Birmingham Southern College - Southern Accent Yearbook (Birmingham, AL) - Class of 1938 Page 1 of 200
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1. mil itjUaps Sllfararg LIBRARY OF BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN COL.5,Er ' =- LIBRARY OF BIRMINGHAM-SOIJTHFRN COI LEGE iiiHiiiiijiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiMii 5 0553 01001583 9 j ? ' - ft. r ' , g , 9 n ' w }[ m in i ■i f i fi i ' W !■■tftt mr m m t i n iw -m iii i '  ■i ■COPYRIGHTED 133B Marguerite Johnston . Editor-iii-Chicf Sara Dominick . . . Business Manager PUBLISHED BY THE STUDENTS A| A_ .1. 4t ji « • t BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN COLLEGE FDR BOOK ONE CAMPUS BOOK TWO CLASSES BOOK THREE .... FEATURES BOOK FOUR .... ATHLETIES BOOK FIVE GREEKS BOOK SIX . . ORGANIZATIONS ■? ■n E W Q R D IN THE LIFE DF BinMINGHAM- SIIUTHERN COLLEGE THIS HAS BEEN A YEAH FULL OF CHAR- ACTER. IT IS THE PURPOSE OF THIS BOOK TO BE A RECORD. IN WORDS AND PICTURES, OF THE YEAR, ITS MOVEMENT, ITS LIFE. 97580 DR. EDWARD DELDS MYERS WHO IN ONE COLLEGE YEAR MADE A LASTING IMPRESSION ON THE STUDENTS OE EIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN COLLEGE, MAKING REAL THE MEANING OF KNOWL- EDGE, GIVING MOVEMENT TO THE WORD LEARNING. TO HIM IS DEDICATED THIS, THE 193B LA REVUE. D E D I C A T I D N U TJ ' : c A M P e ne yLjoam of TRUSTEES President Vice-Presideni Secretary Treasurer Assistant Treasurer OFFICERS Mrs. W. H. Stockham O. V. Calhoux Edgar M. Glexx Fred M. Jackson W. A. PATTn.T.O EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Robert Echols A. M. Freeman Fred M. Jackson Hugh A. Locke Edward C. Moore Lonnie P. Munger S. O. Kimbrough O. V. Calhoun Ed. L. Norton Mrs. W. H. Stockham Gu ' E. Snavelv U S N A V E L Y President ' s Office. Come In. Those words printed on Dr. Snavely ' s door epitomize his years at Birmingham-Southern College. Always he could be relied upon to be properly presidential— a scholar and a gentleman. But not too formal, — a friend. ' 5 K. Dr. Snavcly has been president of Birmingham-Southern College since 1921. At his inauguration, Warren G. Harding, then iVesident of the United States, was the chief speaker. With Dr. Snavely as its head. Southern gained admission to the Association of American Uni- versities, to the Southern Association, to the Association of American Colleges. In the years of his presidency. Student Activities Building, the M. Paul Phillips Library, Munger Memorial Hall, and Stockham Woman ' s Building became a part of this campus. Dr. Snavely gave to Southern the place which it holds today. Birmingham-Southern is proud of its president, proud to see that he now belongs to the colleges of a nation, and proud that he therefore, still belongs to Birmingham-Southern. r A ' f - . ■5«  !r -J :  -TV m t-W-il ' f l WYATT WALKER HALE B.S., M.A., ED.D. Dean Hale has had a busy and a trying year. In addition to his regular duties, he has had to assume added responsibilities as head of academic affairs of Birmingham-Southern. In spite of his heavy sched- ule, Dean Hale has taken his usual active interest in the college organiza- tions with which he is connected, including Phi Beta Kappa, Omicron Delta Kappa, Mortar Board, Beta Beta Beta, Kappa Phi Kappa, Theta Chi Delta, and Tau Kappa Alpha. u_ Birmingham-Southern ' s hbrary was once small enough to fit into one room of Erskine Ramsay Hall. Today it is one of the finest collec- tions of books of any college of like size. Through the gift of Mr. I. Paul Phillips, the present library was built in 1923 and ten years later the stacks at the rear of the building were added. A Carnegie grant for books, as well as gifts from friends of the college, has made the Bir- mingham-Southern Library more nearly complete — a place for study, a home for literature. M. PAUL PHILLIPS LIBRARY ' ■■■- ' : . ' - P ni INE WALLACE MDORE h U L i IN g _ j ,. PH.D. I, i3 hard for Bu-n.inghan.-Southern students to think of Dean CM A Sunday tea without her isn ' t any Sunday Moore without Stockham. A Sunday 11 But as charmmg as her office is, it is not big enough to hold tea at all. But as chaimi g education classes, her i any activities. She is constantly busy with h her University Women, and the Altrusa Club. Still, she n ir; of L.. Bo.a, A,P.. U„.a. -.«... -pp. 0.« HP. ,„„, ,„a ,Ke .„ae„c o..n,.no. .e S , . .„. her office comes every sorority bid and the lushee to -1 4 U YWCA. Cabinet call on her tended. Pan-Hellenic Council and the Y.W.C.A. for advice. She is the Dean of Women. i T D C fi H A M WOMAN ' S BUILDING EHS KINE R A S AY HALL - Once Science Hall with the smell of chemicals. Now Ersklne Ramsay Hall,— still with a scientific atmosphere contributed by the biology, geology and physics departments, but bothered by a long pro- cession of art students coming to read Shakespeare and learn to write. Mtmger — Chapel speakers, monitors marking empty seats, Infor- mation Office with its buzzing switch-board, Beethoven ' s Fifth swell- ing the Faculty Trustee Room, four flights of stairs, steel chairs screech- ing against composition floors, lectures. ■■S UNGEil MEMUillAI, HALL OLe F A Guv Everett Snavelv, Ph.D P ' ' Wilbur Dow Perry, Lltt.D Mary Colletf Mnnger Professor of English George 5 ashington Currie, Ph.D Professor of Lath, and Greek Wesley Adolphus Moore, LL.D Professor of Mathematics Austin Prodoehl, Ph.D Professor of German ami Philosophy William Alonzo Whiting, Ph.D Professor of Biology James Horace Coulliette, A.M._.._.. Professor of Physics Russell Spurgeon Poor, Ph.D Professor of Geology Antony Constans, Ph. D Professor of French and Italian Ernest Victor Jones, Ph. D Professor of Chemistry Emory Quinter Hawk. Ph.D Professor of Economics and Business Marion Lofton Smith, Ph.D Professor of Bible and Religion James Elmer Bathurst, Ph.D Professor of Psychology and Education , .,,■A T3 Librarian Lillian Gregory, A.K. Wyatt Walker Hale, Ed. D ean and Registrar James Saxon Childers, M.A Professor of English Newman Manley Yeilding, A.B ■B ' ' Charles D. Matthews, Ph.D Director of the Library Walter Brownlow Posey, Ph.D Professor of History Eoline Wallace Moore, Ph.D Dean of Women Marsee Fred Evans, Ph.D Professor of Speech Henry Thomas Shanks, Ph.D Professor of History Douglas Lucas Hunt, M.A Associate Professor of English Robert Stanley Whitehouse, M.A Associate Professor of Modern Languages John Milton Malone, M.A Associate Professor of Education Richebourg Gaillard McWilliams, M.A Associate Professor of English Hiram Benjamin Englebert, A.B Athletic Director Benjamin Franklin Clark, Ph.D Associate Professor of Chemistry Leon Franklin Sensabaugh, Ph.D Associate Professor of History Hubert Searcy, Ph.D Associate Professor of Political Science Joshua Paul Reynolds, Ph.D Associate Professor of Biology William Lester Leap, Ph.D Associate Professor of Sociology Harry Earl McNeel, M.A Assistant Professor of Spanish William Tilden Hammond, M.A Assistant Professor of Romance Languages William Ellis Glenn, M.A Assistant Professor of Mathematics ■Perry Wilson Woodham, M.A Assistant Bursar and Lecturer in Economics Egbert Sydnor Ownbey, Ph.D Assistant Professor of English Dorothy Harmer, M.A Assistant Librarian and Instructor in Library Science Jennings Frederick GiUem Assistant Athletic Director James Allen Tower, Ph.D Assistant Professor of Geography Lex Fullbright, A.B Assistant Director of Physical Education u L T Y E. Emmett Reid, Ph.D _ Research Adiher in Chemistry Ray S. Musgrave, Ph.D..... - Instructor in Psycholo- y Helen Turner, A.B. _ - Iiislriictor in Physical Education Howard Leake, B.S instructor in History Ernest Henderson Instructor in Art Shepherd Vincent Townsend _ Instructor in Journalism Lafayette R. Hanna, LL.B .Instructor in Economics Louise Branscomb, M.D ..— - Instructor in Sociology L. Frazer Banks, M.A _ Instructor in Psychology Ruth Edwards, M.A Instructor in Sociology A. Y. Noojin, B.S Instructor in Chemistry Burtt F. McKee, Jr., A.B ... Instructor in Speech James Ramsey Adams, B.Ph Instructor in Economics Jean Pierre Wagner -- Instructor in French HILLTOP FROM THE .AIR ke STUDENT SENATE As the governing body of the students, the Student Senate is pre- sided over by the president of the student body. It is a duty of the group to sit in judgment upon men students who have broken the laws of the college. It is an unpleasant task and one which the Senate handles quietly and well. Occasionally the Senate gets wrought up and does some constitution drafting. This year was void of such, but the Sena- tors threw themselves a party at which they spent much money and from which they left early. GFFICEHS I ' resident Yice-President Secretary MEMBERS E. L. Holland John Cleage III Harry Morris Curry Jones James Ford Oscar Hargett Richard Sexton Marvin Vickers Richard Morland James Cooper an d CD-ED LDUNCIL Coed Council is supposedly the feminine parallel of Student Senate, but its president is not the president of the student body. The Council elects its own head from among its members — a vague inequality be- tween men and women in the set-up but it probably doesn ' t matter. The Council has the same unpleasant duties as the Senate beside certain others more suited to feminine talents — such as teas and May Festivals. OFFICERS President Vice-Presidc ' iif Secretary Treasurer EvELYx Wiley Alice Wexz Lillian Keener Eloise Echols MEMBERS Josephine Harris Sara Hoover Margaret Anne Wilmore Elna Erickson Anne Ray W ' avne Bvnum EDITORIAL Editor ill Chief Associate Editor Assistant Editor Assistant Editor Assistant Editor Sports Editor Marguerite Johnston Charles Barnes Martin Kruskopf E. L. Holland Milton Christian James Herring STAFF Howard Borland, Elizabeth Webb, Beatrice Frazer, Virginia Bartlett, Josephine Harris, Alice Jones, Andre Stephenson, Billy Lively, Henry Stahmer, Virginia Van der Veer, Virginia Hudson, Henrietta Boggs, Kitty Walton, Jo Marian Lackey, Grace Fealy, J. T. Griffin L A T HE 193 8 La Revue has tried to be just a lit- tle different from other Birmingham - Southern yearbooks. For the first time the entire book was engraved and printed in Birmingham; for the first time the class sec- tion pictures were used only in the class section. La Revue moved into the Gold ami Black of- R V U E fice, thereby making It the Pubhcations Office. The editor and business manager of the paper were hospitable. La Rei ' iie is grateful. It hopes that it got some of the verve of the Gold and Black between its own pages. BUSINESS Business Manager Associate Business Manager Sara Domixick Charles Barnes STAFF Bill whetstone Sarah Postelle James Kay Earl Sanders Lillian Keener E D I T n R IN CHIEF MARTIN K R U S K n P F GOLD Editor 111 Chief Business Manager Tom Edwards E. L. Holland Marguerite Johnston Murray McCluskey Associate Editors: Business Staff: Staff: Martin Kruskopf Pierce Bruce James Herring Milton Christian Pickard Williams Bob Luckie Frank Fede, Gordon Atkeison, Wade Bradley, Bobbie Kelly, George Kabase, Irma Laul, Sarah Postelle, Howard Borland, Char- lie Barnes, Elizabeth Jackson, Grace Fealy, Henrietta Boggs, Billy Lively, Martin Knowlton, Elenita Biard, Virginia Van der Veer. BUSINESS MANAGER PIERCE BRUCE an d BLACK The Gold and Black has been the student publication of Bir- mingham-Southern College for twenty years. This year, for the first time, the G d B changed from its customary Old English heading. It went modern. It also took an interest in campus affairs: The Campus Ncit ' sreel, begun early in the year, was probably the most venturesome effort ever made by the paper ' s staff. Editor Martin Kruskopf and Business Manager Pierce Bruce, with Orville Lawson, put on a series of film editions, showing the activities of the students and faculty. With the help of Camera- man Lawson and Director Charles Barnes, the newsreel staff installed its own developing laboratory in Student Ac. The policy of the paper seemed to be that of using its pages to get needed things accomplished on the campus. The Gold and Black started the drive which is about to become successful — th.it of furnishing the Student Activities Building so that it may be- come a student activities building. In spite of all these noble efforts, and because of Psi Psi Psi, the G c5 B had a hilarious year. Put out good papers. And accomplished things. PAINT an J DIRECTDfl Mr. Burtt F. McKee of the Birmingham Little Theater. The Southern dramatics gained umph from Mr. McKee ' s exten- sion class as well as from his direction on the two plays produced this year. 1 AiNT AND Patches has been more intensely dramatic this year than it has in the past four. Two plays produced at the Little Theatre were enough to rouse all sorts of enthusiasm in the numerous members. Lady Windemere ' s Fan was the first performance of the year, and started the Paint and Patchers to thinking in theatrical terms. Also in the direction of radio dramas. But the radio dramas weren ' t particu- larly permanent. After a momentary flash of histrionic temperament in the early rehearsals of the play, Geiiiiis Limited went on to opening night as calmly as could be expected. Paint and Patches, after its years of Zeta domination, is doing better with the free lancers. It is a matter of interest to see how long the or- ganization can continue to have every officer with a different Greek label. PATCHES UFFICERS Vrcsidciif Grace Cutler Yicc-Prcsidciit Margaret Dominick Secretary Alice Jones Treasurer Charles Barnes VUd tke CAMERA at SOUTHERN Cafeteria after dark . . Sen- ior bigwigs Babe Jones and Vernon Cain . . Claude Whitehead earning ODK . . Psi Psi Psi, Holland, Barnes, Kruskopf picnic . . BC Mitchell and Maggie Day in The Snow . . KAs in their usual rail meeting . . Miss Rita ' s quartet . . Mary Eliza- beth gracing a tea . . Your guess good as ours . . Leila ' s Flying Fish . . Snow Queen Pat . . Barnes as G B wrap- per . . Geologues . . Scram- bled eggs . . Hilltop in the snow. Newsreel . . Camera smasher . . Jean Wagner, a student . . Doctors Hawk and Smith in a between class chat . . Trio . . Parade managing in a drizzle . . Proverbial campus course after lab . . Childers and retinue . . A poet and his lawn-mower . . The band in its youth . . Darking a dark room is hard work according to Christian . . Pierce Bruce, Heidi and Fritz, only the squirrel and cat are missing. Jo Marion Lackey in the Gold and Black window — or out of it? . . Kruskopf and Joe make up the paper . . Sessions, Biard and pooch . . Editing newsreel . . No poh- ticing within the ropes please . . Betty Hasty and Anne Berry for TKN . . Director of Extension Poor caught in Science Building! . . Tom Edwards, Clyde Pippin and Don Sims waxed artistic, gave ATO free publicity, but, alas, it is no more. Celebration after the first newsreel . . Prince nabbed in raid on Hilltop . . Sterling Beaumont wrote a sonnet for Paint and Patches . . Pickard looks dizzy. Maybe that bottle really was! . . Biard and True Blue Edwards . . Two AOPis, only one broken leg . . Cash had her man but decided to go Amazonian . . Number please . . A lime dope in a cup . . A six page paper this week, we ' ll need more dirt . . Patton ' s Sophis- ticated Lady, backstage at Genius Limited . . Uh-oh — only P. F. Lawson left to tell the tale. Sweet dreams of more and bigger audience. „ • ' - -— — p- — c L } if J ' fli A S s 1 1 SENIOR CLASS OFFICERS President X ' iLLiAM Curry Joxes Vice-President Vernox Caix Secretary Claude Whitehead Treasurer Mary Frickhoeffer SENIOR Grace Adams Leeds, Ala. Y.W.C.A. ; Alpha Gamma; Sigma Epsilon. Mildred Adcock Brmiiigham, Ala. Z T A Belles Lettres ' 34 ; Gold and Black ' 34 ; Alpha Lambda Delta ' 34; Y.W.C.A. ' 34; Paint and Patches ' 35 ; Beta Beta Beta ' 37. Federico Amador Havana, Cuba Mary Fraxces Aitiss Birmingham, Ala. Clariosophic Literar.v Society ; Sigma Epsilon. Lamar Andrews Birmingham, Ala. A Tfi La Revue ' 37; Paint and Patches ' i7. Dorothy Helen Arnold Birmingham, Ala. A xn Glee Club, Tau Tau Tau ' 36; Y.W.C.A. Gordon Atkeison Mobile, Ala. AS Y.M.C.A. ; Ministerial Association; Clario- sophic; Student Volunteers; Glee Club; Gold and Black; Paint and Patches. C. Everett Barnes Mobile, Ala. Omicron Delta Kappa; Ministerial Associa- tion; Clariosophic; Tau Kappa Alpha. E M. Barnes Huntsville, . la. Ministerial Association ' 34- ' 38, president 38; Y.M C.A. ' 36- ' 37 ; Student Volunteers ' 35- ' 38 ; Clariosophic ' 37- ' 38. Ruth Reason Fairfield, Ala. Kappa Delta Epsilon ; Sigma Epsilon ; Le Cercle Francais ; Y.W.C.A. Mary Virginia Bell Birmingham, Ala. Pi Gamma Mu ; Tau Kappa Alpha; Kappa Delta Epsilon ; Clariosophic ; Writers Club. Wilson Beverly Roanoke, Ala. 1 9 3 B LA n CLASS Elizabeth Rankin Braulky Limestone, Ala. Robert Wade Bradley BirmiiiRliani, Ala. Pastors Union ' 36; Glee Club ' 33-M4; Choral Club ' 33-34: Cabinet ' 37: Cnld and Black Staff ' 37; Ministerial Association. ] rARY O ' Neal Branch A JI Y.W.C.A. Raleiuh. X. C. Eugene Bridges Sipsey, .Ma. Ministerial .Association; ' Y.M.C.A. Gwendolyn Brown Birmingham, Ala. e T Pan-Hellenic Council; Amazons; Y.W.C.A. E. Pierce Bruce Lanett, Ala. 2 AE President Kappa Phi Kappa ; Vice-President Beta Beta Beta ; Business Manager Gold and Black; Omicron Delta Kappa. Paul Woodrow Burleson Birmingham, Ala. K A Manager A ' arsity Basketball ' 37- ' 38 ; Presi- dent Skull and Bones ; President Kappa Phi Kappa ; Treasurer Beta Beta Beta ; Pi Delta Psi ; Glee Club ; International Relations ; Y. Cabinet; Omicron Delta Kappa. Harry A. Burns Birmingham. Ala. 2 AE Track; Golf; Baseball; Debate; Interfra- ternily Council. Vernon Cain Birmingham, Ala. A T 9. Football ' 35, ' 36, ' 37. Alternate Captain ' 3 : Freshman Football ; Track ' 34. ' 35, 36, ' 37 ; Athletic Committee. 36 ; Kappa Phi Kappa. Paul C.- rruba Birmingham. Ala. International Relations ; Y.M.C.A, ; Boxing- Team ; Y. Cabinet. Grace Casey Fairly Chandler Birmingham. Ala. Bessemer, Ala. n K A REVUE 1 3 j S E N I D Margaret Clark Birmingham, Ala. AXfi JoHX Cleage Birmingham, Ala, e K N Y. Cabinet ' 36- ' 37 ; President Interfraternity Council ' 36- ' 37 ; Student Senate ; Omicron Delta Kappa. Tames Clotfelter K A Birmingham, Ala. Pi Gamma Mu ; Y. Cabinet; Interfraternity Council. Fletcher Comer Birmingham, Ala. AT n Y Cabinet ' 35, ' 35; Theta Sigma Lambda, president ' 37 ; Theta Chi Delta ; Beta Beta Beta, president ' 37; Omicron Delta Kappa ' 37, ' 38; Skull and Bones; Interfraternity Council, ' 35, ' 38 ; Phi Beta Kappa. Alice Carolyn CopElakd Birmingham, Ala. International Relations ' 36; Alpha Lambda Delta ' 36 ; Le Cercle Francais ' il ; Pi Gamma Mu; Phi Beta Kappa. Rebecca Laura CrExshaw Birmingham, Ala. International Relations ' 36; Alpha Lambda Delta ' 36. ' 2 1 : Le Cercle Francais ' 11; Pi Gamma lu : Phi Beta Kappa. Evelyn Culverhouse Birmingham. Ala. Z T A Y.W.C.A. ; Glee Club ; Paint and Patches. Charles Dwiggins Birmingham, Ala. 2 AE Theta Chi Delta ; Y. Cabinet. Sarah Dominick Birmingham, Ala. AOn President of Mortar Board; Business Mana- ger of La Revue; President Paint and Patches ' 37 • President Pan-Hellenic ' 36- ' 37 ; Coed Coun- cil ' 35. ' 36, ' 11 ; Kappa Delta Epsilon ; Phi Sig- ma Iota; Amazons; Tau Kappa Alpha; Pi Gamma Mu. Tack Edgar Butler, Ala. Ministerial Association, secretary 3j, vice- president ' il: Glee Club ' 35- ' 36. Evelyn Erwin Elizabeth Ewing Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. KA R 19 3 8 LA CLASS James Ford Alexander City, Ala. 2 A E Omicron Delta Kappa ; Pi Gamma Mu ; Kap- pa Phi Kappa; Student Senate ' 35; President Student Bodv ' 38 ; Varsitv Football ' 35. ' 36, ' 37, Captain Team ' i7 ; Secretary Interfratermty Council. Johnny Forster Birmingham, Ala. A i; Mary Elizabeth Forster Birmingham, Ala. Pi Gamma Mu ; Kappa Delta Epsilon ; Alpha Gamma; International Relations Club; Paint and Patches; Glee Club; Y.W.C.A. Mary Frickhoeffer Birmingham, Ala. ZT A Belles Lettres; Paint and Patches; Pi Delta Psi ' 36- ' 38 ; Kappa Delta Epsilon, treasurer ' 37 ; Y.W.C.A. ' 35- ' 38; Pan-Hellenic; Amazons ' 36- ' 38 ; Treasurer Senior Class. A. D. Leon Gray Bessemer, Ala. Ministerial Association; Eta Sigma Phi. Betty Greagan I M Birmingham. Ala. Paint and Patches ' 36- ' 38 ; Gold and Black ' 36- ' 37; Pi Gamma Mu. Myra Ruth Green Birmingham. Ala. Phi Sigma Iota ; Clariosophic ; Tau Tau Tau. J. Thojias Griffin Crossville, Ala. Football ' 34- ' 35 ; Track ' 36, ' i7 : Clariosophic. Irene Hampton Birmingham. Ala. Sigma Epsilon ; Clariosophic. Arthur Jackson Hanes Birmingham. Ala. BKN Student Senate ' 34; A ' arsitv Football, Base- ball, Track ' 35- ' 38. Oscar Hargett : AE Sheffield, Ala. Tau Kappa .A.lpha ; President Clariosophic ' 37- ' 38: Student Senate ' 36; N ' arsity Football ' 3S- ' 37 ; Omicron Delta Kappa. Billy Harris AE Birmingham, Ala. Skull and Bones; Beta Beta Beta. RE V U E i;; S E N I D Margaret Harris Birmingham, Ala. Alpha Gamma; Sigma Epsilon, treasurer; Alpha Lambda Delta, vice-president. Sam Harris BK Fort Payne, Ala. Freshman Football ; ' arsity Football. Robert Hagood Jasper, Ala. Y.M.C.A. ; Track; Tau Kappa Alpha; Min- isterial Association ; Student ' olunteers ; Clari- osophic. Birdie Hegman Hf Bluff, Miss. GT Writers ' Club ; Student Volunteers ; Y.W.C.A. A ' iviax Herrick James Herring Wilmington, N. C,. Calvary, Ga. K A Interfraternitv Council, vice-president; Gold and Black Sports Editor ' 35- ' 38 ; La Revue Sports Editor ' 3S- ' 38; Y.M.C.A. Alma Hays Howell Birmingham, Al.a r ■f ' B R Mortar Board, treasurer; Alpha Lambda Delta; Glee Club; International Relations Club; Le Cercle Francais, president ' 37; Phi Sigma Iota, vice-president ' 37 ; Kappa Delta Epsilon, vice-president ' 37- ' 38 ; Phi Beta Kappa. Grace Hughes Birmingham, Ala. Beta Beta Beta; Alpha Lambda Delta-; Phi Beta Kappa. Agnes Hunt Birmingham, Ala. ■Y.W.C.A.; Alpha Gamma; Writers ' Club; Tau Tau Tau; Beta Beta Beta; Kappa Delta Epsilon ' 36- ' 37; Glee Club ' 36; Choral Club ' 36. FaE Hurley Fairfield, Ala. Y.W.C.A. ; Little Theatre Guild. Mary Moore Hurst Haleyville, .Ala. Glee Club; Paint and Patches; Dramatic Club; Y.W.C.A.; Tau Tau Tau. Fred Jensen Grove Hill, Ala. Football ' 35, ' 36, ' i7 : Track ' 35, ' 36, ' i7. 19 3 8 LA 1 CLASS Max Johnson Ilarriman. Tenn. e K lY. Cabinet ; Manager Glee Club ; Band Mana- ger ; Parade Manager; Orchestra Manager; Mu Alpha, secretary; Campus Newsrccl. Marguerite Johnston F.irniingham, Ala. n B Editor 1938 La Rcviic; Associate Editor Gold and Black ' 38 ; Campus Newsreel ; Mortar Board, vice-president ; Pi Gamma Mu ; Phi Sigma Iota; Alpha Lambda Delta, vice-presi- dent; Mu Alpha; Belles Lettres, vice-president ' 35; president ' 36; Psi Psi Psi ; Phi Beta Kappa; Le Cercle Francais ; Amazons. Eleanor Jone.- Birmingham, . la. Pan-Hellenic ; Amazons ; Glee Club. Elizabeth Jones Birmingham, Ala. A X n Pi Gamma Mu ' i7 : International Relations Club ' 36; Y.W.C.A. ' i7 ; Le Cercle Francais. William Curry Jones. Jr. Chapman, Ala. President Senior Class; Varsity Football ' 35, ' 36, i7 ; Clariosophic, vice-president. JiMEs Kay Birmingham, Ala. AS Omicron Delta Kappa ; Phi Sigma Iota ; Pi Gamma Mu ; Kappa Phi Kappa; Theta Sigma Lambda; Interfraternity Council; Phi Beta Kappa. John Kent Birmingham. . la. GK X Beta Beta Beta ; Skull and Bones. Daniel Kessler Mary Knox Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. n B Beta Beta Beta ; Theta Sigma Lambda ; Delta Phi Alpha ; Kappa Delta Epsilon. Martin KruskopF Birmingham, Ala. Editor Gold and Black 1938; International Relations, president ' 36- ' 37 ; Pi Gamma Mu : Kappa Phi Kappa ; Psi Psi Psi ; Associate Edi- tor 1938 La Rcvuc: Phi Beta Kappa. William Lawrence Prichard. Ala. Skull and Bones; Glee Club ' 34- ' 36. Velma MacArthur Birmingham, Ala. Beauty Parade Winner ' 38 ; Pi Gamma Mu. REVUE ,r w S E N I D R Julian Mason Phi Beta Kappa. Birmingham, Ala. Merle Massengale Birmingham, Ala. Mortar Board, secretary ; Kappa Delta Epsi- lon ; Theta Sigma Lambda : Y. Cabinet ; Stu- dent Volunteers. J. B. McClendon Scottsboro, Ala. Robert Goodloe McGahey Birmingham, Ala. 2 A E Mary Leila McLeod Jackson. Ala. Tau Tau Tau ' 35- ' 38; Clariosophic ' 3S- ' 36. Harry Moore Birmingham, Ala. Ministerial Association, treasurer; Y.M.C.A. Laura Ross Moore Birmingham, Ala. n B Mortar Board ; Kappa Delta Epsilon, presi- dent ; Y. Cabinet ; Belles Lettres ; Paint and Patches, secretary. John Kenneth Morland Birmingham, Ala. K A Oniicron Delta Kappa, president ; Theta Chi Delta, president: Delta Sigma Alpha; Y.M.C.A. president; Varsity Basketball ' 35, ' 38; Orches- tra; International Relations; Phi Beta Kappa. James C. Morris Birmingham, Ala. Theta Sigma Lambda, treasurer; Belles Let- tres, treasurer. Sara Nell Morris Birmingham, .A.la. Y. Cabinet ; Student Volunteers. Doris Elizabeth Murphy Fairfield, Ala. Y.W.C.A. president; Moftar Board; ' Eta Sigma Phi president. Mary Murphy Birmingham, Ala. ZT A Y.W.C.A; Amazons; Pi Delta Psi ' 36. Xh Xh 19 3 8 L A CLASS Kitty ParkKr Birmingham, Ala. Z T A Plii Sigma Iota, secretary : Le Ccrcle Fran- cais; Amazons; Pan-Hellenic Council; Inter- national Relations Club; Pi Delta Psi. Richmond Eari, Pkrrv Clyde A. Pippen Malone, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. 2 AE Oniicron Delta Kappa, vice-president ; Tau Kappa .Alpha, president ; Y.M.C.A. secretary ; Y. Cabinet; Belles Lettres; Paint and Patches; International Relations Club. John Sydxey Pittmax Dixons Mills, Ala. A T 9. Baseball ' 3S- ' 36. David Reinhardt Montgomery, Ala. BK Y.M.C.A., president ' 36; Tau Kappa Alpha; Interfraternity Council, president. Edxa Mae Richardson Birmingham, Ala. A X n Y. Cabinet ' 35: Glee Club; Pan-Hellenic Council ; Football Sponsor ' 35, ' 36 ; Clariosophic ' 37; Amazons, president ' 37- ' 38. W. J. Riddle U ' ilsonville, Ala. UK A Freshman Football ; arsity Football ' 35- ' 37 ; Intramural Basketball. Fern Riley Jackson, Tenn. Y.W.C.A. Josephine Rutledge Bessemer, .-Ma. William Sanders Birmingham, Ala. Y. Cabinet ' 36, ' 37: linistcrial Association ' 36- ' 37 ; Cheer Leader ' 37. O. M. Sell iMinisterial Association. Richard Sexton Birmingham. Ala. Birmingham, Ala. A T o Gold and Black Business Staff ' 36 ; Inter- fraternity Council ' 37- ' 38; Paint and Patches: Pi Gamma Mu, vice-president ' 37; Parade Com- mittee ' 36 ; Student Senate ' 37- ' 38. REVUE S E N I D ' iRGiN ' iA Shackelford Autaugaville, Ala. Student Volunteers, president ; Y. Cabinet ; Kappa Delta Epsilon; Glee Club; Clariosophic. Catherine Sims Birmingham, Ala. n B Pi Gamma Mu •35- ' 38 ; Gold and Black Staff ' il ; Belles Lettres ' il Kappa Delta Epsilon. R. J. Smith Billy Sxoddy ; AE Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Skull and Bones ; Kappa Phi Kappa ; Y.M. C.A. ; Glee Club ; Orchestra. Eugenia Stanley Birmingham, Ala. Axn Cuthel Stewart Birmingham, Ala. A Z Clariosophic ; Honorary Assistant Editor La Revue; Associate Editor Gold and Black ' 27. JoALLYN Garner Tadlock Nashville, Tenn. Lucy Taylor Fairfield, Ala. Theta Chi Delta, vice-president ' 37, presi- dent ' 38: Alpha Lambda Delta, secretary ' i7 ; Theta Sigma Lambda ' 36, ' i7 ; La Revue Beauty Section ' 37; Phi Beta Kappa. Sarah Adele Taylor Birmingham, Ala. A O 11 Pi Gamma Mu. Jim Thoma.-; Lanett, Ala, Basketball : Baseball ; Football ; Track. BuFORD Gleen Truett eK Clanton, Ala. Tau Kappa Alpha, vice-president ; Eta Sigma Phi, secretary; Y.M.C.A., treasurer ' 37, secre- tary ' 38; Ministerial Association. Reba Turner Birmingham, Ala. Glee Club •34- ' 38; Y.W.C.A. ' 37: Tau Tau Tau ' 37; International Relations Club ' 37. R 1 3 3 B L A CLASS Marvin Vickkks l.iiuUii, Al:i. Ministerial Assuciation ; Student Senate. Margaret Vines Bessemer, Ala. Amazons; Pan-Hellenic; Belles Lettres ; Tau Tau Tau; Kappa Delta Epsilon ; International Relations. O. G. Waid Altoona, Ala. Jean Wagner Bitclie, France Phi Sigma Iota ; Le Cercle Francais. Jack Walden Skull and Bones. Virginia Walker Fairfield, Ala. Vickslnirg, Miss. GT Amazons; Y.W.C.A. ; Pi Gamma Mu. Charles Walton Doniphon. Mo. A i: Freshman Football ; Varsity Basketball ' 35- ' 38 ; Varsity Track ; Athletic Committee. Elizabeth Webb Birmingham, Ala. lY. Cabinet ; Belles Lettres ; La Rcviic Staff ; Glee Club ' 33: President Girls ' Debate Club ' 33; Gold and Black Staff; Pi Gamma Mu. Alice Wenz Bessemer, Ala. e T Pan-Hellenic President •37- ' 38 ; Glee Club ' 34- ' 38; Mu Alpha, president ' 37; Delta Phi Alpha, president ' 37 ; Y. Cabinet. Claude Whitehead Birmingham, .Ala. AE Omicron Delta Kappa ; Kappa Phi Kappa ; Delta Phi Alpha ; Secretary Senior Class ; Tau Kappa Alpha; Y. Cabinet; vice-president Y.M. C.A. ; Ministerial Association ; Phi Beta Kappa. Evelyn ' irginia Wiley Birmingham, . la. r s B Alpha Lambda Delta, president ; Y. Cabinet ; International Relations, secretary; Phi Sigma Iota, vice-president ' 37 ; Pi Gamma AIu, presi- dent ' 37- ' 38; Pi Deha Psi, president o7- ' 38 ; Le Cercle Francais ' 36 ; Mortar Board ' 37 ; Kappa Delta Epsilon ; Phi Beta Kappa. Luther Williams Birmingham, Ala. n K A Ministerial .Association. REVUE L A SENIORS PiCKARD Williams Birmingham, Ala. President Y.M.C.A. •35- ' 36 ; Y. Cabinet ' 34- ' 35; Gold and Black Staff ' 34, ' 37; Omicron Delta Kappa; Glee Club: Phi Beta Kappa. Allen D. Wilson Adamsville, Ala. Ministerial Association; Y.M.C.A.; Clario- sophic. Fi-LONESE Wilson Birmingham, Ala. Leonard Winston Birmingham, Ala. BK Mrs. W. J. Yopp Birmingham, Ala. REVUE TRIBUTE to Mr. James Saxon Childers — for his turkey-stalking, for his invigorating cruelty, and for the delightfully unacademic atmos- phere of his classrooms. Dr. Antony Constans — for his pie-shaped smile, for his enthusiasm, and for his broad knowledge of everything good in music, art and literature. Dr. E. Sydnor Ownbey — for his expressive left eyebrow, for his Shakespeare classes, for his quiet skepticism and intelligent scholarship. Mr. J. Horace Coulliette — for his silence, for his consistent kindness, and for his help on the photographic work of this annual. f |C| c . L J u Billy BarksdalE Birmingham, Ala. A Tn Y.M.C.A. 36; Kappa Phi Kappa: Pi Gam- ma Mu: Paint and Patches ' 37. Charles Barnes Jacksonville, Fla. Associate Editor, Assistant Business Mama- ger 1938 La Revue: Business Staff ' 3fi La Revue: Gold and Black ' ST- ' SS: Director Cam- pus N ' ewsreel ; Psi Psi Psi : Paint and Patches. Virginia Bartlett Birmingham, Ala. n B Belles Lettres; La Revue. Walter Batson Svlacauga, Ala. BK Theta Chi Delta; Skull and Bones. Eloise BeallE Birmingham, Ala. Aon William Bennett Summerdale, .-Ma. A 2 Mary Berry Birmingham, .-Ma. Tau Kappa Alpha. ElEnita Biard Dallas, Texas nB Belles Lettres ' 35- ' 38: Cold and Black ' 36- ' 37; Amazons. Mildred Jane Blair Birmingham, - la. n B Gold and Black ' 35, ' 3S: Belles Lettres: Amazons: Pan-Hellenic. Fred Blanton Birmingham. Ala. K A Tau Kappa Alpha; Paint and Patches; Omi- cron Delta Kappa. Marjorie Bloomfield Birmingham, Ala. Y.W.C.A.; Sigma Epsilon. Grady Bradley Adamsville, Ala. Forney Brandon Birmingham, .Ma. ATn Band; Assistant Business Manager, Gold and Black ' 3. ' J- ' 36. Renwick Brannon Birmingham, . la. Ai: WooDROw Bratcher Boiling, Ala. AS Freshman Football ' 34; Varsity Foothall ' ' i . ' 37; Interfraternily Council: 1937 Field Goal. Richard Breckenridge Birmingham, Ala. Mary Margaret Carr Fairfield, .Ma, Y.W.C.A.; Tau Tau Tau. Mary Louise Cash Birmingham, Ala. K A Amazons; Coed Council; Foothall Sponsor. Hal Childers Birmingham, Ala. S A E Tennis Team. Bill Cleage Birmingham, Ala. Z AE V. Cabinet: La Revue ' 37, 38. Mary Perry Collier Birmingham, Ala. n B V.W ' .C.A.: Belles Lettres: Alpha Gamma; Le Cercle Francais; Alpha Lambda Delta, treasurer; Phi Sigma Iota: Delta Phi Alpha. 19 3 8 L A D R S Errantk Corina Birmingham, Ala. Mu Alpha; Orclicsha ' .sri- ' :ii;. Martha Cowakt liirniiii)fliaiii, Ala. , o 11 Relics I-cttrcs; Frcshiiian ConiniissirMi, |n rs- ident; Iiitfriiational Kflati.Mi ; I ' .uiil an ' ! Patches: Y.W.C.A. Mary Elizabeth Ci ' rti.s BirminKliani. Ala. Y.W.C.A.; Sigma Epsiloii. Grace Cutler BirmiiiRham, .Ala. A xn Coed Council; Cheer- Leader; Paint and Patches, president; Le Cercle Francais; Alplia Lanil)da Delta. Myrtis Davis Birmingham, Ala. Theta Sigma Lamhda: Clariosophic; Signui Epsilon. Nell Dexter Birmingham, Ala. A ri Y.W.C.A. Margaret Dominick Fairview, Ala. A O II Paint and Patches, vice-president; Belles Lettres. V. W. DoROUGH Duiiavant, Ala. George Duerr Crossville, Tenn. Eloise Echols Birmingham, Ala. Y. Cahinet ' SG- ' SS; Glee Cluh ' .S(v ' 37; Tau Tau Tau, president: Clariosophic ' l.-{( -38; Theta Sigma Lambda: P.K. Club, presi- dent ' 37. Tom Edwards Birmingham, Ala. 2 A E Y. Cabinet ' 3t;- ' : ,S; International Relations •35- ' 3(i; Cold and Black Staff ' 35- ' 3t); Associ- ate Editor, 37- ' 38: Psi Psi Psi. Ruth Ehrensperger Cullman, Ala. Tan Tau Tau; Y.W.C.A. Phyllis Elms Birmingham, Ala. Phi Sigma Iota; Girls ' Glee Club; Y.W, C.A, ; Le Cercle Francais, vice-president; Alpha Gamma. Josephine Finke Birmingham, .-Ala. A xn Gold and Black Staff: Clariosophic. De Dee Fitzpatrick Bessemer, Ala. Y.W.C.A.; Glee Club. Hal Flemin ' G Birmingham, Ala. Z T A Paint and Patches ' 3. - ' 3S; Y.W.C.A. ' 3;)- ' 88; Coed Council ' 3i - ' ;i7. George Gibson- Bessemer, Ala. Y.M.C.A., treasurer; linisterial Associa- tion: International Relations. Joseph Greco Birmingham, Ala. B K Skull and Hones. Martha Haralson Birmingham, . la. Z T A lielles Lettres; Le Cercle Francais; Alpha Gamma; Theta Sigma Lambda: Phi Sigma lota. Sidney Hardy Alherta, .Ma. KA Cold and Black Staff ' Sli; Manager Basket- ball ' 3o- ' 3(;. Frances Harris [ . Birmingham, . la. REVUE -74 J U N loHN Harris, Jr. Cullman. Ala. Glee Club. Josephine Harris Birmingham, Ala. K A Paint and Patches; La Revue Staff; Coed Council. Mary Agnes Hartley Birmingham, Ala. Y. Cab-net; Sigma Epsilon. Odein Hill Birmingham, Ala, Mary Hobson Alden, Ala. Z T A Belles Lettres; Paint and Patches. Robert Holmquist Gary. Ind. Margaret Hcbbard Birmingham. - la. A X n Le Cercle Francais; Clariosophic; Y.W. C.A.; Football Sponsor. RoBix Huckster Birmingham. Ala. eicx Y.M.C.A. Herbert HuiE Deatsville, Ala. Mary Charles Illixgworth Birmingham. Ala. n B Pan-Hellenic Council; Amazons; La Revite; Gold aiul Black. Elizabeth Jacksox Birmingham. Ala. n B Y.W.C.A.; Alpha Gamma; International Relations; Cold and Black: Belles Lettres. secretary ' 38. Daxiel Joxes Brundidge. Ala. AS Y.M.C.A. Wallace Jourxey Birmingham. Ala. K A Belles Lettres; Le Cercle Francais; Y.M. C.A.; Band. T. D. K.- YLOR Anniston, Ala. Glee Club; Choral Club. LiLLiAX Keener Birmingham. Ala. A o n Pan-Hellenic Cc-uncil ; Coed Council; Belles l.tjttres; Y. Cabinet; Freshman Commission; Le Cercle Francais. Charlotte Kelly Birmingham, . la. K A Cold and Black; Parade Committee; Inter national Relations Club. WilburTa Kerr Birmingham. Ala. A II Mu Alpha; Belles Lettres; Orchestra. Keba Kilpatrick Cullman, Ala. GT Y.W.C.A.; Alpha Gamma. Toe Kirby Birmingham. .Ala. e K X Football; Track; Y. Cabinet. Louise KlycE Birmingham, Ala. .V 11 Y.W.C.A.; Belles Lettres; International Relations Club. Hazel Kyle Tarrant, Ala. Le Cercle Francais; Y.W.C.A. 19 3 8 L R S Anni; Bkamciiami ' T.anky r irniiiiphani, Ala. Y.W.C.A.; Ahlba C.nmni.i; I.i- Q-rcli- Fran cais; Pi Gamma Mn. Fred Lewis Cullman, Ala. Clarlosoi liic: Inloniatioiial Relations. Ruth Lewis Birmingham, Ala. Freshman Coinniis. ' iion ; liellt-s Lotties; Aljilia Gamma. Billy Lively Birmingham, Ala. 2 AE llellcs Ltttrcs; Y.M.C.A.; liiternatinnal Re- lations; La Rcz ' uc. Palmer Long Salem, . la A i; Frank Lowry Sunny South, Ala. Jada Frances Maddox Birmingham, Ala. T e Cercle Francais : A!i ha Gamma. Lula Makris Birmingham, Ala. Y.W.C.A.: Le Cercle Francais. Martha Malone Birmingham, Ala. MarjoriE Manar Birmingham, Ala. Margaret Matthews Birmingham, Ala. Belles Lettres; International Relations, president ' 37; Y.W.C.A.; Pi Gamma Mii. Murray McClusky Sylacauga, Ala. Tau Kappa Alpha; Omicron D ' eita Kappa. Helen McLeod Sue McNeely Jackson, Ala. Vinn, Ala. er Paint and Patches; Y.W.C.A. Pope Meagher Birmingham, Ala. Student Senate ' ; T: Chairman Non-Fratern- ity Council ' 38; Beta Beta Beta; Interna- tional Relations; Y.M.C.A. Nan Elizabeth Miles Birmingham, .Ala. Y.W.C.A. Annette Mitchell Birmingham, Ala. 11 B Paint and Patches; President Belles Lettres; Alpha Lambda Delta. Theron Montgomery Birmingham, .Via. Perry A. Morgan, Jr. Ensley, .Ala. Glee Club; Paint and Patches: Iiiterfra- ternity Council ; Clariosophic. Thomas Harris Moriarity Birmingham, .-Via. Robert Mooney Birmingham. Ala. Ministerial Association. SLl.f E V U E c c tA M L J U N QuiNcy MuRPHREE Birmingham, Ala. William Myers Birmingham, Ala. BK International Relations. Arthur Nichols Birmingham, Ala. BK Kappa Phi Kappa. JiMMiE NoLEN Birmingham, Ala. Gold and Black. Sara Helen Overton Birmingham, Ala. A XO Mildred Peacock Birmingham, Ala. ex William Pierce Equality, Ala. V.M.C.A. Sarah Postelle Birmingham, Ala. Aon Belles Lettres. vice-president; Kappa Delta Epsilon; Le Cercle Francais; Paint and Patches; Gold and Black. William J, Powers Birmingham, Ala. A TO J. D. Prixce, Jr. Birmingham, Ala. 2 A E Belles Lettres; Y. Cabinet; Tau Kappa Alpha; Varsity Football Manager; Track; Gold and Black Staff. Mary Virginia Respess Birmingham, Ala. r B Amazons; Paint and Patches; Belles Let- tres; Eta Sigma Phi. Janet RoBiNETTE Birmingham, Ala. Alpha Lambda Delta; Y.W.C.A. Arnold Royal Birmingham, Ala. Baseball; Freshman Basketball; Skull and Bcnes. Cherry Scogin Birmingham, Ala. Y.W.C.A., secretary; Tau Tau Tau. Carrie Frances Short Binningham, Ala. Tau Tau Tau: Sigma Epsilon; Clariosophic. Dorothy Siler Birmingham, Ala. Mary Elizabeth Simmons Birmingham, Ala. K A Paint and Patches; Amazons. Sands Simons Birmingham, Ala. 2 AE Y. Cabinet; Band. Mildred Sims Birmingham, Ala. Tau Tau Tau, secretary SfJ, president 37; Clariosophic ' 37. James Sledge Greensboro, Ala. Skull and Bones; Clariosoi)hic; Theta Chi Delta; Y.M.C.A. Fred D. SpEnce Louisville. Kv. A Tn Student Senate ' 3 )- ' 37; Athletic Committee ' 3.5; Varsity Football. 1 9 3 B LA D R S Thomas Stevenson Birmiiij ham, Ala. Track; Y. Caliinct; TPlLta SiK ' nia l.ainlj.hi; Glee CImI) ' 3ri- ' 38. Margaret Neli. Thompson Birmingliaiii, Ala. ( ' ■lee Cliil); Alpha Gamma. MiEDREi) Tifpen Birmingham, Ala. S ' .W.C.A. : Siyma Kpsilon. Norma Jean ToMi.rNsON Birmingham. Ala. K :i Paii-Helleiiic Cinmci!, treasurer; Paint and Patches; Amazons. Harrv Trevarthen Birmingham. Ala. B K MiNAR I,. Triplett Birmingham. . Ia. Y.M.C.A. Fred Vance Birmingham, Ala. OK N Baseball ' 36. Chari.es Vines Varsity Football. Huevtown, Ala. L. A. Weisinger Birmingham, Ala. ATQ Jim F. Whaeev Montevallo, Ala. BK William D. Whetstone Svlacauga, Ala. AS V. Cabinet ' 37; Tau Kappa Alpha; Inter- national Relations ' 3C ; La Rez ' ke Business Staff; Omicron Delta Kappa. John Williamso.n Birmingham, Ala. K A Y.M.C.A. Margaret Anne Wilmore Birmingham, .Ala. II B Belles Lettres ' S. i- ili; Y.VV.C.A.; Alpha Gamma ' 3f - 37; Theta Sigma Lambda ' 37; Coed Council 38. O ' Byne Wilson Birmin.gham, Ala. Mildred Jo Winfield Birmingham. . la. A X n Amazons; Cheer Leader ' 37; Clariosophic; Pan -Hellenic, vice-president. . rthir Yeilding Enslev, Ala. iZ Henry Yeilding Birmingham. Ala. 2 AE Freshman Football Manager; Freshman Bas- ketball; ' i ' . Cabinet. E V U E Carolyn Armstrong, KA Mary Frances Andrews Wesley Allen J. T. Aldridge Louis Claude Albright William H. Acton, Jr. George Acton Rov Bailey, A 2 Ralph Bankston Michael Baranelli Irma Barnes Jesse Bates Edgar Batson Margery Bauer, A X fi Sterling Beaumont Jack Allen Bell, B K Mary Eleanor Bell Ruth Bell Joseph Benefield Anne Berry, n B Virginia Bethea, r B Marjorie Jean Bevis, A n Lester Blackburn Rile Blackwood French Blanchard Richard Blanton Henrietta Boggs Emma Dean Booker, r i B Howard Borland, K A Bernard Bosarge Frances Boston McLemore Bouchelle, 2 A E Berxice Boyd Donald Brabston. ATQ Elizabeth Brittain Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Guntersville, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Pickwick Dam, Tenn. Pickwick Dam, Tenn. Birmingham, Ala. Dora, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Ensley, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Baton Rouge, La. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, . la, Birmingham, Ala. Wetumpka, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Fayette, Ala. Parrish, Ala. Birmingham. Ala. Arab, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala, Birmingham, AVd. Birmingham, Ala. LOWER DIVISION O ri f FsED Bmttox, a t n Josephine Brooks,. K i Emmette Brown, A n Clyde Brown Richard Brown Rose Brown Harry M. Burns, n K A Robert Burr Wayne Bynum, 9 T Margaret Cain Barbara Calloway, r B HoBERT Camp, B K James Campbell Jack Cantrell James Carter.. B K Sam Carter Frank Cash, S A E William Herman Catha Mary Evelyn Chambers, A X n Jo Ned Chatham Mildred Childers Milton Christian Vera Clemons Jessie Coggin Johnnie Cole Paxton Coleman, ZAE Tom Coleman, 2 A E William Collignan, B K Mary Evelyn Colli xs Innes Comer, KA El AIRE Cooper, r B James Cooper, K A Margaret Cooper E. B. Copeland, K a Jean Cosart Birmingham, Ala. Birminglnam, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Hackleburg, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Bessemer, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala, Birmingham, Ala. Tarrant, Ala. Jasper, Ala. Bessemer, Ala. Bessemer, Ala. Nettleton. Miss. Ensley, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala, Birmingham, Ala, Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, . ' Ma. Birmingham, Ala, Anniston, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. LOWER DIVISION J f - « £. lAT Edward Coury Louise Cox Ellen Cross, K A Robert Currie James Ernest Davidson, K A Bessie Davis, e T Jimmy Davis AIarcaret Day, n 1? William DeiTEnbeck Miles Denham Marjorie Dickinson Thomas Dill, G K N Idabel Dixon MiMi Dodge Billy Doggett, B K Frank Dominick, KA Charles Doyal Kathleen Draper Jack Duffie, :s A E Earl Duncan Betty Dunn. K A RuFUS DUVALL William Easter Elna Erickson,, r B Johnie Faust Grace Fealy, n B Frank J. Fede James Fex Mary Finch, K A Gordon Fletcher Ed Foust Eiilette Francis, IT B Bkatrick Frazer. Miriam Freeman, IT B Jean Fucit. A X fJ Valdosta, Ga. Birininghani, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, .Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham. Ala. Birmingham. Ala. Birmingham. Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Florence, Ala, Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Ensley, Ala. Birmingham. Ala. Haleyville. Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham. Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham. Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Hueyton, Ala. Birmingham. .Via. Birmingham. Ala. Birmingham. .Ma. Birmingham, Ala. LOWER DIVISION W S ' t — U-f. Ik , Gladys Gaines Margaret Cecil Gaines. K A Glendon Galloway Dorothy Galloway, A X fi Joe Ganster MvRON Garner LuciLE Garlington, r B Hugh Garrison Estelle Gibson. 9 T Beulah Gilliland, a X n Mildred Gillogly Fannie Ella Graves Leland Gray, K A Dolly Greagan, K Belton Griffin Mary Catherine Griffin WooDFiN Grove Julian Guffin Barton Hagerty. 9 K N Foster Haley ■Fort Hambaugh, Z a E Sarah Hammond. Z T A James Edwin Harvell Betty Hasty, Z T A Harry Hawkins Frances Hayes Bert Heacock Eugene C. Hicks. 9 K N Homer Gene Hicks. 9 K X Jean Hights. 9 T Evelyn Hillin, Z T A Lewis Holladay. 9 K N E. L. Holland. 9 K N Dorothy Hollis Doris Holtzclaw. A IT Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Scottsboro, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Bessemer, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham. Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Jasper, Ala. Birmingham. Ala. Keystone, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham. Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Jacksonville, Fla. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Gadsden. Ala. Ensley, Ala. Birmingham. Ala. Birmingham. Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Hollis, Okla. Birmingham, Ala. LOWER DIVISION J . o Q (P! ©. ' o t C?f. William E. Hood,, 2 A E Sarah Hoover, A X n ExcELL Howard John Howard Cornelia Nelle Howington JaniE Hubbard, A X n Mary Huddleston. r B Virginia Hudson, IIB Helen Hughes Sarah Jane Hurley, K A Pat Hutto Loui Igou Elizabeth Ingram Dorothy Irving. Z T A Mary Louise Ivey, Z T A Betty Jemison, Z T A Bruce Johnson, 6KN Lester Johnson Robert Johnson Virginia Johnson Alice Jones, K A Bruce Jones G. E. Jones, Jr. Irvil Jones Robert Jones Frank Jordan Eddie Kain. A T Charlotte, Keener JuANiTA Keller, AXfi Leslie Knab, A IT Martin Knowlton, e K N Jo Marian Lackey, r B Frank M. Lane Joe Langston Roy Lassiter, Jr., - A E Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, . la. AutaugaviUe, Ala. Monroe, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Oakman, Ala. Fort Payne, .-Ma. Pratt City, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Harriman, Tenn. Tuscumbia, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Crossville, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, .-Ma. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Apopka, Fla. i ' LOWER DIVISION ' Irma L. Laul Herbert Lavender R. D. Leach, Jr. Marion Lehman Peggy Lenz, A n Fannie Livingston Betty Lou Loehr. r B Marysue Logan. ZTA Evelyn Lowery, 6 T Robert Luckie, K A John Malone Nell Mancin, A II Jack Marcus James Marlowe Edith Matthews, n B Marie Maxwell Dorothy Maynor. r B Sarah Alice McCain Bettye McCall Margaret McClure Travis McCollum Fred McCord Jack McGill Bill IcGinnis. 6 KN Nat S. Mewhinney Clay Miller Herbert S. Miller O. L. MiMs, eivN ' irginia Mink Edgar Minor. B K Billy Clyde Mitchell, n B S Henry Mitchell, Jr. Robert Mitchell, a T n Ruth Moates Carolyn Morgan Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Fairfield, Ala. Birmingham. Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Kings, N. Y. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Ashville. Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Carbon Hill, Ala. Roanoke, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Pensacola, Fla. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham. Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Enterprise, Ala. Birmingham, . la. LOWER DIVISION f 2 2 2 l Jim jMoriartv, 9 K N John Mori arty Richard Morland, KA Mary Louise Moore,. Z T A Thomas Moore William Moore Harry Morris, A T fi Claire Morrison Bob Morton, K A Frank Morton, n K A Clyde Moyers, 4 2 Bertha Munger, KA Grace Jean Murphy Marion Murphy, n B Robert Murray, IIKA Mildred Nail Lucy Nelson Robert Nelson, K A Jane Newton Joseph Newton Anne Nicholson, K A W. B. NoLEN, Jr., 2 A E Gus NoojiN. 2 A E Jim Norman, A T Lewis Norris Margaret OldacrE Nellie O ' Neal Marguerite Osborn, e T Mary Catherine Outlaw John Owen, A T Q Bill Pardue, B K Billy Parker, - A E Eunice Parker Susan Parks Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Union Springs, Ala. Fairfield, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Fairfield, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala- Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Andalusia, Ala. Hackleburg, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Bessemer, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Bessemer, Ala. Cullman, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. LOWER DIVISION -(. Frank Parson ' s Le Grande Passmore, A T Jack Patterson LaFayette Patterson, Jr. Elizabeth Shores Patton. A n AIary Penruddocke. A n Emma Lee Pepper, AOn John Perkins RuFus Perry Betty Petree, K a Bill Petitt, n B Sam Phelps Will Henry Phillips, B K Beulah Pittman Gene Pledger Charles E. Porter James Posey Caroline Postelle, A II Aubrey Pound, AS Mary Margaret Price, n B J Mary Pritchard Ward Proctor Sammy Pruett Howard Putnam Clarence Rainwater Vicente Ramos Anne Ray, K A Wanda Lee Ray, e T Perry Reeves John Charles Reid W. S. Reynolds, e K Ann Richardson, A X Q Bill Richardson, 2 A E Martha Richardso.v, n B I Rudy Riley, A 2 Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Fairview, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, AVd. Rock Mills, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Scottsboro, Ala. Florence, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Havana, Cuba Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Greenville, Ala. Evanston, 111. Jacksonville, Fla. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Dothan, Ala. LOWER DIVISION 1! i RosALVN Riviere, A X Elizabeth Roark, r B Mildred Roberts Paul Rockhill, A T n Jane Cherry Ross Ben Royal Billie Russell Earl Sanders,. A 2 S Wilfred Sands Eleanor Schuster, A 11 Mary Alice Scruggs., Z T A Jeanne Seale Margaret Sessions, n B Clay Sheffield Mabel Shepherd, r B Sarah Shepard, r B Eleanor Shumate; Clementine Shurbet Henry Graham Sims Kathryn Sims Theron Sisson Gladys Smalling Tom Smiley, 2 A E Jack Smith James Lee Smith L. B. Smith Lucy Smith. K A Marianne Smith Oren Smith, e K N Pattie Smith, K A Nell Smithson Florence Snipes Walter Snow, n K A H. M. StahmEr. a 2 Herbert Steadham Birmingham. Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Shelbyville, Tenn. Birmingham. Ala. Birmingham. Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Riverview, Ala. Birmingham, Ala, Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Thomaston, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham. Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Irondale. Ala. Birmingham. Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Bessemer, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Powderly, Ala. Irvington, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham. Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Washington, D. C. Lewisburg, Ala. Cullman, Ala. Trelasse. Ala. LOWER DIVISION O { tt a Andre Stephenson, K A William Stevens Frank Stephenson, KA Horace Stephenson,. K A William Stoney Bob Strain Dorothy Strong. A o n Anne Sumner Jane Surrency Barbara Sutherland, AXn Sara Ella Taylor, r B Julia Thiemonge, A n Bertha Thomas Maud Thomas Bettie Thomson, KA Nancy Thompson Tom Thompson Joanna Thorpe Leslie Thorpe Florence Throckmorton, K A Norman Tixgley Charles Trotman Carroll Truss Bob Tucker Madge Tully Alice Turner, Z T A Charles Turner Doris Turnipseed Arthur Watkins, 6 K N Maurice Watkins. IIKA Charles P. Ware John Ware, 6 K N Kitty Walton, A X fi Perry Walker, as Roger Waldrup Birmingham, Ala. Birmiiigliam, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Anniston. Ala. Bessemer, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, .Ala. Ensley, Ala. Ensley, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Attleboro, Mass. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, .Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Fairfield, Ala. Verbena, Ala. Trussville, -Ala. Birmingham. Ala. Birmingham, . ' ila. Red Bay, Ala. LOWER DIVISION I (I i •!?■i; J Alva Bibb Wade Maudie Waits Grace Watson Michael Wesson Elise Wheeler, a X n Julian Whitehead Martha Whitehead, A X fi Clarence Wilburn, Jr. Eugenia Williams. A n Walter Wolf Edna Woodrow. K A Marvin Woodward Leila Wright, n B4 George Vann, e K N ' irginia Van der A ' eer. II B Carlton Wynn Robert Wynn Sidney Yeilding Draimon Young Birmingham. Ala. Bessemer, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, x la. Birmingham. Ala. Birmingham. Ala. Birmingham. Ala. Moundville. Ala. Jasper. Ala. Cullman. Ala. Bessemer, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham. Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham, Ala. Birmingham. Ala. Birmingham. .- la. LOWER DIVISION If _I J JtF V- ' The year 193 8 at Southern has been an unusual one — a year of uncertainty and a year of sudden growth. The college was without a president. Student body and faculty seemed to sense that they had to balance that loss. The Gohl ami Black sponsored the Campus Nei srccl — the only one in the United States. A few students, enthusiastic, sup- plied a band and pep squad for football games. Mr. James Saxon Chil- ders met with students who worked on the lives of the poets with no idea of receiving academic credit. The efforts of Dr. Guy E. Snavely and of the faculty brought a Phi Beta Kappa chapter to Birmingham- Southern. Student organizations took up the idea of the common room in Student Ac. Vigorously they pushed it forward — lectures, a Spring Swing Show, booths at May Day, — anything to get the room which will give Southern more atmosphere of college. i F E A T U R (I R HELEN HAYES etec ts tL Ee eauUeS tu Miss Hayes came to Bir- mingham as Victoria Regina. While here, she graciously consented to judge La Ke- I ' lic ' s beauties, and the pic- tures were sent to her in New Orleans. T a—Q, y -  ! I i c, I MISS M A R Y M U R P H Y !t ..- v MISS BILL P E T I T T ' MRS. LEE MAE ARTHUR J R . . R i-r - r s -. V ■. V v S i au i v ■1 i — i w n MISS ELIZABETH P A T T D X .--A i MISS MARGARET CECIL GAIXES A T H L E T 4 ! - fl WEARERS oftk B Football Captain Basketball Captain Baseball Captain Jim Ford Art Hanes Ruf us Perry Charlie Vines Dick McMichaels Joe Petrite Gus Noojin Herbert Huie Ward Proctor Woodrow Bratcher Tom Sparks J. B. McClendon J. T. Aldridge Roy Lassiter Walter Riddle Oscar Hargett Eugene Looney Vernon Cain Fred Jensen Bob Strain Jim Ford Kenneth Morland Art Hanes Rutherford Key George Williams Curry Jones Sam Harris Fred Spence Kenneth Morland Hugh Corbin Charlie Walton Sammy Pruett Eldridge Mote Dickie Morland Herbert Peterson Sidney Hardy, Mgr. J. D. Prmce, Mgr. Paul Burleson, Mgr. John Pittman James Gandy John Cleage Fred Vance Biviningljain Ne ' U.s Trophy Florsheini S joc-Bill West Trophy I ' - I Ritz Theater Trophy FDDTBALL D IXI ] Jenks Gillem Head Coach Lex Fullbright Assistant Coach Ben Englebert Assistant Coach [ THRILLING 21-20 victory over a traditional grid rival gave Bir- mingham-Southern Golden Platoon the championship of the Dixie Con- ference is as spectacular a clash as Legion Field has ever played host to. The record of the Dixie Conference champions does not rival the imposing success gained by the last title array that swooped down from the Hilltop, the undefeated, untied team of 1934. Victims of this year ' s smooth-working Panther team were Loyola, Mercer, Millsaps, Chatta- nooga, Spring Hill, and Howard. Only the strong outfits from Auburn and Southwestern were successful in downing the Hilltoppers. As usual, the champion Panthers were mentored by Head Coach Jenks Gillem and Line Coach Lex Fullbright. The six All-Dixie players on the Panther team were Captain Jim Ford, Alternate-Captain Vernon Cain, Curry (Babe) Jones, Woodrow Bratcher, Dick McMichaels, and Walter Riddle. The Plainsmen from Auburn played Southern in the Capital City inaugural and, true to form, got a well-earned 19-0 victory. Coach Meagher substituted often to give his green hands game experience for { [ e win the CONFERENCE CL amnions in kip the heavy schedule that the Tigers were to face, and the Panther mentors depended on fifteen workhorses to hold the forward wall. The game was by no means a runaway. The Loyola Wolves were first of the Dixie Con- ference foes; the Panthers licked them 14-0 by featuring a sharp attacking Hilltop crew, includ- ing Woodrow Bratcher and Art Hanes. The Panthers ' third tilt was with Mercer. The Bears stuck in until the end but the Panthers came through, Bratcher again turning the trick when he flagged one of Dick McMichaels ' aerials for the score, and then kicking the point. Southwestern of Memphis invaded Birmingham. The star-studded Lynx struck with devastating force and ran rough shod over the Methodists in a contest that finally ended with the visitors a 26-7 winner. In the fourth game, the Panthers amassed a 12-point lead before the Millsaps Majors counted. Southern left the field victors by a 12-7 count. In Chattanooga the Panthers ran up a 19-12 lead that dwindled during the closing minutes of the game when the ' Noogans crashed over a marker to put them in a position to tie up the game. The attempt at conversion was blocked by Gene Looney, tackle, and the Hilltoppers had another D.C. win. The final game of the season before the Howard encounter came with Spring Hill. From the be- gmning of the tilt the Panthers were hot and ended with a 3 8-0 victory. Following Southwestern ' s victory over Birming- ham-Southern, the Howard Bulldogs defeated the Memphis entry by a single point, 13-12, throwing the conference leadership into a two-way tie be- tween the Panthers and Howard for the Dixie Conference diadem. Jim Ford Captain ami Quarterback i ' erxox Caix Alteriiati- Captain and Guard 4 Riddle, tackle Bratcher, cmi Jones, center Vines, halfback .m. G R I D I R D N Who has forgotten the 2 p.m. of the 1937 Thanksgiving Day? It was all offense that afternoon, with Howard ' s great defense giving up 9 points more than had been scored by all four of her other con- ference foes. The first touchdown came within the first five minutes of play, when Aldridge crossed the line after a 4-play drive. The Bulldogs came back strong and furiously and scored them- selves a touchdown after a 24-yard pass and a few yards gained by scrimmage. A fourth down pass put the ball in position for Howard ' s second score and White again shot a pass, this time to Hill. Score: Howard 14, Southern 6. On the following kick-off Charlie Vines made one of the prettiest runs of the game. Taking the ball on his own 30-yard stripe he travelled 45 yards to the Bulldog 2 5. Vines passed 2; McMichaels passed 14 to Aldridge. The ball was on the 2-yard line, but it took more plays before Perry and McMichaels, alternating at thrusts in the line, carried the ball over. Final Score, Thanks- giving Day. Cham- pions by one point. S0UTHRN2I® ' ; HOWARD 20 BBHECTI QUARTER THE NEWS « ACE-HERALD TO PROMOTE CLEAN SPORT PENALTY NO. Hanes, halfback LooNEY, tackle McClendon, end HuiE, quarterback ACTIVITY Leading 14 to 12 as the third quarter opened, Howard took the kick-off and marched from her own 3 5 straight on down the field for her last score. Fortunately, Gann missed his third attempted extra point. A 20 to 12 Howard lead late in the third quarter looked like sure death for the Panther; but Center Babe Jones blocked a punt, and Howard got rough. They were penalized 15 yards to the 1, and Rufus Perry hurtled center for the third Southern touchdown. Score: Howard 20, Southern 18. In the fourth quarter little Chicken Hanes came into the ball game, and played the greatest game of his career. He put new fire into the Panthers as he tore through the enemy line for repeated gains. The hnemen were doing great blocking and the going was plenty tough. With fourth down coming up and 5 yards for a first down, Ford called Woodrow Bratcher into the backfield. Standing on his own 26-yard line Bratcher kicked a long shot but tmiely field goal. This three points proved to be the margin of victory with the final score being 21-20. liilll Bratcher kicks field goal that brings Dixie Conference title to HilltoD. g ' t) X ' jail ! SK K f. ' :.- ■' • ' r ji ' -mr Aldridge, end ' ir Hard hitting in the final game of the season. Jensen, Sparks, ( ' ( Proctor, fullback GRIDIRON Heralded as one of the most courageous football teams ever to come down off the Hilltop and one with as much staying power as any, Bir- mingham-Southern ' s Dixie Conference champions boasted of a large number of all-star material who were instrumental in the Panther suc- cesses. Six of the team merited All-Dixie Conference recognition and one of that same group was awarded a place on the Little All-America selection, the first time that a Hilltopper has been granted such an honor although Ernest Teel and Hermit Davis of the 1934 club won places on the second team. The six men who contributed in large portions play that enabled the Methodists to emerge champions of the Little Ten loop and who received All-Dixie recognition were Jim Ford, Curry (Babe) Jones, Woodrow Bratcher, Vernon Cain, Dick McMichaels, and Walter Riddle. The last named, Riddle, was the Panther receiving All-Amreica men- tion. By virtue of his outstanding leadership and play during the entire campaign Captain Jim Ford was given the additional honor of captain- 1__ Harris, tackle NoojiN, halfback Perrv, fullback ACTIVITY ing the mythical team. The Panther leader, recognized as one of the deadliest blockers and tacklers in the loop, shone brilliantly in all the Hilltoppers engagements and was a dependable field general. His quar- terbacking in the Howard game was especially commendable, Jim keeping his plays mixed so well that the rivals were at a loss as what to e xpect next. Woodrow Bratcher who saw most of the Auburn game from the bench made wonderful strides forward during the season and emerged as tops in end play throughout the conference. Woody was alway ' s a steady defensive player and a terminal man with glue-like hands that could latch on to any aerial in reach. His ability to propel long place kicks down the field when kicking off was not hampered when the distance was shorter and the necessity for accuracy greater, a fact that is shown in the five extra points he converted. Bratcher will always be remembered however for his game winning, title winning field ' goal against Howard in the last quarter of the game that came when the score was 20-18 in favor of the Bulldogs. Pe TRITE, halfback i|li Ford and Cain halt a Ho ' n-ard threat. gi Lassiter, tackle McMicHAELs, halfback Spence, halfback Key, guard GRIDIRON Mr. Jackson and Dr. Snavely see the How- ard game. Center was a spot the Panther mentors were worried about before the season started. Babe Jones had inherited the spot but his real abih- ties were unknown. But after the Auburn game the coaches gave a sigh of rehef when they saw that Jones could handle the job admirably. The pivotman went on to perform like a workhorse in every game and finished the season the best center in the conference. Babe was always an accurate snapper-back, an able offensive player, and a demon at back- ing up the Panther ' s six-man line. One of the toughest little men in the conference was Alternate Captain Vernon Cain, guard, who overcame a batch of injuries to land a spot on the second team selection. Broken noses and broken jaws were the main casualties that bothered Cain but a specially devised headgear overcame those mishaps and he did not miss a game. A great team player and a man who gave his best at all times, give Cain lots of credit for the Panther ' s success. I 1 Williams, guard Hargett, tackle Strain, guard ACTIVITY Dick McMichaels started out the season as a green sophomore but every game in which he participated seem to add pohsh to the first year man ' s performance. Mac operated at tailback, equivalent to left half in the Notre Dame system, and handled most of the Panther ' s running and passing chores and at times he got the call to kick. The Panther soph who made the second team was also a star defensive man in the safety position. A second spot on th e All-Dixie team but a first stringer on the Little All-America selection were the honors won by Walter Riddle, 190 pound tackle. Riddle escaped the injury jinx that had pursued him in two previous seasons and came through with performances that stamped him as one of the outstanding linemen on any small college team in America. Prince, Manager Southern tackier in jction. 1 BASKETBALL WE ANNEX THE BIG FIVE Climaxing a rather in-and-out season with a great show of courage and abihty the Birmingham-South- ern cagers triumphed over Howard in the Big Five playoff to win the handsome trophy offered by Hick- man-Kearns for the championship of the basketball league. The regu- lar schedule ended with Southern, Howard, and Y.M.H.A. tied for first place with six wins and two losses apiece. In the draw for the playoff series Southern drew a bye with Howard and the Blues meeting on the former ' s court in the first game. Howard spanked the Laney- men by a one-point margin to enter the finals against Southern. The Bulldogs got away with a short lived lead during the first ten minutes of the fray that melted when the Hilltoppers got hot; latter five left the floor at intermission with a 19-18 lead. The lead see- sawed during the second half with neither team holding more than a two-pomt advantage until the clos- ing minutes of play when the Pan- thers jumped ahead by a four-point margin. Two field goals by the East Siders and one successful free throw for Southern constituted the re- mainder of the scoring. The final score was 34-3 3. Coach Ben Englebert in present- ing the trophy to Captain Kenneth Morland commented on the Pan- thers ' lucky drawing that enabled them to reach the finals of the play- off without playing a game, and that the remainder of the task of copping the title was anything but ■«( at S D U T Ck ampionshL ipionsnip L HERN luck. Coach Ben praised the team highly, saying: That was the great- est show of courage and persever- ance that I have ever seen. This team came back in the face of many hard-luck losses and showed that they could win the hard way. During the season the Panthers won eight games out of a nineteen game schedule, lost two games in the Dixie Conference Tournament, and won the only game in which they participated in the Big Five playoff. The Dixie Conference Tourna- ment in Jackson, Miss., saw the Panthers eliminated in two games. Pitting natural rivals against each other in an effort to put the tour- ney over financially, Southern drew Howard and lost a close one. The defeat threw Coach Englebert ' s crew against the defending champions, Mississippi College, who downed the Hilltoppers and went on to again win the D.C. title. Captain Kenneth Morland and Eldrid e Mote were the mainsprings of the Panther attack during the season. The two came in one-two in the scoring column. From the team Coach Englebert will lose four lettermen. Captain Morland, Hugh Corbin, Charlie Walton, and J. B. McClendon. Monogram winners who will return are Eldridge Mote, junior, and Dickie Morland, Sammy Pruett, and Herbert Peterson, sophomores. Replacements will come from the ' 3 7- ' 3 8 reserves and from this year ' s freshman team. Next season ' s soph- omores who might be valuable in- clude Jimmy Cooper, Frank Domi- nick, Ed Neill, Peck Sands, and Bankston. BASEBALL Birmingham-Southern scored a grand slam against her city collegiate rival in 1938 when she captured the annual baseball series in three straight games. The Panthers had already won the football title in a gridiron classic 21-20 and later the championship of the Big Five basket ball loop in another contest that was decided by a single point, the Panthers winning 34-33. Woodrow Bratcher, lanky curve-ball pitcher, with a fast one to go with it, won two games from the East Siders with splendid pitching performances each time out. Bratcher won the first tilt 3-2 and the third and deciding game by a 5-3 score. John Sidney Pittman won the middle game 5-1 when he let the Howardites down on seven scattered hits. Dick McMichaels led the hitters in the Howard series with a neat .440 average compiled in nine official times at bat. The Panther center- fielder was followed in the batting average by Jimmy Cooper, freshman first-sacker, with a .417 average and with three runs batted in. Cooper held the highest number of hits for the series with five safe bingles. James Gandy, second baseman, and Hugh Corbin, rightfielder, were others with good percentages in the hitting column, having .400 and .307 respectively. Gandy led in the RBI averages with four runs propelled across the platter. Eldridge Mote, third sacker, chimed in with hits at opportune times to also account for three runs driven in. j 9;4 .Vy TRACK The track season saw Birmingham-Southern come through a short schedule with one match lost and one won, against Dixie Conference competition, with another defeat coming at the hands of the Auburn Tigers. Scores of the 1938 meets were Southern 72-MilIsaps 59; South- ern 36 ' 2-Auburn 89y2, and Southern 5 6-Mississippi College 70. The loss to Mississippi College was one of the few dual meets that the Panther harriers have lost to Dixie Conference competition during the last several years. Under the excellent tutelage of Coach Lex Full- bright the spiked shoe men have continued to improve until at present Southern has a very promising contingent of young track and field performers. Trackmen who are largely responsible for the improved standing of the Panther track forces include Tom Sparks, Charles Walton, J. D. Prince, John Williamson, Vernon Cain, Henry Stevenson, Joe Petrite, Dickie Morland, Harry Burns, Fred Spence, Gus Noojin, Dick McMichaels, Leland Gray, Freeman Clark, Erante Korina, Theoron Montgomery, Winifred McCartney, William Stevens, A. L. Dodd. Sammy Pruett, Tom Thompson, Molly Swindle, and Bill Richardson. The boy who paced the Panther harriers throughout the season was lanky Tom Sparks. Sparks ran the 100, 220, 120 high hurdles, and 220 low sticks, was always good for points in each of his specialties, and it was no unusual feat for the speedster to score a grand slam by coming in with four firsts in one afternoon. Sparks compiled a grand average in the three years in which he has not been defeated in the 220 low hurdles. OTHER SPDRTS TENNIS Birmingham-Southern is rapidly becoming a haven for top-notch ten- nis players. For the past few years really good netmen from the local high schools have enrolled at the Hilltop and they are the kind of boys who like to play tennis in match competition. One move that will tend to draw even more mate- rial here is to start a strong inter- collegiate set of matches with teams throughout the South. The 1937 tennis squad, under the tutelage of Coach Leon Sensabaugh, played two local matches and showed to the best advantage imaginable. In fact the University of Chatta- nooga and Mississippi College were met in duels in the Magic City and the best these two opponents could do was to salvage one match between them. And none of the Panther racquet weilders performing in those matches had reached the status of juniors, thus showing that they would be back for at least two years more tennis play. The Moccasin outfit was the team to win that lone match, Southern beat them 6-1 and then cleaned up the Choctaw net- men, whitewashing them 7-0. Brooks Shirley, Frank Osment, Rollin Osgood, Charles Baader, and Hal Childers composed the person- nel of the 1937 team. Of this list only Osgood and Baader were ab- sent from the campus when plans for the 193 8 squad began to take form. In the manner of previewing the 1938 tennis team a campus tourna- ment was staged to decide the var- sity team. With Coach Sensabaugh again in charge, the tourney attract- ed more attention and drew more entrants than have any of the previ- ous meets. Several new names were entered that were well known to tennis fans throughout the state by virtue of these new hopefuls having been prominent in local tennis cir- cles. Among these new faces were Herbert Downs, Ed Neill, Horace Stevenson, Lefty Rollins, Rain- water, and Wrona. The annual dead- line caught your chronicler before the tourney was completed but we ' d wager that a representative team was rounded up and that more matches were arranged for the Pan- ther racquet weilders. For the ac- tual results we refer you to the sports section of next year ' s LaRevue. GOLF Golfing interests at Birmingham- Southern were at a new low for the beginning of the 193 8 team, after the loss of three members of the previous squad. Panther hopefuls however were banking on the addi- tion of new material to more than compensate for the loss of the trio of absent linksters. Dick Westbrook, Harry Burns, Wilfred Speed Reynolds, Hugh Nabors, and Houston Brice made up the ' 37 links team. The missing members of that squad are West- a t S D U T H E R N brook who has gone the way of all good students, and Hugh Nabors and Houston Brice who have ma- triculated at other colleges. Thus the personnel of this spring ' s club was chosen from Burns, Reyn- olds, Abner Johnson, Frank Domi- nick, Billy Powers, Paxton Cole- man and Ben Ray, newcomers who will step into the shoes of the out- going veterans. Last year ' s team found opposition from the ranks of the Birmingham Country Club , Ramsay Technical High School, Georgia Tech, and the Ensley Business Men ' s Club. The competition offered by these out- fits was rather stern, the Hilltop linksmen being able to salvage only the Ramsay match from the quar- tet of tries. In the Georgia Tech meet the Panthers also gave a good account of themselves before taking the count from the Yellow Jackets. An incomplete schedule for the 1938 links team lists matches with the University of Alabama, Au- burn, Louisiana Polytechnic Insti- tute, Georgia Tech, the Birmingham Country Club, Ramsay High School and the Ensley Business Men ' s Club. Although some of the best golf ma- terial on the campus is gone there was still reason for optimism among Gold and Black followers for a strong squad in ' 3 8. n M EM R I AM During the year, Henry Montgomer) veteran trainer and friend of every football man passed away. Henry carried with him a little of the heart of every student, since all knew him and loved him. No ath- letic team of any kind ever had a more loyal defender. Henr) ' was always there. . . . Remember the day that he was given a gigan- tic cigar in chapel? . . . Henry and his cigars . . . He has gone . . . But in the tradition of Birmingham- Southern, Henry is here forever. G R E E 4 INTERFRATERN The Interfraternity Council is the seat of all clique troubles. It is also the producer of Hilltop script dances. Members of the Council enjoy giving these script dances because sometimes they rake in the mon, and because they can have a lead-out to take their second-best girls in. If they have second-best girls. The purpose of the Council is to make for better relations among the fraternities. The Council hobby, however, is to decide who to run for what. The members divide out all school offices among the frats, and if anyone is left without an office, they make him Council president. Nice set-up. But the Council mem- bers can ' t always make their respective fraternities agree to the portioning. C ir m . 1 ' «I IP PI. PI .l|fHP ll T Y President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer C [) U N C I L llFFICEHJi MEMBERS David Reixhardt James Herring John- Cleage WOODROW BraTCHER Jim Ford Tom Edwards David Reinhardt John Cleage James Herring Howard Borland Perry Morgan Joseph Greco James Kay Woodrow Bratcher Fletcher Comer Richard Sexton Charles Rogers Clarence Mize II A L H A A The ATO ' s were one up on the other Greeks when it came to a house this year. Their ' s was no farther away, and was one of the largest off the campus. ATO campus history has been long and varied. One of the oldest frats on the Hill, it went through a slump that it is still trying to climb out of. At first the trying looked hopeless. But this year, after pledging a conglomerate bunch of men, and with strong seniors, ATO is well on the way to reclaiming its snug position with the big four. The frat lost out in politics last spring, but came through impres- sively enough this year with two members of ODK, two Student Senators, and men in honoraries on the campus. And they m.ade the dirt column as often as any other fra- ternity. Eureka! u D M A DFFICER.S President Vice-Prcsiilcnf Secretary Treasurer Richard Sexton Fletcher Comer Billy Barksdale Lamar Axdrevcs MEMBERS Richard Sexton Fletcher Comer Lamar Andrews Vernon Cain Billy Barksdale Forney Brandon Fred Spence John Pittman L. A. Weissinger Billy Powers Fred Britton Milton Butsch Robert Mitchell Hugh Hawk James Fex Donald Brabston Eddie Kain Le Grande Passmore Vivian Callen Paul Rockhill Harry Morris B A The Hilltop chapter of Beta Kappa has stepped right along this year, opening the formal season with a little rhythmic huge appling. The boys were able to grab a nice hunk of publicity when they entertained the BK Southern Province convention. Since Punk Fotographer Orville Lawson left, the boys have done remarkably well in pledging and house-getting. They have a new house which, according to the new away from it all trend, is a half-mile from the campus. Publicity-getting seems to be the chief indoor-sport of the BKs, but romance has flourished — especially with the pres- ident. It ' s rumored that the BKs were left out of the frat clique last election, but then they haven ' t been in it for several ballot shufflings. Perhaps they will become as in- dependent as Delta chapter of Non-Fraternity Council. All in all, the Beta Kappas have shown up well, and will close out a good year with prospects for an even better one. M K A A OFFICERS President Vice-Preside 7t Secretary Treasurer Perry Morgan Harry Trevarthen William Myers Leonard Winston MEMBERS Sam Harris Leonard Winston Perry Morgan Walter Batson Joe Greco v William Myers James Whaley ' ' Arthur Nickols Will Henry Phillips John Auston Jack Bell Walter Blocker Hobart Camp Billy Collignon Billy Doggett Joe Harris Leonard Hays Wilbur McClendon Tom Moore Bill Pardue Azzie Scales Charles Trotman Don Winfield James Beck D L T A S Delta Sigma Phi is the Hilltop ' s youngest fraternity. A few years ago it almost went under — only four active members, men who made straight As. Since then its progress has been extraordinary and the chapter has been built up to be one of the largest on the Hill. The chapter is the only frat on the Hilltop to have a flat in Student Act. instead of a house out in the country. But rumors are that they will expand into a house by next fall. One of their great charms is their telephone. The only trouble is that members sometimes use it when visi- tors would like to. Most annoying. This year saw the Delta Sigs well on their way with men in Student Senate, ODK, and the honoraries; one Field Goal and the Intra-Mural Basketball Cup by way of exer- cises; and one of the year ' s better formals. T I M A H I OFFICERS Presideiif Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Sergeant-at-Arnis Curhel Stewart Charles Barnes Morris Walton James Kay Woodrow Bratcher Marvin Vickers Bill Whetstone Eugene Looney Johnny Forster James Allen Gordon Atkeison William Bennett Morris Thompson MEMBERS James Woodrow Bratcher Johnny Forster CuTHEL Stewart James Kay Charles Barnes Renwick Brannon Palmer Long Rudy Riley Aubrey Pounds Bill Williams Clyde Moyers Earl Sanders Robert Tyler Grady Bradley Carroll Truss Perry Walker Jimmie Clark Lewis Crance Barney Wilson K A A Though Kappa Alpha has been one of the Big Four as far back as most of us can remember, It didn ' t reach its all-time high until two years ago. At that time it was crammed with Big-Men-On-Campus. That is always nice, but when they graduate, it causes an AWFUL gap. At least it did for the KAs. After brilliant returns from rush season last year, it was something of a let-down, and a surprise, to the KAs when they had a little harder time this fall. As did the other Greeks, the KAs lost out on major politics. But with Kenneth Morland as president of ODK and Y., and captain of the basketball team, and with one membership in Student Senate, the basketball managership, and places in the honoraries. Kappa Alpha kept its high standing on the campus. i; IP A L H A IIFFICEHH P reside II f Vice-Presii ei f Secretary Treasurer James Herring Kenneth Morland Robert Luckie James Clotfelter MEMBERS James Herring James Clotfelter Paul Burleson Kenneth Morland Sidney Hardy John Ozier Robert Luckie Porter Carty John Williamson Wallace Journey Howard Borland Fred Blanton Robert Nelson G. W. Kendrick Frank Caffey Charles Porter Bob Morton Herbert Lewis Leland Gray Ernest Davidson Frank Dominick Frank Stevenson Horace Stevenson Billy McCuUoch James Cooper E. B. Copeland Ralph Russell Sam Carter Austin Beavers Ed Neill Bill Brothers Julian Guffin S ' I K A The Pi Kappa Alpha boys splurged this year and went so far as to give a gala dance for the other PiKAs in the state. The chapter swung into shape early, and copped a goodly number of pledges to further its glory. There is a house, but alas, it must be admitted that with most of the other Greeks on the Hilltop, the PiKAs have some dis- tance to trudge between campus and frat house. So prominent has this withdrawal of the Greeks been that it resembles a back to the country movement. The dear brothers worked themselves up several im- pressive sweats in intra-mural sports. But big honors came to the chapter when PiKA Walter Riddle woke up one morning and found himself a Little Ail-American Tackle. Dr. Tower takes a fatherly interest in the boys, but since they received a big autographed picture of the PiKA dream girl. Dr. Tower finds that the fellows ' professors claim that all they do is dream in classes. A A L H A OFFICERS President Vice-Preside it Secretary Treasurer Walter Riddle Luther Williams Clarence Mize Charles Rogers Abner Johnson Herbert Huie Eldridge Mote J. T. Aldridge Joe Steele Harry M. Burns Jack Patterson MEMBERS Walter J. Riddle Abner Johnson Leonard Wrona Clarence Mize Ward Proctor Maurice Watkins Lamar Davis A. B. Luster Wilfred Sands Frank Morton Tillman Sprouse Leonard Wrona Bruce Jones Walter Snow Eugene Robinson gl SIGMA ALP This year SAE was, as usual, the largest chapter on the campus and, not as usual, fortunate in pohtics. For the first time in several years, they held two major offi ces: student body president and manager of The Gold ami Black. They seemed to like the change. But took quite for granted their usual share of other honors. After suf- fering from a flurry of competition from other Greeks, which annoyed the good SAE brethren, they went confi- dently on to pledge their usual wholesale batch of Big- Men-On -Campus potentialities. But they, along with the rest of the campus, are not quite sure how long they can keep their perch. The SAEs are the only Greeks to own a chapter house, and they are probably sorry. But they have the advantage of being near the campus — which advantage is becoming a rarity among the frats. This year in addition to being SAE, the chapter had the distinction of holding top rank in scholarship. fj H ?V.E u t % ' % HA E P S I L N IJFFICEHS President JiM Ford Vice-President Clyde Pippex Secretary J. D. Prince Treasurer Sands Simons MEMBERS Jim Ford Sands Simons Bob McGahey Henry Yeilding y Oscar Hargett MacLemore Bouchelle Clyde Pippen Jack Duf fee Charles Dwiggins Tom Coleman Billy Harris Bill Cleage Pierce Bruce Ben Rav Claude Whitehead William Richardson Harry A. Burns Truman Morrison Rogers Cox Frank Cash Tom Edwards Jim Tom Hogan Hal Childers Charles Binzel Bill Lively John Harsh J. D. Prince Oliver Board T H A K ■■rry Alabama Beta of Theta Kappa Nu was established on the Hilltop in 1924 and since then has been right up to- wards the front in the frat line-up. The Theta Nu ' s at present spend most of the time boasting that they have the best house on the Hill as well as the most convenient. In the fall, Theta Kappa Nu Max Johnson parade managed Southern to a parade victory over Howard. Several of the brethren have become airminded and camera conscious during the year in addition to their Glee Club monopoliz- ing. They stuck their fingers in politics and pulled out two Senate posts, and are running into the second straight year as holder of Interfrat Council presidency. Already active in the band and publications, the Theta Nu ' s are looking forward to the ' 3 8 football season now that a brother is to captain the gridsters. The TKNs, one of the youngest Greek bunches on the campus, have come along steadily and have pledges that will take care of the chap- ter ' s future welfare. ' h, A A N U ;ii, ' ; President V ice-Preside nf Secretary Treasurer David Reinhardt Maxwell Johnson Joe Kirby Homer Gene Hicks MEMBERS David Reinhardt Max Johnson John Cleage Harry Moore Arthur Hanes John Kent Joe Kirby Robin Huckstep Ed Faust Charles Vines Fred Vance Hugh Corbin Bruce Johnson Homer Hicks Eugene Hicks Elmer Holland Wilfred Reynolds Frank Wade Douglas Carter Billy Wilson Thomas Dill Martin Knowlton Charles Moore George Vann Arthur Watkins Edgar Batson Gordon Fletcher Eugene Hanes Lewis Holladay Winfred McCartney James Ogburn Frank McGinnis •V P- IW ! IPUiPwp yff ««iMI ' ' -f ' A N H E Southern ' s Pan-Hellenic Council is noted throughout the country for out-doing the French on the matter of red-tape. Each year the members bring forth a monu- mental collection of Rush Rules which, they think, are complete. But invariably somebody finds a way to get around one of the unbreakable laws, and there is an explo- sion in Stockham. There are feminine shrieks of rage. Fur flies. All of which usually means that somebodies are mad because some other bodies beat them to the draw. Members of Pan-Hellenic Council can always be spotted because they look at other members of Pan-Hellenic Coun- cil with expressions of mingled hatred and admiration. And because no one except the members of Pan-Hellenic Council gives a darn. !■' ' H, S iM.l. I. ' ff1f W-w ' P l-7WWTB W!IWWP nTT ' ! W1- ? --WTTT! r ' T- ' n L N I OFFICERS President Vicp-Preshiciif Secretary Treasurer Gwendolyn Brown Martha Cowart Lillian Keener Mildred Jo Winfield Helen Hughes Norma Jean Tomlinson Mary Elizabeth Simmons MEMBERS Alice Wenz Mildred Jo Wixfield Catherine Sims Norma Jeax Tomlixson Catherine Sims Bill Petitt Elna Erickson Margaret Vines Mary Frickhoeffer Mar ' Hohson Alice Venz !i A H . A D M AOPi was the second sorority to come to Southern, estabhshing the chapter in 1925. In the first ten years, the chapter fluctuated greatly from high to low. But since 1934, it has risen steadily until this year it came out as a highly respected group on the campus. AOPis held major offices on Coed Council and in Mortar Board, be- side being outstanding in Paint and Patches and Belles Lettres. Of course with all the other Greeks on the Hill, the AOPis pledged freshmen that they weren ' t quite sure what to do with, which gave them an Old-Woman-Who- Lived-In-The-Shoe look. The annual Rose Ball is always among the first dances of the season as well as one of the best. •I 1 I R D N I President Vice-President Secretary T OFFICERS rcasiirer Martha Co x art Lillian Keener Emma Lee Pepper Eleanor Schuster MEMBERS Sara Dominick Sara Taylor Margaret Dominick Sarah Postelle Louise Klyce Wilburta Kerr Caroline Postelle Nell Mancin Peggy Lenz Emmette Brown Elizabeth Shores Patton Dorothy Strong Alarjorie Jean Bevis Nell Dexter Mary Penruddocke Julia Thiemonge Eugenia ' illiams Doris Holtzclaw Ruth Allan Agnes Gradford Ruthe Griffith ) I B T Because Pi Beta Phi is the oldest national woman ' s fraternity, founded in 1867, and because it has the larg- est national membership, the local chapter is constantly having to explain to its Grand Council just why it has competition from other chapters at Southern. Despite a change of horses in midstream, and despite constant loss through marriage, the Pi Phis this year managed to hang on to the scholarship cup, redecorate the chapter room, win offices on the Coed Council, and acquire a collection of freshmen which cause the actives to wear a perpetual This-Younger-Generation expression. Pi Phis are prom- inent on the publications staffs, Belles Lettres, and Glee Club, and have two members in Mortar Board. Catherine Sims and Mildred Blair did well as President and Vice- President for the second semester. A H I Preside lit Vicc-Pvcsideiit Secretary Treasurer OFFICERS Mary Chari fs Ilijxgworth Painter Catherine Sims Mary Perry Collier Margaret Anne Wilmore MEMBERS Mary Knox Marguerite Johnston Laura Ross W eaver Catherine Sims Mary Perry CoRier Mary Charles Painter Margaret Anne Wilmore Elenita Biard Mildred Blair Elizabeth Jackson Virginia Bartlett Miriam Freeman Marion Murphy Mary Margaret Price Eulette Francis Martha Richardson Margaret Sessions Leila Wright Ann McPoland BiR Pettit Anne Berry Grace Fealy Virginia Hudson Virginia Van der Veer Virginia Blair Rosalyn Ritchie Edith Matthews Margaret Day Billie Clvde MitcheR J For a good many years. Alpha Chi has been hard to pigeon-hole among the other sororities on the campus. Usually its chapter is large. The chapter room is one of the best in Stockham — they have a piano. They even have space for a piano. They always have one or two Big- Women-on-Campus, but the members keep to themselves. This year they held the presidency of Paint and Patches, and Amazons, and membership on Coed Council. Alpha Chi coming up! ALPHA CHI DMEGA President Vice-PresiJefii Secretary Treasurer OFFICERS Mildred Jo Winfield Grace Cutler Mary Evelyn Chambers Margaret Hubbard Edna Mae Richardson Eleanor Jones Mildred Jo Winfield Josephine Finke Mary Evelyn Chambers Sara Helen Overton Sara Hoover Margaret Hubbard MEMBERS Helen Hughes Elise Wheeler Martha Whitehead Jean Fugitt Dorothy Galloway Beulah Gilliland Marjorie Bauer Janie Hubbard Anne Richardson Katherine Walton Juanita Duggan Barbara Sutherland Rosalyn Riviere Mary Elizabeth Cox Jean Dwyer Rosa Stewart Jane Surrency GAMMA PHI BETA President Vicc-Vresidcut Secretary Treasurer Oil ICKRS Margaret Vines iMar ' Virginia Rcspc« Alma Hays Howell Sarah Sheppard Betty Stuart Margaret Vines Evelyn Wiley Mary Virginia Respess Elna Erikson Alma Hays Howell Rosalyn Sea rb rough MKMBKRS Sarah Sheppard Lucile Garlington Jo Marian Lackey Dorothy Maynor Betty Lou Loehr Elizabeth Roark Mabel Sheppard Felonese Wilson Mary Evelyn Collins Mary Huddlcston Emma Dean Booker Virginia Bcthea Barbara Calloway Elairc Cooper Lena Mae Love - Gamna Phi has one of the strongest nationals of any chapter on our campus. It has had a mild career at Southern — never dropping too low in number, never having a flashily good chapter. In the past two years, Gamma Phi has quietly pledged a good girl here and there at odd times until it has built up a strong chapter. The members are strong in Glee Club and the hono aries. had two members of Mortar Board, and held the presidency of Coed Council. The KDs have risen suddenly. Three years ago they had four active members and were just hanging on to their charter. Today, if it can be judged by popular beauty votes and frat lead-outs, KD is the Hill- top ' s prettiest and most popular sorority. Which makes other chapters loose their claws. Naturally, in the three years, KD has had growing pains, and some of its brilliance might be called superficial. Its mem- bers have not been prominent in any campus activities, other than social, and have done little scholastically and, consequently, in the honoraries. However, they succeed, for the most part, in being charming and like- able. And don ' t think other chapters wouldn ' t like to be as ornamental if they could. iV - ik KAPPA DELTA President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Norma Jean Tomlinson Josephine Harris Mary Elizabeth Simmons Mary Louise Cash Edna Woodrow Bobbie Kelly Anne Ray Alice Jones Betty Petree OFFICERS MEMBERS Pattie Smith Andre Stephenson Innes Comer Sara Jane Hurley Ellen Cross Dolly Greagan Margaret Cecil Gaines Betty Dunn Carolyn Armstrong Norma Jean Tomlinson Mary Elizabeth Simmons Edna Woodrow Anne Ray Lucy Smith Mary Finch Josephine Brooks Florence Throckmorton Ann Nicholson Bettie Thomson Augusta Jones Mary Kelly Betsy Royce Bertha Munger THETA UPSILDN OFFICI-RS President Alice Wcnz Vice-President Sue McN ' cely Secretary Birdie Hegman Treasurer MEMBERS Virginia Walker Alice Wenz Carrie Frances Short Gwendolyn Brown Evelyn Lowery Sue McNeely Jean Higfit Mary Leila McLeod Iistelle Gibson Birdie Hegman Wayne Bynum Reba Kilpatrick Margaret Oldacre Virginia Walker Wanda Ray Bessie Davis Marguerite Osborne Mildred Peacock Frances Blake Theta Upsilon has not received the recognition on campus that it de- serves, but this year, under the leadership of an able president, it came more to the front. The chapter held the presidency of Pan-Hellenic Council and Mu Alpha, gave the first spring informal — which was, by the way, one of the year ' s best dances — held their own in the honoraries, and placed two members on Coed Council. J ZTA was the first sorority on Birmingham-Southern campus, estab- lished in 1922. With the entrance of other chapters. Zcta had its ups and downs but for some reason has always had a large supply of beau- ties. The past year was not successful if judged by number, but the chapter was still strong in quietly well-known upper-classmen and at- tractive pledges. ZTA is strong in scholarship among the sororities, and disports itself in political waters by having members elected to Coed Council. In spite of their reputation for over-clannishness, the Zetas are fairly active in campus affairs. ZETA TAU ALPHA President Vice-Pres ' dent Secretary Treasurer OFFICERS Mary Frickhoeffer Mary Hobson Mary Murphy Mary Alice Scruggs Mildred Adcock Evelyn Culverhouse Kitty Parker Martha Haralson Mary Frickhoeffer Hal Fleming Mary Murphy Betty Hasty MEMBERS Mary Hobson Marysue Logan Evelyn Hillen Mary Alice Scruggs Sarah Hammond Dorothy Irving Mary Louise Moore Alice Turner Virginia Johnson Betty Jejnison Anna Louise Beatty Mary Louise Ivey Katherine Cole Trice Dryer Ann Cargill Dorothy Deaver A M A Z n N S V reside II I Vice-Pn ' siiieiif Secretary Treasurer Ofl-ICHRS Edna Mac Rlchardu n Betty -Stuart Mary Frickhoeffcr Gwendolyn Brown Martha Cowart Lillian Keener Sara Dominick Marguerite Johnston Elenita Biard Mildred Blair Kitty Parker MF.MBI-RS Mary Murphy Mary Frickhoeffer Norma jean Tomlinson Mary Louise Cash Mary Elizabeth Simmons Betty Stuart Mary Virginia Respess Margaret Vines Alice VC ' en . Virginia Walker Gwendolyn Brown Eleanor Jones Mildred Jo Winfield Grace Cutier Amazon Club will long be celebrated on the Hilltop as the best of dance-givers. Strangely enough the sorority girls, three from each chap- ter, really get along without hair-pulling. Maybe that Js because Ama- zons never meet except to discuss their annual dance and to initiate new members. Pledges have to wear white cotton stockings with black hair ribbons at winter initiation, and black cotton stockings with white hair ribbons in summer. But In spite of the seeming triviality of the or- ganization, the Amazon Club is probably the most likeable one on the campus. It is remote from all things political. It is humorous. And it gives the year ' s best dance. OHGANIZAT 4 D M I C R D N D E Contrary to custom on other campi, the already over- worked members of ODK at Southern are extremely ac- tive. Perhaps this comes from the inspiration of having had the National President of Omicron Delta Kappa, Dr. Guy E. Snavely, as a member of the chapter. Though handicapped by the restrictive major system of choosing new members, this year ODK tapped men who met the approval of the student body. For two seasons it has put on a series of winter concerts, Twilight Musicals. The programs, featuring the outstanding musicians of Bir- mingham, were successful in bringing citizens to the Hill- top who might otherwise never have seen our college. At Christmas, ODK lights a star and Christmas tree on the campus, and this year they sponsored the special edition of the Gold mill Black on Dr. Snavely ' s birthday. Prob- ably their greatest achievement of the year was pro- nounced by President Kenneth Morland when he said, We feel that in choosing these men politics have been eliminated — to a high degree. L T A KAPPA OFFICERS President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Kenneth Morland Clyde Pippin Mr. Richebourg McWilliams James Kay MEMBERS Dr. E. Sydnor Ownbey Dr. Charles Matthews Dr. H. E. McNeel Dr. Wyatt V. Hale Mr. Richebourg McWilliams Mr. Lex Fullbright Fletcher Comer James Kay Kenneth Morland Clyde Pippin Pickard Williams Everette Barnes Fred Blanton Pierce Bruce James Ford Oscar Hargett Richard Sexton Claude Whitehead Vernon Cain Paul Burleson John Cleage, III Murray McCluskey Bill Sanders Bill Whetstone  ' iii i j ■ i«i ' . -HT ' if; Tj ' M ' P ' Ti I piiiiu iiif Limp.j. aijMi ill l MDRTAR BDARD Prcartlcnt Vicc-Vvcsideut Secretary Treasurer OFFICERS Sara Dominick Marguerite Johnston Merle Massingale Alma Hays Howell Dean Eoline Moore FACULTY MEMBERS Miss Mary Lou Griswold Sara Dominick Alma Hays Howell Marguerite Johnston Merle Massengale MEMBERS Doris Murphy Evelyn Wiley Laura Ross Moore Sara Griffeth Mortar Board, senior honorary for women, replaced the local chapter of Scroll in 195!. Founded in 1918 at Syracuse, New York, Mortar Board seeks to honor scholarship and leadership, to advance the spirit of service and fellowship, and to stimulate love of college. Mortar Board taps only once a year, a whole chapter at a time, and those tapped are active for one year. There is no overlapping. Therefore it always takes the incoming chapters a week or two to catch on. This year the chapter lost two mem- bers before mid-term which made the organization even smaller than usual. But Mortar Board members, though already busier than most, found time to serve at the ODK receptions, hostess a junior luncheon, take part in Alpha Lambda Delta tapping ceremony, give one rummage sale several times (they used the same rummage over again), and give their usual series of vocational guidance conferences. W   - V V V ' f ' ■•7% ■rw.jwy ' yy •.i ' ■' ' ■■■■■' PI G AM M A M U OFFICERS President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Dr. Walter Posey Dr. Henry Shanks Dr. Leon Sensabaugh Billy Barksdale Mary Virginia Bell James Clotfelter Carolyn Copeland Rebecca Crenshaw Jim Ford Mary Elizabeth Forster Irene Hampton Marguerite Johnston E ' ELYN Wiley Richard Sextox Mary Lou Grisxtold Dr. Leon Sensabaugh FACULTY MEMBERS Dr. J. Allen Tower Dr. Austin Prodoehl Dr. Wilbur Dow Perry Dr. George Currie MEMBERS Elizabeth Jones James Kay Martin Kruskopf Julian Mason Margaret Matthews Norman Mehr Clyde Pippen Richard Sexton Catherine Sims Evelyn Wilev Dr. J. E. Bathurst Mr. Perry Woodham Miss Marv Lou Griswold Elizabeth Webb Velma MacArthur Sara Dominick Sara Taylor Fred Blanton Bill Bennett Theron Montgomery Betty Greagan Vir£;inia ' alker Pi Gamma Mu is notorious for its good chaf el programs and its enjoyment ot its own good parties. Probably no other honorary on the campus enjoys itself as much as Pi Gamma Mu does. Its initiations are rowdy and hilarious. Its parties are well-fed. juvenile, and fun. Its chapel programs have been prize-winners every year — who will ever forget the Duke of Windsor — Waiiy Simpson demonstration? All in all. everybody approves of Pi Gamma Mu. It is really honorary. It takes its members from those who have a high scholastic rating and has merrily promoted a better liking for all things socially scientific. PHI SIGMA IDTA OFFICERS Vremicnt Vice-Prcsiiiettt: Secretary Treasurer William T. Hammond Alma Hays Howell Kitty Parker Harry McNeel FACULTY MEMBERS Dr. Antony Constans Dr. George Currie Prof. William T. Hammond Dr. Charles D. Matthews Prof. Harry E. McNeel Dr. Austin Prodoehl Prof. Robert S. Whitehouse MEMBERS Mary Collier Sara Dominick Phyllis Elms Martha Haralson Alma Hayes Howell Marguerite Johnston James Kay Margherita Kuppersmith Kitty Parker Josephine Rutledge Evelyn Wiley Phi Sigma Iota is surrounded by a faint aura of culture. Its members actually enjoy good music, good literature, and good humor. The Birmingham-Southern chapter was established in 1931. Sii.ce that time it has quietly become one of the Hilltop ' s most respected honoraries, one which has held the interest of all its members, both active and alumni, and has done much to bring about a better appreciation of the romance languages. ALPHA LAMBDA DELTA OFFICERS PrniJcnt Francis Harris Vicc-Pvesideut Alva Wade Secretary Irvdl Joxes Treasurer MEMBERS Caroline Postelle Francis Harris Caroline Postelle EIna Erickson Alva Wade Maud Thomas Bernice Boyd Irvil Jones Claudia Barton Dr. Eoline Wallace Moore Since its establishment at Birmingham-Southern in 1933. Alpha Lambda Delta has become one oi the Hilltop ' s most worthwhile organizations. Because of its high scholastic requirements and narrow limits, the group is necessarily small. Its purpose is to do honor to freshman women. Though one of the college ' s youngest honoraries. Alpha Lambda Delta has made a place for itself by giving an annual tea for inconting freshman women, promoting an Interest in scholarship, and by maintaining a traditional tapping ceremony. ill ?! il ! ss MatENMesSfe KAPPA PHI KAPPA OFFICERS Pres dent Pierce Bruce Vice -President Vernon Cain Sccr tary Martin Kruskopf Treasurer Paul Burleson FACULTY MEMBERS Dr. W. E. Glenn Dr. W. W. Hale Mr. R. S. Whitehouse Mr. J. M. Malone Dr. Austin Prodoehl Mr. Ernest Henderson Mr. W. T. Hammond Mr. Perry Woodham Dr. J. E. Bathurst MEMBERS Mr. Vincent Townsend Mr. H. B. Englebert Pierce Bruce Vernon Cain Martin Kruskopf Paul Burleson Billy Snoddy Paul Reed Billy Barksdale Clyde Pippin Sands Simons Bill Sanders Jim Ford Arthur Nichols Luther Williams The Southern chapter of Kappa Phi Kappa was established in 192! to bring together outstanding men interested in education. During the first part of this year, it looked to impartial observers as though Kappa chapter was coasting along on last year ' s momentum — of which it had plenty. But after a slow start, Kappa Phi Kappa finished up the year with its wonted enthusiasm, tapping a superior group of men, being active during AEA, and having a fearfully formal initiation. The only peculiar thing about Kappa Phi Kappa is that one does not have to take a course in education to become a member. •y « , 4W— — KAPPA DELTA EP5ILDN OFFICERS Vrcihlent Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Alma Hays Ho -eio. Catherine Sims Agxes Hunt Mary Frickhoeffer Rutli Be.ison Christine Bryant Grace Casey Sara Dominick Mary Elizabeth Forster IE [BERS Mary Frickhoefter Alma Hays Howell Agnes Hunt Merle Massengale Sarah Postelle Catherine Sims Ntargaret Vines Evelyn Viley Mary Virginia Bell Kappa Delta Fp ilon. lister chapter to Kappa Phi Kappa, replaced the local Sigma Sigma Kappa in 19?4. Its purpose is to bring about greater appreciation of the ideals ot the teaching proteiision. The year has flowed smoothly for KDE in spite of the change oi presidents at mid-year. Perhaps too smoothly. But AEA week, and the accompan -ing luncheon, kept KDE busy enough to last a semester. T i 1! BETA BETA BETA OFFICERS Preudent Vice-Presiilenf Secretary-Treasurer Fletcher Comer Pierce Bruce Mary Agnes Hartley FACULTY MEMBERS Dr. W. W. Whiting Dr. J. R. Reynolds Dr. W. W. Hale Mr. Perry W. Woodham MEMBERS Mildred Adcock Walter Batson Marjorie Bloomfield Pierce Bruce Paul Burleson Mary Evelyn Collins Fletcher Comer Vernon Farnum Billy Harris Mary Agnes Hartley Grace Hughes Agnes Hunt Martha Malone Pope Meagher Jimmy Sledge John Kent Beta Beta Beta, contrary to popular belief among students that it was founded to give stutterers good practice, is really Southern ' s biological fraternity. It ' s pretty old, having been established here in 1928. But it hasn ' t outlived its usefulness, and still gives friendly instruction to a lot of novices who pry into the habits of the lowly amoeba. It also gives interesting parties. ' • ri iiuiit J SKULL AND BDNES OFFICERS Dr. C A. Whiting Paul Burleson Billy Snoddy Billy Harris Jimmy Sledge Quill Murphy Bill Lawrence Jack ' aldon Salter Batson President Paul Bi ■RLESON Vice-PresiiletU Billy Snoddy Secretary Billy Harris Treasurer FACULTY MEMBKRS Dr. J. Paul Reynolds MEMBERS Arnold Royal Joe Greco Fletcher Comer John Kent Jack Smith McLemore Bouchelle Jimmy Sledge Dr. B. F. Clark Sands Simons Charles Porter Robert Nelson Clav Miller Billy Parker Perry Reeves Joe Kirby Bruce Johnson Despite the pre-medical names listed on the roll book. Skull and Bones is not as ghastly as it sounds. The purpose of the thing is to be honorary to its members — originally. But trom the general atmosphere of Science Building (not counting cats, formaldehyde, etc.) the casual observer would think that Skull and Boners enjoy being honored, love their pre-medical existence, and have one swell time being Skull and Boners. •r- sr It! TAU KAPP A ALPHA OFFICERS President Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer Clyde Pippen BuFORD Truett Dr. Marsee Fred Evans Dr. Marsee Fred Evans FACULTY MEMBERS Dr. Ray S. Musgrave Dr. W. W. Hale Everett Barnes Mary Virginia Bell Fred Blanton Sara Dominick Robert Hagood MEMBERS Oscar Hargett Murray McCluskey Clyde Pippen J. D. Prince David Reinhardt Buford Truett Morris Walton William Whetstone Claude Whitehead Tau Kappa Alpha has debates. Also it is the SAE stepping stone to ODK and has been for the past four years. For the first years after its establishment on the campus, Tau Kappa Alpha was small and strictly masculine. More recently, the chapter has grown and two girls have been admitted as active members. Tau Kappa Alpha has brought superior debates to the campus, one from as far away as the University of Hawaii, debates which were not supported as they should have been by the students. Gradu- ally the fraternity is accomplishing its purpose of giving forensics their rightful place on the campus by popularizing debate. THETA CHI DELTA OFFICERS President Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer Lucy Taylor Felonese Tilson Walter Batson FACULTY MEMBERS Dr. E. V. Jones Dr. B. F. Clark MEMBERS Lucy Taylor Felonese Wilson ' alter Batson James Sledge Kenneth Morland Fletcher Comer Charles Dwiggins Robert Ballard BUly Harris Mrs. Estelle Jackson Nan Elizabeth Miles Clay Miller Robert Nelson Arnold Royal Joe Steele Winifred Strickland Lester Blackburn Theta Chi Delta honors those who have struggled long and well in chemistry. Anyone who has done that deserves to be honored. And, tor obvious reasons. Theca Chi Delta is smallish. The Theta Chi Delta fingers are stained with LQ3lZero. and the Theta Chi Delta conversation is sprinkled with precipitates and distillates. But it is a merry honorary, just as the rest are which have science students for members. PI DELTA P S I OFFICERS President Paul Burleson Vice-President Evelyn Wiley Secretary Gwendolyn Brown Treasurer Julia Eliot FACULTY jMEMBERS Dr. ,]. K. Bathurst Dr. R. S. Musgrave MEMBERS f ' aul Burleson Mary Murphy Mary Frickhoeffer Kitty Parker Gwendolyn Brown Lillian Keener Betty Greagan Sarah Postelle Charles Corbitt Julia Eliot Bill Sanders Pi Delta Psi is honorary and psychological. A young organization, it is still impressed with the im- portance of its own dignity. This year Pi Delta Psi was suprrised at how well it got along without its fatherly sponsor, and it still feels that there is something rather piquant about psychology and complexes and Freud. Still, Pi Delta Psi has goodly members, and programs which those members can enjoy. :. -: ' .;a s: ]:v:a OFFICERS :.am:]._a Prt slJi ' nt Fletcher Comer Vice-PrcuJcnt M. RTH. M. LONE Secretary Eloise Echols Treasurer Jim Morris FACULTY MFMBERS Dr. V. A. Moore Dr. W. E. Glenn .Mr. J. .M. Malone MEMBERS Milton Butsch James Kay Jim Morris Eulette Francis Fletcher Comer Thom.is Stevenson Brooks Shirley Alva Wade Myrtis Davis Lucy Taylor Joe Steele Clay .Miller Eloise Echols Jada Frances Maddox Virginia Walker Caroline Postelle Martha Haralson Merle Massengale Margaret Anne Wilmore Sterling Beaumont | Estelle Jackson Martha Malone Mary Collier Xan Elizabeth Miles Bernice Boyd Theta Sigma Lambda is a math honorary. The policy of the organization is: to be as honorary as possible by honoring as many as possible. One good part about t bis plan is that more initiation fees are collected and also more choice people are gotten together. All of which makes meetings and parties | more interesting. Theta Sigma Lambda is lucky to h,ive Dr. Glenn .IS one oi its members. They rhink so too. 1 if ii The Y. Cabinet is the governing body of the Y.M.C.A. At least that is the idea of the organization. There are rumors, however, that the point about getting elected to Y. Cabinet is that its members often get sent to confer- ences at the expense of the Y. And of course the reason for going to conferences is to have a good time — at the expense of the Y. Still, the members of the Y. Cabinet do all the work that ' s done. So maybe that is quite fair. Freshman Commission, obviously, is the training ground for future Y. Cabineters. i. A B I N T nmcERS President Vice-Presidcuf Secretary Treasurer Faculty Advisor Wade Bradley Paul Burleson Jack Duffee Tom Edwards Robert Hagood Kelley Ingram Bruce Johnson President Vice-President Secretary Eugene Brabston Billy Doggett Thomas Dill MEMBERS FRESHMAN CDMMISSIDN MEMBERS Clarence W ' ilburn Kenneth Morland Claude Whitehead BuFORD Truett George Gibson Dr. M. L. Smith Bob Luckie Richard Morland Clyde Pippen J. D. Prince Sands Simons Bill Whetstone Henry Yeilding Trumax AIorrisox Fraxk Domixick JoHX Howard Jack McGiU Carroll Truss Charles Turner Y. W. C. A. CABINET OFFICERS President First Vice-President Second Vice-President Recording Secretary Corresponding Secretary Treasurer D0R15 Murphy Eloise Echols Frances Hayes Cherry Scogin Mary Margaret Price Mildred Sims MEMBERS Mary Eleanor Bell Bernice Boyd Mary Agnes Hartley Lillian Keener Martha Malone Merle Massengale Virginia Mink Laura Moore Weaver Sara Nell Morris Billy Rose Russell Virginia Shackelford Sarah Shepard Mabel Shepherd Maud Thomas Elizabeth Webb Alva Wade Betty Hasty Myrtis Davis The Y.W.C.A. Cabinet is the powerhouse of those mas:es which are the Y.W. The Cabinet is larger than the corresponding one of the Y.M. for some reason, seems to be more compact. Perhaps this is because of the Y. room in Stockham and weekly lunches therein. Y. big wigs spend much vacation and holiday time at Blue Ridge and points conferential. In winter they plan the schedule of the Y.W.C.A. BELLES LETTRES LITERARY SOCIETY OFFICERS President Sarah Postelle Via -President Virginia Bartlett Scci etary Bill Petitt Treasure AL RTHA Cowart MEMBERS Virginia Bartlett Eulette Francis Margaret Matthews Elizabeth Roark Sterling Beaumont Anne Cargill Marion Murphv Dorothv Strong Ruth Bell Martha Haralson Robert Mitchell Margaret Sessions Marjorie jean Bevis Doris Holtzclaw ALirv Penruddocke Catherine Sims Elenita Biard Evelvn Hillen Caroline Postelle Hearv Stahmer Mildred Blair Bettv Hastv Sarah Postelle Margaret Thompson Virginia Blair Virginia Hudson Bill Petitt Nancy Thompson Emmette Brown Elizabeth Jackson Mary Margaret Price Ruth Griffith Rose Brown Wallace lourncv Emma Lee Pepper Margaret Anne VTilmore Mary Collier Lillian Keener Marv Virginia Respe ;s Betsv Rovce Martha Cowart Wllburta Kerr Martha Richardson Elizabeth Patton Grace Fealy Ruth Lewis Bill Richardson Belles Lectres was founded at Old Southern University, and has long been one of the Hilltop ' s most impressive organizations. The members are, to their own surprise, successful in their attempts to awe and embarrass those hopefuls who come to try-out for menibership. To their own surprise because in the modern history of the society, no one has ever been black-balled. CLARIDSDPHIC LITERARY SOCIETY President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Chaplain Corresponding Secretary Mary Frances Amiss Everett Barnes Mary Virginia Bell Mary Eleanor Bell JackBell Emma Dean Booker Mary Margaret Carr Myrtis Davis Eloise Echols Beatrice Frazer Lucile Garlington Dorothy Galloway Helen Fiewes OFFICERS Robert Hagood Freda Barnes Irma Barnes Jean Fugitt Robm Fiuckstep Rosa Stewart Mildred Stansell Robert Flagood John Floward Foster Haley Janie Hubbard J. T. Griffin Irene Hampton Clariosophic was founded back in the d strongest clubs on the campus then, and car more active — though not more literary — (not parties, initiations, and things. Its members a to do double duty. Jimmy Sledge MrLDRED Jo WiNFIELD Myrtis Davis Rudy Riley William Moore Eloise Echols MEMBERS Oscar Hargett Barbara Sutherland Dan Jones Mildred Sims William Curry Jones Bertha Thomas Bill Moore Leslie Thorpe Sarah Alice McCain Mildred Jo Wmfield Jean Pledger Alva Wade Ann Richardson Eugenia Williams Rosalyn Riviere Ruth Griffith Fern Riley Loui Igou Rudy Riley Walter Wolf Carrie Frances Short Truman Morrison Jimmy Sledge Thomas Stevenson Sarah Sheppard ark ages at Old Southern University. It was one of the tied on a bitter feud with Belles Lettres. Now Clario is that BL is overly literary) — than its rival, giving chummy re of the quiet type, but its officers are sprightly enough LE CERCLE FRANCAIS President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer OFFICERS AL (A Hats Howell Phyllis Elms Cecelia Abrahams Mary Colller C«celia Abrahams Eloise Bealle Ruth Beason Mary Collier Carolyn Copeland Rebecca Crenshaw Grace Cutler Phyllis Elms Martha Haralson Frances Hayes Alma Hays Howell Margaret Hubbard Marv Huddleston MEMBERS Mary Louise Ivey Jean Vf ' agner Evelyn Wiley Alice Jones Elizabeth Jones Wallace Journey Lillian Keener Hazel Kyle Margherita Kuppersmith Anne Beauchamp Laney Irma Laul Margaret McClurc Jada Frances Maddox Lula Makris Theron Montgomery Mary Louise Moore Wyllene Murphree Sarah Postelle Vicente Ramos Patricia Robarts Cherry Scoggin Bernadette Smallwood Pattie Smith Florence Snipes Maud Thomas Grace Watson Le Cercle Francais is one ot those large, loosely built organizations that manages to have good pro- grams and many members. Of course most of the members are teminine with the annual exceptions ot the faculty members and exchange students. This year the club took on a slightly more masculine atmos- phere and an enthusiastic bunch of officers. Its initiation picnics are more fun than such parties usually are. Le Cercle Francais achieves its purpose of making the French language more attractive to its stu- dents, and of bringing about a better understanding oi the French people. il! INTERNATIDNAL RELATIONS CLUB OFFICERS President Margaret Matthews Vicc-Prciidcut David Reinhardt Secretary Evelyn Wiley Treasurer Dr. Henry Shanks FACULTY MEMBERS Dr. C. D. Matthews Dr. W. B. Posey Dr. L. F. Sensabaugh Dr. M. L. Smith Dr. J. A. Tower MEMBERS Sterling Beaum ont Bobbie Kelly David Reinhardt Mary Collier Martin Kruskopf Henry Stahmer Margaret Day Billv Lively Reba Turner Grace Eealy Margaret Matthews Jean Wagner George Gibson Billie Clyde Mitchell Evelyn Wiley Robin Huckstep Mary Elizabeth Forstcr International Relations is the club on the Hilltop that makes living with the exchange students easier. It was established at Southern in 1930, enioyed a boom year in ' 3 6, suffered a slight depression last year, but is going great guns (no disarmament) again now. For a while IRs spectacular lecturers — remember Hajle Selassie ' s little friend? — attracted a large flock of transients, but this year, the club has settled in its tracks and is facing in the general direction of Belles Lcttres, Clario. ct al. SIGMA EPSILDN OFFICERS Pre iilent MVRTIS Davis Vice-Prcsiiicnf Eleanor Schuster Sec ■etary Nell D EXTER Treasurer Birdie Hegman MEMBERS Mariorie Bloomfield Birdie Hegman Eleanor Schuster Mary Margaret Carr Peggy Lenz Sarah Shepard Louise Cox Margaret McClure Agnes Bradford Mary Elizabeth Curtis Doris Murphy Dorothy Dewberry Bessie Davis Grace Jean Murphy Ruth Grit ' tith Myrtis Davis Caroline Postelle Mary Ellen Jackson Nell Dexter Elizabeth Roark Bernice Martin Beatrice Frazier Patricia Robarts Clara Morrison Mary Agnes Hartley Clementine Shurbcrt Sigma Epsilon is the Writers ' Clu b. The members keep their talents hidden for the most part and never tell anyone what goes on in meetings. And Southern ' s publications are deprivecT of their creativencss. A few are not so choosy and do their writing around on the campus as well as iust in club meeting. Sigma Epsilon has a fine array of officers and members. The only grudge ag.iinst the club is its reclusiveness. 3i |i MINISTERIAL ASSDCIATIDN OFFICERS President C. E. Barnes Vice-Presitlcn Marvin ViCKERS Secretary Daniel Jones Treasurer FACULTY MEMBERS Kelley Ingram Dr. M. L. Smith Dr. C. D. Matthews MEMBERS Hubert Hardy John Perkins Kelley Ingram Tillman Sprouse Daniel Jones Norman Tingley Robert Mooney Buford Truitt Charlie Moore Marvin Vickers Harry Moore Claude Whitehead William F. Moore Lloyd Kimbrough Quincy Murphrec Thomas Stevenson Fletcher Howington Fleicher Anderson Gordon Atkeison C. E. Barnes Wade Bradley E. E. Bridges Jack Edgar George Gibson Leon Gray Robert Hagood The Ministerial Association, as its name implies, is the association for ministerial students. Sponsored by the saintly Dr. Smith and the scholarly Dr. Matthews, the organization shows the budding young theologians the way they should go — and tries to keep them there. Also it gives good picnics. Despite the slurs of the PiGMu trial, the association is made up fine upstanding young men. But boys will be boys. Even in Ministerial Associations. ALPHA GAMMA ? resilient Vice-Prtsidfnf Secretary Treasurer OFFICERS Betty Hasty Doris Turnipseeo Mary Margaret Price Leila Wright Rose Brown Mary Collier Ruth Hhrensperger Eulette Francis Mary Elizabeth Forster Miriam Freeman Sarah Hammond Martha Haralson Frances Harris Margaret Harris Betty Hasty Hvelyn Hillen Mary Louise Ivey Betty Jemison ' irginia Johnson Anne Beauchamp Laney MEMBERS Ruth Lewis Marysue Logan Elizabeth Pacton Martha Malone Mary Louise Moore Caroline Morgan Marion Murphy Susan Parks Sarah Postelle NLir ' Margaret Price Martha Richardson Billie Rose Russell Cherry Scogin Mary Alice Scruggs Alice Turner Grace Watson Margaret Anne ilmore Leila ' right Dorothy Irving Doris Turnipseed Virginia Blair Anna Louise Beatty Virginia Van der Veer Marjorie Bevis Catherine Cole Trice Dryer Dorothy Deaver Jean Dwyer Mildred ChUders Anne Cargill Betty Lou Loehr Rosalvn Ritchie Alpha Gamma started a few years back without much of a bang. The idea was to have a sports- hobby group on the campus. For a while, nothing happened. And then, gradually, lots of things did. No one seems to know exactly why, but Alpha Gamma has been clicking for the past two years. Lender Miss Helen Turner ' s friendly eye. the club should boom. ETA SIGMA PHI OFFICERS MEMBERS PrcsiJcttt Vice-Prcsidcut Secretary Treantrcr Doris Murphy Marv Virginia Respi.ss BuFORD Trui-tt Dr. George Curril Buford Truott Mary Virginia Respess Doris Murphy Jack Edgar Allan Wilson E. E. Bridges FACULTY MEMBERS Leon Gray Virgil Jones Dr. George Curr e Miss Dorothy H.irmer Christine Bryant Kelley Ingram MU ALPHA Vreudent Cecelia Abrahams Barbara Callaway Errante Corina Thomas Dill Marv Lou Griswold OFFICERS Ai.icr; W ENZ Sec MFMBKRS •cttiry-Trciiiiiif} Barton Hagerty Perry Morgan Rita Lea Harrison Norman Mehr Maxwell Johnson Charles Newman Wilburta Kerr Dr. J. P. Reynolds Jack McGill Rosalyn Scarbrough Max Johnson Leslie Thorpe Joanna Thorpe Charles Turner Alice Wenz DUR PATRDNS Itrmmijlimu (!lintsi?ntaturg DR. DORSEY WHITTINGTON, President -A non-profit educational institution. -Only accredited school of music in Birmingham. -Courses leading to Teacher ' s Certificates, Bachelor of Music and Mas- ter of Music degrees. -Owns its buildings on Seventh Avenue and Highland Avenue. -New equipment includes 2 5 Steinway and Kimball grand pianos. -Departments of Piano, Voice, Violin, ' Cello, Composition, Orchestra Instruments, Public School Music, Choirmasters ' School. -Pre-school and Preparatory departments. -Branches in Anniston and Bessemer. -Preparatory centers in all parts of city. -Faculty of 37. Catalog Scut on Request 42ND SEASON MAIN BUILDING 232 3 Seventh Avenue, N. Phcne 7-4915 HIGHLAND AVENUE BRANCH 273 S Hi hl.ind Ave. We express our M Appreciation to i 7w the Sfiideiits of vi Biriuiughain-Soutbcrn o CONGRATULATIONS ON THE J j ' 7{cvuc For 193 8 WE ALWAYS V ELCOME YOU TO THE Soiifh ' s Most Beautiful Ballrootii LEADS IN ENTERTAINMENT Calendar Of The Year ' s Events By Abigail Grizzle SEPTEMBER School opened, amazingly enough. It really did. The first issue of the Gold and Black flung a blaring yellow Phi Beta Kappa key in the faces of the already-sus- pecting-such students. That meant that there was a chapter on the campus and that some of the June graduates had been taken into membership. Prophecies of the Auburn-Southern game were pitiful in their hope. La Revue was yapping about its class pictures to be taken and making un-subtle hints that people come over and have their mugs snapped. The Wheel, Cart, Carriage and Automobile Have Led Naturally to DIXIE ' S DRIVE-IT- YOURSELF SYSTEM Best Automobiles at Most Reasonable Rates DIXIE SYSTEM 1917 Fifth Avenue, North ■Phone 3-7181 OCTOBER The first issue of Campus Nezc ' srccl made its appearance and the hot-shots got a little touch of deflated ego from seeing themselves in action. Senate and Coed Council posts were filled though nobody paid much attention to the election except the candidates. A Birmingham-Southern band began to grow under the persuasion of Max Johnson; the Mercer game came and went; the Pi Phis planned and more- or-Iess carried out a Beauty Contest for their milk-fund. The Southwestern game sported the first performance of the Pep Squad, after which said pep squad became known as ' Tantherettes. Dr. Snavely ' s birthday brought forth a special edition of the Gold ami Black, sponsored by O.D.K. FLORSHEIM CAMPUS STYLE FLORSHEIM SHOE SHOP 203 No. 19th St. Billy West. Mgr. FOR YOUR CONVEMENCE ' ' ' Where Economy Rules ' THE SOUTHS STANDARD OF SLEEP COMFORT . . . BEDSiS MAnRESSES SPRINGS More Alabama People sleep on Perfection mat- tresses and springs than on any other kind ' . i I JOBE-ROSE JEWELRY CO. Jt ' iiclers and S 7 ■crsmithi of Qualify 1917 Second Avenue Swiss Laundry and Cleaning — MODERN EQUIPMENT — Com [ liiiici! . of w. T. Grant Company 5 1 808 Third 10 Cent Store Ave., N. Birmingham. Ala. Ousler ' s Sandwiches Dr. Hubert Searcy was offered the presi- dency of Huntingdon College, Millsap was beaten by us, and Shep Fields played at a dance which the Interfraternity Council tried to pretend was theirs. NOVEMBER November entered with Dr. Searcy ' s ac- cepting the Huntingdon offer and a quick juggling of classes by other history pro- fessors. Pantherettes and band went to Chattanooga for the football game which gave them a University-of-Alabama-ish feeling. Mortar Board ' s national president paid a visit and suggested that the chapter might give a script dance to make money. Ha! Jean Wagner of Bitche, France, and Federico Amador of Cuba, spoke at the International Relations Club. Very inter- national. Parade plans and Margaret Cecil Gaines ' election as Miss Birmingham- FOOD AS WELL AS DRINK Bottled Carbonated Beverages Maiiufactiivcd by BUFFALO ROCK COMPANY DR. PEPPER BOTTLING CO. COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. TRY-ME BOTTLING CO., Inc. NEW YORKER BEVERAGE CO. ORANGE CRUSH BOTTLING COMPANY Southern started the campus to thinking about the Howard-Southern game early. Paint and Patches started its radio dramas. Woodrow Bratcher kicked a field goal. And there was Thanksgiving DECEMBER The Beta Kappa dance opened the for- mal season. See what they started. And another newsreel came along. The cam- eraman was learning how. Also campus big-wigs were catching on — how to walk into the camera without appearing to. The Gold and Black made first mention of its drive for campus improvements. It proposed a lounge in Student Ac, a com- fortable reading room in the library, and a spiral staircase to the roof of Munger. Some people thought it was a joke — then. Lady Wiademcre ' s Fan was the first Paint F o r Finer Flavor DONOVAN ' S RED DIAMOND COFFEE THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Branches In ENSLEY FAIRFIELD LEEDS NORTH BIRMINGHAM TARRANT WOODLAWN To the graduating class- Our earnest compliments ! It has been a pleasure to serve you TOOLEY-MYRON STUDIOS ' 77 1 ' South i Forcnioit Photogruphcrs 2008i Second Avenue, North Phone 3-2684 MILLER, MARTIN LEWIS ARCHITECTS AND ENGINEERS Title Guarantee Building Birmingham, Alabama Designers of Stockham Woman ' s Building Student Activity Building Munger Memorial Hall Munger Bowl Stadium McCoy Memorial President ' s Home Andrews Hall Phillips Library Breezing Along With the Breeze In a New Car from RUN-A-FORD COMPANY INCORPORATED and Patches effort at the Little Theatre, and Dr. Snavely ' s resignation was final and definite. Southern ' s quartet gave a radio broadcast which threatened to become a series. But didn ' t quite. The Big Apple was monopolizing every party given. The first Glee Club concert of the year turned out to be the best one Southern had ever attended. And there was a snow, ' hich gave coeds a chance to sport jodpurs, jod- phurs, johhdpers, — riding pants. Also broken legs. The AOPi Rose Ball and Delta Sig formal were the big dances of the month. The question of who was to be the new president had everyone gasp- ing for about three weeks. ' allith Win- thell made his first murk) contribution to the GolJ iiiid BliU ' k. JANUARY La Kciuc ' s beauty parade was the first event of the new vear. The audience voted on twenty beauties and fifteen favo- rites. And at the reception afterward, the newsreel staff took color pictures of the beautiful ones. A chapel poll showed that the majority of students wanted an educa- tor for the new college president and would not go abroad to fight. Though lots wondered what the connection was be- tween the two. Then of course, there was basketball to make life brighter. Finals and new registration kept people mutter- ing about hours and free periods. Profes- sor Howard Leake joined the faculty. And Bursar Yeilding, with forethought, got an estimate on how much the furnishing of the student activities room would cost. The Gold and Black, took over the job of sandwiching a monthly Hilltop Alumnus in with its regular schedule. And, once a month, it began mailing 3,000 Gold and Blacks all over the world, to China, Peru, Brazil, and Honolulu — every continent but Australia. And still the frenzied search for a president. Which then, suddenly, died out. GREENWOOD CAFE ' SEA FOOD Our Special fy Twentieth Street, Fourth Avenue, North Compliments of BLAW KNOX COMPANY Bromberg (Jo. 218 North 20th Street feivelers f Silversniiths ram berg Qa lleries china — Glassware Gifts — Arfii ' are Furniture — Interior Decorations 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 Coiiipliiiicii s of EMPIRE GALAX CAPITOL ROYAL THEATRES Coiiiplniu ' iits of HILL GROCERY COMPANY LEGG ' S OLD PLANTATION SEASONINGS Built upon a ¥ aii r A. C. LEGG Packing Co., inc. 2319 First Avenue. North Better Light Better Sight Better Grades ATLANTA-SOUTHERN DENTAL COLLEGE ATLANTA, GEORGIA Four-Year Course, Leading to the D. D. S. Degree MODERN BUILDINGS AND EQUIPMENT AMPLE CLINICAL FACILITIES Entrance Re(iuirpments : TWO YEARS OF COLLEGE WORK SESSION OPENS OCTOBER FIRST For catalog and information tirite Ralph R. Byrnrs, D.D.S.. F.A.C.l).. Dean FEBRUARY February brought Kirby Page. Also the sale of Kirby Page ' s books. And the KD dance. And the Amazon hop. Which was one of the best ever given. This time the dates actually caught on and there was a gorgeous array of velvet evening wraps over tuxedoes and veils and feathers over white ties. MARCH With March, the Student Ac. room gained ground. James Saxon Childers lectured on Queer Things in Queer Countries and the sponsors raked in lucre. Untermyer. Deep silence. Another student poll showed that Southern students are not radical in their ideas of life. The May Court was elected. (Yes, in March.) PiKa and KA dances came close together. The Gold and Black had its face lifted on the March 11 issue and went modern — definitely. The Swing Show was planned to make money for the room. (That was as good an excuse as any.) Genius Limited was chosen for the next Paint and Patches production. Founders ' Day celebrated Southern ' s 83rd birthday. And, star occasion of the month, Fred Waring gave the Hilltop glee club a stiff rehearsal and work-out — over the radio. Dr. William E. Dodd visited the cam- pus and thereby put the college on the local front pages. There were hitches in the Genius Limited schedule that threatened to become permanent pauses. The newsreel distinguished itself by sho wing film at the end of its show which had been taken at the beginning. The SAE dance and Helen Hayes as a beauty judge came on the same night. Laboratory Apparatus and Reagents Only Complete Stock in the South McKesson Robbins Doster-Northington Div. 1706-08-10-12 First Avenue North BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Long Distance, Phone 3-4 1 7 1 Congratulations to BIRMINGHAM-SOUTHERN Ai PHA Portland Cement Co. A A Ash, Iec 1921 Second Avenue The Best Place to Shop After All THE SOUTH ' S LEADING STATIONERS ZAC SMITH STATIONERY COMPANY 20 1 4 First Ave. Birmingham Phone 7-9153 INVISIBLE RESOLING Goodyear Shoe Hospital 418 North 20th Street Opposite Tutwiler Hotel C omplimcnts of Lm Dame cleaners 723 South 26th Street 3-n89 JOHNSON COMPANY jc ' tcclcrs Phone 3-4995 Next door to the Ritz Cam plniicilti of A G STORES AND PURE FOODS DISTRIBUTORS 3-5281 Phones 3-5282 JOHNS-SERVICE Leading Funeral Directors Thirty-Nine Years WE ACCEPT BROWN-SERVICE FUNERAL POLICIES AMBULANCE SERVICE WALLACE C. JOHNS. SR. LLEWELLYN W. JOHNS. ' 32 1806 North Seventh Avenue APRIL And with April, the April Fool edition of the Gold and Black, a charming sketch of Editor Kruskopf in linoleum. Genius Limited, to its own surprise, was fmally pro- duced. The Theta U ' s had the first informal of the year at which everyone had a remarkably good time. Election rumblings. And what rumblings. Practically a blow-up. But fun. All sorts of clique splits. And then it was all over and no one cared. Stunt Night and the Theta Kappa Nus still on top — hut only by a little bit. The Delta Sigs chased them too close for comfort. Mortar Board sponsored its annual career conference. And the Pi Phi dance flashed its Neon arrow. MAY Everyone getting an Old Lang Syne feeling. May Da -. Beautiful queen. Lovely inaids. Properly dignified king. Balloons. Scarfs. Etc. Phi Beta Kapp tapping. Election of valedictorian, salutatorian. Baseball. e heat Howard. And the year nearing its end. MISS OLENA WEBB Graduated from Birniinghani-Soulhern College in 1936 Member of Zeta Tan Alpha Sorority Graduated from Massey Business College in 1937 This combined training has fitted her for a Secretarial Position with The Birmingham News For 51 Years ' ' Massey Has Been Training Young Men and Young Women for Executive Positions. They Can Train You. Call 3-7278 MASSEY BUSINESS COLLEGE Ask for Information ROLLER CHAMPION The Flour the Best Cooks Use COSBY -HODGES MILLING CO FRED S. JONES 1901 Eleventh Ave., South Five Points ICE CREAM, CAKES AND SALADS We Deliver •Phone 3-1233 AN UNBALANCED MEAL A woodpecker lit on a Freshman ' s head And settled down to drill He bored away for half an hour And then he broke his bill. And then he lit on a Sophomore ' s head, And drilled at a nifty pace Till suddenly something happened; He found a hollow place. Mrs. Hargett (To her son when he had returned from school) : Did you meet any highway robbers while you were in Birmingham, son? Oscar: Yes ' m. I took Mary Finch out to dinner one day. John Williamson: Why are you wear- ing two different kinds of perfume, Mary? Mary Murphy: Oh, I feel like two cents. Coinplinrciits of CITY PAPER COMPANY Birmingham ' s Oicn Alabama Theatre A Theatre to Match the Achievements of Southern and Birmingham . . . A Theatre Continually Setting New Standards of Entertainment . . . • A Theatre to Amaze with it s Luxurious Comforts. in Warmth of Soft. Rich Lights . . ▼ Com e and Revel in Great Sh ons . . . Proper h- Presented! Two weeks until graduation. Senior invitations coming in. Exam exemptions posted in the office. Final Paper for Childers writing. Chemistry experiments brought up to date. The year ' s last dance. The year ' s last class. The election of officers for Fall in all the too-many organizations. Last minute flurry to use up all chapel cuts. House- parties on week-ends. Sunburn. It seems so long ago that the NcwsrccI camerman first started whir- ring his camera at suspecting students. That the Pantherettes snake- danced across the campus. The Thanksgiving drizzle of the Southern- Howard game is almost forgotten. And now, one last excitement in the atmosphere of finality — the new president. Mr. Raymond Ross Paty will come to Southern to be its leader. His telegram to the Gold and Black had a friendly sound. He ' s young. He ' s had the business, teaching, and executive experience that anyone could want. We ' ve never seen him. But we want to. Underclassmen can be glad that they will be back next yea r. For them there will be more campus elections, more frat dances, more exams. The seniors have a slightly lost feeling. They will not know Mr. Paty as the other students will. They ' ll be out digging for a job. But occa- sionally they can come back. They can walk across the campus and have acquaintances greet them casually, friends who have been too busy with college to miss graduates. Sad. GOLDEN FLAKE PRODUCTS Always Good — All Ways POTATO CHIPS SALTED PEANUTS PEANUT BUTTER SANDWICHES MIXED NUTS, CANDY, ETC. MAGIC CITY FOOD PRODUCTS CO. I ' hone 7-0828 LOVETT ' S FLOWERS For All Occasions FUNERAL DESIGNS — CUT FLOWERS CORSAGES — POT PLANTS BEDDING PLANTS Open Evenings 2150 Highland Avenue WE FOOL THE RAIIS Birniinghain Exclusive RAIIVCOAT STORE GOODYEAR RAINCOAT CO. 404 North 19ih Street 3-3907 Com pinncnts of S. H. Hanover The Quality Jeiiclcr of Birmingham The high quahty and careful workmanship of the 193 8 La Revue covers will tell our story. A good yearbook deserves a Molloy made cover. The David J. Mqlluy Plant 28 57 N. Western Avenue Chicago, Illinois BOOSTERS Stulls Highland Ice Cream Co. Mrs. Lewis Famous Pie Co. c. w. Streit, Jr. Howard Odorless Cleaners, Inc. McCulla ' s Bakery McKiiistry ' s Flowers Inc. Pipers Ice Cream Co. Ben F. Ray Bon I featuring- Lady Barbara YOUTH COSMETICS THE BEST! — It ' s Our Own! Buy where your dollar has more SENSE 6514 1st Avenue, North Birmingham, Alabama Ready-Mixed Concrete Means PERMANENT WORK Build porches, steps. basement floors, lily pools, driveways, curbs and gutters. We estimate costs and furnish names of reliable con- tractors. Call us. Sloss-Sheffield Steel Iron Co. CONCRETE DEPARTMENT Phone 7-1562 I}esl Wishes to 1938 GRADUATES Roy Girdley and Company Incorporated INVESTMENT SECURITIES First National Bank Builrling Best Wishes to CLASS OF ' 38 HOTEL TUTWILER R. BURT ORNDORFF fice-fresidetit nntl Mannger (Greetings from The Glidden Co. 2016 Isl Ave., No. 3-0273 Comitlinieiits of Birniiufiham Federal Saving LOAN ASSOCIATION 2028 First Ave. Compliments of South Highlands Infirmary Compliments of RHODES-CARROLL FURNITURE CO. 2020 3rd Ave., No. 3-9211 Rest Wishes to Graduates of 1938 ED NORTON Compliments of William S. Pritchard First National Bank Building (.itniplitin ' tits ttf DONALD COMER t .tnttptiinrttts tf 1 KAY LOK OPIICAL CO.. INC. 1. K. I ' osleil, ()i.tom.lr; l 319 No. 20th St. 3-0876 (.ompliDKiila of ERSKINE RAMSAY (.oniftfiinrnts 4tf R. H. (Boh) Wharlon (■[iii ' lhl.tlc iMi I ' m siilciil (. ' oniity C ' Jiniiiis--ii.n Com plim on ts of W. E. RICHARDSON MACHINE CO. 1513 3rd Ave., No. .S-1572 URIINK DIXIE CLUB COFFEE AND TEA Best U ishit to 1938 GRADUATES DOLCETO yUARRY DOLCETO, ALA. Best WUhes to 1938 CLASS NEW WILLIAMS READY-TO-WEAR 1911 3rd Ave.. No. 3-6268 Best W ishes to 1938 GRADUATES OVERTON PHOTO SERVICE CO. Joe Overton, Mgr. 2007 8th Ave., So. 7-41)8 CONGRATULATIONS lO CLASS OF -38 GOLDEN FLAKE PRODUC TS CO. iltvoys Good — ill ff n x Coiiiplinipnts of EUGSTER PACKING COMPANY FRESH MEATS GROCERIES 204 Carniiohael Ave. Powderly, Ala. Compliments of MAGIC CITY CANDY CO. 1000 2nd Ave., No. 7-1933 Compliments of FAIRFIELD Dry Cleaning Co. B. N. Glover, Mgr. 4400 Gary Ave. 6-1842 Congralulnlioiis to 19,38 ;radiiates Concrete Products and Roofing Co. ' ' Makers of Good Will and Good Roofs Since 1911 BIRMINGHAM, ALA. Compliments of MERIT OAK FLOORING CO. MAKERS OF HARDWOOD FLOORS 4500 5th Ave., No. Phone 9-5191 Best Wishes to 1938 GRADUATES SOUTHERN STEEL WORKS CO. Fabricators of Structural Steel. Shape . Plates. Bars 903 3rd Ave., est Phone 6-1195 Best ff ' ishes to 1938 GRADl ATES ED GANTT Machinery Co., Inc. 2900 10th Ave., No. 3-9598 Compliments of Alabama Terniinix Co. Bonded Termite Insulation 510 No. 21st St. Phone 3-5581 Compliments of INGERSOLL RAND COMPANY 1700 3rd Ave.. So. 3-9278 Compliments of WOOD-FRUITTI- CHER GROCERY COMPANY 2321 1st Ave., No. 3-3111 Compliments of SOUTHERN PRODUCTS CO. Manufacturers Distributors DISINFECTANTS LIQl ID SOAPS JANITOR SI PPLIES 105 South 21st St. P. O. Bov 466 Phone 3-8304 Compliments of SOUTHERN DAIRIES ' SE.ALTEST ' ' ICE CRE.AM The Folloiving Biisinesi ! Concerns and Individuals Extend Greetings to r riie Graduating Class — Ideal Laundry Co. Conville Co . Standard Casket Mfg. Co . R. F. Cain Furniture Co. | Best Gas Oil Co. Star Market Farmers Ginners Cotton Oil Co. Southern Furniture Repair Shop Ne-Hi Bottling Company Schultz-Hodo Realty Co. E. E. Forbes Sons Brumback Brothers C. D. Barr Harry Denman J. W, Payne Gov. Bibb Graves | J. W. Hamilton F. O. Reemer Mrs. Margaret Bush Alex Smith Mrs. E. M. Tutwiler O. D. Street W. C. Vice J. E. Penney Charlie MoCombs Mrs. C. P. Orr A. C. MONTGOMERY, Pres. Alabama Compliments MONTGOMERY REAL ESTATE By-Products of the INSURANCE COMPANY Corporation FIRST Real Estate, Rentals, Birmingham, Ala. NATIONAL Mortgage Loans. Insurance Manufttctitrers ttf A. B. C .■28 No. 20th St. BANK Bimiingham, Ala. Phone 3-3211 DOMESTIC of COKE ISatural Gas Birmingham, Ala. An Efficient Service For Sale by To the home, its use brings The convenience, health and eoni- Capital and Surplus forl. SMOKELESS $10,591,390.03 Its application to industrial pro- cesses has enabled manufactur- ers to widen their markets with improved products made at lower cost. FUEL CO. Resources Over Nothing but ABC $65,648,747.13 Southern ISatural Gas Company Birmingham, Al?. Coke ' ' Telephone 5-1546 i: l„rr BARBER PURE MILK CO. An nM in- iilnlioii m. Hlcniizcd bc- yni.l riui ' i rft|iiircmciitv ' IHOY LAUNDRY CO. 1911 Ave. F, Knslev 6-3 1«4 6-:il8. ' DHV CI.EANINC; A si ' KciAr rv (.tun ftliiiiftil 1 i PARAMOIM CLEANERS DYERS 1001 1 u-ialoo a Ave. 6-4141 Cotupliittfuts of RIDOIJF S FUNERAL HOME i ' .tnuitiintt ' ols of DOMirS MARKET ' KviTYthinfi frtroti to hat ' ' Ave. ; 24ih Si. 7-0336 lo Class of 1938 Jas. Esdale A. D. SNYDER CABINET SHOP V( 1- repair, rcfiiii-li and iiphoU- ivv all kiii U ui fiiriiiliirc. 124 Souih 2()ih Si. .1-077 1 ConipliiiD ' tits of R. G. SNIDER CONCRETE CO. :i-«i03 , 00 South 15lh Slreel Coni ftimftitjt iff ELM OOD CEMETERY CORPORATION Itvst n islies lo l9,-{« CLASS C. C. Lewis Furniture Company 1610 3r l Ave.. No. 3-. 196 Birmingham Jewelry Co. Walclifs. Dianiunds. Jcwtlry For Graduation Watch and Jewelry Repairing (jiiality Work at Lowest Prices A. B. BROMLEY, Prop. ,i:: X.I. 19th St. Cotnpiinients of BOHEMIAN BAKERY DELICATESSEN 1804 4th Ave.. No. 3-3464 Coiti f}litiu ' nts of ALABAMA TITLE TRUST COMPANY J. A. NORMAN, Pres. 2109 :ir(l Avenue S-9288 THE PERRY SUPPLY CO., Inc. 1st Avenue at 9th St. Itirniinghain. Alabama PAINTS— ROOFING All Kinds of BUILDING AND INDUSTRIAL SUPPLIES Compliments of LAMSON AND SESSIONS BOLT CO. 3103 27th Ave.. No. 3-9188 Ifrsi IT ishes to CLASS OF 1938 GOODYEAR SHOE HOSPITAL Compliments of ' imberly and Thomas Hardware Co.. Ine. 2011 Ut Ave.. No. Phone 3-3221 Compliments of CASCADE PLUNGE ( iftnitliiufnts of Kii irl Koalty Co. (;ot a ilale? Don ' t be late — Rent a F ' ord V-8 At a mighty lo rate. ' e ' ve got the Newest oars — Anil we ' ve got the Lowest rates! DIXIE DRIVE-IT-YOl RSELF syste:m Sep the •HEAD MAN ' For All Kinds of • OFFlll. SI PPLIES • FILING SYSTEMS • LOOSE LEAF BINDERS • SCHOOL SI PPLIES J. A. HEAD. Inc. 201.1 1st Ave.. No. C.oniplintonts of Dr. C. N. Carraway (.« i;) i  ic i(. « Tom ' s Steak House Cinn fithnents of J. Calamusa. Jr., and S ife r • • COMB WHAT MAY. CONFIDENCE is the heritage of youth .... it is also a fundamental requirement of business .... attained by long study, training and experience • We have enjoyed the confidence of yearbook Staffs throughout the country for over thirty years .... an accomplishment for which we are truly grateful and justly proud .... • •■-• COLLEGE ANNUAL DIVISION ALABAMA ENQRAVING COMPANY B I RMI N Q HAM. I THE EMBLEM OF FINE PRINTING Birmingham Printing Company Birmingham. Alabama AUTOGRAPHS if SNAPSHOTS CLIPPINGS UIBRARV OF- LIBRARY OF BIRMINGH VM SOUTHERN COLLEGE
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GENEALOGY ARCHIVE
REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.