Wofford College - Bohemian Yearbook (Spartanburg, SC)
- Class of 1954
Page 1 of 232
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 232 of the 1954 volume:
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1 THE BOHEMIA] 100 YEARS LeGRAND A. ROUSE, II ... Editor JOHN C. SNYDER, JR Associate Editor HARRY GALL Centennial Editor TOMMY GRIGGS Business Manager FROM THE PRESENT . . . OF PROGRC:S:§i AT . . . Wo otd College FROM THE PAST . . . W. E. Burnett Gymnasium, now the Music Hall. Cleveland Street when students boarded there. A CENTURY OF PROGRESS The last dawn had risen on Benjamin Wofford. The lean, lanky ex-circuit rider, grim and avaricious of countenance whom men called miser, lay dying in the early hours of morning, at peace with the world. Upon his tomb in a back-country church- yard were carved these words: He gave to the country and to the church an institution for the benefit of which countless thousands yet unborn may have reason to be thankful and reverence the owner ' s name. Wofford is gone but in a sense he lives still in the hearts, hopes, and dreams of those whose footsteps have echoed down through the years across a campus, rich in the memories and traditions of the past. He was in a sense more important in death than in hfe, for this tall, sinister figure, whose one good eye gleamed balefully from behind thick green spectacles, left a legacy which no man could anticipate from a miser ' s horde. Upon this slender foundation has been reared an edifice of spiritual grandeur, which over the past hundred years of progress has sent its graduates into every station of hfe, and has sent its graduates to the far-flung corners of the globe. It is our inten- tion to trace within these pages the amazing growth of Wofford College since the first students entered the original classrooms a century ago. The past is spent but the glorious tradition which it has woven will live on in perpetuity so long as there are Wofford men who love and revere their Alma Mater. We intend in this volume to restore through the medium of word and picture som.ething of the lustre of bygone days, to revive a fireside memory or two for an old graduate here and there who may out of curiosity leaf through these pages and remember men long dead and events as long forgotten with nostalgic reminiscence. Within these pages are, for example, to be found photographs of past presidents of the college, who step by step have raised the institution they served from the depths of poverty and despair to the pinnacle of success and prosperity — men who though gone and largely forgotten by a student body, which if it thinks of them at all, thinks only of mute chapel portraits of unknown figures of yesteryear, dressed in the picturesque costume of an era long past, hve on in the lasting monuments of bricks, stone, and mortar which surround us in the quiet beauty of a campus scene. There is on another page, for example, a photograph of Bishop W. M. Wightman who made the keynote address at the laying of Wofford ' s famous cornerstone, a monument not merely to things physical, but even more a spiritual dedication initiating a milestone in the history of education which can never be forgotten. A few lines from this magnificent oration of a man who was destined to serve as the first president of the college and the first chairman of the Board of Trustees might not be inappropriate here. And now having drawn upon your patience thus far, we address ourselves to the laying of this cornerstone. We lay it for thee and in the name of the Holy Ghost, for the good of posterity we plant the foundation of this institution. After the lapse of ages, and amid whatever chances or changes may in the eventful future befall our political institutions, may this corner- stone support a fabric still flourishing in its early freshness. And sooner crumble this granite into dust than perish from the minds and hearts of our countrymen and successors the great principles which have t his day been enunciated and which lie at the foundation of all our virtues as individuals, all our glory as a nation. Even as Wightman spoke these words the storm clouds of secession were gathering ominously over the nation and many of the South ' s traditional institutions were being grievously threatened. War came, but even amid the clash of musketry and the roar of cannon, the college continued to operate, though it was at the time httle more than a Greek classical school with only a handful of students too young to engage in the mighty struggle going on around them. In connection with this dramatic era might be mentioned the 5 Raising the colors towards the end of World War I. dr.imaric legend of the lost cornerstone. A block of hollowed- out granite of considerable size was chosen to serve as a foun- dation stone for the Main Building, and consequently as a subject of the lines quoted above from Bishop Wightman ' s stirring address. Within its hollowed interior was placed a large lead box containing numerous valuable documents relating to the founding of the college and to the personal history of the founder and his family. There was, up until a very recent date, a fabulous legend current, sprung from sources unknown, the gist of which was as follows. Toward the close of the War Between the States, according to the legend. Union cavalry swept down through this section of the South, burning and pillaging. The favorite targets of their looting were the cornerstones of old buildings which often contained priceless relics and occa- sional!) items of monetary value in the form of bonds and securities. One dark winter ' s night, late in the war, (so goes one version of the story) word was received in Spartanburg that a detachment of blue-clad cavalry was approaching the town. The freemasons who had presided over the laying of the cornerstone feared that the object of their attentions a decade before might be stolen by the marauders, and, that same night, removed the granite block from its original position on the northeast corner of the building and concealed it, so went the since discredited legend, in some other portion of the edifice, possibly in one of the tall towers flanking the portico. The exact location of the cornerstone was forgotten in the turmoil of those turbulent days and until ver) ' recently eluded discovery, remaining the source of heated speculation down through the ears. Duiing the days of reconstruction, amid the disorder of the timcN, the aliiablc relic was forgotten. The men who re- mo ed it that dark, siorm - night dared to trust no one with their secret in the da s when the carpetbaggers rided and ruin was spix ' ad throughotu the land. S the time the lawless era had ended, all who knew the exact location of the missing relic were eithei ' dead or hail v.tnished, none knew where. So went a rom.mtic legeni.1 groiuul n absurdit but marxeloush ' fasci- n.itnig ne ei tlieless. I here was, however, one salient fact of undoubted truth ui this extremeU colorful saga of another da ' . 1 lie cornerstone was lost; whether h carelessness or in some manner more thrdhng ' as not known. The question of its location was agitated by college antiquarians down through the years and just prior to the writing of this article was still an unsolved enigma. It was only during this the centennial year, however, that a really scientific and systematic search was insti- tuted for the missing memorial, involving the most modern scientific equipment and the finest scholarship available. A mine detector was to be employed to comb every inch of the century- old Main Building in studied determination to divest her silent walls of the mysterious secret they had held so long. The search commenced on an unusually warm and sunny November morning and ended three hours later in apparent failure. Only once was there a strong reaction from the me- chanical device employed, and this to the great disappointment of the curious onlookers turned out to be only a rusty nail of no great antiquity. It remained for a freshman, George Duffie, to find information leading to the location of the long-sought objects of such frantic searching. While browsing through moldering piles of old and dusty manuscripts, lying neglected and forgotten upon an obscure shelf in an almost unused corner of the Whiteford Smith Library, Duffie and a companion stumbled across an antedated copy of the Southern Christian Advocate containing an article from the pen of Bishop Wight- man, locating in precise detail the exact position of the missing granite. On the basis of this new information the search was renewed, this time at the northea.st corner of the Main Building, resulting very quickly in the uncovering of the long-sought foundation monument. Ante-Bellum days saw not only the disappearance of the cornerstone but more happily the steady expansion of the college both in regard to physical plant and enrollment. It was during this era under the able leadership of the col- lege ' s second president, gray-bearded A. M. Shipp, that the lit- erary societies and the Greek letter social fraternities began to rise into prominence. After President Shipp resigned in 187 5 the college entered upon a great period of physical expansion. In Shipp ' s day the entire physical plant was to all intents and purposes concentrated in what is today Main Building, including classrooms, dormitory space and dining hall and library. Greek and Latin were the principal subjects taught and they were Senior class at the turn of the century, about 1897. 6 hammered in with a vengeance. It was not at all uncommon for an examination to last from six to eight hours. Each room in the Main Building of that day was heated via the pot-bellied stove and the old-fashioned fireplace which gave cheerful Ught from its glowing embers but Uttle heat. The Wofford student of that day arose before dawn and was frequently forced out into the biting cold of a winter ' s morning in search of firewood or water from a nearby well located not far from the site of what is today the John B. Cleveland Hall of Science. Classes lasted from dawn to dusk with few holidays and less recreation. The Wofford of that day was located in a rural area in the midst of an almost untouched wilderness. A dusty wagon road following roughly the track of present-day Church Street led into Spartanburg, then a sleepy Httle village composed of a few frame houses clustered around Morgan Square in nondescript fashion. During the administration of Dr. James H. Carlisle who succeeded Shipp, a startling period of growth set in, commencing in 1880 with the erection of Alumni Hall, a brick structure beautifully ornamented by ornated porticoes and white-washed wooden columns, which towered high above the surrounding landscape and seemed to touch the clouds. Within a few years Snyder Hall, today a freshman dormitory, had risen adjacent to Alumni and was situated near the ravine. These two structures were soon to compose the old Wofford Fitting School where young men deficient in scholastic training were prepared for college. These are only a few of the many and vast improve- ments inaugurated by the genious and driving vitality of Dr. Carlisle, who more than any other individual deserves to be called the father of Wofford College. This great man whose portrait is mounted with quiet dignity above the chapel rostrum was one of the foremost educators of his time, and loved Wof- ford with a passion such as only men of intellect and concern for humanity can muster. He found her poor and impoverished, struggling with desperation to make ends meet, and left it a flourishing institution of higher learning, well able to make its own way in the academic world. His administration saw also the construction of the Whiteford Smith Library, the John B. Alumni Hall and Snyder at the turn of the century. Wofford-P.C. football gome in 1927. Cleveland Hall of Science and other monuments to a genius which can never die. Tired and full of years Carlisle retired in 1909 and soon found his way to the land beyond the shadow. He was succeeded by Dr. Henry Nelson Snyder, at that time professor of English on the faculty of the college he was to serve so well in after years. Snyder, in whom many of his stu- dents saw a marked resemblance to Shakespeare in appearance, continued during his administration on the work so well begun by Carlisle. It was during the administration of the former that Carhsle Memorial Hall was erected to the memory of one of the bright lights of Southern education. Snyder, author of An Educational Odyssey, stood at the helm during the stormy days of World War I, the hectic era of the roaring twenties, and the hard and bitter years of the thirties which are best forgotten but never can be. The advent of World War II brought with it one of the severest crises in the history of the college. With Pearl Harbor came an ever-shrinking student body as one by one men marched to join the colors to fight and die in the name of God, country and liberty. The armed forces were quick to requisition the physical plant of the college for mili- tary training program. Soon the tramp of marching feet added something new to the magnificent panorama of Wofford his- tory. The students that remained upon the scene, a pitiful remnant of what once had been, attended Converse and the Spartanburg Junior College. With peace came revival and a new president. Snyder retired after well over four decades of service and was succeeded by Dr. Walter K. Greene who was destined to become for a time President of both Wofford and Columbia colleges simultaneously. Greene ' s administration saw new monu- ments to education rise one by one to crown the lands cape with majestic splendor. Nowhere in the annals of the college is there a record of so much being accomplished in so short a time. Ill health forced Greene ' s retirement after an all too short tenure of office. After a brief interval of a year, during which Dr. C. C. Nor- ton doubled as President and Dean of Administration, Dr. Francis Pendleton Gaines, Jr., Dean of Students at Southern Methodist University, was inaugurated amid elaborate cere- monies as the sixth President of Wofford College — a ceremony which was destined to be a superb keynote to commence a cen- tury of progress. 7 9 t O iV T E i T S l ealicathH lalmMMfatm 1854 AT WORK . . . AT PLAY . . . D E D I C A T I O IV In you, Dr. C.uithcn, we find a faithful friend as well as an accomplished teacher. To the students of today -tnd to students of years gone by, you have been a living example of what a Woffoid man should be. For these noble reasons we take greal pleasure in dedicating the Centennial Bohemian to you. Dr. C.aLithen, as heai.1 man of the llistory Department at W ' oftoril, has done much to make e ents of the past live again in liie nunds of countless students attending his Alma Mater, and h.is forex ' cr, in class, and out, been an inspiration to all who came his way. Being a dependable, hard-working personality, it was no surprise to any of us to find that Dr. Charlie was selected to captain the Centennial Committee, a group of W ' offord professors and students who co-ordinated the year ' s activities. Countless times Dr. Cauthen was called upon and just as man) ' times he abl ' answered tlie call. So, Dr. Charlie, we proudly dedicate this book to you, knowing vou will continue to be the fine teacher, admin- istrator and friend that ou are. 18 54 19 5 4 DR. FRANCIS PENDLETON GAINES, JR. President of Wofford College ( ' resent President, Dr. Gaines, and Dr. Walter K. Greene, President Emeritus. DR. WILLIAM B. WIGHTMAN 1854-1859 14 DR. HENRY NELSON SNYDER Professor of English President, 1902-1942 Teaching teats 0 the PaJt DR. ARTHUR MASON DUPRE Headmaster, Wofford Fitting School Professor, Wofford Dean, Wofford PROFESSOR DANIEL ALLSTON DUPRE Professor of Physics and Geology DR. DON GEORGE CLINKSCALES Professor of Mathematics DR. DAVID DUNCAN WALLACE Professor of History and Economics DR. JOSEF-H AUGUSTUS GAMEWELL Professor of Latin Left to Right Seated Dr. F. P. Gaines, Mr. Dwight F. Patterson, Rev. R. H. DuBose, Dr. J. O. Smith. Standing: Mr. James A. Chapman, Mr. Grier Hudson, Mr. Hugh W. Perrow, Rev. Melvin E. Derrick, Rev. John M. Younginer, Rev. David Clyburn, Rev. Ellis L. Woodord, Mr. Edwin P. Carroll. HOARD O F TRUSTEED BOARD MEMBERS DWIGHT F. PATTERSON, Chairman Laurens, S. C. J. O. SMITH, Vicc-Chairman Spartanburg, S. C. BENJAMIN 0. JOHNSON Spartanburg, S. C. EDWIN P. CARROLL Charleston, S. C. JAMES A. CHAPMAN Spartanburg, S. C. DAVID A. CLYBURN Charleston, S. C. MELVIN E. DERRICK Columbia, 5. C. ROBERT N. DUBOSE, Secretary Whitmire, S. C. J. GRIER HUDSON Spartanburg, S. C. HUGH W. PERROW Cameron, S. C. BENJAMIN R. TURNER Columbia, S. C. C. L. WOODARD Charleston, S. C. JOHN M. YOUNGINER Walterboro, S. C. I ' lic South C.iTdlln.) CotitcicnLC of the Methodist Church .ippomls the nu ' inbcrs of WOt ford ' s Board of I rustccs etch cMr. I hcsc proiniiicnt men ;.;,itlier toi;ether e.ich school term carrying out administrative functions of the college. Mr. Dwight F. Patterson proved to be a capable chairman of the group din-ing the Centennial. 18 MR. PHILIP STANHOPE COVINGTON Dean of the College DR. ROBERT ARTHUR BRENT Dean of Students HE ADMIIN ISTRATI MR. HAROLD STEPHEN SMITHYMAN Bursar MR. SAMUEL FRANK LOGAN Registrar 19 ADMINISTRATION Allen Brockman RAYMOND MAXWELL ALLEN Director of Religious Activities MRS. ELIZABETH R. BROCKMAN College Nurse HERBERT HUCKS, JR. Librariar) ARTHUR LOVELACE GUNTER Assistar)t to the President JOEL EDWARD ROBERTSON Business Manager of Athletics JOHN MADISON YOUNGINER, JR. Director of Alumr)i Affairs and Public Relations SAMUEL ROBERT MOVER Director of Music JOHN ROBERT CURRY Superintendent of Grounds and Buildings MRS. SUMTER SMITH WINGFIELD Assistant Librarian WILLIAM EARLE BUICE Dietitian and Manager of College Canteen Hucks Gunter 20 SECRETARIES MRS. HELEN COTHRAN Secretory to the Dean of Administration MISS JOSEPHINE ELDER Secretary to Business Manager of Athletics MRS. FRANCES T. BANKS Secretary to the President MISS SHIRLEY N. COBB Secretary to the Registrar MISS MARIE T. BLACK Secretory to P.M.S. T. MRS. BETTY P. DAVIS Assistant to the Registrar MRS. PEGGY C. BUCHANAN Secretary to the Bursar MRS. HELEN B. UPTON Secretary to the Director of Public Relations and Alumni Affairs. 23 CHARLES EDWARD CAUTHEN Professor of History IRA COLUMBUS CASTLES Assistartt Professor of Economics SAMUEL SKINNER BRITT, JR. Assistant Professor of Psychology and Education WILLIAM PINCKNEY CAVIN Associate Professor of Cfiemistry JAMES ARCHIE CHEATHAM Professor of Military Science and Tactics HE FACULTY ,48 k !t JOHN LEONARD SALMON Professor of Modern Languages JOEL EDWARD ROBERTSON Assistant in Physical Education THE EDWARD HAMPTON SHULER Professor of Applied Matliematics WILLIAM WOODROW SCHEERER Professor of Physical Education F A C C L T JAMES HUBERT RUSSELL Instructor in Military Science JAMES TATE STEWART Assistant Professor of English JOHN MOSLEY WELCH Instructor in Military Science LOY MONTGOMERY GREER, JR. Instructor of Economics THE FACULTY HUBERT ROOSEVELT TINDELL Armorer for Military Science JOHN WILLIAM SUTPHIN Administrative N.C.O. of Military Science VIRGIL SCOTT WARD Processor of Psychology 10 0 YE A R S O F 32 1954 I lows in an atmosphere of gay-liearted liiLirity. Nor can we forget the inauguration of Dr. Gaines amid solemn ceremonies of imposing grandeur. W ' e were proud that day — proud of our college and the -oung man w ho stood at its helm and guided the destinies of our class for two years. Yes, there were days of pride but there were also memories of sadness as well. Fondly ' e remember the late Lewis Jarrett, whom we recall as freshmen, al a s the life of an ' party. These and a thousand other reminiscences will come back to us across the ) ' ears and remain forexer embedded m the memor ' of the class of ' 54, soon to leave a offord she can ne ' er forget. Our class has the unic ue honor of being the 100th class to step from these portals to join the thousands of other Wofford graduates who have taken their place in society. We look back with nostalgia upon freshman days at Snyder Hall, pushball games, fraternity parties, the excitement of rush season, the wildly enthusiastic student section at football games cheering the team on to victory and consoling it in defeat. Wc saw the last of old time ratting in the days when the bare mention of the word made freshmen suffer. We remember friends long gone, and King ' s coffee shop now a bleak, deserted buildings with smoke charred walls across from Municipal Auditorium on Church Street, but once the place wlieie Wotford men gathered for good food with good fel- C LASS OF FIFTY-FOrR 34 bell Altman Alverson Anderson Anthon Auman Awtry Barber Bigelow Bond FIRST ROW: JACK STANLEY ABELL Columbus, Ga. Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Block W Club; E.A. of Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Football; Golf; Swimming. GEORGE FRIERSON ALTMAN Galivants Ferry, S. C. Kappa Sigma; Vice-President of Glee Club; Spanish Club; Inter-Fraternity Council; Scabbard Blade; Company Com- mander of Co. D ; Grand Procurator of Kappa Sigma. CLYDE BERNARD ALVERSON Reidville. S. C. Sigma Alpha Epsilon; E.Ch. of S.A.E. WILLIAM HILTON ANDERSON Camden, 5. C. Kappa Alpha. HOWARD THOMAS ANTHONY Spartanburg, 5. C. Drill Team; Baptist Student Union. SECOND ROW; HAROLD WAYNE AUMAN High Point, N. C. Football; Block W Club; Scabbard Blade. SHERRY EUGENE AWTRY Manchester, Ga. Football; Baseball; Block W Club. GARY DONALD BARBER Spartanburg, S. C. Pi Kappa Phi; Glee Club; Ministerial Union. ARCHIE RUFUS BIGELOW, JR North Charleston, 5. C. Band; Glee Club; Ministerial Union. NEIL CAROL BONDS Calhoun Falls, 5. C. Pi Kappa Alpha; Treasurer of Freshman Class; Secretary of Sophomore Class; Editor of the JOURNAL; Who ' s Who; OLD GOLD AND BLACK staff; BOHEMIAN staff; Secre- tary of F.T.A.; Treasurer of Wightman Literary Society; Inter-Fraternity Council; I.R.C.; Secretary and Vice-Presi- dent of Pi Kappa Alpha. THE SENIORS 35 H E E O R S FIRST ROW: RONALD KENNEDY BRIDGES Duncan, S. C. Scabbard Blade. ALLEN HENRY BRIGGS 5- C. JIMMY LEE BROCK Sp artanburg, S. C. Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Football; Track; Vice-President of Block V Club. BILLY BOWMAN BROWN Patrick, 5. C. Ministerial Union. HUGH ROBERT BROWN, JR Charlotte, N. C. Delta Sigma Phi; Baptist Student Union; Secretary of Junior Class; President of Inter-Fraternity Council; Treasurer and President of Student Christian Association; Glee Club; I.R.C.; Senior Order of Gnomes; Who ' s Who; Secretary of Delta Sigma Phi, Blue Key. SECOND ROW: KENNETH MILLER BRYANT High Point, N. C. Football; Basketball; Baseball; President of Block W Club; Scabbard and Blade; Future Teachers of America. THEODORE WILBUR BRYANT Spartanburg, S. C. BOBBY LEE BURNETT Spartanburg, S. C. CLYDE HARLAN BURTON High Point, N. C. Delta Sigma Phi; Vice-President, Intramural Manager, Pledge Chairman of Delta Sigma Phi. VICTOR DEE BUTTS Spartanburg, S. C. THE S E FIRST ROW: HENRY CLARKE BYNUM Sumter, S. C. Kappa Alpha; Tennis; Block W Club. DONALD RYAN CALDWELL Buffalo, S. C. GEORGE WESLEY CAMPBELL Edgefield, S. C. Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Glee Club; Pre-Medical Society. SOLOMON MACTURIOUS CANADY Charleston, S. C. Kappa Sigma; Tennis; Golf; Scabbard Blade. WILLIAM JOSEPH CANTRELL Inman, S. C. N I O R § SECOND ROW: ROY TALTON CARPENTER Spartanburg, S. C. FRANK DELANO CASSELL Campobello, S. C. HAROLD L. CHAVIS Trio, S. C. Pi Kappa Alpha; Wightman Literary Society; Spanish Club; American Chemical Society; Pre-Medical Society; Staff of BOHEMIAN; Staff of JOURNAL; Staff of OLD GOLD AND BLACK; Secretary of Pi Kappa Alpha; LR.C. HARLEY HENRY CHRISTOPHER, JR Pelham, S. C. Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Scabbard Blade; Co-Business Man- ager of Glee Club. GENE ELDREDGE COLLINS Effingham, S. C. Kappa Sigma; Glee Club. Bynum Caldwell Campbell Canaday Cantrell Carpenter Cassell Chavis Christopher Collins THE SENIORS FIRST ROW: SECOND ROW: JESSE LECEL COOKSEY Spartanburg, S. C. Alpha Sigma Phi; Treasurer of Student Body; Vice-President of Inter-Fraternity Council; Scabbard Blade; Pi Gamma Mu; Football; Block W Club; President of Alpha Sigma Phi. GEORGE WALTER FARRELL COX Hemingway, S. C. Vice-President of Student Christian Association; President of Blue Key; Who ' s Who; President of Ministerial Union. RAYMOND LAVON COXE eenneftsv(7 e, S. C. Future Teachers of America; Baptist Student Union; Spartan- burg Junior College; Phi Theta Kappa; International Rela- tions Club HOMER AUSTIN DAVIS Spartanburg, S. C. ROBERT ADVIL DAVISON Florence, S. C. Kappa Sigma; Student Intramural Manager; Intramural Edi- tor of C: LD GOLD AND BLACK. MELVIN EARLE DERRICK, JR Columbia, S. C. Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Wofford Sports Publicity Director; P.K. Club; Staff of OLD GOLD AND BLACK; Co-Sports Editor of BOHEMIAN; Pledge Trainer of Sigma Alpha Epsilon. JAMES MITCHELL DITTY Wilmington, Calif. Football; Block W Club. JAMES SIDNEY EPPERSON New Bern, N. C. I.R.C; Pi Gamma Mu. ARTHUR MICKEY FISHER Union, S. C. Pi Kappa Alpha; Pi Gamma M).i; Vice-President of Ministerial Union. RICHARD BERNARD FORE Dillon, S. C. Cooksey Derrick Cox Ditty Coxe Epperson Davis Fisher Davison Fore THE SENIORS FIRST ROW: SECOND ROW CHARLES GILMORE FURR Dillon. S. C. Delta Sigma Phi; Glee Club; Publications Board; Staff of OLD GOLD AND BLACK; Staff of BOHEMIAN; Staff of JOURNAL; Vice-President of LF.C; Treasurer of Sopho- more Class; Treasurer of Junior Class; Cheerleader; Editor- Historian of Delta Sigma Phi. HARRY GALL, JR Florence, S. C. Pi Kappa Alpha; Cent ennial Editor of BOHEMIAN; Presi- dent of Pi Gamma Mu; Historian of Freshman Class; His- torian of Sophomore Class; Historian of Junior Class; His- torian of Senior Class; Blue Key; International Relations Club. THOMAS GREGORY GIBBONS Kershaw, S. C Pi Kappa Alpha; S.C.A. Cabinet; President of Freshman Class LF.C; President of Ministerial Union; Publications Board Staff of OLD GOLD AND BLACK; Staff of BOHEMIAN Vice-President of Wightman Literary Society; Glee Club Freshman Control Board; Vice-President of Pi Kappa Alpha ROBERT JOHN GOLDSTON Wallace, N. C. Librarian of Glee Club; Ministerial Union; Co-Business Man- ager of Glee Club. FRANCIS HUITT GOSSETT Union, S. C. DANIEL STEVENSON GOUDELOCK Winnsboro, S. C. Delta Sigma Phi; Vice-President of Scabbard Blade; Glee Club; President of Junior Class; Vice-President of Student Body; Battalion Commanding Officer; Staff of OLD GOLD AND BLACK; Pre-Medical Society; Vice-President and Treas- urer of Delta Sigma Phi, Blue Key. EDWARD FREDERICK GRANT Murrell ' s Inlet, S. C. Vice-President of Future Teachers of America. JOHN ANDERSON GILL Rock Hill, 5. C. Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Head Cheerleader; Baseball; Editorial Assistant of BOHEMIAN; Vice-President of Sigma Alpha Epsilon. WILLIAM WALKER GLASCOE Duncan, S. C. WILLIAM DAVID GRAVELY Pickens, S. C. Alpha Sigma Phi; Block W Club; Inter-Fraternity Council; Treasurer of Alpha Sigma Phi. Furr Goldsfon Gall Gossett Gibbons Goudelock Gill Grant Glascoe Gravely E SENIORS FIRST ROW: ROBERT HERLONG GRIFFITH Jefferson, S. C. Kappa Alpha; President of Senior Class; Business Manager of JOURNAL; Blue Key; Who ' s Who; Scabbard Blade; S.C.A. Cabinet; No. HI of Kappa Alpha. TOMMY LYNN GRIGGS S- C. Kappa Sigma; Blue Key; Scabbard Blade; Pi Gamma Mu; I.R.C.; Secretary of the Student Body; Business Manager of BOHEMIAN; Treasurer of Senior Class; Treasurer of Kappa Sigma. REX BEACH GUTHRIE Manteo, N. C. Tennis; Swimming; Basketball; Block W Club; Spanish Club. JACKSON WESTMORELAND HAMBRICK Spartanburg, S. C. Band. DONALD HAROLD HAWKINS Lenoir, N. C. SECOND ROW: MICHAEL HAYNIE Canton, N. C. THOMAS JACKSON HERBERT Portsmouth, Oh o Kappa Sigma; Staff of OLD GOLD AND BLACK; Ameri- can Chemical Society. WADE WILKES HERRING Walterboro, S. C. Delta Sigma Phi; LF.C; Ministerial Union; S.C.A. Cabinet; Staff of BOHEMIAN; R.O.T.C. Battalion Chaplain; Editor- Historian and Pledge Master of Delta Sigma Phi. JIMMY CARMON HILL Woodruff, S. C. Pi Gamma Mu; Scabbard Blade. ROSCOE NORRIS HILL ' Whitney, S. C. Baptist Student Union. Griffith Haynie Griggs Herbert Guthrie Herring Hawkins Hill THE SENIORS FIRST ROW: EDWIN RUSHING JOHNSON Spartanburg. S. C. Delta Sigma Phi; President of Blue Key; President and Vice- President of B.S.U.; Treasurer of Scabbard Blade; Who ' s Who; Secretary of I.R.C.; S.C.A. Cabinet Member; Vice- President of I.F.C.; Cabinet of State B.S.U. Council; Presi- dent and Sergeant-at-Arms of Delta Sigma Phi. JAMES MELTON JOHNSON Union, S. C. Pi Kappa Phi; S.C.A. Cabinet; Band; Glee Club; Staff of OLD GOLD AND BLACK; Staff of JOURNAL. WILLIAM HYLAND KELLY Brooklyn. N. Y. Delta Sigma Phi; Football; Block W Club. WILLIAM LIGHT KINNEY, JR Bennettsvllle, S. C. Sigma Alpha Epsilon; President of Student Body; Editor of 1953 BOHEMIAN; Editor of 195 3-54 W-BOOK; S.C.A. Cabinet; Who ' s Who; American College Student Leaders ; Blue Key; Delta Phi Alpha; Pre-Medical Society; LR.C; Staff of OLD GOLD AND BLACK; Senior Order of Gnomes; Librarian of Glee Club; Centennial Steering Committee; Staff of 1954 BOHEMIAN; Vice-President of Sigma Alpha Ep- silon. CARL WILLIAM LANE, JR Moore, S. C. Pi Kappa Phi; President and Historian of Pi Kappa Phi. SECOND ROW: EARL HAMES LAWSON Union, S. C. Pi Gamma Mu; Phi Beta Kappa. GEORGE FRANCIS LAWRENCE, JR Brooklyn. N. Y. JOHN M. LISTON Smoaks, S. C. Kappa Alpha; President of Glee Club. JAMES LYNN LOWRY, JR Spartanburg. S. C. Kappa Alpha; Basketball; Block W Club; Sigma Delta Pi; Spanish Club; No. VIII of Kappa Alpha. CHARLES THOMAS LYNN, JR Greer, S. C. Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Business Manager of Glee Club; Pre- Medical Society; Captain of Drill Team; Associate Editor of JOURNAL; E.R. and E.Ch. of Sigma Alpha Epsilon. HE SENIORS FIRST ROW; WALKER REID McBRIDE Pacotet, 5. C. WILBUR RAY McBRIDE Pacolet, S. C. WILLIAM HOVEY McCLURE Landrum. S. C. Scabb.u-d Blade; Rifle Team. ROBERT WILLIAM McCULLY West Palm Beach, Fla. Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Football; Block V Club; Treasurer of Junior Class; Treasurer of Sophomore Class. FRANK LOVE McELWEE, JR Clover, 5. C. SECOND ROW: JOSEPH MONROE McELWEE Clover, S. C. Delta Sigma Phi; Blue Key; Pi Gamma Mu; President of Junior Class; S.C.A. Cabinet; Publications Board; Secretary of LF.C; President of Delta Sigma Phi; Phi Beta Kappa. ANSEL BOBO McMAKIN, JR Slater, S. C. Alpha Sigma Phi; Secretary of Future Teachers of America; Secretary of Alpha Sigma Phi. JAMES VERNON McMAKIN Spartanburg, S. C. Glee Club. JESSE FRANKLIN MANNING Abbeville, S. C. Glee Club; Secretary of Ministerial Union. JESSE GAYLORD MAY Union, S. C. Kappa Sigma; Secretary-Treasurer of Blue Key; Senior Order of Gnomes; Who ' s Who; Secretary-Treasurer of Delta Phi Alpha; Captain of Rifle Team; Staff of BOHEMIAN; Scab- bard Blade; Grand Master of Kappa Sigma; Phi Beta Kappa. McBride McElwee McBride McMakin McClure McMokin McCully Manning McElwee May THE SEIVIOR ! FIRST ROW: WILKES GRAHAM MAY Union, S. C. Kappa Sigma; Senior Order of Gnomes; Blue Key; Vice-Presi- dent of Delta Phi Alpha; President of Scabbard Blade; Who ' s Who; Staff of BOHEMIAN; Rifle Team; Grand Mas- ter of Ceremonies of Kappa Sigma; Phi Beta Kappa. MELVIN DuBOSE MEDLOCK Columbia, S. C Kappa Sigma; I.F.C.; Publications Board; Pre-Medical Society; Secretary of P.K. Club; Grand Master and Grand Scribe of Kappa Sigma. CHANCY E. MILLARD Spartanburg, S. C. Baptist Student Union, JAMES ELWOOD MOORE Spartanburg, S. C. Rifle Team. S. T. MOORE Greer, S. C. SECOND ROW: WESLEY LAWTON NEELY Spartanburg, S. C. Vice-President of Baptist Student Union. AUBREY TALMADGE NOLAND Union, S. C. Delta Phi Alpha; Sigma Delta Pi; Phi Beta Kappa. DONALD RUSSELL O ' DELL Whitney, S. C. WILLIAM EMILY OWENBY Lancaster, S. C. CONSTANTINOS N. PAPADOPOULOS Kavala, Greece President of Pre-Medical Society. Moy Neely Medlock Noland Millard O ' Dell Moore Papadopoulos THE S E N I O R S FIRST ROW; JAMES EDWARD PARRIS Spartanburg, 5. C. LeROY PARRIS, JR Spartanburg, S. C. Scabbard Blade; Block W Club; Basketball. GEORGE TURNER PERROW Cameron, S. C. Scabbard Blade; Inter-Fraternity Council; Kappa Sigma. LcROY PIKE Inman, S. C. American Chemical Society; B.S.U. WILLIAM LLEWELLYN POPE Darlington, S. C. Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Football; Baseball; Vice-President of Senior Class; Vice-President of P.K. Club; Block W Club; I.F.C.; Scabbard and Blade; President of Sigma Alpha Epsilon. JULIAN CLEON PRUITT Spartanburg, S. C. Band; American Chemical Society. SECOND ROW: THOMAS EVATT ROPER Raleigh, N. C. Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Assistant Planetarium Director; E.T. of Sigma Alpha Epsilon. LEGRAND ARIAIL ROUSE, II Spartanburg, S. C. Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Blue Key; Who ' s Who; I.R.C.; Glee Club; Octette; Quartette; Debate Team; Sports Editor of BOHEMIAN; Editor of Centennial BOHEMIAN; Feature Editor of OLD GOLD AND BLACK; Intramural Editor of OLD GOLD AND BLACK; Staff of JOURNAL; Church- Campus Relationship Committee; S.C.A. Cabinet; E.Ch. of Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Pi Gamma Mu. WILLIAM CARLYLE SMALL Lyman, S. C. Football, Captain; President of Block W Club. FRANKLIN OSCAR SMITH, JR North Charleston, S. C. Intramural Manager of Carlisle-Greene Hall. HORACE ELMER SMITH Spartanburg, S. C. JOHN CLEM SNYDER, JR Florence, S. C. Kappa Sigma; Band; Glee Club; Staff of OLD GOLD AND BLACK; Associate Editor of JOURNAL; Associate Editor of BOHEMIAN; Ministerial Union; Secretary of Freshman Class; Grand Master of Ceremonies of Kappa Sigma. Porris Roper Porris Rouse Pope Smith THE SEW I O R S FIRST ROW: RALPH EUGENE STAMM Spartanburg, S. C. Delta Phi Alpha; American Chemical Society; Band. JAMES LEWIS SUGGS Conway, S. C Kappa Sigma; Glee Club; Golf. JACK OWEN SULLIVAN Ninety Six, S. C. Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Pi Gamma Mu; Drill Team; P.K. Club; E.R. of Sigma Alpha Epsilon. BENJAMIN TAYLOR STEELE Cliffside, N. C. Ministerial Union. HUGH MORRILL THOMPSON Walterboro, S. C. Kappa Alpha. ASA WARNER TINDALL, JR Campobelio, 5. C. SECOND ROW: WESLEY TONY TREADWAY Union, S. C. BUFORD EARL TRENT Pacolet Mills, S. C. Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Band; Glee Club. JOHN LOGAN WARD Rocfc Hill. S. C. Sigma Alpha Epsilon; LF.C; American Chemical Society; E. Chronicle of Sigma Alpha Epsilon. CHARLES RAYMOND WEST Spartanburg, S. C. ZEB CARSON WILLIAMS, JR Asheyille, N. C. Pi Kappa Phi; Ministerial Union; Editor of OLD GOLD AND BLACK; Staff of JOURNAL; Football Manager; Track; Block W Club; S.C.A. Cabmet; Glee Club; Band. THOMAS DANIEL WYATT, JR Spartanburg, S. C. Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Glee Club; President of Spanish Club. Stamm Treadwoy Suggs Trent Sullivan Ward Steele West Thompson Williams Tindall Wyatt JOE McELWEE President SAMMY GLENN .... Vice-President PAUL REINARTZ Secretory BOB McCULLY Treasure TOM BROGDON Historiarj ' eccH4 Centutif enht Now that we, the class of ' 5 5, have passed the midpoint of our education, many and more serious considerations con- front us. By now we have completed our required work and are working hard on our major and related work. W ' e have the great distinction of being the first class to graduate during the second century of Wofford ' s existence. Many of us who are R.O.T.C. cadets will get our first real taste of army life this summer at camp. We are looking forward to it with many doubts and speculations. As this year comes to a close, we can look forward to taking over the responsibilities left to us by the seniors. We can only hope to fulfill them as well, and start Wofford on another illustrious hundred years. With these new duties and obligations, along with the added privileges that will be ours as seniors, we can look forward to our senior year as being our best one. Known around the campus for their leadership ability were many of our number. Man) ' campus activities were originated by our class members, while an even larger number of campus happenings depended upon the juniors for loyal support. € L A S O F FIFTY-FIVE 46 FIRST ROW: HARVEY LARALLE ADAMS, JR Lynchburg, Va. Sigma Alpha Epsilon CLYDE MAJOR AIKEN Liberty, S. C. Pi Kappa Alpha MACK MONROE ARMSTRONG Saluda, N. C. SECONDROW: CHARLES D. BARRETT Rock Hill, S. C, Kappa Alpha JAMES SHERER BARRETT York, S. C. Delta Sigma Phi BILL EDWARD BASS Shelby, N. C. Kappa Alpha THIRD ROW: BILLY GENE BATES Converse, S. C. CURTIS PORTER BELL Georgetown, S. C. Alpha Sigma Phi WILLIAM M. BENNETT, JR Walterboro, S. C. FOURTHROW: CLARENCE TALMADGE BIGGERSTAFF Spartanburg, S. C. RICHARD RIDDICK BLOCKER Charleston, S. C. Kappa Sigma JOE BERT BOGAN Union, S. C. FIFTH ROW: THOMAS ELMORE BROGDON Sumter, S. C. Kappa Alpha JOE E. BROWN, JR Spartanburg, S. C. Alpha Sigma Phi LEONARD HOBSON BUFF, JR West Columbia, S. C. SIXTH ROW: WILLIAM WADE BURLEY Spartanburg, S. C. Sigma Alpha Epsilon MORRIS JENNINGS BYERS Gilkey, N. C. CECIL MARTIN CAMLIN, JR Florence, S. C. Kappa Alpha H E J O R 47 FIRST ROW; NELSON WALLACE CARMICHAEL . . . . Delta Sigma Phi DALE EUGENE CARNES HERMAN EDWARD DAVIS SECOND ROW: MILTON RICHARD DOWDESWELL Delta Sigma Phi MARVIN M. DuBOSE, JR Pi Kappa Alpha JOHN COLLINS DUNLAP Delta Sigma Phi THIRD ROW: HORACE LEE EDGE, JR Campobello, S. C. ROMEO HICKS ELMORE, JR Caroleen, N. C. Pi Kappa Alpha HENRY THERON FEW Greenville, S. C. Alpha Sigma Phi FOURTH ROW: JOHN CLEMON FLOYD Columbia, S. C. LEE DELANO FORD Greenville, S. C. CHARLIE MONROE FOSTER Easley, S. C. Alpha Sigma Phi FIFTH ROW: ROBERT R. FRALEY Gary, W. Va. WILLIAM MURRAY GIBBONS New Zion, S. C. PHILIP HAMLET GIBSON Hampton, Va. Kappa Alpha SIXTH ROW: SAMUEL RUFUS GLENN, JR Greenville, S. C. Sigma Alpha Epsilon FRANK D. GOODALE, JR Camden, S. C. Kappa Alpha DOUGLAS LAYTON GREGORY Spartanburg, S. C. Mullins, S. C. . Townsend, Tcnn. Sportanburg, S. C. Spartanburg, S. C. . . Rock Hill, S. C. . . Rock Hill, S. C. THE J F 1 R S T R O W : LAWRENCE SAMUEL HAMMITT Spartanburg, S. C. JAMES RICHELIEU HARRELSON Marion, S. C. Kappa Sigma JOSEPH ELDRIDGE HAZLE Duncan, S. C. Sigma Alpha Epsilon SECOND ROW; EDGAR RANDOLPH HENSLEY Spartanburg, S. C. ALLEN KING HOFFMEYER Florence, S. C. Sigma Alpha Epsilon PERCY HUGH HOLDER Pickens, S. C. Alpha Sigma Phi THIRD ROW: CHARLES FOWLER HOLLABAUGH, JR Nashville, Tenn. Pi Kappa Alpha BOBBY JOE HOWELL Union, S. C. JOHN HAROLD HUDSON, JR Greer, S. C. FOURTH ROW: W. HAROLD HUFF Greer, S. C. GEORGE ELBERT HUGGINS Batesburg, S. C. Pi Kappa Alpha ROBIN BARRETTE KELLEY .■■■Spartanburg, S. C. Sigma Alpha Epsilon FIFTH ROW: PAUL S. KENT Fairforest, S. C. JOSEPH HENRY KIRBY Union, S. C. Sigma Alpha Epsilon CECIL FLOYD LANFORD Woodruff, S. C. Pi Kappa Alpha SIXTH ROW: DAVID LOWREY LASHER, III Asheville, N. C. Kappa Sigma ROBERT SYDNEY LORYEA Wolterboro, S. C. Delta Sigma Phi EDWIN CLYDE McGEE Hartsville, S. C. O R F I R 5 T R 0 W : ALFRED CHESTER McGINNIS Knoxville, Tenn. MELVIN DWIGHT MclNTOSH Charlotte, N. C. ROBERT LEE MARCHANT Greer, S. C. Sigma Alpha Epsilon SECOND ROW: THURMAN ROBERT MARTIN Arcadia, S. C. MARSHALL LcROY MEADORS, JR Florence, S. C. Kappa Alpha JOHN JOSEPH MITCHELL, JR Union, S. C. THIRD ROW: RALPH VERNON MOORE, JR . Conway, S. C. Kappa Sigma WILLIE ANSEL OWENS Marion, S. C. Delta Sigma Phi WILLIAM K. PARRIS Gaffney, S. C. FOURTH ROW: THOMAS LUTHER PATRICK St. George, S. C. JOHN JACOB PENICK Salisbury, N. C. ROBERT EUGENE PETTIGREW Starr, S. C. Pi Kappa Phi FIFTH ROW: ROBERT DWIGHT PETTUS Inman, S. C. FREDERICK GRIDLEY PHILLIPS Greenville, S. C. Pi Kappa Phi WILLIAM PERRY PHILLIPS Spartanburg, S. C. Kappa Alpha SIXTH ROW: CLARENCE ODELL PITTMAN Greer, S. C. MACK COLLIER POOLE Cross Anchor, S. C. Sigma Alpha Epsilon WILLIAM AUGUSTUS POWELL Chesncc, S. C, H E r O 50 ' all Ik t ' i n ft . ' ■ft ' C ' x ' 1 m ' .V A ■FIRST ROW: JOSEPH OSCAR PRICE, JR Nashville, Tenn. Pi Kappa Alpha WAYMAN STEWART PRINCE Campobello, S. C. WILLIAM G. PUGH, JR Spartanburg, S. C. SECOND ROW; WILLIAM CHARLES REID Orangeburg, S. C. Kappa Alpha PAUL VICTOR REINARTZ, JR Jacksonville, Fla. Sigma Alpha Epsilon RICHARD GILMORE ROGERS Marion, S. C. Kappa Sigma THIRD ROW: TED JONES ROPER Pickens, S. C. Alpha Sigma Phi DAVID ESTON BUCHANAN SANDERS, JR. . . . Spartanburg, S. C. CECIL OLIVER SMITH, JR Spartanburg, S. C. FOURTHROW: DANNY HERBERT SMITH Oswego, S. C. Pi Kappa Alpha ROBERT F. SMITH Spartanburg, S. C. WILLIE E. SMITH, JR Spartanburg, S. C. FIFTH ROW: JAMES DAVIS STEWART Joanna, S. C. Delta Sigma Phi BURRELL CLEMENT TAYLOR Hampton, Va. Kappa Alpha RONALD K. TERRELL Lyman, S. C. SIXTH ROW: WILLIAM MADISON TUCKER Spartanburg, S. C. WILLIAM JOSEPH VINES Trenton, S. C. DAVID E. WALKER Massena, N. Y. Delta Sigma Phi THE J IJ 61 IV I o R S . . . « Out 0 Het PaM . . . In the above picture are the men of the fabulous diamond squad of 1900. These Terriers won twenty-six out of the twenty-seven games and grabbed the state baseball championship two years in o row. The gentleman on the right on the front row is Walter K. Greene, then a great infielder, now President Emeritus of our college. The Todd House shown above was the dwelling place of Benjamin Wofford and his wife, Anna, from 1809 to 1830. Wofford was first laid to rest here in the old home-place cemetery but his remains were later removed to the grave found on the Wofford front campus. Action on the gridiron . . . mony years ago. BOB BURNETT President GL EN ASKINS Vice-President LAURENCE MclNTOSH . . Secretory TED WALTER Treasurer RUSSELL KING Historian RUSSELL KING ■JIB Possessing the distinction of being one of the Largest classes in the history of Wofford College, the class of ' 5 6 has done more than its share of upholding and furthering the cherished Wofford tradition. Not only is the class well fortified scholas- tically, but it is one noted for its versatility. l.eaving the many accomplishments of its freshman days tucked away in the record books, the sophs cast expectant eyes to the future and foresee even greater things to come. The men of ' S6 witnessed the inauguration of Wof ford ' s sixth president, Dr. Gaines, and hold the honor of being the first freshman cktss under his administration. Not only as frosh did ihc ii.nc pep and vigor, but also as second-year men, the sophomores succeeded greatly in instdling school spiiit in tile other classes. CLASS O F As for records, the sophomores are looked upon as a class with a great future. Many members of the class of ' 5 6 have entered in the various phases of collegiate activities and have shown their prowess in many fields, such as athletics, scholar- ship, religion, and politics. The editor of the school news- paper, the captain of the basketball squad, and next year ' s annual editor are just three of the man - leaders included in the class. With a spirit of co-operation prevailing over the entire class, it is no wonder why this sophomore class has produced such fine leadership. As time marches on, one can look for the class of ' 5 6 to pla ' a major role not only in the dexelopment of Wofford College, but also in conquering some of the many perplexing problems of the world. FIFTY-§IX 54 THE SOP F 1 R S T R O W : JOHN ROBERT BROWN Jackson, Ala. Kappa Alpha WILLIAM DuRANT BROWN, JR Centenary, S. C. ROBERT ADAIR BURNETT Spartanburg, S. C. Kappa Alpha SECOND ROW: JOHN ROBERT CAPES Covington, Ga. Sigma Alpha Epsilon ROBERT CHAMBLEE Newport News, Va. CHARLES HENRY COKER Taylors, S. C. PI Kappa Alpha THIRD ROW: LAWTON RUTLEDGE CONNOR Eutawville, S. C. WILLIAM ZAFERIOS COSTOS Spartanburg, S. C. Alpha Sigma Phi CHARLES CURTIS DAVIS Hemingway, S. C. Delta Sigma Phi FIRST ROW; PAUL PENNEY ANDERSON, JR Folly Beach, S. C. DAVID GLENBURN ASKINS, JR Marion, S. C. Kappa Sigma JAMES HERBERT BAILEY Darlington, S. C. S;gmo Alpha Epsilon SECOND ROW: ' CHARLIE HENDERSON BATES Anderson, S. C. Kappa Sigma CHARLES MAJOR BAUKNIGHT Mauidin, S. C. ALFRED EDWARD BEAM Spartanburg, S. C. T H I R D R O W : JOHN GERALD BEASLEY Lamar, S. C. Delta Sigma Phi PAUL BRYAN BLACK Greenville, S. C. Alpha Sigma Phi THOMAS LEAGUE BONDAY Hampton, Va. Kappa Alpha H O M O R E K 65 FIRST ROW; OTTO ANDERSON DAVIS Darlington, S. C. Kappa Sigma RICHARD PATRICK DuBOSE • • Florence, S. C. Pi Kappa Alpha WILLIAM ALLEN DuBOSE New Zion, S. C. SECOND ROW: WILLIAM F. EDWARDS Travelers Rest, S. C. RAYMOND CONVERSE EUBANKS, JR Spartanburg, S. C. Kappa Alpha WILLIAM BOYD EVINS, JR Travelers Rest, S. C. Pi Kappa Phi THIRD ROW: DOUGLAS RANDAL FORBIS Lancaster, S. C. EUGENE LEE FOSTER Spartanburg, S. C. JULIAN HARRIS FOSTER Spartanburg, S. C. H E S O H O M O R E FIRSTROW: ROBERT EDWARD FOX Charleston, S. C. Sigma Alpha Epsiion WILLIAM EDDINS GALLOWAY Hartsville, S. C. Pi Kappa Alpha JOSEPH V. GOBOLOS Lackawanna, N. Y. SECOND ROW: JAMES LEONARD GOLDEN Newberry, S. C. Alpha Sigma Phi VERNON WILSON GOODLETT Travelers Rest, S. C. CLYDE H HAMILTON, JR Edgefield, S. C Sigma Alpha Epsiion THIRD ROW: F. JETER HAMMOND Sumter, S. C. Kappa Alpha EARL THOMAS HARDIN Spindale, N. C. Kappa Sigma WILLIAM SWINTON HAYNSWORTH Florence, S. C. Delta Sigma Phi 56 FIRST ROW: CURTIS WESLEY HIPP Newberry, S. C. Alpha Sigma Phi LESLIE WHEELER HOWARD, JR Columbia, S. C. Kappa Sigma RICHARD ARDEN HOWLE Hartsville, S. C. Pi Kappa Alpha SECOND ROW: JAMES EARL HUDGENS, JR Greenville, S. C. ROBERT DENNIS JENNINGS Bishopville, S. C. Kappa Alpha DAVID NEIL JOHNSON Spartanburg, S. C. Kappa Sigma THIRD ROW; JOHN NEWTON KELLETT, JR Seneca, S. C. Sigma Alpha Epsilon RUSSELL CALVIN KING, JR Darlington, S. C. Sigma Alpha Epsilon RALPH HERVEY LAWSON Buffalo, S. C. H E S O O M O R E S FIRST ROW: TIMOTHY LEE NORRIS Timmonsville, S. C. JAMES WORTH LINEBERGER, JR Dunn, N. C. Pi Kappa Phi DAVID LAURENCE MclNTOSH Florence, S. C. Kappa Sigma SECOND ROW: THOMAS KIRKLAND MclNTYRE . Chesnee, S. C. Alpha Sigma Phi ROGER LEE MARSHALL Charlotte, N. C. Pi Kappa Alpha SAMUEL HARLSTON MAW, JR Newberry, S. C. Sigma Alpha Epsilon T H I R D R O W : JAMES LEE MAXWELL Spartanburg, S. C. Alpha Sigma Phi GEORGE A. MEARES, JR Spartanburg, S. C. Alpha Sigma Phi THOMAS TRAVIS MEDLOCK Columbia, S. C. Kappa Sigma 57 FIRST ROW; SAMUEL KRAMER MILLER Lymon, S. C. JAMES FELDER MOSELEY • ■' ' R ' dgel° d, S. C. WILLIAM FREEMAN PARKER, JR Sumter, S. C. Kappa Alpha SECOND ROW; SAMUEL GRAHAM PARLER • • Batesburg, S. C. Kappa Sigma WILLIAM BELLINGER PATTERSON Walterboro, S. C. Delta Sigma Phi ENGLISH BROWN PEARCY Walterboro, S. C. Delta Sigma Phi THIRD ROW: WILLIAM EARL PENNY Gibsonville, N. C. Kappa Alpha LEWIS WILSON PORTER, III Spartanburg, S. C. Kappa Alpha JOHN W. POTTER Spartanburg, S. C. THE SOP FIRST ROW: HOWARD P. POWELL, JR Raleigh, N, C. Pi Kappa Phi EDDIE LANG REED North, S. C. Sigma Alpha Epsilon JAMES LEONARD RICHARDSON Marion, S. C. Kappa Sigma SECOND ROW; MARSHALL BR0C1 ROPER Liberty, S. C. Alpha Sigma Phi PLEASANT TERRY ROPER Liberty, S. C. WILLIAM EUGENE SEIFERT Spartanburg, S. C. Pi Kappa Phi THIRD ROW; WALTER WOODROW SESSOMS Darlington, S. C. Delta Sigma Phi CLAUDIUS OSBORNE SHULER, III Easley, S. C. Pi Kappa Alpha JOHN W. SHUMATE Hompton, Va. Kappa Alpha 58 F I R S T R O W : TALMAGE BOYD SKINNER Anderson, S. C. Pi Kappa Alpha CHARLIE DORN SMITH, JR Lake City, S. C. Pi Kappa Alpha CARROLL DEAN SOLESBEE Spartanburg, S. C. SECOND ROW: DAVID BURRIS SPIVEY, JR Conway, S. C. Pi Kappa Alpha JOHN ALEXANDER STEVENSON Seneca, S. C. ALAN DON STEWART Locke, N. Y. THIRD ROW: CARL McWILLIAMS STYLES Travelers Rest, S. C. THOMAS ABRAM SUMMERS Orangeburg, S. C. Kappa Alpha WILLIE REED SWANN Georgetown, S. C. Alpha Sigma Phi FOURTH ROW: THOMAS REGINALD THACKSTON Fort Mill, S. C. Kappa Sigma HOWARD ELDRED TOOLE Greer, S. C. WILLIAM MILES TUNNO Spartanburg, S. C. Sigma Alpha Epsilon FIFTH ROW: HARRY HART WALLACE Drayton, S. C. Sigma Alpha Epsilon RICHARD STRONG WALLACE Darlington, S. C. Kappa Sigma WILLIAM CLARKTON WALLACE Marlon, S. C. Delta Sigma Phi S I X T H R 0 W : ' THEODORE HOLT WALTER Florence, S. C. Kappa Sigma TOMMY MARTIN WILLIAMS St. George, S. C. Pi Kappa Phi EDWARD ALLEN WILSON Orangeburg, S. C. Kappa Sigma SEVENTH ROW: CHARLES MURRAY YARBOROUGH Darlington, S. C. ROBERT EDWARD WILBURN Union, S. C. PAUL ESTES DURHAM, JR Chester, S. C. Kap pa Sigma IP ; ;,, m _ ■Sir ' ' 1 J DON FOWLER President CRAIG TEMPLETON . . Vice-President BILL BARHAM Secretary JIMMY ROGERS Treasurer BOB PENNY Historian It was the largest freshman class in the history of the college that descended on the campus that day of September 9, 195 3, and although it was an unknown fact to every single member, each of the frosh was equally as tense and nervous as his new classmates. Life at Wofford seemed strange at the start, but with the passing of days into weeks and weeks into months, that sense of not belonging disappeared. Strong friendships were formed, that old feeling of nostalgia fo r home disappeared or at least didn ' t bother us as much, the memories of high school days seemed to fade like old soldiers in our minds and those queens at Converse took over where the girls from home had left off — well, for most of us anyway. W ' e were proud to have two freshmen in the personalities of David l ane and Diddy Carlson representing us as cheer- leaders for the ' 5 3 football season, and true to the form of a class of leaders, about thirty of us got the bite from the political bug when class elections rolled around and cam- paigned with hearty gusto for ourselves. After close races, Donnie Fowler, Craig Templeton, Bill Barham, Jimmy Rogers, and Bob Penny were chosen respectively as president, vice- president, secretary, treasurer, and historian. We had our own freshman dance — good! And we set off firecrackers in the dorm — bad! Those eternal bull sessions, our first college exams, those all night dates with the books, and last but not least our little visits to the Dean ' s office will always be remembered as a part of our freshman year. We yelled, we griped, we laughed and we groaned. Some left us at the semester ' s end. New ones joined us. The year sped swiftly by and now the day has come when we look forward to welcoming those little frosh next year. CLASS O F FIFTY S E V E . 62 FIRST ROW: LEON J. ALFORD, JR Conway, S. C. WILLIAM LEO ALLEN, JR Rockingham, N. C. SAMUEL MARVIN ATKINSON, JR. . . . Bennettsville, S. C. WILLIAM WADE BARHAM Florence, S. C. SECOND ROW: WILLIAM PEEBLES BASKIN, III Bishopville, S. C. JOHN McBEE BASWELL Spartanburg, S. C. JIMMY TARLTON BEASLEY Chesnee, S. C. KENDALL MAURICE BELCHER Inman, S. C. THIRD ROW: RUDOLPH DUNLAP BLACKMON Rock Hill, S. C. CECIL GRAHAM BOND Seneca, S. C. THOMAS EDWARD BOWEN Turbeville, S. C. HORACE HOSEA BOYKIN, JR Sumter, S. C. FOURTH ROW: JACK LIGON BROWN Greenville, S. C. RODDEY M. BROWN, JR Florence, S. C. HUGH WILSON CAMPBELL, JR Spartanburg, S. C. WILLIAM PAUL CARLSON North Augusta, S. C. FIFTH ROW: CLARK ROBERT CARSON Spartanburg, S. C. ARTHUR LEE CARTRETTE, JR Chadbourn, N. C. DONALD RICHARD CHENEY, JR Spartanburg, S. C. JUSTING CLARDY, JR Dillon, S. C. SIXTH ROW: ROBERT BEATY CLYBURN Charleston, S. C. SAMUEL BRYSON COKER Anderson, S. C. ROBERT KEITH COOK Inman, S. C. LEO JAMES COOPER Powell, Tenn. H E F R E H M E 6S FIRST ROW: JERRY HALTIWANGER CROMER Anderson, S. C. WILLIAM DONALD CROSBY Chester, S. C. MILLARD LOPEZ CROTZER, JR Gaffney, S. C. WILLIAM WALLACE CULP, JR Union, S. C. SECOND ROW: JERRY THOMAS DAVIS Sportonburg, S. C. TONY O ' NEAL DAVIS Spartanburg, S. C. WILLIAM BLAKE DILLESHAW Columbia, S. C. FRED FAIREY DuBARD, JR Columbia, S. C. THIRD ROW: GEORGE SUMMERS DUFFIE Greenville, S. C. WADE HADLY DURHAM, JR Siler City, N. C. CECIL TERRY EARLE Depoy, Ky. HUGH BLANTON EASLEY Spartanburg, S. C. FOURTH ROW: CARL T. EDWARDS Whiteville, N. C. JACK COLUMBUS ELLISON Spartanburg, S. C. LAURIE NELSON ERVIN Dillon, S. C. DON PRATT FERGUSON Rock Hill, S. C. F I F T H R O W : FRANK TATUM FLETCHER, JR McColl, S. C. JOE CALVIN FOGLE Lamar, S. C. ALTON LeROY FOSTER, JR Spartanburg, S. C, JACK EDWARD FOSTER Boomer, N. C. SIXTH ROW: PERRIN CALDWELL FOSTER, JR Spartanburg, S. C. BOBBY GLENN FRIPP Woltcrboro, S. C. THOMAS RONALD GARRETT Spartanburg, S. C. BOBBY FONCIE GILES Converse, S. C. H F R E 11 E 64 FIRST ROW: JAMES OLIN GILLIAM, JR Spartanburg, S. C. THOMAS MARION GODBOLD, JR Marion, S. C. JOSEPH LEE GODFREY Fort Mill, S. C. FLOYD ALISTER GOODWIN Walterboro, S. C. SECOND ROW: CLYDE MOFFETT GRAHAM Charlotte, N. C. JOSEPH WALKER GRAHAM, JR Loris, S. C. JAMES DAVIS GREEN Camden, S. C. JAMES MARTIN GRIMES, JR Bamberg, S. C. THIRD ROW: LARRY DALE GROCE Spartanburg, S. C. MORGAN BAGNAL GUILFORD Florence, S. C. JOEL WYMAN HAND, JR. . Bamberg, S. C. JACK MELTON HAWKINS Covington, Ga. FOURTH ROW: FREDERICK BREVARD HAYES Rock Hill, S. C. MELVIN ELTON HENDRICKS Ridgeland, S. C. ROBERT REID HEOS North Augusta, S. C. JOSEPH LAWRENCE HERRIN Chicopee, Go. FIFTH ROW: WILLIAM WALLACE HODGE, JR Columbia, S. C. EVANS PARNELL HOLLAND Florence, S. C. RICHARD MARCUS HUFF, JR North Augusta, S. C. WILLIAM RALPH HUFF, JR Greenville, S. C. SIXTH ROW: BILLY HUBERT INMAN, JR Buffalo, S. C. FRANCIS PAUL INMAN Union, S. C. DAVID MEDLIN JARRETT Lincolnton, N. C. EVERETTE KEITH JOHNSON Spartanburg, S. C. H E F R E S H M E JV 65 FIRST ROW: FREDDIE DEAN JONES Pacolet, S. C. JOHN EARL JONES Greenville, S. C. THOMAS WHITE KEELS Sumter, S. C. ARCHIE LEWIS KEMMERLIN, JR St. Matthews, S. C. SECOND ROW: WAYNE MANLY KING St. George, S. C. WILLIAM WAYNE KIRKPATRICK .... Spartanburg, S. C. BEN LEWIS KOON Woodstock, Vo. DAVID LEROY LANE Bishopville, S. C. THIRD ROW: CHARLES STUART LANGLEY Atlanta, Ga. JULIUS RUTLEDGE LAWSON Sumter, S. C. WALTER NESBIT LAWSON Florence, S. C. BILLY LEE Timmonsville, S. C. FOURTH ROW: KENNETH CARROLL LEE Timmonsville, S. C. JAMES DANIEL LEWIS, JR Conway, S. C. THEODORE ALISON LIDE, JR Sumter, S. C. BELTON JAMES LITTLEFIELD Woodruff, S. C. F I P T H R 0 W : RICHARD HENRY LUKSTAT Clinton, S. C. LEON CRAIG McKENZIE Sportanburg, S. C. WILLIS EDWIN McMillan Lamar, S. C, JIMMY ALBERT MANERS Rock Hill, S. C. SIXTH ROW: DAVID MACY MARTIN Winter Haven, Flo. JAMES ELMORE MARTIN Laurens, S. C. KENNETH RONALD MARTIN Cheraw, S. C. BILLY HUGH MASON Jonesville, S. C. H E F R E S M E 66 FIRST ROW: MARTIN LEE MAYS Camden, S. C. WILLIAM PAUL MELTON Winnsboro, S. C. JAMES THOMAS MILLER, III Charleston, S. C. HENRY EDWARD MITCHELL, JR Spartanburg, S. C. SECOND ROW: CHARLES ASHLEIGH MOOD Sumter, S. C. JOE WHEELER MOONEYHAM Spartanburg, S. C. FREDERICK ARNOLD MOilEY Sandwich, Mass. BYRON SHAKESPEARE MO: RIS, JR. . . . Timmonsville, S. C. THIRD ROW: CHARLES WILBUR MORROW Union, S. C. WILLIAM BENJAMIN MOYER Spartanburg, S. C. LOUIS HARRY MUZEKARI . Greenville, S. C. DON ROGER NANNEY Chester, S. C. FOURTH ROW: CHARLES ARTHUR NEVES, JR Greer, S. C. JACOB PERRY O ' QUINN Bamberg, S. C. EDWARD POWELL OSTEEN Rockingham, N. C. HARVEY COGSWELL OWEN, IR St. Matthews, S. C. FIFTH R 0 W ■THOMAS DWIGHT PARROTT Greer, S. C. ROBERT LYNN PENNY Gibsonville, N. C. PAUL DEWITT PETTY Spartanburg, S. C. JAMES KEITH PHILLIPS Spartanburg, S. C. SIXTH ROW: DOUGLAS DRAYTON PITTS, JR Greer, S. C. CHALMERS WHITHART POSTON Columbia, S. C. CARL RHAME REASONOVER Camden, S. C. HENRY THOMPSON REEDER Whitmire, S. C. H E R E H M E N 67 FIRST ROW: BOBBY FRANKLIN ROBERSON Union, S. C. JACK A. RODDY, JR Spartanburg, S. C. JAMES LANHAM ROGERS, JR Spartonburg, S. C. THOMAS GLENN ROGERS Florence, S. C. SECOND ROW; JAMES NELSON ROUKOSKI Marietta, Go. GARLAND LUCIUS SARRATT, JR Blacksburg, S. C. RICHARD WAITE SCUDDER Charlottesville, Va, DONALD JACKIE SEXTON Atlanta, Ga. T H I R D R 0 W : ROBERT KEITH SHULER Easley, S. C. ERNEST EARL SLIGH Norway, S. C. MALCOLM WELLS SLINGERLAND . . . . Interlaken, N. Y. AUBREY EUGENE SMITH Honea Path, S. C. FOURTH ROW: HENRY WALTER SMITH, JR Darlington, S. C. JACK MONROE SMITH Florence, S. C. THADDEUS JACKSON SMITH Florence, S. C. WILLIAM DOUG SNIPES Columbus, Ga. FIFTH ROW: JAMES CROXTON SPEARMAN Cherow, S. C. BOBBY GENE STEPHENS Glendale, S. C. JAMES MARSHALL SWANSON, JR South Boston, Va. BEN MOORE TATUM McColl, S. C. SIXTH ROW: REX ADAMS TAYLOR Fountain Inn, S. C. CRAIG TEMPLETON Newburgh, N. Y. THOMAS HUGO TEZZA Spartanburg, S. C. LEON EDWIN THOMPSON Timmonsville, S. C. E R E H M E IV 68 I FIRST ROW: RICHARD ANDREW THORNTON Greenville, S. C. JOHN ROBERT THRAILKILL Columbia, S. C. CHARLES EDWARD TIMMONS Spartanburg, S. C. BOBBY MONTGOMERY TRAMMELL .... Greenville, S. C. SECOND ROW; HOYT DuPREE TURBEVILLE Gresham, S. C. BOBBY GENE WADDELL Greer, S. C. MILTON DALE WARNER Asheville, N. C. JOHN TRAVIS WATSON Granitevilie, S. C. THIRD ROW: ROBERT MALCOURT WATSON, JR Drayton, S. C. VICTOR LEE WEBER, JR Ponca City, Okla. DONALD F. WEST Pauline, S. C. GEORGE RAY WHITE, JR Titnmonsville, S. C. FOURTH ROW: THOMAS BYARS WILKES, JR Woodruff, S. C. JAKE WITSELL WILLIAMS Ruffin, S. C. DONALD LAWTON WOOD Spartanburg, S. C. RUSSELL PAUL WOOD Spartanburg, S. C. FIFTH ROW: VINCENT SMITH WRIGHT Chester, S. C. 69 Doc Hunter and some of his night schoolers. W O F F O R D NIGHT SCHOOL . . . CeHtemial pi-pject and it ' s back to school for some of the old folks. Dr. Ward and his evening scholars. The main building lights burned late into the night during this school term as Wofford inaugurated a new service to the folks in and around Spartanburg . . . night school. The program, designed for folks who work in the daytime, but who wish to further their education, proved to be quite beneficial both to the college and the community. Many of the regular Wofford faculty were called upon to instruct the evening division, with several outside instructors also partici- pating in the program. Dr. Gaines, Mr. Logan, Dean Covington, and other administrators were largely respon- sible for the success of the new program. Derrick is cautious, as beards will burn. Christopher proudly combs his beard. BEARD GROWING . . . 4 CentcHHial Ptpject It was Bill Kinney, Student Body President, who got things rolling as far as this Centennial project was concerned. The official word was all Wofford ' s usually clean shaven lads needed, and from here on out the hair began to sprout. Everyone entered into the contest (well, everybody but the house- mothers) and before long some students were well hidden behind dense beards, goatees, mustaches and what have you. When it was all over everyone had agreed that it was a good fun- filled idea, and several bearded men were still counting their prize money for having the most unusual and the most pr olific growths. Gill trims up a little Coker tidies up a little. Ward tries In the organizations which have lived and died on the Wof- ford campus is to be found much of the history of the college in ante bellum days. Following the War Between the States the only organizations of note on the campus were the old literary societies, now for some years extinct, which flourished at a very early date. It was these societies, steeped in the cultural traditions of what is today a lost era of American history, which provided the only stimulus to serious thought on a campus otherwise barren of extra-cur- ricular activities. The purpose of these societies, of which at one time there were as many as four, was to instill into a young man the ability to think and act upon his feet. The literary society in its heyday was a society of scholarship which special- ized in debating and oratory. Membership in this organizations was compulsory, while the ostentation and ornateness of the meeting rooms were beyond compare. These organizations ex- pressed vividly the Hfe and breadth of the campus, the Old Gold and Black, the Bohemian, and the Journal being published under their auspices. The Calhoun, Carlisle, and Preston were of all these societies the oldest, most active, and most enduring. They are adead now, the long forgotten by-product of another day, but their ghosts are still with us in the faded grandeur of their meeting rooms used today as classrooms. The portraits of the college ' s greats which once lined the wall of the Carlisle Society room in ornate splendor are now cast aside and forgotten refuse for rubbish heaps and abused by vandals. The old Preston So- ciety room where the last of the literary societies died is today the Student Christian Association ' s Tower Chapel. The precursor of this latter organization was the Y.M.C.A., for many years the leading spiritual force on the campus until the advent of the S.C.A. in the thirties. The meeting room of the former, once so alive with devotional activity, is now used as a classroom by the department of economics. Coinciding with the great literary society movement of the nineteenth century was another nationwide movement which swept over Wofford and many other American colleges. This was the emergence of the Greek letter social fraternity, destined to become a subject of heated controversy over the years. The first such organization on this campus was Delta Chapter of Kappa Alpha order founded by W. A. Rogers in 1867. Others followed rapidly— Chi Phi in 1869, Chi Psi in 1871, Sigma Alpha Epsilon in 1 88 5, Pi Kappa Alpha in 1891, and Kappa Sigma in 1894. During the latter decades of the century, fraternities flourished in close harmony and were in many respects better off than they are today. Storm clouds soon gathered on the horizon with the turn of the century as a great wave of anti- fraternity feeling swept the nation. An organization known as the Philanthropeans was organized on the Wofford campus. Their numbers were at first small and their influence negligible, but within only a few short years the membership of what was in fact a fraternity to combat fraternities began to number its adherents by the score, while the amount of influence it exerted was profound, both on the campus and with the administration. There was in these early years of the twentieth century great bitterness of feeling between fraternity men and those who were their vehement opponents. By June, 1903 matters had come to a head. A petition was presented to the Board of Trustees by the Philanthropeans asking that fraternities be barred from the campus. Both sides hired legal council who pleaded their case before the Board of Trustees. This latter body had in the mean- time, pending action on the case, ordered that no fraternal organization should be allowed to initiate new members unless the initiates had been on the campus at least a year. This meas- ure, however, proved totally inadequate and completely unsatis- factory. Mutual friction and bitterness finally reached a boiling point on the fateful day in 1906 when the independents and fraternity men fought a pitched battle with fists flying upon the old Church street railway bridge, then a wooden structure. The Board of Trustees, after a thorough investigation, ordered all fraternities off the campus and did not reinstate them un- til 1915. Honorary organizations had their field days in the twenties and thirties with the emergence of such societies as the Inter- national Relations Club, forerunner of Phi Beta Kappa; Sigma Upsilon, a literary fraternity, once very active on the campus; Beta Theta Chi, an honorary French fraternity, and others. Delta Phi Alpha, the German fraternity, was nurtured deep and well by the guiding hand of Dr. James Auburn Chiles, head of the department of foreign languages for many years. Many of these organizations were destined to fall victim to war, gen- eral apathy, and lack of interest. Many others, however, have survived to carry on the traditions of intellect, culture, and refinement which have laid the foundation stone and erected the imposing edifice of a century of progress. ORGA] IZATIO] S 77 H Bourne, W. R. Carlisle, H. B. Carlisle, R. M. Cauthen, C. E. Chreitzberg, A. M. Coates, K D. Covington, P. S. Gaines, F. P. Jr. 7957 Allen, R. L Collins, D. R. Cronford, W. R Hall, R. A., Jr. Holmes, G. T. Howell, B. Mackenzie, A. Padgett, M. Shingler, J. M., Taylor, E. K. Tillotson, J. H. Wholey, W. R. H. Jr. E T K A For over a century .ind .1 half, election to PHI BETA KAPPA has been a recognition of intellectual capacities well employed, especially in acquirini; an education in the liberal arts and sciences. ,1 PHI BETA KAPPA was founded on December 776, at the College of William and Mary in Williamsburg, ' ir- ginia. It was the first society to have a Greek letter name. From that small beginning in one of the cradles of the American nation and in its transplantation to another cradle of that nation, the colleges of New England, the society has spread out and covered the entire nation and become one of he most honored societies of the world. Over one himdrecH and fift) ' chapters arc now in existence. | ' 1 The Wofford Chapter of PHI BE FA KAPPA, Beta of .South Carolina, was chartered in [.inuai ' y ot 1941. I hfc charterjj a5, granted to the holders of the PHI BE FA KAPpA key who were officialU ' connected with Wofford C ollege a|: that time. It is one of the two chapters in South (Carolina! During the past accade, the local chapter has held firml| ' to the high ideals and purposes for which PHI BI-.TA KAPP 1 was fotinded. | MEMBERS 19 5 2 -19 5 3 Greene, W. K. Herbert, W. C. Hunter, W. B. Jones, L Logan, S. f. ' Nesbitt, C. F, Norton, C. C. Patterson, R. A. Covin, W. P., Scc.-Tr R S N COURSE 7952 Berckman, E. M. Eoddy, A. E, Myers, C. R. Piftman, R. C. Webb, C. M. Womble, E. W. A Pettis, C S. Pugh, W. L. Salmon, J. L. Smith, J. 0. Stewart, J. T. Trawick, A. M. Waller, C. B. Wingfield, Mrs. R. C. Worley, J. S. (953 Corroll, J. B., Jr. Gulledge, J. D., Jr. Izzi, T., Jr. Bryant, R. M. Cottingham, J. B., Jr. Cannon, W. S., Ill Floyd, W. H. Jr. Fulmer, J. S. Johnson, C. B., Jr. Hottel, J. V. 1954 Lawson, E. H. McElwee, J. M. May, J. G. May, W. G Noland, A. T. Alumni Allen, C. L. 79 LeGRAND ROUSE BOB GRIFFITH PETE JOHNSON GAYLORD MAY WHO ' S WHO IN AMERICAN COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES Recognition in Who ' s Who Among Students in American Universities and Colleges announces that a student has been both officially recommended by a faculty committee and accepted by the national organization. Each year at Wofford this honor is given to a number of men who have proven their interest and allegiance to their college, maintained a good scholastic rating, and have participated in a number of the campus ' s organi- zations and activities. The eight seniors selected this year can be justly proud of this means of compensation for their outstanding effort and achievement. GRAHAM MAY NEIL BONDS BOB BROWN BILL KINNEY L B r E K E Seated, left to right; Bill Kinney, Bill Reid, Jackie Meadors, Pete Johnson, Goylord May. Standing; Graham May, Tommy Griggs, Joe McElwee, LeGrand Rouse, Harry Gall, Charlie Barrett, Jimmy Barrett, Bob Griffith. Blue Key had its beginning in 1924 at the University of Florida. As an honor society dedicated to service, its appeal to men in other colleges became widespread almost immediately and in 192 5 Blue Key began its phenomenal growth. Today there are ninety-two chapters in the United States. The earliest recognition of the Wofford chapter of Blue Key which can be found is in the 1927 Bohemian. Therefore it is presumed to have been founded in that year or the preceding one. Membership in Blue Key is considered one of the highest honors which can be attained at Wofford. Members are elected from the junior and senior classes on the basis of their scholarship, character, individual accomplishments, and leadership abilities. PETE JOHNSON President 81 GAYLORD MAY BILL KINNEY I SENIOR ORD£ The Senior Order of Gnomes was founded at Wofford College in the year 1915. The purpose of this organization shall be to gather together the most prominent and influential members of the Senior class . . . Each year four new men are chosen by the four graduating members to take their place in this honor fraternity. A high- R OF GI OMES light of class day exercises is the formal induction o ' the new members into the organization. These men have just cause for being proud. Through con- secration to duties they have attained one of the highest honors at Wofford College. H £ K U B The Preachers ' Kids is the most recently formed club on the campus. The organization was formed at the end of second semes- ter last year with a banquet at Gowan ' s Cafeteria. The P.K. ' s are banded together for both service and social activities. The club is one of the most exclusive on the Wofford campus in that the students must be ministers ' sons to be eligible for membership. Although the P.K. Club is newly organized, its members feel sure that it will, in the near future, take its place among the leading organizations on the campus. BILL PENNY President Standing: Bill Pope. Seated, left to right, first row: Melvin Medlock, Bill Bass, Sammy Glenn, Bill Penny. Second row: Travis Medlock, Jack Sullivan, George Duffie, Dove Martin, Dwight Porrott, Bob Clyburn, Danny Smith, Thomas Wilkes, Bob Penny, Charles Bouknight . Left to right: Donnie Fowler, Bob Burnett, Bob Griffith, Bill Kinney, Jock Dunlop, Joe McElwee, Steve Goudelock, Jesse Cooksey. THE STUDEXT COUNCIL Through the years, the Wofford Student Council has steadily grown in popularity. The council has continually strived to promote a more pleasant relationship between the students and faculty, and at the same time has helped create a cooperative spirit between Wofford and the neigh- boring colleges and universities. During this, Wofford ' s Centennial Year, the council has been especially active in promoting such projects as the Homecoming Dance, the Founder ' s Day Activities, the Centennial Dance, and the Centennial Parade. This year ' s council has also initiated such projects as the new Freshman Control Board and the addition of Converse cheerleaders to the regular team. Earlier this spring, the Wofford Student Council played host to the annual convention of the Student Government Association of South Carolina. Our busy leaders 84 Late ill April of 1 9 5 3, President Bill Kinney and his council were elected. Serving with Kinney on the Cen- tennial Council are Steve Goudelock, Vice-President; Jack Dunlap, Secretary; Jesse Cooksey, Treasurer; Bob Griffith, President of the Senior Class; Joe McElwee, President of the Junior Class; Bob Burnett, I ' resident of the Sophomore Class; and Donnie Fowler, President of the Freshman Class. BILL KINNEY President JACK DUNLAP Secretary Left to right, seated: Professor Doby, John Younginer, Harry Gall, Tommy Griggs, Earl Lawson. Standing: Sidney Epperson, Roy Carpenter, Jack Sullivan. PI tiAMMA Mil HARRY GALL President The Wofford College chapter of Pi Gamma Mu was founded November 1, 1939. The standards of the lo cal group are high and membership is considered one of the highest honors that can be bestowed upon a social science student. Under the terms of its charter. Pi Gamma Mu has undertaken the task of encouraging the study of the social sciences among graduate and undergraduate students throughout the world. The purpose of this organization is the inculcation of the ideals of scholarship in the study of all social problems. Pi Gamma Mu was organized not to oppose or advocate any particular social movement. It aims, rather, to instill in the mind of the individual a scientific attitude toward all social questions. The motto of the society is that famous epigram of the Master Teacher, Ye Slnill Know Ihc Tnilh, and the Truth Shall Make You Free. 86 Left to right: Gaylord May, Professor Bourne, Graham May, Bill Kinney. Left to right: Dr. Adams, Aubrey Noland, Professor Salmon, Jim Lowry. Delta Phi Alpha, national honorary German fraternity, was founded at Wofford College. The Alpha chapter was formed in 1929 by Dr. James A. Chiles. Each year new members are chosen from the second year German class. These men must have attained a certain scholastic record and must have shown an interest in the life and traditions of the German people. • This year ' s officers are: Aubrey Noland, president; Graham May, vice-president; and Gaylord May, secretary-treasurer. Professor Raymond Bourne and Professor John Salmon are the faculty advisors. DELTA PHI ALPHA ♦ SIGMA DELTA PI The Gamma Xi chapter of Sigma Delta Pi, national honorary Spanish fraternity, was estab- lished on the Wofford campus in 19 5 2. Tenta- tive members must be in a third year Spanish class and possess an overall college average of B. The purpose of the fraternity is to promote the study of the Spanish language and the cus- toms of Spanish people. In keeping with this purpose the fraternity has sponsored several Spanish dialogue movies, which have been shown to students of all the local colleges. AUBREY NOLAND President Delta Phi Alpha AUBREY NOLAND President Sigma Delta Pi 87 THE BLOCK '  W ' ' CLUB The BLOCK W CLUB is composed of those men who have earned a letter by participation in one or more of the major sports. Membership in the ckib is a definite honor and one of which the student may be justly proud. The college year of 1 9 5 3-54 finds the Block W Club maintaining its place as one of the top organizations on campus. The club sponsors various programs and projects, the proceeds of which are invested to further the ath- letic program of the college. The group operated parking lots and sold cushions at all home football games this year. The proceeds of this project were used to buy athletic equipment for Ed Berckman, former Wofford student, and now a missionary of the Methodist Church in Licknow, India. The Old Gold and Black intra-squad football game, which is sponsored by the club, and the annual initiation are highlights of the club ' s activities. CHARLIE BRYANT President Left to right, first row: Charlie Jones, Charlie Bryant, Jimmy Brock. Second row: Bill Small, Bill Pope, Bob McCully. Third row; Bill Kelly, Bob Fraley, Fronk Rhodes, Jimmy Lowry. Fourth row; Poul Cope, Jesse Cooksey, Sammy Maw, Walt Sessoms, Allen Hoffmeyer. Fifth row; Rex Guthrie, Joe Hazle, Jerry Beasley, Dove Gravely, Russell King, Jomes Ditty. Sixth row: Jack Abell, Tommy Mclntyre, Don Reeder, George Lawrence, Lee Ford, Alfred McGinnis, Joe Price, Theron Few. 88 THE DEBATE TEAM ■- ,. flu H PPII ' ||| m , - ' ' 9 . , ' Resolved: that the U.S. should adopt a policy of Free Trade. With world trade very much in the headlines it was only fitting that the Wofford Debate Team should have devoted the year to a detailed study of the question. Wofford ' s young orators uncier the able direction of Coach George Adams, got an early start with the state warm-up tourna- ment at the University of South Carolina in November. Later the group took in its stride the Southern Annual Tournament at Wash- ington and Lee and a number of local contests. This year ' s team was captained by Talmadge Biggerstaff, one of the group ' s veterans. Debating is one of the oldest extra-curricular activities at Wofford. Originally debating was sponsored by the literary so- cieties, but in recent years the debating team has formed a separate organization. TALMADGE BIGGERSTAFF Manager 89 r Left to right first row: Floyd Goodwin, Mock Poole, Julian Foster, English Peorcy. Second row: Bob Loryea, Thomas Garrett, Freddie Jones, Julian Pruitt. Third row: Cecil Lonford, Arthur Cortrette, Bobby Fripp, Edwin McGee. Fourth row: Professor Potterson, Dr. Covin, Professor Loftin. AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY CECIL LANFORD Chairman MORE MEMBERS OF A.C.S. Left to right, first row: Jim Barrett, Laurie Ervin, Bobby Stevens, John Ward. Second row: LeRoy Pike, Keith Johnson, Deryle Chavis, Harold Chavis. The Student Affiliate Chapter of the American Chemical Society was granted a charter at Wofford College in the year 1949. Since that time, under the watchful eyes of the faculty advisor. Dr. J. C. Loftin, and the other members of the chemistry department, it has grown to be a leading organization on our campus. Although the society is not one of long history, its short past has been a glorious one. The Chemical Society is typical of the many pro- fessional groups that have adorned our campus since 18 54. This year, under the direction of Dr. Loftin, faculty advisor; Cecil Lanford, Chairman; Jim Barrett, Vice-Chairman; and Julian C. Pruitt, Secretary-Treasurer, the society has done much to encourage work among students majoring in chemistry and related fields. 90 Seated, left to right, first row: Gus Papadopoulos, Cecil Lanford, Professor Foreman. Second row: Bill Kinney, Edwin McGee, Mock Poole, Som Porler. Third row: Stewart Prince, Fred Jones, Freeman Parker, Doug Forbis. Fourth row: Charlie Smith, Jimmy Barrett, Bobby Loryeo, Ted Roper. Fifth row: Clyde Hamilton, James Wiggins, Jack Hawkins, George Meares. Sixth row: Dave Martin, Leslie Howard, Charlie Bauk- night. Standing: Harold Chavis, Jock Dunlop, George Campbell, and Ed Hensley. PRE MED SOCIETY The Pre-Medlcal Society of Wofford College was founded in 1946 by a group of particularly interested pre-med students who felt the need of a better understanding of the practice of medicine to further their interest in the profession. Through varied programs and lectures, both on and off the campus, the members of the society became familiar with many phases of the medical profession. Membership in the society is limited to juniors and seniors with a creditable academic standing. Freshmen and sophomores are , admitted as associate members. CONSTANTINOS N. PAPADOPOULOS President Pre-Med Homecoming Float. 91 CABINET MEMBERS Seated left to right: Bill Kinney, Bob BurncU, Bob Griffith, Wade Herring, Toby Davis, Chorlie Barrett, Dick Wallace. Standing: Jim Barrett, Bill Reid, Wallace Gulp, LeGrand Rouse, Joe McElwee, Dr. Allen. S.C.A. Prexy Brown and Treosurer Meadors dis- cuss program plans. Jackie Meadors and Bob Brown. THE S . C . A . For the Wofford College Student Christian Association, the Centennial has been a year of hard work. Under the leadership of President Bob Brown and Advisor Dr. Ray Allen, the group success- fully carried out a number of worthwhile projects. Wofford Deputation Teams were sent all over the state, the Gas Bottom Project was increased in scope, Centennial Religious Emphasis Week was successfully completed, prayer groups were organized in the dormitories, and the active membership in the association here on campus was increased. On an overall basis, the work of this year ' s S.C.A. was both profitable and enjoyable as the group worked to maintam the stand- ards of service, love, and fellowship that have made it a Wofford tradition. Seated, left to right: Pete Johnson, Bob Brown, Dale Carnes. Standing: Bob Loryea, Jackie Meadors, Bobby Capes. President Brown gets together with some of his cabinet. 92 Left to right, first row: Elton Hendrix, Wallace Culp, Bill Vines, Tommy Gibbons, Mickey Fisher, Richard Howie, Bill Seifert. Second row Cecil Camlin, Stewart Langley, Bobby Woddell, James Gilliam, Ed Osteen, Leon Thompson, Richard Thornton, Fred Morey, Bobby Clyburn. Third row: John Snyder, Dwight Parrott, Allen Hoffmeyer, Tommy Rogers, Lewis Wells, Wade Herring, Paul Anderson. Fourth row: Richard Blocker, Melvin Mcintosh, Murray Gibbons, L. H. Buff, Tolmadge Skinner, Jimmy Stewart, Oscar Smith. Fifth row: Jim Jones, III, Jackie Meador ' s, Sammy Coker, John Watson, Ben Steele, Bob Goldston, Frank Manning, Bill Reid. THE MIXISTEHIAL UNION The Wofford Ministerial Union is organized for the purpose of acquainting pre-ministerial students with their chosen profession. Not only does the union work to prepare its members for the Christian ministry, but it also helps the students to know one another better. Throughout the year, members of the union work together on worth- while Christian projects on and off the campus. During this Centennial year, the members of the union have laid particular stress on worthwhile community projects. Outstanding among these is the fellowship project that has been carried on at the Old People ' s Home in Spartanburg. Another highlight of the year has been the group ' s work during Wofford ' s Centennial Religious Emphasis Week. Tommy Gibbons has served very ably as president of the union. TOMMY GIBBONS President 93 Seated, left to right, first row: Robert Wilburn, Jo Ann Bishop, Joyce Cothran, Eldred Toole, Ronnie Neol, Dale Carnes, Mrs. Helen Davis. Second row: Darrel Chavis, John Jones, Helen Dickson, Patsy Vaughn, Elizabeth Ruff, Jean Moore, Lucy Kate Eppley. Third row: Wruble Emory, Keith Parris, Mary Floyd, Ronald Terrell, Foye Murphy, Howa rd Anthony, Dot Cothran. Fourth row: LeRoy Pike, Tommy Patrick, Roscoe Hill, Beverly West, Percy Holder, Sybil Flynn, Orena Gregg. Fifth row: Viola Dover, Brock Roper, Mary Alice Brown, Wilhelmina Fowler, Maureen Craig, Lawrence Childs, Terry Liston. Sixth row: Ann Cothran, Dee James, Joe Mitchell, Donna West, Irene Rice, Paul Kent. Standing, left to right: Jimmy Moseley, Carl Edwards, Don West, Tub Smith, Sammy Rollins, Claude Adams, Don Fowler, Freddie Jones, Clyde Graham, Jackie Sexton, Pete Johnson. DALE CARNES President The Baptist Student Union links Wof ford ' s Baptist students w ith the local Baptist churches. B.S.U. ' s work is directed by an organized council of students who meet weekly to plan activities. A devotional meeting is held each Thursday during the chapel period. This assembly is presided over by student or visiting speakers. The group observes special weeks of emphasis (such as Evangelistic Em- phasis Week and Vocational Emphasis Week) throughout the year. Parties and social get-togethers with other college students of the city are other features of B.S.U. ' s varied program. Dale Carnes is president of the Baptist Student Union for 195 3-1954. BAPTIST STTDEIVT IJIVIOIV 94 THE PUBLICATIONS O A R D The Centennial Publications Board, confronted with the usual problems of the OLD GOLD AND BLACK, BO- HEMIAN, and JOURNAL, has once again rendered an in- valuable service to the school. In particular, the board is to be praised for its fine work in governing the finances of this year ' s BOHEMIAN. As is constitutionally required, the board is composed of four faculty members and five students (which are elected through student body voting procedures). The board is di- vided into four committees: the BOHEMIAN committee, the OLD GOLD AND BLACK committee, the JOURNAL committee, and the Ways and Means committee. DR. G. C. S. ADAMS Secretary 95 Left to right, first row: Tommy Keels, Fred Morey, Lee Mays, Charlie Bates, Arthur Cortrette, Sonny Clardy, Stewart Langley, Ditty Carlson, Tommy Miller, Reggie Thackston, Bill Seifert. Second row: Marvin DuBose, Al Wilson, Jack Foster, Clyde Aiken, Bob Goldston, Morgan Guilford, Pot DuBose, Tolmodge Skinner, Bill Moyer, Wallace Culp, LeGrond Rouse. Third row: Earl Hudgens, Charlie Coker, L. H. Buff, Jimmy Bailey, DuRont Brown, Fred Jones, Mac Styles, Charles Neves, Jimmy Green, Carl Edwards. Fourth row: Prof. Moyer, Roger Marshall, Robert Watson, Lewis Wells, Dwight Porrott, John Jones, Bob Clyburn, James Gilliam, Ted Lide, Jimmy Grimes, Laurie Ervin. Fifth row: Joel Hand, Jim Lineberger, Bob Loryeo, Jim Swanson, Jack Ellison, Leon Alford, Bill Wollace, Harley Christopher. JOEL HAND Percussionist CHARLES COKER Accompanist Tennessee Dewdrops. THE GLEE CLUB During this Centennial Year, the Wofford College Glee Club has succeeded in capturing the hearts and applause of a record number of audiences. Having sung before more than 30,000 people, the club ended its season with the annual home concert here at the Memorial Auditorium. Moyer ' s men have combined sacred and secular music to give a program to please everyone. As usual, the ten-day tour of the lower state was the highlight of the year for the Golden Club. Accompanied by Charles Coker, the club took the Tennessee Dewdrops along again this year wherever they went. The act added much to the enjoyment and variety of the program. This, Wofford ' s Centennial Year, is also the Golden Anni- versary of the Glee Club. Eighty men strong, the club made this a year to remember. PROFESSOR SAM MOYER Director 98 Kneeling, left to right: Betty Jo Burdette, Peggy George, Ann Cannon, Nancy Jenkins, Shirley Hayes, Shelby Wright. Standing, first row: Mr. Smithyman, Elton Hendrix, Ronnie Neol, Sammy Atkinson, Don Harmon, Kendall Belcher, Mills Black, Bobby Fripp, Cecil Lanford, Charles Timmons, Morgan Guilford. Second row: Jimmy Grimes, Pat DuBose, Floyd Goodwin, Archie Bigelow, Bill Kirkpotrick, Lee Mayes. Third row; Tommy Garrett, Bobby Loryeo, Carl Reasonover, Butch Trent, Bill Patterson, Robert Wilburn, Paul Wood. Fourth row: Donald Wood, Julian Pruitt, Ben Moore Tatum, Billy Galloway. Fifth row: Jock Hambrick, James Johnson, English Peorcy. THE BAND The Wofford College Band entered right into the swing of Cen- tennial happenings, maintaining the fine spirit of Wofford musicians of all ages. Whether at Terrier football games, pep rallies, or parades, the colorful bandmen always were a welcome addition to the occasion. This year found Mr. Harold Smithyman taking over the band- leading duties at Wofford and a fine job he did with the student music makers. A truly integral part of the school ' s extracurricular activities, the band is composed of students proficient in the use of musical instruments, and members are granted scholarships for participation. HAROLD S. SMITHYMAN Director THE CE] TEX] IAL LeGRAND A. ROUSE, II Editor-in-Chief The long parade of Wofford yearbooks has at its head the AURORA, which was pubhshed in 1904 during this school ' s sesqui- centennial year. This book was, in addition to an annual, an analogy of the best articles from THE JOURNAL and the school news- paper. A few years later, the BOHEMIAN appeared and the year- book lost its literary nature. The 19 54 BOHEMIAN has as its theme Wof ford ' s centennial year. It is larger and encompasses a wider field of endeavor than any annual published at Wofford to date. This Centennial Edition represents many hours of hard and tedious work by Editor LeGrand Rouse and his staff. HARRY GALL Centennial Editor JOHN SNYDER Associate Editor WADE BURLEY and DAVID JARRETT Art Staff TOMMY GRIGGS Business Manager 100 BOHEMIAN TOM SUMMERS, CHARLIE BATES, and SONNY SMITH Sports Staff TOBY DAVIS and MACK POOLE Business Assistants CECIL CAMLIN and BILL KINNEY Proofreaders WADE HERRING, CHARLES NEVES, and EDWIN McGEE Editorial Assistants HAROLD CHAVIS, SAM MURRELL, and WALLACE CULP Copy Staff Standing- CECIL LANFORD, ROBERT JENNINGS. Seated: GRAHAM MAY, DICK WALLACE, GAYLORD MAY. Organizations Staff 101 NEIL BONDS Editor-in-Chief ROBERT GRIFFITH Business Manager THE JOURNAL TOMMY LYNN Associate Editor 102 Standing: LeGRAND ROUSE, RICHARD HOWLE, DANNY SMITH, BOB BURNETT, CHARLIE FURR. Kneeling: BOB PENNY. Editorial Staff The first volume of our Literary Magazine made its appearance in January, 18 89, under the editorship of E. D. Smith. Through its many years of appearance, it has strived only to encourage literary achievements among Wof- ford men . The Journal has made no bids for fame, although many of its contributors have become leaders in every field of life. Since its first printing, the Journal has doubled its size and has changed its style several times. JUNIOR SPIVEY, CHARLIE COKER Typists CECIL LANFORD, HARRY GALL, BILL TUCKER, HAROLD CHAVIS. Copy Staff 103 CHARLIE BARRETT Editor-in-Chief 1st Semester DICK WALLACE Editor-in-Chief 2nd Semester BOB BURNETT Managing Editor OLD GOLD AND LACK The OLD GOLD AND BLACK, Wofford ' s weekly newspaper, has, since its inception in 1915, become prac- tically an institution on the Wofford campus. And, in the process of becoming an institution, it has on several occasions very nearly succeeded in making its editors fair game for an institution. This year was no exception. Indeed, since it was Wof- ford ' s Centennial year, it presented man - problems of its own other than the traditional problems which confront a college newspaper. For instance, the problem of suf- ficient coverage of Centennial activities arose to plague editors already beset by traditional headaches like earl ' deadlines and readability; historical events with some bear- ing on the year ' s significance had to be ferreted out of the school ' s archives and given pla ' alongside the usual dry news which is so hard to make readable; and to top it all off, a special Centennial issue had to be produced m conjunction with the hundredth ear celebration in the spring. BOB PENNY and WALLACE CULP Reporters TOBY DAVIS GLEN ASKINS Feature Editor In spite of these factors, however, Room 118 Greene (the ivory tower in which the O.G. B. was born each Monday night) was by no means the hangout of gloom. Indeed, even Editors Barrett and Wallace were wiUing to concede ere the year was over that the production of the weekly astonisher was in some ways an enjoyable task. It almost got to the place where the horseplay of news staff heads Burnett and Askins at two o ' clock in the morning was amusing, and the art of bluffing Tuesday morning professors, once mastered, was invaluable, as well as entertaining. Wallace ' s and Barrett ' s task was made much easier by the work of a dependable news and feature staff, headed by Burnett, Askins, Davis and Thackston. Sportsmen Thompson, Osteen, and Summers also proved their mettle week after week. In volume one, Number one, of the O.G. B., produced in 1915, a salutatory editorial contains these words: Our aim is to portray life on the campus as shown by the students ' activities in all phases of work. Our real object is to promote a movement for a greater Wofford. No better summation could be made of the purpose and goals of volume 3 8 of the same newspaper. LEON THOMPSON, TOM SUMMERS, SONNY CLARDY, ED OSTEEN Sports Staff SONNY SMITH, JIM BARRETT, BILL KINNEY, REGGIE THACKSTON. Columnists GRAHAM MAY Captain Left to right, first row; Bobby Griffith, Bill Kelly, Steve Goudelock, Graham May, Harley Christopher, Pete Johnson, Tommy Griggs. Second row: Gaylord May, Pete Altman, James Hill, Jesse Cooksey, Alfred McGinnis, Harold Auman, Bill Small, Dave Walker. Third row: Charlie Bryant, Mac Conaday, Bill Pope, George Perrow, Kay Patton, Leroy Parris, Ronald Bridges. Scabbard and Blade is a national military honor society with chapters, called companies, located in eighty-nine leading colleges and universities which have Reserve Officer Training Programs. The first chapter was organized in 1904-0 5 at the University of Wis- consin. Wofford ' s chapter, M Co. of the 6th Regiment, was chartered in 1920. Merit is the sole basis of membership in Scabbard and Blade. The cadet elected must be an officer and a gentleman possessing the qualities of leadership, patriotism, and honor. Under the direction of Captain Graham May, M Co. sponsored the successful Militar ' Ball, along with two initiation periods and numerous other activities. ABBARD ANB BLABE 106 Seated, left to right: John Stevenson, Charlie Bauknight, Ben Weaver, Bill Boss, Sammy Glenn, and Horvey Adams. Standing: Leo CoDper and Lewis Wells. THE SPANISH CLUB Membership into this club is open to any student at Wofford who has a sincere interest in the language, customs and traditions of the Spanish- speaking peoples. This year, under the capable direction of Dr. G. C. S. Adams, faculty advisor, and Ben Weaver, president, the members of El Circulo Espanol have enjoyed the benefits of numerous Spanish movies, a variety of social events held in conjunction with the Converse Spanish Club, as well as the interesting informal discussions which are so effective in promoting an understanding of the Spanish people. BEN WEAVER President 107 Ofietathn CpfHetMoHe . . . Under the supervision of Mr. J. R. Curry, Superintendent of Building and Grounds, work- men cut into the stone in search of the enclosed lead box. There it is! Wofford students gather around the long lost cornerstone. The search is over. Experts in many fields held many theories on the location of Wofford ' s missing corner- stone, that supposedly contained a metal box, filled with relics from the past; Ben Wof ford ' s Bible, old copies of the S. C. Methodist Advo- cate, etc. But no one living person could seem to locate the prize stone. It remained for an alert freshman to turn up information on the whereabouts of the stone, and then Operation Cornerstone began. L Dr. Charles Couthen, Choirmon of the Centennial Committee looks over the situation. 108 The crowd gathers around as workmen remove the lead box. Mr. Curry turns the long looked- for container over to Dr. Gaines. Dean Covington, with students in pursuit and box in hand, marches to the library where he appeases the masses, telling them the box will be opened very soon. Later, ot a secret meeting of the powers that be, the big moment takes place. The disappointed looks offer proof that the materials found inside the container were water-soaked and decayed beyond recognition. HOME OF THE FRATERNITIES. ii e Mtk the taU Wofford College can be proud of the seven social fraternities that have chapters located on her campus. The strong Greeks have for many years contributed much to the social life of the entire student body while at the same time they have been the driving force behind many worthwhile service projects. Throughout the year, Wofford fraternity men have enjoyed a whirl of parties, dances, banquets, and have vigorously partici- pated in an mtramural sports program which is largely composed of fraternity athletic teams. The various fraternities have cooperated continually with school officials and lia c banded together to support campus pa- rades, parties and other activities. Largely responsible for the notable heights attained by these groups is the Inter-l raternit) ' Council, made up of representatives from all sesen fraternities. A fraternil-y man ... a girl ... a big weekend. INTER-FRATERNITY COCA CI I.F.C. member Murrell enjoys Homecoming Ball. Representatives of the seven social fraternities here at Wof- ford form the governing body for the Greek-letter men — the Inter- Fraternity Council. This year the I.F.C. was under the guidance of Bill Reid of Kappa Alpha. He was aided by Charlie Purr of Delta Sigma Phi, who served as Vice-President, and Robert Jennings of Kappa Alpha, who fulfilled the duties of Secretary. The council was faced with some rather difficult fraternity problems this year, but by consistent hard work was able to take each matter in its stride. This year ' s I.F.C. scholarship trophy was captured by Kappa Sigma with better than a 1.2 grade point ratio. Highlight of the I.F.C. ' s work this year was the very success- ful Centennial Homecoming Ball. Right to left: George Altman, Bill Covington, Steve Goudelock, Robert Jennings, Neil Bonds, Bill Reid, Jock Meadors, Allen Hoffmeyer, Sam Murrell. Pretty girls . . . Sweet music . . . I.F.C. Donee. FIRST SEMESTER MEMBERS OF I.F.C. BILL COVINGTON Alpha Sigma Phi STEVE GOUDELOCK Delta Sigma Phi JACKIE MEADORS Kappa Alpha GEORGE ALT.MAN Kappa Sigma NEIL BONDS Pi Kappa Alpha SAM MURRELL Pi Kappa Phi Dick Levin and his boys in the swing of things at the Centennioi Homecoming Boll. 117 Lett to tight, first row; Jesse Cooksey, Monroe Foster, Bill Covington, Theron Few, David Grovely. Second row: Joe Brown, Ted Roper, Cobb Bell, Ansel McMakin. Third row: Ed Bowen, Percy Holder, Curtis Hipp, Brock Roper. Fourth row: Reed Swonn, Paul Black, Curtis Bell, Don Reeder. Fifth row: Jack Hothersall, James Golden, James Maxwell, Terry Eorle. 118 mam ALPHA SIGMA PHI SECOND SEMESTER OFFICERS Left to right, seated: Monroe Foster, Correspondent; Jesse Cooksey, President; Percy Holder, Marshal. Standing; Ansel McMakin, Secretary; Cobb Bell, Treosurer. Cobb Bell Joe Brown Jesse Cooksey Bill Covington Theron Few BROTHERS Curtis Bell Paul Black Bill Costas James Golden James Maxwell Monroe Foster David Gravely Percy Holder Ansel McMakin Ted Roper PLEDGES Jack Hothersall Don Reeder Brock Roper Reed Swann Benny Koon James Williams For the Beta Phi chapter of Alpha Sigma Phi this has been a big year of social activity. During both first and second semesters the fraternity had a number of Stag and Drag parties. The fraternity was proud of the honor bestowed upon Brother Cobb Bell, whose girl, Miss Ruth Oliver, was chosen Centennial Homecoming Queen. The Alpha Sigs were also pleased that Student Body Treasurer Jess Cook- sey ' s entry. Miss Bess Macombson, was one of the finalists. Throughout the year, the fraternity was glad to receive many of their alumni at the home of chapters advisors, Mr. and Mrs. Salmon. The Big Event for the year was, as always, the Talis- man Ball which climaxed a successful nine months for the Wofford Alpha Sigs. FIRST SEMESTER OFFICERS Meeting time Left to right, tjrst row; Bill Kelly, Steve Goudelock, Joe McElwee, Pete Johnson. Second row: Walter Sessoms, Wade Herring, Charles Davis, Jack Dunlap. Third row; Ben George, Bill Patterson, Jimmy Barrett, English Pearcy. Fourth row; John Adair, Jerry Beasley, Jimmy Moseley, Nelson Carmichael. Fifth row; Billy Hoynesworth, Bob Brown, Ansel Owens, Dave Walker. Sixth row: Bobby Loryea, Rick Dowdeswell, Harlan Burton, Charlie Furr. 120 DELTA SIGMA PHI SECOND SEMESTER OFFICERS Left to right, seated: Walt Sessoms, Secretary; Steve Goudelock, Vice-President; Joe McElwee, President; Bill Kelly, Treasurer. Standing; Charlie Furr, Alumni Secretary; Pete Johnson, Sergeant-at-Arms; Wade Herring, Editor-Historian. BROTHERS Bob Brown Harlan Burton Charlie Furr Steve Goudelock Wade Herring Pete Johnson Bill Kelly Joe McElwee James Stewart Jack Dunlap Larry Groce Bill Hilton Bill Patterson English Pearcy Bobby Loryea Rick Dowdeswell Benny George John Adair Nelson Carmichael Ansel Owens Walt Sessoms David Walker Charlie Davis James Barrett PLEDGES Jerry Beasley Bill Haynesworth Jim Mosley The Delta Sigma Phi fraternity was founded on the tenth day of December, 1899. The fraternity had its beginning in New York City, with the organization being a mvitual and cooperative movement of a body of regular students of the college of New York, Columbia University, and New York University. The mother chapter, Alpha, was in and of the College of the City of New York. Psi chapter was founded at Wofford in 1916. It has been active since that time except for a couple of years during the last World War. Psi chapter has always since its installation, held a prominent spot on the Wofford campus. Her members occupy positions of prestige and responsibility, and they firmly believe in the virtues of service mingled with jolly fellowship. Under the leader- ship of Joe McElwee, president, Psi chapter began a most successful year. Activities were very numerous. Following the procedure initiated year before last, the Delta Sigs en- joyed a steak and mush dinner for the purpose of im- proving scholarship. The chapter carried out several worthy projects during this year, contributing to a needy family ' s welfare at Christmas and making large donations to the March of Dimes. The brothers also were able to organize an active alumni chapter and threw quite a few memorable parties. Then there was the Sailor ' s Ball . . . and what a success it was. One of the big Delta Sigs. The weekly meet. Lett to right, tirst row; Bob Burnett, Jackie Meadors, Bob Griffith, Bill Reid. Second row: Tom Brogdon, Jimmy Lowry, William Anderson, Jeter Hammond. Third row; Bill Penny, Robert Jennings, Tom Summers, Freeman Parker. Fourth row; Phil Gibson, Bill Bass, Terry Listen, Frank Goodale. Fifth row; Johnny Shumote, Henry Bynum, Ray Euba nks, Johnny Brown. Sixth row; Hugh Thompson, Dennis Mathis, Bur- rell Taylor. 122 KAPPA ALPHA SECOND SEMESTER OFFICERS WBBk Left to right, seated: Bob Burnett, IV; Jock Meadors, I; Bill Reid, II; Bob Griffith, III. Standing; Henry Bynum, VI; Tub Anderson, VII; Hugh Thompson, V; Frank Goodale, IX. BROTHERS Tub Anderson Charles Barrett Thomas Brogdon Bob Burnett Henry Bynum Frank Goodale Robert Griffith Robert Jennings Jim Lowry Jack Meadors Freeman Parker Bill Penny Bill Phi llips Bill Reid Tom Summers Burrell Taylor Hugh Thompson PLEDGES Bill Bass Tommy Bonday Johnny Brown Cecil Camlin Ray Eubanks Jeter Hammond Terry Liston Dennis Mathis Lewis Porter Johnny Shumate Phil Gibson The history of Delta chapter of the Kappa Alpha Order is long and illustrious. Delta is the third oldest chapter of the Order, having been founded on the Wofford cam- pus in 1869. It is preceded in age only by the original chapter at Washington and Lee and the chapter at the University of Georgia. Kappa Alpha is the oldest social fraternity on the campus and has consistently been high among the fraternities in scholastic, religious, and athletic activities from the first difficult year until the present. Our heritage is one which causes us to keep the welfare and betterment of our fraternity always foremost in our thoughts and actions. To bring harm or dishonor to Kappa Alpha would be to bring shame to the greatest of Ameri- cans, Robert E. Lee, and the greatest of American insti- tutions, Southern chivalry. Among our social functions are the Farmer ' s Ball, always a gala occasion; the Old South Ball, a state- wicfe affair honoring the Confederacy and her gallant heroes who laid down their lives for the great Southern cause; and the Robert E. Lee Banquet, held traditionally on the birthday of the great general and wonderful gentleman who is the spiritual founder of the Order. K.A. ' s of 1904. Those little get togethers. Left to right, first row; Bobby Dovison, Dick Rogers, Tommy Griggs, Ted Walter, Melvin Medlock. Second row; Mac Conaday, Richard Blocker, Reggie Thackston, Tommy Miller, Laurence Mcintosh. Third row; George Altman, Glen Askins, Al Wilson, Travis Medlock, Paul Durham. Fourth row; James Suggs, George Perrow, Ralph Moore, F. O. Wright, Rich Harrelson. Fifth row; Sam Parler, Dick Wallace, Dave Lasher, Jack Herbert, Gene Collins. Sixth row; John Snyder, James Richardson, Charlie Botes, Leslie Howord, Toby Davis. 124 KAPPA SIGMA SECOND SEMESTER OFFICERS Left to right, seated: Travis Medlock, Guard; John Snyder, G.M.C.; George Altman, G.P.; Melvin Medlock, G.M. Standing: Gene Collins, Guard; Dick Rogers, G.T.; F. O. Wright, G.S. BROTHERS George Altman Gaylord May Glen Askins Graham May Richard Blocker Melvin Medlock Mac Conaday Travis Medlock Gene Collins Ralph Moore Toby Davis Laurence Mcintosh Bobby Davison Sam Parler Paul Durham George Perrow Tommy Griggs James Richardson Tom Hardin Dick Rogers Rich Harrelson John Snyder Jack Herbert James Suggs Les Howard Dick Wallace David Johnson Ted Walter Dave Lasher Al Wilson F. 0. Wright PLEDGES Charlie Bates Tommy Miller Reggie Thackston The Alpha Nu chapter of Kappa Sigma was founded at Wofford on January 17, 1894, when De la Warr Benjamin Easter, R. M. Rawls, and R. S. Des Portes initiated B. Wofford Wait, Fred H. Cummings, Tom McRansor, Jr., and Nathaniel M. Sailer into the brotherhood. Kappa Sigma was the seventh fraternity on the Wofford campus, and was abused by the larger and older fraternities, but as it grew in size and strength, it became more prominent in the functions on the campus. Fraternities were abolished at Wofford from 1909 to 1915. In the latter year, however, the anti-fraternity law was repealed, and Kappa Sigma was again on the campus with the man most responsible for the Alpha Nu chapter, De la Warr Benjamin Easter, to guide her in the begin- ning of her tenure at Wofford. Kappa Sigma has become one of the largest fraternities at Wofford in the past years, and has been very active on the campus. The prominence of Kappa Sigma at Wofford led some of her alumni to form an alumni chapter in Spartanburg. It was called The Spartanburg Alumni Chapter of Kappa Sigma and was granted a charter by the national office on November 16, 1924. The chapter has continued her upward climb, and, in the past year, was possessor of both the intramural cham- pionship and the scholarship trophy in addition to numer- ous other awards given by the national office of Kappa Sigma. Alpha Nu of Kappa Sigma has gained strength and is continuing her service to the students, to the school, and to the nation by contributing all she has for the good of others. Kappa Sigs of 1904. FIRST SEMESTER OFFICERS Le t to right, first row: Fowler Hollobaugh, Ncii Bonds, Clyde Aiken, Cecil Lonford, Joe Price. Second row: Burris Spivey, Mickey Fisher, Robert Heos, Charles Smith. Third row: Marvin DuBose, Pat DuBose, Billy Gallowoy, Richard Howie. Fourth row; Charlie Coker, Claudius Shuler, Harold Chavis, Harry Gall. Fifth row; Talmadge Skinner, George Huggins, Hicks Elmore. PI KAPPA ALPHA SECOND SEMESTER OFFICERS Left to right, seated: Charles Coker, Secretary; Clyde Aiken, Vice-President; Joe Price, President. Standing. Cecil Lanford, Treosurer; Hicks Elmore, Pledge Master; George Muggins, Historian. Clyde Aiken Neil Bonds Harold Chavis Charles Coker Pat DuBose Hicks Elmore Mickey Fisher Harry Gall BROTHERS Billy Galloway Fowler Hollobaugh Richard Howie George Huggins Cecil Lanford Joe Price Claude Shuler Talmadge Skinner Charlie Smith Marvin DuBose PLEDGES Dovid Spivey, Jr. Dupree Turbeville Nu chapter was first established on the Wofford campus in March of 1891. It grew steadily from then until 1906 when all fraternities left the school. During the short time that Nu was active it must be noted that it always ranked high in scholastic, athletic, and extracurricular activities. On April 13 and 14, 1951, Nu once again took its place among Wofford ' s fraternities. Since that time, the brothers have established a reputation for their harmonious and brotherly manifestations. Among the noteworthy activities are the successful rush parties and dances, and the famed Dream Girl Ball m the early spring. Brother Harry Gall is historical editor of the Bubcmian, president of Pi Gamma Mu, and a member of Blue Key. He is also Historian of the senior class. Brother Hicks Elmore is head drum major for the band, and Brother Charlie Coker is accompanist for the Glee Club. Brother Neil Bonds is Editor of the journal and a member of Who ' s Who. P.K.A. ' s of 1904. Around at the frat house. PI KAPPA PHI SECOND SEMESTER OFFICERS BROTHERS AND PLEDGES Bill Evins James Johnson Carl Lane Jim Lineberger Robert Pettigrew Howard Powell Bill Seifert Tommy Williams Left to right, standing; Bob Pettigrew, Warden; Bill Evins, Secretary; Jim Lineberger, Historian; James Johnson, Treasurer. Seated. Carl Lane, President. Zeta Chapter of Pi Kappa Phi has had one of its greatest years on the Wofford campus in ' 5 3- ' 54. Organized in 1911, we have had a very active part in forming recent Wofford history, emphasizing our unwritten motto, Qual- ity before quantity. Though small in size Zeta Chapter has shown great spirit in all campus activities. The chapter started this scholastic year with a bang when they walked off with first prize in the Centennial Homecoming float contest, producing an original float expressing the double theme 100 Years of Progress and Beat Newberry. The peak of all our successes came on November 2, 19 5 3, when the brothers of Zeta Chapter had the very great pleasure of pinning Miss Dorothy Lamour, well known movie and stage actress, and officially declaring her Sweetheart of Zeta Chapter. This year being the golden anniversary of Pi Kappa Phi, it was only fitting that a suitable celebration be held on the campus. On December 11, this celebration took place in the form of a golden anniversary ball which was open to the entire Wofford student body. Pi Kaps ' gala social whirl was brought to a close with the annual Rose Ball in the spring. Just relaxing More cards . . . More iun . . . More Pi Kops. Left to right, first row: Paul Reinartz, Allen Hoffmeyer, Bill Tunno, Sammy Glenn. Second row: Harry Wallace, Mack Poole, Bobby Kelley, Butch Trent. Third row: Mel Derrick, Bernard Alverson, Tommy Roper, Joe Kirby. Fourth row: Sammy Mow, Russell King, Eddie Reed, John Kellett. Fifth row: Jock Sullivan, Sonny Hamilton, John Ward, Bob Fox. Sixth row: LeGrand Rouse, Bobby McCully, Jimmy Bailey. SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON SECOND SEMESTER OFFICERS BROTHERS Jack Abell Bernard Alverson Weyland Burns Wade Burley George Campbell Harley Christopher Melvin Derrick Bob Fox Johnny Gill Sammy Glenn Sonny Hamilton Allen Hoffmeyer Bobby Kelley John Kellet Russell King Eddie Reed Sammy Maw Tom Wyatt PLEDGES Red Adams Bill Kinney Joe Kirby Malloy Lampley Tommy Lynn Bob McCully Mack Poole Bill Pope Paul Reinartz Tommy Roper LeGrand Rouse Jack Sullivan Butch Trent Bill Tunno Harry Wallace Johnny Ward Jimmy Bailey Joe Hazle Left to right, first row: John Gill, E.D.A.; Bill Tunno, E.G.; Tommy Lynn, E.R.; Bernord Alverson, Chaplain. Second row; Allen Hoffmeyer, E.A.; Paul Reinartz, E.T.; John Ward, E.Ch.; Sommy Glenn, E.H.; Bob McCully, E.W. The Lions of South CaroLna Gamma chapter roared triumphantly on the Wofford campus this year, claiming cherished positions of honor and responsibility for the glory of Minerva and Sigma Alpha Epsilon. With resi- dence in Black Hall, the Sig Alphs conducted a highly successful rush season. The annual Founder ' s Day Ban- quet and Sweetheart Ball set the S.A.E. ' s a new high in enjoyment of their big weekend. Piloted first semester by Jack Abell, now on the Wof- ford coaching staff and former Little All-American end, the brothers enjoyed many social events and witnessed the benefits of real brotherhood. Social life was only a part of the Lions ' existence. Many campus honors came to the Sons of Minerva, as: President of the student body. Brother Kinney; Editor-in- Chief of the 19 54 Bohemian, Brother Rouse; Vice-Presi- dent of the senior class and Preachers ' Kid Club, Brother Pope; Business Managers of the Glee Club, Brothers Kirby and Christopher; College Sports Publicity Director, Brother Derrick; Planetarium Director and Operator, Brother Roper; Head Cheerleader, Brother Gill; Business Manager of the Band, Brother Trent; Vice-President of the Junior Class, Brother Glenn; Secretary of the junior class. Brother Reinartz; Treasurer of the junior class. Brother McCully; Historian of the sophomore class. Brother King; Secretary of the Pre-Meds, Brother Lynn; Program Chairman of the Pre-Meds, Brother Campbell. Brothers held membership in the following honored places: Senior Order of Gnomes, Who ' s Who, Blue Key, Sigma Delta Psi, American College Student Leaders, Delta Phi Alpha, LR.C, and Student Council. Five S.A.E. ' s were on the Terrier grid team. They were: Record breaker Joe Hazle, Eddie Reed, Sam Maw, Billy Pope, Bob McCully, and Red Adams. Truly the Sig Alphs had a very successful year and roared for Minerva on the Wofford campus. S.A.E. ' s of 1904. The weekly get together. CADET OFFICERS Left to right: Johnson, Wyott, Roper, Sullivan, Thompson, Rouse, Brown. CADET CAPTAIN EDWIN JOHNSON Commanding CAPTAIN EDWIN JOHNSON Company Commander 1st LIEUTENANT TOM WYATT Company Executive 1st LIEUTENANT TOM ROPER Platoon Leader 1st LIEUTENANT JACK SULLIVAN Platoon Leader 1st LIEUTENANT HUGH BROWN Platoon Leader 2nd LIEUTENANT LeGRAND ROUSE .... Assistant Platoon Leader 2nd LIEUTENANT HUGH THOMPSON . . . Assistant Platoon Leader m m CADET OFFICERS Left to right; Pusey, Fraley, Bynum, Anthony, Herbert, Christopher. CADET CAPTAIN CHARLES BRYANT Commanding CAPTAIN CHARLES BRYANT Company Commander 1st LIEUTENANT HARLEY CHRISTOPHER .... Company Executive 1st LIEUTENANT FRANK PUSEY Platoon Leader 1st LIEUTENANT BOB FRALEY Platoon Leader 1st LIEUTENANT HOWARD ANTHONY Platoon Leader 2nd LIEUTENANT HENRY BYNUM Assistant Platoon Leader 2nd LIEUTENANT JACK HERBERT Assistant Platoon Leader B CADET OFFICERS • l« Mil t to right, first row: May, Griffith, Tindall. Second row: Cassell, Brown, Hill. CADET CAPTAIN GAYLORD MAY Commanding c CAPTAIN GAYLORD MAY Company Commander 1st LIEUTENANT FRANK CASSELL Company Executive 1st LIEUTENANT ROBERT GRIFFITH Platoon Leader 1st LIEUTENANT ASA TINDALL Platoon Leader 1st LIEUTENANT JAMES HILL Platoon Leader 2nd LIEUTENANT JOE BROWN Assistant Platoon Leader CADET OFFICERS CADET CAPTAIN GEORGE ALTMAN Commanding CAPTAIN GEORGE ALTMAN . . . 1st LIEUTENANT TOMMY GRIGGS 1st LIEUTENANT KAY PATTON . 1st LIEUTENANT GEORGE PERROW 1st LIEUTENANT MAC CANADAY 2nd LIEUTENANT GENE COLLINS . . Company Commander . . . Company Executive Platoon Leader Platoon Leader Platoon Leader Assistant Platoon Leader CctnfiaMf D CADET OFFICERS Left to right: Noland, Pope, Bridges, Alverson, McGinnis, Moore, Small. CADET CAPTAIN BILL SMALL Commanding COMPAIVY CAPTAIN BILL SMALL . . . ■Company Commander 1st LIEUTENANT BILL POPE Company Executive CAPTAIN AUBREY NOLAND Platoon Leader 1st LIEUTENANT ALFRED McGINNIS Platoon Leader 1st LIEUTENANT RONALD BRIDGES Platoon Leader 2nd LIEUTENANT JAMES MOORE Assistant Platoon Leader 2nd LIEUTENANT BERNARD ALVERSON . . Assistant Platoon Leader BAND CADET LT. COL. STEVE GOUDELOCK Battalion Commander LT. COLONEL STEVE GOUDELOCK MAJOR TOMMY LYNN CAPTAIN JOE PRICE CAPTAIN JESSE COOKSEY CAPTAIN GRAHAM MAY CAPTAIN BILL KELLY 1st LT. WADE HERRING M SGT. THERON FEW BATTALION Left to right: Kelly, S-4; Few, Sgt. Maj.; Price, S-1; Cooksey, S-2; May, S-3; Herring, Chaplain; Lynn, Executive Officer. 139 Throughout her years of being acclaimed as one of the nation ' s leading small colleges, Wofford ' s versatile athletic program has been one of the major reasons for her one hundred years of collegiate progress. An almost countless throng of athletes have gained their degrees from the institution of the Twin Towers, and Wofford College has received the full benefits of the en- deavoring participation of these men. The present athletic program at Wofford has emerged from the diligent labors of Wofford athletes for over a period of the last one hundred years. Wofford College ' s sports history has had its ups and downs as well as its high spots. However, the student body never fails to give its wholehearted support to any Terrier squad. This kind of spirit seems to be instilled into every generation of Wofford men, and for a century the famous Wofford spirit has prevailed over the tranquil campus of the Methodist school. Not only should the Wofford students of today and tomorrow be proud of their great scholastic heritage, but also they can well be proud of their athletic heritage. During her infancy, the college placed more emphasis on the students ' scholastic average, rather than on the students ' batting averages. In the early 1890 ' s there were no football nor baseball varsity squads present on the campus, but many of the students saw the dire need for some athletic entertainment. By 189 5 a football team was organized, but the sport was soon de- nied to Wofford by a vote of the Methodist Conference. Intra- class football and tennis we re popular among the students, and in 1900 basketball had been introduced on the Wofford athletic program by Instructor Chreitzburg. The building which is now the Wofford Recreation Hall was built in 1897 for the purpose of being used as a gymnasium, and the athletes of Terriertown took full advantage of this $4,000 structure. Probably the greatest baseball team that Wofford ever had was the magnificent 1900 edition, which won the State Title for three years consecutively, and over that span of three years the Terrier baseballers won twenty-six out of twenty-seven con- tests. Intercollegiate football was re-introduced during the same year, but the gridiron sport, which was thought to be too brutal, was dropped again two years later. By 1914 the leading sports on the campus were track, basketball, baseball, and the activities of a gym exhibition team. Basketball was a leading sport of the South, and the hardwood game had caught the fancy of the Wofford student body. Again football was brought back, and contests with such rivals as Furman were resumed. In the fall of 1920 the alumni met and pledged themselves to stand behind Wofford in all phases of sports. This action was an awakening of athletics for the Methodist college. The new emphasis paid off, because during the 1920 ' s and 1930 ' s Wofford won its share of state championships in basketball, baseball, and tennis, and produced some strong football squads. During these two decades sports were a large part of the college program, and the students backed the teams to the highest degree. The 1920-1940 era produced such leading coaches as T. C. Scaffe and Jules Carson, while some of the Terrier athletes who made their names famous throughout state circles were basket- ball ' s Habel, baseball ' s Rouse, and football ' s Finney. In 1929 the Andrews Field House was erected, and the following year bleachers, which would accommodate 3,000 people, were built on Snyder Field. The Second World War halted athletic activities for awhile, but the post-war era was probably the greatest athletic period in the history of Wofford College. Mr. Phil Dickens, who used the Tennessee System, took over as head football coach, and under his direction, Wofford became known throughout the country for her football powerhouses. In 19 5 3 Dickens moved on to the University of Wyoming, and the coaching duties fell into the capable hands of Wofford ' s present football coach, Mr. Conley Snidow. The mentioning of Wofford basketball would not be complete without inserting the name of fabulous Daddy Neal, who during 1949-195 3 broke just about every scoring record in the state. With the destiny of Wofford College athletics resting in the hands of her present coaches, the future indeed looks bright. With such a successful past in sports, the Terriers of today and tomorrow have a glorious heritage to cherish and to uphold. A T H L E T I C S Snyder Field showing Wofford stands. COACH CONLEY SNIDOW JcHl ali at WOFFORD Football at Wofford during the Centennial year was the same fine brand of athletics that has been exhibited by Terrier teams over Wofford ' s long span of history. Gone was Phil Dickens, the expert men- tor who led Wofford gridders through a number of successful seasons. But to take his place was an equally fine gentleman and coach — Conley Snidow, formerly of Emory and Henry College. The spllt-T replaced the old single wing in the Wofford camp, and the Terrier team settled down to a rugged slate of opponents. Starting with many new men, new coaches, and new formations, the Terriers were expected to have a losing season, but displaymg a great spu it man- aged to win over half their contests. P.C., Newberry and Furman accounted for most of the Wofford losses as the three state teams gamed revenge, ekemg out 7-6 wins. Coach Snidow had as his assistants: James Brake- field, Line Coach; William McCarren, Backfield Coach; Jack Abell, End Coach; and Floogie Ariail, Trainer. Bill Small captained the S3 Terriers. Snidow, Brokcficld and Floogie chat before practice. 142 JAMES BRAKEFIELD Line Coach WILLIAM McCARREN Backfield Coach FLOOGIE ARIAIL Trainer COACHES •yew t ' 3 3 S « f 3 Lett ti ' nrjlit, first rrjw R. Knight (Manager), H. Auman, D. Walker, J. Moseley, G. Lawrence, S. Awtrey, A. McGinnis, L. Ford, D. Cornes, J. Hammond, H. Boykin. Second row; D. Cole (Manager), A. Wilson, J. Warren, R. Burnette, J. Herrin, B. Capes, J. Hall, P. Gibson, J. Ditty, D. Watson, J. Gobolos, B. Small. Third row: J. Brock, B. Clark, B. Taylor, B. Cothran, C. McKenzie, H. Adams, C. Roddy, C. Gregory, J. Hazle, A. Nanney, B. Pope, S. Maw, E. Reed, F. Ariail, Coach Brakefield. Fourth row: Coach McCarren, C. Bond, J. Brown, S. Mose- ley, E. Holland, C. Bryant, B. Fox, C. Bawls, B. Phillips, J. Spearman, B. McCully, B. Batten, Coach Snidow. Fifth row: D. Sexton, J. Maners, J. Mooneyham, I. Flough, G. Duffie, B. Splawn, A. Kemmerlin, W. Hardin, W. King, 0. Davis, J. Roukoski, B. Ware, A. Smith, B. Kelly (Manager), Coach Abell. The Wo Pfd Gllefe 53 T E II It I E R S . 54 MEL DERRICK Sports Publicity Director BILL SMALL Captain HARVEY ADAMS HAROLD AUMAN SHERRY AWTREY CECIL BOND TERRIERS TAKE WESTERN CAROLINA Jock Abell, former Wofford Little All-Americon, joins coaching staff. Tense moment during Wofford ' s season opener. This game unveiled South CaroHna football, and at the same time introduced a new era of athletics at Wofford. Gone were the days of Phantom Phil Dickens and his brand of football. Something new had come to Wofford — the T formation, and with it a new coaching department. Many questions were being asked. This game answered them. Western Carolina struck first. Then Wofford turned on the steam. The Terriers showed what they had: some very fine coaches, a terrific line, three fine linebacks, good ends, two brilliant field generals, and several of the state ' s finest backs. This game was mostly defensive, with the Terrier forward wall showing its superiority throughout. Halfback Eddie Reed scored the first Wofford touchdown of the season and Charlie Bryant added that all-Important extra point. 1:45 Heading for those wide open spaces. JIMMY BROCK WOFFORD TRAMPLES LEI OIR-RIIYAE N-0 After the close one with Western Carolina the previous week, the Terriers, playing at home again, found the Bears of Lenoir-Rhyne an easy conquest. The Terrier backs un- leashed a terrific running attack as they controlled the ball most of the game. Awtrey was the first to break the scoring ice, but Brock and Hazle were the men of the hour. They each scored once and continued to pile up a terrific yardage total. Brock was the leading ground gai ner with 135 yards, while Hazle ran a close second with 12 5, but Hazle had a hundred yards called back on him. Brock ' s score came on a 6 8 -yard dash. Hazle had a 57-yard punt return called back because of a penalty, but still managed to tally later. McCuUy added both extra points. HORACE BOYKIN JACK BROWN CHARLIE BRYANT RONNIE BURNETT Surrounded by the enemy. WOFFORD HALTS ELOX Two thousand drenched fans saw Coach Snidow ' s charges spLish their way to a lopsided 3 3-0 victory over Elon ' s Christians. The Terriers, making it three in a row, turned three fumbles, a blocked punt, and a 51-yard march into a scoring parade that greatly pleased Wofford pigskin enthusiasts. The first score came when Bill Pope gathered in a fumble on the Christians ' 15 and Jolting Joe Hazle scored five plays later from the one. The next came on a 27-yard touch- down heave from Quarterback Charlie Jones to Arnold Nanney. Jimmy Brock and Sherry Awtrey each added a T.D. in the third canto, and halfback Al Wilson ended the scoring for the day with a nice gallop up the middle. The hard- hitting Wofford forward wall looked exceptionally good in this game. BOBBY CAPES DALE CARNES JESSE COOKSEY BOBBY COTHRAN JAMES DITTY GEORGE DUFFIE LEE FORD TERRIERS UPSET I . I. LE ATHERiXEC KS 19-6 The strongest and most alert Terrier team to take the field thus far in the season completely outclassed a highly favored Marine team of experienced beef. The situation looked very dismal for the Gold and Black as a star-studded group of ex-college gridders took the field wearing the Marine colors. It looked as though Parris Island ' s hard-running backs were going to give the Terriers a rough time until Joe Hazle, Eddie Reed, and Sherry Awtrey swung into action. From then on it was Wofford all the way. On defense the outweighed Terrier line was superb; Bob McCuUy and Alf McGinnis turning in superior games, as did all the linebackers, Hazle, Small, and Ford. Awtrey shined on offense, scoring a pair of touchdowns and reeling off several beautiful runs. The other Terrier six pointer came on a breath-taking Jones to Nanney pass. McCuUy added the point. Charlie takes a rest. Adams and Gibson in for the kill. BOB FOX . f 1 BOB FRALEY PHIL GIBSON JOE GOBOLOS CHARLES GREGORY BLUE HOSE EDGE BY TERRIERS With four victories under their behs, a vastly superior Terrier eleven invaded the domain of the P.C. Hosemen. The P.C. ' uns were keyed up, as usual, for the favored Terriers. For five years they had been trying to spring an upset, and this time the law of averages was with them. The fighting Blue Hose scored in the first three minutes on a series of passes; the score coming on a short jump pass from Quarterback Harry Hamil- ton. A perfect conversion placed the P.C. squad out front 7-0. The Terriers roared back but were unable to muster a score until the fourth quarter when Quarterback Sherry Awtrey sprinted ten yards off tackle for the big six points. And then for that all important, game tying, extra point attempt. The ball was snapped, placed, kicked — no good! Thus the Terriers, champs of Little 3 competition for so long, suffered defeat at the hands of one of the other member schools . . . and by one point! Big Eddie blocks, Awtrey chugs along. • . v.,. .. i.•. JETER HAMMOND Where ' d he go? HOMECOMING SPOILED- IXDIAXS TRirMPH 7-6 Through the middle for five more yards. LEO HARDIN Once again the Terriers failed to kick that much needed extra point. This time it was the Indians of Newberry who pulled the trick and spoiled the occasion for a homecoming day crowd. The game, played in a boiling sun, found three of Wofford ' s top seniors — Auman, Bryant, and Cooksey — sitting in the stands due to injuries, and several others playing but hurt. The Indians, having one - of their best seasons in years, scored first but Wofford bounded back, racking up six points on a s hort gallop by Sherry Awtrey, the state ' s leading scorer. Again the extra point jinx caught up with the Gold and Black and our Queen, Miss Ruth Oliver of Winthrop and Georgetown, ruled over a dismal campus. All the Terriers; especially the seniors: Pope, Gibson, Fraley, Ditty, Small, Hunncycutt, Brock, Games, Walker, and Awtrey played hard but ... Somebody missed a block. JOE HAZLE JOE HERRIN EVANS HOLLAND CHARLES JONES WAYNE KING GEORGE LAWRENCE BOB McCULLY ALFRED McGlNNIS WOFFORD STO ZO-7 You win a few, lose a few — this one we weren ' t supposed to win. From the opening kick-off the Hatters displayed one of the fastest backfields to perform upon Snyder Field in many years, but the masterful Terrier line proved a little too much for the visitors from Florida. The rugged Terrier forward wall held the opposing speedsters in check all evening and Wofford ' s own fleet-foots put on quite a show of their own to the delight of the local supporters. Hazle was the big man, reeling off two 24-yard dashes for two touchdowns. Eddie Reed set one of the early touchdowns up when he returned a kick-off to Stetson ' s 2 5. Hazle had previously scored on a 5 7-yard jaunt but a clipping penalty nullified his efforts. Quarterback Awtrey scored from seven yards out in the 2nd quarter after a 31-yard pass to Pope and a 30-yard gallop by Reed had paved the way for the tally. Later Brock sHpped across the double stripes from 3 yards out after Small had pounced on a fumble. And that was the ball game! PS STETSON Coach and his quarterback map out plans for the day. CRAIG McKENZIE SAMMY MAW JOE MOONEYHAM JIMMY MOSELEY ARNOLD NANNEY F 11 R HI A N SLIDES BY WOFFORD 7-6 The Terriers, still suffering from losses to P.C. and New- berry, bounced back to hold the nation ' s number one rushing team to a mere 1 5 1 yards and missed upsetting them by the slim margin of an extra point. The Hurricanes were stopped cold by Wofford ' s bruising front line men all evening except for a few minutes in the third quarter when the gridders from Greenville managed to push across a score. The Terriers, showing offensive and defensive superiority all evening, came back with a 77-yard march climaxed by a 2 3 -yard pitch-out pass play from Brock to Nanney for the T.D. A closing minute threat by the Wofford squad fizzled out when Furman took over on downs deep in their own territory. Where Furman made that seventh point, we failed, and found ourselves still behind. WOFFORD ST C AT AW B A N-6 BILL PHILLIPS BILL POPE It was Catawba who had their homecoming spoiled this time, as the Terriers ground out a 14-6 victory. Awtrey got the first score on a 13-yard off-tackle sprint, and boosted his season ' s total to 54 points as he continued to set the pace in state scoring. Brock was the big offensive gun, however, as he set a new rushing record for a single game at Wofford. He ran up 130 yards in 13 carries; 72 of these yards coming on a single dash to pay dirt. Fraley converted after both scores. Freezing weather was probably responsible for the low scoring, as there was very Httle passing. It was mostly a defensive game for the Wofford line, rapidly gaining mention as one of the best defensive units ever to wear the Gold and Black. . and he may have picked up a yard. EDDIE REED JAMES ROUKOSKI JACK SEXTON BILL SMALL AUBREY SMITH JIMMY SPEARMAN WOFFORD TIES MARSHALL Cold weathei and Marshall struck simultaneously up at Huntington, West Virginia, and before the ball game was very old the Terriers found themselves on the short end of a 20-0 score. Fans here in Spartanburg, keeping up with the contest via radio, were beginning to visualize a bad evening for the Wof- ford squad, but many miles away the Terriers were beginning to come to life and shortly the whole picture was to change. Just before the first half ended the Gold and Black struck back. Dependable Joe Hazle climaxed the Wofford thrust with sprints of 16 yards and 3 yards for the T.D. The Terriers checked the Big Green in the third quarter and scored two quick touchdowns in the fourth. It was Awtrey and Hazle all the way down the field on this first drive, with the former getting the score. Then came a timely onsides kick by Fraley, a quick recovery by Ditty, and the Terriers were in business again. Awtrey tossed to Bill the for Pope, who snatched the pigskin down on the Marshall On the next play Hazle fought his way into pay dirt. With the score deadlocked and the time running out, game took on a wild atmosphere, both squads fighting the lead. Marshall scored again but watched the extra point attempt miss. The Terriers began another goalward march ... a fourth down gamble pays off (thanks to a sensational catch by Cooksey) . . . Brock chugs to the 1, and Hazle carries half the Marshall team with him across the double stripes. The score stands 26-26. Then the try for the point . . . no good! Whoa there, boy! BILL SPLAWN ROBERT TAYLOR DAVE WALKER DAVE V ATSON GAMECOCKS HUMBLE TERRIERS 49-0 This one was worse than the Tennessee disaster of the ' 5 2- ' 5 3 season. The Wofford team of that year at least man- aged to push across a score against General Bob Neyland ' s mighty Tennesseeans. This time the opposition was the University of South Caro- lina, and this time we came back with nothing except a badly beaten crew of Terriers. Johnny GramHng and company assured football fans around the state that U.S.C. did have quite a powerhouse on the gridiron . . . and at Wofford ' s expense. Coach Snidow ' s men fought very hard, however, through- out the game, and the many Wofford enthusiasts who jour- neyed down to the capital city had no reason to hide their faces when the final whistle had been blown. This was the last outing for the Wofford squad this year and the last collegiate football for a number of the Terrier team. Let us, here and now, thank these men for their fme efforts while wearing the Old Gold and Black. These seniors were: Bill Small, Dave Walker, Sherry Awtrey, Dale Carnes, Phil Gibson, Jim Ditty, Bill Pope, Harold Auman, and Jimmy Brock. Two of Wofford ' s best- in action — Smoll and Hozle. AL WILSON Left to right; Head Cheerleader Johnny Gill, David Lane, Carol Clarke, Charlie Furr, Libby Evans, Bill Penny, Julie Hen- derson, Ditty Carlson. Gill gets the cheerleaders into action. C H E E R L E A D K IK § With booming voices and .igilc bodies, Wofford ' s energetic cheer-prompters seemed to litcr.illy throw themselves into the Centennial swing of things as they helped push school spirit higher and higher during the Terriers ' eleven-game grid schedule. Head Cheerleader John Gill and veteran Charlie Furr as usual did their best, but it was the appearance of several female cheerleaders that really got the cheers rolhng. This year found W ' offord electing five men to the cheering group with Converse College selectmg three gu ' ls to aid in eading the Terrier ells. Three other oung ladies were chosen as alternates. W hether at pep rallies (here or at Con -erse), parades or games, the cheerleaders stayed right in there xellimr. Left to right: Rock HuH, Harry Wallace, Dennis Mathis, Dole Worner, Leo Cooper, Donnie Fowler, Ronnie Knight, Terry Earle, Craig Templeton, Roy Eubanks, James Golden, Paul Reinortz. BASKETBALL W O F F O B II Basketball at Wofford this year produced no Daddy Neal or Bill Moody but still took its place as one of the top sports on the Wofford College campus. The team of ' 54 was composed mostly of sophomores with a few prom- ising freshmen in reserve . . . but a fighting young crew it was; one we could proudly observe and support. Two Spartanburg men, Dennis Mathis and Harry Wallace, led the hard- wood Terriers this season as Captain and Co-Captain respectively. Both of these young men starred for the Spartanburg High School cage squ ad several years ago and have now seen two years ' service with the Wofford varsity. Leo Cooper, Donnie Fowler, Craig Templeton, Paul Reinartz, and Jim Golden all proved worthy additions to the Terrier squad, and with experience should do great things in the years to come. JOEL EDWARD ROBERTSON Cooch DENNIS MATHIS Captain HARRY WALLACE Co-Captain LEO COOPER RAY EUBANKS DONNIE FOWLER ajkeM at W O F F O II D ■FLOOGIE ARIAIL Trainer ' ' . 0 , y Left to right, kneeling: Awtrey, Reeder, Hilton, Moseley, Pope, Pusey, Rhodes, Mclntyre, Coach Brokefield. Standing; Brock, J. Sessoms, Swonn, Smith, Mathis, King, Bryant, W. Sessoms, Bates, Koon, Kem merlin, Godfrey. BASEBALL A T W O F F O K l TOM MclNTYRE Pitcher 1 FRANK PUSEY Pitcher With almost all of last year ' s baseball players returning, Wofford has probably its best team in recent years. The club has a strong pitching staff returning, along with some mighty fine batters. With a combination such as this, the team could not help but make a good showing and as the season progressed, they compiled a record that reflected much prestige upon the school. Ending the season with the State ' s best won-lost record and champions of the Little Four League, the Terriers of the Diamond gave a great finale to this centennial year. JAMES BRAKEFIELD Coach INFIELDERS — Awtrey, Mathis, Bryant, King. CATCHERS — Smith, W. Sessoms, Godfrey. OUTFIELDERS — Rhodes, Hilton, Pope. ' RED COLEMAN Coach E N N S Tennis, on the up grade at Wofford, continued to climb in pres- tige as the Terrier net-men made a fine showing in state competition. With five racket wielders; Jim Bailey, Allen Hoffmeyer, Henry Bynum, Rock Huff, and Frank Goodale returning from last year, the net-men had a fine nucleus around which to build their team. These and some newcomers combined to give Wofford a top flight team, one of which Terriertown could be proud. Tennis coaching chores were handled this year by Spartanburg ' s own Red Coleman, former U.S.C. star athlete, now a local business- Left to right, kneeling: Frank Goodale, Cecil Smith, Tub Anderson (Manager). Standing: Allen Hoffmeyer, Rex Guthrie, Jim Bailey, Henry Bynum, Dale Warner, Coach Coleman. T r r r r T ' N Left to right: Rick Dowdeswell, Ronnie Martin, Jock Hothersall, Dave Martin, Donald Wood, Tom Summers, Rex Guthrie, Bill Penny, Coach Jack Abell. SWIMMING A new, exciting sport was added this year to Wofford ' s Intercollegiate sports program — swimming. A good time was had by all as the Terrier Tankmen made their debut in South Carolina swimming circles. Jack Abell, player-coach for the squad, found many Wof- ford men interested in the brand new sport and in qviick time was able to field an eager, hardworking, aquatic team. The Terrier Tankmen used the Spartanburg Y.M.C.A. pool for both practice and home contests, meeting Clemson, the University of South Carolina, and several other schools there during the year. TOM SUMMERS Free Style GOLF AT WOFFORD The Terrier Golf team continued to display the fine form that has made them one of South Carolina ' s outstanding golf teams. The link men lost many of the finer golfers from previous seasons except Mac Canaday, but the vacant slots were quickly filled by other enthusiasts. Despite the tough opposition they faced, they did themselves honor. Golf is gain- ing much popularity on the Wofford campus and varsity link prospects continue to look better and better as the years go by. Joel Robertson is the Terrier golf mentor. Left to right; Laurie Ervin, Marcus Huff, Ralph Moore, Bob Fraley, Mac Canaday, Jim Suggs. KAPPA SIGS— BLITZBALL CHAMPS Seated, left to right: Gene Collins, Ralph Moore, Tom Hordin, George Altman. Standing; Bobby Davison, Goylord May, Tommy Griggs, Graham May, Reggie Thackston. K. A. ' s— FOOTBALL CHAMPS Seated, left to right: Frank Goodale, Robert Jennings, Hugh Thomp- son, Burrell Taylor. Standing: Terry List-on, Bill Bass, Tom Summers, Jackie Meadors, Henry Bynum. BERNARD FORE Handball Champion GRAHAM MAY Tennis Champion INTRAMCRALS The Intramural program at Wofford has ranked among those of the top colleges and universities in the nation for the past five years. Yearly, the seven social fraternity teams, the day student team, the dormitory teams, and the fresh- man teams battle it out through a series of events to determine the winner of the coveted intramural trophy. Membership in an organization is not necessary to take part in any individual or dual tournament, however. Guided by Mr. W. W. Sheerer, and Bobby Davison, student director, the program received a great deal of support this past year. Many hours of clean, healthful sport with a prize to the winners are the benefits of the program. KAPPA SIGS— PADDLE TENNIS CHAMPS Left to right: Tommy Griggs, Tom Hardin, Gaylord May, Graham May. MISS CEXTEIVIVIAL WOFFORD Entered by BILL PENNY 168 THE 19 5 4 BOHEMIAN • • • BEAUTIES aF Miecte4 FRAIVK SELVY All-American BasketbaiE Great- 5 4 MISS CENTENNIAL WOFFORD MAI DS OF HONOR I ettif tedeU . . . ' FABULOUS FRANK 169 Entered by BOB FRALEY 171 IIOMECOMIIVG |ITEEI VI JJf ( utk Olidet OF GEORGETOWN, S. C. AND WINTHROP COLLEGE Wofford fans were somewhat shocked and bewildered as the Newberry Indians slapped a 7-6 defeat on the Terrier record books, but the day wasn ' t completely spoiled for the Wofford alumni, students, and friends who gathered for the colorful week-end. One of the finest Homecoming Day parades in Wofford ' s history took place the night before Homecoming, witnessed b ' large groups of Spartanburg people. Pi Kappa Phi won first prize in float competition. Then it was game time and well . . . well, there was one happy part of those two hours — halftime. For it was then that Miss Ruth Oliver of Winthrop College was crowned Wofford ' s sixth homecoming queen . . . and lovely she was. That night everyone had a good ole ' time as Dick Levin ' s orchestra supplied some I ' eal sweet music for the homecom- in r dance. 172 I Rots parading down Main Street. Cosey Kinney I . . . and his council. j Dr. Black and Coach Snidow watch the boys in action. Happy crowd in spite of heat wave and the Terrier loss. Pika ' s Price and Heos perform for Main Street c WO F FORD ' S Centennial Ifmecmi ' n Celektatm October 17, 1953 Always on guard. So I raised him and he called. il MISS SYBIL DAVIS for The BOHEMIAN Tommy Griggs, Business Manager MRS. HARRY GALL for The BOHEMIAN Horry Gall, Centennial Editor 180 MRS. HELEN R. BARRETT for The OLD GOLD AND BLACK Charlie Barrett, Editor, First Semester MRS. NED WALLACE for Tfie OLD GOLD AND BLACK Dick Wallace, Editor, Second Semester MISS PHYLLIS WEIRMAN for The JOURNAL Neil Bonds, Editor MISS JANET ELIZABETH MURRELL for The OLD GOLD AND BLACK Sam Murrell, Business Manager MRS. W. E. GRIFFITH tor The JOURNAL Bob Griffith, 6us ' ness Manager MRS. WENDELL BURNETT for THE SOPHOMORE CLASS Bob Burnett, President MISS JULIE HENDERSON for THE JUNIOR CLASS Sammy Glenn, Vice-President 19 5 4 SPONSORS MISS BETTY LOU DALRYMPLE for THE SENIOR CLASS Bob Griffith, President MISS JEAN GOODWIN for THE FRESHMAN CLASS Donnie Fowler, President MISS JANE MARIE HANCOCK for THE STUDENT BODY Bill Kinney, President MISS PAT BURNS for PI KAPPA PHI MISS ELIZABETH MASSEY for PI KAPPA ALPHA MRS. EDWIN R. JOHNSON for BLUE KEY Pete Johnson, President MISS CYNTHIA SHQPE for THE SPANISH CLUB Ben Weaver, President MISS BETTY ANN KELLEY for COMPANY D George Altman, Captain MRS. WILLIAM SMALL for FOOTBALL TEAM Bill Small, Captain MRS. CHARLES BRYANT for BLOCK W CLUB Charlie Bryant, President MISS FRANCES SELDEN for BASKETBALL TEAM Dennis Mathis, Captain MISS GLORIA PEARSON for COMPANY A Tommy Lynn, Captain MRS. J. C. LISTON for THE GLEE CLUB Terry Liston, President %J . . . Our cameraman catches Skinner and Coxe at work. Seated, left to right; Professor Patterson, Dr. Cauthen, Dr. Gaines, Mr. Younginer, Professor Salmon, Dean Covington, Dr. Norton. Standing: Bob Burnett, Professor Coates, Bill Kinney, Dr. Brent, Bob Griffith, Professor Pettis. j The Centennial Committee was very instrumental in plan- I ning and carrying out activities during this, Wofford ' s hun- I dredth year. Dr. Charles Cauthen served ably as chairman of the group, while Professor Kenneth Coates capably handled the secretarial chores. The Wofford student body was repre- sented directly in the committee functions by Bill Kinney, Bob Griffith, and Bob Burnett, presidents of the Student Body, Senior Class, and Sophomore Class, respectively. I 1 he hum was on! WIkmc was W ' oftoid ' s long lost cornci ' sionc? Administration, faculty, and students alike pitched in to look for the missing treasure, but seemingly to no ax-ail. Then a freshman, George Duffic, pla ed a hunch and isited the hbrar ' . There tucked away in an old South Carolina Methodist Adxocate was the solution to the prcssini; problem — a complete description of the w heieabouts of the missing stone. Centennial General Williams, Deputy Commander of the Third Army, addresses Wofford R.O.T.C. unit. On the morning of Founder ' s Day, October 17, 19 5 3, the entu ' e Wofford student body, faculty and administration, along with people from the city of Spartanburg, gathered around the grave of Benjamin Wofford for a wreath laying ceremony honoring the founder of the School of the Twin Towers. After delivering a short talk in memory of the beloved Rev. Wofford, Student Body Presi- dent Bill Kinney placed a wreath by the long standing tombstone. The ceremony was closed with the singing of the Alma Mater by the assembled group. Scene from Founder ' s Day ceremony GRIGGS TRUCKING COMPANY RUBY, S. C. - Terminals - LA GRANGE, GA. Phone 8697 PATERSON, N. J. SHerwood 3-5967 SAVANNAH, GA. Phone 2-1600 COLUMBIA, S. C. Phone 3-8614 CHARLOTTE, N. C. Phone 6-4814 MACON, GA. Phone 2-4616 PHILADELPHIA, PA. LOmbord 3-9166 SPARTANBURG, S. C. Phone 6410 ROCK HILL, S. C. Phone 3173 COLUMBUS, GA. Phone 7-4356 NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J. CHorter 7-1666 RUBY, S. C. Phone 222 YORK, PA Phone 7229 ATLANTA, GA. CYpress 0572 EASTON, PA. Phone 7197 NEW YORK, N. Y. LOngacre 3-6433 NEWARK, N. J. UNion 4-1400 BALTIMORE, MD. ORIeons 7596 GREENVILLE, S. C. Phone 3-1664 PROVIDENCE, R. I. BOSTON, MASS. 194 ADAMS SON TIRE RECAPPING ESTABLISHED 1912 DAYTON TIRE DISTRIBUTORS When Better Reeaps Are Built — ADAMS Will Build Them 65] -653 N. Church St. Phone 2-1689 -L J- GRIER and COMPANY GENERAL INSURANCE REAL ESTATE MORTCrAGE LOANS 154 VV. Ahtiu St. Dial 7-244 James Fowler John Fowler George Fowler FOWLER BROS. CLEANERS (ODORLESS CLEANERS) 422 Main Street 558 S. Church St. Dial 6771 Diol 3-2572 Corner Pearl and N. Church Streets Dial 3-5237 Spartanburg South Carolina HERRING FURNITURE COMPANY, INC. We Are Not Satisfied Unless You, Our Customers, Are 161 North Church St. SPARTANBURG, S. C. -f EVERY ITEM FOR THE OFFICE OFFICE EQUIPMENT COMPANY Dial 3-4549 156 Magnolia St. 195 WHEN GOOD PRINTING COUNTS . . . Since 1904 and Ever Since BAND WHITE S. S. WALLACE, JR. — H. B. CARLISLE, III 144 S. SPRING STREET PHONE 5441 SPARTANBURG, S. C. CHEVROLET Ernest Burwell, Inc. The Automotive Center Telephone 5445 265-281 NORTH CHURCH ST. Spartanburg, S. C. — . « « — t 196 Hartness Bottling Works 729 S. Church St. Dial 2-4531 t LOCKWOOD GREENE ENGINEERS INC. Architects - Engineers Montgomery Building SPARTANBURG, S. C. BOSTON MONTREAL NEW YORK SPARTANBURG — Licensee — SPARTANBURG U- DRIVE- IT 184 Dunbar Street Compliments of The Commercial National Bank OF SPARTANBURG. S. C. WITH OFFICES LOCATED ... North Church St. Jonesville Union Landrum. Member F.R.B. F.D.I.C. 197 FURNITURE . . . . IT ' S A FACT — YOU CAN DO BETTER AT ... . HAMMOND - BROWN - JENNINGS 167 N. Church St. S P A P C 0 SPARTAN PRINTING AND PAPER COMPANY - Established 1844 - 150 Archer St. — On Your Way to Town Owned and Operated by WOFFORD GRADUATES Dial 8962 Dial 2-4297 ' REMEMBER... You are Always Welcome Thomas West at Cleaners SMITH ' S DRUG STORE NO. 1 266 S. Church St. 635 Uriion St. ■• 142 E. Mam Spartanburg, S. C. T T- CONGRATULATIONS TO VVOFFORD ON YOUR IOOtii ANNIVERSARY The Aug. W. Smith Co, VISIT OUR MEN ' S DEPARTMENT FIRST FLOOR SPARTANBURG, S. C. HENDERSON FAIN, Barbers Where the Wofford Boys Go Central Barber Shop 112 N. Church Guy Fain, Mgr. Franklin Hotel Barber Shop W. E. (Shorty) Henderson, Mgr. Rey ' s Jewelers IT ALWAYS PAYS TO SHOP AT REY ' S 153 E. Main Phone 5675 ■T 1 RCA and MAGNAVOX Television Sales o)id Service Wyatt ' s Music Hous 155 N. Church St. DIAL 3-3549 1 « ■0 o ' WOFFORD ' S FIRST LA UN DERERS Spartanburg Laundry 136 MAGNOLIA STREET PHONE 7261 1 - T he Citizens Southerr 1 National Bank OF SOUTH CAROLINA Now — For your convenience Drive-in Banking in the Heart of Spartanburg 148 W. MAIN STREET Main Office 295 E. MAIN STREET Branch and Drive-In Member FDIC 199 1892 1954 A. M. LAW COMPANY Sure Insurance — 144 Old Kennedy Safe Investment SPARTANBURG, S. C. DUNBAR ELLIS FURNITURE ooo 122 N. Liberty St. 139 E. Broad St. SPARTANBURG, S. C. i J- Compliments Hardware ■. of Paint Electrical Appliances GENERAL Industrial Equipment BAKING CO Farm Supplies w Bond HALL HARDWARE 197 W. Main Street Bread [ AN HONOR BRIGHT STORE PRINTERS LITHOGRAPHERS CALHOUN ' S STATIONERS OFFICE MACHINES Williams OFFICE EOUIPMENT AND SUPPLIES Printing; u v L()(.ilccl 175 N. C ' luiich Si. Next to ( ' oiiipany AfontgonuTV Uuiklini; Telephone 6367 Spai t:inl)ur;_;, S. C. Phone S182 200 Compliments of Smith-Ouzts Drugs Hi J- ARTEX CLEANERS A COMPLETE DRY CLEANING SERVICE ALTERATIONS OUR SPECIALTY Pick-up and Delivery DIAL 3-3205 PLANT: 2L Magnolia St. PICK-UP STATIONS 151 W. Main 128 S. Liberty Phone 2-341 167 E. Main St. SPARTANBURG SOUTH CAROLINA PI EDMONT NATIONAL BANK Montgomery Building and 531 E. Main Street Dial 631 1 MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM FD I C SPARTANBURG SOUTH CAROLINA 201 Wall Paper • Draperies • Slip Covers • Upholstery • Pictures VOGEL BROS. DRAPERIES. INC, 900 Pine St. Spartanburg, S. C. Wallace D. DuPre AUTO SUPPLIES ooo Believes in Wofford 127-131 Broad St. BELK-HUDSON CO. S7 ] R TA Mi ( 1 RC. ' S MOl )ERN DEPA R TMENT STORE MEN ' S FURMSI II (,S - M.iin I ' loor -r 1- 202 BEACON DRIVE-IN WHERE EGO I) S ALWAYS GOOD PHONE 3-5356 SP.VRTANBURG, S. C. DUKE POWER 1 KIMBRELL ' S Dependable Furniture 171 N. CIuikIi Street Phonr ' J-2. .Sr) SMITH i KIRBY SUPERIOR CLEANERS Cleaning At Its Best 420 Farley Ave. Phone 2-0174 A Representative in Each Dormitory THE STUDENTS ' STORE FOR STUDENTS ' NEEDS WOFFORD COLLEGE CANTEE AND BOOKSTORE SPARTAN SERVICE STATION 426 North Church St. Opposite Wofford College ATLANTIC PRODUCTS — LEE TIRES BATTERIES A. H. (Fat) VASSEY Wofford Students Can Get Checks Cashed Here 203 Cot)i}jlnne)il.s ( SPRATT GROCERY CO., INC. VV H O L E S A L E C ; R O C E R S Laurens, S. C. WOODWARD SALES COMPANY Distributors TOM ' S TOASTED PEANUTS POTATO CHIPS CANDIES PEANUT BUTTER SANDWICHES P. O. Box 132 Foirforest, S. C. Dial 2-3008 ACADEMIC GOWNS - CAPS - HOODS o£ Authentic Design Supplied by COTRELL AND LEONARD, INC. EsTAUListna) 18. )2 ALBANY 1, N.Y. SL ' PPLIERS TO WOFFORD COLLEGE 204 BELLWOOD FOOD PRODUCTS For Institutions W. H. WILLIAMS COMPANY DISTRIBUTORS Richmond, Virginia . « . . — • — y Young Office Supply Co. THE STEEPLE OFFICE OUTFITTERS Dial 6744 124 Morgan Square GOOD FOOD FOUNTAIN DRINKS ' West Main at Dual Lane Next Door to Wriglit—Scr uggs _ PHONE 9154 Price ' s Store For Men McDowell cleaners 113-115 N. Church St. SPARTANBURG, S. C. CLOTHES CONSCIENTIOUSLY CLEANED 501 MAGNOLIA ST. 1 Block From Wofford THE GE E R DRUG COM P ANY CHARLESTON GREENVILLE 1 SPARTANBURG 205 CONVERSE COLLEOE SPARTANBURG SOUTH CAROLINA A Liberal Ar s College for Women CHRISTIAN BUT NOT DENOMINATIONAL Academic Degree B.A. Music Degree B.Mus., M.Mus. Majors in Music, Speech, Art Allowed in B.A. Degree Men Admitted to Courses in Music, Speech, and Art For Catalogue and Booklet of Views, Address E. M. GWATHMEY, PRESIDENT 206 ONE-STOP SHOPPING PAYS . . . NATIONALLY ADVERTISED BRANDS THAT YOU KNOW AND TRUST . . . COMPLETE VARIETY OF FROZEN FOODS FOR QUICK — QUICK MEALS . . . DAILY FRESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES — DIRECT FROM THE BEST FARMS IN THE LAND . . . HIGHEST QUALITY MEATS, POULTRY AND FISH . . . HEALTH AND BEAUTY AIDS FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE . . . FRIENDLY — COURTEOUS SERVICE EVERY TIME YOU SHOP . . . Community Cash Super Markets Stores EASY TO PARK .... EASY TO SHOP G W VENDING CO, Automatic Merchants 209 St. John St. Phone 7481 SPARTANBURG, S. C. 207 ■-P 1- STEWART-HOLMES SHOES For The College Man KINNEY ' S SHOE STORE Compliments of Alexander ' s Music House 200 E. Main Street SPARTANBURG, S. C. Phone 32139 FOREMOST DAIRIES, INC, ' ' The Standard of Purity and Quality ' PASTEURIZED MILK BUTTERMILK ICE CREAM CREAM Where to Buy It ' 250 Magnolia Phone 5671 GREENE ' S BARBER SHOP PLACE WHERE ALL WOFFORD BOYS GO 208 MOORE ' S CLEANERS 260 E. Main St. SPARTANBURG, S. C. ONE OF CAROLINA ' S BETTER CLEANERS SPARTANBURG ' S LEADING CLEANERS WOFFORD COLLEGE SPARTANBURG, S. C. Founded 1854 A four-year college of Liberal Arts and Sciences for men, offering courses leading to Medicine, Law, Busi- ness, Engineering, and the Ministry. Full accreditation by all regional and national asso- ciations of colleges and universities. Chapter of Phi Beta Kappa, highest scholastic honor society. Modern library of 50,000 volumes, equipped with latest audiovisual aids. Excellent laboratory facilities in Chemistry, Physics, Biology, and Electricity. Joint five-year program of studies with Columbia University School of Engineering leading to degrees from both institutions. Similar program with Duke University School of Forestry. Voluntary General Military Science Program. Well-balanced program of intercollegiate and intra- mural sports, with ample facilities for indoor and out- door recreation and physical training. Emphasis on personalized, qualitative. Christian education. For further information, write to THE REGISTRAR WOFFORD COLLEGE 209 GOOD PHOTOGRAPHY MAKES A GOOD ANNUAL Photographs in the 1954 BOHEMIAN WILLIS STUDIO -Established 1912- 153 N. Church Street Spartanburg, South Carolina We Photograph Anything, Anywhere, Anytime ROBERT H. WILLIS Specializing In Commercial and Industrial Photography Portraits School Annuals Weddings Color Photography All BOHEMIAN Negatives are on File, and Prints Will be Available At Anytime 210 ELECTRIC ICE FUEL COMPANY, INC. SPARTANBURG, S. C. ■■L 1— • — ♦ — • — • — . — . — . — . — . — . — _ — . — . —  — . — — . — . — . o . . . Friends of Wofford, It has certainly been a great undertaking. We hope we lived II up to expectations of some of the students at least. Along with the work has been some fun, and we of the ' 54 Bohemian Staff can certainly look back over this year as being somewhat unusual but enjoyable. To all those who in any way, shape, or form contributed to the composition, production and selling of the yearbook, we offer thanks. II Especially to John Snyder, our Associate Editor; Harry Gall, our Historical Editor; and Tommy Griggs, our Business Manager; I offer my thanks and praise. To Prof. Adams, our experienced advisor, we also offer a salute. May this Centennial Bohemian be one that you will cherish for years to come wherever you may be. Sincerely, ' ' , LeGRAND A. ROUSE, II Editor 211 ADAMS, G. C. S 425 S. Fo Vv ew Ext. JONES, L, P ;34 Cambridge Circle ALLEN, R. M Wofford Campus LEONARD, W. R 3 5 Amherst Drive ANDREWS, D. W 235 California Avenue LOFTIN, J. C 110 Overbrook Circle ARIAIL, W. G 218 E. Cleveland Street LOGAN, S. F 127 Franklin Village BOURNE, W. R 407 Lucerne Drive McCARREN, W. C 136 N. Dean Street 5RAKEFIELD, J. A 53? Irwin Avenue MAY, G. H Rt. 1, Union, S. C. 3RENT, R. A Wofford Campus MOBLEY, W. F 268 W. Hampton Avenue iRITT, S. S, JR 186 N. Fairview MOYER, S. R Hillcrest iROCKMAN, MRS. J. H Wofford Campus NESBITT, C. F 411 Mills Avenue BUICE, W. E Boiling Springs Road NORTON, C. C 526 Gadsden Court CASTLES, L C 802 Plume Street PATTERSON, R. A 133 W. Lee Street CAUTHEN, C. E 665 Poplar Street PETTIS, C. S Glendale Car Line CAVIN, W. P 121 College Strest PHELAN, J. P 756 Hampton Avenue CHEATHAM, J. A 204 Brookwood Terrace ROBERTSON, J. E 103 Lonsdale Drive COATES, K. D 349 Ammons Road RUSSELL, J. H Hillcrest COLLOMS, L. H 769 Rutledge Street SALMON, J. L 175 N. Fairview Avenue COOKE, G. S 151 N. Fairview Avenue SCHEERER, W. W Ben Avon COVINGTON, P. S Wofford Campus SHULER, E. H 126 E. Cleveland Street CURRY, J. R 236 f. Cleveland Street SMITHYMAN, H. S 244 f. Cleveland Street DOBY, J. T Hillcrest SNIDOW, C. T., JR 364 Connecticut Avenue FINLEY, R, M 204 Howard Aden Apartments STEWART, J. T Wofford Campus FOREMAN, C. W Wofford Campus SUTPHIN, J. W 793 Boundary Drive GAINES, F. P., JR Wofford Campus TINDELL, H. R Rt. 2, Spartanburg GUNTER, A. L Schuyler Apartments WARD, V. S 242 Fairforest Road HILL, J. Q ' 79 S. Fairview Avenue WELCH, J. M 120 Wrightson Avenue HUCKS, HERBERT, JR 470 Hampton Drive WINGFIELD, MRS. SUMTER 56 Otis Boulevard HUNTER, W. B , JR Connecticut Avenue YOUNGINER, J. M , JR Wofford Campus Wp cf4 Student l ifectctif Sr. ABELL, JACK STANLEY 956 Henry Aye., Columbus, Go. So. ADAIR, JOHN THOMAS 505 Adair St., Clinton, S. C. Jr. ADAMS, HARVEY LARALLE, JR. . . .8 Clifton St., Lynchburg, Va. Jr. AIKEN, CLYDE MAJOR Box 104, Liberty, S. C. Fr. ALFORD, LEON J., JR 7006 Lakeside Dr., Conway, S. C. Fr. ALLEN, BENJAMIN HARRISON .... Apt. A-4, WoHord Campus Fr. ALLEN, WILLIAM LEO, JR Box 25, Rockingham, N. C. Fr. ALLEY, HAROLD WALKER, JR. . 258 Donald St., Spartanburg, S. C. Fr. ALLISON, GUS BENJAMIN, JR Box 71, Duncan, S. C. Sr. ALTMAN, GEORGE FRIERSON Galivants Ferry, S. C. Sr. ALVERSON, CLYDE BERNARD Rt. 1, Duncan, S. C. So. ANDERSON, PAUL PENNEY, SR Box 87, fo y Beach, S. C. Sr. ANDERSON, WILLIAM HILTON . . . Laurence St., Camden, S. C. Sr. ANTHONY, HOWARD THOMAS . Rt. 1, Box 103, Spartanburg, S. C. Jr. ARMSTRONG, MACK MONROE . . . . Rt. 1, Bessemer City, N. C. So. ASKINS, DAVID GLENBURN, JR. . . . N. Main St., Marion, S. C. Fr. ATKINSON, SAMUEL MARVIN, JR Bennettsville, S. C. Sr. AUMAN, HAROLD WAYNE Apt. C-8, Wofford Campus Sr. AWTREY, SHERRY EUGENE .... 22 Perry St., Manchester, Go. So. BAILEY, JAMES HERBERT .... 266 Caslua St., Darlington, S. C. Sr. BARBER, GARY DONALD . Knollwood Acres 3, Spartanburg, S. C. So. BARHAM, WILLIAM WADE . ... 414 Park Aye., Florence, S. C. Jr. BARRETT, CHARLES DAVID R.F.D. 2, Rock Hill, S. C. Jr. BARRETT, JAMES SHERER Co ege St., York, S. C. Ft. BASKIN, WILLIAM PEEBLES, III . 68 S. Main St., Bishopyille, S. C. Jr. BASS, BILL EDWARD 72 6 S. Lafayette St., Shelby, N. C. Ft. BASWELL, JOHN McBEE . . 53 Perrineau St., Spartanburg, S. C. Jr. B ATES, BILLY GENE Converse, S. C. So. BATES, CHARLES HENDERSON 608 S. McDuffie St., Anderson, S. C. Jr. BAUKNIGHT, CHARLES MAJOR Mauldin, S. C. So. BEAM, ALFRED EDWARD Apt. A-8, Wofford Campus Ft. BEASLEY, JIMMY TARLTON Rf. 2, Chesnee, S. C. Ft. BEASLEY, JOHN GERALD Lamar, S. C. Fr. BELCHER, KENDALL MAURICE . Bloomwood Heights, Inman, S. C. Jr. BELL, CURTIS PORTER ... 3 0 Oronge St., Georgetown, S. C. Fr. BELL, PAUL VERNON Rt. 1 , Woodruff, S. C. So. BELL, RODDEY COBB 3 0 Orange St., Georgetown, S. C. Sr. BENNETT, WILLIAM MARSHALL, JR 102 Webb St., Walterboro, S. C. So. BENSON, HOWARD CLAYTON R.F.D. 5, Ga ney, S. C. So. BERRY, JAMES ANDERSON, JR. . . 104 W. South St., Union, S. C. Sr. BIGELOW, ARCHIE RUFUS, JR 3 5 Churchhill Rd., North Charleston, S. C. Jr. BIGGERSTAFF, CLARENCE TALMADGE 633 Farley St., Spartanburg, S. C. So. BLACK, PAUL BRYON 504 Easley Rd., Anderson, S. C. Fr. BLACKMON, RUDOLPH DUNLAP 670 Annafral St., Rock Hill, S. C. Jr. BLOCKER, RICHARD RIDDICK . . Rt. 8, Box 870, Charleston, S. C. Fr. BOATWRIGHT, DONALD VENDEL . . Box 236, Myrtle Beach, S. C. Jr. BOGAN, JOE BERT 215 N. Mt. St., Union, S. C. Sr. BOLUS, DAWSON E Apt. C-3, Wofford Campus Ft. bond, CECIL GRAHAM 6 Townyille St., Seneca, S. C. So. BONDAY, THOMAS LEAGUE . . 59 Greenbriar Ave., Hampton, Va. Sr. BONDS, NEIL CAROL Box 68 , Calhoun Falls, S. C. Ft. BONNER, CARL HILLIART . . . Rt. 4, Box 352, Spartanburg, S. C. Ft. BOWEN, bobby MAYTON Mountain City, Ga. Ft. BOWEN, THOMAS EDWARD Turbeyille, S. C. Ft. BOYKIN, HORACE HOSEA, jr. . . . 112 Willow Dr., Sumter, S. C. Jr. BRABHAM, VANCE LYN Fairway Dr., Florence, S. C. Sr. BRIDGES, RONALD KENNEDY Box 53, Duncan, S. C. Sr. BRIGGS, ALLEN HENRY . ... 131 Woodlawn Aye., Union, S. C. Fr. BRIGMAN, ALLEN PRESTON Smith St., Latta, S. C. Sr. BROCK, JIMMY LEE ... . 696 Asheyille Hwy., Spartanburg, S. C. Jr. BROGDON, THOMAS ELMORE .... 208 Pear St., Sumter, S. C. Sr. BROWN, BILLY BOWMAN R.F.D. 2, Patrick, S. C. Sr. BROWN, HUGH ROBERT, JR. . . 2039 Vo 7 Aye., Charlotte, N. C. Ft. BROWN, JACK LIGON 9 Wilborn Aye., Greenyille, S. C. Jr. BROWN, JOE EARL Box 692, Spartanburg, S. C. So. BROWN, JOHN ROBERT Jackson, Ala. So. BROWN, WILLIAM DuRANT, JR Box 22, Cenfenory, S. C. Sr. BRYANT, KENNETH MILLER . . 804 Lindsay St., High Point. N. C. Sr. BRYANT, THEODORE WILBUR 32 W. View BIyd., Spartanburg, S. C. Jr. BUFF, LEONARD HOBSON, JR Rt. 1, Box 196, West Columbia, S. C. Sr. BUNDY, DON ROBERT .... Chesterfield Aye., Lancaster, S. C. Ft. burgess, SAMMY HAWTHORNE Rt. 2, Chesnee, S. C. Jr. BURLEY, WILLIAM WADE . 35 Oakwood Aye., Spartanburg, S. C. Sr. BURNETT, BOBBY LEE 24 6o ng Springs Rd., Spartanburg, S. C. So. BURNETT, ROBERT ADAIR . . 297 Hydrick St., Spartanburg, S. C. Fr. BURNETTE, RONALD DOUGLAS . . 309 Cannon Aye., Greer, S. C. So. BURNS, CLAUDE WELDON, JR R.F.D. 1, Lancaster, S. C. Ft. BURNS, JULIUS WEYLAND R.F.D. , Loncosfer, S. C. Sr. BURTON, CLYDE HARLAN . . 271-A Dorothy St., High Point, N. C. Sr. BUTTS, VICTOR DEE, JR Box 1108, Spartanburg, S. C. Jr. BYERS, MORRIS JENNINGS Gilkey, N. C. Sr. BYNUM, HENRY CLARKE 131 Church St., Sumter, S. C. Sr. CALDWELL, DON RYAN 202 Mill St., Buffalo, S. C. It. CAMLIN, CECIL MARTIN, JR. . . . Rt. 2, Box 439, Florence, S. C. Sr. CAMPBELL, GEORGE WESLEY . . 1002 Morris St., Edgefield, S. C. Ft. CAMPBELL, HUGH WILSON, JR. . . , Apt. B-6, Wofford Campus Sr. CANADAY, SOLOMON MACTURIUS, JR 64 Rutledge Aye., Charleston, S. C. Sr. CANTRELL, WILLIAM JOSEPH Rt. 1 , Inman, S. C. So. CAPES, JOHN ROBERT R.F.D. 2, Covington, Ga. Ft. CARLSON, WILLIAM PAUL 208 Jackson Ave., North Augusta, S. C. Jr. CARMICHAEL, NELSON WALLACE . . . Marion St., Mullins, S. C. Jr. CARNES, DALE EUGENE Townsend, Tenn. Sr. CARPENTER, ROY T 201 Brenton Aye., Spartanburg, S. C. Ft. CARSON, CLARK ROBERT 132 Oyerbrook Circle, Spartanburg, S. C. Fr. CARTER, WALTER EARL Warren St., Lamar, S. C. Ft. CARTRETTE, ARTHUR LEE, JR. . Rt. 1, Box 265, Chadbourn, N. C. Sr. CASSELL, FRANK DELAND Box 202, Campobe o, S. C. Jr. CAUTHEN, MAX BARNES, JR. . . Marion Sims Dr., Lancaster, S. C. So. CHAMBLEE, CARTER ROBERTSON 3 5 25th St., Newport News, Va. Ft. CHAVIS, DERYLE WESLEY Rt. 4, Bennettsville, S. C. Sr. CHAVIS, HAROLD L Box 82, Trio, S. C. Fr. CHENEY, DONALD RICHARD, JR 167 Connecticut Ave., Spartanburg, S. C. Jr. CHILDS, S. LAWRENCE, JR Apt. D-8, Wofford Campus Sr. CHRISTOPHER, HARLEY HENRY, JR Pelham, S. C. Ft. CLARDY, CERMETTE JUSTING, JR. . 705 Roosevelt St., Dillon, S. C. Ft. CLYBURN, ROBERT BEATY . . 207 Calhoun St., Charleston, S. C. So. COKER, CHARLES HENRY 56 Mill St., Taylors, S. C. Ft. COKER, SAMUEL BRYSON Rt. 3, Anderson, S. C. Ft. cole, BOBBY DONALD 42 Roosevelt St., Marietta, Ga. Sr. COLLINS, GENE ELDREDGE Rt. 2, Effingham, S. C. So. CONNOR, LAWTON RUTLEDGE Eutawville, S. C. Ft. COOK, ROBERT KEITH Inman, S. C. Sr. COOKSEY, JESSE LECEL . . 140 Carolina Ave., Spartanburg, 5. C. Fr. COOPER, LEO JAMES Rt. 2, Powell, Tenn. So. COPE, PAUL VERNON Spring St., Drayton, S. C. So. COSTAS, ALEX H 716 Union St., Spartanburg, S. C. So. COSTAS, WILLIAM ZAFERIOS . 483 Church St., Spartanburg, S. C. Ft. COTHRAN, bobby RALPH Rt. 7, Spartanburg, S. C. Sr. COVINGTON, WILLIAM CARLISLE C o, S. C. Sr. COX, G. W. FARRELL Hemingway, S. C. Sr. COXE, RAYMOND LAVON . . .208 Ellen St., Bennettsville, S. C. Ft. CROMER, JERRY HALTIWANGER . 112 Norris St., Anderson, S. C. Ft. CROSBY, WILLIAM DONALD . . 98 Goy e St., Chester, S. C. Ft. CROTZER, MILLARD LOPEZ, JR. . 130 Anthony St., Gaffney, S. C. Ft. gulp, WILLIAM WALLACE, JR. . 05 McPherson St., Union, S. C. So. DAVIS, CHARLES CURTIS Rt. 2, Hemingway, S. C. Jr. DAVIS, HERMAN EDWARD Rt. 3, Gate City, Va. Sr. DAVIS, HOMER AUSTIN . 130 E. Cleveland St., Spartanburg, S. C. Ft. DAVIS, JERRY THOMAS . . .205 Dewey Ave., Spartanburg, S. C. Ft. DAVIS, JESSE DEAN Rt. 2, Campobello, S. C. 213 So. DAVIS, OTTO ANDERSON fit. 4, Darlington, S. C. Fr. DAVIS, TONY O ' NEIL ... 790 Southern St., Spartanburg, S. C. Sr. DAVISON, ROBERT ADVIL Rt. 2, Florence, S. C. Jr. DENNIS, JAMES DICKERSON . Country Club Rd., Spartanburg, S. C. Sr. DERRICK, MELVIN EARL, JR. . 2906 Heyv ard St., Columbia, S. C. Fr. DILLESHAW, WILLIAM BLAKE Columbia, S. C. Sr. DITTY, JAMES MITCHELL 138 E. 234th Place, Wilmington, California So. DOBBINS, Z. E., J; Rt. 1 , Bostic, N. C. Jr. DOWDESWELL, MILTON RICHARD 658 Glendolyn Ave., Spartanburg, S. C. Fr. DRENNAN, JOHN BERNARD . 25 W. Georgia St., Woodruff, S. C. Fr. DuBARD, FRED FAIREY, JR. . . 1300 Johnson Ave., Columbia, S. C. Jr. DuBOSE, JACK BOYD 006 Waverly Ave., Florence, S. C. Jr. DuBOSE, MARVIN McBRIDE . . .923 Finely Rd., Rock Hill, S. C. So. DuBOSE, RICHARD PATRICK . . ;006 Waverly Ave., Florence, S. C. So. DuBOSE, WILLIAM ALLEN New lion, S. C. Fr. DUFFIE, GEORGE SUMMERS .116 Anderson St., Greenville, S. C. Jr. DUNLAP, JOHN COLLINS ... 520 Chestnut St., Rock Hill, S. C. Fr. DURHAM, FLOYD DONALD Rt. 2, Pickens, S. C. So. DURHAM, PAUL ESTES 102 Academy St., Chester, S. C. Fr. DURHAM, WADE HADLEY, JR. . . 502 Park Dr., Siler City, N. C. Fr. EARLE, CECIL TERRY Depoy, Ky. Fr. EASLER, HUGH BLANTON . . . Rt. 1, Box 114, Spartanburg, S. C. Jr. EDGE, HORACE LEE, JR Rt. 1 , Campobello, S. C. Fr. EDWARDS, CARL T 501 W. College St., Whiteville, N. C. So. EDWARDS, WILLIAM FRANCIS . . . . Rt. 2, Travelers Rest, S. C. Fr. ELLISON, JACK COLUMBUS . . Rt. 3, Box 86, Spartanburg, S. C. Jr. ELMORE, ROMEO HICKS Box 79, Caroleen, N. C. Sr. EPPERSON, JAMES SIDNEY Box 371, New Bern, N. C. Fr. ERVIN, LAURIE NELSON 906 f. Main St., Dillon, S. C. So. EUBANKS, RAYMOND CONVERSE, JR 25 Victoria Rd., Spartanburg, S. C. So. EVINS, WILLIAM BOYD, JR Rt. 1, Travelers Rest, S. C. Jr. FARMER, FRANK, JR 504 E. 48th St., Savannah, Go. Fr. FERGUSON, DON PRATT .... 839 Saluda St., Rock Hill, S. C. Jr. FEW, HENRY THERON 71 Blake St., Greenville, S. C. Sr. FISHER, ARTHUR MICKEY 200 Broad St., Union, S. C. fr. FLETCHER, FRANK TATUM, JR. . . . Rt. 1, Box 20, McColl, S. C. Jr. FLOYD, JOHN CLEMON ... 2 4 Vallejo Circle, Columbia, S. C. Fr. FOGLE, JOE CALVIN Rt. 2, Lamar, S. C. So. FORBIS, DOUGLAS RANDAL Box 631, Lancaster, S. C. Jr. FORD, LEE DELANO Box 37, Rt. 5, Greenville, S. C. Sr. FORE, RICHARD BERNARD Rt. 2, Dillon, S. C. Fr. FOSTER, ALTON LEROY, JR. . 500 Park View Dr., Spartanburg, S. C. Jr. FOSTER, CHARLIE MONROE . . 208 Greenville Hwy., Fasley, S. C. So. FOSTER, EUGENE LEE ; Front St., Spartanburg, S. C. Sr. FOSTER, HARRY HALL Rt. 3, Spartanburg, S. C. Fr. FOSTER, JACK EDWARD Boomer, N. C. So. FOSTER, JULIAN HARRIS . . .384 Forest Ave., Spartanburg, S. C. Fr. FOSTER, PERRIN CALDWELL, JR 90 Briarcliff Rd., Spartanburg, S. C. Fr. FOWLER, DONALD LIONEL Rt. 5, Spartanburg, S. C. So. FOX, ROBERT EDWARD ... 37 Lyttleton Ave., Charleston, S. C. Jr. FRALEY, ROBERT RAY Gory, Wes Va. Fr. FRIPP, BOBBY GLENN Walterboro, S. C. Sr. FURR, CHARLES GILMORE 301 1st Ave., Dillon, S. C. Sr. GALL, HARRY 1013 Jackson Ave., Florence, S. C. So. GALLOWAY, WILLIAM EDDINS Rt. 2, Hartsville, S. C. Fr. GARRETT, THOMAS R. . 265 Asheville Hwy., Spartanburg, S. C. Fr. GAULT, JOHN CLEVELAND ... 77 Stone St., Pacolet Mills, S. C. So. GEORGE, BENJAMIN SCAFE . . 3 Walker St., Pacolet Mills, S. C. Sr. GIBBONS, THOMAS GREGORY 302 N. Matson St., Kershaw, S. C. So. GIBBONS, WILLIAM MURRAY Turbeville, S. C. Jr. GIBSON, PHILIP HAMLET ... 329 Hampton Rd., Hampton, Va. Fr. GILES, BOBBY FONCIE Rt. 1 , Spartanburg, S. C. Sr. GILL, JOHN ANDERSON 227 Oakland Ave., Rock Hill, S. C. Fr. GILLIAM, JAMES OLIN 570 Brawley St., Spartanburg, S. C. Sr. GLASCOE, WILLIAM WALKER Box 125, Duncan, S. C. Jr. GLENN, SAMUEL RUFUS, JR. . . 6 W. Paris Rd., Greenville, S. C. Jr. GLOVER, COLLIE WILLIAM . . Rt. 1, Box 152, Warrenville, S. C. So. GOBOLOS, JOSEPH VINCENT . . 20 Beech St., Lackawanna, N. Y. Fr. GODBOLD, THOMAS MARION, JR Marion, S. C. Fr. GODFREY, JOSEPH LEE 209 Ardry St., Fort Mill, S. C. So. GOLDEN, JAMES LEONARD . . 908 River St., Newberry, S. C. Sr. GOLDSTON, ROBERT JOHN Box 406, Wallace, N. C. Jr. GOODALE, FRANK D., JR ;6;5 Brood St., Camden, S. C. So. GOODLETT, VERNON WILSON Travelers Rest, S. C. Fr. GOODWIN, FLOYD ALISTER Walterboro, S. C. Sr. GOSSETT, FRANCIS HUITT . . . . 7 ? f nterpnse St., Union, S. C. Sr. GOUDELOCK, DANIEL STEVENSON Box 10, Rt. 3, Winnsboro, S. C. Fr. GRAHAM, CLYDE MOFFETT . . 4607 Park Road, Charlotte, N. C. Fr. GRAHAM, JOSEPH WALKER, JR Box 7667, Loris, S. C. Sr. GRANT, EDWARD FREDERICK Murrell ' s Inlet, S. C. Sr. GRAVELY, WILLIAM DANIEL . 505 Cedar Rock St., Pickens, S. C. Fr. GREEN, JAMES DAVIS .... 672 Cantey Parkway, Camden, S. C. Jr. GREGORY, CHARLES RAY . . . 7 3 73 Tipton St., High Point, N. C. Jr. GREGORY, DOUGLAS LAYTON . 279 Ravenscroft St., Union, S. C. Fr. GRIFFIN, JULIAN EARLE .... Montogue Ave., Greenwood, S. C. Sr. GRIFFITH, ROBERT HERLONG Jefferson, S. C. Sr. GRIGGS, TOMMY LYNN Ruby, S. C. Fr. GRIMES, JIMMY MARTIN, JR. . . 672 S. Main St., Bamberg, S. C. Fr. GROCE, LARRY DALE Rt. 2, Spartanburg, S. C. Fr. GUILFORD, MORGAN BAGNAL 505 S. McQueen St., Florence, S. C. Sr. GUTHRIE, REX BEACH Monfeo, N. C. Fr. HALL, TERRY WAYNE . 93 Woodworth Homes, Spartanburg, S. C. Sr. HAMBRICK, JACKSON WESTMORELAND . 437 St. Andrews Ave., Spartanburg, S. C. So. HAMILTON, CLYDE HENRY, JR. . 204 Augusta Rd., Edgefield, S. C. Jr. HAMMITT, LAWRENCE SAMUEL 7 74 Pecrson St., Spartanburg, S. C. So. HAMMOND, F. JETER, JR 70 Folsom St., Sumter, S. C. Fr. HAND, JOEL WYMAN, JR. . . 323 N. Carlisle St., Bamberg, S. C. So. HARDIN, EARL THOMAS ... 703 Courtland St., Spindale, N. C. Fr. HARDIN, WILLIAM LEO 75 Wotts Ave., Laurens, S. C. Fr. HARMON, DON R Box 592, Spartanburg, S. C. Jr. HARRELSON, JAMES RICHELIEU . 200 W 7cox Ave., Marion, S. C. So. HART, BOBBY GENE Box 644, Pacolet, S. C. Fr. HASELDEN, ALONZA HEAPE . 729 Dewey Ave., Spartanburg, S. C. Sr. HAWKINS, DONALD HAROLD 449 S. Church St., Spartanburg, S. C. Fr. HAWKINS, JACK MILTON .... Monticello St., Covington, Ga. Fr. HAYES, FREDERICK BREVARD 322 S. Confederate St., Rock Hill, S. C. So. HAYNES, GEORGE McKENDRE 7 7 7 - 7 Crystal Springs, Spartanburg, S. C. Sr. HAYNIE, MIKE 504 forest St., Spartanburg, S. C. Fr. HAYNSWORTH, WILLIAM SWINTON . . . . 272 W. Cedar St., Florence, S. C. Jr. HAZLE, JOE ELDRIDGE Duncan, S. C. Jr. HEAD, ROBERT NORRIS Box 783, Columbus, N. C. Fr. HENDRICKS, MELVIN ELTON Ridgeland, S. C. Jr. HENSLEY, EDGAR RANDOLPH 657 S. Church St., Spartanburg, S. C. Fr. HEOS, ROBERT REID . . .978 Georgia Ave., North Augusta, S. C. Sr. HERBERT, THOMAS JACKSON, JR 2907 Circle Dr., Portsmouth, Ohio Fr. HERRIN, JOSEPH LAWRENCE 9 C Ave., Chicopee, Ga. Sr. HERRING, WADE WILKES . 467 Hampton St., Walterboro, S. C. Sr. HILL, JIMMY CARMON .... 24 Woodruff St., Woodruff, S. C. Sr. HILL, ROSCOE NORRIS 8 Pond St., Whitney, S. C. Fr. HILTON, WILLIAM HENRY Harrison St., Dillon, S. C. So. HIPP, CURTIS WESLEY Rt. 2, Newberry, S. C. Fr. HODGE, WILLIAM WALLACE, JR 224 S. Harden St., Columbia, S. C. Jr. HOFFMEYER, ALLEN KING . 506 Park Ave., Florence, S. C. So. HOLDER, PERCY HUGH Rt. 7, Pickens, S. C. Jr. HOLLABAUGH, CHARLES FOWLER, JR. . . . 803 Glenhaven Dr., Nashville, Tenn. Wo ct4 Student t ifectctif Fr. HOLLAND, EVANS PARNELL . . 1308 W. cvans St., Florence, S. C. So. HOPE, ROBERT OSCAR . . . Rt. 7, Spartanburg, S. C. Jr. HOTHERSALL, JOHN BAKER . Rt. 5, Graenville, S. C. Sr. HOWARD, FLOYD NYE . . Workman Ave., Woodruff, S. C. Jr. HOWARD. LESLIE WHEELER, JR 220? Bhssom St., Columbia, S. C. Jr. HOWELL, BOBBY JOE ... . Rt. 5, Union, S. C. So. HOWLE, RICHARD ADEN . . . .1435 Green St., Hartsville, S. C. So. HUDGENS, JAMES EARL . . . 2103 Buncombe Rd., Greenville, S. C. Jr. HUDSON, JOHN HAROLD, JR Rt. 4, Greer, S. C. Fr. HUFF, RICHARD MARCUS 328 W. Pine Grove Ave., North Augusta, S. C. Jr. HUFF, WALTER HAROLD 200 Duke St., Greer, S. C. Fr. HUFF, WILLIAM RALPH, JR. . . .103 Oregon St., Greenville, S. C. Jr. HUGGINS, GEORGE ELBERT . jr. HUNEYCUTT, JAMES S. . . . . . . E. Main St., Appalachia, Va. r r. HUNTLEY, STEPHEN JENNINGS 494 Hampton Dr., Spartanburg, S. C. Fr. HUSSEY, RICHARD EMANUEL Harleyville, S. C. Fr. HYATT, DONALD MclNTOSH, JR 307 N. Boulevard, Wilmington, N. C. Sp. HYNDS, WILLIAM B 835 Rutledge St., Spartanburg, S. C. Fr. INGRAM, PETER ELLIOTT . . 1601 Vi Home Ave., Hartsville, S. C. So. INMAN, BILLY HUBERT, JR. . . 304 Church St., Buffalo, S. C. Fr. INMAN, FRANCIS PAUL . . . 609 N. Pinckney St., Union, S. C. Fr. JARRETT, DAVID MEDLIN . . 602 S. Poplar St., Lincolnton, N. C. So. JENNINGS, ROBERT DENNIS . . . . Church St., Bishopville, S. C. Fr. JETER, WILLIAM H., JR . ... 3 0 S. Mt. St., Union, S. C. So. JOHNSON, DAVID NEIL . . . Front St., Spartanburg, S. C. Sr. JOHNSON, EDWIN RUSHING . ... Box 2363, Charlotte, N. C. Fr. JOHNSON, EVERETTE KEITH J 9 Ponce de Leon Ave., Spartanburg, 5. C. Fr. JOHNSON, HARRY DAVIS Rt. 5, Spartanburg, S. C. Fr. JOHNSON, JAMES F Sr. JOHNSON, JAMES MELTON . ... 101 Mill Ave., Union, S. C. Jr. JONES, CHARLES P 3 29 Johnston St., Knoxville, Tenn. Fr. JONES, FREDDIE DEAN Rt. 1, Pacolet, S. C. So. JONES, JACOB ROWELL, JR. . 42 Kennedy St., Spartanburg, S. C. Fr. JONES, JOHN EARL .... . . . .118 Park Ave., Greer, S. C. So. JONES, MAX DUNCAN . . . . 925 Howard St., Spartanburg, S. C. Fr. KEELS, THOMAS WHITE . ... 202 Purdy St., Sumter, S. C. So. KELLETT, JOHN NEWTON, JR Cherry St., Seneca, S. C. Jr. KELLEY, ROBIN BARRETTE . 110 Oakleaf Dr., Spartanburg, S. C. Sr. KELLY, WILLIAM HYLAND 2709 Clarendon Rd., Brooklyn 26, N. Y. Fr. KEMMERLIN, AR CHIE LEWIS, JR Calhoun Ave., St. Matthews, S. C. Jr. KENT, PAUL SWITZER Fairtorest, S. C. So. KING, RUSSELL CALVIN, JR. . 286 Orange St., Darlington, S. C. Fr. KING, WAYNE MANLY St. George, S. C. Sr. KINNEY, WILLIAM LIGHT, JR 807 Covington St., Bennettsville, S. C. Jr. KIRBY, JOSEPH HENRY . . . 202 Lakeview Heights, Union, S. C. Fr. KIRKPATRICK, WILLIAM WAYNE 120 Canterbury Rd., Spartanburg, S. C. Fr. KNIGHT, ALBERT RONALD Rt. 57, Greenville, S. C. Fr. KNOPF, JULIAN RICHARD Fr. KOON, BEN LEWIS Woodstock, Va. So. KRELL, CLISBY HARRELL . . . 535 Lucerne Dr., Spartanburg, S. C. Fr. LaCROSSE, DENNIS JOSEPH 263 W. Camelia St , Spartanburg, S. C. Jr. LAMPLEY, FULTON MALLOY . 204 Carlisle St., Spartanburg, S. C. Sr. LANE, CARL WILLIAM, JR Rt. 1, Moore, S. C. Fr. LANE, DAVID LEROY . . . . . . . Calhoun St., Bishopville, S. C. Jr. LANFORD, CECIL FLOYD Rt. 2, Woodruff, S. C. Fr. LANGLEY, CHARLES STUART . 1268 Hardee St., N.E., Atlanta, Ga. Jr. LASHER, DAVID LOWREY, III Apt. U-1, Beverly Apts., Asheville, N. C. Jr. LAWRENCE, GEORGE FRANCIS . 6 4 Marlboro St., New York, N. Y. Sr. LAWSON, EARL HAMES .... 204 Spruce St., Union, S. C. Fr. LAWSON, JULIUS RUTLEDGE . . . 404 N. Purdy St., Sumter, S. C. So. LAWSON, RALPH H . . . Church St., Buffalo, S. C. Sr. LAWTON, WILLIAM T. . 66 E. Columbia Ave., Spartanburg, S. C. Fr. LEAGUE, JACK LEWIS 14 N. Haven Dr., Greenville, S. C. Fr. LEE, BILLY . . . Rt. 2, Timmonsville, S. C. Fr. LEE, KENNETH CARROLL . . . . . . . Rt. 2, Timmonsville, S. C. So. LEE, NORRIS TIMOTHY .... Fr. LEWIS, JAMES DANIEL, JR 1208 Main St., Conway, S. C. Fr. LIDE, THEODORE ALLISON, JR. 1 Frank Clark St., Sumter, S. C. So. LINEBERGER, JAMES WORTH, JR . . 410 W. Divine St., Dunn, N. C. Sr. LISTON, JOHN M Rt. 1 , Smoaks, S. C. Fr. LITTLEFIELD, BELTON JAMES Rt. 2, Woodruff, S. C. Jr. LORYEA, ROBERT SYDNEY , . . 112 Lucas St., Walterboro, S. C. c br. LOWRY, JAMES LY NN, JR. . 27 Carolina Ave., Spartanburg, S. C. iO. LOWRY, PHILLIP SAM ... 72 S. Church St., Spartanburg, S. C. Fr. LUKSTAT, RICHARD HENRY . J2 W. Centennial St., Clinton, S. C. c _ br. LYNN, CHARLES THOMAS, JR. . . . 102 North Ave., Greer, S. C. Sr. McBRIDE, WALKER REID . . . Rt. 1, Pacolet, S. C. Sr. McBRIDE, WILBUR RAY ... . Rt. 1, Pacolet, S. C. Sr. McCLURE, WILLIAM HOVEY Fr. McCOWN, WILLIAM VANCE Box 67, Tryon, N. C. Sr. McCULLY, ROBERT WILLIAM . 5 9 41st St., West Palm Beach, Fla. Sr. McELWEE, FRANK LOVE, JR. . 112 Woodland Dr., Clover, S. C. Sr. McELWEE, JOSEPH MONROE .... 05 Kings Mountain St, Clover, S. C. Jr. McGEE, EDWIN CLYDE . , . 1906 W. College St., Hartsville, S. C. Jr. McGINNIS, ALFRED CHESTER . . 937 Marion St., Knoxville, Tenn. Jr. MclNTOSH, DAVID LAWRENCE . 526 Edisto Dr., Florence, S. C. Jr. MclNTOSH, MELVIN DWIGHT . . Rt. 4, Box 735, Charlotte, N. C. So. MclNTYRE, THOMAS KIRKLAND Chesnee, S. C. Fr. McKENZIE, LEON CRAIG , . Box 2382, Spartanburg, S. C. Sr. McMAKIN, ANSEL BOBO, JR . 10 Whitney St., Slater, S. C. Sr. McMAKIN, JAMES V . . Rt. 3, Hadden Heights, S. C. Fr. McMillan, willis edwin ;?f. 2, Lamar, S. C. Fr. MANERS, JIMMY ALBERT . . 926 Oakland Ave., Rock Hill, S. C. Sr. manning, JESSE FRANKLIN . . 56 Cherokee St., Abbeville, S. C. Jr. MARCHANT, ROBERT LEE . . . 301 W. Poinsett St., Greer, S. C. So. MARSHALL, ROGER LEE ... . Rt. 8, Charlotte, N. C. Fr. MARTIN, ARCHIE EUGENE . . 118 Hemphill Ave., Chester, S. C. Fr. MARTIN, DAVID M. . . 750 Lake Howard Dr., Winter Haven, Fla. Fr. MARTIN, JAMES ELMORE . . . . 9 5 S. Harper St., Laurens, S. C. Fr. MARTIN, KENNETH RONALD . . . . 521 3rd St., Cheraw, S. C. Jr. MARTIN, THURMAN ROBERT Box 325, Arcadia, S. C. Fr. MASON, BILLY HUGH .... . . . . Box 144, Jonesville, S. C. Jr. MASON, GLENN MILTON . . . . . . Rt. 2, Campobello, S. C. So. MATHIS, DENNIS EARL . . . . . . . . Rt. 1, Spartanburg, S. C. So. MAW, SAMUEL HATHSTON, JR. . . 500 Glenn St., Newberry, S. C. Fr. MAXWELL, JAMES LEE . . . 706 Riverside Dr., Spartanburg, S. C. Sr. MAY, JESSE GAYLORD .... Rt. 1, Union, S. C. Sr. MAY, WILKES GRAHAM . . . Rt. 1, Union, S. C. Fr. MAYS, MARTIN LEE ... . 608 Monument Square, Camden, S. C. Jr. MEADORS, MARSHALL LeROY, JR 418 Cherokee Rd., Florence, S. C. Fr. MEARES, GEORGE ARTHUR, JR. 726 Hollywood St., Spartanburg, S. C. Sr. MEDLOCK, MELVIN DuBOSE . 34 6 Devereoux Rd., Columbia, S. C. So. MEDLOCK, THOMAS TRAVIS . 34 6 Devereoux Rd., Columbia, S. C. So. MEEK, JOHN THOMAS .... Pine St., Solvang, Calif. bp. MELTON, TRUMAN DEFOIX . . . . . Rt. 2, Spartanburg, S. C. Fr. MELTON, WILLIAM PAUL . . . . 129 Maple St., Winnsboro, S. C. jr. MILLARD, CHANCY E . . . . Rt. 6, Spartanburg, S. C. Fr. MILLER, JAMES THOMAS , . Charleston, S. C. So. MILLER, SAMUEL KRAMER . . Rt. 1, Lyman, S. C. Fr. MITCHELL, HENRY EDWARD . . . . Box 43, Spartanburg, S. C. Jr. MITCHELL, JOHN JOSEPH, JR. . . .305 Pine St., Union, S. C. Fr. MOOD, CHARLES ASHLEIGH . 24 S. Wos iingfon St., Sumter, S. C. Fr. MOONEYHAM, JOE WHEELER . 510 Brawley St., Spartanburg, S. C. Sr. MOORE, JAMES ELWOOD . . . .126 Washington Place, Spartanburg, S. C. V)0 0t4 Student hifectctif Jr. MOORE, RALPH VERNON, JR Box 29, Conwoy, S. C. Sr. MOORE, S. T Rt. 4, Greer, S. C. Fr. MOREY, FREDERICK ARNOLD Kmgs Highway, East Sandwich, Moss. Fr. MORRIS, BYRON SHAKE . . . . Rt. 4, Timmonsville, S. c. So. MORRIS, HENRY MILTON . . 1001 Cleveland Court, Dillon, S. c. r r. MORROW, CHARLES WILBUR ... OS Moore St., Union, S. c. io. MOSELEY, JAMES FELDER . ... Box 145, Ridgeland, S. r r. MOSELEY, SHERRILL CORNELIUS . . Box 145, RIdgeland, S. c. r r. MOYER, WILLIAM BENJAMIN . Hillcrest Blvd., Spartanburg, S. c. Sr. MULL, BENJAMIN ISH . . . . . Box 428, Morganton, N. c. Fr. MUZEKARI, LOUIS HARRY . . 206 W. Croft St., Greenville, S. c. c. r r. NANNEY, DON ROGER . . . . . . . Pickney St., Chester, S. c. So. NEAL, RONNIE SMITH ... 749 Fulton Ave., Spartanburg, 5. c. Sr. NEELY, WESLEY LAWTON . . . Box 1507, Spartanburg, S. c. Fr r r. NEVES, CHARLES ARTHUR, JR . ... 102 Pine St., Greer, S. c. Sr. NOLAND, AUBREY TALMADGE . ... 208 Boyce St., Union, S. c. Sp. O ' DELL, DONALD RUSSELL . . . .100 Wallace St., Union, S. c. Fr. O ' QUINN JACOB PERRY 719 S. Main St., Bamberg, S. c. Fr. OSTEEN, ED POWELL . Fayetteville Road Ext., Rockingham, N. c. Fr. OWEN, HARVEY COGSWELL, JR 309 Dantzler St. Matthews, S. St., c. Sr. OWENBY, WILLIAM EMILY . . . 213 S. Church St., Union, S. c. So. OWENS, ALBERT DEWEY . 711 S Lone Oak Rd., Spartanburg, S. c. Jr. OWENS, WILLIE ANSEL Rt. 3, Marion, S. c. Sr. PAPADOPOULOS, CONSTANTINOS NEOFYTOS ... 23 Isminis, Kavala, Greece Sc. PARKER, WILLIAM FREEMAN, JR. . . 232 Broad St., Sumter, S. c. Jr. PARLER, SAM G . Columbia Ave., Batesburg, S. c. Sr. PARRIS, JAMES EDWARD . . 740 Asheville Hwy., Spartanburg, S. c. Sr. PARRIS, LeROY, JR 548 Thomas St., Spartanburg, S. c. Jr. PARRIS, WILLIAM KEITH Rf. 3, Go ney, S. c. Fr. PARROTT, T. DWIGHT . . . Lancaster, S. c. Jr. PATRICK, THOMAS LUTHER . . . . George St., St. George, S. c. So. PATTERSON, WILLIAM BELLINGER 60 Hampton St., Walterboro, S. C. Jr. PATTON, MILTON KAY . . . S. Main St., Woodruff, S. c. Jr. PEARCY, ENGLISH BROWN . . 523 Hampton St., Walterboro, S. c. Jr. PENICK, JOHN JACOB . . . . 527 Lincolnton Rd., Salisbury, N. c. Fr. PENNY, ROBERT LYNN . . . . . . . Box 77, Gibsonville, N. c. So. PENNY, WILLIAM EARL . . . Church St., Gibsonville, N. c. Sr. PERROW, GEORGE TURNER c. Jr. PETTIGREW, ROBERT EUGENE Box 77, Storr, S. c. Jr. PETTUS, ROBERT DWIGHT Box 81, Inman, S. c. Fr. PETTY, PAUL DEWITT . . . c. Jr. PHILLIPS, FREDERICK GRIDLEY . ... Box 2021, Greenville, 5. c. Fr. PHILLIPS, JAMES KEITH . . 224 Briarcliff Rd., Spartanburg, S. c. Jr. PHILLIPS, WILLIAM PERRY . 252 S. Converse St., Spartanburg, S. C. Sr. PIKE, LeROY Rt. 5, Greer, S. c. Jr. PITTMAN, CLARENCE ODELL . . . Brannon Ave., Greer, S. c. So. PITTS, CLAIR DANIEL, JR 205 N. Adair St., Clinton, S. c. Fr. PITTS, DOUGLAS DRAYTON, JR. . . . 303 School St., Greer, S. c. Sr. POOLE, MACK COLLIER, III Cross Anchor, S. c. Sr. POPE, WILLIAM LLEWELLYN . . 290 Orange St., Darlington, S. c. Jr. PORTER, FRED BELTON . . . c. So. PORTER, LEWIS WILSON . Hillcrest, Rt. 1, Spartanburg, S. c. Fr. POSTON, CHALMERS WHITHART 07 Shirley St., Columbia, S. C. So. POTTER, JOHN W Apt. A-6, Wofford Campus So. POWELL, HOWARD PETERSON, JR 228 W. Heaton St., Raleigh, N. C. Fr. POWELL, JAMES HAROLD . 44 Ingleside Ave., Concord, N. C. POWELL, WILLIAM AUGUSTUS Chesnee, S. C. Jr. PRICE, JOE OSCAR, JR. . . . . . Hillsboro Rd., Nashville, Tenn. So. PRIDGEON, JULIAN BOLEN . 801 N. Vernon St., Spartanburg, S. C. Jr. PRINCE, WAYMAN STEWART Rt. 1, Campobello, S. C. Sr. PRUITT, JULIAN CLEON . . . 122 Terrace Rd., Spartanburg, S. C. Jr. PUGH, WILLIAM GUY, JR . . .Box 829, Spartanburg, S. C. Sr. PUSEY, FRANK OLIN .... . Willowbank St., Georgetown, S. C. Fr. RAUBER, ERNEST LUDWIG . . 140 Druid Ave., Spartanburg, S. C. Fr. REASONOVER, CARL RHAME . . 1603 Lyttleton St., Camden, S. C. So. REED, EDDIE LANG North, S. C. Fr. REEDER, DONALD LEE ... . . 1540 Church St., Whitmire, S. C. Fr. REEDER, HENRY THOMPSON . . 1540 Church St., Whitmire, S. C. Jr. REID, WILLIAM CHARLES . . 26 Summers Ave., Orangeburg, S. C. Jr. REINARTZ, PAUL VICTOR, JR 3603 Richmond St., Jacksonville, Fla. Jr. REYNOLDS, DON ALLEN . . . 1027 E. Jackson St., Pensacola, Fla. Sr. RHODES, FRANK EDWARD Fr. RICE, GEORGE RENTZ . . . . . 3903 Park St., Jacksonville, Fla. So. RICHARDSON, JAMES LEONARD . . . E. Dozier St., Marion, S. C. Fr. RIPPY, TEDDY DIXON . . . . So. ROACH, BILLY LYNCH . . . Box 301, Tryon, N. C. Fr. ROBERSON, BOBBY FRANKLIN . ... 106 Moore St., Union, S. C. Fr. ROBERSON, JACK DONALD . 06 Moore St., Union, S. C. Jr. RODDY, CHARLES DOUGLAS Rt. 2, Taylors, S. C. Fr. RODDY, JACK A., JR . . . 1 Judson St., Greenville, S. C. Fr. ROGERS, JAMES LANHAM, JR 68 W. Park Drive, Spartanburg, S. C. Jr. ROGERS, RICHARD GILMORE . . . . Rt. 1, Box 35, Marion, S. C. Fr. ROGERS, THOMAS GLENN . . ■154 S. Guerry St., Florence, S. C. Fr. ROLLINS, SAMMY EDMOND Va ey Falls, S. C. So. ROPER, MARSHALL BROCK Rt. 1, Liberty, S. C. So. ROPER, PLEASANT TERRY Rt. 1, Liberty, S. C. Jr. ROPER, TED JONES .511 Cedar Rock St., Pickens, S. C. Sr. ROPER, THOMAS EVATT . . . . 1951 Bernard St., Raleigh, N. C. Fr. ROUKOSKI, JAMES NELSON . . . . 703 Birney St., Marietta, Go. Sr. ROUSE, LeGRAND ARIAIL, II . 6 9 Norwood St., Spartanburg, S. C. Jr. RUSSELL, DAVID GORDON . . .105 Circle Dr., Union, S. C Sr. SANDERS, DAVID ESTON BUCHANAN, JR. . . 20 7 Independence Blvd., Charlotte, N. C. Sr. SANDERS, ELLIOTT F Box 326, Beaufort, S. C. Fr. SARRATT, GARLAND L., JR 301 W. Carolina St., Blacksburg, 5. C. So. SCHAFFNER, HARRY JOSEPH School for the Deaf, Spartanburg, S. C. Fr. SCUDDER, RICHARD WAITE Mary Munford Hall, Charlottesville, Va. So. SEIFERT, WILLIAM EUGENE . 5 0 Hampton Dr., Spartanburg, S. C. Fr. SESSOMS, JESSE THOMAS . . . 124 Lamon St., Fayetteville, N. C. So. SESSOMS, WALTER WOODROW Rt. 5, Darlington S C Fr. SEXTON, DONALD JACKIE . . . 1071 3rd St., N.W., Atlanta, Go. Jr. SHEALY, DAN WALLACE . . 740 N. Vernon St., Spartanburg, S. C. So. SHULER, CLAUDIUS OSBORNE . . . Rt. 1, West Columbia, S. C. Fr. SHULER, ROBERT KEITH . . . Rt. 1, West Columbia, S. C. So. SHUMATE, JOHN W . 379 Leeland Ave., Hampton, Va. Fr. SIKES, ERNEST LEE . . 2569 McAfee Rd., Decatur, Ga. Fr. SIMMS, CARLTON BURNETT 333 Laurel St., North Charleston, S. C. So. SISK, LEON JAN 718 Union St., Spartanburg, S. C. So. SKINNER, TALMAGE BOYD . 2205 W. North Ave., Anderson, S. C. Fr. SLIGH, ERNEST EARL . . . Norway, S. C. Fr. SLINGERLAND, MALCOLM WELLS . N. Main St., Interlaken, N. Y. W0 0t4 Student hitectctif Sr. SMALL, WILLIAM C J09 P a d St., Bur ingfon, H. C. Fr. SMITH, AUBREY EUGENE . . .229 Georgia St., Honea Path, S. C. Fr. SMITH, BILLY SCOTT Rt. 3, Marion, S. C. Jr. SMITH, CECIL OLIVER Rt. 5, Spartanburg, S. C. So. SMITH, CHARLIE DORN Lake City, S. C. Jr. SMITH, DANNY HERBERT Oswego, S. C. Sr. SMITH, FRANKLIN OSCAR . 101 Oak Aye., North Charleston, S. C. Fr. SMITH, HENRY WALTER, JR. . 255 W. Broad St., Darlington, S. C. Sr. SMITH, HORACE ELMER 277 W. Freemont Aye., Spartanburg, S. C. Fr. SMITH, JACK MONROE 604 Nome St., Florence, S. C. Sr. SMITH, REGINALD KIRKLAND 353 S. Spring St., Spartanburg, S. C. Jr. SMITH, ROBERT FRANKLIN Rt. 7, Duncan, S. C. Fr. SMITH, THADDEUS JACKSON . 426 McQueen St., Florence. S. C. Jr. SMITH, WILLIE EUGENE 213-B Brookyiew Apts., Spartanburg, S. C. Fr. SNIPES, WILLIAM DOUG .... 1901 Hilton Aye., Columbus, Go. Sr. SNYDER, JOHN CLEM, JR. . . . 772 W. Cedar St., Florence. S. C. So. SOLESBEE, CARROLL DEAN Rt. 2, Cbesnee. S. C. Fr. SPEARMAN, JAMES CROXTON Box 568, Cberav , S. C. So. SPIVEY, BURRIS, JR Box 393, Conwoy, S. C. Fr. SPLAWN, JAMES WILLIAM . . 533 forest St., Spartanburg, S. C. Sr. STAMM, RALPH EUGENE .... 36 Mill Rd., Spartanburg, S. C. So. STANTON, WILLIAM HUGH 7 70 Harrington Aye., Greenville, S. C. Sr. STEELE, BENJAMIN TAYLOR Box 73, Cliff side. N. C. fr. STEPHENS, BOBBY GENE Glendale, S. C. So. STEVENSON, JOHN ALEXANDER Rt. 3, Seneca. S. C. So. STEWART, ALAN DON Rt. 2, Locke, N. Y. Jr. STEWART, JAMES DAVIS Clinton Hwy., Joanna, S. C. So. STYLES, CARL McWILLIAMS Travelers Rest, S. C. Sr. SUGGS, JAMES LEWIS Laurel St., Conway. S. C. Sr. SULLIVAN, JACK OWEN . . . .7 70 Saluda St.. Ninety Six, S. C. So. SUMMERS, THOMAS ABRAM Middleton St.. N.E., Orangeburg, S. C. So. SWANN, WILLIE REED .... 232 Hazzard St., Georgetown, S. C. SWANSON, JAMES MARSHALL, JR 732S Irish St., South Boston. Va. Jr. SYDNOR, EDWARD BATES . . .527 Poplar St., Spartanburg. S. C. Jr. SYDNOR, GRANVILLE LASSITER 557 f. Main St.. Spartanburg. S. C. Fr. TATUM, BEN MOORE, JR. . . . 475 f. Tofum Aye., McColl, S. C. Jr. TAYLOR, BURRELL CLEMENT ... 744 Locost Aye., Hampton, Va. Fr. TAYLOR, REX ADAMS Rt. 7, Fountom Inn, S. C. Fr. TAYLOR, ROBERT ANTHONY . 240 Folsom St., Spartanburg, S. C. Fr. TEMPLETON, CRAIG Box 723, Newburgb, N. Y. Jr. TERRELL, RONALD KEITH 79 Brook St., Lyman, S. C. So. THACKSTON, THOMAS REGINALD 206 Cantrell Aye., Fort Mill, S. C. Sr. THOMPSON, HUGH M 7 72 Warren St.. Walterboro. S. C. Fr. THOMPSON, LEON EDWIN . . 47 7 Smith St., Timmonsville. S. C. . THORNTON, RICHARD ANDREW 700 Memmger St., Greenyille. S. C. Fr. THRAILKILL, JOHN ROBERT . . . 4806 Main St., Columbia, S. C. Jr. THURMOND, JAMES BRYON . . 407 E. Main St., Fort Valley, Go. TILLINGHAST, BURETTE STINSON, JR 900 E. Main St., Dillon, S. C. TIMMONS, CHARLES EDWARD 7 78 Crescent Rd., Spartanburg, S: C. TINDALL, ASA WARNER, JR Inman, S. C. So. TOOLE, HOWARD ELDRED Corey St., Greer, S. C. Fr. TRAMMELL, BOBBY MONTGOMERY 720 Capeton St., Greenville. S. C. Sr. TREADWAY, WESLEY TONY Rt. 4. Anderson Dr.. Spartanburg. S. C. Sr. TRENT, BUFORD EARL . . 2 Montgomery Ave.. Pacolet Mills, S. C. Jr. TUCKER, WILLIAM MADISON, JR 405 Lucern Dr., Spartanburg. S. C. So. TUNNO, WILLIAM MILES . . .656 Boyd St., Spartanburg, S. C. Fr. TURBEVILLE, HOYT DUPRE Gresham. S. C. Fr. VAUGHN, LANDRUM EARL 70 G St., Inman. S. C. Jr. VINES, WILLIAM JOSEPH Trenton. S. C. Sr. VINSETTE, BILLY RAY Providence St.. Gaffney. S. C. Fr. WADDELL, BOBBY GENE Rt. 7, Greer, S. C. Jr. WALKER, DAVID EGLEY 5 Bailey Rd., Massena. N. Y. So. WALLACE, HARRY HART Droyfon, S. C. So. WALLACE, RICHARD STRONG . 722 Sanders St., Darlington, S. C. So. WALLACE, WILLIAM CLARKTON Rt. 3, Marion, S. C. So. WALTER, TED HOLT Rt. 2, Florence, S. C. Jr. WARD, ALBERT EDISON Jonesville, S. C. Sr. WARD, JOHN LOGAN .... 926 Oakland Ave., Rock Hill, S. C. So. WARLICK, WILLIAM JESSE Apt. C-4, Y offord Campus Fr. WARNER, MILTON DALE . . 787 Merriman Ave., Asheville, N. C. Fr. WARREN, JAMES NEAL 100 Ott Rd., Columbia, S. C. Jr. WASHBURN, EDWARD N., Ill Rt. 2, Bostic, N. C. Jr. WATSON, DAVID T 2673 Sherrod Rd., Nashville, Tenn. Fr. WATSON, JOHN TRAVIS ... 279 Leitner St., Graniteville. S. C. Fr. WATSON, ROBERT MALCOURT, JR 7 Milliken Ave., Drayton, S. C. So. WEAST, HOWARD COLTON . General Delivery. Kannapolis, N. C. Jr. WEAVER, BEN FRANKLIN . .7 705 S. Lafayette St.. Shelby. N. C. Ft. WEBER, VICTOR LEE 407 N. Birch St.. Ponca City. Okla. Jr. WELLS, LEWIS THOMAS .... 2308 Dearborn St.. Augusta. Go. Sr. WEST, CHARLES RAYMOND .... 32 Hancock St., Union, S. C. Fr. WEST, DONALD F Box 70, Pauline, S. C. So. WEST, JOE R., JR Rt. 2. Inman. S. C. So. WEST, LON HUGH, JR Box 787, Yadkinville. N. C. Ft. WESTBROOK, SIDNEY HENRY 7034 Charlotte Ave.. Rock Hill. S. C. Fr. WHITE, GEORGE RAY, JR Rt. 1. Timmonsville. S. C. So. WHITMIRE, GROVER CLEVELAND .... Box 347, Tryon, N. C. Jr. WIGGINS, JAMES THOMAS ... 309 W. Cohen St.. Union, S. C. So. WILBURN, ROBERT EDWARD . . .7 73 Wallace Ct., Union, S. C. Fr. WILKES, THOMAS BYARS, JR Rt. 7, Greer. S. C. Fr. WILLIAMS, JAKE WITSELL Ruffin. S. C. Fr. WILLIAMS, JIMMY CARROLL 446 Cleveland Ave.. S.E.. Atlanta, Go. So. WILLIAMS, TOMMY MARTIN St. George, S. C. Sr. WILLIAMS, ZEB CARSON ... 30 Ridgecrest Rd.. Asheville, N. C. Fr. WILLIAMSON, JAMES SNYDER Norwoy, S. C. Fr. WILSON, ALBERT WALL Rt. 2, Roanoke, Va. Fr. WILSON, BOBBY GRAY Box 36, Timberlake, N. C. Sp. WILSON, CHARLES RAYMOND Rt. 7, Spartanburg, 5, C. So. WILSON, EDWARD ALLEN . . . Summers Ave., Orangeburg. S. C. Fr, WOLFE, JAMES REGINALD Rt. 7, Lancaster. S. C. Fr. WOOD, RUSSELL PAUL . . 235 Brookwood Ter.. Spartanburg, S. C. Jr. WRIGHT, FREEMAN OSCAR ... 767 Saluda St., Chester, S. C. Fr. WRIGHT, VINCENT SMITH .... West End Rd., Chester. S. C. Sr. WYATT, THOMAS DANIEL, JR. . . . Box 7563, Spartanburg, S. C. So. YARBOROUGH, CHARLES MURRAY 238 W. Broad St.. Darlington. S. C. 218 Lyrcum progrom fcoturing puppet version of The Mikodo. Our proxy during lighter moments. o Original layouts, distinctive typography and sparkling reproduction that give your annual the luxurious appearance impossible to obtain by standard layout, mass-production methods. 1 1 0 TRINITY D E CATUR, G EORGIA T 1- RAY ' S BAR-B-Q The Wofford Boys Meet Here For A Treat Try Our Real Pit Cooked Bar-B-Q COFFEE — SHORT ORDERS — SNACKS Beside Southern R. R. Passenger Station G R E E N E W A L D ' S Incorporated YOU WILL FIND THE FOLLOWING NATIONALLY ADVERTISED LINES ■AT GREENEWALD ' S McGregor Shortsivear Florshehii Shoes Hart-Schaffner Cj Marx Clothes Alligator Raincoats Arroii ' Shirts 109-111 W. MAIN Spartanburg, S. C. -4 J- BELL LAUNDRY Representative in Dorm PICK UP AND DELIVERY Discount Cash and Carry Dial 3-8668 448 Marion Ave. Whitlock ' s Pharmacy, Inc. 819 N. Chuich St. By General Hospital The Medical Cciilcr of SpiirlMiihing
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