T H E RAWENOCH 1 9 3 2 PUBLISHED BY THE STUDENT BODY OF ROANOKE COLLEGE IN SALEM,VIRGlNIA FOREWORD A history ol an institution is a story ol that institution, The story may be a long and documented one, it may be a brief sketch etching the highlights, or it may be just a story- slovv, moving, colourless, graphic, but nevertheless a story vvhich tells ol and alludes to the events which made the story possible. The story of a college is a story ol human beings, with the power and the vveakness ol humanity in the back- ground. The background may be drab but, if the foreground is strong, the picture is strong. Roanoke College began as an impulse in the soul of one man, Roanoke College became a matrix ol men ol like calibre. It is with Roanoke College and the men of Roanoke College,vvho made it the mould ol idealism that it is, that this volume ol the Ravvenoch vvould deal, and it is from the men vvho are continuing the traditions of Roanoke that this volume would prophesy. Roanoke-matrix ol men . . . QMEQNQ M NK i I .,..:.,X .L I A,- vfiixt-T.1, 'n'o.z...fJ' Cf it f X..L..f Ei.-,f:f 29 1 N: 1' DR. DAVID F. BITTLE Roanoke College began as an impulse in the soul of one man . . . that man was David F. Bittle.1'his man had founded The Virginia lnstitute in Augusta County in 1842, it was an lnstitute and little more. But it was the germ cell of Roanoke College. Three years later the name was changed to The Virginia Collegiate institute, but it was still the lnstitute located in Augusta County. The school was removed to Salem in 1847 in order to secure the support of the Lutherans of Southwest Virginia. The location was new but the lnstitute was still a preparatory school. -lhen youth entered. The student body wanted a college and in a body they demanded a college. The alternative was that none of them would return the following year. Revolt against authority, it is true, but it was the event which made the story that is Roanoke College possible. Dr. Bittle, who had gone away beiorethe school had been removed to Salem, was recalled to be the President of the new College, Roanoke College-the name chosen in honour of the nearby river. And Roanoke began under its new charter with Dr. Bittle as president and Professor oi lntellectual and Moral Science, S. Carson Wells was Professor of Mathe- matics and Natural Philosophy, and I-i. G. Von l-loxar was Professor of Ancient and Modern Languages and Literature. The Faculty and Curricula of Roanoke College in1853.1'he Library consisted of less than two hundred volumes, most of which were printed in Cierman. Thus Roanoke began with Dr. Bittle at its head. The Civil War broke ten years later and Roanoke was one of the few Southern colleges to function during this period. Dr, Bittle alone maintained the school. A man of giant physique, he rode out into the countryside to procure food, he drove cattle over circuitous routes to escape the Federal Troops, and discharged his executive and scholastic duties at the same time. The man who constructed the matrix. . . Roanoke College developed during the decade that followed the war and students came from all parts of the United States to attend. ln 1876, Dr. Bittle died in action. QMS-N0 i I I i 1 w 1 1 1 1 i T l : J! AJ. iV 'I Z!.N 1 t-as . A, DR. CHARLES R. BROWN There are men who have gone out ol Roanolce College to stayi and there are men who have gone out to return-to become a part ol Roanolce College. Such a man is Dr. Charles R. Brown. l'le Finished his College and returned to it a lew years later as a pro- fessor ol l-listory. Now, he is Dean ol the College and the l-lead ol the Department ol l-listory. Dean Brown learned ol the story ol Roanolce as a student, he returned to teach l-listory in it and to mal4e history lor it. -l-o Dr. Charles R. Brown, the class ol '32 oledieates this volume Because he has told us a story that he has lived and Because he has shaped us to the mould ol Roanoke men. GMQRQEQ In Memoriam 'U' Reid E. Callaway January 21, 1912 May 15, 1931 THE COLLEGE l ..q N' v f He,- Pg 1 rl ' ff SF A 2 7182- . 1' ' .13 5- V X V' ' J7'j,ru .X Q- 1 J '72 cfm 'M 'J QQ-. ..c , : w-3. V 's 7: We x.- 1 X-1 A L. 5 L. -V H fl Q li b Q , ffm: 2ETf fi3fggf.i.4-Q -:sq 'LJ' , eff-' ' fum+u,jTi'-2 311.1 ' 'l:E13'?'f xl iii, 'ti-,p 'Y 'T'-Q1 ,blff wwf f 1 '-M, W 'Q.p:.'g imb 'LI 2 'C' W 5 , N JL X J.,U,,., ,W N MR , :Tiff - P ..:Q 'QJ' ' rx: 1',,, . .5 '-Y ' Ls' ' . K, H- Zigi ,A ., . ,-.- , ,L iw kf Ly , 1 ,N f : , ,.. ' 'H ,- . J. ' 3., f ' 5, P, ff 'r Frei , ' , -TQ S15 3 , 1-' ' , ., fs nf- Q Ag ga ,, A . - wg -1 f , I ww -'Q if ff W nwfo . ' V21-g iw.. . .1 . r.g w 1513? , , ,.,E5gg, 4 Yi .W I '- jg .4 .1J,f-.- L3 . ,.x . Z 9 .'. f Q , ' -'N VKX xv! , QQ 5-.KC .- ' .-- , if --, xx-7.4 5354. 6 'fgl wr -1' .1 KW' W f f ' 1' . -f s ig, ug-la v 2fgi .qe' .,-Q, -ga 3 'f 3 ' all . T' lf u ' F -,:f,-:'g'y'if 443 Y wml. KTM ll 1 l 'x' ', -2.91 ,l If F' X x LN ,EQ , 1 ff 'i X I ug, ,wg 3 X. 'X - 1. , , I. Q , f ' 11 L , H w .1 J. , .af rx I7 1 z JlM .4 f if Ni DR. JULIUS D. DREHER After the death of Dr. Bittle, the Rev. T. W. Dosh was elected President of the College. l-lowever, he resigned after a year and Dr. Julius D. Dreher succeeded him in August,'l878. The year served as an interlude in which the College found itself after the dynamic services of Dr. Bittle. Some of the old was faulty and new matter must be found with which to replace it. And the College must advance or die. Men are kinetic and a mould which forms them must keep apace, or be left behind. The man who had founded Roanoke had a worthy successor in Dr. Dreher. Corollary to the growth of any institution is the financial backing that is necessary to maintain it. Roanoke was not destitute, but the borderline between poverty and destitution is not always a sharp one. This period was the one immediately following the Civil War: money was scarce, Confederate currency was useless paper-Dr. Bittle had been waiting for a train to carry him to Richmond in order that he might purchase books when the end of the war came . . . the books were bought with Federal currency later. The faculty was inadequate to a growing institution and the physical plant was far from complete. l-lence, the financial problem that confronted the new president was one that the Danaides would have ignored. But Dr. Dreher was a product of Roanoke and he met the difficulties with energy and tact. l-le had learned the story and when it fell to him to tell his chapter, he told the story of a fighter who fought in the dark against intangible opponents, and he told it well. Dr. Dreher brought the finances of Roanoke to a degree of soundness that had been but a dream before, he improved the grounds and the build- ings, he was able to secure endowments, the first in the history of the college, and he made a dream of Dr. Bittle, the Library, a realization- with twenty-one thousand volumes. But perhaps the greatest event of his presidency was the appointment of Dr. Luther A. Fox to fill the chair of Professor of Moral and intellectual Science. Men who shaped the matrix. . . QMQSSD DOORWAY AND WINDOW 4 -1932- ' -- ' ---A-------fm-V--,Y--V, -1932- x www w H , v, - , ' ' ' N t X. E.. ii. . . W i A -1932- FACULTY RH E iEj Elfwti will E i 'yi Y L.. i 1 - .Q ' -,1f', A2.'Lv-,ahh l r, 1 :Q .- .-' 1' -11 xii 1' Wai?-i'?33Q1'i 'iff' 'ffibzibgl 'ii DR. CHARLES J. SMITH THE PRESIDENT This book will be a reminder For liie oi the people you knew and the things you did while the spell oi student experience was upon you. It will be a Fine book to drag out beiore your Fireside when your children and grandchildren cry for a story. They will scarcely recognize the Figure that you are then from the likeness oi the boy or girl that you are now. But you will be able to prove to them that you were once young, eager in spirit, and unafraid of the onward march oi time and events which you could not foresee. And, best oi all, from these pages you will draw material which, under the influence of a whetted memory, will make your hearers laugh and cry by turns as you weave For them the humor and pathos ol the life stories ol those whose portraits will be Found herein. l trust that in those distant years each one oi you may show a completeness of personality and a fullness oi liie lar in excess of any promise oi the pictures and stories oi this book. When this occurs Roanoke College will be conscious oi its most perfect work. It will rejoice greatly and its institutional spirit will foregather with you and your loved ones around the hearth. What college pours into the vessels oi our lives can never be lost. CHARLES J. SMITH 22 iii li ti Wifi! l DR. CHARLES R. BROWN THE DEAN MEN-so vve have been told since the days ol Plato-need not so much to be informed as to be reminded. ln times like ours, when public matters have perlorce been painted before the national consciousness in large brush-strolces- sometimes in truth, sometimes in error- it seems more necessary than ever before lor earnest and serious students to revalue everything before they reject anything. Therefore, l would remind you, men and women ol Roanoke, that as you face the struggle for existence in a savage society, the value ol what you learn from day to day has a very important, if not immediate, bearing on your lives and welfare. Your genera- tion will witness many changes and re-adaptations. Youthful and lusty science leads on to constant surprise, it not reversal. There seems no end to Naturels surprises .. , no bottom to her mysteries. Remind yourselves then, to build, to tear dovvn, and to rebuild until you are satisfied with the effects. CHARLES R. BROWN 23 W ,E F . ln? Q Faculty CHARLES ADDISON DAWSON, Ph.D. Professor of English AB., Ohio Wesleyaii University, 1899 1 Student, University of California, 1901- 1902, A.M., Ohio WCSlCy'3ll University 1902, Ph.D., Boston University, 1909. DEI.1XfIA RAE CARPENTER, A.M. Stoere Professor of Malhemaiirs and Ailronomy A.B., Roanoke College, 19083 A.lVI. Princeton University, 19092 Student University of Chicago, Summer Sessions 1909-10, 1912-14. GEORGE GOSE PERRY, A.M. Professor of Biology A.B., Roanoke College, 19053 A.M. 19075 Student, Johns Hopkins Univer s 5 3 1 sity, IQIO-12, Biological Laboratory, Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences Summer Session, 1914. 24 1 1 EEE ,ft - 7 IFE E.LQ.WWE'Nfi 1 E Faculty HARRY I. JOHNSON, A.M., Ph.D'. Profrssor of Chemislry AB., Roanoke College, 19125 A.M., I9l2j Ph.D., Johns Hopkins University, 1917. FRANK CARROLL LoNoAK12R A.M., D.D. L. A. Fox Professor' of Philosophy and Religion A.B., Muhlenburg, 18945 A.M., 18975 Student, Theological Seminary, Phila- delphia, 1894-955 Student, Hamma Di- vinity School, I8Q5-Q75 Graduate Stu- dent, University of Pittsburgh, 1912-135 Graduate Student, University of Penn- sylvania, Summer, 19235 D.D., Witteii- burg College, 1929. CHESTER SQUIRE P1-HNNEY, Ph.D. Professor of German and Frwzfh A.B., University of'Mai11e, 19115 Stu- dent, University of Berlin, IQI2-145 Harrison Fellow in Germanics, Univer- sity of Pennsylvania, 1916-185 A.M., University of Maine, 19175 Ph.D., Uni- versity of Pennsylvania, 19185 Student in Spain, Summer, 1920. an ti s all 'rg , 'luv -M 1-: 4 Ju ,iq in LQ ibiiaieli FZ, JI UQ 'jus Faculty CHARLES H. RAYNOR, M.S. Professor of Physics B.S., Hobart College, I92Oj IHS., Uni- versity of Michigaii, 19261 Graduate Student, University of Michigali, Sum- mer Session, 1926, and Academic Ses- sion, 1926-27. CLEMENT NIANLY WOOIJARD, A.M. Associate Professor of French and Sjmnislz AB., University of North Carolina, 1918, A.M., 1926, Graduate Student, 1926-27. WILLIAAI IRVLNG BARTLETT, M.S. Instructor in E11gli,h B.S., Roanoke College, 1925, NLS., University of Virginia, 1930. 3 E iliiii Qliiiwi 'EWG ri 1 Faculty DONALD SMITH GATES, M.B.A. flssocialc Profrssor of Buriness Xldminislralion A.B., Harvard College, 19175 M.B.A., Graduate School of Business Administra- tion, Harvard University, 19205 Gradu- ate Student, University of Chicago, 1924-27. W11.1xUR EARL NIANN, A.M. I7Z.S'f7'1lCf07' in llwincss 1qdIllilliJf7'llfi07l Busar A.B., Roanoke College, IQOQQ A.M., 19103 Certificate for Completion Course in Bookkeeping, Roanoke College Com- mercial Department, 1908. JULIUS F. PRUFER, A.M. flrrocialc Profesmr of Poliiical Scimrf A.B., Roanoke College, 19205 A.M., 19215 Student, University of Virginia, Summer Sessions, T922-23-245 Instruc- tor and Student, University of Chicago, 1924-25. 1+ E17 ,BJ 22 tw l 1 1 l ,'1 1, , 'iv' - l Faculty 1 if l 1 1 EVANS WILLSON LINDSEY, A.B. 'H H .4.v.vociale Professor of Grerk and French N A.B., Princeton University, 19045 Stu- 11 1 dent, Virginia Polytechnic Institute, 1 ' IQIQ-211 Student, University of North lil Carolina, Summer Sessions, 1928-29-30. 1 l 1' I 1 Fii 1 1 1 1 .1 1 1 lVIILES S. MASTERS, A.M. flssociatf Professor of Latin and Gracie I A.B., Denison University, 1924, A.lVI., 3 . 9 New York University, 19265 Graduate 1 1 Student, Ohio State University, 19261 1 1 Student, New York University, 1927-29. 1 ' 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 IN, Q1 G. A. A.B., 19093 19043 1913, 1 N, 1, , 28 L. KOLMER, A.M., LL.B., NLD. Instructor in Hygiene Roanoke College, I907Q A.M., LL.B., University of Marylaiid, NLD., Johns Hopkins University, Army Laboratory School, Yale University, 1918. - 'E QE E - Eff lf U1 2352151 l fl .., .4 .A', Faculty Howfmn E. STRUDWICK Busilzcss Manager DENNIS B. WELSH, A.M. T rm5ul'er A.B., Roanoke College, 19083 Alki., 19091 A.M., Princeton University, 1916. DEAL HLTRST ToMPK1Ns, B.S. BS., Roanoke College, 1929. Q 5 FEE l?AW fNiDIi,'li i Faculty GORDON CARROL W1-:ms Ilrad Coach, Direrlor JANET M. FERGUSON Librarian School, Emory University, 1931. SIDNEY DEAN PETERSEN Coach, Director i 30 i K -V , . i - 'I 'D 'ii SQ A.B., Library Science, Emory Lib1':u'y CLASSES f'a'X- ,- Y N. - .. ff-f: ,-NX..,' 1,1 ,,,JS-..,...-ij' ui? A Y ku! ffm if i -.. l-. H , -1 DR. LUTHER A. FOX ln every college Faculty there are men vvho have made life a thing more worth living and scholarship a Finer thing For the students in those colleges. These men, through the mediums ol their personalities, have in- culcated into their students aims, ideals, dreams, and the like that have made the students better men and Women than they vvould have been othervvise. Else vvhy the college? Roanoke has had and has men oi such quality. There are Five ol by-gone years who merit especial attention in any chronicle that pertains to the story that is Roanoke College. S. Carson Wells was a member of the First Faculty oi the College. A Roanoke man from the beginning, For he had attended the Virginia Collegiate lnstitute, Dr. Wells served as a member oi the Faculty For Forty-seven years-a service vvhich vvords cannot phrase adequately. William B. Vonce vvas a volunteer member of the faculty during the Civil War interlude. A versatile man, he met his classes and served as the Hquartermastern in the aiternoons, at times driving teams himself. Alter the vvar he continued to teach until his death in 1895. John G. Frey carried on in a like Fashion during the War and continued after the Southern gesture vvas Frustrated. l-le might be called the Umorale otiicern vvho continued and added to the Roanoke spirit. F. V. N. Painter came to the College alter the War. As a professor he vvas much, as a teacher he vvas more, and as a man he vvas greater than all of these. A man vvho had the gift oi making men. Perhaps the greatest Figure ol historical Roanoke is Luther A. Fox. This Tar l-leel ol North Carolina, suhn possessed a vibrant Flame ignited by the spark that another Prometheus might have given -the spark that makes a human being more god-like and a god-like being more human. These are the Five. It matters not that one taught Mathematics, that three taught Languages, or that the last chose the Field ol philosophy, the matter is that these men lived and taught at Roanoke and gave to Roanoke idealism and dreams. Qmtwb 'I' I Wi HIAWV Ei Fifi iff if Emi 1 Senior Class O. A. lSlzoUGu'1'oN . . ...... ...... I 'rvsidz-111 R. H. Souks . . . Vice-lvcxidmzt Junior Class M. VV. SMITH . . ...... PI'I'5idL'7ll H. D. RlliI.EY . . . ViC'f'Pl'f5iliElli 35 ' 'I Qi Q5 M Ii l'Ii1 iQ!,AVVilNL'1Q I 3 I I I II III I I ,I ,I QI I' Sophomore Class , I J. C. Cxuarzu .... ....,...... ....... P r rxvidvnt I W. T. com . . . . Viff-Pffjidflll ' Il I I I I I , I I 1 I - . I 'I I II Q I I , I I II II I Ff2SI'ImCI'l Class G, J. PORT . .,... ....,...... ....... 1 ' l'!'SidI'Ill C. E. MILE,-y JR, . , . . . Vice-I'rvsid1'nl 36 I 35 IW W, QU SENIORS gi In I-1 ,E+ A :5::NA,I?7, , I ' f? 'I ' 'F' ff ll! il J I gram: f 'lm WF '55 ' W . I , l , , wil: mol V, fini, 1-my Eiillw-Q, , . :sill V I l ,I :EI IIIIui,1, ' - ,H ll' QL II :I , l l l seize l Musee ll ll f ' H ,W I 'H'-IH .flli JW, 1: he 'I' ' f III EE l I II ,J IH uw ROBERT HERNDON ALLEN ROANOKE, VIRGINIA K A Appliztrzizt for B.S. Drfgrm' in B1l5'i71l'XX ffflminixtrafimz Monogram Club, I, 2, 3, Secretary-TI'easureI', .tg Freshman Football, IQ Freshman Basketball Varsity Football, 2, 3g Varsity Basketball, 2, 3, 45 Tennis, I, 2, ZQ Captain, 45 English Club 3 P Secretary-Treasurer, gg Mountain Empire Club, 3, 4, Brackety-Ack , 3g Classical Club, 3, Freshman Friendship Council, Ig Second Distinction, I, 2. HOWARD ALTIZER ROANGKE, VlRClNlA H K fl, Applimnt for 21.3. Degree Football, I, 2, 3, 4, Monogram Club, 4. 38 . ,, --1 - ,., I , ' ill ' ' - A A R ll ' .si ll in l will QT we ll ll l lm' L-,,, . fl num l , iv vw' mu is V OLIVER ALBERT BROUGHTON NORGE, VIRGINIA E1 0 X fljljwliclflzt for 14.3. Degrfc Blue Key, 3, 4g Secretary, 4, President of Class, 3, 4, Second Distinction, 1, 2, 3, 4g Ciceronian Literary Society, 3, 4, Glee Club, 2, SQ Orchestra, 35 Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, 1, 2, 3, 4.9 Manager Y. M. C. A. Handbook, 3g Manager Roanoke College Quarterly, 3. THEODORE WARD BRUEGEL PPIILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA fljbplicnnt for 14.3. Degree Classical Club, 4, Ciceronian Literary Society, 3, 4, Dramatic Club, 4. 39 J 'll Cl? . if A L7 in ,ft 'Pr ,A ffl' 2- 1 .F ls, . Q 'H 2 I -we .Tl ul, lil I 34 1' i, w I, H PHILIP CLORE, JR. noimoxrz, vrncmm K A Ajmpfiarnzzl for ILS. Dfgrzuv Publicity Director, 4, Br:1cety-Ack , 1, 2, 3, 4g Editor, .tg Rawenoch, rg English Club, 3, 4.5 President, 4.5 Biology Club, 3, ,pg Mountain Empire Club, 3, 4, ROBERT L. DUNCAN, JR. CHILHOWIIE, VIRGINIA Applicant for B.S. DFQFFL' in Business Hzlnzhzistralion Assistant Manager Varsity Football, 1, 2, Manager, 3, 4, Manager Freshman Basketball, rg Assistant Manager Varsity Basketball, 2, 35 Manager, 43 Secretary Freshman Council, 3, President, 4, Assistant Business Manager Rzlwenoch , 1, 2, Business Manager, 3, General Athletic Council, 2, 35 President, 45 Monogram Club, 3, 4. 4.0 f , if. Ei . ' 111 4,0 ,Hr L' l U- .Ja ,fs ,J J.: G if-. I' :sf IE 1-1 L. ,Q WE, L' -'N4 JAMES W. ELLIOTT WINFALL, VIRGINIA Apjnlimnt for AB. Degree RUSSELL B. FARLEY ROANOKE, VIRGINIA flpplicmzt for B.S. Degree Football, 1, 2, 3, 4. 4,1 Q IQ Q3 .L ' E. ,-Qi.'i?'ief iii- El CHARLES L. FELTY SALEM, VIRGINIA Ajnplicant for 14.8. Degree RICHMOND T. FROTHINGHAM HAMPTON, VIRGINXA 2 X Appliczznl for HB. Degree Glee Club, 2, 3, 4, Classical Club, 2, 3, 4, Dramatic Club, 3, 4g Secretary, 33 Harlequins, 4g German Club, 2, 3, 4.3 Second Distinction, 43 English Club, 3, 4, Biology Club, 35 Gold Fish Club, 3, 45 President, 43 Clericus, zg M. C. C'lub, 2, 3, 4.5 Secretary, 2, SQ President, 45 Brackety- Acku, 2, 3g Rawenoch, 3. 42 lzl K-' . J' Eau Q Ll - . 14 J 'A xl f'- V. G. GEARING ROANUKE, VIRGINIA dpjrlicfzlzt for B.S. Degree LETCHER K. HALL ROANOKE, VIRGINIA Afppliczznt for ALB. Degree 43 'Fm 'V v' 7 v a H N: - YL! Wx' ' l j M ,iff ir, i'EN L .,, ,a J ' U Ei LA la me .V '.'1f'v Ea J'- FW il al um fm I JULIAN ALTON HAMPTON SALI-IM, VIRGINIA K A, 5 e X Apjnlicant for All Degree Blue Key, 4, Director of Glec Club, 1, 2, 3, 43 Band, 3, Vice-President, gg English Club, 3, 4, German Club I 2 3, 45 Harlequins, 3, 4, Classical Club, 4, Mountain Empire Club, 3, 4, Brackety-Acli ,,1g' Biology Club, IQ Dramatic Club, 2, 3, 4, Delegate to National K A Convention, New Orleans, 4, President German Club, Second Semester, 4. JOHN L. I-IARNE, JR. ROANOKE, vnzomm II K 11, Alpjrlicmzt for 14.13. Degree Football, 1, 2, 35 Basketball, 1, 2, 33 Monogram Club. 44- 67 ' .- 4 ,. ' fu f Lu ' - 1' 1 A ' J 1 -4. . - 1 1 1 1 1 1 W, 11 11 11 11 1 11 1 111 112' 11 . 1 11 me r ,, TV- 111 Y 111 - 11 11. 1 ...H 111 .M 1 '1' 1 111 1 1 1 mf' W. 11 1 1 1 '11 1 11 M1 1, 1 ' '11 111 1 ,11 , ' I . rt., 4.1 U ,, . , A V , V DEI-IUNTER HARROLD BRISTOL, TENNESSEE 5 X, E o X Jjrplicant for Degree Blue Key, 4, Freshman Basketball, rg Basketball, 3, 4, Captain, .tg Secretary-Treasurer Senior Class, junior Scholarship Prize, Vice-President Student Body, 3, First Distinction, g, 3, 4. WILBUR HARRISON INSKIP STEPHENS CITY, VIRGINIA Ajnjmliannt for 11.13. Dcgrfe Second Distinction, 1, 3, 45 Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, 2, 3, .ig Treasurer, 3, Delegate to Southern Student Conference, 3, Ciceronian Literary Society, 2, 3, 4.5 President, gg Assistant Librarian, 2, 3, 4, Classical Club, 3, 4g Vice-Presitlent, 4g Blue Key, 4, Honour Council, 45 Chairman Credit Investigation Committee, 4.3 Brackety-Ack , 3, 4.5 Editor Y Handbook, 3g Secretary-Treasurer junior Class, Advisory Editor HY Handbook, 4, Director Blue Key Calendar, 4.3 History Honours, 4, Dormitory Council, 4. 45 , A LM i5!-r'-ig will El. RICHARD E. KIEENY MIDDLETOVVN, MARYLAND Ajnjwlizrmzt for AB. Degree English Club, 3g Debating Team, 3,.1.Q Harlequins, 3, 4, ERNEST B. KING BRISTOL, TENNESSEE Applicant for 11.3. Degree 46 , 4 ' .-, I ' all U , L' if ' il ll lil ' N V ul ll' Ely! va 11 ai 1 4 S.. in - w ll rf - 1 A A 1j,s,,N- Jol-IN HENRY LEE BLACKSBURC, VIRGINIA E X, E 9 X Ajrplimnt for AB. Dffgrve Blue Key, 4, Second Distinction, 2, 3, First Distinction, 4, English Club, 2, 3, 4, President, 3, Rawenoeh , 2, 4, Editor, 4, English Honours, 4, Drxnnatic Club, 3, Harlequins, 4, German Club, 2, 3, 4, Class Poet, 3, 4, General Athletic Association, 4, Classical Club, 3, English Assistant, 3, 4, Manager Boxing, 4. CAROL W. MARTIN Roixxoxs, vnzcmm K A Applicant for B.S. Degree Freshman Friendship Council, 1, Assistant Manager Freshman Football, 1, Manager, 21 Ger- man Club, 2, 3, 4, President, 4, Mountain Empire Club, 3, 4, President, 4, Biology Club, 1. 47 I , r 1 l 'V l Ur 5 .. rgv i.: ': -23 .- A , Lt E ii. nz: .Aft W4 it it 13 . l l l ll, 'u 1 lm- ,l . l ll ll ' .., .. r 'T ' w- ml ll f lf '- ll ,.- .t li ,2 lt' if ':' . .,' 'N ,ll Q ' l i l l l , l ll 'A l lu if ' ,wi 1 MARGARET GIBSON MAXWELL li 3 ROANOKE, VIRGINIA V fljwjrliczlnt for 14.13. Degree l Sphinx Club, 3, .tg President, .tg Biology Club, 3g Classical Club, 4.3 Class Prophet, 4.. t ll ,. T. CLOYD NEAS GREENEVILLE, TENNESSEE T K A fljzfrlirrant for 15113. Degree Freshman Friendship Council, IQ Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, I, 2, 3, .tg Y. M. C. A. President, 4, Glee Club, 2, 39 Dramatic Club, 3g Debating Team, 3, 43 Track, xg Demosthenean Literary Society, 3, 4, First President, 33 Biology Club, 23 Classical Club, 3g Clericus, 1, 2, 3, 4, State i , Student Council, 43 Brackety-Ack , 4. ,, tl 48 v '-Q 1 V . L' i. .AJ fl J .3 , ' ' l E ERNEST WALLACE NYLANDER RICHMOND, VIRGINIA EX fljfpliamzz' for f1.B. Dfgrrc ee Club, I, 2, 3, 4g President, .gg Brznckety-Ack , I, 23 Football, 1, 2, 31 'I'r:1ck, I CARL B. PATTESON INDEPENDENCE, VIRGINIA Appliczzvzt for 15.8. Degree 49 -A 5 +P .5 .M '- 3' li I Ii M5353-w?'.! fII5593331 ugg I- I ,-. , U- fx. , , M, I .I .A WILLIAM S. PLYMALE, JR. ROANOKE, VIRGINIA E X Hjmjrlicmzt for B.S. IJl'gl'I'0 Physics Assistant, 3, 4. NORMAN LOREN PoTTs COLORADO SPRINGS, COLORADO H If 11' Apfrlizrrlnt for B.S. Degree in Busivzzfss Hflrnhzisirrztion go --.- HE ii I ii wi ,ii wi 4 ii wi ,, , u ii, 1: ii H i 1 i i H' , ii H lu my ,, ,, , w iw ' w w ns! :si iw iw u w ' ,, , i H w PLEAS RAMSEY SALEM, VIRGINIA H K 11, f1f7PHlTIllll for B.S. Degree' Football, 1, 2, 3, 4g Captain, 4, All-State Team, 4, Basketball, zg Track, xg Baseball, IQ Monogram Club, I, 2, 3, 4.3 Ciceronian Literary Society, I. DANIEL WENTWORTH RICHARDS CLENVAR, VIRGINIA Aljzjnlinavzt for B.S. Degree Brackety-Ask , 2, 3, 45 Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, 3, 43 Rawenocl1 , 3, Demostheneun Literary Society, 3, 45 President, 45 Harlequins, 3, 4, Property Manager, 3, Business Manager, rpg Niountzxin Empire Club, 3, 43 Secretary-Trexmsurer, 3, English Club, 3, 4. SI 1 -f, Y li i ll , - 1 1 1 li t l 1 1 W 11 1 1 1 MILLER RITCI-HE CHURCHVILLE, VIRGINIA I EoX,rKA ffjvfnlirrant for AB. Dr'grf'rr I-Ionour Council, I, 2, 3, 4, Credit Investigation Committee, 3, Rawenoch, I, 2, Track, IQ Ciceronian Literary Society, 1, 2, 3, 4, President, 3, Improvement Medal, 1 , Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, 3, 4, President, 3, Delegate Southern Student Conference, 3, State Student Council, 3, 4, Debating Team, 2, 3, 4, Debate Manager, 3, Debate Council, 3, Secretary, 3, Delegate State T K A Convention, 3, 4, President State Chapter, 4, Blue Key, 2, 3, 4, Vice-President, 4, Most Popu'ar Student, 3, I. E. Bushnell Prize, 3, English Club, 3, 4, State Oratorical Association, .q., Vice- President, 4., Publication Staff Appointment Committee, 4, General Athletic Association, 4, First Distinction, 3, 4, English Honours, 4, History Honours, 4, Harlequins, 3, 4, Executive Council, 4, Chairman, 4, President Student Body, 4. FELIX A. RODRIGUEZ LAKES, PORTO RICO dpjzlicarzl for 14.3. Degree Second Distinction, r, 2, 3, 4, Ciceronian Literary Society, 1, Demosthenean Literary Society, 3, 4, Biology Club, 1, 3, Chemical Society, 2, 3, Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, 1, 2, 3, ,- 52 :tt 1 , H TT' all V Nfl E - '- -- 1 - 4- , II If 5 II MARTIN LUTHER SI-IANER STAUNTON, VIRGINIA A'l2jJli1'a1zt for f1.B. DI'-Ul'f'lJ Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, x, 2, 3, 4, Y. M. C. A, Handbook, 2, 3, 41 Manager, 2, Editor, .Ig Clericus 1, 2, 3, 4g President Stale Clericus, .Ig Ciceronian Literary Society, 1, 2, 3, 4, TI'easIIrer, 2 President, 4g Brad-cety-Ack , xg Freshman Council, 2, Track, Ig Freshman Basketball, 2. ROBERT I-IEBER SOURS ROANOKE, VIRGINIA Apjvlizrrznf for l1'.S. Dfyrzfc' Football, rg Track, 1, Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, 3, 4, Dramatic ClIIb, 35 Biology Assistant, 3, 4. 53 E1 5' F? . E . .IQ g- II ' Tl ll 'Qf 'll I! ll fl, mm, I ,lu f NJA., will . II. W,-It M -,ws I- V , was 5, 1 ,ll .Q W .- H, ,Z UE: M, I ew H . 4 , H, ,pa .l 2 . ,S I- , Hg. . We . ,gg ug, Y . ., ,, . ul.. 1 is I I me ' EFX FRANCIS WILSON TRIMMER ROANOKE, VIRGINIA II K fb, 5 o X Apjvlizvuzt for fl.B. Degree Blue Key, 4, Monogram Club, 2, 3, 45 President, 4, English Club, 3, 4, Secretary, 43 Football, 1, 2g Basketball, 1, 2, 3, President Freshman Friendship Councilg Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, 23 Biology Club, 2, President Pan-Hellenic Council, 43 Class Historian, 4, General Athletic Association, 4. CHARLES GILBERT TUSING NEW MARKET, VIRGINIA E1 9 X Afnjrlirazzt for f1.B. Degree Freshman Friendship Council, Assistant Manager Track, 2, Y. M. C. A. -Cabinet, 2, 3, 45 Secretary Y. M. C. A., 3, 4, Glee Club, 2, 3, 4, Classical Club, 3, 4, Ciceronian Isiterary Society, 43 Dramatic Club, 3, 43 Treasurer, ,Ig Harlequins, 4, Dormitory Committee, 4. 5-1- ,.i , -,I I - .lg L F V W' Lx' . fl ll 'lf ll fl ll ,, w , , 'H is, r W rl W, , , av tsl l , H ,, l r, H it 1, l l l J l ' 1 ,, ' ' ' ' 1, ,, ,, , , 1 , ' rr 1 , H ll H ml ri tv 224 ir ru KENNETH YONCE UMBERGER BLOUNTVILLE, TENNIESSEE rzx, sox, TKAA A flpplit-fm: for 11.3. Dvgrrc Secretary Class, Ig Vice-President Class, 25 Harlequins, I, 3, 45 Vice-President, 45 '4Brackety-Ack , 1, 2, 35 Business Manager, 25 Track, IQ Assistant Manager, 2, 35 Varsity Manager, 45 Baseball, IQ Honour Council, 3, 45 Secretary, 35 President, 45 English Club, 3, 4.5 Vice-President, 45 Debating Team, 45 Blue Key, z, 3, 45 President, 4.5 Director of Calendar, 35 Managing Editor Quarterly , 3, 4.5 Student Publication Staff Appointment Committee, 25 German Cfub, 45 English Honours, 45 History Honours, 45 Distinction, 4.. A WILLIAM A. YOUNG ROANOKE, VIRGINIA If A Applicant for B.S. Degree 55 A Fl ll .f'? J II f-I 1I Senior Class ROBERT LTISRNDON ALLEN . HOYV.fXRD ALTIZER . . . . . OLIVER ALBERT BROUGHTON . . TPIEOIDORIE AVVARD BRUIEGEI, . PHILIP CLORE, QIR. . . . . ROBERT L. TDUNCAN . . . JAMES NVILLIAAI ELLIOTT . RUSSELL B. FARLEY . . CHARLES L. FELTY ...... RICHMOND T. FROTHINGHABI . V. G. GE.fXRING . . . . . . LETCHER K. HALL . KI. AI.TON l'lAMl'TON . .IOHN L. I-IARNE . . . DEHUNTER HARROI,l3. . . WILBUR .HARRISON INSKIII . RICHARD E. TQIEENY . . . ERNEST B. IQING . . JOHN HENRX' LEE . CAROL VV. MARTIN ..... TVIARGARET GIIESON iX'TAXW'ELL . T. CLOYD NEAS . .... . ERNEST XVALLACE NiYLANDIiR . . CAIKL B. PATTESON ..... NVILLIAAI S. PIYIxIAI.E, JR. . NORMAN LOREN POTTS . PLEAS RABISEY ...... . . DANIEL VVENTXVORTH RICI-IARDS TVIILLER RITCHIE ....... FELIX A. RODRIGUEZ . . . MARTIN LUTHER SHANER . ROBERT H. SOURS . . . . . FRANCIS VVILSON TRIBIBIER . . CHARLES GILBERT TLTSING . . . TSZENNETH YONCE UAIBERGER, JR VVILLIARI A. YOUNG .... - . ' ' 1 . Roanoke, Virginia . Roanoke, Virginia . . . . . Norge, Virginia . Philadelphia, Pennsylvania . . . . Roanoke, Virginia . Chilhowie, Virginia . . VVinfall, Virginia . Roanoke, Virginia . . Salem, Virginia . . Hampton, Virginia . Roanoke, Virginia . Roanoke, Virginia , . Salem, Virginia . Roanoke, Virginia . . .BristOl, Tennessee . . Stephens City, Virginia . lfliddletown, Tklarylaiid . . .BI'iStOl, Tennessee . Blacksburg, Virginia . Roanoke, Virginia . . Roanoke, Virginia . Greeneville, Tennessee . . .Riel1Inond, Virginia . . Independence, Virginia . . . . Roanoke, Virginia Colorado Springs, Colorado . . . . . Salem, Virginia . . Glenvar, Virginia . Cliurelwille, Virginia . . Lares, Porto Rico . Staunton, Virginia . Roanoke, Virginia . . .Roanoke, Virginia . New Nlarket, Virginia . Blountville, Tennessee . . .Roanoke, Virginia s .37 JUNIORS iifiii 'QAwfIENc31Ql I I , Juniors MILLARD K. Bus:-IONG CHARLES TOWN, WEST VIRGINIA 1 E. N. CAMDEN ROANOKE, VIRGINIA WESLEY M. CHAPMAN SALEM, VIRGINIA 58 , . 1 I-A' Ri QD 3 li 'Emil' E l3A'W'lfM 6 ,.. W' 'E Juniors AI. HOLBROOK COLE BLUEFIELD, WEST VIRGINIA GEORGE I-I. DIXON ROANOKE, VIRGINIA - RAYMOND A. DILLON ROANOKE, VIRGINIA 59 -I In 2 .fa -O v., ,-. iff If lf! A IW E1 N 01 I f , Juniors DOUGLAS F. Downy ROANOKE, VIRGINIA JOHN I-I. FISHER WINCHESTER, VIRGINIA I ROANOKE, VIRGINIA 6o I 61932- WILLMM O. GILES, -In I 5 :ET Juniors PHILIP R. GROVE IVIARTINSBURG, VVEST VIRGINIA LOUISE I-IANSBROUGI-1 SALEM, VIRGINIA WILLIAM L. SNYDER BROOKLYN, NEVV YORK E,4fie..I2v4e II'F'1wI 'iii 6I E , -ia 2245 ,J -F I I1 E lL,FAWfliN Ulf! H Juniors CLARENCE G. HAUPT ROANOKE, VIRGINIA HUNTER I-I. HENDERSON SALEM, VIRGINIA JAMES G. I-IILLOCK QUINCY, MASSACHUSETTS 62 -II9.1LZ- 'I' F F M W Nfl, ll Juniors , ALICE I-IARDCASTLE SUTHERLIN, VIRGINIA O. L. I-IUFFMAN, JR. ROANOKE, VIRGINIA M. L. KEFAUVER ROANOKE, VIRGINIA 63 .1 .-- , , I li I-E ,E A? I Fi-1 il l13 Ah'W Ighiw fl ' li , Juniors VIRGINIA Koowrz SALEM, VIRGINIA SIEBERT W. LAVINDER SALEM, VXRGINIA LUKE L. LINEBARGER CREENEVILLE, TENNESSEE IM Juniors KYLE T. LEE, JR. ROANOKE, VIRGINIA MARY MCDANALD RUA NOKE, VIRGINIA FOREST L. MCNEER ROANOKE, VIRGINIA ff E E' .-A 'W' if PE if ll EF I l 65 ff? Q? - II E1 li EQQAWQF N 41564-E f I , Juniors G. M. MAXWELL, JR. ROANOKE, VIRGINIA RICHARD H. MOORMAN ROANOKE, VIRGINIA W. Louis NOFTSINGER ROANOKE, VIRGINIA 66 Q' E QD -,R ' Mlm IAS ll. IQAWN' if N if! QT I' Juniors ,, E. CLAUDE PACE, JR. ROANOKE, VIRGINIA CARLOS PARALITIC1 LARES, PUERTO RICO JAMES C. PARRISH ROANOKE, VIRGINIA 67 f . -HQ! M !!'I Ei HQ?AVS 'EfFw1,MQ A' A 1 Juniors R. N. PERRY BURKES GARDEN, VIRGINIA OLGA PETTERSON ROANOKE, VIRGINIA JACK PETTYJ OHN ROA NOKE, VIRGINIA 68 H E QE QE gi ' I I if QAM! ENQQQDQIQEE'-1 Juniors , jol-IN H. PULLIAM RICHMOND, VIRGINIA CHARLES I-I. PURVINE, JR. BRISTOL, TIZNNIXSSHE I-IARLAN D. RIELEY TROUTVII.I.I?, VIRGINIA 69 f- I CP 3 2, - HW HR f El AWN' I ff7'Clf1E'f , Juniors GEORGE W. RITTER BLUEFIELD, VIRGINIA HAROLD H. Ross ROANOKE, VIRGINIA W. ARTHUR ROBERTSON SALEM, VIRGINIA 1 K x E I-Q 9 ' 'II ' I I7 L'A'M' E N 013 I Juniors , I-IARRY K. RUSSELL FLOYD, VIRGINIA R ALBERT G. SCHNURMAN ROANOKE, VIRGINIA JULIUS M. S1-1AP1Ro ROANOKE, VIRGINIA 71 -I Ll 3 2 - -. x . T l'I ff lIQ3'AW'If N 0 C H I Juniors W. ELMER SHEALY PROSPERITY, SOUTH CAROLINA MATTIE LOU SMITH ROANOKE, VIRGINIA MOYER W. SMITH FLOYD, VIRGINIA -I 9 3 2- xk x 'it E ii E21QgwfaWi Qf1Pw1 QIQHZI I Juniors MARSHALL W. SPOTTS CARLISLE, PENNSYLVANIA i ANNIE SPIGGLE ROANOKE, VIRGINIA Louis C. STEPHENS VVOODSTOCK, VIRGINIA 73 f N f-HNPEMH if id il. iifiiif EN GQ- 4, i fl , Juniors IRIS THIERRY ROA NOKE, VIRGINIA STUART W. THOMAS BEDFORD, VIRGINIA MARY WILLIS SALEM, VIRGINIA . 74 I ' G H LE 32 - M. K. BUSIIONO E. N. CAMDEN W. M. CHAPRIAN J. H. COLE G. H. DIXON R. A. DILLON D. F. DOWDY J. H. FISHER Junior Class Roll W. O. GILES, JR. P. R. GROVE LOUISE HANSBROUGH ALICE HARDCASTLE C. G. HAUPT H. H. HENDERSON J. G. HILLOCK O. L. HUEEMAN, JR. M. L. IQEFAUVER VIRGINIA KOONTZ S. VV. LAVINDER K. T. LEE, JR. L. L. LINERARGER F. L. 1XfICNEER MARY MCDANALD G. M. IXCIAXXVELI., JR R. H. MOORMAN NV. L. NOFTSINGER, JR. E. C. PACE, JR. C. PARALITICI J. C. PARRISH R. N. PERRY A. E. POWELL J. H. PULLIAM H. C. PURVINE, JR. I-l. D. RIELEY G. VV. RITTER H. H. Ross W. A. ROBERTSON H. K. RUSSELL A. G. SCHNURMAN J. M. SHAPIRO VV. E. SHEALY IVIATTIE LOU SMITH M. W. SWIITH VV. L. SNYDER ANNIE SIIIGGLE NI. VV. SPOTTS L. C. STEPHENS IRIS 'TI-IIERRY S. W. THOMAS MARY VVILLIS 75 1' To '33 A toast to the class of '33, To the days that are past and goneg A toast to you and a toast to me, A toast to the days that are to he. Together We,ll travel on! Together We've passed the halfway mark Look forward-lag not behind. The sought for goal is now in sight, The lamp of truth sheds forth its light, The prize we sought to find. The ties Weave formed will always hold, Link arms-together we stand. We'll face the future with inner trust, We'll lift our comrades from the dust And grasp them hy the hand. A toast to the class of ,33, To the days that are past and goneg A toast to you and a toast to me, A toast to the days that are to he. Together we'll travel on! J. G. HILLOCK 76 I SOPHOMORES U IH E !4?b.,'9f'4S I N iii' IH sophomores LLOYD D. AKERS ROANOKE, VIRGINIA BENJAMIN W. ANGLE ROCKY MOUNT, VIRGINIA THOMAS A. BARNARD SALEM, VIRGINIA DAVID P. BARNETT ' ROANOKE, VIRGINIA 78 ' E :QP -I EW sophomores EUGENE R. BARNETT ROANOKE, VIRGINIA LINWOOD BLANKENSI-up ROA NOKE, VIRGIN IA ERNEST B. BOLICK BLOWING ROCK, NORTH CAROLINA DAVIS T. BARLOW HOLLINS, VIRGINIA E' ALAN E N W II' 79 - 'H .39 Iii H 141 ES! Wi! E1 11 '1 1 4 'H 11 '1 '1 . l 1 F 1 F 1 F IF: Y 'U 1 l N I 11 Ai If JI1 W V4 11 1 131 11 112 11, IR' 1 1 11 11 H 111, 11 111 11 H X, .1 I 1 111 1 1 JL TH E IQAYVENUCH W sophomores W. ERVIN BOONE BASSETT, VIRGINIA CHARLES T. BOYD CALLAWAY, VIRGINIA LELAND W. CALVIN BROOKLYN, NEW YORK WILLIAM M. CARR DEDHAM, NEW YORK 80 ' I YJ ' TH E sophomores WILLIAM C. CoNNoR COPPER HILL, VIRGINIA WILLIAM T. COFER ROANOKE, VIRGINIA E. ELLYSON COLEMAN ROA NOKE, VIRGINIA R. PATRICK COLEMAN ROANOKE, VIRGINIA IEIIAWW' E N C fi H 81 -1932- Il' ER 9 Hi EQAAWVEI? N Ulf E1 Soplwomores HERBERT COPENHAVER ROANOKE, VIRGINIA J. CooN CREED MOUNT AIRY, NORTH CAROLINA T. Goocl-I CROSBY ROANOKE, VIRGINIA JULIUS DARDEN SALEM, VIRGINIA 82 - E QP 5 Iii - I WF SOPIWOITIOTCS DEXTER I-I. DAVIS SALEM, VIRGINIA MARGUERITE DOUGHMAN SALEM, VIRGINIA SARAH A. DUTROW ROANOKE, VIRGINIA CHARLES L. ENGERS CI'IA'I I'ANOOGA, TENNESSEE 8 EQJQA. 'W' E? FRA E 'F E' B 8 3 A n lf R'RR H22 I N. I . I I .f -. '- M 34 F, E I Sophomores GARALDINE FARRAR LITTLETOVVN, PENNSYLVANIA FRANK F. FARRIER, JR. SALEM, VIRGINIA JAMES A. FECHEIMER SOUTH NORWALK, CONNECTICUT WILLIAM E. PINK ROANOKE, VIRGINIA - J 'P '55 29 ,N V 1 -.M .1 all 4 no I yoxwfw sm I sophomores HAROLD C. GIVENS WISE, VIRGINIA ALTON L. GOOD BRISTOL, VIRGINIA WILLIAM O. GOODWIN SALEM, VIRGINIA MARVIN G. GRAHIAM ELLISTON, VIRGINIA Ss WI 'D 121 86 , 5, EKJ fd :fx IIE 'I I' I Sophomores FRANCES HAMPTON SALEM, VIRGINIA ROBERT HARVEYCUTTER SALEM, VIRGINIA EDWIN V. I-IAYDEN SALEM, VIRGINIA JAMES L. I-IINSHAW VVIRTZ, VIRGINIA 1 F 1 .E if ' sophomores CHARLES I-I. HUBER, J GETTYSBU RG, PENNSYLVA NIA THOMAS J. HUGHES, J ROANOKE, VIRGINIA ALBERT E. JAMES STAMITORD, CONNECTICUT J. FOREST JAMISON ROANOKE, VIRGINIA W 'E R. R. AWQP' I N 'fN!f' B Ei 87 ITB ., E Q -f EE? 'lm E4 if L ,19a.'Nf If N 0 df Boi sophomores RICHARD W. JONES NEW CAS'l'I.I-I, VIRGINIA EDMUND W. JONES EAST RADFORD' VIRGINIA ROBERT E. KERLIN VVINCHIISTIZR, VIRGINIA HOWARD E. KERR ROANOKE, VIRGINIA 88 'E 2, ' 'IH IH Wg Ewkviff' sophomores HOWARD F. KESLER I ROANOKE VIRGINIA WALTER A. KNOBELOCI-1 CHARLESTON, SOUTH CAROLINA MARGARET LAYMAN DALIEVILLE, VIRGINIA MARLYN E. LUGAR CHARLES TOWN, WEST VIRGINIA 89 I -lfwofsim . I II' H If IQAWVEN DC low sophomores W. ALLEN MARKHAM ROANOKE, VIRGINIA S. E. MARTIN SALEM, VIRGINIA CLAUDE G. MATTHEWS GALAX, VIRGINIA JOSEPHINE MAXWELL ROANOKE, VIRGINIA f'l932- 'EEE I if, sophomores A. T. MAZAK PRINCE GEORGE, VIRGINIA FRANCES MEADOR ROANOKE, VIRGINIA SAMUEL P. MILLER, SURCOINSVILLE, 'TENNESSEE Lols OVERSTREET VINTON, VIRGINIA 91 - B IB Q2 in. ,H ,ill E . - ... Ii' E-4 li il3AW i'1 N Cl. I SOPIIOITIOFCS NEIL G. PAYNE ROANOKE, VIRGINIA JAY P. PENCE WOODSTOCK, VIRGINIA RICHARD B. PERSINGER SALEM, VIRGINIA JANE PHENIX ROANOKE, VIRGINIA 92 I interim HH E sophomores JESSE T. PRICE ROANOKE, VIRGINIA HAZEL RICHARDSON SALEM, VIRGINIA R. L. RINGSTAEF RICIILANDS, VIRGINIA JAMES M. ROSENHEIM ROANOKE, VIRGINIA r G 'K+ L1 If E-H1 of Q 1,4 93 '! ' LJ ,Q I ,af Ili ni umwb-Iomilooa sophomores jol-IN W. SABBAG1-1 MILFORD, PENNSYLVANIA THOMAS D. SAUNDERS ROANOKE, VIRGINIA I-I. C. SHOCKEY, JR. ROANOKE, VIRGINIA CLAUDINE SINK ROANOKE, VIRGINIA 94- - 'U 2? QE 2 - T H li Soplmomores ARTHUR E. SMITH ROANOKE, VIRGINIA CARL V. SMITH ROANOKE, VIRGINIA FRED H. SMITH BRISTOL, TENNESSEE M. VVILLIAM SMITH SUFFERN, NEW YORK -lD3l U ii lilgfdkwf' E N IJIL ITE SOPIIOITIOTZS RALPH C. SNAPP RURAL RETREAT, VIRGINIA KITTY SYDENSTRICKER ROANOKE, VIRGINIA C. B. THORNTON, JR. ROANOKE, VIRGINIA ANTHONY M. TROIANO NEW YORK CITY 96 - I :E .6 Q 1- J 'IH l'1 E SOpI'l0mOl'CS CHARLIE F. TURNER ROANOKE, VIRGINIA RAWLEY F. TURNER ROANOKE, VIRGINIA AMES I-I. WATERHOUSE ROANOKE, VIRGINIA HARRISON S. WEEKS CIliI'I'IANO0GA, 'I ICNNIISSFE MA W' E N if H 97 2192?- XQ . III l'i If If-?A'N E N 0 fl H K SOpI'l0l'll0l'6S LEWIS B. WERTZ ROANOKE, VIRGINIA THOMAS F. WEST, AIR. SALEM, VIRGINIA MARY VIRGINIA WHITE SALEM, VIRGINIA J. L. WRIGHT, JR. ROANOKE, VIRGINIA 98 -1193 L. D. ARERS B. VV. ANGLE T. A. BARNARIJ D. P. BARNI:'I'I' E. R. BARNIVIII' L. BIANRIINSIAIIP E. B. BoI.IcR D. T. BARI.oW W. E. BOONE C. T. BOYD L. VV. CALVIN' VV. M. CARR VV. C. CIINNOR VV. T. COEER SOPIWOITIOTC Class R. E. lxIaRI.IN II. Ii. IQERR H. F. KESLER XV. A. KNOEELO MA RGARIET LAI-'MA M. Ii. LUGAR VV. A. M.-XRKIIIXM S. E. MA RTIN C. G. M.-x'I I'IIEwS JUSEPIIINE MAxwIaI.I. A. T. MAZAR FRANCES MEADOR C S. P. MII.I.ER, JR LUIS OVliRS'l'RlilE'I' Roll E. COLEMAN H. C. CIIVENS R. P. COLEMAN A. L. Goon H. COPENI-IAVER VV. O. GooImwIN J. C. CREEII M. G. GRJXIIIXM T. G. CROSRI' FRANCES HAMPTON J. DARIIEN R. HARVHRCU'l'I'ER D. H. DAVIS V. I'IAYDliN MARI:uERI'I'E DOUGIIMAN J. L. HINSHAVX' SARAI-I DU'I'Row C. H. I-IUIIER, JR. C. L. ENGERS T. J. LIUGI-IES, JR. GERIXLIJIXE FARRAR A. E. JAMES F. F. FARRIER, JR. J. F'. JAMISON J. A. FECIIEIMIER R. XV. JONES VV. Ii. FINK E. VV. JONES N. G. PAYNIE J. P. PENCE R. B. PERSINGER CII JANE PIIENIX J. T. PRICE I'IAZHI, RICIIARIISON R. L. RlNGS'l'Alfl' J. M. ROSIZNIIEIM J. VV. SAIIIIAGII T. D. SAUNIIERS H. C. SIIOCREY, JR. I..-XUIJINFI SINIQ . IE. SMI'I'II . V. SMI'I'II A C F. H. SMITII M. VV. SMITII R. C. SN.-XPP KI'I I'Y SYI'mENs'I'RIcRER . B. TI-IoRN'I'0N C A. M. VIROIANO C. F. TURNER R. F. TURNEIK J. H. VVATERIIOUSE H. S. XVEEKS L. B. VVIIRT2 T. F. XVIZST, JR. MARY V. VVIIITE J. L. WVRIGIIT, JR. 99 Ozymandias I met a traveler from an antique land Wluo said: Two vast and trunkless legs of stone Stand in tlve desert. Near tlvem on the sand, Half sunk, s15atter'd visage lies, whose frown And wrinkled lip and sneer of cold command Tell tlvat its sculptor well tlnose passions read Wlviclv yet survive, stamp,d on tlvese lifeless tlvings Tlve band that mocked tlvem and tlte lveart tlvat fed, And on the pedestal tlaese words appear: My name is Ozymandias, king of kings, Look on my works, ye Miglvty, and despairlv Nothing beside remains. Round tlve decay Of that colossal wreck, boundless and bare, The lone and level sands stretclv far away. FRESHMEN -.. -. I 1, 'U' . in L ' C' 1'S 'i31' Wwe. .gi IE. ..L.'6. ,EI mn . ,Q I,. . .I .I G. C. ASIII.Ei' FRANCES BAILEY E. P. BARNETT W2 C. BECKERMAN G. G. BENT, JR. MARY BowERs H. I. BREITIYIAUPT, J FLORENCE BREWER H. D. BROWN MADELINE BURKS VV. VV. BURTLIESS Lois CARSON TIIEOCLA CI-IAEEIN KATIIRYN COFFMAN O. C. C01-IRON C. VV. COLE L. VV. COOPER, JR. R. P. CGPENIIAVER L. W. DARST R. D. DAVIS Fl'2SI'Im6l'l Class VVILMA DENI1' MINNIE DENNIS B. DIAMOND VIRGINIA DICKENS HELEN DILLON R. F. DQYLE H. A. DUDLEY, JR. M. L. DUDLEY, JR. L. D. F151-IER, JR. ICATHRYN FLORA J. R. FRANCIS R. F. FREIS MARIQN GARDEN G. S. GARDNER W. R. GARLAND VV. VV. GARST MARY GII.MORE R. VV. GLENDINNING M. F. HAIAIN J. VV. HANRLA IO2 're-. 4, 3' 'I J. Y fp 14' - U .,,. ...fi ' L. C. fIANSBROUGH G. F. HARRIS I-I. R. I-IARTLEY R. I. HOYT LOUISE PIUDGINS ALENE HUFF G. J. HUFFMIXN K. K. HUNT VV. O. HUNT, IR. MARY SUE HUl1'F A. P. HUSE R. M. KATZ S. C. KULICK I. I. LASKER R. S. MCCLUER D. A. MCKIRREN B. VV. MCNEER M. MARKS N. G. MARSHALL HARRIETT MARTIN -1- F . 1, vw A5214 .-A .f --I Q E Liz. YW Lu. W EI, J. E. MARTIN O. M. MARTIN, JR. J. M. MASON R. E. MEAnoRs J. C. MERREI. C. E. MILEY, IR. H. E. MILLER J. M. MILLER R. B. MILLER J. W. MORGAN C. W. MYERS F. D. MYERS J. B. ODGEN R. L. PAINE I. E. PALMER H. S. PEARMAN JEAN PEAREON I. PECKIZRMAN R. N. PIZERY Freshman Class Roll E. E. PETERSEN' J. G. PIZTRENCS P. C. PEYTON F. PINKERT G. J. PORT L. C. QUIsI'I'0 M. S. RAIRES KERSEX' RAY BEATRICE REES CHARLOTTE REYNOLDS VIRGINIA RHODES R. R. RICE T. C. ROBERTSON R. ROCKIIILI. . S. RUSENRERGER J. R. Rowrdwn L. VV. SIIROPSI-IIRE M. A. SMVTIIE, JR. J. R 103 -Y . I E am L R. L. SPENCER W. L. SPENCER W. A. S'l'ATON N. SUSSMAN H. H. SUTTNER C. A. FFAUGHINBAUCII E. H. ffl-'ANK LUCILLE TIIORPE J. B. 'TILLOTSON J. C. Tonms J. D. VIA EMERY VVADE R. VV. VVALDROND SARA VVIELLS L. VV. Wlzssox J. O. VVILKERSQN L. B, VVILKERSON S. VV. VVINN M. S. Woon Thirty- five Dawn-and this the year Of our beginnings. We brought to college without fear The total of our winnings. But they were naught. The new Had won far more. And all we did was see a 'view Through an open door. To us-the view, in part, belongs. We have stepped inside. And now we dare to raise our songs Across the vista--Wide. GILBERT C. ASHLEY 10.1, ATHLETICS ,A ff 4 f, A X, V ffl '. . gl AT-V7,-S - 4 k ' x --?-ef N.,-W -1 , i 'k 'L WHIP, Ns - iw ,ii h. l l ,g.:gc,,,-M 4 3 ,. ' X DR. JOHN A. MOREHEAD When Dr. Dreher resigned as President in 1903, he vvas followed by another son of Roanoke-Dr. John A. Morehead. A graduate of the class of 1889, he came to Roanoke as a builder. Those vvho had gone before had founded vvell, and Dr. Morehead built tangibly upon those foundations. Before his term of office the Academic or Administration Building housed the academic and administrative factors that it does novv and, in addition, served as a dormitory as vvell., Alumni tell strange tales of nocturnal provvlings in the dormitory section of the present Administra- tion Building. Ghastly deeds vvere done Hmongst horrid shapes, and shriel4s, and sights unholy. Ghosts Walked, witch fires burned, and uncanny sounds made almost any night a sleepless one. Academic pranks were played which the faculty learned of the next day. And Halloween vvas Carnival night. If the College and Community had recovered from this night by Christmas l-lallovveen had been a failure. But the College continued in spite of cramped conditions. A stove vvas to be found in every room, the plumbing system consisted of basins-pitchers-and the Freshman Class, and most of the rooms were crovvded. The number of courses offered had been augmented in past years but there was considerable room for expansion. The teaching staff, as it had been from the beginning, was too small. Such vvas the status of things when Dr. Morehead came to continue the building. During his administration the main building vvas remodeled. -l-he living quarters vvere converted into class rooms and a third floor for laboratory purposes vvas added. The present dormitory building vvas erected. And vvith these structural changes came alarger curiculum and a more adequate teaching staff. The picture conceived in the soul of Dr. Bittle novv had a presentable frame, the picture itself is of the stuff that does not die. QMQNQ FOOTBALL W Wil I W,' fi-. M i1MQf59!,lE'i Coaches GORDON C. VVHITE . . . ...... ...... I lead Coach S. DEAN PETERSEN . . Assixlanl Coach ' Managers W. A. ROBERTSON . ...,.. ....... . Manager R. W. VVALROLD ................ ,flssixlanl Manager IIO ' GB Q5 -' . . ... . uf- 1 -. ' - f - Ellie TEL A Ll til Although the 1931 football schedule was one of the hardest attempted by a Roanoke team in a number of years, the Maroons brought it to a successful c'ose by winning five of their nine games and holding exceptionally strong teams to small scores in the other instances. The Roanokers started the season with a strong outfit and high hopes. The playing of the Maroons justified their hopes, but it was soon found that other schools also were boasting unusually strong teams, The result was a string of three conference defeats as against two victories. The VVhitemen dropped the first game to Virginia, 18-o. They then took toll of Elon, Guilford, and Transylvania Colleges in three night contests on consecutive week-ends in Salem. The Hampden-Sydney Tiger was subdued in Death Valley to yield the first conference victory. Rich- mond broke her string of ties with a 7-2 win, though, and the Maroon percentage fell. Disaster visited the Roanoke camp the following week, and Captain Ramsey was forced out of the game with an injured ankle. Not to be dismayed, however, the team went to XVilliamsburg and put up the best Fight of the year, to hold the Indians to Il I3-7 score. The Yellow Jackets of Randolph- Macon visited Salem the next week-end with a team which boasted an unusually impressive record. The Maroons fought them on even terms throughout the game, but the visitors eked out a I9-I8 victory to add to their collection. The Roanokers climaxed their season with a good win over Emory and Henry in Salem. The score was 7-6. Outstanding among the events of the season was the selection of Captain Pleas Ramsey to fill the fullback position on the mythical all-Virginia eleven. The team was chosen by the coaches of all but one of the members of the Virginia Conference and the Big Four. This marks the first time since 1923 that the Maroons have been represented on the all-state eleven. III ' ' . I tv , .gf ' B , .H L. 3 r li ,' Aw., 'jj I ........ THE GAMES The Cavaliers of the University of Virginia were met in Charlottesville, September 19. The Maroons put up a stiff battle and held them off for the first period, but the University men pushed over a touchdown in each of the remaining periods to emerge with an 18-o lead. Elon College, of North Carolina, journeyed to Salem for the Roanokers' first home game, a night contest. The visitors were outplayed throughout the game, but it was Ramsey's passing that rolled up the score. Ringstafii, Copenhaver, and Russell, each connected with a toss to carry the ball over for a touchdown. Matthews climaxed the evening with an eighty yard sprint off tackle for the final score. The brilliant work of Williams, Elon fullback, featured the contest. The Maroons registered their second victory of Transylvania College, 33-19. The game was played under the Hood lights of College Field. Here again the Maroons relied heavily on Ramsey's passing arm, and Ringstaft and Russell featured on the receiving end. The Pioneers took advantage of a fumble to take an early lead, but they were soon smothered in the barrage of Maroon passes. The Roanoke passing attack did not work so well against the Quakers of Guilford College. The Carolinians put up an exceptionally strong defense and it was not until Gene Barnett, husky Maroon tackle, blocked a Guilford punt that the locals got their chance to score. Ramsey carried the ball over. The final count was 6-o. Il2 air' .et ra of Wit iii Hutt es' Id .1-sul 'fu a It was another blocked punt which enabled the Roanokers to tame the Hampden-Sydney Tiger, 6-o. The VVhitemen carried the oval across the goal from the thirty yard marker in the second period, and showed an unusually strong defense to hold off the determined attacks of the Tigers. The game was one of the hardest fought of the season. Against the Spiders of Richmond University the Maroons found themselves outplayed to a 7-2 defeat. The game was played in Richmond. The Spiders carried the ball over the Roanoke goal in the second quarter after a sustained drive down the Held. The Maroon score came on a safety resulting from a had pass from the Richmond center in the second half. The game brought disaster to the Maroon squad in other ways also. Ramsey and Engers were both disabled and were unable to take part in the VVilliam and Mary contest. The Indians won from the scrapping Salem eleven, 7-2. The Maroons count it as one of the most successful games of the seafzon, however. Heavily outweighed, and playing without their captain and backfield ace, they held the Indians to two touchdowns during the first half, and then outplayed them throughout the remainder of the contest, to recover half the score. In this game Ed Petersen, 125 pound frosh who played the rest of the season at the quarterback position, made his entrance to varsity play. The Randolph-Macon game, played in Salem on homecoming day, was a heart-breaker. The Jackets won, I9-18. The MU1'00IIS opened with a powerful punch and scored in each of the two first periods before the visitors could get under way. The jackets scored on a fumble in the second period as Ramsey tried to punt from behind his goal. The visitors counted again in the II3 , t iii il,-1ii59lellfF'diri, Ei third and took the lead in the fourth, Bent on retaliation, the Maroons stormed to a third score, but failed to convert the point as Hess deflected Ramsey's pass by inches. It was the Jacket passing attack that spelled ruin for the locals, and it was a pass that brought the deciding point. Roanoke won the final contest from Emory and Henry, 7-6. The VVasps fumbled early in the first period, and the Maroons converted the advantage into a score. Gene Barnett dropped back from the line and toed a place kick up between the bars for the extra point. From then on the game was even. The visitors pushed over their score in the third period, but their pass for the extra point was knocked clown. THE PLAYERS Pleas Ramsey was conspicuous throughout the season for his excellent punting, passing, line plunging, and defensive play. He truly deserved the honor he received in his choice for all-state fullback. 114 E 'Sli - lei li' Eh?-..Nff lfF'fiJ! ll, .dad Ringstaff played a dependable game at safety and showed up exceptionally well in broken Field running. His tackling was deadly. Matthews' line plunging was especially spectacular, though he proved an able substitute in the punting and passing game late in the season. Petersen played only a part of the season, but made a name for himself by his expert field generalship and great defensive play. Russell and Miley proved to be able ball carriers, Russell's speed and pass-snagging ability standing him in good stead. The line was exceptionally strong and well balanced. Engers, Copenhaver, West and Port all served well in the flank positions. Barnett and Suttner played the entire season at the tackle positions and proved to he more than worthy of the place. Altizer earned his letter as subititute tackle. Smith, Boone, Purvine and Quisito alternated at the guard posts. All were strong players and good tacklers. Thomas started the season at center, and earned his monogram. Lavinder took over the pivote position for the latter games. Duncan and Robertson were awarded letters as managers. 115 fr I .i-D 45 A - i U1 .LQ V151 116 SQUAD THE BASKETBALL AND MINOR SPORTS lil Eli Basketball 1932 has been an important year in basketball at Roanoke College. The Work of the Marooim cagers this season has put Roanoke on the map in basketball, and it has put basketball on the map at Roanoke. Following the disastrous 1931 season, Coach Wliite started out this year with practically a new team and completed a reasonably successful schedule. The total number of games won and lost Was approximately equal, with the balance favoring the college tossers in conference contests. The press of Virginia began to take notice of Roanoke College early in the season after the Ma1'O0l1S had downed the Bridgewater and Lynchburg aggregations on suc- cessive nights, and Bill Garland, stellar forward for the Roanokers, had jumped into the leading position among the state's high scoring basket tossers. 1 118 1' Ti if is Q. ra. 1 -f A 5. Q. at-Ea, is - r . 1 Perhaps the most interesting game of the season developed when the Wasps of Emory and Henry journeyed to Salem in January. After an extremely close and spectacular battle in which first the lllaroon and then the visitors took a small lead, the score was tied at 33-33 at the close of the regular playing time. After another five minutes of desperate playing the Roanokers emerged in the lead 36-35. Roanoke supporters will not soon forget that the 1932 team trimmed the V. lW. I. in Lexington, 35-27. This alone would have marked the season as outstanding for most, had the rest of the season been less satisfactory. Bill Garland, a newcomer to the lVIaroon camp this year, easily took the scoring honours for the squad. His basket shooting and Hoor Work were conspicuous in every encounter. Purvine and Harrold, also playing the forward positions, showed strong and even brilliant performances. Suttner, playing at guard and later at center proved to be probably the strongest defensive player on the squad, while Engers and the Turner Twins, Charlie and Rawley, made themselves valuable in their scrappy Hoor work and accurate basket tossing. Ci if . ,Vf wx 'W 119 F' -.yah 1 3 In . .. '. L. . 1. . E 115 Pound 125 Pound 135 Pound 145 Pound 160 Pound 175 Pound Unlimited . Unlimited . Nlanager . Class Class Class Class Class Class Assistant lVIanagcr . Boxing I 0 E53 ggi? ,. . . A. L. Goon . M. W. SMITH . . C. V. SIX-'IITI-I F. W. TRIRIRIER T. F. WEST, JR. . . J. T. PRICE S. W. LAVINDER . . R. F. DOYLE . . . J. H. LEE . . I. J. LASKER SWEET? IW..'?2.5fVQf!?!'Ff34'fi fi 2 Swimming T. F. Wm, JR., Captain J. E. PALMER H. BREITHAUPT, JR LI. C. Tonms E. N. CAMDEN G. C. ASIILEY R. I. HOYT L. W. SHRo1'sH1RE J. L. HARNE, AIR. E. XV. NYLANDER J. M. ROSENHELM L. PIANSBROUGH N. G. PAYNE I-I. E. MILLER I I ! E lf? QE 3 E! IE? Q3!f3I'i 4 J I U -I 'S E m --' M P l Cheer L2adel'S I-I. D. RIELEX . . ......... ...... I Ihief VV. NI. CARR. . . .Assistant S. E. NIILLER . . . dxsistalzt 4 W I. M ' Y 122 G LJ ' , I la ill v L: ORGANIZATIONS . .':- W . 1 f 2' ,A 4441?-.,,,',.,7 A I ' x -1' 5-.... ,ix -,-W. ,Lv Q5 rw: , .N 'gg Tvagelflf- r, Agfa' gf , --if , N 1 wv ffl J xx. x '22 il.,---MN, f . .I J,- ,WMI 1 .1 J jffd J-X x if .. t. fffiisaii:-fl'-9 rife ,'x,Wig.f ' --,,- bear Y PROFESSOR WYTHE F. Mokiai-:EAD l.ast year we bade an academic farevvell to Professor Morehead, vvhen after forty-six years of service he became Professor Emeritus of English. l'le knevv Roanoke as fevv have. first as a student vvho lived in the Administration Building vvhen a part of that versatile building was used for living quarters, he learned and lived Roanoke. Then as a teacher he helped to build Roanoke -to make the matrix what it is. l-le savv Roanoke with little more than a small endovvment, a small faculty, and a tradition born of an impulse. l-le savv the College built during the azlministration of Dr. Dreher and he savv a continuation of that building under Dr. Morehead. During his forty-six years of teaching a young college became an old one, an impulse became a vvell-founded ideal, a dream became a fact- Roanoke College, a mould in which men are shaped. Professor Morehead savv the mould made and helped to make it. There vvere rough spots, unfinished sides at first, but Roanoke men have burnished the spots away and completed the work that vvas left unfinished by previous hands. Professor Morehead, as an embyro and as a finished product of Roanoke, savv and aided in all of this. Three changes of administrative heads vvithin the period that one man taught, building and rebuilding of material factors, but the original dream remained the same. -lime merely brought it to its present fruition. Professor Morehead left Roanoke in its present, the future vvill thank the gods that he vvas a part of the Roanoke that will then be past. lf . . . old experience do attain To something like prophetic strain, then vve may prophesy a greater Roanoke because of Roanoke men that have been and the greatest Roanoke because of its men vvho are to come, vvho shall carry the impulse, the dream, and the fact to its highest reality. The matrix will then be perfect. Qmgwb 'l'l ll'f lf21AYW'EN1lfQ'! li Student Body Cfficers MILLER RITCHIE . . . ...... ............. P resident H. K. RUSSELL . . .... . - Vice-President W. NI. CARR . . . Sfcretary-Treasurer 127 I I 9 5 LZ A I i 3 X. 'QS fr H xf if -V 1 . M M. ., 21' Ag. Executive Council MILLER Rrrclmz . . ..........., . . . Chairman . VV. M. CARR. . . . Secretary MEB'IBERS H. K. RUSSELL M. W. SMITH 0. A. BROUGHTON W. E. Boom G. J. Pom' 128 E7 1 E1 IJ , HC. f?Q.'V'WZW'fGufE W3 KT K. Y. UMBERGER . . K. Y. UMBERGER VV. H. INSKII' . . Honor Council S EN lolz R EPR IES ENTATIVES Mn.1.raR Rrrcmra j U NIUR REPR1zsEN'r.1vrlv ES C. C. MA1'rnEws H. D. RIELEY SOPHOMORE REPRESENTATIVE C. T. BOYD FRESHMAN RE1fREsENTAT1vE N. G. MARSHALL CREUIT INVESTIGATION COEX-IMITTEE ASSCJCIATIES C. C. MAITHEWS H. D. RIELEY 1 29 M F ff? E VV. H. INSKIP Prc.virlf'1zt Chairman 7112? H ,1S,'UxAfs'F w,,n'.f' 1'-H' ! Freshman Council R. L. DUNCAN .... . ........ .... P resident S. VV. 'THOMAS .... ..... ...... S e Crrffary . S. P. MILLER, JR. . . . Sophomore Rl'fll'L'S?7Zfllli'Ul? 130 I ' J I FT iii i'f2! 'i I3 - General Athletic Association R. L. DUNCAN . .... PHILIP CI.0RE,JR.. . . . . . . . F. W. TRIMMER K. Y. UMBERGER VV. A. ROBERTSON PLEAS RAMSEY J. H. LEE MILLER R1TcH112 A Ex-O1-'F1c1o C. J. SMITI-I D. B. WELSH VV G. C. VV!-IXTE S. D. PETERSEN 131 ..- u- -r- r P if 9? L-f . :Ai sl' . . . Pl'1'Jif1l'71l . Snfrclary E. MANN - ... .rv Fr. .y.. L 1T3,,'+k vi 5 Monogram F. VV. TRIMMIZR . . R. H. ALLEN . . . S IVIEMBERS PLEAS RAMSEY I. L. HARNE, JR. F. VV. TRIMMER S. VV. LAVINDER R. I-I. ALLEN R. L. DUNCAN C. G. MATTHEWS F. H. SMITH STUART THOMAS E. P. HARNETT Ivllzknrzm' COPENHAVER W. E. Boom 132 HOWARD A1.'1'xz1aR HARRY SU'1'1'NlzR G. J. PORT Louis Quxsrro R. L. RINGSTAFF H. K. RUSSELL . . . . - PI'l'Jidf'7ll I'l'l'l'fIIl'y- TI'l'!1.VIH'l'l' VV. A. Rorsmvrsox C. L. ENGERS T. F. VVEST, JR. E. E. PETERSEN C. E. Mlmzv, jk. F. F. FARRILR, JR. Y' . if 1 u ' T T' a' n . , ., . 55 if-t J? if ' T. C. N .7 -. -1 .. H x M, 1 . Yfapln L. . I .vw Nms . .... F L. MCNEER . . R. N. PEERY C. G. TUSING. . 11. B. liomcu C. T. Bow O. A. Bxouclwox M. K. Busx-xoxo T . VV. Bkulinnl. C. L. Fmfrv H A F VK . C. CIIVHNS . I.. Goon .. V. I'IM'nl1:x 7. I-I. INSKIP Y. M. C. A. Cabinet MEMBERS L. L. LINEBARGER M. E. LUGAR W. A. MARKHAM F. L. MCNHER A. T. MAZAK T. C. Nrms C. M. P.xRAr.rr1c1 J. P. Prsxcxa R. N. Primm' D. VV. RICHARDS T 33 S L' . . . . . Prcxidenl . - Vice-President . T reamrw' crlfiary MILLER Rrrcmn G. VV. Rnvrnu F. A. RODRIGUEZ H. K. RUSSELL M. L. SHANER W. E. SHHAIA' R. C. SNAP? L. C. S'1'ls1-films R. H. Souks C. G. Tusmc 1 f Y T P-3 ,,.. .. '. 12- , r 1 An, MH, -Aims' 7. wi EE w VE +...-- 'J' ze. 'M' -c 'I' , Clericus Motto: Pro Christo el Ecclfsia OFIVICERS R. N. PEERY ..... ..... .... P r cszduzt C. L. FELTY .... . Vice-Prmdrnt A. T. MAZA K C. T. BOYD E. B. BOLICK L. VV. DARST C. L. FELTY L. L. LINIZBARGER IVIEMBERS 13+ T. MAZAK C. NEAS N. Psmw VV. Rmvrran M. L. SHANIER I YQ, J 1 x 55. -QL Secrfiary Rf V. In . u .S EC, Z, .ni AT., L! la f .14 1 :' I 9 if I-M Nw 1, :-x, .4 , W . vw .L .J1.1.1... T. C. Nms J. C. Tonms Debating Team E. V. I-IAYDEN L. C. S'r1zPHENs K. Y. UMBERGER C. H. D. Rnsnmf MILLER RITCHIE J. E. PALMER R. E. KIIZENY 135 iii . L9 B. THORNTON, JR JH Ciceronian Literary Society 1' L MCNEER .... . . . . . . Presidenl L. C. STEPHENS. . . . . . Vice-Presidfnt VV. E. SHEALY . . . .... Serrelary W. H. INSKIP . . . Chaplain M. L. SIIANER . . ..... . . Critic IVIEMBERS O. A. BROUGIAITON IVIADELINE BURKS M. K. BUSI-IONG T. W. BRUEGEL VIRGINIA DICKENS C. L. FIILTY VV. VV. GARST R. I. IIOYT G. J. PIUFFMAN VV. H. INSKIP M. E. LUGAR MILTON MARKS F. L. MCNEER B. VV. MCNEER J. K. MILLER S. P. MII.LER, JR. W. A. MARRIIAM P. C. Pl-:YTON R. B. PERSINGIER H. D. RIELEY MILLER RITCHIIZ 136 64 . .E ' HAZEI. RICI-IARIJSQN H. C. SI-IOCKEY, JR M. L. SIIANER W. E. SIIEALY . R. C. SNA-.PP R. H. SOURS VV. A. S'I'.x'I'oN I.. C. S'I'IcI'III2Ns J. C. Tomfxs C. G. T USING M. S. Wooo .1 1, V. .1- ' m .- . f ., I. 1 H, Y 3 I :film lg L - .i .. ax Demosthenean Literary Society I-I. K. RUssrzLL . . . Prmdnzt E. B. Boucx . . . .... lfza' Pzeszdcnt SARA VVELLS .... ..,.. R affording Sccnlmy R. N. PEERY ., . . Corrcxjwmling Sacrafary E. V. HAYUEN . . ....... . Cutzc T. C. Nms . . R. I-1. Mookwmx . . XV. C. BECKERMAN B. BOLICK C. T. BOYD H. C. GIVENS E. V. I-IAYUEN M,xRx' McD.xN.x1.n A, T. MAZAK T. C. NraAs C. M. PARALITICI R. N. PERRY FRANK Plxmauu' IM EM B ERS I . . . . Chzzpfazlz . Snyeafzt-:lt-fl: ms D. W. Rlclmkus G. W. RI'l'Tl'iR R. A. RODRIGUEZ H. K. RUSSELL M. XV. Smml R. H. MQURMAN L. L. LINIQBARGIER R. E. MEADORS SARA VVELLS J. H. VVA'1'E1ur0UsE L. B. XV ER'1'z , ,,, . - '.' -' 1 A Y - df L. 413. '-Wf3'F -' .. ' 11 , ' Glee Club E. W. NYLANDER . . Pfeszdent J. A. HAMP1'ON . . .... . . . . Director R. A. D1LLoN . . . . . . Basin:-s.v Manager M. K. BUSI-IONG . . .... . Librarzan MER'IBERS G. C. Asr-1LEY M. K. BUSHONG E. E. COLEMAN R. P. COLEMAN R. A. DILLON F. F. FARRIER R. T. FROTHINGIIAM A. L. Goon J. A. IiAMPTON J. G. PIILLOCK 138 R. I. I'IOYT O. L. HUFFMAN B. VV. MCNEER F. D. MYERS E. W. NYLANDER R. N. PEERY L. VV. SHROPSIIIRE NA'FI-IAN SUSSMAN J. C. TOBIAS C. G. Tusmc , 3 E Q. 4 ., ,x ., , . .I .,. 4.5 4 P gr .. 1.14 V' ,f 4 1. I: T 5 .5 Harlequin STEPHENS ..... ....... . Preszdmzt K. Y. UMBERGER . . . .... Vice-President D. VV. RICHARDS .... . . . Bmirzmv Manager I. A. HAMPTON . . . . . Properly Mzz1zayer MARY Vmmwm VVHITR . . . . . Sfcrelary H. K. Russlsu. ............ T rmsurcr R, C. SNAI-P, D. F. Downy, M. VV. SM1111 . .-Id-verifying R. T. FROTIIINGIIAM R. E. KIIEENX' G. C. Asrmm' E. B. Boucx SARAH DUTROW FRANCES HAMPTON E. B. ICING C. G. 'IQUSING Dramatic Club A. G. SCIINURM-KN J. C. Tomfxs FRANCES BAILEY J. A. FECHEIMER 139 I. H. Lmz Mu.LER RITCI-:IE R. I. TIOYT VV. A. KNOBliLOCH KI'l 1'X' SYDENSTRICKER M. S. Wooo VV. A. YOUNG .v ,1 -V ,- ,R - T- , . I, A Q Lf' H Vaigl? I I ,II r I -- ,5 I, V, qv- E Sphinx MARGARET MAXWELL . , ..... . Presidcnl KI'lv1'X' SYIIENSTRICKER . . Svcrelru'y-Trf'as1zrcr CLASS OF IQ32 MARGARET MAXWELL CLASS OF 1953 LOUISE HANSIIROUGII VIRGINIA Koox'I'z MARY MCDANALD CLASS or 1934 FRANCES I-IAMPTON ELlZABlE'l'l'I RQADCAP JGSIQPIIINE MAxwm.L ANNIE SPICGLE Loxs OVIiRS'l'Rlil5'l' Kl1 l'Y SvnHxs'rRIcRIiR JANE PIIIENIX IRIS TIIIERRY HAZEL RICHARDSON MARY VIRGINIA VVHITE 14.0 5' L fi, F13 , I1 EJ Af ,. -,af ,- Ei Q I if SEEQM Q- IGI 5 Y. W. C. A. MARS, MCDANALD .... . . . P1 mdf 11: MARY VIRGINIA VVIIITII . . . . . Scrrflaly j0sIcI'IIINIf MAxwIaI,I. . . . . . Trrnsurm' FRANCIES lIAIvII1'I'0N . . . P'icr-PI'rxid1'nl VIRGINIA KOON'l'Z . . . Pl'0yI'lllII f:0llIIIliffI'l' MARGARIVI' MAXWIILI. . . Surinl Swrfvirr Cnmmillrf MARGARET CARSON Lols CARSON ANNIE SPIGGLIQ HENRIE'l l'1X BRUCE SARA VVIzI,I,s VIRGINIA DICKISNS Loulsls I-IANSIIROUGI JANE' PIIIINIX NIARGARITI' LAYMAN I MEB'IBERS LOIS OvERs'I'RIsI5'I' HAZEL RICHARDSON VVILMA DENIT CIIARLo'I I'Ia REx'xoI.I15 IRIS TIIIIIRRI' EI,IzAIzI2'I'II RQAIIQAP I-IIZLEN DII.I.oN MATTIE Lou SMIIII .ALICE I-IARIIcAs'I'I.Is CLAUIIINII SINK 141 I 33' ., S-, FRANCES MIzAIJoR SARAII DU'I'Row MARIUN G.-XRDliN I-IARRIET1' MARTIN BEATRICE RI2I2s TPIEOCLA CIIAIFFIN IQATHRYN FLORA JEAN PEARSON MARGIIIERITE I7oucIIM,w ' V J' I..' -f- f - , J r .1 -2.2 wi! --A . .- Roanolce College Chemical Society - OFFICERS G. H. D1cKsoN ..... .... . . . Prrszdynl A. G. Scl-INURMAN . . .... Ifzre lhfszdmzt R. A, DILLON . . ..... . Srrrclary Tr1'as1ur'1 MTQMBERS L. VV. Coovsn, JR. C. B. PAATTESQN G. H. D1cKsoN J. C. PARRISH, JR. R. A. DILLON I. PECKERMAN J. W. ELLIOTT F. PINKER1' H. C. GIVENS G. VV. RITTETQ C. G. HAUPT F. A. RODERIGUEZ O. L. HUFFMAN, JR. A. G. SCHNURMAN J. E. MARTTN J. M. ROSENHEXM R. E, Mmnous NATHAN Suss1vmN DR, I'IARRY I. JOHNSON i.. 142 1-T 43 .Rx -.J w - ,A Y AI, hp H III IE FI VRNSQ JI UwW1i.IfiLH CHRISTINE BREWER H. D. BROWN WILMA DENIT B. DIAMOND J. C. DARIIIQN R. A. DlI.I.0N J. VV. ELLIOTT lf.-XTIIRYN FLORA MARIAN GARDEN VV. VV. CSARST MAGIIALIQNE GII.MoRI3 J. VV. HANRLA ALICE I-IARDCASTLII O. L. I-IUFFMAN, JR. H. ICERR I. J. LASKER K. T. LEE, JR. B.' W. MCNRER F. L. MCNEHR MILTON MARKS JosEPI-IINIa MAXWELL F. D. MYERS J. B. OGIIIEN R. L. PAINII H. S. PEARMAN N. L. POTTS LOUIS QUISITO Biology Club BEATRICE Rrzlis PIAZEL RICIIARIISON J. R. ROWLANII A. G. SCIINuRMAx J. M. SIIAPIRO M. VV. SMITII L. C. STIIPI-IIINS NAJ1-IAN SUSSMAN C. 'FAUGHINBAUGII LUCILLIQ '.l'1'IORPIi R. VV. VVALRONII SARA VVIzLLs L. XV. VVESSON S. W. VVINN G. C. ASI-ILEX' D. P. BARNE'1 I' E. N. CAMDEN O. E. COIIRON T. G. CROSBY L. W. DARsT R. D. DAVIS D. F. Downs' R. F. FRRIS I--I. C. GIVENS L. PIANSBROUGH E. V. PIAYDEN MARX' SUE HURT MARGARET LAYMAN 143 A H IFF H. M. MAR'1'IN J. E. MARTIN A. T. MAZAR LOIS OVERSTREET J. E. PALMER j. C. PARRISI-1 N. G. PAYNII I. PRCRERMAN J. PET'I'YJ0I-IN P. C. PEVTON F. PINRERT R. R. RICE G. VV. RITTER , ELIZABETH ROADCAP J. R. ROCKHILL F. A. RODRIGUEZ J. M. RosI2N1-IEIM M. W. SMITH R. H. SOURS R. L. SPENCER M. VV. SPOTTS KI'I'I'I' SI'nI2Ns'I'RICRIaR E. H. 'IXFANK J. B. 'TILLOTSON L. B. WIIRTZ J. O. WILRERSON J. A. FRCHIIEIMER ... -- -Y . L , I li . I 'II'4 fi 51 N I. .A Classical Club XV. M. CARR . . . . . . . Prcsidrnl VV. H. INSKIP . . ..... Ifinr-l'1'1'yidv111 NIARY WVILLIS .... . . Swrrrlury-Trrrm1r'1'r M. S. MASTERS . . . . . Farlllly nldfviswl' E. B. BoI.IcK H. BREITHAUPT, JR. W. M. CARR VIRGINIA DICKENS GERALDINE FARRAR H. C. GIVENS J. A. HAMPTON FRANCES PIAMPTON MRs. MEM IIERS D. PIARROLD VV. H. INSKIP E. B. KING M. E. LUG.-XR MARY MCDANALII MARGARET MAXWELL G. M. MAxwIzLI., -IR. A. T. MAZAK HONORIXRY C. J. SIvII'I'II MRS. LOUISE DARDEN 14+ gp by 'f MA'I l'lE LOU SMITII 'KITTY SYDENSTRICKER J. C. r1'OBlAS SARA XVELLS MARY VIRGINIA VVIYIITH H. C. SHOCREY, IR. Bos SOURS Axxm SI-IIGGLI2 M. S. MAs'I'IaRs F, . -.: T..- .H M 55 W if 'flib'fif'EQ f I... L.. .. . English Club Pmllr- Clokr I . . . . . Pltlfldllll Tx Y Umm RUR, jk. . . .... Ifzcz- 1'u-xzdnzl I' W IRIMMHR . . . . . . Sl'II'1'fHl'y-Tll'llllHl7 FACULTY NIEMBERS C. A. DAwsoN VV. I. BAk'rLE'rT IVIEMBERS M. K. Busuoxc PHILIP CLORE, JR. R. T. FROTHXNGHAM J. A. HAMPTON J. G. IIILLOCK R. E. K1121-:Nr K J. H. LEE D. W. Rlcl-mnns Mu.1.ER Rx'rcH1E H. H. Ross L. C. S'rb:PHENs F. W. TRIMMER . Y. UMBIERGER 145 ca I gif '1 fy, Q11 ,z 'H - W-:qw M, H w N , 7. ummm fin 1 Qi.: Vw QE w u :ju . WAI. - X , , , , .1 3 Blue Key Founded at the University of Florida November 27, 192.4 ROANOKE CHAPTER EJflIll!i5lll'!f in 1930 K. Y. Ummzxcmz .... O. A. BROUCHTON . . FRATRES IN FACULTATE DR. C. R. BROWN DR. F. C. LONGAKEK DR. C. S. PIIINNHY FR.fxTR1zs IN COLLEGIO D. HARROLD MILLER Rncum L. C. S'rEP1fnzNs F. W. TRIMMER K. Y. Uzvrmskcsk O. A. BROUGIITON J. A. HAMPTON VV. H. INSKIP J. H. Llsn 147 . . Presidvnz Scfrelary I Xi Theta Chi F. VV. 'FRIMMER . . . F. L. MCNEER . . . . . . . IE. VV. LIXDSEY . . , Family FAC L' Iqrx' M EM 11 ERS C. S. Pmxxm' C. M. xVOOIWVARlJ VV. I.INusrzv M. S. MASTERS STUDENT MEMBERS O. A. Blzourzwrox M. K. Busnoxrz I. A. HAMPTUX DEI'IUN'l'ER I'IAkRo1,n J. H. LEE F. L. MCNEER I C. M. PARAr.1'1'lcI MII..I.lER Rrrcl-11:2 L. C. S1'rzPnENs F. VV. TMMMER C. G. Tusmc K. Y. UMBERGER, JR. . . . Prmidwnl . Serremry 1'1d Ui5EI' f 1.n.L-wk 51 The Rawenoch BUSINESS H. K. RUSSELL . . ....... .... B usi1ze.vs Hlzzrzzzger E. W. JONES . .... . . ffssistrmt Illanager D. F. DOWDY .... ..... S lay? Assistzzyzt VV. E. SHEALY . . .... Staff ffssisfzlfzt R. C. SNAPP . . . Siaff flssistmzt 150 I-3 . X, '1 The Rawenoch EDITORIAL -I. H. LEE ....... ....., ........ E 1 liter L. C. STEPHENS . . . ..... 1fl.v.vi.vla1zt Editor E. V. I1AYDEN .... .... A ssislant Editor W. Nl. CIARR . . . . . . Axsociate Editor J. G. I-IILLOCK . . . . Associate Editor 1 ISI AIQ J. A. FECI-IEIMER ........ M. K. BUSHONG . . . . E. V. HAYDEN .... J. C. Tonms Q Ht' 1 Hi EQ..,f'ff5aW f5i, E 1 The Braclcety Aclc Pyfekly Stzulcnt Newspaper EDLTORIAL ..Edilor . . . . .Associate Editor . . Jllanaging Editor . . . . . . .Athletics . . . . . Ffaiures . Conlrilzutitzg Editor . . . - Organizations . . fldrninistraiion .News . . . . . . . . Exchanges PHILIP CLORE, JR. . VV. M. CARR . . Louis C. STEPHENS . . H. J. Bxsm-IUPT W. H. INSKIP . . L. L. Llmzafxkcmz R.EPoRTERs B. VV, MCNERR H. H. Ross I. M. MII..I.ER T. C. NEAS 152 ,EE M S Q E5 Fi '11 'I A The Braclcety Aclc Pfewkly Slndrfnz' Newsprzjwr BUSINESS ELMER Sl-IEALY . . . . .... ...., B uxizmu Manager DOUGLAS Downy . . . . . Circulaiion Manager VV. VV. GARST .... . . . .ifiwerzixing Edilor H. K. RUSSELL . . Collection Managvr 153 J 14 ' I , I IW W W I I I I E ET i EIL lIl..ff'1I.I'WsII'lii,IW'i'Q.IIEi il I W ,WI W' I I I I l I. LI I W WI WI xl ,X X P! W W W I W. W ' I! .IQ W I I. 1, X Ig! Tau Kappa X Founded at Indianapolis, Indiana, May 13, IQOS W W Colours: Purple and Gold Flmwer: jack in the Pulpit W ' Mzzyazifze: The Speaker of T K A ROANOKE CHAPTER I Eslablishvd in 1922 W L. C. STEPHENS . . ........... . Presidcnl W FRATRES IN FACULTATE X C. R. BROWN J. F. PRUFER F. C. LONGIIIIEII I E. V. IIAYDEN T. C. NEAS I. Ie- FRATRIZS IN COLLIEGIO H. D. RIELEY MILLER RITCHIE I.. I 'III - I W I -I5 .IES JE E91 L. C. STEPIIENS K. Y. UMBIZIIGER SCJCIAL Social Organizations at Roanolce CCIAL organizations at Roanoke have been and are considered from many points of view. They have had loyal adherents and bitter opponents, they have been strong and wealcg but through it all they have been a factor in the shaping of Roanoke men. Within the memory of recent graduates there is the open warfare that existed between the fraternally minded groups and those who thought otherwise. And wars there were. Political machinations and counter movements that would have done credit to world affairs were enacted on our campus, within organized groups there were organized cliques that at- tempted to motivate college destinies-but it was only a formative period. Out of chaotic beginnings there has come a social order here that is a credit to Roanoke College and to Roanoke men. The order is still building, and each year it is building new edifices upon a mutual foundation. 156 ' I-Inf F Efl5 AYV'fWiQfH Pan-Hellenic Council F. W. TRIMMBR . . . ........., . . Ifrmidenl F. F. FARMER, jk. XV. A. YOUNG 157 H H .E if F01UIll'I.' Crimsron and Old XV. L. BROWN DOUGLAS BUNTING VV. F. BRAND R. H. .ALLEN PIIILIP CLORI2, JR. K. T. LES, JR. VV. M. CARR E. E. COLEMAN E. VV. JONES E. P. BARNI511' H. J. BREI'I'IIAUP'I' M. L. DUOLIBY, JR. Kappa Alpha fS0llfllEI'7lj Founded at vX7ilShil'lgf0H and Lee in 1865 flrli-ve' ChajJfM's.' Sixty-nine C0111 Flofwrr PILl11ic11lio11.' Kappa Alpha journal BETA RHO CHAPTER Inslnilrd in 1924 FRATRES IN URRE J. HOLES O. E. BURCH FRATIIR IN FACULTATE DENNIS B. WELSH FRATRIZS IN COLLEGIO Class of 1932 J. A. H.-xMP'I'ON Cfnxs of 1Qj3 XV. A. MARKIIAM, JR. Class of1934 R. VV. JONES I-I. E. KERR VV. A. KNOBHLOCII R. L. RINGSTAFF Class of 1935 G. F. PIARRIS N. G. MARSI-IALL I58 .' Magnolia and Red Rake BURKS LOGAN VV. A. OAKIEY L. M. Woons C. VV. MARTIN XV. A. YOUNG W. L. NOFTSINOER T. D. SAUNDERS W. E. SIIEALY R. C. SNAP? I. MASON M. A. SMYTIIE, JR VV. L. SPENCER I l l PI Kappa PI1I FIIIIIILICII at the College of Ch1ll'lCSIOIl Colozzrs: Old Gold and YVhite XV. F. CHAPMAN C. G. IJOBBINS CARRoI.I. CIIAPMAN l'IowARII ALTIZIIR XV. M. CIIAIHMAN B. VV. ANGLE D. P. BARNIQT1' R. E. BARNlE'1 I' I.. BLANIQIENSHII' C. F. rfURNER W. Boomz G. C. ASI-lI.EY' L. VV. C001-ER, JR R. F. DoYI.Ia 1 RATRI2S IN URIIIS R. P. HJXISLIP Luo DIENIT J. II. VEST FRATER IN F.AcL:I,T.ATE GORIION C. XVIIITIE FRATRES IN COLLEGIQ Clrlss of 1932 in I9o4 F10f'LU1'7'.' A. D. HURT F. H. VEST E. E. VVEBBER I. L. PIARNE PLISAS RAIvISIzY N. L. POTTS F. XV. r1qRIMMER Clasx of 1933 J. I-I. FISIIISR S. VV. I.AvIxIIIaR Clzlxs of 1Qj'.,l D. H. DAVIS C. I.. ENGISRS R. E. Ii!-IRLIN I. P. PISNCE R. F. TURNER Class of 1935 A. P. HUSIZ J. C. N1liRKET. 160 J. I-I. PUI.1.IA:vI I.. C. S'I'I2PIIIaNs H. S. 'WEEKS N. G. PAYNIS R. L. PAINI2 R. R. RICE A. SIvII'I'II T. F. xvm, IR. F. D. MYERS J. C. 'IXOBIAS M. S. Woon Red Rose 1 f 1 N N ' v 'Fw' 1 -s 16: Sigma Chi FoIIIIIlf:d at Miami University in 1855 Colours: Bfue and Old Gold FI0q,wr.- VVhire Pzzblicalionf The Magazine of Sigma Chi TAU CHAPTER E.flabli.I1n'd in 1872 Rf-L'slal1li.ch1'd in 1923 FR.-ITIQES IN UIzIaIz M. S. MCCLUNG, JR. R. S. KIIvIIz A. S. I'IARVERCU'l I'ER R. T. HUBBAIIIJ H. S. RICE GEORGE S'I'ELI.JIfs, JR. FRA'I'IzEs IN FAcUI.TA'I'I2 CII,xIaLIas DT. SMI'I'II D. R. CARI1nN'I'Ek VV. I. BAR'I'I.I5'I'1' C. H. RAYNOR FR.-vI'I1us IN CoI.I,EGIo Clam of 1932 R. T. FIzo'I'I-IINGIIAM J. H. LEE VV. S. PI.vIvIIxI..Is, JR. DEHUNTIQR I-IIxRR0I.D E. VV. NYLANDER K. Y. UMIIERGIQR, jk. Class of .IQ33 J. H. COLE H. H. IAIENIIERSIJN H. C. PURVINE, jk. F. F. FAIIRIHR, JR. G. M. MAXWELI., JR. XV. L. SNYDIER Class of 1934 L. VV. CALVIN T. G. Ckosm' C.IRI.YI.Iz COLE II. A. DUIJIJIY, JR. J. R. FImxcIs R. VV. CLIQNIIINNING jumus DARIIEN VV. O. Goonwm Clam of 1935 K. K. HUNT C. E. MII.IzY, jk. G. J. Pom' E. E. PETIZRSEN 162. R. C. IAl,IIwHRcu'rI'IaR T. J. I'IUGI'lES, JR. J. R. ROCKIIILI. VV. A. S'I'.xT0N ILIIIRY SU'I I'NER J. B. TILLO'l'SON Rose I N -A-1 , ,ima F' -.I 1, xuffyn-'ii n -I hh wgf!b f,f?z, Fa VW? 1 1 I M Q ,gli 4- 6+ - as F A G? 'v lg, ,. I I II 1 II 1 f' German OFFICERS I A HAMUON , . , . . . . . . Prfszdenl I' I' FARRIER JR. . .... Vzcc Pnszdenl D 1' Downy , , - . S1'Cl'L'f!ll'y-TIBLZJZIVLV MEMBERS E. W. NX'LIXNDYiR L. BLANKIINSIIIP WV. L. SNYIIER j. H. LEE H. R. HARTLEI' JULIUS DARDEN R. HARvI2x'cu'I'1'mz W. A. IQNOBELOCH J. A. HAMPTON W. A. YOUNG VV. C. BIQCKERMAN R. P. COLEMAN J. R. FRANCIS G. M MAYWFII J W. S. PI.YMAI.Ia R. T. FROTIIINGI-IAM H. H. HENDERSON R. A. DILLON VV. A. MARKI-IAM T. D. SAUNIIERS R. E. KIEIQNY J. B TILLOISON K. Y. UMIIIQRGIER, JR H. A. DUIILEY, JR. VV. L. SPENCER H. BREl'l'l'fixUP1', JR. H. D. BROWN J. L. WRIGIIT, JR. L. IIANSBROUGII T. J. HUGHIES, JR. J. W. ELI.I0'r'I' C. B. PA'I'I'IasoN 165 11l'li' I fd w Harlequin Orchestra R. A. DILLON ..... O. L, HUFFMAN .... NATHAN SUSSMAN . ..,. C. G. HAUPI' . . . Clarinet L. VV. SHROPSHIRE . . Trumpet LOUIS QUlSl'1'0 . . Trombone RAYMOND DXLLON . . . Piano O. A. BRoucH'roN ELLISON COLEMAN VVILLIAM FINK T. M. BERNARD G. H11.l.ocK x66 I H Violin . . Dircrtor Violin SPONSORS STUDENT LIFE ET CETERA 2 in V, . 9: I I 7 f. L v 1 v ur .'g,u' ,ui v 'Q ' Q , . m W ..f bf H! J , 0-3-A N I DR. CHARLES J. SMITH A product ol Roanoke College and a Roanoke man to the core, Dr. Charles J. Smith is President ol the College at the present, and hence the greatest period. The old story holds lor colleges as vvell as lor life: the past is gone, the present vve have with us, and the Future will he evolved out ol our present. The present Roanoke College is to be con- gratulated lor having such a man as Doctor Smith to lead it now. -limes are hard, money is scarce, a vvar in the Far East is menacing, some authorities hold that, capitalistically speaking, the United States is on the verge ol revolution .... But Roanoke is carrying on, and it is carrying on vvell. True to the idealism on which the College vvas founded, a Roanoke man is leading Roanoke to a greater fulfillment ol the educational premises on which it vvas founded, and he is attaining to a Financial stability that has been the dream ol Roanoke leaders since the idea ol a collge was germinated. The recorded history ol the Roanoke that is to he awaits the judgment ol the years to come, present indications point to a vivid story that will lar transcend the original dream .... AVE! QQQQSQB MISS MILDRED MOORE ' Mrss LORNA SHELTON JUNIOR CLASS- , Y. M.C.A. ll . 1 Dlctes moy ou, nen quel pays, I Est Flora la belle Rommaine, ZI THEZTA CHI GERMVANXNQLQE Arclnipiades, ne Thais, . Qui fut sa cousine germaine, 'MISS NANCY .... MISS oemosmswzm ureamv c.1.Ass MISS HE Eg- , ru' H MRS. R B. CARR MISS KATE SIGMON c.L.Ass1cA1. 'C.1.UEa Pass:-MAN CLASS Echo parlant quant laruyt on maine Dessus riviere ou sus estan, MRS. KY UMBERGED HoNoun coumcu. C!CEF2ONlAN MARY STICKLEY KAPPA ALPHA MISS' MARGARET FISHER MISS STELLA BLEVINS QAWENQCQ-u:E,u51NEss BLUE KEY Qui laeaulte ot trop plus qu'l1umaine? Mais ou sont les neiges crantan? MRS.d.A.M.1-NRTIN GERMAN CLUB 71,01 1 MISS KATHERINE WERT5 Busmsss s'rAFF:aRAcHa'rv-ACK MISS HELE N KRAIGE ORCHESTRA M ISS MARGARET STOUTAMIRE BIOLOGY CLUB M L55 FZGINIA HARRIS Cl'-KEJV1 I CAL. SOCIETY Et Jehanne la Bonne Lorraine Qu'Englois brulerent a Rouani Ou sont ilz, ou, Vierge souwaine? Mais ou sont les neiges djantan? Prince, n'enquerez de sepmaine Ou elles sont, ne de cest an, Que ce refrain ne vous remaine: Mais ou sont les neiges cl'antan? MCDRE INTIMATE Nm, L--.'-,, .mw- li's'i1!.'.J.1i14Bfllllrllilfllfif , 7 'x , ,X mmmm, mmm tri' mf, ww ws' '55 'MM' H- '- -P' m m 'QQ-4' s w n Y ...P- A11 1:- be-fi '-4-.LY L -Ns R PUR isis-4' lv Q., ,, 4 ii F 47 V M - 9 , ,. ,. .- J- 1 .,.,-..., ' t .f V A! - -I . , '75:2f '5F?-'-f ' ' fr - 4. A ' V ff- L - . , V .:- V ' ww f . , ,.-9 ' . V, ,, M . 1. L ,.f 1 Q ' 'vig 155.1 'Yi Iwi flu'- m-: Y - '-.. I' ,, ' . . 'T k .A .i,f,-M lm 'A ,- ' 533 ,-..' Yl '-4 A sm --J 1 ff 5 , ' jf :Q-Y .. 1 'i wi' ff '12 , 1 Q E5 Y If I , QA' J' M -:ssFff'5f' ' - 7'3'5lif7z.gW.g V ss, , 11,553 wg, wif .- -1r:1T..p L V E2 ww LM ADVERTISEMENTS PHOTOGRAPHERS The qlawenocb 1932 WOODWARD STUDIO portrait anal CO7Tl77'L67'Cil17 PHOTOGRAPHERS Reprints of Any Pfvotog ph A y A I-191 'Vai a DB9 S V PHO 8 J COLLEGE YEAR BOOKS CATALOGUES AND MAGAZINES of the BETTER CLASS Our experience and personal interest are found by our customers extremely helpful in the production of creditable publications. The S tone Printing and Manufacturing C o. EDWARD L. STONE. President ROANOKE, VIRGINIA ROANOKE? BRIGHT SPOT HOTEL ROANOKE, with its ample comforts, good food, spacious assembly rooms, Wide verandahs, and beautifully landscaped grounds, is an ideal spot for social gatherings, dances, and conventions. If you're planning such a gathering, let our capable, experienced man a gem e ll t help to make it a success. Hotel Roanoke KENNETH R. HYDE, Manager ROANOKE, VIRGINIA Airbeart-Kirk Clothing Co. h Since 1902 ROANOKE, VIRGINIA , COMPLIMENT5 OF GLENMARY APARTMENTS F. C. WILEY, Manager Phflne SALEM, VIRGINIA GOLDSMITH SPORTING GOODS BASEBALL, FOOTBALL, VOLLEY BALL, BASKETBALL ROANOKE HARDWARE GO. O. G. LEWIS AND COMPANY GARAGE :QV-8:9 Authorized Ford Sales ancl Service N473 Gas and Oils PHONE 93 Greasing and Storage A DRUG STORE SINCE 1850 The Store of Service SMEA D C? WEBBER Prescription Dru g gists 1 Salem, Virginia BROWN HARDWARE COMPANY Everything in Hardware PHILCO RADIOS-HEATROLAS-MAJESTIC RANGES-ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES Telephone 121 123 EAST MAIN ST. SALEM, VIRGINIA OLD VIRGINIA BRICK I ua Old Virginia Brick Company SALEM, VIRGINIA O. H. DOOLEY M. I-I PHONE DOOLEY PRINTING CO. Commercial Printers I5 COLLEGE AVENUE C48 Anything' in Quotation Printing' Request 244 SA L The Store of Greater Values BROTHERHOOD MERCANTILE COMPANY GOOD CLOTHES FOR MEN, YOUNG MEN AND BOYS We Specialize in Two-Pants Suits 107 SOUTH JEFFERSON ST. ROANOKE, VA. A. K. MINTON WHOLESALE AND RETAIL FRESH MEATS OF ALL KINDS Wholesale House Retail Department 869 Norfolk Ave., Southeast Stall No. 4, City Market Phone 1077 Phone 5507 RESIDENCE PHONE 5413-R BUSH AND HANCOCK Incorporated Clothes for Men and Young Men HICKEY FREEMAN CLOTHES, KNOX AND STETSON HATS 208 SOUTH JEFFERSON ST. Q ROANOKE, VIRGINIA MCPI-IEE MOTOR COMPANY FORD LINCOLN SALEM AT FOURTH ROANOKE, VA. PHONE 1900 CORNER S TORE Salem Theatre Building The Students' Store Fountain Drlnlcs, Sandwiches Calzes and Canclies Full Line of Student Stationery and New Assortment of R. C. Jewelry Every Neecl for the Student HEADQUARTERS FOR ALL SPORTING EVENTS SALEM BATTERY COMPANY Conoco Gas and Oils U. L. Batteries Cars Washed 6171.61 POIJSIIECZ Plmone 9167 ROAD SERVICE 0 ID RIEAMS CUMHE TRUE 0 Ht m mmm mu mmm a hmm if hmm 0 mint whtttmv mttmm In g wild Q mtttw mwmsfttumm them jijiig il iiaiit hw MWMQWWUTQQ the mmm mmll A mm H hmm mth tm my dmv? S Q, Q Fldluhltmvi. M1 REQ mthbmwwfmqulmmtlm Wmmmmg DESIGNERS AND ENGRAVIERS OF BETTER ANNUAJLS A BETTER. BOOK AT THE SAME COST Clotlviers and Furnishers for University Men niilonuzz Care Away PATRQNIZE Your Roanoke Theatres Regularly GLENN-MINNICH THE AMERICAN Roanoke ROANOKE I , PARK RIALTO These Are PUBLIX-NATIONAL 106 Campbell Ave. THEATRES Newest Pictures Properly Present d Virginia The Farmers National Bank SALEM, VIRGINIA Capital ........... . 3100000.00 SurpIus, Profits and Reserve Gver . . . 5200000.00 Resources Over .......... Sl,800,000.00 OUR TRUST DEPARTMENT AT YOUR sERv1cE YOUR ACCOUNT INVITED Safe Deposit Boxes in Burglar Proof VauIt FOR RENT Accounts of Mercantile Firms, Corporations and Individuals Invited SAFETY SECRECY SERVICE COMPLUWIENTS SALEM CREAMERY eo., INC. ooMpL1MENrs Albert Brotbers Inc. li - CONTRACTORS Phone 425 SALEM - - VIRGINIA GITTENS 699 KIME 'ne Salem Tbeatre Owned and operated by local people for your entertainment. Sbowing tbe 'very best of tbe pick of tbe big pro- LOA cluctions from tbe world? best pro- ducers. 42 Matinee Daily 3:30 P.M. SALEM' VA' Night, 7:15 and 9 yr I W. P. KIME 4 J. F. MORTON POPULAR PRICES C A GITTENS iT Q. Y ' NU ED BY ...... UH E WORLD'S LARGEST PU BLISHERS OF ANNUALS ENSON PRINTING C0. NASHVI LLE KTEN N I, u lzAnmJAn'rlms J '1
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