golf campaign were very bright at Birmingham-Southern for the 1936 sea- son. Only one member of the strong ' 35 outfit was missing and the holdovers were considerably more ex- perienced than they were during the previous year, as evidenced by the constantly lowering cards. The 1935 squad was composed of Alex Montgomery, Richard Westbrook, Herbert Acton, Harry Burns and Malcolm Wheeler. This team played home matches with Louisiana Polytechnic Institute, University of Ala- bama and the Birmingham Country Club outfit as well as one match with Ramsay Tech, of Birmingham. Al- though they did not set the woods afire with any blister- ing 70 ' s or 75 ' s, last year ' s squad had a highly success- Bun Westbrook ful season in competition with the aforementioned teams. During the fall session of the 1935 scholastic year, a tournament was staged in order to determine the com- ponents of the 1936 links team. Interest on the campus was running high and a position on the squad was a coveted honor. Harry Burns turned in a great game and won the medalist honors. Burns advanced to the final round in the tournament and met Westbrook for the cham- pionship. The medalist was defeated 5-4 and West- brook became the title-holder. Matches were played against Vanderbilt, Auburn, Alabama and other nearby colleges and also against several country club organizations. The Hilltop squad captured a majority of the meets in which they were The Birmingham-Southern team was made up of Richard Westbrook, Harry Burns, Malcolm Wheeler, Herbert Acton and Bill McGehee. Stevenson, Powell, Jensen, Patterson, Clem, Perry, Bridges, Manage: fOACH BEN ENGLEBERT ' S 1935 base- ball team may not have won the annual Panther-Bulldog diamond series, but it distin- guished itself by beating some of the best ama- teur teams in Alabama — in exciting extra-inning games, too. The Hilltoppers were able to finish the season schedule of 18 games with a .500 average. Having started the campaign with but one veteran pitcher, an inexperienced infield and with two new outfielders doing the bulk of the playing — and soon after the season began, having lost seven star regulars because of aca- demic difficulties — the Panthers under Engle- bert ' s coaching came through with one of the best baseball seasons in years. The regular season play b?gan April 5. En- glebert ' s new combination lost four games be- fore it finally began to click. Braly chalked up the first win over Acipco and followed it up with the season ' s masterpiece, a 2-1 victory over Buck Creek. The Panthers then scored a dou- ble win over the Mississippi College nine, Pitt- man, frosh righthander, winning the first game, 9-2, and Braly taking the series final, 5-3, allow- ing the Choctaws six hits. The only real blemish on the Panther record was the loss of the Howard series. After win- ning the first two games in rather easy fashion, the Hilltoppers allowed the Bulldog ' s loud growl to cool their winning spirit, and dropped the last three contests by rather disconcerting scores, the crowning disappointment coming in the ninth inning of the fifth and deciding game. With the score 5-3 in Southern ' s favor, the bases loaded and two men out in the last half of the final inning, Ed Chojnowski socked a round-tripper to cinch the series for the Bull- dogs. Brice McCay led the slugsmiths with a hefty .362 average. Big Hermit Davis proved a hit- ting sensation by driving in the most runs and finishing second to McCay in the team batting with a .324 average. Two freshmen, Cy Low- rey and James Bailey, played steady fielding games and finished above the .300 mark. Fisher played a graceful game at first and batted .305 for the season. BASEBALL TNTERFRATERNITY athletics scored their greatest triumph at Birmingham-Southern during the 1935-36 term — a triumph of interest. The Council had as its main objective the task of increasing the popularity of intramural sports on the Hilltop, and its success is worthy of men- tion. More Greek letter societies and more un- affiliated organizations entered play than ever before, adding to the success of the program. The Kappa Alpha fraternity won the first cup when its ace golfer, Richard Westbrook, cap- tured the golf tournament. His opponent in th e final round was Harry Burns, S. A. E. West- brook won the last match, 4-3, taking the lead at the first of the match and holding it through- out. The K. A. golfer ' s game was approximate- ly 80, Burns ' a few over. The two linksmen ad- vanced to the finals by defeating Bill McGehee, Horace Heninger, James Johnson, Malcolm Wheeler, Billy Bowers, and Leroy Parker. The Touch Football League aroused more interest this year than has any intramural sport at Birmingham-Southern in the last decade. The Alpha Tau Omega fraternity was seeded first, followed by the Kappa Alphas, defending champions. One lodge pulled out of the pic- ture, leaving a total of six fraternity teams com- peting for the interfraternity championship. There was also a nonfraternity league, com- posed of teams from the Dormitory, Ensley, Norwood, West End, and Southside, and also a G-man outfit. The winner of each league was to meet to determine the champion of the cam- pus. The A. T. O. ' s started off strong and waded through all fraternity competition without a loss, chalking up double wins over the S. A. E. ' s, Delta Sigma Phis, Kappa Alphs, Beta Kappas, and Theta Kappa Nus. The G-men won the non-fraternity flag and tied up with the Iron Crossmen for the campus title. AND OTHER SPORTS The G-men, a team composed of men on gov- ernment scholarships, won the all-important game, 26-7. Both teams scored their touch- downs on aerial heaves, Frank Osment doing the tossing for the winners and Ed Stevens passing for the fraternity team. Stevenson proved him- self the G-men ' s main offensive threat, this mid- get end taking in three of Osment ' s passes for scores. At the end of the season an all-star interfra- ternity team was selected, composed of: West- brook, K. A., and Schroeder, A. T. O., ends; Cox, S. A. E., and Sulzby, A. T. O., tackles; Edwards, S. A. E., center; Trotman, Beta Kap- pa, quarterback; Stevens, A. T. O., and Mc- Eniry, S. A. E., halfbacks; Thomas, K. A., full- back. The Kappa Alpha Gentlemen won their sec- ond cup of the year when they captured the basketball championship for the third consecu- tive time. One of the most attractive sched- ules possible was arranged by the athletic com- mittee and a competent referee was secured. The games evoked lots of interest, due to the topnotch brand of basketball displayed. No competition was offered the G-men in the non- fraternity loop and as a consequence they were immediately declared champions of that group. The K. A. ' s won their first game by default over the Beta Kappas, defeated the Theta Kappa Nu ' s, 37-13; the Delta Sigma Phis, 35-19; the S. A. E. ' s, 36-28; the A. T. O. ' s, 56-13, and the Pi Kappa Alphas, series favorites, 30-23. In blazing through this strong competition, the winners scored 194 points to their opponents ' 96. In the game for the championship of the cam- pus, the Kappa Alpha ' s started off strong but barely managed to stave off a strong G-man rally and win, 31-29. An all-star interfrat basketball team was se- lected, consisting of: Miller, Pi K. A., and Her- ring, K. A., forwards; Cooper, K. A. center; Westbrook, K. A., and Latimer, S. A. E., guards. T ELIEVE it or not, ping-pong was added to the - Birmingham-Southern athletic curriculum dur- ing the 1935 fall season, and, believe it or not, the Birmingham-Southern paddle pushers won the championship — that is, they annexed the pennant in the City Table Tennis League, which was or- ganized and sponsored by the City Ping-Pong loop. After six matches, the Panthers found them- selves tied with the Y. M. C. A. team in com- parative standings, with a record of five wins and one loss. The lone setback had been inflicted by the Y. M. on the Central Y ' s tables after the Panther pongers had given their final-round op- ponents their only defeat in Southern ' s Student Activities Building. A two out of three series was played for the championship of the league, the privisions being that one match was to be played at the Y. M. C. A., another at the Student Activities Building, and a third, if necessary, on neutral grounds — that is, tables. The Hilltoppers came through in the first two matches, making the playing of a third un- necessary. The league was composed of five teams — the Young Men ' s Hebrew Association, Boys ' Club, Birmingham Athletic Club, Y. M. C. A., and Southern. The Hilltoppers were awarded a beau- tiful trophy by the league in recognition of their championship status. The Birmingham-Southern squad was organized and captained by Martin Lide, a freshman from Ramsay Tech High School. Lide occupied the No. 1 slot and played brilliantly all season, con- tributing greatly to the success of the team. Team- ing with Lide were Curtis Roberts, No. 2 man; Raymon Marshall, No. 3; Richard Sexton, No. 4, and E. P. Miles, No. 5. Plans have been made for the same league to function next year, possibly with a larger number of contesting teams. The Hilltoppers return in- tact and should be even stronger than during the past season. Yes, sir, Mr. Ripley, it ' s all true. ealitte ■•■■.. :■' - SELECTING eaiiiie tl This year marks a departure in the manner of selecting the co-eds for the Beauty Section of La Revue. For the first time in the history of this feature, the beauties were chosen by a committee of judges at a public recep- tion, and not from photographs as has been the custom in the past. Each organization on the campus was in- vited to nominate one candidate, with the result that forty girls were named. The nominees were then pre- sented at a college reception to which the public was invited, and the judges made their selections — vis-a-vis. Those who served as judges for the 1936 beauties, and to whom the editor wishes to express her deep appre- ciation, are: Mrs. Arthur Crowder Mrs. Roderick Beddow Mr. George Bridges, Sculptor. Mrs. Louise Cone, Portrait Painter. Mr. Clifton Camp, Star of the New York Stage. Mrs. Harriett B. Adams, City Amusement Inspector. Mr. Pettersen Marzoni, r, and Movie Editor, The Birmingham News. Mu MdLd IZ ; an y li ( rnral slewit n I Ite 1 axu QUUZ K a lt yvlt A atkettne J—tdt i kattatte K otJLta t l £ enevieve li ' -Mi awi ' ■1 4V . Hfef cr ■Jessie Keller . . . Lalla Rookh Hill . . . Florence Norton . . . Virginia Bartlett . . . Lucy James . . . Jane Haralson . . . Mary Hobson . . . Sara Lowry . . . Loudel Garrett . . . Selmn Dale Durham. SOUTHERN ' S Edith Teal . . . Marian Bruce . . . Virginia Jamison . . . Claire Walker . . . Jane Moore . . . Margaret Lewis . . . Eleanor Edmonds . . . Nancy Thompson . . . Margaret Thompson . . . Peggy Crabtree. FAVORITES CAMPUS LIFE THE CANDIED LOLLARPOPS ■till and his seustv fronts lake their kodaks in hand: Katliryn Ivey. pretty red-bead, _ lure in tlie bookstore . . . Airview of campus, by J. T. Griffin . . . Football players plaring leetball . . . Freshman orientation— Dean Moore, Mary Louise Cash, Lillian Keener ami E.izabeth Duke . . . Through the windshield, another campus course . . . More orientation, a his word, anyhow . . . Martha Lyman Thompson, a mighty sweet A. O. Pi . . . Election day . . . Dean Hale and freshmen, all smiles . . . Gold and Black Editor Arnold Powell registering ennui — or is it disdain? . . . Co-eds — Janice Johns, Lnllah Rookh Hill, Sara Lowry, Eicnita Biard, Barbara Seaman and Emlyn Colniant. CAMERA Caught in the act : Murray McEniry , Grace Cut.er and Evalyn Currie in Mary the Third ... So we can spell? Kitty Peters, Betty Weaver, Peggy Crabtree, Aniv Howell (stand- in for Winifred Seale), Evelyn Walton, Pene- lope Prewitt, Theresa Davenport (for G?ne Hardin) and Kirby Jones in college skit at Ritz . . . Make-up Artists Mary Adams and Theresa Davenport working on Clyde Pippin, Jr., and J. D. Prince . . . S. A. E. ' s en masse at the Southern-Howard football game — Col- mant, Prince, Simmons and Edwards . . . K. A. Knights in Malcolm ' s parade . . . Deacon guing to his den . . . Nat Mewhinney, Hal Childtrs and Paxton Coleman as Hcward sponsors - , . We see you, Florence Norton . . . Theta Kappa Xus take off Gail Patrick . . . More parade . . . We still love a parade! MORE C ONFECTIONS... JUST PLAIN SUCKERS Library staff — Errante Corina, Don Beside the babbling brook with Ch Haralson, Ed Cooper, Laurie Battle Jessie Keller. Bill Miller, Amy Eiiz K. D. E. chapel performers . . , Tom —Julia Echols, Louise Stange. Christii delegates at Memphis, in the shadow . . . Friday, and H. Booth, Dee Foster Future Mortar Boards with Kat Ive n land (honorary). Hazel Howes, Alice thews, Jane Haralson, Amj Elizabetl Ann Ratlin , Virginia Bartlett. Laura llj Harmer, head librarian, and Bill Lawrence . . . stine Bryant . . . At the Amazons Dance with Jane and Loudel Garrett . . . Amy Howell, Wade Bradley, beth Thomas, Howell Aldredge and Gordon Atkinson, Carter, Alone at a Table for Two . . . More library ne Thaxton and Catherine Sims . . . Youth Conference of Saint Nick . . . Spanish Teacher Dolores Kodriques and Bill Downs . . . Looking up — In the library . . . nissing — Jane French, Gene McCoy, Miss Rosa V. Strick- Murra.i, Grace Bobbins, Loudel Garrett. Martha Mat- Hid Katberine Lide ... Pi Phis boating — , Richardina Ramsay and Gene McCoy . . . Debaters Malcolm Wheeler (left) and Wayne Ramsey (right) with Hav adversaries. AND SOME ESKIMO PI E When it snowed . . . Vera Mortar Board and shovel . . . Paul Clean poshing: Ed Cooper, Gwendolyn Brown, Elizabeth Leslie and Dee Foster ... A glimpse of Science Hall through a be.jeweled bush . . . John Nixon, Porter Carty, Melbourne Cannon and girls, Sarah Pos- telle and Martha Co wart . . . Sleddin — with a group of K. A. ' s — John Wiley Williams, James Thomas, Mel Cannon, James Herrin, Porter Carty, John Tillia and John Nixon . . . Throw- ing- snowballs at the camera . . . Mildred Joe Winfield, Jewel Trotman and Ella Will Cannon . . . Oscar Hargett and Sanford Enslen . . . Snow man . . . Henderson Walker and Mary Irickhoffer . . . Skinny Johnston takes a spill . . . Munger Hall . . . Brother Pope with A era ' s shovel . . . Dean Hale. It never snows but what it Hales, eh, Dean? t exit it i t at exit £4 FRATERNITIES Fir,, Row: Mayer, McNeill, Comer, Neville, Lawson, Garrett. Second Row: Allen, Miller, Chappell, Hughes, Malone, Walto INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL Frederic Mayer President Orville Lawson- Vice-President James Garrett , Secretary Morris Walton Treasurer Members Alpha Tau Omega Kappa Alpha Rob McNeill Edwin Neville Fletcher Comer Frederic Mayer Beta Kappa Pi Kappa Alpha Orville Lawson William Miller Archie McRimmon Robert Chappell Delta Sigma Phi Sigma Alpha Epsilon James Allen James Hughes Morris Walton Roy Malone Theta Kappa Nu Lucius Evins James Garrett F R A T E I T I E S i_ First Row: Miller, McCay, Massey, Bridges. Second Row: Johnson, Chappell, Carter, Eakei Third Row: McLeod, McClendon, Kinney. Fourth Row: Cordell, Abemathy. FRATERNITIES v Colors: Garnet and Gold Flower: Lily-of-the-Valley PI KAPPA ALPHA Founded at University of Virginia, 1868 DELTA CHAPTER Established lSyr Miller President Brice McCav Vice-President Fred E. Massev Secretary Cleveland Bridges Treasurer Fratres in Facultate Thomas F. Debnam H. Benjamin Englebert Perry W. Woodham Hubert Searcy H. T. Shanks Fratres in Collegio 1936 Robert Chappell Brice McCay William B. Johnson Will Miller Hoyt Abernathy 1937 Tom Carter Cleveland Bridges Jack Eaken Fred E. Massey Norman McLeod Abner Johnson J. B. McClendon G. C Kinney Walter Davidson Robert H. Cordell 1939 Joe Newton Hugh Birdsong Clarence Mize James Brown John Brown FRATERNITIES First Row: Hughes, Ramsay, H. McEniry, Montgomery, M. McEniry, Starnes. Second Row: Best, Binzel, Enslen, Malone, Johnston, Dwiggins. Third Row: Ford, Hargett, Petrie, Pippen, Snoddy, Terry. Fourth Row: McGowin, Harris, Whitehead, McGahey, G. Cabaniss, W. Cabanii Fifth Row: Childers, Livingston, Cleage. Coleman, Eaton, Edwards, Lively. Sixth Row: Mewhinney, Prince, Ray, Robinson, Simons, Latimer, Colmant. RATERNITIES Colors: Purple and Gold SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON Founded at University of Alabama, 1856 ALABAMA IOTA CHAPTER Established 1878 James Lewis Hughes ■President Wayne Knight Ramsay Vice-President Hugh McEniry Secretary Robert Montgomery Treasurer Frater in Facultate Harry E. McNeei, James Hughes Murray McEniry Be xt Lest Alvin Binzei, Harry Burns Charles Dwiggins James Ford Oscar Hargett George Cabaniss Weatherly - Cabaniss Hal Childers Bill Cleage Paxton Coleman FRATRES IX COLLEGIO IQ36 William McGehee Rob eri Montgomery 1937 Sanford Enslen Hugh McEniry I93S Billy ' Snoddy Porter Terry Jack McGowin Rogers Cox James Petrie 1939 John Colmant Billy Latimer James Livingston Garrad Harris James Eaton Thomas Edwards William Lively- Nat Mewhinney Wayne Ramsay Roy Starnes Roy Malone James Johnston Clytje Pippin William Harris Claude Whitehead Robert McGahey J. D. Prince Ben Ray- Dan Robinson- Sands Simons Billy Ray FRATERNITIES First Row: F. Mayer, Cooper, Wesrbrook, Price. Herring. Second Row: Thomas, Roberts, Ozier, Slaughter, Williams. Third Row: Freeman, Neville, Shoop, R. Mayer, Nixon. Fourth Row: Morland, Fleming, Tillia, Hardy. Cannon. Fifth Row: Heide, Journey, Skelding, King. Sixth Row: Williamson, Carry, Clotfelter. FRATERNITIES Colors: Crimson and White Flowers: Magnolia and Red Rose KAPPA ALPHA Founded at Washington and Lee, 1S65 PHI CHAPTER Established 18S2 Frederic Mayer President Edwin- Cooper Vice-President Richard Westbrook Secretary Joe Price Treasurer Fratres in Facultate Wilbur Dow Perry Andrew Hemphill Benjamin - F. Clark Marion L. Smith Edwin Cooper Merriman Freeman- James Herring Fratres in Collegio 1936 Benjamin Joe Price 1937 John Ozier Edwin Neville James Roberts Perry Slaughter Robert Brazeal Richard Westbrook Sidney Hardy- John Tillia 1938 James Thomas Frederic Mayer John Wiley Williams Melbourne Cannon Kenneth Morland Robert Mayer Robert Shoop James Clotfelter Porter Carty Sam Heide Ben King Bill Bickerstaff 1939 Robert Luckie John Williamson Jack Skelding Wallace Journey Tom Griffin Porter Mitchell FRATERNITIES First Row: McNeill. Srough. Sexton, Comer, Dinning. Second Row: Cummins, Sulzby, Harrison, Liles, Morris. Third Row: Powers, Berry. Knox, Schroeder. Stevens. Fourth Row: Andrews, Daniel, DeLapp, Wood, O ' Ferrail, Booth. Fifth Row: Dalrymple, Brandon, Shields, Barksdale, Downs, Baugh. Page 128 F R A T E R I T I E Colors: Old Gold and Sky-Blue Flower: White Tea Rose ALPHA TAU OMEGA Founded at Virginia Military Institute, 1S65 BETA BETA CHAPTER Established 18S3 „ ,, .. ...... President Rob McNeili Ben Stougii Vice-President Richard Sexton Secretary Fletcher Comer Treasurer Fratres in Facultate James Saxon ChildeR3 Marsee Fred Evans Fratres in Collegio 1936 Rob McNeill Woodford Dinning 1937 Ben Stouch Paul Liles Ed Cummins William Sulzby 1938 Fletcher Comer David Knox David Daniels Richard Sexton Woods Berry Lamar Andrews Ed Morris Ed Stevens John Schroeder James Powers J. B. DeLapp 1939 Harold Wood Forney Brandon- William O. Downs William O ' Ferrall William Barksdale William Dalrymple Vincent Shields Herbert Booth Vernon Cain Ashton Baoch Fred Spence John Sidney Pittman Archie McGillivary Bill Smith Page 129 FRATERNITIES First Row: McComsey, Garrett, Lanier, Craw-ford. Second Row: Cofield, Edge, Beckham. Bellows, C. Gholston. Third Row: Evins, McLester, Mercer, Bivins, R. Gholston. Fourth Row: E. V. Brindley. Hanes, Kent, Lollar, Reinhardt. Fifth Row: Smith, Edwards, Murphree, Johnson. A. R. Brindley. Page 130 FRATERNITIES Colors: Argent, Sable and Black Flower: American White Ros THETA KAPPA NU Founded at Drury College, 1924 ALABAMA BETA CHAPTER Established 1924 Frank McComsev President Alfred Bivins Vice-President James Garrett Secretary E. V. Brindley Treasurer Fratres in Facultate William T. Hammond Vincent Townsend J. Paul Reynolds William A. Whiting Fratres in Collegio 1936 Frank McComsey Aubrey Crawford Paul Lanier, Jr. B. B. Cofield Claude Gholston 1937 Richard Beckham Leo Edge Clayton Mercer Charles Bellows James Garrett Sam Tatum Lucius Evins Robert McLester Richard Gholston 1938 Alfred Bivins John Cleage, III David Reinhardt E. V. Brindley Arthur Hanes Allison Smith John Kent William Lollar 1939 A. R. Brindley Joe Kirby O. L. Mims William Edwards Floyd Harris Bob McAdory Frank Wade Joe Mac Murphree Fred Vance Maxwell Johnson James Bailey FRATERNITIES First Row: Lawson, Winston, Goodwin, Cruit. Second Row: Trotman, Morgan, Screws, Bailey. Third Row: Vines, Andrew, Kessler , Chappcll. Page 132 FRATERNITIES Colors: Purple and Gold Flower: Red Templar Rose BETA KAPPA Founded at Hamline University, igoi PSI CHAPTER Established 1927 Orville Lawson . . „ . President James M. Trotman, Jr Vice-President Archie McRimmon Secretary Leonard Winston Treasurer Fratres in Facultate James E. Bathurst J. Horace Coui.liette Fratres in Collegio 1936 Orville Lawson Archie McRimmon 1937 Sam Goodwin James M. Trotman, Jr. 1938 George Cruit Leonard Winston 1939 Perry Morgan, Jr. Sam Andrew Billy Chappeli M.lburn Bailey Charles R. Kessler Adrian Sp.dle Carl Screws, Jr. Charles Vines FRATERNITIES Ftrst Row: Allen, Thomason, Stewart. Strong Second Row: Wheeler, Walker, Crowley, Willii Third Row: Walton, Bratcher, Corbitt. Barne Fourth Row: Todd. Davis. Winner. Page 134 FRATERNITIES Colors: Nile Green and White Flower: White Carnation DELTA SIGMA PHI Founded at City College, 1899 BETA DELTA CHAPTER Established IQ2S James Allen ■President J. E. Thomason Vice-President Cuthel Stewart Secretary Ernest Strong Treasurer Fratres in Facult.ate Emorv Q. Hawk Russell S. Poor Fratres in Collegio 1936 J. E. Thomason Ernest Strong Malcolm Wheeler Raymond Wedgeworth 1937 James Allen Henderson Walker Maurice Crowley Pickard Williams 1938 Cuthel Stewart John Forster Woodrow Bratcher Charles Corbitt Morris Walton 1939 Charles Barnes David Todd Waldo Davis Walter Wintter Eugene Looney James Kay Raymond Leach Earl Hendon Ill atatLLtei SORORITIES First Row: Haralson, Bruce, Foster, Garrett, Ryan. Second Row: Griffith, Davenport. Winters, Hill, Matthe Third Row: Snow. Hettriclc, Jamison. Moore. PANHELLENIC COUNCIL Jane Haralson President Marian Bruce . . ..■Vice-President Dee Foster Secretary Loudel Garrett Treasurer Members Alpha Chi Omega Kappa Delta Alpha Omicron Pi Loudel Garrett Lalla Rookh Hill Marian Bruce Mildred Ryan Martha Matthews Sara Griffith Pi Beta Phi Gamma Phi Beta Anne Hettrick Theresa Davenport- Edna Snow Katherine Winters Theta Upsilon Zeta Tau Alpha Dee Foster Jane Haralson Virginia Jamison Jane Moore O R O R ! T I E S Firu Row: Leslie, Hill. Seama ond Row: Hollo%yay, Griffith. Wint Third Row: Bryant. McCoy. Foste . Bruce, Ryan. Garrett. Hanes i. Long. Durham. Matthews. Cc Hall, J. Haralson, P. Haralso AMAZONS Intersorority club for encouragement of social relationships among sororities Elizabeth Leslie President Lalla Rookh Hill • Vice-President Barbara Seaman Secretary Marian Bruce Treasurer Members Alpha Chi Omega Kappa Delta Gamma Phi Beta Loudel Garrett Emlyn Colmant Selma Dale Durham Martha Hanes Lalla Rookh Hill Mildred Long Mildred Ryan Martha Matthews Katherine Winters Alpha Omieron Pi Pi Beta Phi Marian Bruce Betsy Bryant Sara Griffith Gene McCoy rufie holloway barbara seaman Zeta Tau Alpha ' Diet a Upsilon Jane Haralson Dee Foster Page Haralson Charlotte Hall Elizabeth Leslie SORORITIES Fir, I Row: J. Haralson, Anthony, Adcock, P. Haralson, Prewitt, Buchanan, Moore. Second Ron-: Johnson, Culverhouse, Walker, Currie, Fleming, Schmitt, Frickhoeffer. Third Row: Murphy, Parker, Adams, Hobson, Ash, Claybrooke, Wise, Edmonds. ZETA TAU ALPHA Founded at Virginia State Normal, 1S98 ALPHA NU CHAPTER Established 1922 Jane Haralson • President Alice Buchanan Vice-President Mildred Adcock Secretary Page Haralson Treasurer SORORES IN COLLEGIO 1936 Jane Haralson Penelope Prewitt Mary Anthony 1937 Alice Buchanan Pace Haralson 1938 1939 Eleanor Edmonds Mildred Adcock Hal Fleming Mary Hobson Mary Murphy Jane Moore Mary Jane Schmitt Kathryn Ash Kitty Parker Marion Johnson Evalyn Currie Mary Frickhoeffer _ Evelyn Culverhouse „ . Jane Claybrooke _ TT7 Sara Wise Mary Adams Claire Walker Colors: X Flower. Steel Gray and Turquoise Blue £H Isc, White Violet Page 13? SORORITIES Fust Row: Bruce, Griffith, Holloway, Dominick. Brvant. Fuller. Brown. Second Row: R. Keener, Taylor L. Brown, Postelle. Klyce, Duke, Worthington. Third Row: Mosely, L. Keener, Cowart. Matthews, Gilbert. Bates. ALPHA OMICRON PI Founded at Barnard College, 18 97 TAU DELTA CHAPTER Established 1925 Marian Bruce President Sara Griffith Vice-President Rufie Holloway Recording Secretary Sara Dominick Corresponding Secretary Christine Bryant Treasurer SORORES IN COLLEGIO 1936 Idalene Fuller 1 9 ' 37 Marian Bruce Constance Brown Rufie Holloway Ruth Keener 1938 Christine Bryant Sarah Taylor Sara Griffith Lois Brown Sara Dominick 1939 Margaret Bates Dobbsie Gilbert Lillian Keener Elizabeth Duke Louise Klyce Sarah Postelle Martha Cowart Margaret Matthews Mildred Worthington Martha Mosely KhJ Color: Cardinal Vw ZjwKJ Flower: Jacquemot Rose Page 140 SORORITIES F,r,l Row: Foster, Leslie, Brown, Miller, Surer. Second Row: Hall, Dalton, Jamison, Jones, Wenz. . . Third Row: Johnson, Lovelace, Maddox, Thompson, Fain, McNeely. THETA UPSILON Founded at University of California, 1914 XI CHAPTER Established 1026 Dee Foster ' ' . ' ' . ' President Elizabeth Leslie Vice-President Gwendolyn Brown Secretary Virginia Miller Treasurer SORORES IN CoLLEGIO 1936 Elizabeth Leslie Virginia Miller Mary Ella Suter J 937 Dee Foster Charlotte Hall 1938 Gwendolyn Brown Alice Wenz Betty f. Jones Margaret Dalton Virginia Jamison Era Belle Fain 1939 Sara Louise Johnson Jadda Frances Maddox Eva James Lovelace Margaret A. Thompson Fannie Sue McNeely Rainbow Tints V 9 Ir ' 5 ' Fleur de lis SORORITIES First Row: Garrett, Hanes, Seale, Richardson, Bates, Ryan. Second Row: Cooney, Howell, Walton, Hurst, Snuff, Dickinson. Third Ron-: Thompson, Jones, Dobbs, Dyson, Bernhard, Cowan. Fourth Row: Hubbard, Winfield, Lacy. Sumner, Trotman, Cutler. Fifth Row: Douglas, Finke, Gandy, Spradley, Oyerton, Bullock. S O R O R ! T E S Colors: Scarlet and Olive Green Floujers: Red Carnation, Smilax ALPHA CHI OMEGA Founded at Depauu ' University, 1885 ALPHA OMEGA CHAPTER Established 1926 Loudel Garrett President Martha Hanes Vice-President Dorothea Seale Recording Secretary Edna Mae Richardson .... Corresponding Secretary Sara Bates Treasurer SORORES IN T COLLEGIO 1936 Mildred Ryan Evelyn Walton Anne Cooney Amy Howell Loudel Garrett Martha Hanes 1937 Edna Mae Richardson Mary Moore Hurst Winifred Shuff Dorothea Seale 1938 Sara Dickinson Laura Thompson Eleanor Jones Jewell Dobbs Eleanor Dyson 1939 Eleanor Bernhard Mildred Jo Winfield Jewel Trotman Ella Will Cowan Mary - Blanche Sumner Josephine Finke Grace Cutler Margaret Hubbard Katherine Spradley Kitty Lacy Ruth Bullock Louise Douglas Sara Helen Gandy Page 143 Sara Helen Overton SORORITIES F„ l Row: Snow, McCoy, Lide, Johns, Teal, Hettnck, Bryant, Arnett. Second Row: Johnston, Kelley. Knox, Moore, Banks, Bartlett. Biard, Blair. Third Row: Seaman, Collier, Illingworth, Jackson, McGough, Meade, Mitchell, Wilmore, Smith, PI BETA PHI Founded at Monmouth College, 1S67 ALABAMA ALPHA CHAPTER Established lgsy Edna Snow President Gene McCoy Vice-President Katherine Lide Secretary Janice Johns Treasurer SORORES IN COLLEGIO 1936 Edith Teal Betty Lyon 1937 Betsy Bryant Janice Johns Gene McCoy Anne Hettrick Katherine Lide Barbara Seaman 1938 Peggy Arnett Marguerite Johnston Laura Ross Moore Cynthia Kelley Harriet Goff Mary Knox Edna Snow Daisy Dean Smith 1939 Sara Lee Banks Mary Collier Isabel Meade Virginia Bartlett Mary C. Illingworth Mary K. McGough Elenita Biard Elizabeth Jackson Annette Mitchell Mildred Blair Sara Lowry Margaret A. Wilmore Colors: Wine and Sih-er Blue Flower: Wine Carnation SORORITIES F,„j Row: Hill, Brown, Colmant, Ewing, Lewis, Matthews. Scconrf Row: James, Williams, Tomlinson, Thomas, Smith, Peay. Third Row: Manly, Harris, Fite, Cash, Dupuy, Basenberg, Woodrow. KAPPA DELTA Founded at J ' irginia State Normal, 1897 ALPA UPSILON CHAPTER Established IQ2Q Lalla Rookh Hill President Emlyn Colmant . Vice-President Martha Matthews Secretary Mary Brown Treasurer SORORES IN COLLEGIO 1936 Lalla Rookh Hill Mary Brown 1937 Emlyn Colmant Martha Matthews Elizabeth Ewing 1938 Margaret Lewis Lucy James 1939 Mary Louise Cash Margaret Basenberg Sarah Peay Genevieve Wiluams Edith Manly Sara Frances Dupuy Frances Smith Edna Woodrow Minnie Watt Fite Josephine Harris Ruth Alden Thomas Norma Jean Tomlinson Mary E. Simmon s Colors: ■- ' $W ' - Flower: Green and White SSaft 1 White Rose SORORITIES First Row: Davenport. Long, Tate. Gignilliat. Second Row: Henley. Durham, Winters. Michaelson. Third Row: Harrison, Howell. Vines, Davis. Fourth Row: Bagley, DeLamotte, McKee. Page 146 SORORITIES Colors: Double Brown F lower: Pink Carnation GAMMA PHI BETA Founded at Syracuse U niversity , 1874 ALPHA RHO CHAPTER Establislied ic 30 Theresa Davenport President Mildred Long Vice-President Helen Tate Secretary Dora Henley Treasurer SORORES IN COLLEGIO 1936 Theresa Davenport Mildred Long Selma Dale Durham Helen Tate 1937 Katherine Winters Caroline Gignilliat Rita Lea Harrison Dora Henley Rebecca Sharp Betty Stewart Josephine Michaelson 1938 Alma Haves Howell Mary Virginia Respess Margaret Vines Jennie Ritchey Davis Jane McKee Miriam Bagley Rosalyn Scare-rough 1939 Heloise DeLamotte Page 147 taauizati n ORGANIZATIONS Williams. Reinhardt, Thomason, Douglas Y. M. C. A. Pickard Williams President David Reinhardt Vice-President J. E. Thomason Secretary Gilbert Douglas Treasurer Faculty Members Dr. Paul Sweet Dr. Charles Matthews Cabinet Members Howard Aldridce Ralph Adams James Clotfelter Fletcher Comer Charles Dwiggins James Howard Denny Johnston Frederic Mayer Robert Mayer Kenneth Morland Grant Murray McEniry Edwin Neville Jim Petrie Clyde Pippen James Powers John Schroeder Roy Starnes Thomas Stevenson Morris Walton Claude Whitehead ORGANIZATIONS First Row: Ratliff, Garrett, McCoy. French, Thomas. Second Row: Morgan, Smith. Green, Turner, Robins Third Row: Griffith, Wiley, Dalton, Haralson, Bartlet Fourth Row: Matthews, Cowart. Meagher, Moore. Bate: Filth Row: Keener, Mitchell, Postelle, Wilmore. Sixth Row: Duke, Lewis. Matthews. Collier. RGANIZATIONS y ci, Massengale, Tate, Griffin. Y. W. C. A. Kathrvn Ivey President Florence Norton First Vice-President Merle Massengale Second Vice-President Helen Tate . . Secretary Tolbert Griffin Treasurer Faculty Meaibers Dean Eoline W. Moore Committee Chairmen Anne Ratliff Loudel Garrett Gene McCoy Jane French Amy Elizabeth Thomas Rebecca Morgan Mary Olive Smith Charlotte Green Mildred Turner Grace Robins Sara Griffith Evelyn Wiley Margaret Dalton Page Haralson Virginia Bartlett Martha Matthews Martha Covvart Vera Meagher Merle Massengale Freshman Commission Martha Covvart Margaret Bates Lillian Keener Annette Mitchell Sarah Postei.le Margaret A. Wilmore Elizabeth Duke Ruth Lewis Marcaret Matthews Mary Collier RGANIZATIONS F,r,l Row: McEniry, Lanier, Robb. Price, Londa, Hughes. Second Row: McNeill, Myrick, Cooper, Mayer. Powell, Patterson, Cle: OMICRON DELTA KAPPA National Leadership Fraternity for Men Founded at Washington and Lee, 19 14 KAPPA CIRCLE Established March 22, 1024. Murray McEniry President Paul Lanier Vice-President Harry E. McNeel Secretary Felix Robe Treasurer Wyatt Walker Hale, Faculty Adviser Faculty Members Dr. Guy E. Snavely Dr. Austin Prodoehl Dr. Chas. D. Matthews Dr. Walter B. Posey James Saxon Childers W. E. Glenn Dean Wyatt W. Hale Dr. Russell S. Poor Dr. Henry T. Shanks Harry E. McNeel Robert S. Whitehouse Newman M. Yeilding H. B. Enolebert W. A. Moore Dr. E. Sydnor Ownbey John H. Malone Dr. W. D. Perry Octavus Roy Cohen Dr. Marion L. Smith Dr. Wm. A. Whiting Student Members Paul Clem George Londa Arnold Powell Edwin Cooper Murray McEniry Joe Price James Hughes Rob McNeill Felix Robb Paul Lanier Frederic Mayer Don Sims Conrad Myrick McCoy Patterson Page 154 ORGANIZATIONS First Row: Meagher, Tate, Keller, Prewitt. Second Row: Griffin, Fuller. MORTAR BOARD National Honorary Scholarship and Leadership Fraternity for Women Founded at Syracuse, New York, 19 18 SCROLL CHAPTER Established October 26, IQ35 Vera Meagher President Helen Tate Vice-President Jessie Keller Secretary Penelope Prewitt Treasurer Honorary Members Mrs. W. H. Stockham Dr. Eoline W. Moore Mrs. Guy E. Snavely Faculty Advisers Dr. W. A. Whiting Dr. Wvatt W. Hale Dr. Antony Constans Student Members Idalene Fuller Jessie Keller Helen Tate Tolbert Griffin Vera Meagher Mary Lou Griswold Penelope Prewitt Page 155 ORGANIZATIONS First Row: Hughes. Miller, Robb, Yelanjian. Baum. Second Row: McEniry, Hunt, Piice. Hamilton, Massey, Starne KAPPA PH! KAPPA Honorary Professional Educational Fraternity Founded at Dartmouth College, 1922 KAPPA CHAPTER Established April, 192-, James Hughes President Felix Robb Secretary Will Miller Vice-President Freeman Orr Treasurer James Huches Will Miller Felix Robb Members Freeman Orr Louis Yelanjian Richard Hunt Roy Starnes Herbert Baum Joe Price Travis Shelton Hugh McEniry John Hamilton- Fred Massey Faculty Members Dr. Guy E. Snavely H. B. Englebert Dean W. W. Hale Dr. J. E. Bathurst W. E. Glenn J. M Malone ORGANIZATIONS Second Row: Griffin, M Third Row: Sue KAPPA DELTA EPSILON National Honorary Educational Fraternity for Women Officers Mildred Turner President Jessie Keller Vice-President Bertha Best Secretary Helen Tate Treasurer Dean Eoline Wallace Moore, Faculty Adviser Active Members Bertha Best Mary Enslen Amy Howell Louise Crow j essie Keller Mildred Turner Theresa Davenport Anne Moss M arv Lou Overall TOLBERT GRIFF.N HELEN TATE M ARV Eu.A SUTER Dorothy McGlatherv Amy Elizabeth Thomas Page 157 ORGANIZATIONS First Row: Wiley, Noryell. Taylor, Murray, Adcock, Cordray. Second Row: Howell, Hughes, Robins, Copeland, Crenshaw, Johnsto ALPHA LAMBDA DELTA National Honorary Scholastic Fraternity for Freshmen 11 omen Founded at University of Illinois, 1924 BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN CHAPTER Established 1033 Evelyn Wiley • President Ruth Norv ell Vice-President Lucy Taylor Secretary Alice Murray Treasurer Student Members Mildred Adcock Harriet Goff Myrtle Putnam Carolyn Copeland Alma Hayes Howell Grace Lillian Robins Charlotte Cordray Grace Hughes Lucy Taylor Rebecca Crenshaw Marguerite Johnston Evelyn Wiley- Alice Murray Ruth Norvell Honorary Members Mary Lou Griswold Sarah Alice M. Rice Faculty Adviser Dean Eoline Wallace Moore RGANiZATIONS F,rst Row: Cook, Johnson, Chitwood, S. Bradley, Calhoun. ond Row: Wilson, Cooke, Rutland, Gray, Flanmgan. W, Bradley. Third Row: Cheatham, Gibson, Barnes, Rooks. PASTORS ' UNION Robert Dane Cook President Elmer C. Johnson Vice-President T. J. Chitwood Secretary Wade Bradley Treasurer Members E. M. Barnes, Jr. Sam Bradley Wade Bradley E. E. Bridges J. C. Calhoun Roy Cheatham Thomas J. Chitwood Robert Dane Cook Ross A. Cooke Ellis Flannigan George Gibson Alan DeLeon Gray Elmer C Johnson Harry Moore John Rooks John Rutland Allen D. Wilson ORGANIZATIONS First Row: Rutland, Smith, Waldrup, Barnes, S. Bradley. Second Row: W. Bradley, Calhoun, Cheatham, Chitwood, Cofield. Thud Row: Pierson, Corbitt, Edgar, Flannigan, Gray. Fourth Row: Howington, Johnston, Johnson, McLeod, Myrick. ORGANIZATIONS Thomason, Butterly, Whetstone, Clem, Cooke Fall Semester MINISTERIAL ASSOCIATION Spring Semester J. E. Thomason President Elbert Butterly Elbert Butterly Vice-President . . John Rooks Wood Whetstone Paul Clem Secretary Jack Edgar Treasurer Joe Wheeler Smith Bob Pearson John Rutland Bill Scott Joe W. Smith J. E. Thomason Lee Waldrup Wood Whetstone Gordon Atkeison E. M. Barnes Elbert Butterly Sam Bradley Wade Bradley Eugene Bridges John Calhoun Roy Cheatham Student Members T. J. Chitwood Paul Clem B. B. Cofield Robert Coley Ross Cooke Charles Corbitt Thomas Edgar Ellis Flan nig an Alan DeLeon Gray- Fletcher Howington Denny Johnston Elmer Johnson Lloyd Kimbrough Walter McLeod Robert Mooney Faculty Members Dr. Chas. D. Matthews Dr. Paul Shankweiler Page 161 RGANIZATIONS BELLES LETTRES Literary Society Established at Southern University, 1S59 Wayne Ramsay President Ernest Strong Vice-President Marcuerite Johnston Secretary Katherine Lide Treasurer Harry E. McNeel, Faculty Adviser Hoyt Abernathy Mary Adams Kathryn Ash Sara Lee Banks Virginia Bartlett Margaret Bates Elenita Biard Mildred Blair Gwendolyn Brown Betsy Bryant Alice Buchanan Harry Burns Mary Collier Martha Cowart Theresa Davenport Sara Dominick Charles Dwicgins Elizabeth Ewing Mary Frickhoeffer Members Joel B. Guin Martha Hanes Jane Haralson Lloyd Harris Anne Hettrick Mary Hobson Rufie Holloway James Hughes Elizabeth Jackson Marguerite Johnston Lillian Keener Louise Klyte Henri LeClercq Ruth Lewis Katherine Lide Billy Lively Betty Lyon Margaret Matthews Martha Matthews Jane McKee Isabel Meade Annette Mitchell Laura Ross Moore Virginia Morcan Ed Morris James Morris Jim Petrie Clyde Pippen Sarah Postelle John D. Prince Wayne Ramsay Barbara Seaman Robert Shoop Sands Simons Edna Snow Roy Starnes Ed Stevens Ernest Strong Margaret A. Thompson- Margaret A. Wilmore James M. Trotman, Jr. ORGANIZATIONS Thomas, Echols, Gray, Chappell. CLARIOSOPHIC Literary Society Established at Birmingham-Southern, 1920 Amy Elizabeth Thomas President Julia Echols Vice-President John O ' Neal Secretary Allen Gray Treasurer Dr. B. F. Clark, Faculty Adviser Ralph Adams Howard Aldredge Sara Bates Mary Bell Marie Boozer Renwick Brannon Genevieve Brown Elbert Butterly Vernon Cain Nell Campbell Carey Chadbourne Jack Chandler Bob Chappell B. B. Cofield Everette Craig Maurice Crowley Dorothy Culpepper Myrtis Davis Julia Echols Members Eloise Echols Bill Edwards Kathleen Ezell Mary Gassman Allen Gray Leon Gray Myra Ruth Green J. T. Griffin Oscar Hargett Gene Hight LlLLY ' AN HlLTY Lucille Horton James Howard Hazel Kennybrook Katheryn LeNoir Fred Lewis Pauline Lyle Edith Mathison Sue Mathison Perry Morgan Rebecca Morgan Florence Norton John O ' Neal Lois Parham Elmina Peterson John Rooks Naman Salibi Helen Scott Mary Olive Smith Cuthel Stewart Christine Thaxton Amy Elizabeth Thomas Morris Thompson Mildred Tippen Buford Truett Margaret Vines Wood Whetstone Felonese Wilson ORGANIZATIONS Hughes. Kincaid. Rice. Do BETA BETA BETA National Honorary Biological Fraternity BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN CHAPTER Established 102S Grace Hughes President James H. Kincaid Vice-President Mary Clara Rice Secretary Gilbert Douglas Treasurer Faculty Members Dr. ' Guy E. Snavely Dr. J. Paul Reynolds Dr. W. A. Whiting Perry W. Woodham Dean Wyatt W. Hale Studext Members Pearce Bruce Robert H. Chappell Sam Cohn Fletcher Comer Gilbert Douglas Mary Enslen Jane French Tolbert Griffin Martha Griswold Dora Henley Grace Hughes John Kent James Kincaid Mary Knox Gene McCoy- Virginia Morgan Mary Clara Rice Grace Twining Wade Whitney ORGANIZATIONS Cohn, Kincaid, Perry, Parker. SKULL AND BONES CLUB Local Honorary Pre-Medical Organization Founded 1934, Birmingham-Southern College Sam Cohn „ • , President James Kincaid Vice-President J° E Perry Secretary Leroy Parker Treasurer Faculty Members Dr. W. A. Whiting Dr. J. Paul Reynolds Honorary Members Dr. Joe Hirsch Dr. James R. Garber Dr. T. C. Donald Student Members Gilbert Douglas Fletcher Comer J° E P r ' ce Quill Murphy William T. Miller John Kent William Dupuy Sam Hay Robert Chappell William Lawrence Howard West Clyde Miller John Ozier Billy S noddy Jack Smith Sam Cohn McCoy Patterson James Kincaid Tom Carter j e Perry Merriman Freeman Leroy Parker ORGANIZATIO Currie, Ivey, Hill. Baurr PAINT AND PATCHES Evalyn Currie President Kathrvn Ivey Vice-President Lalla Rookh Hill Secretary Herbert Baum Treasurer Marsee F. Evans, Faculty Adviser Mildred Adcock Doris Adi.er Mary Anthony Herbert Baum Fred Blanton Sam Bradley- Lois Brown- Christine Bryant Emlyn Colmant Charlotte Cordray Ella Will Cowan Evelyn Culverhouse Grace Cutler Evalyn Currie Theresa Davenport Louie DeArman Sara Dominick Ed Dunlap Eleanor Edmonds Members Hal Fleming Mary Elizabeth Forster Mary Frickhoeffer Dee Foster Sara Griffith Pace Haralson Jane Haralson Lalla Rookh Hill Mary Hobson Mary Moore Hurst Kathrvn Ivey Marion Johnson Kitty Lacy- Mildred Long Eva James Lovelace Murray McEniry Jane McKee Martha Matthews Robert Mayer Clayton Mercer Jane Moore Laura Ross Moore Annette Mitchell Anne Moss Florence Norton- Ruth Norvell Frederick Outlaw Clyde Pippen J. D. Prince John Rutland Mary- Jane Schmitt John Schroeder Dorothea Seale Virginia Shackleford Robert Shoop Henry Sparks Bill Sulzby- Helen Tate Claire Walker Henderson Walker Genevieve Williams Sara Wise Sarah Wyatt ORGANIZATIONS i tr Starnes, Walton, Currie, Johns. ETA SIGMA PHI National Honorary Latin-Greek Fraternity Founded at University of Chicago, 1924 BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN CHAPTER Established 1026 Hazel Hewes ■' President Roy Starnes Vice-President Evelyn Walton Secretary George Currie Treasurer Faculty Members Dr. George Currie Dr. Guv E. Snavely Dr. Charles Matthews Student Members Maurice Crowley Janice Johns Hazel Hewes Roy Starnes Evelyn Walton Wood Whetstone ORGANIZATIONS McCoy, Hilty, White, Lide. ALPHA GAMMA Sport and Hobby Club Gene McCoy President Lillyan Hilty Vice-President Pansy White Secretary Katherine Lide Treasurer Barbara Ransom, Faculty Adviser Grace Adams Joan Bernheim Elenita Biard Marjorie Bi.oomfield Edna Brannon Maurine Brannon Mary Collier Mary Enslen Evelyn Erwin Members Mary Elizabeth Forster Charlotte Green Myra Ruth Green Martha Haralson Lillyan Hilty Roberta Hudson Agnes Hunt Elizabeth Jackson Sara Frances Lacey Katherine Lide Martha Mai.one Isabel Meade Vera Meagher Josephine Michaelson Gene McCoy Jessie Mae McCulley Virginia Morgan Doris Murphy Kitty Peters Mary Olive Smith Vanoni Sturgess Margaret Thompson Nancy Thompson Pansy White Page 1(8 ORGANIZATIONS y, McComsey, Wiley, Searcy. INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS CLUB Established at Birmingham-Southern, 1930 Wayne Ramsay President Frank McComsey Vice-President Evelyn Wiley Secretary Hubert Searcy Treasurer Hoyt Abernathy Ralph Adams Margaret Basenberg Herbert Baum Charles Bellows Woods Berry Bert Best Elenita Biard Alfred Bivins Marjorie Bloomfield Sam Bradley E. V. Brindley Robert Buchanan Paul Burleson Robert Burr Carey Chadbourne James Clotfelter Mary Collier Carolyn Copeland Martha Cowart Rebecca Crenshaw John Crim Maurice Crowley Bill Dalrymple Jennie Ritchey Davis James Eaton Tom Edwards Bill Edwards Lucius Evins Corrinthie Belle Fiel Curtis Finch Mary Elizabeth Forste Members Claude Gholston Richard Gholston Caroline Gignilliat Joel Guin Martha Haralson Billy Harris Hazel Hewes James Howard Alma Hayes Howbll Fletcher Howington Cobern Hullet Agnes Hunt Elizabeth Jackson Marguerite Johnston Elizabeth Jones Wallace Journey Curtis Kingsberry Louise Klyce Martin Kruskopf Paul Lanier Henri LeClercq Frank McComsey Gene McCoy Murray McEniry Mary Catherine McGc Frank Machen Martha Malone Margaret Matthews Isabel Meade Pope Meagher Clayton Mercer Josephine Clyde Miller Annette Mitchell Robert Montgomei Kenneth Morland Edward Morris James Morris Martha Mosely Alice Murray William Myers Ellis Newman Joseph Newton Arthur Nichols Rollin Osgood Lois Parham Lucia Patton Kitty Peters Elmina Peterson Clyde Pippen Sarah Postelle John Prince Anne Ratliff John Rooks Richard Sexton Don Sims LeRoy Cooper Shi Bill Snoddy Shelby Southard Sarah Taylor Margaret Vines Ma w Claude Whitehe Evelyn Wiley Wilson I Z A T I O N S Hughes, Miller, Lide THETA SIGMA LAMBDA Honorary Mathematic Fraternity Herbert J. Baum President James Hughes Vice-President Will Miller Secretary Katherine Lide Treasurer W. A. Moore Faculty Members John- H. Malone W. E. Glenn- Hovt Abernathy Herbert Baum Verna Beene B. B. Cofield Sam Cohn Louise Crow Wv.nelle Docgett Wendell Edwards Student Members Chadwick Gibbs Sam Goodwin Allen Gray Peggy Greene Tolbert Griffin- James Huches Arnold Kinc James Lassiter Katherine Lide Gene McCoy Frederic Mayer Merle Massengale E. P. Miles, Jr. Will Miller Virginia Morgan Freeman Orr Felix Robb Vanoni Sturcess Amy Elizabeth Thomas James Thomas Pansy White RGAN IZATI O N S Wheeler, McComsey, Sweet. PI GAMMA MU Honorary Social Science Fraternity Founded at William and Mary, 1924 ALABAMA ALPHA CHAPTER Established igsg Malcolm Wheeler President Frank McComsey Vice-President Dr. Paul Sweet Secretary Dr. George Currie Dr. Walter B. Posey Dr. W. D. Perry Faculty Members Dr. Chas. D. Matthews Dr. James E. Bathurst Dr. Paul Shankweiler Mary Lou Griswold Dr. Paul Sweet Perry Woodham Hubert Searcy Ida Mae Chasey Ed Cooper Woodford Dinning Corrinthie Fields Caroline Gignilliat Robert Giles Richard Hunt Student Members Alice Murray Murray McEniry Frank McComsey Vera Meagher Ellis Newman- Mildred Ryan Barbara Seaman Catherine Sims Shelby Southard John B. Stevenson Mary Ella Suter Richard Westbrook Malcolm Wheeler Woodrow Wilson ORGANIZATIONS First Row: M. McEnirv, McComsey, Evans, Gholston, Hughei Second Row: H. McEniry, Ramsay, Wheeler. TAU KAPPA ALPHA Honorary Forensic Fraternity ? Murray McEniry ■President Frank McComsey Vice-President Marsee Fred Evans Secretary and Treasurer Members Richard Gholston Hugh McEniry James Huches Murray McEniry Frank McComsey Wayne Ramsay Malcolm Wheeler Faculty Members Dr. Marsee Fred Evans Hubert Searcy Dean W. W. Hale Page 172 ORGANIZATIONS CHORAL CLUB Women ' s Glee Club Rebecca Morgan . . Rita Lea Harrison . Bertha Best Clara Griffith Jane McKee Mary Olive Smith Edna Brannon Martha Griswold Josephine Michaelson Nelle Stewart Maurine Brannon Glendon Galloway Rebecca Morgan Mary Sumner Marjorie Bloomfield Dora Henley Alice Murray Sara Thomas Mary Evelyn Collins Odein Hill Florence Norton Margaret Thompson Selma Dale Durham LlLLYAN HlLTY Ruth Norvell Nancy Thompson Ruth Ehrensperger Agnes Hunt Mary Lou Overall Reba Turner Eloise Echols Mary Moore Hurst Elmina Peterson Winifred Strickland Kathleen Ezell Lucy James Grace Robins Alice Wenz Jane French Eleanor Jones Ola Mae Sargent Pansy White Peggy Greene Merle Massengale Virginia Shackelford Emily Wilson Me Glee Club Aubrey Crawford President John Hamilton • Vice-President Gordon Atkeison Secretary John Tillia Treasurer Rita Lea Harrison Accompanist Andrew Hempill Director Gordon Atkeison Aubrey Crawford Max Johnson Milburn Bailey Maurice Crowley J. D. Kaylor Richard Beckham V. W. Dorough Zeno Knapp Bert Best Jack Edgar Bill Lawrence Paul Burleson Leon Gillespie Robert Luckie John B. Stevensc Alvin Binzel Matthew Gillespie Robert Mayer Charles Calkins Claude Gholston Will Miller John Tillia Carey Chadbourne Joel Guin Perry Morgan Cecil Chilton John Hamilton Bob Pearson Frank Win gate Arthur Cook Holmes Hill J. D. Prince Grant Yeilding ORGANIZATIONS Powell. Neville ®Ij? (loft mh Hark Official Jf ' eekly Publication of Birmingham-Southern Arnold Powell Editor-in-Chief Edwin Neville Business Manager Editorial Staff Robert Shoop Managing Editor James Herring . Hugh McEnirv .... Managing Editor Penelope Prewitt Martha Matthews -Issociate Editor . Sports Editor Society Editor coxtributors Anne Hettrick, Dee Foster, James Thomas, Merriman Freeman, Mildred Dodson, Becky Phillips, LeRov Cooper Smith, Pickard Williams, Mary Charles Illingworth, Kitty Parker, Shelby Southard, Marguerite Johnston, Conrad Myrick, George Londa, Evelyn Wiley, Mildred Ryan, Peggy Arnett, Daisy Dean Smith Business Staff Forney Brandon . . Asst. Business Manager Ralph Adams . . . .Isso. Business Manager Richard Sexton Secretary John Wiley Williams . . Circulation Mgr. Faculty Advisers James Saxon Childers Newman M. Yeilding RGANIZATIONS LA REVUE Yearbook of Birmingham-Southern College Penelope Prewitt Editor-in-Chief Evelyn Walton Business Manager Arnold Powell Assistant Editor Conrad Mvrick Honorary Assistant Editor Associate Editors Anne FIettrick Murray McEniry Mildred Ryan James Herring ■• Sports Editor James Thomas •• Assistant Sports Editor Bill Lollar Snapshot Editor Feature Editors Dick Westbrook Amy Howell Ed Cooper Organization Editors Woodford Dinning Amy Howell Tolbert Griffin Joe Price Senior Class Editor Grant Yeilding Junior Class Editor Ed Stevens Lower Division Editor Art Editors Mary Eblen Anne Moss Bob Chappell Cartoonist Compiling Staff Jane Haralson, Bill Johnson, Loudel Garrett, Sara Dominick, Lalla Rookh Hill, James Powers, Theresa Davenport, Grace Twining, Virginia Morgan, J. E. Thomason, Paul Lanier, Roy Starnes, James Garrett, Evelyn Wiley, Marion Johnson, Wood Whetstone, Kitty Parker, Nat Mewhinney, Jane Moore, Robert Shoop, Waldo Davis, Sara Griffith, Becky Phillips, Bertha Best, Bill Daniel, Gene McCoy. Business Staff Charles Barnes . Assistant Business Manager Morris Walton . . Asso. Business Manager Solicitors Ralph Adams, David Knox, Lamar Andrews, Marian Bruce, James Kay Page 175 RGANIZATIONS Lide. Lanier. Keller, G PH! SIGMA IOTA Honorary Romance Language Fraternity Founded at Birmingham-Southern, 1931 Harry E. McNeel President Katherine Lide Vice-President Jessie Keller . . . Faculty Members Harry E. McNeel William T. Hammond Paul Lanier Secretary William T. Hammond Treasurer ■Sergeant-at-Arms Antony Constans Charles Matthews Robert S. Whitehouse Mrs. Harry Greenwood Theresa Davenport Idalene Fuller Mary Gassman Honorary Members Mrs. Andrew Hempii.l Miss Elizabeth Steadham Student Members Annie Bibb Graves Mary - Lou Griswold Amy Howell Paul Lanier Katherine Lide Fred E. Massey Kathryn Ivf.y Jessie Keller Margherita Kuppersmith Nelle Stewart Don Sims Evelyn Wiley Virginia Miller Mary Lou Overali Henry Sparks MU ALPHA Honorary Musical Fraternity Aubrey Crawford . President Rita Lea Harrison Vice-President Rosalyn Scarbrough Secretary Faculty Adviser Andrew Hempili. «w Richard Beckham Charles Calkins Aubrey Crawford , Dorothy Davis Eleanor Dyson Robert Giles Crawford Harrison Members Mary Lou Griswold Rita Lea Harrison John Hamilton Lucy James Marguerite Johnston Alice Wenz Wilberta Kerr Howard West Zeno Knapp Rosalyn Scarbrough Roy Starnes John Tillia RGANIZATIONS Ivey, McCoy, Lide, Kellei LE CERCLE FRANCAIS Kathryn Ivey Gene McCoy . • President Vice-President Katherixe Lide . Secretary Jessie Keller Treasurer Mary Anna Barker Margaret Bates Constance Brown Mary Collier Theresa Davenport Jane French Faculty Members Henri LeClercq Student Members Martha Haralso Alma Hay Kathryn ) Marguerh Jessie Keller Katherine Lide Mildred Long T. Hammon Martha Mosely Alfred E. Mayer Milburn Bailey Cecil Chilton Myrtle Cochran Errante Corina Douglas LITTLE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Martha Griswold Secretary Members Tom Edwards Martha Griswold Martha Jordan Wallace Journey Frank Machen Frederic Mayer Robert Mayer Perry Morgan Mary Sl Howard In Hppreciation The editor and business manager wish to express their deep appre- ciation to the following for their splendid assistance and co- operation in the publication of this book: Bill Lollar for his snapshots of the faculty and students and his assistant, Bill Daniels. Arnold Powell for his editorial assistance. James Herring for the sports section. Mary Eblen and Bob Chappell for their cartoons and art work. Anne Hettrick. Murray McEniry and Mildred Ryan for their general help wherever needed. Joe Price and Amy Howell for their help with the senior write-ups. Conrad Myrick and Dee Foster for their assistance with the Beauty Reception. Charles Barnes for his active solicitation of ads. Every Member of the Compiling Staff and Others who as- sisted in any way towards the completion of this annual. Joe Aloia for his efficiency in handling photographs of the student body. Messrs. W. A. Benson, R. G. Benson and Joe Ledbetter of the Benson Printing Company and Mr. Bob Faeber of the Ala- bama Engraving Company for their guidance and constant help on our publication. And Dinky the Dunk and Tuney the Turtle, whose enthu- siasm was a real inspiration to the staff. J-v ie p4-Jivetti i et 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. CO GULF STATES STEEL COMPANY Brown-Marx Building BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Pig Iron Welding Rods Staples Billets Plates — Sheared and Universal Nails (all kinds) Slabs Sheets— Black, Blue, Annealed Bale Ties Wire Rods and Galvanized Fence Posts Bars Wire Rods, Straightened and Bright and Annealed Wire Angles Cut Galvanized Wire Woven Wire Fence Barbed Wire CAMPUS CLOSE-UPS The Editor has borrowed me and my caption (from the Sunday News-Age-Herald) for a sort of composite, so here goes: It isn ' t any easy task to review the year ' s jottings, especially when so many things have been jotted and you don ' t have The South ' s Greatest Newspaper to jot them down in. But I ' ll take some pot jots . . and hope that I don ' t hit my sparrow. First, the blond lad, McCoy Patterson, president of the student body. Figured in the news frequently and does a little bit of everything, including boxing and stuffing birds. They say he ' s a taxidermist, but I can ' t prove it. He was born in China, but you couldn ' t tell it. (Editor ' s note: While we don ' t know anything about boxing, it ' s interesting to note that the Boxers in China call their society the righteous league of fists. Re- member the Boxer rebellion?) Then, I remember the beautiful lady in blue, and I don ' t mean the song — I mean the young lady standing very calmly by the library. Who, you ask. Mildred Ryan, who was elected Miss Birmingham-Southern to lead the parade, and then to head the Beauty Section. Parade Manager Malcolm Wheeler received a lot of praise. The K. A. ' s and A. O. Pi ' s won the trophies for the best fraternity and sorority floats . . . Medals for chapel programs go to the Rev. Mr. Louis Telanjian, who gave us an inspirational talk that was fairly captivating. A rich, smooth voice that we would so like to hear from the platform more often . . . Dr. E Q. Hawk, who, we are sorry to report, is not sporting a Van Dyke, as would be Mr. Woodham because Southern didn ' t trample the Bulldogs . . . The Mayer brothers, Frederick and Bobby, who se music is nothing short of superb ... A four-star honor that came our way with the installation of Mortar Board, nee Scroll. Absolutely tops in woman ' s honorary, a real feather in our cap which tickled every- body. And Vera Meagher the first president . . . Sam Bradley elected president of the Alabama Conference of Toung People. Florence Norton, another young folks ' leader, and mighty pretty . . . Bouquets to Actress Grace Cutler for her performance as Mary the Third, and posies also for Evalyn Currie, as the Second, and Dot Seale, as the First. Dot certainly was a spicy little grandma. Eva James Lovelace and Annette Mitchell, as Mary First and Mary Second, in the prologue, like- wise outstanding. A play which attracted the entire campus two nights hand-running. Much praise for Dr. Evans. Now a paragraph, for no reason at all, since we haven ' t been paragraphing according to Hoole. except that it ' s desirable for typographical effect. Conrad My rick, the popular little minister, who finished in February, landed a splendid pastorate in Mobile and a charming wife all at the same time . . . Evelyn Culverhouse. a really good voice, teaming with Rita Dee Harrison and Selma Dale Durham, both accomplished pianists as well as harmon- izers. Appeared also in college skit at the Ritz . . . Rob McNeill, the soul of honor, who is a member of the Diars ' Club. Very popular and president of the A. T. O. ' s the past two years. Oh. yes, we like to hear Evelyn Culverhouse sing Don ' t Mention Love to Me. Nothing personal . . . Big Jim Hughes, of all sorts of fame, in- cluding the fashion show and honors a yard long. Like- wise Fashion Plate Smiling John Colmant. not forgetting charming Lalla Rookh Hill, a beauty in her own right who can make good-looking clothes look better. And Murray McEniry. also of fashion show fame, with honors galore . . Henri Le Clercq and his piquant mustache, both of which will be greatly missed when he returns to his native France . . . Co-captains (football) Brice McCay and Bill Johnson, something of inseparable com- panions, seen suaving about the campus . . . Jane Haral- son, who wears modish clothes and whose favorite actor is Charles Boyer . . . Arnold Powell, editor of G. B., busy with his paper every week, but often seen driving along in a springish atmosphere in an open touring with bevies of girls on all sides and his long brown touseled hair waving in the breeze . . . and his pipe . . . Edna Snow presiding over wearers of the Arrow ... A. Har- rison, A. T. O. big shot (pun my word), munching sun- dry ice cream cones but not quite up to the record of Dr. Clark. And so life goes. But while tossing brickbats and bouquets, we must not overlook Penny ' s Beauty Parade. It seems she loves a parade, if I remember correctly. Forty breath-taking beauties parading across the foot- lights at Hunger Hall, then receiving at Stockham. A swell idea of the editor. And she let the chips fall where the judges chipped ' em. News that Mildred Ryan has brains as well as beauty. Her psychology wins a scholarship at Brown University. Wood Whetstone gets one, too — at Duke . . . Quaint is the word that describes Anne Hettrick . . . Tom ( Bud- dy ) Braly. president of the senior class, a fine fellow . . . Our ping-pongers win the gonfalon, which is some- thing to fly as well as to crow about . . . Eleanor McGlathery, a quiet and studious person . . . Remember when Bill Scott made a chapel talk wearing a cowboy hat. Talked about Western books in the library, and not through his sombrero . . . Marian Bruce, the little blond A. O. Pi leader who always attracts admiring glances. And Dee Foster (while on the subject of girls), the friendly and capable president of the Theta U. ' s. Loudel Garrett, the Alpha Chi ' s efficient president. No- tice the adjectives. We ' ve got ' em or will get ' em — when it conies to the gels. Theresa Davenport and her Gamma Phi ' s come to mind. Can ' t think. Some have already been mentioned. Anyhow, we ' ll pause to utter the name of Jessie Keller, the Cullman beauty — and I ' ll say she is — so will the Sparrow and Egbert, they ' re beauty specialists. Took her Triple Delta at the U. of A. . . . Will Miller, the Pi K. A. chief, to give this paragraph a little masculinity. One of the few Williams who call himself Will. To change the tempo Mo -the hill ' s concerts, wii Mu Alphas repay of the G. B. coli mony we like to st come crowding in now. Dr. Hemp- many beautiful voices. Later, his Howard chapel visit. And as one nnist ' s noted, that ' s the kind of har- as well as hear . . . The dormitory fire during the Christmas holidays, and great excitement. But look! An almost new building has taken its place. Better than ever. Steel furniture and a recreation hall that ' s like a young gymnasium . . . Three big snows in a row on the Hilltop. Sunshine Slopes, eh. what? Some real sleddin ' and snow-ballin ' , and during the last big one a holiday. Come again, Mr. Snow . . . The Sun Dial repaired. Joshua stopped the sun but time and erosion stopped our dial. But don ' t dial 3-S294 for the time. Call Western Union for that . . . Still more events: T Day, when the greasy pig wouldn ' t run and some studes had to pick him up . . . Another day when some kind of a race was held and merry marathoners ran all over crea- tion, Hal Wood, an A. T. O. sprinter, winning the cake . . . There goes Aubrey Crawford, president of the Mu Alphas, who plays a sweet violin . . . The Kappa Phi Kappas keep busy . . . With the Italians and Ethiopians at each other ' s throats, we hear Dr. C. F. Checlzzi, native Ethiopian and graduate at Oxford, at chapel . . . John Schroeder, head cheer leader, sprained several ton- sils but never let up while urging the Panthers on. That ' s the old Southern spirit . . . The O. D. K. ' s inaugurate something new by presenting Mrs. Edna Gockel-Gussen in the first of a series of Sunday concerts at Munger Hall . . . Kitty Parker, the new president of the Zetas. And speaking of Zetas, they have a trio of Janes and a double trio of Marys in their chapter, namely, as follows, and to- wit: Jane Haralson, Jane Moore and Jane Claybrooke; Mary Murphy, Mary Frickhoeffer, Mary Anthony. Mary Adams, Mary Hobson and Mary Jane Schmitt. Why not call ' em all Mary Jane and be done with it? . . . The Rev. Dr. Robert Echols comes to McCov Memorial as pastor . . . Homecoming in Novem- BIRMINGHAM CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC Chartered Under the Laws of the State of Alabama DORSEY WHITTINGTON, Director COURSES LEADING TO CERTIFICATES, DIPLOMAS AND DEGREES FACULTY JUNIOR AND PREPARATORY DEPARTMENT Miss Ethel Abbott Mr. Hugh Thomas Mrs. Reba Tolhurst Mr. Roy McAllister Mrs. Anna Bernhard Miss Mary Caroline Farrell Mrs. John Seals Miss Ivie Pearl Ray Mr. Glenn Nichols Mrs. Jane Hammill-Westbrook Miss Louise Bates Miss Arline Hamilton Miss Allen Orton Miss Phyllis Cain Beulah Hancock Naylor PIANO Mr. Dorsey Whittington Mrs. C. W. Phillips Mrs. Frances Whittington Mrs. Minnie McNeill-Carr Mrs. Ethel Coffin-King ORGAN Mr. Jesse Walker Mrs. Minnie McNeill-Carr VOICE Mrs. Olive Cheek Humphrey VIOLIN Mrs. Sara Goff Miss Helen Cullenn Mr. Ottokar Cadek HARP Miss Betty Gilmore ORCHESTRAL INSTRUMENTS Miss Pauline Zinzer Mr. Robert Hamilton Mr. Carlton Butler Mr. Charles Tiske Mr. Yale Ellis Mr. Harold Cadek Mr. Pasquale Bria Mr. Angelo Silva Catalogue Sent on Request 2323 Seventh Avenue, N. Phone 7-4913 (Opposite Phillips High School) CAMPUS CLOSE-UPS ber a gala event, with banquet . . . Dr. Henry M. Ed- monds at chapel, saying that young people do have a sense of beauty. We always thought so. His splendid daughter Eleanor is our idea of one example . . . Much merriment over the mouse which Murray McEniry car- ried for several weeks. (Black eye to you innocents.) Said he got it in a friendly scuffle. Oh, well, that ' s better than saying, You ought to see the other fellow. Harking back, ' way back, do you remember the little senegambian who campaigned for Ed Neville when Ed ran for business manager of Gold and Black, to which he was elected and in which capacity he served so eapably this year ? (The editoi can hark back farther than that. She remembers when the writer of this col- umn played the lead in Barrie ' s Admirable Creighton at Phillips High School, a never-to-be-forgotten piece of histrionic art) ... Ed Cummins and his flaming thatch, now running for cheer leader, unopposed. They ' ll see him, all right, and hear him, too . . . Grace Lillian Robbins and her vocabulary. Uses perfect English and knows all the words . . . Woodford Dinning, a likable chap. Wonder if anybody ever leaves an n out. Huh, n ' en out . . . Hadn ' t thought of that . . . Amy Eliza- beth Thomas, very droll . . . Orville Lawson calls his Austin the Bug . . . Ichabod Bruce, Crane- ing around the campus. What ' s he doing in Snoop-Ups? . . . Un- derstand that Bob Chappell and Mary Ebelen are doing some clever cartooning for La Revue . . . Has any- body thought of this before ?— Bertha is the superlative of best. . . . Those Theta Kappa Nu ' s again — Paul Lanier and Ivan Tunneviteh James Garrett, the former a coming Southern colonel because of his (and his par- ents ' ) hospitality at Lanier Camp, and the latter with a Russian moniker which seems to fit his somewhat hefty frame and good nature, though in no wise pertain- ing to his looks . . . Jane French, an interesting per- sonality . . . Grant Yielding, famous for his obliging manner . . . Tolberf Griffin, a shark in any course . . . Martha Matthews, of Belle Lettres, quite a speaker. Wayne Ramsey again president of these literary lights . . . The O. D. K. ' s come along with their second Sunday twilight musicale at Munger, presenting the Cathedral Choir of the Independent Presbyterian Church . . . Cotton Tom Heflin, former United States Senator, talks in chapel . . . We ' ve been wondering who this Sampler is — in G. B. Good . . . Tapping starts. O. D. K. ' s, Mortar Board. Kappa Phi Kappas and K. D. E. get their men . . . and women . . . Wish we could mention all their names . . . Here comes the April Fool Edition of the G. and B. Lemme see. A breezy number. Best headline in it reads, Dr. Snavely Puts All His Begs in One Ask-it. referring to his money-raising procliv- ities ... So Ellis Newman is to be the valedictorian and Felix Robb the salutatorian. That last word makes me think of stentorian. Deserved honors. Getting close to May Day now. But a word about the faculty — first: Dr. Snavely, one more swell guy. And Dean Hale, recipient of another honor — president of the Alabama Collegiate Registrars ' Association . . . Professor Childers ' interesting articles in the magazine section of the Sunday News-Age-Herald. And now a new novel, A White Man and a Black Man in the Deep South, an intriguing title — his ninth or twelfth book, forget which . . . Dr. Hawk blossoming out with another book on economics . . . Dr. Matthews digging up more Biblical lore . . . Dr. Whiting doing tricks with biology and Dr. Poor really driving into the mysteries of Mother Earth . . . Dr. Prodoehl will be back from sabbatical leave next year . Now in his native Germany, you know . . . My, what a faculty! Students, you ought to be proud. Be sure to send your children here . . . Dr. Hoole ' s melliflu- ous voice over the radio. Sounds network . . . Dr. Hawk (again) packing them in at his Sunday school class . . . Dr. Bathurst eternally on the go, delivering lectures, personneling and also teaching Sunday school at the swank Independent Presbyterian, meantime chair- manlng the Board of Stewards at McCoy Methodist. Plays no favorites . . . Dr. Shankweiler telling youn g folks how to choose their mates and pinch-hitting in pulpits about town . . . Dr. Perry, head of the English department, a lot of fun ... A versatile and muchly- sought crew of professors, I ' d say . . . Prof. Hubert Searcy, who is more than a little bit of all right And Dr. Owenby, a real young professor with a Ph.D. . . . Did you ever see the like of Doctors— Ph. D. ' s ? Please see faculty roster. Lack to the students once more before we go a-Maying. Just to say that Betty Lyon, a Pi Phi transfer from Kentucky, is a tiny mite who ' s dynamite; I mean that she ' s little but loud — no. not that, either — just a bit of concentrated sweetness . . . Evelyn Walton, scurrying here and there closing up her ad section of La Revue. A busy person and most capable. Planning on teaching school — for a while, at least. By the way, she ' ll ap- preciate your patronizing our advertisers . . . Breezy Beaird, who will be remembered as a calm, cool and collected basketball player. Freshmen all trying to imi- tate ... Pi Gamma Mu ' s first chapel program was funny but the last one was a scream. Professor Searcy stopped the show. Malcolm, the president, had the mumps and couldn ' t take part . . . Herbert Baum did a really good job of managing Paint and Patches . . . Miss Thomas, the registrar. Nearly forgot her and wouldn ' t for the world. What can I say nice about her —I mean what can I say about her that ' s nice. Shucks, Miss Thomas is nice . . . Don Sims and his chewing gum, with a stick for everybody and the only known rival of our Mr. F. M. Jackson of the board of trustees. And, lest we forget, Joe Price, the good-natured medic, who, it seems to this scribe, gave up a promising football career, begun at Phillips, to pursue studies instead. Pos- sibly saving his digits to be a sawbonc. Going to Vandy. and so are Gilbert Douglas. Merriman Freeman, Bob Chappell, Sam Hay and Mrs. Hortense Eaton — all fine medicos. Sammy Cohn and Joe Parry, more medi- cos, on their way to Tulane. Well, the Sparrow has gone to sleep and Egbert has grown a beard, so I might as well confide the last big piece of news. It ' s May Day . . . looking into the future with our flouroscope and anticipating the celebration as it is scheduled to happen. Bevies of beauties in gossamer and garlands around a May Pole wreathed with flowers. Dancing girls too numerous to mention and too sweet to describe. Miss Ransom ' s terpsichorean artistry there. And Dr. Evans ' speech art . . . The crowning of Penelope as May Queen and Wayne as May King. Dr. and Mrs. Snavely appear first as the regents, then hand over their crown and scepter to the young prince and princess . . . Beau- tifully done, with throngs looking on. (Let ' s hope it didn ' t rain.) . . . And the May Court, composed of Jessie Keller, Mildred Ryan, Evelyn Walton, Gene McCoy, Jane Haralson, Loud 1 Garrett, Hal Fleming, Sara Do ' mi- nick, Mary Murphy and Elenita Biard — beauties all. Oh, to be a prince! ... All tied in with the Student Senate County Fair or rather the Student- Senate ' s Fair tied to the May Pole, since the Co-ed Council sponsored the May Day festivities. Bill Edwards ' idea, the Fair, and a brilliant one. too since it all leads to our campus roads which Bill hopes to pave ... or help to pave . . . with the proceeds. Bill we hope you stay with this until it ' s done, even if you must come back for a post-graduate . . . What a Spring! What a year! And soon, now, com- mencement, graduation for some hundred or more. A swift year which has fairly flown by. We ' ve been close to it— Sparrow, Egbert and I— in a way, in these Close- Ups, but not close enough to record all the wonderful happenings. However, until our paths cross again, some- time, maybe, along life ' s highways — maybe on one of Bill Edwards ' new paved roads — (I ' m in favor of naming one of the drives the Bill Edwards ' Pike)— we ' ll say aurevoir and take this detour ... to avoid the dust. — MORGAN SMITH, ALIAS SAM WELLER. THE SOUTH ' S STANDARD OF SLEEP COMFORT . . . More Alabama Peo- ple sleep on Perfec- tion mattresses and springs than on any other kind! THE WHEEL, CART, CARRIAGE, AND AUTOMOBILE Have Lead Naturally to DIXIE ' S DRIVE-IT- YOURSELF SYSTEM A modern transportation utility that takes care of Peak Loads for Birmingham ' s leading busi- ness, large and small, and, last but not least, gives you an automobile when you feel the urge to go. DIXIE SYSTEM 1917 Fifth Ave., N. Phone 3-7181 COMPLIMENTS OF BromDerg Jewelry Company ClarL 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 BUSINESS 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 ATLANTA-SOUTHERN DENTAL COLLEGE ATLANTA, GEORGIA FOUR-YEAR COURSE LEADING TO THE D.D.S. DEGREE Modern Buildings New Equipment Ample Clinical Facilities Entrance Requirements One Year of College Work Session Ofiens October First For Catalogue and Information Write RALPH R. BYRNES, D.D.S., F.A.C.D., Dean HOTEL REDMONT BIRMINGHAM, ALA. 250 ROOMS ALL WITH BATH Air-Conditioned Coffee Shop Inviting Birmingham-Southern ' s Fac- ulty, Students, and Friends to THE BRITLING CAFETERIA Three Convenient Locations FIRST AVE. TWENTIETH ST. THIRD AVENUE Compliments of Yeildmg Bros. Co. Birmingham ' s Oldest Department Store Second Avenue and Twenty-second Street PHONE 3-6101 Howard Yeilding Melton Yeilding Friedman s Jewelers 125 North Nineteenth Sorority and Fraternity Pins at Half Price We have the following Southern Pins on hand Kappa Delta Sigma Alpha Epsilon Pi Kappa Alpha Delta Sigma Phi Frances Howell Frederick GRADUATED FROM BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN COLLEGE MEMBER GAMMA PHI BETA SORORITY GRADUATED FROM MASSEY BUSINESS COLLEGE MEMBER ALPHA IOTA SORORITY This Combined Training Has Fitted Mrs. Frederick for a Splendid Position As Teacher with The Massey Business College in Birmingham For 50 Years Massey Has Been Training Young Men and Young Women for Executive Positions. They Can Train You. Call 3-7278 MASSEY BUSINESS COLLEGE Ash F or Information Breezing Along With the Breeze In a New Car FROM RUN-A-FORD CO. Incorporated PANSY BACON You Can Almost See the Flavor Alabama Packing Co. BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Birmingham ' s Own ALABAMA THEATRE • A Theatre to Match the Achievements of Southern and Birmingham . . . • A Theatre Continually Setting New Stand- ards of Entertainment . . . • A Theatre to Amaze with Its Luxurious Com- forts, in Warmth of Soft, Rich Lights. Come and Revel in Great Shows . . . Properly Presented! COMPLIMENTS OF CITY PAPER COMPANY FOOD AS WELL AS BOTTLED CARBONATED BEVERAGES Manufactured by BUFFALO ROCK COMPANY ORANGE CRUSH BOTTLING CO. NEHI BOTTLING COMPANY COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. DR. PEPPER BOTTLING CO. BfieSmblem Efficient School INSURANCE FOR LIFE Today the young man and young woman, because of his college training, realizes 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 orher words, the well- educated, far-seeing, wide-awake young person of today rightly in- terprets a modern business training as insurance for life. WHEELER BUSINESS COLLEGE ELEVATOR ENTRANCE 1911 FIRST AVENUE BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA 48th Year Sessions Day and Night FRED S. JONES 1901 Eleventh Ave., South Five Points ICE CREAM, CAKES AND SALADS We Deliver Phone 3-1233 Wear An Adorable Dress and Be Adored ADORABLE DRESS SHOPPE 1927 Third Avenue, North Compliments of ALOIA STUDIO Photographer of THE 1935-36 LA REVUE Thanking Every Student and the Faculty for Their Patronage, We Hope to Have the Pleasure of Serving You in the Future. FOR CLEAN FUEL USE SLOSS COKE For Prompt Service TELEPHONE Sloss Yard, 7-3169 Laboratory Apparatus and. Reagents Only Complete Stock in the South McKESSON-DOSTER- NORTHINGTON 1706-08-10-12 First Avenue, North BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Long Distance, Phone 3-4171 WHO ' S WHO IN SENIORDOM Votes Handsomest boy Wayne Ramsey — 25 Prettiest girl Jessie Keller — 30 Most popular boy .... Murray McEniry — 14 Most popular girl . . . Penelope Prewitt — 32 Smartest ■. . Ellis Newman — 19 Dumbest Herbert Baum — 17 Best musician Aubrey Crawford — 29 Best athlete Buddy Braly — 22 Best dressed girl . . . Theresa Davenport — 26 Best dressed boy .... Bob Montgomery — 16 Biggest politician .... Murray McEniry — 22 Most sophisticated .... Mildred Ryan — 17 Most conceited Jim Hughes — 12 Most bashful Freeman Orr — 19 Most fickle Evelyn Walton — 19 Biggest nuisance Herbert Baum — 26 Biggest loafer Herbert Acton — 17 Most studious Ellis Newman — 16 Most ambitious Vera Meagher — 10 Wittiest . Anne Moss — 9 Biggest gossip Evelyn Walton — 9 Biggest liar Rob McNeill — 10 Most Jovial Mary Gassman — 9 Ladies ' Man Herbert Acton — 9 Cutest Jessie Keller- — 8 Loudest Mouth Evelyn Walton — 9 Biggest tightwad . . Gilbert Douglas and Joe Price each — 4 (Claude Gholston received 15 votes for this office but is not a member of the senior class.) Valedictorian Ellis Newman Salutalorian Fellx Robb Prophet Bob Montgomery Historian Frank McComsey Poet Bob Chappell Lawyer Aubrey Crawford THE NEW PHONE NUMBER OF CLARA RAY ' S TUTWILER HOTEL FLOWER SHOP In the Lobby is: 7-1682 Open Sundays and Evenings Compliments of W. T. GRANT COMPANY 5 and 10 Cent Store 1808 Third Ave., N. Birmingham, Ala. Southern Dairies There is 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 RED DIAMOND COFFEE For Finer Flavor C. H. COWART ROLLER CHAMPION THE FLOUR THE BEST COOKS USE COSBY-HODGES MILLING CO. MILLER, MARTIN LEWIS Architects and Engineers Title Guarantee Building BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Designers of: Stockham Woman ' s Building Student Activity Building Munger Memorial Hall McCoy Memorial Andrews Hall Munger Bowl Stadium President ' s Home Phillips Library %q LfiTCHSTRinG ' S ALWAYS OUT at Loveman ' s in Birmingham. Easily accessible from school or your home, quick to supply your needs by mail when a visit to Bir- mingham is not convenient. FINEST STORE SOUTH LOVEMAN, JOSEPH LOEB Eyes Are PRICELESS Light is CHEAP Guard Your Eyes With Better Light For Your Convenience || WHERE ECONOMY RUlE Sj| Where Economy Rules ' IVx is for Modes Militaire and such . is for Armholes deepened a touch INJ is for New blouses and skirts Cj is for Gowns that are simply the nerts ' ! fc_i is for Elegance, rule of the day L_ i is for Lavishness, the smartness cue i is for Seeing our clothes so new! j jamjels Always a Good Show Fine, Clean Entertainment Week In and Week Out A Big Hit Every V eek With a Big Star in Every Hit ALL SEATS 25c TILL 6 Except Saturday, Sunday, Holidays Tke RITZ Tneatre COMPLIMENTS OF BERRY ' S SHOE STORE GREENWOOD CAFE Sea Food OUR SPECIALTY Twentieth Street Fourth Avenue, North BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Genuine Kueffel and Esser Slide Rule One Dollar and Up Zac Smith Stationery Company 2014 First Avenue, North Norton s Flower and Gift Shop For Lovely Flowers and Unusual Gifts . . . 10% Discount to College Students 1128 N. 26th St. Phone 3-4168 We Telegraph Flowers -More snapshots: Murray and Bit; Jim in a typical S. A. E. pos e . . . Joe Newton, freshman basketball manager . . . Who ' s Who in American Colleges and Universities — won- dering- why — Jim. Penelope, Kvelvn, McCoy, Murray, Kathryn, Vera and Brice, Conrad absent . . . Ab John- son with a Sucker . . . Selma Dale Durbani, Laura Thompson, Rita Lea Harrison anil Wilburta Kerr . . . Fifteen rahs tor Lumas, Jr., future eapn of the football team . . . We ' ve had the sponsors, now the maids . . . ■Professor Henrv Montgomery keeping vigil at the pep tire, which was rained out . . . Perry Slaughter, Nancv Kate Gilbert, John Evius. Ab Johnson, John Cleage, III, Louise Stange and .Marian Bruce . . . Book Store boys, Marvin Yickers, Pearce Bruce and A ' .vin Binzel . . . Grant Yielding and Don Sims . . . Hugh McEniry. 1931 editor of La Revue — a bit of spring news bu ' ding into a winter picture . . . Ping-p mgers S?xton. Copt. Lide. Miles and Marsha ' l . . . Marv Lou Grisvvold and Miss lb. c tire tvvent.v (or Mr nileut of huildii Lee Banks batting and Ma:guret Anne Hi.i ... J. B. and J. 0.— home for C .ristmas tette of freshmen hockey players.. And so shutters tight on our cameras and holt do vrite ster. nd sall.v forth into the wi rid. which Goodyear Raincoat Co. The Goodyear Raincoat Co. invites all Stu- dents, Faculty Members, and Friends of Bir- mingham-Southern College to see their attrac- tive Raincoats and Combination Coats for Spring and Summer. 20% Discount Offered to AH College Students on all Coats Here are just two of the Specials: Pretty Raincapes for misses and ladies ... 0.95 Trench Coats for young men, all sizes __ 2.45 Goodyear Raincoat Co. 318 North 19:h St. Phone 3-3907 COMPLIMENTS OF Wood-Fruitticner Grocery Co. GO TO HOOPER ' S CAFE WHERE YOU WILL FIND . . . The Best People Eating the Best Food 2009 Third Avenue, North ' ■■■■ . • ; .  £ :.:. mmimmf fffffffff Keep the Home Fires Burning the WILLIAMSON Way, then De- cember weather will be like May. WILLIAMSON FURNACE Backed by a Factory 20-YEAR GUARANTEE Complete Heating Surveys and Estimates Made Without Obligation Also For: Repairs, Cleaning or Service on Any Make of Heating Equipment Call Hahn Roofing and Heating Company Phone 3-3840 1905 Second Ave., South Birmingham, Ala. Heating Service Company Phone 3-3850 2811 Seventh Ave., South Birmingham, Ala. Schomberg Roofing and Heating Company Phone 6-5716 1916 Avenue E Ensley, Ala. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Branches in ENSLEY NORTH BIRMINGHAM AIRFIELD TARRANT LEEDS WOODLAWN P«3 CO CAPITAL AND SURPLUS, $10,000,000 JEFFERSON COUNTY NEEDS A CONGRESSMAN Let ' s Elect LEWEY ROBINSON 1. He led the fight to bring Industrial Water to Bir- mingham. 2. He saved the citizens $410,000.00 on the city ' s electric 3. He has gotten more for Bii ton during his two years as dleston has in twenty years lingham from Washing- :ommissioner than Hud- s a Congressman. Get This Multigraphic Advertising Company PRINTING Multigraphing, Mimeographing, Mailing, Typ- ing, Personal Stationery, College Campaign Printing Quality and Service FELIX B. LEFTWICH, Manager Phone 3-0310 2020 Fourth Ave., N. COMPLIMENTS OF Hill Grocery Company JJ, u SI A r - That charm the Graduate as well as the Co-ed . . . wky Moderately Priced At k aneenA ,K Bob Chappt-l ' Birmingham ' s Most Cordial Hotel THE MOLTON IDEAL LOCATION Large Comfortable Rooms With Every Modern Convenience GRILL Air Conditioned Home-Cooked Food At Reasonable Prices MOLTON HOTEL FRANK C. HURLEY, Manager BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA JOHNS-SERVICE Leading Funeral Directors WE HONOR BROWN-SERVICE FUNERAL POLICIES AMBULANCE SERVICE LLEWELLYN W. JOHNS, ' 32 1806 North Seventh Avenue BOOSTERS MR. F. M. JACKSON, SR. BEDDOW, RAY 8C JONES MR. W. H. McGOWEN COLMAN, SPAIN, STEWART DA VIES MR. STEPHEN B. COLEMAN J. BLACK 8c SONS PEGGY HALE WIMBERLY THOMAS BIRMINGHAM JEWELRY CO. JUDGE H. B. ABERNATHY „,   ' -. Fraternity Foibles Fraternities on top the Hill Are thriving as they always will; They get their man by smiles and smirks But mostly with their dirty dirks. Oh! come to school and we will find A way to take up all your time. If you have joined, here ' s how you rate; At least this is our estimate — ■We may he right, we may he wrong, But just the same this is our song. Oh! come to school and we will find A way to take up all your time. The A. T. O ' s have quite a crowd, And some of them are mighty loud, They thought that they were hard to lick. Until the G men turned the trick. Oh! come to school and we will find A way to take up all your time. The Beta Kaps, the Lawson clan, (He rules them with an iron hand). Thirteen of them is just a few, But they don ' t care, so why should you? Oh! come to school and we will find A way to take up all your time. The Delta Sigs are riding high, For now there is no more Chi Chi; Allen and Stew are just a few Who helped them start out Strong anew. Oh! come to school and we will find A way to take up all your time. A Kappa Alph may he a knight, But to his maw he ' s still tied tight; And if by chance you hie their hall, They ' ll show you cups upon th ' wall. Oh! come to school and we will find A way to take up all your time. A Piker is an athaleet, In any sport he ' s hard to beat; To get a Cap on every team Is just about his fondest dream. Oh! come to school and we will find A way to lake up all your time. The S. A. E. ' s are quite the stuff, They never know they have enough; They ' re forty-one upon their rolls, But they can ' t all climb up the polls. Oh! come to school and we will find A way to take up all your time. The T. K. N. ' s give all a thrill, Their naslinul pres. lives on the hill; McComsey, too, is quite a shot, But we ' ll sum up, they ' re not so hot. Oh! come to school and we will find A way to take up all your time. ,jH THIS BOOK PRINTED BY... The % WORLD ' S Sgj ,. ■' ' ' ■Bs ' LARGEST PUBLISHERS . l ,JBhB OF CO LLEG E , ' ' «m ' ANNUALS Renso 1 L PRINTING COB Vr ' . NASHVILLE COLLEGE ANNUAL II EADOJJARTEItS : 015 OF THE VEHR ARE RECQRfl ■¥ and now that the task has been com- pleted we feel a tinge of regret— for our association with your staff has been a most pleasant experience and we have thor- oughly enjoyed the part we were selected to play as Advisor and Engraver. GrLLaxja, rutaal j lyidlorL RLflBflmn encRRuinc co. Bl RMINGHAM . . -. ..... -■■• ' -.-v - ' • ' ■;■v. :v v : - ; . :.-■■ft 1 ' ? :■■• ' . • .. ' -,-( :■;{ ; • LIBRARY OF BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN COLLEGE
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