College of William and Mary - Colonial Echo Yearbook (Williamsburg, VA)

 - Class of 1921

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College of William and Mary - Colonial Echo Yearbook (Williamsburg, VA) online collection, 1921 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 356 of the 1921 volume:

li :■ sa g THE Colonial Echo VOLUME XIX MCMXXI i IP m ■!g r--. PUBLISHED BY THE STUDENTS OF THE COLLEGE OF WILLIAM MARY WILLIAMSBURG, VIRGINIA ..- P. ' jiS55M 55a i ' iSiL«!iUJ!jyS ' i. . ' ijjfe j j fegiMiyM.yJlMi- ' CljC CoIOUitll BtiiO, 1921 ' A ' - Md l Mymi MMi iMMM ti n In times long past, on English soil, Reigned William great and Mary good, And, spite of foreign wars ' turmoil. And civil strife and scenes of blood, They ' stablished in the virgin west This school we love of all the best. Then to our royal founders ' names In Orange wreathed and York ' s pure white, We ' ll raise our song in glad acclaim And break the stillness of the night With Rah! Rah! Ree! W. M. C. 1693. Right doughty men were Parson Blair (Priest, pioneer, first president) And his successors in the chair. With mind and heart devoutly bent To make young Indians ideas shoot And spare the white man ' s scalp hirsute. But when these seek their native haunts, With keener zest the scalp they take: And student braves in frenzied dance Around their victim at the stake Whoop Rah! Rah! Ree! W. M. C. 1693. Page 4 - 55 Ojc Colonial iCfljo, 1921 p What great alumni thronged this spot! Monroe, Page, Marshall, Tucker, Roane, |j Rives, Tyler, Randolph, Taylor, Scott, Leigh, Gilmer, Tazewell, Jefferson, Who urged his hopeless plea of love To fair Belinda of the Grove. I For, radiant as summer skies, The loveliest maidens here abound ; } I To sweethearts then and witching eyes § We ' ll make the very heavens resound W ith Rah! Rah! Ree! W. M. C. 1693. J Turn not alone to days of yore, I But may our younger brethren aim J , To lead in hall and field once more, And light anew this shrine with Fame, As when our powdered fathers met g. And danced the stately minuet. And when irginia calls her roll |j Of mighty sons on storied page, I Our brothers ' names upon the scroll Shall blaze like stars from age to age! I So I Rah! Rah! Ree! I W. M. C. I 1693. I I M Page 5 |y{MMiagKaKSiLfflxfflXi gai!usugL gs Ct)C Colonial (2Bci)0, 1921 mmmMmi jmS iM mMMJi J X DEDICATION Co aibbocate anii3iutt)oritp onHegall rocebure l ersatilc USan of Hctters;, Hlumnug, iFormer Member anb Utector of ' €iit S oarb of l tKitorg, linsitDerbing ifricnb anb 0cnerous! 2?cncfactor of tlje O lb CoUege, iForCfjirtj gears tijc ilintirinslt©orber in aU ' Cfjat abc for tv l©eU=2?ein8 anb Progrcgs, 31n Hbmiration anb Z3ratttubc as ©ebicateb ' TfjE Colonial OJcfjo for 1921 S3 Page 6 mmrS VMf trM fSAyi«re ' irmrS im!r mmm mMM Cf)C Colonial Cci)0, 1921 mmmi Jmmis mis mmMM ' M I i i i i I ■g ' I Robert Morton Htcuks. A. B., M. A., I.L. D. % SajHSSsS JSi; Pase ; i-!iJivy{i i;y.( ' T UJ3UJ3yBy oiai T! Cf)C Colotlial 2BcbO, 1921 i? 3 mi ' } jiMup: mMMVJiiJitUi}iJ ' Robert Morton Hughes ROBERT M. HUGHES, the son of Robert V. and Eliza M. Hughes, was born at Abingdon, Virginia, on September lo, 1855. At the age of fifteen years he entered the College of William and Mary, from which he was graduated Bachelor of Arts on July 4, 1873, before the completion of his eighteenth year. Entering the University of Virginia in October of the same year, he received his Master of Arts degree on July 4, 1877. He at once entered upon the practice of the law in the cit y of Norfolk, where he has since continued to reside. Mr. Hughes ' ability as a lawyer has been recognized, and his success evidenced, not only by the importance of the litigation entrusted to him and the character of his clien- tele, but also by the positions of honor and trust conferred upon him by his brethren of the bar. For many years a member and the eighth president of the ' irginia State Bar Association ; for many years chairman of the Library and Legal Litera- ture Committee of the Association and of the Committee on Legal Education and Admission to the Bar, and president since its organization of the Virginia Board of Law Examiners. Mr. Hughes has done permanent, constructive work in shaping the foundations and practice of his profession. He has indeed well repaid that debt which Lord Bacon says every man owes his profession. Though actively and successfully engaged in the practice of the law, and a leader in fixing the lines along which the practice of the law in X ' irginia should proceed, Mr. Hughes has found time to devote to literary pursuits, and as an author in various fields he has earned a national reputation. The publishers of the biographical series of Great Commanders of the Civil ' ar, having invited General Joseph E. Johnston to designate the biographer he would prefer, that distinguished soldier chose his nephew, Mr. Hughes, and his work ranks among the most successful of all that authoritative series. Mr. Hughes ' Treatise upon Admiralty Law, which appeared in 1901, was at once adopted for use in the leading schools of the country ; and at the request of the publishers, three years later, he wrote a treatise upon Federal Procedure, a new edition of which was made necessary by the reorganization of the Federal Court System and the promulgation of the New Judicial Code. A new edition of the Admiralty Law was published in 1920. In 1907, at the request of a lead- ing law book publishing firm, Mr. Hughes wrote the article on Maritine Liens which is incorporated in the Cyclopedia of Law and Procedure. Mr. Hughes is known to the profession, however, not alone as an able practitioner and author, but as a teacher of law as well. By invitation of the authorities he has delivered courses of lectures on Admiralty Law at Washington and Lee, George Washington, and Georgetown Universities. Mr. Hughes worthily maintains the finest traditions of the legal profession in his varied and catholic sympathies in all branches of belles lettres scholarship. i « 1ir :t .trS t« tS tr My ft tr« 1.Y iWWSi ' i Page 8 ?iss?i s ifg jf ? ?; ' air g? 7 ' $ 7 if7 , iisssEj- His private library is one of the finest in the South in the extensive range of g interests represented, and its owner ' s knowledge of rare and old editions, and a of the literature of art and sculpture, is typical of the devoted and lifelong stu- dent. Mr. Hughes has from time to time written verse of no mean order of merit, and he has been in constant requisition before literary and patriotic organi- ' zations for addresses on particular occasions and notable men. % Mr. Hughes was especially active in the revival of the mother chapter of « the Phi Beta Kappa Society at its birthplace in 1893, after a period of su.spension d covering nearly three-fourths of a century. He has been enthusiastic in its gi service, having served as president of Alpha Chapter for a number of terms, j and having repeatedly attended the triennial National Councils of the United Chap- i ters as the representative of the mother chapter. Mr. Hughes was for a number of years Rector of the Board of Visitors of the College, and has shown his abiding interest in and love for Alma Mater by his generous gifts of a succession of scholarships, medals and prizes bestowed annually upon the successful students competing for literary honors. Perhaps the best known is the Pi Kappa Alpha Scholarship. awarded to the member of the local chapter of that fraternity, whose translation from a foreign language into English is deemed most worthy by a committee of judges. In 1920, as a fitting culmination to a lifelong service to the College, and in grateful acknowl- edgment, the Board of ' isitors, at the instance of the Faculty, conferred upon him the degree of Doctor of Laws. To all who know either, Mr. Hughes and the old College are inseparably associated. In a life crowded with varied activities — legal, political, literary — any one of which woul d seem to claim his available time, Mr. Hughes has been an outstanding leader in all matters demanding active interest in the affairs of Alma Mater. His love for her is deep and sincere; his loyalty to the old Col- lege in the days of her poverty and obscurity, as in her new day of progress and prosperity, has never known the . ' :l!adow of turning. In recognition of his worth as a man, his abiliiy as a lawyer and author, his culture as a scholar, ho be. s the respect and the admiration of the students and alumni of the old College of William and .Mar , and the Editorial Staff of the 1921 Colonial Echo but give tangible shape to this sentiment when they dedicate it to Robert Morton Hughes. Page 9 i MMMMMMMMMMMMMSi CfjC Colom ' al (ZEci)0, 1921 Md i MMMMiimmMMMmM ' Statue of Lord Botetourt in Front of Main Building. Page 10 si, sli i?sn rfiirfi!yB ' fr ' g«? fe ji sjgysR w i?n ' .C15 Hn m y 1 m ' Ai i-v! 5t; |)c Colonial Ccf)0 1921 FOREWORD To All Men of the Old And All Men and Women of the Present and Future ' ILLL M and Mary Upon Whose Faces Still Shines the Light of High Hope and Undimmed Trust in the Ancient Shrine of Learning This Volume of THE COLONIAL ECHO IS Sent Forth That it May, Despite its Many Shortcomings, Bring Back to Them, Wherever They May be Set in the Far-Flung Battle-Line of Life, Hallowed Memories of Alma Mater, Her Sights and Sounds, Dreams Happy as Her Day, and Laughter Learned of Friends AND Gentleness in Hearts at Peace. Paje 11 €i)c Coloninl (Ecbo, 1921 n CONTENTS 1 Book I History Book II Administration Book III Classes Book IV Literary Activities Book V Secret Organizations and Clues Book V ' l Athletics Book V ' ll The Spice of Life KtiSs Dii S g P««e 13 I I i i I i UuiMMMMMMMMMM m CtC COlOllial (Cc!)0, 1921 MMMMMMMsM- ' MMMMS I I I i I I CALENDAR FOR SESSION 1920-1921 The session is divided into two terms First term begins Thursday, September 16, 1920 Joint Y reception Tuesday, September 21 229th session of the Supreme Court convenes September 23 Visitation of the Sulgrave Institute, October 5 The Opening Dances, October 15 and 16 Armistice Day Celebration, November 11 Concert (Miss Bettie Booker, Mrs. Charles Hancock), November 17 German Club Leap Year Dance, November 18 Thanksgiving Day observed, Thursday, November 25 Annual Banquet of Phi Beta Kappa Society, December 4 Thanksgiving Dances, December 9 and 10 Christmas Holidays begin Thursday, December 23 Classes resumed Monday, January 3, 1921 Intermediate examinations close January 29 Registration for Second Term, January 30 Second Term begins January 31 Midwinter Dances, February lo and 11 Concert (Miss Reinhardt— Mr. Whittemore), February 16 Intercollegiate Debate, Lynchburg College-W. and M., February 21 Girls ' Masquerade Ball, Februaiy 26 German Club Dance, March 11 Easter Vacation begins Friday, March 25 Easter Vacation ends Tuesday, 9 o ' clock a. m., March 29 Easter Dances, April 7 and 8 1 I I i I i I I I I I I I I i I I i I I I 1 i I i I I 3 gS saiiSjK Page 14 rij7 ' S7 j7 irs ' ' i ' ' j; i S? i i TRm303i onr : . cf)c Colonial Cfbo, 1921 s ' K (:: New York University vs. William and Mary, baseball, March 26 University of Pennsylvania vs. William and Mary, April 15 Lehigh University vs. William and Mary, at Bethlehem, April 16 ' i State Oratorical Contest at William and Mary, Friday, May 6 University of Richmond vs. W. and M., baseball, May 12 ; Final Examinations end June 4 E Baccalaureate Sermon, Sunday, June 5 g Celebration of the Literary Societies, Monday, June 6 B Alumni Day, Tuesday, June 7 g| Closing Exercises of the Session, Wednesday, June 8 E Final Ball on the night of June 8 I I Page 15 nui}L ' iM:iiiMM MMM MJiM:i Cijc Colonidl Ccljo, 1921 emmmmmmmmmmm - I Alma Mater Hark ! the students ' voices swelling, Strong and true and clear, Alma Mater ' s love they ' re telling. Ringing far and near. Chorus William and Mary loved of old, Hark, upon the gale, Hear the thunder of our chorus, Alma Mater — hail. All thy sons are faithful to thee Through their college days. Singing loud from hearts that love thee Alma Mater ' s praise. Iron shod or golden sandaled Shall the years go by, — Still our hearts shall weave about thee Love that cannot die. God, our Father, hear our voices, Listen to our cry, Bless the college of our boyhood, Let her never die. . 5 . JVilson, ' 02. Page U {g Sfy ' ifeife ' sftpife ' ai?W fffifg {glSf  TMSQ MMMMMM MS CfjC Colonifll CcfjO, 1921 Acknowledgment EARTFELT gratitude and thanks are due, and are herewith extended, to J. Gordon Bohannon, Esq., of the Petersburg Bar, for his kindness fi HH in contributing information for the writing of the character sketch of i SlS the Hon. Robert M. Hughes, to whom it has been our great privilege I r ' i t i CI tQ dedicate this volume. Likewise the thanks of the staff are tendered to the many friends and alumni of ' illiam and Mary who have willingly given their advice in matters relative to this edition, and who have expressed their interest in the success of our efforts. To others who have assisted in the preparation of the material, in kodak work and copying, and who have contributed their time and criticism, we extend the expression of our sincere appreciation. Finallv, to the irginia Engraving Company, Cheyne ' s Studio, the Jahn and Oilier Engraving Company and to the Mlliam Byrd Press, Incorporated, for the hearty co-operation and courteous attention shown us throughout the production of this volume of the Colonial Echo, the Editorial Staff wishes to express its gratitude and final acknowledgment of indebtedness. . MY V lV« Vf  M •• .V• i Page 17 mis MMmmmmmmm ' i C!)e Colonial €c!)0, 1921 smmmmj ssssssmmmss. ELSIE SAMUEL Sponsor Colonial Echo 1921 . Ii t :. V iYf ' ffl .Tfif7Y«tf(7 Page 18 i fSff -if '  i !i r ii mi srimi!i BOOK I History W:: i ' 5?J55t535s53J ' ' v ' ' ' C ' V €l)c Colonial Ccl)o, 1921 5? ' a ' S . ain 15uiIDins of tbe College The facade of the main l)uikhng of the Old College is perhaps the best known aca- demic corridor in America. Originally designed by Sir Christopher Wren to be the center of the projected rec- tangle fronting east down the ancient Middle Plantation Road, and completed in 1697, the walls of the old front have sustained three fires, and suns and storms of more than two centuries. No William and Mary student but must feel a challenge to the best that is in him as he passes day by day through these portals where have passed as students the men destined to lead the col- onies, the State, and the Na- tion to larger issues in peace and war. Page 19 MMMyiMM i yi i MM M g CljE Colonisl BtiiO, 1021 5S 2DID 16raffc«on Built in 1723, as directed in the will of the Honorable Robert Boyle, eminent in the history of early English sci- ence, out of the proceeds of the sale of his Brafiferton estate in the North Riding of Yorkshire, the Brafferton started its career as a dormi- tory and school for chosen Indian youth of promise, who were to be kept in meat, drink, washing, clothes, medi- cine, books and education from the first beginning of letters till they should be ready to be sent abroad to convert the Indians. With the stoppage of the supply of indigenous material, the Brafiferton became the abode of pale-faces; but for more than a century, if one may judge by blood-curdling yells which periodically ema- nate from its historic walls, the spirit of the youthful braves has still hovered over the m ; and figures clad in war paint and tomahawk may un- der cover of darkness still be seen to steal forth from this, the original wigwam, taking the warpath in true Indian file. With the ruthless march of progress, room after room of the old Indian school is fall- ing to use as prosaic offices; but old Braffertonians of by- gone years will ever smile, and feel their hearts grow youth- ful again, as memories of High Jinks in the old build- ing come back to them. I I i i I I Page 20 Zbt Colonial OBcbo, 1921 8 i i IB CDe prcsiDcnrs Ipouse In 1732, one month after the dedication of the Old Chapel, the foundation of the Presi- dent ' s House was laid in the presence of a large concourse of towns-people, students, and gentry from the country. As the President wrote his Chan- cellor, the bishop of London: The Faculty laid the first five bricks in order opposite the Brafferton.  These two buildings will appear at a small distance from the East Front of the College, before which is a garden planted with Evergreens kept in very good order. In the months pre- ceding the Yorktown cam- paign, the President ' s House was occupied by Lord Corn- wallis but no damage was done by the British troops to either of the three buildings. In Oc- tober, after the surrender at Yorktown, French officers then occupying the house, it was badly damaged by fire, but re- stored by the ill-fated Louis XVI out of his own purse.  ft i ' T  r  tr« r? ia r «Kiy y «vM « ■ ■ fiTifff lflriBr Page 21 Ct)E Colonial dccbo, 1921 JMM M jimmi dtM j M ' !3riiton I atisft Cfturcf) The site of Bruton is near that of Old Middletown Church, which it superseded, and which dated from 1658 ; and its name was taken in compliment to the Governor Berkeley ' s native place in Somersetshire. The original building of Bruton was con- tracted to be erected for £150 and sixty pounds of good sound merchantable sweet-scented to- bacco, to be leveyed of each tythable in the parish for three years together. With the es- tablishment of the College, and the removal of the seat of government from Jamestown, Bruton became the Court Church of the Colony, the Cathedral Church of the Old Dominion. The present building was completed in 1714. With the Revolution, it fell on evil days. In the half century following, the interior was completely changed, all vestiges of hated royalty being stripped away. In 1906. the original arrange- ment and equipment of the in- terior was restored, all being in accordance with the origi- nal designed w ' hen Alexander Spotswood was royal governor. Between the College and Bruton, relations have ever been close. The students, re- gardless of church affiliations, have ever had an abiding af- fection and feeling of proprie- torship in Bruton, second only to that they fee! for the Col- lege itself. iB JS?i;fr iffr ' i? 1Sli7 iflyaifr 5S? ! Page 22 m Cjjr Coloninl OBrbo, 1921 ' 4 ©ttc of m mn Capitol First Capitol Building erect- ed in 1702; burned in 1746. Second Building erected in 1751, burned in 1832. The Monument, erected in 1897, bears this inscription : THE OLD CAPITOL Here Patrick Henry kin- dled the flames of revolution by his resolutions and speech astainst the Stamp Act, May 29-30, 1765. Here. March 12, 1773, Dab- ney Carr offered, and the House of Burgesses of Vir- ginia unanimously adopted, the resolutions to appoint a com- mittee to correspond with sim- ilar committees in the other colonies — the first step taken toward the union of the States. Here, May 15, 1776. the Con- vention of irginia, through resolutions drafted by Edmund Pendleton, offered by Thomas Nelson, Jr.. and advocated by Patrick Henry, unanimously called on Congress to declare the colonies free and indepen- dent States. Here, June 12, 1776, was adopted by the Convention the immortal work of George Ma- son — the Declaration of Rights — and on June 29. 1776. the first written constitution of a free and independent State ever framed. SS arr ( ' k;Vf] Page 23 piyiMMjyiMMMMiMMMMi! Cfte Colonial Ccjbo, 1921 W5S ' -i - ' -i5A!Wi«gji3iSfiiSga35«rams Cfje Poor Debtors Prison Somewhat back from the village street stands the hum- ble little building which, time out of mind, has gone by this pathetic name. It was built in 1744 on what was then Market Square, and for ' ' ye commit- ment of Debtors, Criminals, and Offenders. Falling into increasing squalor and dilapi- dation, it was reclaimed and restored late in the eighteen nineties. The whirligig of Time brought to the Old Prison an amusing reversal of fortune. In Williamsburg ' s Days of Forty-Nine. Vi hen the Penni- man Plant crowded the old town, tourists rubbed their eyes to read over its gloomy portals the cheerful inscription : John Doe and Rich. rd Doe, Real Estate and Rentals. WALK RIGHT IN. Page 34 ' 3S ' I 11 Cf)C Colonial Ccfto, 1921 i I ■ ;■ B;. p M J ousc Just to the north of Bruton, and facing east upon the Pal- ace Green, stands The Wythe House. erected in 1760; and falling, in the year before the Revolution, to the possession of the illustrious lawyer of that name, the Colonial Cap- ital ' s foremost citizen. Signer of the Declaration. Chancellor of the State of Virginia, first professor of law in the Col- lege, and repeatedly offered by President Washington the post of justice of the Supreme Court of the United States. The old house was the scene of sumptuous hospitality, and its stout walls echoed the merry voices of the leaders of social life in the colony. Cy- nics have scoffed at the innum- erable houses claiming to have been Washington ' s Headquar- ters; but the old Wythe House can read its title clear to that distinction. If one have sufficient faith, he may, in the chilly October nights, in a certain room in this old mansion, in the big old four-post tester, hover- ing between sleeping and wak- ing, hear the stately footfall of the great commander, and see his serene features pass slowlv by. n i MfiSr ' marMrt Srs iTi ' tiis tie irt trtKtfiSr .trt -trtt Page 25 Ct)e l otoDer li)orn Perhaps no other ancient pile in the Old Capital so fully represents the vicissitudes of all things human as does the old powder magazine. Con- structed in 1714 — the same year as Bruton Church — of brick in Flemish bond, octa- gonal in shape, with walls twenty-two inches in thickness, it deserves national fame al- most as much as does the far more widely known powder magazine of Lexington. Mas- sachusetts. The next day after the battle of Lexington, Lord Dunmore, at the end of his patience with the rebellious colonists, removed all muni- tions of war from it to His Majesty ' s armed schooner ly- ing in York River. This was for Virginia what the fight at Concord Bridge was for Mas- sachusetts. By turns a market house, a meeting place for the newly organized Baptist congregation — for whose permanent church building its engirdling wall supplied the foundations, — a dancing school, an arsenal for Confederates and Federals alike, and, last, a stable, the old pile served faithfully the passing generations ; and now, as an interesting museum of relics of bygone stirring days, it richly deserves its dignified ease and the affection in which it is held by all who know it. : Page 26 s I ' lP. Che Colonicil Crlia. 1921 I 8 i i§ CoUicr of ©ID JamcstoUin Cburdj This, the only surviving rehc of the first public building erected by men of the English race in America, was built soon after 1647. This tower, being part of the tower of the fourth Church, was of brick baked on the Island, forty-six feet in height, and eighteen feet square at the base. The narrow arched portal shows its original design to have been for use by sharpshooters with- in, against the Red-skins. The Church itself, built toward the east of the tower, was thrice destroyed by fire, once by a torch in the hand of Bacon, the Rebel. With the removal of the seat of government to Williamsburg, the old building, falling into dilapidation, ceased to be used. In 1907, the Ter- centennial year, tower and church were restored, accord- ing to the original designs, by the Association for the Pre- servation of Virginia Antiqui- ties. ■3 i iBnig iSf fiy« ' iB? ' iQrai? firWjr;fine; i--. lu j julj liiili: Pace 27 gigjfS:mmj;i! aM!i!AMi! f)t Colonial BttiO, 1921 mmjmiM ' MjiJi i MJi MJi imM : Monument at gorktotun This noble monument, erect- ed by Act of Congress and dedicated, October 19, 1881, with impressive ceremonies to celebrate the centennial of the Surrender of Lord Cornwallis. stands on a commanding pro- montory overlooking the York, at the beginning of the rolling fields in which the armies of Great Britain grounded their arms. It was from this memorable scene that General Washington returned to Mount Vernon after the Surrender of Corn- wallis, and wrote to Lafayette : I have become a private citizen on the banks of the Potomac in the shadow of my own fig tree, free from the bustle of camp, and the busy scenes of public life. I am solacing myself with those tranquil enjoyments, of which the soldier, who is ever in pur- suit of fame — the statesman, whose zvatchful days and sleep- less nights are spent in devis- ing schemes to promote the welfare of his own, perhaps the ruin of other countries, as if the globe was insufficient for us all. and the courtier, who is always watching the coun- tenance of his prince in the hopes of catching a gracious smile — can have very little conception. I have not only retired from public employ- ment, but am retiring within myself, and shall be able to view the solitary walk, and tread the paths of private life with heartfelt satisfaction. En- vious of none. I am determined to be pleased with all, and this, my dear friend, being the order of my march, I will move gently down the stream of life, until I sleep with my fathers. ■is i. i! (3 Page 28 S5 ; ;fr ffi s yifir  ijifrsfiis Mii ' i ' Aiii! jffi!oiBJ!0! ' J3 S5 if ' isi ' ns 2Df)c (ZToIotiifll (ZBfi)0, 1921 ' a CotnUiallis ' €a ]e Startling in its resemblance to tile (lufiniit developed in the World War is the under- fjround excavation in the steep bank of the York which for nearly a century and a half has gone by the name of Cornwallis ' Cave. Such is the revenge of the plain peo- ple of the colonies through whose fields the armies of the noble Marquis marched and pillaged at their will ! Despite the manifold scribblings over the dank walls, there is no scintilla of evidence to show that Cornwallis, a gentleman and a soldier, against whom, in a long and honorable ser- vice of his King not one whis- per of cowardice was ever heard, ever so far forgot him- self as to take refuge here in craven terror at the allied bombardment, severe as this was for the time. Yet Corn- wallis ' Cave it has ever been ; Cornwallis ' s Cave it will ever be. ri re tf Trta re■:rl ye ,Trt ure T t, rrt rr rr rrt rf Page 29 : ' yo Byo -Ji ' .tJ!!Mjyj.MM ' MM. ' -y C J)C Colonitil (Ccljo, 1921 ' jmmmmmmmmmmmm ■ Q ansion at gotktoton Retired in stately dignity within its setting of thick walls of ancient brick, and its hedge of bordering box bushes, with its broad halls, ample wainscoted chambers, and se- cret passageways, the Nelson House brings vividly back to mind the romantic and heroic days of old, when no man was for self, and each man for the State. Erected before the middle of the eighteenth century, by the then head of the influential Nelson family, it was, when the tide of war rolled thither in October, 1781, the most pretentious residence in the little port town, and the property of Governor Thomas Nelson, who was in command of the Virginia militia co-op- erating with the French and continental troops. James Barron Hope in his Arms and the Man. thus im- mortalizes the stirring tale of Governor Nelson ' s devotion : Then as the flashing cannon sowed Their iron crop brave Nelson rode. His bridle bit all foam, Up to the gunners, and said he: Batter yon mansion down for me — Basement and walls and dome. And, better to sharpen those gunners ' wits, Five guineas, he cried, for each shot that hits — That mansion was his home. 1 Page 30 •rli trt trgXrS trS Ut tri Vi trS rM Cbe Colonitil C-cfio. 1921 IE [-! U I 3 :g ' i 1} Cfje DID €ii0tom IDoiisc at ft ' orbtotun Situated on the main street of the Httle village which has never recovered from the damages inflicted by battling armies in October 1781. this humble building erected in 1715, and the oldest custom house in the colonies, is all that remains to attest the ex- traordinary prosperity enjoyed by Yorktown prior to the Rev- olution. It was the second largest port in the colonies, and the previous port of entry even for New York. Tradi- tion has it, that it was before this little custom house that a sturdy young backswoodsman from one of the interior coun- ties, on the morning after the surrender, recognizing his own animal in the splendid blooded mare ridden by the dashing young Colonel Tarleton, Corn- wallis ' Master of Horse, dragged him unceremoniously from the saddle and rolled him in the dust with hundreds of soldiers on both sides look- i ' v T{gj fir ' yi?fe fi7 0nftrsfir firiai Paje 31 |i m Bym 5utiUiiM:M ' iyi K m4Juys d)c Colonial (2Bcf)0, 1921 Mm m mmmMM JmiMMMS Q onument on tbe Ccmple jTarm Q arbing tl)e cene of Cotnttiallis ' urrenDer This graceful snow-white shaft, erected in 1895 by The Association for the Preserva- tion of Virginia Antiquities, should be better known by all patriotic Americans, both for the significance of the event it commemorates, and for its own beauty and picturesque environment. It marks the ex- act spot on which Lord Corn- wallis ' sword, tendered by General O ' Hara to General Washington, was referred by his stern gesture to General Linc oln, symbolizing the sur- render at discretion of His Britannic Majesty ' s army. A brief guide post refers the tourist to the nearby Moore House, on Temple Farm, in one of whose rooms the arti- cles of surrender were actually drawn up and signed. The obelisk suffers under the disadvantage of being situ- ated nearly three miles from the Victory Mounment, and so lies out of the beaten track for tourists ; but all William and Mary men who have taken the journey down the sandy road to see it have expressed them- selves as deeply impressed by its quiet charm. Page 32 ' i I i Cbe Colonicil C-rlio. 1921 W l ista Looking DoVon JFcom ©ID (IBartj)toork0 to tftc l orb Uitjct Turning now from scenes and sights which recall war ' s horrid front, one may well imagine that down this glade tripped the Princess Pocahon- tas and her attendant maidens, flashing in and out of the primeval forest like startled deer. Beyond them, on the silvery bosom of the lordly York, as yet all unvexed by the keels of the English, one may picture the darting war canoes of the Great Wero- wance Powhatan, bearing to the great encampment maize and venison and captives of rebellious tribes doomed to human sacrifice. Here, too, upon this glade, one may later see the gallant beaux and belles passing to and from the gaieties of the Co- lonial Capital and Royal Col- lege, while in the distance the dripping oars of the bateaux flash merrily in the sunshine as they rise and fall in rythmi- cal swing in the powerful hands of the slaves, themselves eager to reach the scene of the festivities and share in the good times in progress. r. 1i fi7 ( Syiwraiii g igiBriB? snHn rii iuivjifu.kiVJii.yj.k L i AMmms CDe Colonial Ccbo, 1921 smmmmmm Lake a atoaka As the old road from James- town to Williamsburg, trav- ersed for two centuries by the beauty and chivalry of the Old Dominion, by high-born belle and gallant beau, by statesman and soldier, by saint and sinner, by planter and peasant, sweeps sharply around the large hill just to the west of the old College. Lake Ma- toaka bursts suddenly into view. Located on the western margin of the original 330 acres purchased for the Col- lege, and made by the me- anders of Archer ' s Hope Swamp, this exquisite little sheet of water, bearing the other and original name of the Princess Pocahontas, presents scenes of romantic beauty from whatever side it may be viewed. Time out of mind, its coves in winter have rung with the musical clang of the skaters ' steel, and echoed their merry voices, and with nightfall have flashed back the cherry fires on the banks. In spring and fall, canoeing parties have ex- _ plored its furtherest nooks, and landed beyond the wooded promontories to picnic and kindle camp fires, and to find ever-new sources of delight. Could fair Matoaka ' s waves but speak, they could moving tales unfold of Damsels fair, and swains for love distraught. Casting themselves in lov- ers ' ecstasy At their beloved ' s feet. But, the lovesick aside, for all William and Mary students. Matoaka ' s amethystine waters, set in their emerald woods, will ever hold pleasurable memories. i Page 34 CI)C Colonial €cl)o, l92i I I I i LoDcrs ' Lane LcaDing DoUju to tbt iiJorktoUin ISauii ' There ' s a barefoot trail through t h e meadow- grass, And over tlie sunlit hill, Through the wild-wood ways where a lad and lass Once roamed at their own sweet will — A brown little lad with a freckled nose, And a w-ee bonny lass like a sweet wild rose, Over the hill tops and down the dale Treading the winding bare- foot trail. O the barefoot trail goes winding Through the years of mem- ory. The past and the present binding In a wonderful dream for me. 3 I 3 Page 35 | ijjj|MMMM ' ' - Mii !! ! Cf)0 Colonial dBcbO, 1921 :c jJ lS4Jii MMM5ysy4MM ' i ' Midsummer Meadows | ks? fiy s 7iffi? ftHa? . ?ifr Page 36 (Williamsburg, August lo, 1920) By Clyde Francis Lytel Touched by the glistening sun ' s celestial fire, On trembling fronds the raindrop lanterns glow ; Where the wild thrush sings his daybreak note, And swamp rose and the tawny lilies grow. In meadows pied, the red-top bends to kiss A black-eyed Susan, smiling, unashamed ; And dusty-headed timothy grieves o ' er Wee blue-grass flowers, by the mowers claimed. The milkweed entertains small butterflies. From cups with luring, sparkling nectar filled, | Whose painted wings add dancing shade to those By Nature o ' er the glowing landscape spilled. f I From swaying poplars on the dusty road, ■ The drought-fly strums his G-string, out of tune ; And the green crests of the sumacs bring forecasts Of autumn ' s burgundy and rich maroon. But lavish August still spreads gorgeous hues Where startling, ardent saffron dots the way. And crims ' on-tinted hawkweed hangs its head, And pasture bloom breaks into golden spray. | BOOK II Administratio n m Msmmmmmmmmmw i)t Colonial (2I;Ct)0, 1921 mmwmwMw mmm Julian Alvin Carroll Chandler, Ph. D., LL. D., President of the College of ]l illiam and Mary M. A. College of William and Mary. Ph. D. Johns Hopkins I ' niversity. LL. D. Richmond L ' nivcrsiiy. Kappa .-Mpha. Phi Beta Kappa. Page 37 tyiMM MMM MMiuiMMM i Mig C f)0 Colottisl dBcJjO, 1921 MMMJ sj mmmui smmTt Lyon Gardener Tyler, M. A., LL. D., President Emeritus of the College of Jl ' illiam and Mary M. A. University of Virginia. LL. D. Trinity (Connecticut). LL. D. University of Pittsburg. LL. D. College of William and Mary. Kappa Sigma. Phi Beta Kappa. I Page 38 il Cfje Colonial dEcljo, 1921 FACULTY John Lesslie Hall, Ph.D., Litt.D. Dean Professor of English Language and Literature Educated at University School, Richmond, and Randolph-Macon College. Fellow of Johns Hopkins University. Ph.D. Johns Hopkins University. Litt.D. Wake Forest College. Phi Beta Kappa. K. J. Hoke, M.A., Ph.D. Dean of the College Professor of Education. M.A. Columbia University. Ph.D. Columbia University. Van Franklin Garrett, A.M., M.D. Professor of Inorganic Chemistry Graduate Virginia Military Institute. M.A. College of William and Mary. Student Medical College of the University of Virginia. M.D. University of New York City. Chi Phi Beta Kappa. Henry Eastman Bennett, A.B. Professor of Education Student Florida A. and M. College. L.I. Peabody Normal College. A.B. Univer- sity of Chicago. Graduate Student University of Chicago. Phi Beta Kappa. Richard McLeod Craivford, B.S., M.A., Ph.D. Professor of Fine and Industrial Arts B.S. Trinity College. M.A. Columbia University. M.S. Columbia University. Ph.D. Columbia University. Phi Beta Kappa. Josef Roy Geiger, M.A., Ph.D. Professor of Philosophy and Psychology A.B. Furman University. M.A. Stetson University. M.A. University of Chicago. Ph.D. University of Chicago. T  Ti1 T«i TO T) « Tl■« Tr ' .V y Yf« T  T«v « a jTBff r• TA v« r • T ' Aft •« (  Tl '  f T s Tnl i■lSv Page 39 yffiyfflLm mg rgJS LfljtySiUSiyS ' UtK Cf)C Colonial CCi)0, 1921 JSiMMMMMmMMMJiimMJJ Donald Walter Davis, Ph.D. Professor of Zoology A.B., Ph.D. Harvard University. Student The John Innes Horticoltaral Instsi- tute, London, England. Sigma Xi. Robert Gilchrist Robb, M.A., Sc.D. Professor of Organic Chemistry M.A. University of Virginia. D.Sc. St. Stephens College. Phi Beta Kappa. Arthur George Williams, M.A. Professor of Modern Languages B.A., M.A. Roanoke College. Graduate Student University of Chicago. Roscoe Conklin Young, A.B., B.S., M.A. Professor of Physics A.B., B.S., M.A. College of WiUiam and Mary. Graduate Student University of Chicago. Theta Delta Chi. Phi Beta Kappa. Frederick Juckoff, M.A., LL.B., Ph.D. Professor of Economics and Accountancy % Ph.B. Kansas City University. Ph.D. Kansas City University. LL.B. Ohio North- em University. LL.M. University of Maine. Graduate, School of Commerce, North- western University. Graduate Student University of Chicago. I James Glenn Driver Professor of Physical Education P Student College of William and Mary. Student University of Virginia. Student C Columhia University. Walter Alexander Montgomery, A.B., Ph.D. Professor of Latin A.B., Ph.D. Johns Hopkins University. Kappa Alpha. Phi Beta Kappa. fiffif sfffijf jaaiofc aetiiiLifc tfc Page 40 ■ ' JMMEwmmmmmmmm drtit Colonial (Ccl)O, 1921 ! mm mmmmmmmmj William T. Hodges, A.B., M.A. Professor of Education A.B. College of William and Marj. M.A. Columbia University. Scholar in Educa- tion, Harvard University. John Saunders Counselman, B.S., C.E. Professor of Mathematics B.S. Virginia Polytechnic Institute. C.E. Virginia Polytechnic Institute. Graduate Student University of Michigan. Graduate Student University of Chicago. Cary Franklin Jacob, M.S., Ph.D. Professor of English Language and Literature B.S., M.S., Ph.D. University of Virginia. Phi Beta Kappa. Alfred Miles Withers, M.A. Professor of Modern Languages A.B. Washington and Lee University. M.A. Johns Hopkins University. Graduate Student University of Chicago, University of Pennsylvania, University of Grenoble, France. M. Hazel Gallagher Professor of Home Economics, B.S. Graduate Chicago Teachers College. B.S. Columbia University. Student University of Chicago. Richard Lee Morton, M.A., Ph.D. Associate Professor of History and Political Science A.B. Hampden-Sidney College. M.A. Harvard University. Ph.D. University of Virginia. Phi Beta Kappa. Earl Jerome Grimes, B.S. Asociate Professor of Botany B.S. University of Illinois. Graduate Student Imperial CoUege of London. Grad- uate Student Cornell University. Sigma Xi. Page 41 : Miyjfiur:MiyiiLii: ' A a !yi!yi; ' -UtMiyi.s: d)C Colonial Ect)0, 1921 .SMMM MiyJJUJjy i iMJ i Oa Robert Kent Gooch, B.A., M.A. | ' Associate Professor of History and Political Science wj B.A. University of Virginia. M.A. University of Virginia. B.A. Oxford. Phi ' ' 9; Beta Kappa. (3 Ralph L. Power, M.B.A. Associate Professor of Commerce and Industry B.B.A. Boston University. M.B.A. Boston University. Graduate Student George ; Washington University. Graduate Student American University. Associate Professor of Public Health College of Technology. George Howard Gelsinger, A.B., M.A. Associate Professor of Greek and English W. A. Hamilton, A.B., LL.B., LL.M., D.C.L. Associate Professor of Business Law Lecturer in Physical Education if ' mmrt m Msw s i 31 1 Clarence Dunbar Hart, A.B. m A.B. Tufts College. Student Harvard Medical College. Massachusetts Institute sa (3 v3 A.B. Muhlenberg College. M.A. Harvard University. I3 sg A.B. Harvard University. L.L.B. Cornell University. L.L. L Yale University. 3 D.C.L. Yale University. ' S Francesca C. Shotivell, Ph.B. gj Instructor in Home Economics ' Ph.B. University of Chicago. S j sai 3 L. T. Jones a sa. i; Cf)c Colonial (Ccljo, 1921 ir:j Robert Perry Wallace, B.S. Instructor in Physical Education B.S. College of William and Mary. p si- % Rae Booth Shaughnessy Instructor in Physical Education for Women Bessie Porter Taylor Soci4d Director of Women. Stndent Richmond University. University of Virginia. Columbia University. Member Virginia Education Commission. Herbert Lee Bridges, A.B. Registrar of the College A.B. College of William and Mary. Phi Beta Kappa. E. G. Sivem, A.B., M.A. Associate Professor of History. Librarian A.B. Lafayette College. M.A. Lafayette College. D. J. King, M. D. Physician to the College. ■ SSSffii iu.iL:. .u. ;; '  xWW S Tr• T« T  T •« T • T« T • Tr« T« t hT Page 43 J m mMMMM MMMF. t CoIOtlitll Ccf)0, 1921 The National Committee of Alumni and Co-operating Citizens OF The William and Mary Endowment Fund Rear Admiral Cary T. Henry W. Anderson S. Otis Bland John Stewart Bryan Thomas L. Chadbourne Bainbridge Colby John W. H. Crim Dr. James H. Dillard Homer Lr Ferguson Rev. Dr. W. A. R. Goodwin GRAYSOisr, Chairman Mrs. Charles Dana Gibson Harris Hart Mrs. George Maynard Minor Andrew J. Montague Mrs. Beverly B. Munford James P. Munroe Dr. Albert Shaw Augustus Thomas Dr. Lj ' on G. Tyler ■i m it  mfi« 7iii 6itft tri trii tm l trlt imitr (SrS Page 44 ift ' fe ' 0 « 7 ft7 fl?W fi s n e? 6 Mmmwwmsmmm2mmm Ci)C Colonial Ccijo, 1921 w sMMs wmi I I I I The Board of Visitors of the I College of William and Mary The Rector of the College James Hardy Dillard The Vice-Rector of the College George Preston Coleman I ■ g THE VISITORS OF THE COLLEGE g James Hardy Dillard I Charlottesville, ' irginia Nathaniel Terry Green Norfolk, Virginia Fernando Southall Farrar Jetersville, Virginia t Oscar Lane Shewmake I Surry, Virginia Randolph Preston Cocke Williamsburg, Virginia George Preston Coleman Williamsburg, Virginia Mrs. Beverly B. Munford Richmond, ' irginia John S. Draper Pulaski, ' irginia The State Superintendent of Public Instruction, Ex-Officio Harris Hart Richmond, ' irginia The Secretary to the Visitors Levin Winder Lane Williamsburg, ' irginia Page 45 ?j : Miui «!PXS Miyi;iyiiMiUiuaaiy5! tit Colonial iCcl}0, 1921 mmmJoysy ayjjytiLitMtugifiu-.. -. T p wwwfmmtm ' Page 46 SM332S523SJ o 3 31 fi BOOK III Classes P dLht Colonial liicijo, 1921 1= . -■r jysft; !fti«;ft7 wriW! ' iw? jraf : Pag« 47 y MMMMMJysMMMMJJ Cf)C COlOnicll (IBcl)0, 1921 lMM07 nr??: MMMM? 5tf Senior Class History T ONE time the term history was synonomous with the term dry as dust. Of late years several things have contributed to place a wedge between the similarity of these terms. While the process of separation is incomplete, yet if one will study the newer histories he will see a different point of view is adopted by the modern his- torian. Perhaps the most extreme manifestation of this tendency comes to us from England, where the popular fiction writer has turned historian. And yet the reader of H. G. Well ' s Short History of the World may wonder if even when the novelist turns historian the dry as dust tendency does not remain. Perhaps under the limitation of definition it would be impossible to have a history of a class. A collegiate class is an extremely evanescent thing, scarcely the same for more than a month, and to attempt a history of it seems almost as futile as taking a portion of beach sand and attempting its history. If it were the history of the College, or the history of each individual who at the present moment makes up our class, the task would be an easy one; but to present a record, or even an impression of a class, is a problem past sophomoric ability. If a history is to be written of a class, I fear it must be written in terms of the history of the College of the past four years, lit with the radiance of the per- sonalities who have sojourned here under the stars and under the trees of the Campus and are now about to take up their tents and move on. To bridge the gap between today and that September afternoon four years ago when many divergent streams of human entities became a unit in time, place, desire, and opportunity ; to do this it is necessary to possess a very clear mirror with a backward look. A.t present, the numerical value of this class of 1921 is just forty. Of that number perhaps less than half shared in that incoming of four years ago, which was the legitimate birth of our class. The history we write will be recorded in terms of the general experience of that number. It seems fair at the very beginning to record some word, perhaps some tribute, to those who were with us, but who are not with us now — a number more than double those who remain. Those we have left by the way, some after one year, some after two and even three years, let us not forget that many of them fought a good fight, and we bear the imprint of many a personality who through the exigencies of war, or of circumstance, or even lack of preparation or capacity, has had to leave us. They have contributed their part to the final result. Therefore, let us who have had the good fortune to finish the race and to receive the prize, always remember those who began the race with us but for whom the Determiner of Destiny had other plans, other courses for them to run. In looking back over the four years there are certain nodal points around which many events cluster. Perhaps the first of these was the introduction of Page -18 i sff BT ffiT ii i ljifriilrijSnfS?! Cf)e Colonial (£cf)o, 1921 mssgm MMMMsmms cu-cducation. At this point the writer is put to the test as to whether he is an historian or not, for we ])r€sunie that the true historian, even though he may have the strongest antipathies toward the events which he chronicles, yet, for the good of his work, represses the outhurst of personal feeling that would master him at the time. Without giving expression to the feelings that were common to all of us who had spent a delightful year, perhaps the fullest of our college course, here on the Campus before this doubtful blessing was forced into our lives, we simply record the fact that by act of the Virginia Legislature women were admitted to the College of William and Mary in the two hundred and I twenty-fifth year of her history and the second year of the history of the class of 1 92 1. This was an event which changed the whole complexion of the College. From the day the first woman put her dainty foot within our venerable precincts, from that day the William and Mary of tradition ceases and new forces were let loose which, when judged from a final balancing of the books, will show a record of many gains and many losses. It is then, as a prophet and not a historian, that I fear the gains will never compensate for the losses. Another nodal point was when there occurred at the end of the second year of our history a change in administration. We who lived under both can but pronounce each good, and like Tennyson, write : The old order changeth, yielding place to new, and God fulfills himself in many ways, lest one good custom should corrupt the world. It seems good in passing to record some word relative to those instructors at whose feet we sat in the early days of our college course, whose feet since have been turned from our paths, and who have left an indelible impress, that will last until each life has reached its ultimate goal. Such men as Dr. Tyler, Mr. Wilson, Air. Clark, Mr. Keeble will always be a part of the recorded history that is ingrained in the hearts of all of us who came in contact with them and made them a part of our college experience. The past four years have seen emanate from the lives of us who make this class, all the forces, all the feelings that human personalit y can generate. Love, hate, ambition, joy, mirth, high purpose, low aim, industry, integrity — why record the list? It seems almost futile. Within our numbers can be found men who have made great contributions to the athletic life of the college, women who have made possible a wholesome social life, men who have kept alive the spark of the religious life, men who have been collegiate statesmen. Among us are leaders and also followers. Perhaps on close analysis we could find both saint and sinner, the idealist and the ma- terialist, the patriot, the artist, the business man, and the healers of bodies and souls. For surely we feel that all life is represented in embryo within our numbers. II And now we come to the end of the process. Until now our lives have run in parallel streams. We have touched the life stream of many a life, modified it, and have been modified in turn. The process nears completion and when these words are read, the cataclysm of separation will have been accomplished. The bond that held us together will have been broken. We shall no longer eat from the same table, dwell under the same roof, drink from the same fountains of n I i Tr Tri rs tri rr-t Trt Tre yt rtm)eC ' rgtat :rg utiUt .rt .rii i Page 49 w MMit MiLmmaam maiUiii C|)c Colonial dBcijo, 1921 ' ssusifsasasmLJSsmsiSiiS wisdom. And yet again, as prophet and not historian, I feel that when the bonds are brol en which hold us together and have held us together during this four years ' journey we shall forge new bonds, more spiritual, which will hold us in a unity perhaps even greater than that which now knits us together. And so we look forward with eager hearts, facing the parting of the ways; the past shall teach us how to take the forward step into the dim, rich future. Let us remember then these four years spent together under the protecting arms of Alma Mater. Let us remember that while we have contributed to her history by our four years of contact with her, yet our contribution is never com- plete. When we leave, we leave as the intellectual children of our College ; her successes and our successes, her failures and our failures, will be one. All finite things know an end and the time is here to draw this to a close. History it may be, and yet it may not be. Unlike the history we learned in the days of our youth, it contains no dates, no battles, no records of. individual conquest. Yet history is a something more. Is it not an attempt to register the passing heart beats? I wonder. A.W.J. Sf Srlriffirarsirsiyififs Page SO i MmsMMM? (Cljc Colonial Ccl)0, 1921 Senior Class WW iv AvViVWv yii«yi! yv AK yn i ' t y 2OT Motto— AAMHA ' AIA ' EX0NTE2 AIAAn ' 20Y2IN ' AAAH ' AOIS. Colors — Orange and White Flower — Dogwood Blossoms OFFICERS Herbert Lee Bridges, Jr President Ruth Etta Cashion Vice-President Edward Dewey Hudson Secretary-Treasurer Inger Scheie Prophetess Arthur Warren Johnson Historian Alexander David Joyner Poet Emory Voorhees Stowitts J ' aledictorian Morris W. Derr Chaplain Candidates for A. B. Degree Martha Elizabeth Barksdale Alexander David Joyner Lucille Brown Robin Hartwell Owen Alice Burke Word Day Peake Janet Haldane Coleman Reba Anna Smith James Anderson Conway, Jr. William Seth Snyder. Jr. Morris William Derr Herbert Lee Spain Leslie James Gilliland Emory X ' orhees P. Stowitts Arthur Warren Johnson ' illiam Fred Ward Candidates for B. S. Degree Isaac Dewey Akers Julian Strong Lake Loren Eastman Bennett Hortense Lewis Herbert Lee Bridges, Jr. Chapman S. Moorman Frank Seymour Calkins Robin Hartwell Owen Ruth Etta Cashion William Harvey Pride Catherine Teackle Dennis Inger Sophia Scheie Herbert Lawrence Duff James Bathurst Smith, Jr. Malcolm Dewey Foster Emory ' oorhees P. Stowitts ' alter Edward (iarber Russell Randolph Thompson Edward Dewey Hudson Martin Adolph Waldrop Blanche Lucile Kennedv Pace SI  gll5S!fiiaiJS{J .8WilM{lJS«34ia ' C|)e Colonial (Ectjo, 1921 i5SJli J!SgSiS 3!SJ!3a3 i3iM« John Coriden Lyons, M.A, Phi Tau Beta. Tan Kappa Alpha. Serretary Sophomore Class, ' 1S- ' 19 Basketball Squad, •19- ' 20. Flat Hat Staff, ' IQ- ' iO. Editor Flat Hat, ' 21. S. O. S. Ribbon Society. Flat Hat Club. Secretary-Treasurer of Cotil- lion Club. Corcoran Scholarship, ' 19- ' 20. Phoenix Literary Society. In- structor in French, ' 19- ' 20. Mathematics, ' 20- ' 21. Inter-Fraternity Council. a ir 8vti r gviftiftirr« yr«Aiy« iivs i i iWfti ayrti if5a5fl: Page f w ir w s ir ir iPf iimr ' mMJw M mMMMJiMMM}: Cfjc Coloiiial Ecf)0, 1921 Benjamin McIlvaix W ' oolsey, M. A. Rough Ashler Club. Graduate Class Course High School, Albia, Iowa. Student in Iowa State Teachers ' College one term. A. B, Cor- nell College. 1913. A. B. State University of Iowa, 1917. Special stu- dent Northwestern Lniversity, summer, 1917. Graduate student State University of Iowa, summer. 1918. Candidate for M. A. degree Wil- liam and Mary College, 1921. ata T 4 Y « tr T( T  T 8vT tf a«tfrt W Wiv Pase 53 Page M W£A P8i!e S5 WEA Page 56 Page 57 Cl)e Colonial €ct)o, 1921 we A TageSS Page 59 Page £0 IV t A Page 61 Page 62 P«ge 53 Pag 64 Page 65 Page « Cbe Colonial Bcto, 1921 Malcom Dewey Foster, B.S. Philomathean Literary Society. Football Squad, ' 19- ' 21. Monogram Club. Rappahannock Club. Secretary-Treasurer, ' 19- ' 20, ' 20- ' 21. Cotil- lion Club. American Legion. Vice-President Y. M. C. A., ' 19- ' 20. Treasurer Philomathean Literary Society, ' 18- ' 19. Taliaferro Club. WEA Page 6; PafC 66 Cbt Coloniar (fficf)o, I92l WEA Page O C{)e Colonial Cclio, I92t Arthur Warren Johnson, A.B. Phil Alpha Zeta. Tau Kappa Alpha. Phoenix Literary Society. Chap- lam, 17-18; Secretary, ' 18- ' 19; Vice-President, ' 10- ' 20. Y M C A Cabinet, ' IS- ' IP. ' 10- ' 20; President, ' 20- -21. Associate Editor Flat Hat ' 18- 19. Assistant Editor-in-Chief, ' 19- ' 20. Associate Editor Literary Magazine, 19- ' 20; Editor-in-Chief, ' 20- ' 21. Literary Editor Colonial Echo, 19-20; Assistant Editor, ' 20- ' 21. Manager Debate Council .in ' . Student Council Member, ' 18- ' 19. Secretary Student Council 20-21. Northern Lights. Delegate Student Volunteer Conference Des Moines, Iowa, ' 20; Lexington, Virginia, ' 19; Salem. Virginia, ' 21. American Society of Electrical Engineers. Dramatic Club. . K ' DeACOH VtoUKma to Beiit Hell. W [gj jm ' WfEA Page ?0 Ciie Colonial Cclio, 1921 AiEXANiiER David Joyner, A.B. Alpha Beta Kappa. Captain Track Team, ' 17- ' 18. Elected Captain and Manager Track Team, ' 18- ' 19. Captain Track Team, ' 19- ' 20. Manager and Captain Track Team, ' 20- ' 2 . Monogram Club. Mono- gram in Track. ' 16- ' 17, ' 17- ' 18, ' 19- ' 20. Monogram in Kootball, ' 19- ' 20, ' 20- ' 21. M ' onogram in Baseball, ' 19- ' 20. Medallist in Broad Jump in Virginia Inter-CoIIegiate Tract Meet, ' 17. Medallist in Broad Jump in ' irginia Inter-Collegiate Track Meet. ' 17. Medallist for Best Col- lege Athlete in Track, ' 19- ' 20. Basketball Squad, ' 17- ' 18, ' 19- ' 20. As- sistant Business Manager Literary Magazine, ' 19- ' 20. Athletic Coun- cil, ' 20- ' 21. Student Council, ' 20. Tidewater Qub. Philomathean Lit- erary Society. American Legion. Overseas Club P «e n Pkge 73 Pig 73 Page 74 Page 75 IT LoosS -IKE fl Bottle -Bur iTs fl Hanky- WEA Page 76 Page;? Page 7S Paje n Page 80 Page 81 Ci)e Colonial €cl)o, 1921 n cA Page 82 Pate S3 Page 84 Page 85 Page 86 Cj)e Colonial aBci)0, 1921 IBS I ij Senior Class Prophecy A Psycho-Analytic Study HE GIFT of prophetic vision has been in times past a factor which has contributed immeasurably to the determining of the destinies of men. The prophetess of Apollo at Delphi, drunk with the vol- canic gases, determined the course of the Greeks more than Zeus on Olympus. The Hindu Yogi, the Mahatmas, looking into con- templative space until space narrowed down to a pin point and utilizing this pin point to look into the souls of men and nations, predicted with precision the ultimate realities. The prophets of the Hebrews removed themselves from the world and lived in the desert places in contemplation. Coming forth from fasts and vigils possssed of the prophetic voice, they announced to their day and genera- tion those things which were shortly to be. Apocalyptic John, standing on Pat- mos shore, looked into the sunset and was taken up into it and previsioned the super world. The Medieval Rosicrucian, with touch of eastern lore and crystal in hand, sought the futures of men in the translucent depths of the crystal. Today w ' e find ourselves emerging from all these and the prophetic office has fallen on the psychologist. With keen insight into those things which lie beneath the surfaces of men ' s minds, the psychologist sees in the youthful mind all the concomitants which are to reach their fruition in later life. Their process they call psycho-analysis. So we who have to function as prophet will cast aside the discarded  iantles of the prophetic schools of history and assume that of the moderns. W ' e will look down into the mind of our associates even as the biologist looks at his specimen with his compound microscope, and sees there revealed wonders, that to the ordinary observer are non-existent. Taking the microscope of psychology, the psycho-analytic method, we will look into the minds about us and see what is there and record the results of what we observe. The function of science is classification, prediction and control. Looking into minds we can see what is there and predict how it is to function. We leave the final step in the process to the individual. The psychological microscope which we intend to use is of Austrian make, and it bears the hall-mark of Freud. It was imported by Brill, and we learned to use it under the direction of Dr. Geiger. The first specimen we mount on a slide is labeled Reba Smith. How strange her mind looks under the psycho-analytic microscope ! Here we observ-e a group of newly formed ideas that if allowed to reach fruition will result in political ambition. We see the germinal cells of a strong ambition to excel, the will to power. Pushed back into the fringe of consciousness we see such things as the maternal instinct fighting for recognition, yet the strength of the will to ffinonfiTJOrrigaffagggw ff ffi ' Page 87 ' mm M JtMMVJ m iM xs mm C[)e Colonial (lBci)0, 1921 mmmmmM ' suisjojiMMMimj I power mastering and subduing them. Interpreting these observations, it would seem that in later life this individual consciousness will be a leader in women ' s political circles. It also seems that this will necessitate her keeping the home- making ideas always in the fringe of consciousness and never letting them reach fruition. The next slide bears the label, Herbert L. Spain. It takes considerable adjusting of the penetrating ray to see beneath the passive surface of his mental structure. When the adjustment is made the field of vision is most interesting. In the center of the field of vision we see a large group of scholarly idea ma- terials. They seem to be resting quietly, as if they had been placed there with much efifort and were exhausted by the process. Looking toward the twilight zone we see walled out by a thin membranous wall a solid circle of business ideas. They are virile in places, straining the membrane that holds them back almost to the breaking point. Interpreting our observations, it seems that now the material of his immediate consciousness is that of the quiet scholar, but at any minute when the membranous wall is broken these business ideas will break through. It seems then that H. L. Spain is to have a period of scholarly pursuits, teaching probably, and then he will enter a business career, and the material which makes up these is of such virility we are sure that they will lead to success. Next in turn is one marked Tommy Thompson. The surface is easily pierced and the materials beneath are in a state of great flux. They are not solid materials as earth is, but ethereal. All his mental furnishings seem to take flight and almost refuse to stay attached. This can mean but one thing. The things of the air are calling to that which lies in his mental structure and the result can onlv be one thing, namely, for it to realize its complete self it will have to dwell for the most part in air. Hence, in practical terms, the structure is such as to demand the environment of an aeronaut. We place J. C. Lyons on the platform of analysis next. The sight is an inspiring one. Here order reigns supreme. In neat compartments are mathe- matical concepts, in others well arranged and completely developed linguistic materials. The thing that evokes the most interest though, is the germs of medi- cal knowledge which intersperses the other material like bundles of dynamite. And they are all connected with a nerve fibre, apparently waiting for the spark to kindle them. We realize the signification. Some day the spark will set oflf these bundles of psychic material which will scatter and permeate the whole, and the result will be that the life which is controlled by them will inevitably be that of a great physician. We say great, for the material is there in such quanti- ties that only few could excel it. We await that day when the process is complete. What stolid specimen is this? Derr? Yes, M. W. Derr. It seems almost impossible to get a beam of light sufficiently strong to penetrate this all too solid surface. Working with such as this is rather unsatisfactory — things do not stand out in clear ' lines. Psychic materials are mixed with others and elemental things are hard to discern. It seems as if an unsympathetic environment had thickened the external wall to such an extent that the things under it were hidden from the world and that nothing short of a miracle could release them. Examining this I Xr trSiSr t A1!rS Vr trS biyVrS tr trs tr V Page C()c Colonial OBcbo, 1921 5= : i s asuBimmmmjm r, i I 3 3 I i. thickened surface wall we tind that it is weak in several places. What lies beneath we cannot discern, yet we feel that when it is placed in the right environment it will act as a solvent to much of this thickened surface and release many of the things that are struggling to reach out beyond it. This one is more than interesting. The mind structure is divided into two separate compartments, each full and complete, with no relationship to the other. Between them is a wall or partition w ' hich it w ould be impossible to break down. In one is all the material for putting together an ideal picture of a country home, an old-fashioned garden, and beaming children. The other half contains the ideal material for a teacher, rules, discipline, recitation, executive material. Surely this can mean but one thing. Either half must be chos«n to the exclusion of the other. We feel that the second will be chosen, then di. ' ivarded for the first. Such is the mental picture of Martha Barksdale. There are many other specimens ready for us to turn our mental microscope on and examine. The one we have picked up is different from many. The focus of attention shows bridges, structures, moving bodies, all arranged like the physics text books. The mental furniture of Lee Bridges can mean but one thing, a fruition in engineering, and as the present mental structure is in terms of large structures it seems that he will be an engineer of large problems. The one which we are now examining is of feminie gender — Brown, Lucile Brown. The neurograms which we see are for the most part embryo plots. Budding romances that will grow if not inhibited into the best sellers. With cer- tainty we can predict from such as this a brilliant writer. Skulls, bones, livers, beating hearts, make the view of a cross section of A. B. Clark ' s mind look like the witches broth which is so aptly described in Macbeth. The very elements for a splendid surgeon 1 It takes little imagination to see the finished product with such a basis from which to create it. A rather uninteresting specimen is this, the field made up of neat logarithmetic tangents, geometrical figures, secants and cosine all ready to burst forth. Time is the only factor then to complete the process. When it is complete Blanch Ken- nedy will have all full mental equipment to instruct the race of men in all the intricacies of mathematical science. Another of feminine gender, and made up of concepts of ideal men, men not so ideal, a host of them, all a part of the mental picture. Surely with such a collection Hortense Lewis seems destined to one thing, to choose from the many and live happily ever after (if a woman can live happily with a man forever after). This mental area is tremendous, yet the neurograms seem to be in terms of cakes and bread. The name Ward and cake seems to be synonymous, and for slim Ward to live up to the tradition seems as easy as any process of nature. Janet Coleman ' s mental structure is as interesting as her name. A poetic thing! Like a delicate cobweb of misty dreams, all the rough corners of her mental structure have been draped in cobwebs. .A,ll this is rather confusing. It seems to prefigin-e an eventual poetess. fnt trt trs 7rit ' .ys ' fi rt ri rt 7rt Tr Wi -f .r Page 89 itiU ' MMM MMMMMjg-g i! Cl)0 COlOttJal CCi)0, 1921 MS mMJkkU ' -U ' XUMiJJJ ' JUn r,} Here is an interesting thing. In this mind there is a fully formed complex of a text-book of trigonometry. Rather sketchy now. The title page is inscribed with the name H. L. Duff. We can predict then after seeing this, a mathemati- cal career blossoming in a text-book of trigonometry. Underneath a rough surface life, hid among all kinds of mental rubbish, we have found a jewel of purest ray serene. The owner seems to be all un- conscious of it. Alice Burke is the owner. Buried in law concepts, and teaching concepts, the gem, which we name the linguistic diamond, shines. This gem will shine its brightest when its owner is the secretary to the ambassador to Greece. Over the mental field of this one Home is written in large letters. In this mental make-up is everything that is needed to make woman ' s greatest con- tribution to the world — the home. With the strong home complex that Catherine Dennis has we await the day when it expresses itself in objectivity. Napoleon or Bismarck could not have had a more interesting mental life to examine than Pop Gilliland has. I am sure that if they all were placed to- gether they would have much in common. There would be in all the will to power, the will to conquer. Diplomacy and coup-d ' -etats would mark them all. Surely the statesmanship of the latter will eventually find its own and another name will be added to the first two. A beam of light amid much of lesser interest. A beam of light if allowed to grow will result in Cashion ' s Theory of Light. This is not all that we see in our mental examination of Ruth; there is much more, but this stands out among all the rest. Facts ! What quantities of them make up this field, that of M. D. Foster. Such accumulations of facts seeking expression mean but one thing. A series of histories. Hexapoda, arthropoda, myrapoda, coleoptera, arachnida, all these and many more in outline are well arranged and animated with live interest. Such is the picture we see of Calkins ' mind. Biology claims its entire field. It seeks ex- pression. Hence time will see the rise of Calkins, the Biologist. ' ay back in the twilight zone of the mind of Loren Bennett, with the aid of much searching, we find in miniature a beautiful building. Everything in the mentality seems to contribute to it. There already exists the material which will bring him fame and fortune as an architect. We have looked at this one for a long time and do not seem quite able to express what we see. A mental field filled with the forms and figures of beauti- ful youths, ideal, knightly, all under the guidance of the personality that animates the mass. This desire to be the leader of youth as seen by the picture, by the examination of the mind, will result, we are sure, in Stowitts becoming principal of a large private boys ' school. It is a position which requires all the gifts of a great personality. Contrast, that is the only adjective that will state clearly the difference between the surface of the mental life of Snyder, W. S., and that which lies beneath. We see many things of interest floating before our vision when we g ti«sir s ir wif wt) in ir«fl7s iSs M i.-5 i.-r8B ' 5sft Page 93 i i a, ' 3 . ' 3 9 3 si i« iS8fi« T« i;) ri i:«ftSfl iMv«a vH r« tsa5 2e;ss 5M3J ?j Cl)e Colonial Ccijo, 1921 iro I I I look deep into his mental life, but they are so unorganized that it is impossible to state which will become a dominant complex. Only the Determiner of Destiny Himself, could state into what form these are to burst out. ' et .surprise awaits ,; I both Snyder and the world when the synthesis of the complex that is to domi- fil nate his life is complete. Strange, very strange, this one. It seems quite easy to penetrate the surface, but what lies beneath seems to be veiled completely in an aura of pure white light. The name attached is Johnson. Through this mystic veil many things I seem to protrude. On the whole it is quite unsatisfactory. What lies beneath I may be another Chrysostom in embryo, or another Loyola, or a St. Francis of Assizi, or perhaps all that will come to the surface will be a voice crying in a wilderness. Quite unsatisfactory is this one, for can a psychic microscope turn inward on itself and see back of the eye that has the outward look? We wonder ! Dollar marks are the outstanding features of this mind which we have before us. All that is there resolves itself into the inevitable dollar. And the process is a beneficent one. To watch it brings inspiration. The future will reveal to us if these signs be true, a developing Joe Garber, a large-hearted, good-natured financier with the ability to turn resources into gold and we see a part of that golden stream controlled by him, turning to ' illiam and Mary to again trans- form itself into creative work. Yes, another physician, for the mind work of E. D. Hudson is filled with gniesome things, but in looking at this mental picture we look beyond them to the fringe and see there the ideal already formed, of men ' s bodies made whole. Surely this mind is well furnished with the things to make a life that will bring healing to the bodies of men. In the immediate foreground of this cross section of mentality the fires of youth burn so brightly that it is hard to see the twilight zone. In dim outline it reveals quite a contrast, the pre-vision of a different Julian Lake living the life ' of the owner and director of a large country estate. The most versatile of all that we have examined yet ! C. S. Moorman. A collection of interesting things, each developing fully in its own line. Here we see clearly outlined the embryo of a state sman, with the gift of oratory to sway the minds of fellow-men. Here the gift of healing. And almost out of the range of vision the materials from which a successful writer is made. It must be that the result will be that this large mass of mentality will throw itelf behind the science of healing men ' s bodies and work through all three channels. Molar teeth, canine teeth, feline teeth, bicuspids, and even wisdom teeth, whole and not so whole, these are the cores around which the mental complexes of J. B. Smith center. It can mean but one thing: J. B. Smith, D. D. S. 3 Once again we find that the instruments of the law have moulded the mental I make-up. It is W. D. Peake this time. It is no half way beginning, but a well- laid foundation on w ' hich a great superstructure can be raised. 1 Variety is said to be the spice of life. A little pepper to liven up a same- ness. Here we have A. D. Joyner. A glimpse of his mind is fascinating. Base- st balls circle around in dizzy motion. Bats strike out at them and send them t3i Page 91 Ma iyay5 iiypMiyByiiysyBy{ ' j C lje Colonial (2Bci)0, 1921 mm MJmiMMMSjm ims. }jpx whizzing through mental space. The delicate connective wires of co-ordinated action are highly developed. An athlete, a league player, no other fate can await such a combination. The material is exhausted. We put up the instruments whereby we looked beneath the minds and saw the rudiments of things that are to be. W ' e take you all and turn you loose in that element which is necessary if the mental life is to bring forth fruit. Time. What a wonderful element it is! It will transmute all things that exist as tendencies now, rudimentary actions into realities. The process has begun. Already in our mental lives have begun processes that must run to completion. We have put those minds in the care of the guiding arms of our Alma Mater. She has tended them, nurtured them and put rich seeds in them. We see the seeds only now. Time will show to men the fruits. The seeds have been planted, they may be planted on stony ground, or among thorns, or in dry places, or in good ground. The seeds are of good and bad, many have rooted. We separate to go to that environment which is best adapted to the type of fruit we wish to give the world. And when the harvest season comes let us not forget the joys and the pleasures of the seed time ! PROPHET (Cum Addenda.) Page -it s!j7 ' frag rifi? y ?« Sii ?fr g  rs Cl)e Colonial (Ccbo, 1921 To Alma Matei «y,ivt jiv xvwiv yjiv vi yiWiVWi yw ' Neath the shadows of thy maples, Where the fragrant blossoms smell, Many eager hearts are weeping, ' As we bid you sad farewell. But in parting we would linger. Just a moment to insure, That to thee we ' re always faithful, In whatever we endure. Many are the ties that bind us, W ' ith a love that ever lasts. Love that always will remind us Of the bright and glorious past. In our absence may you flourish. Reaching unknown heights of fame. May whatever we accomplish Be an honor to your name. May the laurels that now adorn you. Never fade within thy sight. But through countless ages guide you, In the footsteps of the right. While the eagle holds the summit. And the lion rules his den. Know that all our prayers are for thee. All our efforts to thy end. Fear no dreams that may surround thee, As we pass from day to day, Fill with joy each fleeting moment. Lest some farer miss the way. Life is sweet, dear Alma Mater, But the grave is not its end. When from hence we have departed, We ' ll be with you even then. — Class Poet. !fl! ' !ft?sftwflrrf i l Aftr Page 93 it« ijj vjiyi ' kujiyii fii tyjiiyt ig! g Cfje C-oIoiiial (ZEcf)0, 1921 The Autumn Forest Over yonder in the distance In between the earth and sky, Brushing, swaying in the distance, Sighing in sweet lullaby, Rocking in the morning breezes, Calling at the sunset hour. Bathed in cooling, balmy breezes Lies the wood in golden bower. Up among the highest treetops. In among the lowest slants, Swinging o ' er the highest treetops, Creeping over crawling plants ; Darning o ' er the broken skylight Of the swaying, rolling trees, Grapevines closing out the sunlight, — All are rocking in the breeze. And upon the crisped carpet Creaking, breaking, sighing sighs, Rolling o ' er the crisped carpet, Fluttering upward to the skies : Colored with the paints of autumn — Golden-brown and reddish hue — Falling leaflets of the autumn Crowd the air from earth to blue. Then upont he palled midnight As the ghostlike creatures crawl Into the enamoured moonlight. Where the breaking branches fall, When the chill breeze whispers warning As the shuddering branches fall, — There upon the gray of dawning. Owls to little owlets call. Draper in the cold, white curtain Of the first deep snow of Fall, Glistening and seeming certain Sparkle diamonds over all. And the gleaming, beaming sunlight. And the twinkling, sparkling star Struggle with the moonlight Its supremacy to bar. Page 94 mmim{i iimmm!S! smismismmtm mm lfjmfmiJ!fiUF m;ui)iJimiM3 mmsi tH ' t Colonial (2Eci)0, 1921 SMSasasSPnnTr irzrr sTTTrFiriTCT: ' i I I I I I I I E r Fff ri7 vff ?fr friSv ' HnQ7 m miW ' iyr Page 95 m C e Colonial (Ccfio, 1921 That Wliich Is Hidden Beneath the Winter ' s snow there Hes, Entombed but for awhile, The seed of all the Springtime flowers, The source of Springtime Smiles. And underneath the deadened sod, Deep down beneath the cold. There lives a myriad ecstacies. Of life and love untold. So, deep beneath the furrowed brow. And underneath the rough. There lives a heart in tune with God — A soul of faith — enough. R. E. Kennard. Hage 96 «gf fig ffi S 7 mf«ii? Br 5rM v tj LmMmmmM jm Cf)C Colonial (IBcljo, 1921 i i ' i I J ' sJ Officers and Members of Junior Class CLASS OFFICERS Floyd Joseph Berl President William Hume Hoskins Vice-President Martha Flippo Secretary-Treasurer Savala Eustace Gunn Historian Fletcher Emory Ammons Chaplain Motto — Pnidentia et Animo Colors — Old Gold and Maroon Flower — Red Clover MEMBERS Ammons, F. E. Benschoten, Josephine Berl, Floyd J. Blakey, Madeleine Bland, J. Roderick Bridges, Margaret Briggs, R. C. Burcher, M. C. Burden, Royce Chandler, Ferdinand F. Conner, E. E. Eifert, Leota Ely, A. R. Featherstone. Helen E. Flippo, Martha Gunn, S. E. Haile. Mary X. Harris, Ruth Henderson, John V. Holman, Mary Holman, Maria Hopkins, Aubrey E. Hoskins, William H. Hudson, J. G. King, Lloyd N. Kohout, Bozena Lee, Elizabeth Lee, E. M., Jr. Person, Alice Pierce, C. G. Pleasants, Anna Powers, Isca Settle, L. Healey Shackelford, T. M. W ' adsworth, Mary Wilkins, Mary H. Wilson, J. F. I i % 1) i i ' I fT i, t r vif. ffTTf V t T. TfT, Page 97 MMMMMMMMMMMS CljC (CoIOtlial (GrljO, 1921 :33SM£; Junior Class ■ Page ' 98 f f T fW f ' ' -,.-.. .,, ■v iTiifi- ffr T.: ■5:;i;u Mrayii!n! -fjp Coloilial (JBd)0, 192 ' I .6! i ■E; ■!:1I Junior Class tri trs trsars tra Vri sr trs tfe trs tm tri t a Page 99 mM m mmMMimiMM mMMv Cbc Colonial (Echo. 1921 mjiiuii} ijmi-u ,imjj i j i ' pj MM ii ' ■ I ' a - CI)C Colonifll OJcIjo, 1921 ? Page 101 2iMM smM3mmmmm p- Oc Colonial (Bci)0, 1921 iMMMMMiyiiyfiy-tyjiy s g r; « I I i Junior Class Page 102 5! Of €oIoninl (Crho. 1921 r: 5 . © ' =• Junior Class ' ai t I Page 103 pMMMM MMMMMM MM? Ci)P COlOtlial (2Bcf)0, 1921 JMMMMAgM MM MM -I i 1 1 I i History of the Class of 1922 HE HISTORY of the class of 1922 must be written if for no other reason than that every class has a history. But the piirpose of this history is not to squander the last few moments of time before this volume is hurried off to the printer in enumerating the many facts of the individuals, rather the heroes and the heroines (for heroic deeds are many and varied since the co-eds came) of our college class. Although custom has decreed that the history of a class should be in general terms, there are facts concerning the accomplishments of the members of this class that should not go by unnoticed. Not all the events to which the members of this class have contributed are worthy of record, but there are some so outstanding, some of such ultimate worth, that no history could be written and deserve the name without a passing mention. Space in these pages is of such intrinsic worth, it is as our only visible heritage to the student generation which shall come after us, to fill with empty platitudes. What we write must be written in brevity and sincerity. Virtues must be recorded and not praised. Gifts and accomplish- ments must be recorded but not evaluated. Every man, every woman, of the thirty-six which make up our class has merit, has gifts, has attainments. It is only when these set the various members off and shed around them particular light, which is essential to a complete under- standing of the group, that we can fully record. Without any further attempt at an Apologia for the fact, that, dominated by an amiable disposition not to proceed with undue haste to the neglect of eternal verities, yet yielding to a categorical imperative that this record must be made clearly and accurately, we adopt the method of approach which is as old as the written word, the method used by the writer of Genesis and the Fourth Gospel. Our history, in the beginning, reaches not to some distant past shrouded with the cobwebs of doubt. It has an accurate location both in time and space, for during one week of September, 19 18, a week which saw the great World War grinding the nations of Europe with greater destructive force than any previous week in its course, during this week dawned the history of the class of 1922. Once more William and Mary gathered together a group of faithful spirits to enter the course of preparation for the battle of life. This class began its history with the establishment of an institution here on the Campus which was to transform the whole student life on the college for a season, namely, the Students ' Army Training Corps. What it contributed to the college is rather hard to say. This much is certain, that several of our members were drawn to our venerable precincts through this medium. Page 104 mw ' m - wm r m mmmmmmmrsrmi. ' «■ ? Cf)C Colonial OBcbo, 192 1 i [:, To give an adequate picture of student life under the militaristic regime of the S. A. T. C. would take many pag«s. Perhaps some day one of our members may be inspired to write in order the things that made up that interesting chapter in the life of William and Mary. Suffice to say that many of our number came to tread the paths of learning and found that path consisted of little knowl- edge and much work. To us removed by many months from this period there ;. is but one general impression, that of a large number of men raking leaves, scrubbing floors, shining brass that had not gone through that process since f; ' the days of Thomas Jefferson. Of tiie hundred or more men who go t their intro- [;; duction to William and Mary via the Students ' Army Training Corps, only a rela- t; tively small per cent survived the cold showers of disallusionment. K The year 1918 seems to have been the year of miracle, or of calamity (we p leave the decision to the gods on Olympus), for it brought not only the S. A. T. C. ' 2 but also co-education. Perhaps some day there will be added to the list of igj, priorities of William and Mary the fact that she was the first co-educational fj institution in the South. We sincerely hope that the other innovations which make up the interesting list received a warmer welcome than this last named one. It is a time-worn adage that it is useless to cry over spilled milk, and even though this particular brand of milk has spilled itself very much over the Campus and % flooded college life, we who were here before they were have sufficient sports- 5 manship to see only the good in a dismal situation and to shed neither tears of f : joy nor sorrow at their arrival. The fact that nearly one-half our class is of g, the Mary variety shows how completely they have made themselves at home. Turning now from the painting of abstraction to the more concrete process of g examining the personalities whose actions and reactions have made our class history possible, we find things of more than passing interest. 1 In Lead Ammons we find a personality who seems to have a happy faculty of making history of one kind or another. In our Nation ' s history he contributed his part, having enlisted in the service soon after war was evident. , On the campus his contribution has been anything but small. Among the stately pillars of ou r class is Burcher, who is somewhat of a patriarch. As one of the few survivors of the once William and Mary Academy, he carries in his mind memories of the old William and Mary which when related make some of us of the newer William and Alary wonder just a little whether we have not left behind some things which were of greater value than we realized I at the time, yet which are so far behind that all chances of recovery are lost. We refer to the college spirit that was indigenous to the William and Mary of a generation ago which with the modernizing and effeminizing has been to a great gi extent eliminated. Like Virgil, arma virumque cano, the man in this case being Fredie Chandler and the arms, his valor on the baseball diamond. Unlike ' irgil. the power is not given us to sing the praises of this peer of athletes in a manner befitting his accomplishments. Our contribution to the cause of college athletics g , has not been limited to this man, but in him much of our athletic historv- has w Sj been made, and we see that the future holds for him as many rewards as it does ' ■ for those who throw their whole self into the game of life as Fredie does ' ; when playing tackle or handling the mit for Settle. :i Page 103 yny MMMydy MMty MM-M ' .! Cftc Coloiiicil Bcbo, 1921 mjijUW- Sv ■ It is not always the individual who says the most that contributes the largest amount to a cause. The highest price for a liter of much talk has never risen very high and we would not care to do business in this commodity. Among our number we have an individual who deals not in this commodity but in actions — 1 Berl. His contribution has not been in what he has said but in the things he § has done. In college activities it has always been to Berl to whom we have 3 instinctively looked when there was something to be done quickly, accurately K and quietly. f Greek, French. Bohemian, Checz, Slovakian. Latin, English, Anglo-Saxon, i Hungarian, German. Not many classes in any college could boast a member with |j; the God-given gift of tongues. We have such a member. Bozena Kohout has such a gift and the above mentioned list to her credit. A genius of any kind is g a rare thing. An individual with a genius for language is also rare. We pride | ourselves in having Miss Kohout with us and envy her these rich attainments. ;= Every class has its transient visitors — those individuals who come and stay :H for a day and move on. We do not mean those who move into college and out ' again ; we have those too, but the kind that come up from a lower class and like - a will-of-the-wisp pass on. Burden is such a one. He came in our class at the g end of his first year of college and at the end of the first half of his junior year ; w ill have left us. 3 If any one individual has contributed any more than any other to that in- definable thing, the general impression our class has made on the college as a .i whole, that man is Healey Settle. The term all-round hardly does him justice. The cause of athletics has been advanced through him perhaps more than any one other man in college. Literary work, religious work, student government, all ' .§ ' these and many more have received his support. And for all that he has put in so generously, he has reaped a reward that cannot be measured in terms of ;| gold, that reward being that subtle thing we call personality. ! These are but a few of the many names that make the illustrious whole. .=; The road has been traveled for three years now. One year is left to us. In ■ ( that year is given the opportunity to enjoy the richness of each other. As we pass we realize that the things we do. the things we say, the things which we accomplish are in the last analysis not things that will reflect as the history- of a class but as a chapter in a part or whole, the history of the College of William and Mary. The traditions which we found, the traditions which we have received and have to pass on to the next generation are but a part of the rich heritage 1; from the past. ' hen we realize that by heritage we are the intellectual sons of such men as Washington, Jefferson, Marshall, Monroe, and the Tylers, we realize what a serious thing the making of history is. Yet we are not overwhelmed, for we I have a sure confidence that there lies latent within our number all that is necessary to make new statesmen, lawyers, religionists, physicians and educators. And as we pass from the status of Junior to the higher of Senior we feel that we can give the old college a Senior Class of which she may well take pride. e write =: I this not in conceit, but in a humble recognition of those things we know. ; I HiSTORI.XN. ;g I i i If Page 106 t} Cfte Colonial (Ccbo, 1921 ;9 ' r- . w B ' g ' ' 5 ' . IgaSMj iti; ' ■ ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ■ ■■Ml ? r ?gSB? ' S }i1 g ;; ffi 57 1ffif !S ' i?g {i S fr f ■3 3 ' •Si V5 I Page 107 MMiumaiyauf Miiu MiMjyiMMi. ' C!)c Colonial !Bci)o, I02i Sophomore Class CLASS OFFICERS John B. Bentley President Dorothy Terrill Vice-President Fairmount R. White Secretary-Treasurer Robert C. Harper Historian Abernathy, L. D. Ackiss. P. W. Anderson, F. L. Ball, Cecil R. Belanger. Albert B. Bentley, John B. Berger, Elizabeth Bergey, Beulah Blakey, Madeleine Blizzard, Virginia Bond, W. S. Bridges, J. Malcolm Brooks, Bertha Burch, William T. Burfoot, J. D., Jr. Campbell, R. D. Christian, Wm. T. Clarke, T. C. Cline. F. F. Close, W. K. Conley, Thelraa Cooke, A. H. Cox, James G. Cox, Wm. J. Davenport, L. B. Davis, Estelle Davis, W. E. Davis, Reginald G. Dickinson, William A. Downing, George A. Duff, C. D. Duke, C. J. Duling, Annie H. Fades, Elizabeth East, O. B. Eifert, Leota Elder, Sue W. Faison, J. O , Jr. Farrar, J. C. Fifer, U. L. Finks, Zella B. Flippo, Martha Frost, J. F., Jr. CLASS ROLL Fulcher, O. H. Garnett, J. H. Garrett, Charles D. Gilliam, Mary E. Goad, R. R. Green, Julia Haile, Anna W. Haile, R. G., Jr. Hall, Snowden C. Hamilton, Ethel Harper, Robert C. Harris, Elizabeth Harwood, W. S. Henderson, U. K. Hudson. B. H. Huffman, E. B. Hutchings, Myree Jennings, R. C. Johnson, W. C, Jr. Jones, Charles B. Joyner, Moses B. Kenncy, Reginald A. King, May E. Kohout, Mprie Kyle, C. J. M. Kyle. R. E. Lawson. Thelma Lohr, E. W. hov e. Otto S. Lottie, Anita McWhorter, Marion Manson, Fletcher S., Jr. Manson. Waverley S., Jr. Marks, Rosalind Marshall, Dewey H. Marston, Lucile Morrissette, Harold M. Myrick. L. S. Pate, Elizabeth C. Pettis, J. B. Phillips, J. C. Pierce, E. H. Piland, M. R., Jr. Pollard, J. G., Jr. Powell, Wilma V. Reed, W. J. Rice, Emilv Riddell. Mary E. Roach. C. T. Rorrer, Charles E. Rowell, W. W., Jr. Ruffin, M. Beverley Sapp, F. A. Scott, Elizabeth Scott, J. Randolph Shell, Ruth Shipman, Charlotte Smoot, O. P., Jr. Stebbins, Cary Stallard. C. W. Stratton, Mabel Straughan, H. R. Swift, Stuart C. Tatem, Mary Nash Temple, R. R. Tennis, LeGrand Terrill, Dorothy Thompson, Virginia Topping, C. E. ' an Laer, Elizabeth Vaughan, Ruth C. Ward, L. T. Warren, C. H. Waters. Louise Weddle. William H. White. F. R. White, L H. Wilshin, Francis Witten, T. R. Wood, Edward W. Woodward, Bettie Young, T. J., Jr. Young, W. F. Zirkle, Dorothy ii  i. I; i ' jm M i mm !ra timri frmf !i fsmiimimimim Page 108 ' Tiffr m fT T amM u i S3 I I s €l)c Colonial (Ccfjo, 1921 ' - 1 - ;i : ' g} ' g 1 (51 =- m JfgYIBMifil ' Tri ■ J AkSr: i i I I 1 i ' v? ; ggg? ' gfii ?i ftwg s ?wanfifWsBitig ' is msmnii Page 109 i I C e Colonial €cf)o, 1921 t- . The Gang ' s All Here Hail! Hail! The Gang ' s all here! How we have heard them sing it, swarming down the street, Their boyish, untrained voices, hit or miss at tune or time To the trampling of the clumsy, untrained feet. Perhaps they ' d won a football game, or wished to raise a row — What the Deuce do we care now! ' •Hail! Hail! The Gang ' s all here! Sounding like a pean along a foreign road, Marching, boys no longer, as Crusaders every one, Called to free a stricken people from their load. French children caught the foolish words and sang them anyhow- IVhat the Deuce do we care nozv! Hail! Hail! The Gang ' s all here! We hear them sing their marching song again, Counting the empty places in the gang with burning eyes, And through the flaunting notes of the refrain. Voices we hear, that shouted once, our hearts remember how — What the Deuce do we care! What the Deuce do ive care! What the Deuce do we care now! ft ' Psge liO il C|)e Colonial €c )o, 192 1 History of the Class of 1923 R( )M Freshman to Sophomore is only one step on the educational stairway, but it marks a (tetinite advance in all those things that Alma Mater inspires. Love for one ' s college begins to crystalize (luring one ' s sophomore year, and each succeeding year makes stronger this bond of affection. The sophomore class of 1920-21 did not differ from sophomore classes of other years in any great respect. In this class was to be found the enthusiasm, extravagant hopes, and self-complacency common to all sophomore classes. Its sole virtue was the regard with which it was held by the freshmen, and hopes for the future entertained by altitudinous juniors and seniors. After this impersonal, dispassionate line of reasoning, we shall now try to ; J be a human being and say something nice about the future greats in our class. c ' Intellectual giants, athletes de luxe, athletes a la Mexico, good fellows — i-- ' all are to be found shedding their refulgent rays upon an unsuspecting world. Have we not Monk White, Alva Cooke, Girard Moore, and Otto Lowe t amongst us to set the athletic pace? And who can gainsay Reginald Kenney, ' -■ Edwin Davis, Fulcher, Burfoot, Pollard and Everett Wood that peak attained only by those who burn the midnight oil? Isn ' t there Phi Beta Kappa material 1 in that group ? Sure, wonders never cease ! Then there is Bill Christian. He is r: a landmark and a handy man, when he isn ' t slinging ink for the college press ' ' i [ club. And Qine said he organized a band, though few persons believed him. iS The class, in harboring a would-be poet among its number, seeks forgive- t|-- ness. Because he disliked perfumed notes and all that sort of thing, Melvin ' j :: Tennis chose the nom de plume of Drow-sy Waters. His outbursts really were not g| ;;, bad. The chauvinistic Schenck and the faithful Bridges upheld the class honors ' 5; ' with the fair sex. What more could any class ask ? We might go on indefinitely, 2 but human patience, as we know, has a limit. r. Such mighty curlers as our class boasts of seldom have invaded the Sacred Halls of America ' s second oldest institution of learning. The class has a future, 5; just as all classes have, and several years must elapse before an impartial inventory s can be taken. But with pardonable pride we advance the belief that the type S; of men and women in our class will produce results highly advantageous to : ' William and Mary. :;;, Aeons and aeons ago some bard went into ecstasy over liberty and what g; it meant. That was before the eighteenth Federal amendment. Sophomores !g ' have a certain liberty, after a year ' s bondage in freshman ranks, and there are I© few things VE wise soph doesn ' t know. But Time is a great healer, and we all ' ' would make our lives sublime. ip , — Historian. sI iS S3i ■i ' I I Boy of the Broken Body Who Died ' st for France On the second anniversary of the armistice, the body of an unidentified j-oung Poilu, disinterred from the field of the First Marne, was buried with the highest mil- itary honors in the Hotel des Invalides. Boy of the broken body, who died ' st for France, What time the exuUant Hun burst through the gate, And thinking of easy victory, elate, Upon her sleeping targe rang his fell lance. O laughing lad, who didst leave the greensward dance. The homely round of meadow and of byre. The plough-boy ' s whistle and the winter fire, To meet the foeman ' s lunge with bayonet glance. Quenched was thy laughter ; e ' en forgot thy name, Through grim years ' agony the fight was won. Lighting their path by thy glory ' s radiance. The living brought thee from the field of flame, And laid thee, Poilu, by Napoleon : Boy of the broken body, thou = rt France. M. Page 112 i Cftc Colonial Ccfjo, 1921 I I 3 5!. I I 5!. 5!. :. jfiggjgswffij itg isrtBTiaiia; Page 113 i maMMMg Cf)C Colonial (£cf)0, 1921 jgj g ayg uPAJgjjnjjrois iyriyriSg i What Counts There ' s a country filled with sunshine, With happiness and rest, And it is just a moment ' s journey Over the mountain ' s crest. liS?lfSBS 1SSfl!S  t 1« t«v S 1CrS ia« iri« 1i W There ' s a land of a thousand wishes Over beyond the hills, Where everything is contentment And one has what one wills. There ' s a land all filled with flowers Over beyond the hills. With roses and trailing arbutus, Violets and daffodils. There is music and there ' s laughter, There are streamlets and founts, And after you get there it ' s yours — il It ' s climbing there that counts. | — R. E. Ke.v.n ' ak ' I). ¥ I Page 114 M? Cl)e Colonial Ccbo, 1921 I t-: i; ife: I Freshman Class CLASS OFFICERS Ernest C. W. Diete President James Dudley Carter Vice-President Elizabeth Wadsworth Secretary-Treasurer Sallie Mapp Jacob Historian Joseph C. Chandler Chaplain Colors — Orange and Black Flower — Table Talk k I ,6 i 6 4 !;■ i 5 . Allen, Frank Alsop. Kathleen Andrews, W. E. Eadgett. S. B. Barker, Kanzo Barnes, Anna Bedsaul, F. C. Bennett, M. S. Berlin, Bertha Berlin, Helen Bland, W. L. Blanks, James R. Boguess, Nona Bond, Hagan Booker, Essie Boyd, Brent Bradford. Cathryn Bradley, Bruce Brauer, E, Welford Breeding, Delia Bridgeforth, J. W, Bunting, Janie Bush, Chase Butler, Hilda Butler. Wave Carter, James D, Cave, Eloise M. Chandler, Joseph C. Chisholm, Walter S. Clarke, Sarah Clarke, S. Harvey Cocke, Frances L. Coleman, Mack Covvles, C. C, Jr. Cowles, Walker Cox, Everett E. Cox, F. W. Cox, James S, MEMBERS Custis, Thomas Custis, W. S. Cuthrell. Elizabeth Daugherty. H. L. Davis. L. E. Davis, Lillian Davis, Margaret Davis, Mary- Davis, Mattie M. Deane, Mary K. De Shazo, Elizabeth Dick. William M. Dickenson, Harold F. Dickerson, Lawrence M. Dietz, Ernest C. W. Donaldson, Agnes F. Doyle, J. Albert Duncan, Robert A. Eason, James, Jr. Echols, Alton C. Edwards, F. L. Ellis, Mrginia M. C. Elmore, Walter S. Engart, Mamie Featherstone, Helen E. Fitzgerald, Geo. E. Flett, Florence Floyd, E. D., Jr. Forbes. Sadie Foreman. Aline E. Forrest, Dennis Forrest, Naomi Fortna, Marie Fraughnaught, Hilda Fristoe, M. Elizabeth Flanders. George E. Garnett. Juliet B. Garrett, Suzanna Garrison, Helen Gay, Stanley J. Geddy, Otis M. Gemmill, W. L. Gibbons, Frances Goad. P. T. Graham, Helen Gray, Inez M. Gray, Josephine C. Gray, Winifred M. Griffin, Nettie Haile. Hilda Hancock. Hugh T. Harrington, W. B. Harris, Nellie J. Harrison, Carter H. Hedrick, Ethel Henderson, Etta Hess, George Hicks, Horace Hogg, O. Lynwood Hogwood, Andrew W. HoUaday, C. E. Holladay, W. J., Jr. Holland. Lutie Hope, John W. Hoskins, Charles R., Jr. Howard, Eula Houser, Mary C. Hughes. J. Aubrey Hurt, Sarah R. Herr, Lawrence J. Isley, ' irginia C. Jacob. Sallie Mapp Jeffreys, E. G. Jenkins. Carlton Jenkins, James S., Jr. lenkins. Marguerite il tase 115 5 cije Colonial (Bc o, 1921 i mi Mmv ' iJSMM is iiS Freshman Class — Continued. J essup, Bettie Sue Jessup. Lucy H. Johnson, Helen G, Johnson, Hugh H. Jones, John Anderson Jones, Ocie Jones, Stanleigh H. Jones. Wyatt B. Jordon, Thomas L. Kennar l. R. E. Kelton, Mona R. Kchon, Nettie R. KUnc, Ruth Kramar, Dewey N. Kiefcrle, S. S. Lacv. George E. Land, W. E. Lane, Mildred C. Lannigan, Helen Latham, S. E. Lee, Rosebud Lemley, Clementine Levy, Benjamin Lohman. Mary Elizabeth McKann, ' crnon Manning, Lulah Marston, Baker Mawson, T. H. Mears, Charles K. Mercer, Elizabeth Meredith. Anne N. Metcalf, Frederick W. Moftitt, E. Baird Moncure, Richard G. Moody, Juliette Moore, Gerard Moore, Jean Morccock. Mildred L. Murphy, Mabel Murray, Dorothy M. Meyer, Norma Nealson, Eugenia Nelson, M. S. Norfleet, Cecil G. Nottingham, J. T. Page, Virginia A. Parker, Anne V. Parker, Barton Parks, Floyd W, Parrish, V. VV. Patsel. Mary E. Peake, F. L. Perry, Mary Lee Person, William L. Pierson, Arthur N. Poulson, H. Ross Powell, Paige W. Powers. D. A., Jr. Quaintance, C. B. Quisenberry, J. P. Reay, Virginia M. Reeve. Dorothy M. Reynolds, Lillian Rhodes. Sara H. Richardson, Nellie F. Richmond, C. M. Ridout, Frank A., Jr Roadcap, E. Lorraine Roberts, A. Lucille Robb. Elizabeth Robinson, Charles G. Ruffin, Virginia Russell, Cecil B. Russell. Floyd Schenck, Walter C. Seager, Catherine Shertzer, Charles H. Sinclair, Mollie Sinton, W. A. Smith, Elizabeth Smith. J. Swanson Sproul, F. H. Stuart, R. A. Swingle. Leslie L. Swingle, Myrtle Taylor, J. C. Taylor, Mavis C. Tennis, Melvin H. Thorpe, Hazel Thorpe, Herbert Tinsley, Winifred M. Tompkins, James L. Toombs, Lillian Travers, Percy Trundle, Annie M. Tucker, J. Randolph Tuthill, Margaret Van Sickler, Mary Vaughn, Clarence Wadsworth, Elizabeth Walker, Amelia Walker. R. P., Jr. Waterfield, Frances L. Weber, Irene K. Weedon, Mary M. WessoUs, Sara G. West, F. B. West. J. T. White. B. T.. Jr. Whittaker, Lula Wilkins, Harry D. Wilkinson, Ida M. Williams, Bartley G. Winder, Miriam G. Wright, Emmett Williams. Mrs. A. G. youell, Zaida Page lis ■a ■a l •a ■a •3 ■a: si; ■a % ' ' ,5 4! s3 s3: si: s3 Ji ' .■■!: i l- ' 41 i iji Uti,! - ' ' . ' Cf)c Colonial (Ecfjo, 19: e;. Lv ' g ' n ' ' I rtr «fc • tt.j t ) u s (I] OS { i sai  ft WSVll« T«iT«iT«iTlS T« r« T«vr S M Page 117 ? jjgj j IEQsin?3 5Ioiim5;!? ' 57rs3: CI)? Colotlldl (Bti)0, 1921 S History of the Class of 1924 ND LO, it came to pass that in September, one tliousand nine hun- dred and twenty, a great multitude descended from the train at Williamisburg. From far and near they came, and all wended their way to the College of William and Mary, a College which stretched out its arms and said unto them, Come unto me, my chidren, and I will give you knowledge. And among this multitude that had come were many, many dues and ducesses who, after being established into dormitor} ' life, soon learned that the trials and tribulations of a freshman were many ; for great were the inflictions imposed upon them. But, yea, verily they weathered the storm, and said unto each other: The Sophomores know not with whom they reckon, for ' we are unconquerable. And, truly, it happened that these Freshmen were unconquerable, for they heaped upon themselves many honors in scholarship, athletics and social promi- nence. Oh, ye people, is not the Freshman Class a success? HlSTORI. N. Page 118 i ii ; S3 ii 1 i m i!imr tf!smmnm8mmii:uii: l :r!:u-i n r. €lK Colonial (Ccbo, 1921 ii ' Due ' s Letter g! ' Dear Pa : Williamsburg, Virginia, September 25, 1920. School has commenced. I got here alright. They must have been waiting for me because they met me at the train and school started right after I got here. They put me in an old building where there used to be Indians. That was in the good old days before the eighteenth amendment to the honor system. Then they come and took me to the president ' s office to swear away my rights. Believe me, pa, he was sure some glad to see me and welcomed me like a long lost brother. I took my cue and tried to make him feel perfectly at ease. You know I didn ' t take that I. C. S. course in social graces for nothing. After I signed about fifteen papers they took me up to a man called the Colonel, but that small rank did not phaze me, since he was not half so rank as grand- pap, who was a corporal. He seemed to have right much authority around here though, for he separated me from my money with a smile and a couple of young females who was helping hitn. Just as I was back in my room and thinking I had paid all my bills a big fellow opened my door and called me a fowl name like duck and collected another fee from me. I don ' t know now just what it was for, but it had something to do with Eg) ' pt. Pa, we have croquet and horseshoe pitching at Montross, but up here they have the peculiarest game I ever seen. They put about twenty-two men in a pig pasture marked off with white lines. Then a fellow blows a whistle and one side kicks a bag full of nothing wrapped up in a hog hide to the other side and then they rush together and fight over the hog hide until they are all in the hospital. I reckon the ones that gets the less number in the hospital wins the game. Ever once in a while the man will blow his whistle and they will stop fighting until he tells the folks just how the game is going and wdio has the most in the hospital. First he will say, First down 10 . That means one side has one in the hospital and ten more to get there before they win. Next time he will say second down nine to get, and so on until the game is over. The man what runs the game wanted me to play on account of my athletic figure, but you know me, pa, I goes into a game wholehearted like and I comes out the same way if possible. I think I will get my monogram in some manly indoor sport like dancing. Believe me, pa, I can shake a wicked number 12. Recollect that fifty cents you give me for extra spending money? Well, that ' s nigh gone. I aint got but 15c left. Gosh, but you certainly can spend money in this wild town. You ' d be surprised to know of all the wicked vices they have here to lure your money from you. Send me 2Sc more for the remain- ing two weeks of this month, as I expect to go on a big theatre party to the Wf? i; r W ir ' !fyr ' S r ' S r ' Ss ir t ! SaI n itff t? r 7?T i7 ' ffff , f Pmse 119 i 3 I I g , Palace theatre. Don ' t worry about my studies as I am going through the school with E ' s. I am at my best in the dining hall. They aint a man here which can use his knife as graceful as I can. I aint cut myself yet and these knives are sharp. .£ That is all the result of home training, pa, and from my picking up stuff from ' S § the well to do folks around Reidsville. You can ' t get by me when it comes to ; 1 manners and being a leader. ; l They have girls here, too. They live in a big building called the Frog r I Shack or something like that. I dont ' pay no attention to them myself but they = i are crazy over me though. Whenever they see me they just bust right out into a big laugh they are so glad to see me I guess. I took one out since I been here out of seven attempts and believe me I sure did show her a big time. Altogether ; I spent 20c on her besides being urbane. That ' s a new word, pa, which I learned in Dr. Hall ' s class. It dont ' mean anything like profane. It means citified like the folks that comes from South Norfolk and Churchland. Anyway after we J had et a box of dried apples and drunk a couple of coco-colas she seemed to be -■ all swelled up with pride or something and wanted me to take her home. She ' ? said she never had such a time in her life. I reckon she told the truth for I know what will please the women don ' t I? I guess I got my social instincts from you. i My standing on the campus is right high it being about 6 ft. I speaks to everybody mostly but a bunch of fellows which are called seniors. They must be a bunch of very green fellows for they keep to themselves and nobody seems to have anything to do with them unless they come right up and join in the 5, conversation. I think they have to go bareheaded too. I don ' t. I got the dinkiest little cap which I wear on account of the customs up here. I suppose it is to advertise the college, and you know me pa, I am always willing to help whenever I can. They are going to elect a gang of fellows called the student council this week. These fellows give the fellows council I guess, like telling them how late to go to bed and what kind of stuff to drink besides water and such like. You _ know how good I am on that stuff don ' t you pa? Remember the time I shot g „ at that fellow in our chicken house? I am just brave enough to be on that :? I council and I reckon I had better tell everybody just how brave I am or they -- t won ' t know and wont elect me. g ' Speaking of social progress the best thing I can report is I have been taken 5 ' into society. It must be about the best thing on the place for most of the := fellows are just crazy for me to talk to them on some subject every time I go. : The name of it is Fullomathean. I got up the other night and gave them a few points on home rule which was being talked of. There ain ' t anybody here that s5i can give them the points on that like I can and you ought to know that pa the way ma runs things around home. They must have liked my talk emince because they laughed right out and hollered, Razz. I aint familiar with that term razz but I am of a spell that it is a sort of yell they have around here for valor. Since I am talking about yells and so forth they all went into a place the other night called the chapel to a rally where everybody tried to out-holler the II II - _ _ g ffys .v; ;r.7 lj;.7 s ?to 1r SBUlfl SMMBaSagWijJiri iinffirW j SrBr Page 120 Cf)c Coloniiil aBdjo, 1921 other boys and girls there. When they would get tired of hollering they would sing and then they call somebody who is popular to make a sj eech. They didn ' t call for me but I knew I was popular and since they was always calling on me in the society I thought I might favor them with a few words on my own hook, so I struts right up front and told them how pleased I was to see them out but not make so much noise since the police force who has right much authority might come in and not like it. The other fellows all said something about foot- ball but I wanted to be individual like so 1 made a few remarks about myself and what I was going to study. That struck them just right for they rushed up to the front, about 20 of them, and took me on their shoulders and carried me to the door and threw me down about 15 steps. It is sure funny how they show their appreciation to a man of ability but they just do it different up here than ' S they do anywheres else. I never shall forget the first time I went over to the Frog Shack to see the girls. One of them fresh Seniors told me to go right up on the second floor that they was having a party up there. That was just my place and I preceeded myself up there. No more than I had just reached the top of the second bunch of steps about five women pushed me all the way down with one big push. It was right playful of them but I ' ve been sort of sore ever since then. At this rate I ' ll soon get used to it and be just as tough as any of them. Some fellows was kind enough to take me out snipe hunting the other night g, and I played them dirty. I waited until about four o ' clock in the morn ing for S the snipes to run into my bag. None didn ' t come so I only had to walk five miles I back to the school. The other poor fellows had it worse than I did I reckon I because I couldn ' t find them when I left and they must have been lost. I hated to leave them but I come to the conclusion that the snipes had all gone to bed for the night. Can you blame me pa? I will write you another letter when I gets that extra 25c. Dont forget to send it right off and tell all the folks what a student I am. I expect to get my B. V. D. degree soon. Dr. Hall said so right before the whole class the other day if I kept up like I am going. It means EJeing ' ery Dumb or in other words § I won ' t tell all I know to ever ybody who wants to know. Well, I will close now for it is after seven thirty and I am not going to dissipate any more than possible. Distractedly, Monk White. P. S. — Tell ma to send me some soap and about four clothes pins. i 2, I •I 1 i g, _ PageUl U S SMMSMMS MM M bt (CoIOlliclI (Oci)O, 1921 ' i ' ! M X!i iJ i M iJ i iJ S iU i SJiJiJ i } iJ 3 I The Extension Division of the College of William and Marv f]HE EXTENSION DIVISION of the College is one of the latest departments to be added to the work of the college. Through this division the work of the college is extended out into the adjoining cities. At present extension work is carried on in such places as Rich- mond, Norfolk, Newport News, Suffolk, Portsmouth and Petersburg. Many of the students enrolled are graduate students; in fact, perhaps the majority of them are. Among the institutions represented by graduate students are the following,: Cornell University University of Michigan University of Indiana Maryland College for Women Winthrop College Ohio University University of Cincinnati University of Missouri Virginia Military Institute Stevens Institute of Technology Adelphia College W ' esthampton College Juanita College Randolph-Macon College Richmond College ' illiam and Mary Blackstone College Philadelphia College of Pharmacy ■Roanoke College Johns Hopkins University The type of student found in extension is, as a rule, of a more mature type than found on the Campus. The numbers enrolled to date exceed the five hundred mark. Already the eft ' ect of the extension work is being felt on the Campus. The January Col lege Student Hour was conducted by Senor Rafel Collegna, of the Mexican Consulate, who is a student in extension work. Some of our best contributions to the Literary Magazine have come through the students who are doing this work. Those of us who see the effects of the extension work feel that it is a real asset to the college and we feel that the men and women who are enrolled as students in the extension division are some of the best students that the college has. This is the first year that the Colonial Echo has devoted space to them and we trust that in the future that no small amount of our space will be given to their work and interests. Page 122 -rtTYii-TnTTn ' rTTiT trrvtTTuTTuTrdrruTrigTLra Cf)c Colonial edjo, 1921 ' §;■ ' g ,1 Lest We Forget to William and Mary g g ji li in- When down, high priestess, from her altar flings Her vestments wide in streams of opal light, They fall on shining acres stretching far, Girdled by waters and by wooded lea. By countryside flashing with silver dew, On all a splendor that a God creates ! And as a gem encircled by its gold, Transmits its brilliancy to that which holds Virginia ' s tirst fair intellectual crown, Ineffable in beauty lies enthroned ! The centuries have marked the sacred spot The silent Indian and the stately lord. Each stalked its leafy aisles. The bitt ' rest foes Found sanctuary, rest, within its walls. Illustrious statesmen, patiots whose dust I loved and shrined as deities, adorned. By their own breathing presence these old halls ; Along illimitable paths they trod, The torch they bore and in its widening gleams, We sense the vision and the dreams that gave To us tirst choice of draught from Pierian ' s well, The old Greek letters kept as jewels rare, That trust in youth now echoed far and near ; — The prestige that begets a deathless name ! Through Autumn ' s glory. Winter ' s frost and Spring ' s Warm, languorous, with fragrant scented breath. All palpitate with world-old hopes, the glad Young voices ring. The immemorial trees. Mute witnesses, still throw their length ' ning shade. The same pale twilight hues herald the dusk ; Changeless as e ' er the argent moon allures And weaves its witcheries throughout the years. The music of the trembling vibrant strings. That myriad fingers struck, reverberates — • Is caught by hands today, hands soft and strong, Whose notes are infinitely sweet and clear, A challenge from the vanished days that sleep ! — C. B. T. Pageias l;; a iJ SUi3yi ' MMJ =!0!Ai =tiMJ J -MM i)t Colonial (CrbO, 1921 KU ' Mj MiltMMMMMMJU Up the Far-Stretching Road ' Neath Syria ' s Skies Page 124 Pi ;Ci To my soul ' s death by weakness and by sin ; ■ So touch my darkened soul erstwhile that slept, P And give me still eternal life to win. . k -M. ■ I Up the far-stretching road, ' neath Syria ' s skies, , The Master toiled, His raiment weather-stained ; Toward Main ' s quivering walls His vision strained, {s And Human hope of rest brightened His eyes. {3 But lo, out-borne upon a humble bier, A youth they brought, his mother ' s only son. The Master stood and pitiful looked on P The weeping mother ; then His word rang clear : J Young man, arise. The frozen blood leaped free. 2 The mother received her son in ecstasy. yi So stand Thou, Lord, when Thou shalt see me swept ' t| a I i i 5i 3 I I I 3 I I I I I I I 3 I I j S! KiiiMgWlif ' tfi7 inrrilli?ni ti i HimlM fiiiTfiST SrsszlHrflSrriWtT ' ii ' ff ' i I BOOK IV Literary Activities Cf)c Colonial OBcfjo, 1921 n i ? r g rifty fiy?i !iftr iftriQr s i Page 123 ?Sg53m2 Sa!52J!M }y ' tMM ' iy; ' iJf7 Cf)C Colonial (ZBCi)0, 1921 I ' J MMd MMM J k MMM i U f ' li :- :: f The Colonial Echo Staff Editor-in-Chief C. S. Moorman Assistant Editors A. W. Johnson C. J. Duke, Jr. R. C. Harper Inger Scheie R. G. Davis J. A. Conway, Jr. Business Managers F. J. Berl Martha Barksdale L. H. Settle Athletics Classes Art Editors Alice Burke E. V. P. Stowitts W. E. Andrews Social E. D. Hudson Clubs W. T. Christian Catherine T. Dennis W. E. Career Y. M. C. A. R. Burden Y. W. C. A. Ruth E. Cashion Jokes and Grinds Dorothy Terrill Stenographer F. R. White S. E. GUNN Page 126 s3 :i ;i •a ■n 3 % .3 Si 31 mmmr ! imr ' !(SFS if?W ' m :mm fP!!fr f }! ' 5J i)£ Coloiiicil €rbo, 1921 • I Colonial Echo Staff 3 J Page 127 ui}imMM Mmmm 2mMMusiLM Ci)C Colonial (Ecfto, 1921 mmmmmmmmmmmm? i i Colonial Echo Staff a ' si Page 128 •|r riiri ' i ' ?iA i . ' . ' ' V ' ' .V.M ' T ' r ■ ' r■ • ' ■: , 1- .-, :k 5 B, ■ 5 Cbe Colonial Crl)0, 1 2 Graduated first term.  tr t«vtye t) T« Tri irrs « r«,iy. iy T« t 8 TirSvft Page 129 1 I Tlie William and Mary Literary s Magazine Staff 3, 1 Arthur Warren Johnson Editor-in-Chief s| : !, ' iLLiAM A. Dickinson Assistant Editor | RoYCE McC. Burden Associate Editor ♦Isaac Dewey Akers Associate Editor '  a| A. D. Joyner Business Manager g James A. Conway, Jr Business Manager % W. B. Pettis Assistant Business Manager - r i! 5 • ■ §1 t Colonial Cct)0, 1921 mJi mii!idmiMMMiuf]immM-m Page 130 Cbe Colonial Ccbo, 1921 el ' i Mary Wordsworth Sponsor Flat Hat I Pate 131 cBQnu: ' 15MMMMMMMMMMI Ci)C CoIOlUal (Ccl)0, 1921 5!jyyjiy}.j The Flat Hat Staff Editor-in-Chief J. C. Lyons Assistant Editor R. C. Hauper Business Manager J. B. Pettis Associate Editors Maelh Stratton W. T. Christian W. F. Young W. A. Dickinson H. L. Bridges, Jk. VV. H. Hoskins S. E. Gunn L. W. Simmons Hortense Lewis Assistant Business Managers F. F. Chandler O. S. Lowe Page 132 S5 s2, 1 l)t Colonfnl ffio. 192! H CO H ■a; 1 ' 3 ' :1 S tATf4 ' tTnit ) ; siM f  r«if aAr '  t ivir«AM t  T«irrs SSS r r ii-m , Page 133 mgi - w-ypMiysMMMMjyt ' Mi! Cf)c Colonial (ZBct)0, 1921 MMMMMjiMMmmMMMMiu ' Dreams Dreams — dreams — hauntingly beautiful ; Made by the gods to be broken by men. Dream — dream, child ere the time is past ; Life is a golden dream. Dream while you can. Dreams of my childhood : I thought they were infinite ; Swiftly I dreamed them and found they were past. Merry dreams, truthless dreams, never a sad one ; Dreams of my childhood, I left you too fast. Dreams of my youth were of life as it ought to be. Surely the world would be soon rid of wrong. Life would be beautiful, just as my dreams were Life with vague mystery, calling me on. When I had entered life, why did dreams leave me? Why did I seek to dream always in vain? I could dream only what I believed in ; Dreams must be of joy ; I had learned pain. Where were my dreams as my life neared its end? Dreams were forgotten as older I grew. I ceased to long for them; truth was too precious; I had grown wiser; I sought what was true. Dream — dream, child ere the time is gone. Life is a golden dream — dream while you can; Dreams — dreams — wonderfully beautiful, Made by the gods to be broken by men. -Janet Coleman, ' 21 ygggjr ' fr ?jf«iiffl 7 : 7 ffiy ! ii? ?s Cage 13 JJSi ' fe ' Sff S S ilig ig ' iff T iiB MMm Cf)C Coloniiil (Ccfjo, 1921 t, ' ;■ ,6; i m I :g Page us ■ ' uyj jytiu ' Si ' : Cf)e Colonial dBcljo, 1921 mmmmmmmm TSJOj2«5SJP3 -1 5| -i- • -: ' t  ; ' ' © I ' -i . «f . . ' A.. • i. jja: ..jai. t. Philomathean Literary Society OFFICERS FIRST TERM Robin H. Owen President A. B. Clarke I. D. Akers Vice-President R. Burden C. W. Stall, rd Secretary C. E. Rorre r S. E. GuNN Treasurer OFFICERS SECOND TERM JoHN Bentley President E. E. Conner S. E. GuNN President E. Cox C. W. Stallard Vice-President R. Burden U. L. FiFER Secretary A. B. Clarke Clarke, A. B. ..Sergeant-at-Arms Critic Chaplain Treasurer ..Sergeant-at-Arms Critic Chaplain Withdrew from College. MEMBERS Akers, I. D. Ball, C. R. Bentley. John B. Belanger, A. B. Burcher, M. C. Burden, R. Clarke, A. B. Conner, E. E. Cox, E. Davis, W. E. Dickinson, H. Derr. M. W. Farrar, J. C. Fifer, U. L. Hall. S. C. Gunn, S. E. Joyner. A. D. Latham, S. F. Moffit, E. B. Moncure. R. G. Moorman, C. S. Lohr, E. W. Peake, W. D. Quaintance. C. B Rorrer, C. E. Rowell, V. Stallard. C. W. Wright, E. Thompson. R. R. Johnson, H. H. Wl ji!fflii?niffifaTif«!riffi?l ' •Paje IX trt mim xmifirs s:rs Vfa sr mriism t  tmfSSi TWWWiGr Clie Colonicil (Gcbo, 1921 Phoenix Literary Society OFFICERS FIRST TERM L. H. Settle President V. A. DiCKERSON Vice-President J. B. Pettis Secretary L. R. VV ' itten Treasurer H. L. Duff Sergeant-at-Arms W. J. Reed Chaflain OFFICERS SECOND TERM W. A. DiCKERSON President L. R. W ' itten . . O. H. FuLcHER Vice-President T. C. Clarke. . VV. E. Garber Secretary L. B. Mead Treasurer .Sergeant-at-Arms Chaflain MEMBERS Anderson, F. L. Bcdsaul, F. C. Clark, S. H. Qark, T. C. Cox, J. G. Cox. F. W. Chandler, F. F. Dickerson, W. A. Duff. H. L. Dovle, J. A. Dick, H. E. East, O. B. Elmore, R. M. Fulcher, O. H. Garber, W. E. Harrison, C. H. Harrington, W. B. Hopkins. E. A. Hoskins, W. H. Jennings, R, C. Jenkins. C C. Johnson, A. W. Jordan. T. L. Jo -ner, M. B. Kennard, R. E. Kyle, J. C. M. Kyle, R. E. Mead, L. B. Powell, P. W. Pettis. J. B. Purcell, Thorpe Roach, C. T. Riggins. W. D. Reed, W. J. Russell, C. T. Shackleford, T. Settle, L. H. r.iirii Traf M. Spain. H. L. Stowitts, E. V. Snyder, W. S. Ward, W. F. VV ' aldrop, M. A. Weddle, VV. M. Witten, L. R. White. I. H. Mawson, T. H. Eason. J. S. Carter, J. D. Wilkins, H. D. 1 r ' Sm- triiiitrt Trii Trt Trs tra ri mS7S PageU7 gm ' iiy mmaMiiytiy gjiaiii aEat .m i. ' CI)C Colonial (Ecf)0. 1921 MmMS mmmsMMMMM s. i i Whitehall Literary Society OFFICERS Sue Elder President Mabel Stratton I ' ice-President Bettie Woodward Secretary Mary Nash Tatem Treasurer Emily Rice Chaplain Janet Coleman Literary Critic Dorothy Terrill Parliamentary Critic Josephine Benschoten Elizabeth Berger Lucille Brown Frances Cocke Elizabeth Deshazo Virginia Ellis Mamie Engart Helen Featherstone Florence Fleet Aline Foreman Elizabeth Fristo MEMBERS Juliet Garnett Josephine Gray Anna Haile Lutie Holland Myree Hutchings Virginia Isley Helen Lannigan Lulah Manning Vernon McKann Juliet Moody Elizabeth Pate Elizabeth Scott Mabel Stratton Elizabeth Smith Marvis Taylor Elizabeth Van Laer Louise Waters Amelia Walker Zaida Youell Dorothy Zirkle Page 138 MTi.?ni;!r ' a;!7Uii7 ia? ' ifi7 ' iiiY Lrr n7 ' :i:7i:;::7Ta7l£ifS iS Si?1i €i)£ Colonial OBrbo, 1921 t t i i I J. Leslie Hall Literary Society OFFICERS I I I 1} Alice Burke Ruth Cashion .... ViRGiNi. Thomson Madeline Blakey . President . Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Bozena Kohout . . . Martha Flippo Beverly Ruffin ... Martha Barksdale. Chaplain Literary Critics .Program Head Martha Barksdale Bertha Bcrhn Helen Berlin Madeline Blakey Virginia Blizzard Delia Breeding Alice Burke Eloise Cave Ruth Cashion Catherine Dennis Estelle Davis Anne Duling Mary Dean Agnes Donaldson Elise Eades Leota Eifert MEMBERS Martha Flippo Sadie Forbes Naomi Forrest Frances Gibbons Winifred Gray Mary Haile Ruth Harris Nellie Harris Elizabeth Harris Maria Holman Mary Holman Ethel Hamilton Mary Houser Eula Howard Hilda Haile :, lfiy ft a ra t ' •j71i rijij i Margaret Jenkins Lucy Jessup Bettie Sue Jessup Helen Johnson Bozena Kohout Ruth Kline Clementine Lemly Anita Lotti Elizabeth Mercer Anne Parker .Anna Pleasants Mary Lee Perry Wilma Powell Beverly Ruffin Lillie RejTiolds Lorraine Roadcap Ruth Shell Inger Scheie Molly Sinclair Anne Trundle Lillian Toombs ' irginia Thomson Mary Van Sickle Sara Wessels Ida May Wilkinson Marie Wilkins Mary Wadsworth Isca Powers Nona Boguess Mary Lohman n tr tr• tl« Tr• T ' trk tr T(« 1 7S M tr 1 PageU9 I w i MMMMMMMiy- ' M i y i Mfe d)0 Colonicil iBci o, 1921 i 3 il 1 ; The Debate Council William A. Dickinson A. Warren Johnson Secretary Treasurer Professor R. K. Gooch Dr. R. L. Morton Faculty Adviser Faculty Adviser C. S. Moorman President Ferdinand F. Chandler John B. Bentlev Left College. Page 14 1 I; 1 I ' l Ta, lir ,-:: :r, riTv ' -7lT.M MJt:  f -!ff 6fiiag Cf)C Colonicil €cfto, 1921 1 The Debating Teams S. E. GUNN W. A. Dickinson W. M. Weddle E. Wright m s ■a i R. Burden C. S. Moorman sa IxGER Scheie Elizabeth Mercer ii laa r ' i ' vr. rtftf i wiVg ' ftg ' i r. .1! i: I Page 141 I 1 I The Virginia State Intercollegiate Oratorical Association OFFICERS 1921 Dr. R. L. Morton President W.. H. HOSKINS Vice-President C. S. Moorman Secretary-Treasurer V. Stowitts Contestant COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES IN THE ASSOCIATION Randolph-Macon College William and Mary University of Virginia Washington and Lee University Emory and Henry College University of Richmond Lynchburg College Paae M3 m ' g m r fi ST f r siiiSimr smfmw iiW m - Clir Colonial Ccbo, 1921 The Dramatic Club I W ' fi ATE in the Spring of nineteen-tvventy, following their higlily success- 1 ' presentation of Oscar Wilde ' s Lady IVindermerc ' s Fan, a group S )y of students under the directorship of Dr. Cary F. Jacob formed the I S!t William and Mary Dramatic Club in order that there might be a self -perpetuating body to continue the work which they had begun in dramatic expression at William and Mary. This is the first year of the life of the Dramatic Club, and the organization bids fair to live up to the purposes of its founders. The increase in the number of students at the college, and conse- quently greater demands made upon Dr. Jacob in the way of regular class-room work, have prevented the giving of quite as extensive a program of plays this year as had been planned had conditions permitted. A one act play, Sam Average, was admirably presented in the open air on Palace Green during the County Fair, and was greatly appreciated by visitors and home folks of the city as well as b)- the college students. From those whom Dr. Jacobs had tried and tested in the two previous plays he selected the nucleus of the cast for the one big play of the year. Nothing But the Truth, a play quite different from the one presented last year but equally good in its class, was chosen for this year. After months of hard, patient work by both the director and the cast, the Dramatic Club presented the play. The success it enjoyed wherever presented fully justifies the existence of the Dramatic Club and its claim to recognition among our most important college activities. No higher compliment could be paid to William and Mary and its Dramatic Club than the large and appreciative audiences which greeted Nothing But the Truth in Hampton, Smithtield and illiamsburg. With the second presentation of the play at Cameron Hall, requested by both students and townspeople, the Club closed, officially, its most successful year. Several of its members, however, in connection with others, will probably give private and public stunts and one act specialties after the Club ' s year is over, as they have done in the past. The work of the Dramatic Club is unusual in a college of this size. In fact, William and Mary is one of the few colleges in the State having such an organiza- tion presenting regular dramatic productions in which both men and women take part. The value of the activities of the Club in furnishing trial and training to those having dramatic talent or inclination cannot be overestimated. ff fm tfPlsmr irft mn ' Sin n I Atr6Sre(trs(trt!ife!SiS tts triS ssiiai ? St I ' ll W ' ■ i 1 ii fe i The Dramatic Club C. J. Duke President Dorothy Zirkle Vice-President Josephine Benschoten Secretary J. D. BuRFOOT, Jr Treasurer Dr. Gary F. Jacob Director Josephine Benschoten Madeleine Blakey J. D. Burfoot, Jr. R. Burden WilUam Christian Janet Coleman J. A. Conway, Jr. R. G. Davis Dr. J. A. C. Chandler Mrs. Grimes MEMBERS Charles Duke, Jr. J. S. Jenkins. Jr. A. W. Johnson Helen Lannigan RosaUnd Marks Eugenia Nealon W. D. Peake J. C. Philips J. G. Pollard, Jr. Emily Rice Mary Nash Tatem Dorothy Terrill Winifred Tinsley Dorothy Zirkle HONORARY MEMBERS Dr. Cary F. Jacob Miss Norma Meyer Miss Ella Pitman Miss Bessie P. Taylor Sssass i ,u:SMMMS M s 1 sffrAtr• t? ' • 1 s 1t« 1y• 1yi 1y«Yly ( 1y• 1y• T Page 144 © Oe Coloniiil €fl)0, 192 1 I IB ' R} ' e- gJ ' Ti TO a .Ti iJ s Q (3, |l X lU iijy iu . ' lu iL Page 145 gasMHsspssMUMPSMPEs Cfte Colonial (lBc!)0, 1921 wv .v ..,v5.wi2iMa«gW3S83affige Dramatic Club 1 I I I i 3 y ijy j f ' a ririlifsr i y !;? Page 106 ■m Cf)e Colonial Ccfjo, 1921 Page 147 ■ff MSM}UiMMMMM mmMM Ci)C CoIonial dBrfto. 1921 mm i ' m mmmmmmm UiMSJ f I Dramatic Club ' 3 IS ' k H-i ' !i rmF :fi7mm , !Stm?mmwmWi L i: ' i Dramatic Club f Page 14f Cljc Colonuil €ci)0, 1921 1 ' .  ' IJ li The Golden Star The Golden Star is the Lucky star When all is said and done, He was wise, is the lad who lies At rest where the war was won, The others came back o ' er the grey sea ' s track To face life ' s daily strain. But the boy will never be weary or old Who didn ' t come back again ! Tom and Bill are spendthrifts still, And Ned grows more a miser, Jack ' s love will fmd him oft unkind When — sadder grown, and wiser — She ' ll often sigh and wonder why She chose poor Jack, instead Of Hal, at whom she laughed, until He lay in Flanders, dead. The blue stars set, which oft were wet With tears of pride and sorrow, But the stars of gold their place will hold Through many a proud tomorrow. Fate ne ' er will frown on lads laid down To rest where the war was won. So the Golden Star is the lucky star, ' hen all is said and done ! - v.7 ff?- ftFiflriOr ?ftr ' :W -TTQr 2a ifiafiiaiisft? ? :ft? !ft? fir ii Pace 1« TO THE MEMORY OF THE MEN OF THE COLLEGE OF WILLIAM AND MARY WHO LOST THEIR LIVES IN THE SERVICE OF THEIR COUNTRY DURING THE WORLD WAR ' These laid the world away; poured out the red sweet wine of youth; gave up the years of work and toy, and that unhoped serene that men call age; and those who would have been their sons they gave their immortality. I CHARLES MARVIN BARBER EDWARD SCOTT BURFORD JAMES FREDERICK CARR GEORGE CLOPTON RAYMOND RICHARD COLLINS WILLIAM HATCHER CROSWELL EDWARD GRAHAM FIELD ROBERT CARTER GARLAND WILLIAM DANIEL GARLAND DR. EDWARD LE BARON GOODWIN SAMUEL HILDRETH HUBBARD, JR. NATHANIEL HULL JENNINGS ' f mT fmifmf imim ' inmmin MWWmmn Page liC , ERNEST J. LEWIS RICHARD PERKINS JAMES NEVILLE RICHARDS JESSE FIELDING SMITH VERNON LEE SOMERS HARRY TUCKER SWECKER FITZHUGH LEE WHITE WADE HAMPTON WHITEHEAD PERCY LEWIS WITCHLEY CHARLES RODERICK WOLTZ BITTLE WINFRED WOODS ig jSn iin?!in?snsra5r i5mr g ? ?i7 C: it Colonial OBcljo, 1921 i 1 The Answer Vaguely, in the darkened night Of wondering and of fear, We feel a mystic, soothing touch As though some angel hand were near. We hear a whisper in our ears, Be steady, child, be steady. , And hearts of ours in answer beat, We are ready, Master, ready. And how the darkness turns to light! How the bright stars gleam ! For yonder, tho enshrouded still, Is that of which we dreamed. And so in answer to that touch, And to the words, Be steady, We waft our soul ' s voice to the sky And call out, We are ready. — R. E. Kenn.ard. ■.3, tf .. i ; Vt «M m l tt t- AX I • u Page 151 s m MMs s mmmw MMs Cl)e Colonial (Ccijo, 1921 smmmmh y. ' iLitiU ' lUuiiuii iii ' !L!( -y Quicksands Bv Reginald G. Davis. A twenty minute playlet of today. Copyrighted, 1917, by Reginald G. Davis. All rights reserved. CAST Tommy Holbrooke A rising young business man Virginia His wife Robert Chase An acquaintance Scene.— Lhntig room of Holbrooke ' s apartment on Morningside Drive, Neiv York. It is a pretty interior, furnished with excellent taste, not crowded, but shoziting the refining touch that characterises the home of the man of moderate means. A door centre, with hall backing, is the entrance, a door left upper leads to Virginia ' s room. A library table is dozvn centre, upon which stands sez ' eral books in book-ends, a silver framed photograph, a parchment-shaded electric table-lamp, a telephone, cheque book, pens, ink, tvriting material, etc., and filing basket. There is an electric oz ' erhead cluster zvith a szi. ' itch at the door centre. Bookcases filled zxfith books, comfortable wicker or leather chairs {to match set) one at the table centre, pictures, Japanese prints, bronzes, statuary, Victrola, or piano may be used to furnish the set. Time. — Present, a little after ten in the evening. At Rise. — Darkened stage. Holbrooke and Virginia enter, Holbrooke enter- ing first lighting the lights by pressing the switch at door centre. They are return- ing from dining out. He removes his hat, casts it into a z ' acant chair up Stage, comes down and sinks into the chair at table centre, still keeping on his overcoat. He appears to be pre-occupied, and there is a tired, and somewhat depressed ex- pression on his face. J ' irginia removes her hat and zcraps, speaking as soon as she makes her entrance. Virginia (as she enters) : I ' ve had a lovely evening, dear ; I don ' t know when I ' ve enjoyed myself so much. The dinner was delightful, and the orchestra! (suddenly she notices that Holbrooke has not removed his overcoat). Why, what ' s the matter, dear ? Aren ' t you feeling well ? Holbrooke {rising quickly and removing his overcoat) : Oh, I ' m all right, honey; just a little bit tired, that ' s all. Virginia (sitting on the arm of his chair): Oh, there is something the mat- inmr rrm Sx SurmWrn ' imBl l Page IS2 sartSrsSraiTiSiffi B i S ijg jg ig ft I I ' - € K Coloiiitil a3cl)0, 1921 jj; ter; you seemed so happy tonight until you met Mr. Qiase, and when he called you g; aside, and you had a little talk together, you seemed to lose your color, you acted so differently from your usual happy self. Do tell me what it is that is bother- I ing you. I; HoLiiROOKE (rising and putting his arm about her): Why, it ' s nothing at g: all, dear. Just a little business deal that you wouldn ' t understand. Mr. Chase is i?; coming here tonight to tell me all about it. It may be very late before I turn in. % So don ' t wait up for me. Good night, dear. (He kisses her.) ei Virginia : Good night, dear. (She goes to her room, left upper.) HoLnROOKE: Now, to get down to business. (He glances at his watch and snaps it shut.) If Chase tinds me here it will be too late. Oh, that I had never listened to him, never waded into these quicksands of debt ! If I stop to think of the consequences, it will drive me mad, — no, I must not think of the outcome, I must act. (He again scats himself at the table centre, picks up a sheet of paper, pen and begins to ivrite, reading aloud as he zvrites) : S { 1 Si De.ar irgie: For the past three months, unknown to you, I have dabbled 3 in stock ; today the end came ; I dare not face you and tell you of my losses. Try ' to think that I acted for the best. (He scrawls a signature, and pushes the paper ' , aside, tosses the pen down, and mechanically opens the drawer in the table. His : hand encircles a rei ' olver and ivithout looking at it, he places it on the desk. Music. ' ,7. His gace is straight before hiin and slozvly. mechanically, he forces himself to look ' Z at the gun on the desk. He starts, stands erect, the hand zvith the revolver rises. ;§ Off stage, I ' irginia in her room is singing some little melody current at the time. ;3 Softly, szvectly, its tone reaches his cars, he turns, his hand drops to his side, the % revolver falls to the floor, he squares his shoulder.) 1 I Holbrooke: I can ' t do it; can ' t do it; it wouldn ' t be fair to her. p ' iRGiNi. (off stage): Are you all right, dear? ' 3 Holbrooke (going to her door and holding the knob): Yes, dear; I ' m all right now. Good night, dear. ViRGiNi. (still off, answering him): Good night. Holbrooke (coming back to table): Yes, I ' m all right; just tired, that ' s all. W (He drops into the chair before the table and buries his head in his arms upon the I table.) So tired, so tired of everything, that ' s all. (The lights are dimmed, and after a fetv s ' econds elapse they brighten again. Chase enters the door centre. He is a tall, keen looking indiindual, about thirty. He is dressed in a blue busi- ness suit and carries his overcoat on his arm. He enters quickly, coming down centre, talking as he makes his entrance.) Chase: Hello, Holbrooke, I tried to get you on the wire this afternoon, but I guess you were busy. (He sees the rez ' olver on the floor and stoops, picking it up.) What the deuce is this? (He looks keenly at the huddled figure of Hol- brooke.) Holbrooke! Holbrooke! Good Heavens, Tommy, what has happened ? (He finds the note on the table, and picking it up reads aloud) : For the past three months unknown to you I have dabbled in stock. Today the end came. Try to think that I acted for the best. Good God! he has killed himself. (His ex- Piee ' S3 S g! iaM i M ! MiyB ! ' l ' -Ut ' I MM iyB iUiK Cf)C COlOtltal (lECt)0, 1921 l ' MM}X!lMMi!iJl.MM.M MM.M prcssinn is one of ivide-eyed fear, and then his eyes narrow with the thought of the consequences, and he adds): No, I have killed him. Ferguson got him out of the way for me. It took nearly three months and cost me a little fortune, but I never meant it to go this far. Ferguson must hold his tongue at all costs. If I can only get him on the wire. (He goes to the front of the desk and picks up the telephone, sitting facing the audience with his back to the huddled figure of Holbrooke..) Hello! (He moves the hook up and down quickly.) Hello, Morn- ingside 3074, please. Yes. (A pause.) Hello, Ferguson ? Mr. Ferguson, please ; yes, senior. (Another slight pause.) Hello, Ferguson ; this is Chase talking. (He leans backzvard slightly and knocks a heavy, bound, telephone director to the floor. Holbrooke aivakens with a start. Chase continues.) Chase (continuing): Yes, I know you put the job over all right. He ' s down and out, too much so; the damned fool killed himself. Now, I ' m going to leave New York by the fastest train out, and I want you to keep my name out of this. Oh, I ' ll make it worth your while, only I don ' t want my name mentioned in con- nection with this affair, get me? Holbrooke (picks up the revolver from the table top where it has been placed and points it at Chase): Give me that telephone. Don ' t hang up, do as I tell you. Give me that ' phone. (Chase is too bewildered to reply, but passes the telephone to Holbrooke, and raises his hands above his head. Holbrooke continues the con- versation): Hello, hello, yes, this is he; doesn ' t sound like it? Well, it is all right. Now, what about Holbrooke? Oh, you sold him some wildcat stock, eh? Do you know what that means? You don ' t? Well, I ' ll tell you — No, no, no, no. this is not Chase talking, this is Holbrooke himself. Thank you, good bye. (He hangs up the receiver.) (To Chase): So you thought you had got rid of me, eh? Chase : Wait a minute, Holbrooke ; I can explain everything. Holbrooke: Explain! Why damn it, I know what you have been up to. It was for Virginia that I wanted the money, not myself. Sit down. (Chase sits.) Do you remember three years ago? S ' ou were still at school, and I was in a bank. We both wanted her, and you told me that I could never hope to make her happy with the pittance that I called my salary ; you told me that I could never give her half the little luxuries that she had been accustomed to having. I knew it and I tried to give her up, but I couldn ' t. I loved her too much, and I realized that she loved me. It was a dream, a beautiful, impossible dream. I saw the world through rose-colored glasses ; I scraped and saved ; I had a thousand in the bank and we were quietly married. I remember how sore you were at the time. Well, that seemed to blow over. Three months ago, you dropped in to see me at the bank; you told me that I was a fool to stick there. It was August and hot as the devil, too. You told me that I ought to take Virginia away to the seaside for a little change. I knew she needed it, but I couldn ' t afford it. You wanted to loan me some money and told me about a wonderful new stock on the market. You brought your broker around. Ferguson talked, you talked, and I bit. For a while I was happy; the thing did show some signs of life; I gained confidence and put my every cent in the pool. Then the thing began to drop. Down, down, doicn it went until I thought I ' d go mad watching the market. I lived on the curb, neg Page 154 wwti5rairara?rff?niS? ;! ? sfiffimyaff ' Cl)c Colonial (Ccljo, 1921 lecteil home, business and everything. This was the revenge you wanted because I married the girl. If she had loved you, 1 would have given her up, but she didn ' t, ' ou revenge was now complete, you were ruining me, destroying our happiness. Today the end canic ; 1 was mad ; I dare not face her and tell her of my losses, so 1 decitltd to take a little journey. (He picks up the revolver and toys with it in his hands.) But 1 lost my grip ; I was dead tired, I hadn ' t slept for days it seemed. In the meantime, you came. 1 heard you call Ferguson. You were afraid that you would he found out. You told him that you were going to leave New York by the fastest train out. I have a faster way than that. You damned cad, I ' ll kill yon! (He points the revolver at Chase. Chase rises quickly, the smile of tolerance that has been his all through this speech has given luay to a look of fear. Virginia rushes in from her room, left. She is dressed in her negligee, having been about to retire. As she comes in, Chase realizing that the shooting is now out of the question, and that he is out of danger, smiles as if he zvere enjoying the situation thoroughly.) Virginia : Oh, Tom ! Please don ' t shoot ; please put down the gun. HoLBROOKii (surprised) : Good heavens, Virgie, where did you come from? I thought you were in bed, long ago ! Virginia : 1 have heard everything. Tom, please don ' t shoot, for my sake. Holbrooke (putting the gun on the table): All right, Virginia, now you run oflf to bed like a good little girl and in the morning I will have some news for you Virginia : No, I won ' t ; you will tight with him. HoLBROOKK (laughing to reassure her): No I shan ' t. You ' ll take cold out here, so you run along to bed, and in the morning 1 will have a surprise for you. (He takes her gently to her door, sees her in and closes it after her. Returns to table.) Now, to get back to business. Chase (banteringly) : Now, what do you want me to do? Holbrooke; I ' ll tell you what you are going to do! Chase (lighting a cigarette and nonchalantly blowing cloud of smoke in the air) : Well ? Holbrooke: You ' re going to buy this stock. Chase: Ha, ha, ha, ha! That ' s a good one. Holbrooke : And you ' re going to take it with you. Chase (surprised) : With me? I don ' t understand, where? Holbrooke: Anyzvhere, and you ' re not coming back. Chase: Oh, I see your little game; you want to get me out of the way. Holbrooke: Yes, I ' m going to get you out of the way. There is a train leaving Grand Central for Buffalo and the West in an hour. Think fast ; which shall it be, the train or the penitentiary? Chase: What time does the train leave? Holbrooke: Eleven ten. Chase: Yes, I think 1 can make it. fttf IS ■ ' ■■UiMMMMM Mm m Ci)C Colonicll (CdjO, 1921 SMMMMMMMMMMM- ' --: Holbrooke: I think you had better; but before you go, I want a cheque for the amount I lost. Chase: Very well, I ' ll make it out now. (He crosses to the table. Hol- brooke moves so that he may sit. Chase takes from his pocket a cheque book, picks up a pen and begitts to write a cheque. Holbrooke turns on the desk lamp that he may more readily see to write. A dull click comes from the socket. The light does not come on. Holbrooke : Hello, burned out, eh ? Well, that ' s easily remedied. (He iin- screi.vs the bulb, holds it up to the light for an instant, and then places it in the filing basket on the corner of the table. Chase tears out the cheque and hands it to Holbrooke.) Chase: Well, you have managed to come out on top again, haven ' t you? Holbrooke : I always do, Chase ; I play fair. Chase (realizing that he is now solely at Holbrooke ' s mercy, attempts a nezv attitude) : Yes, you play fair. And me, I ' ve always been an unlucky dog ; caught cribbing at school, and expelled. Next, I lose the only girl I ever cared about, and now I ' m boxed up and sent away, perhaps never to come back; do you call that fair? (His eyes wander aimlessly about the table, finally resting on the revolver. With a quick motion he has it in his hands and has pointed it at Hol- brooke.) Chase {tensely) : I won ' t do it. Give me that cheque. can kill you and the courts zmll say it ?vas suicide. Here is your note to that effect. (He shows the note.): Give it to me. (He snatches the cheque, and Holbrooke raises his hands above his head.) Virginia (standing framed in the door-way of her room, unth a small revol- ver in her hand; she points it at Chase) : Just a minute, please; give 7ne that cheque. Chase (standing at the door-zvay centre, a revolver in his right hand, covering Holbrooke, the cheque in his left hand. He smiles, Still covering Holbrooke, and ivithout turning his head, he holds the cheque out at arm ' s length, letting it flutter to the ground. J ' irginia forgets all but the cheque and loivering her gun. stoops to pick it up. In an instant Chase has pressed the light switch at the door centre, throwing the place in darkness. There is a struggle, the sound of falling chairs and furniture, folloived by a muffled report and a woman ' s scream.) Virginia: Oh, Tom, what has happened? (She has taken her place at the door centre.) Holbrooke: It ' s all right, dear. IT ' S ONLY THE ELECTRIC LIGHT BULB. Quick, turn on that light. (The lights come on.) Ch. se (is cm his knees looking for the cheque. He finds it and starts for the door. Virginia, with a woman ' s presence of mind, has kept her gun, ivhich she points directly at Chase, barring his escape.) Virginia (sweetly) : Just a minute, please ; that cheque before you go. He bows, smiles, hands her the cheque, as quickly falls the •i m ! CURTAIN. mF m g fmm sifj iir ffr smiir i,: Cfte Colonitil Ccfto, 1921 5) ' A Brush With the Pirates On the western shores of Chesapeake Bay, between the North and Rappa- hannock Rivers, there lies a low, flat country ; a country of rich farm lands and dense pine woods ; a country indented by numerous rivers and small coves, and a I country where lives a splendid race of big-hearted. God-fearing men. This section § we call today Matthews County. In the days of King James, in the days when the settlement at Jamestown was a struggling colony, there sailed for these shores a ship load of English settlers, men and women to strengthen the little band that had settled on the River James, liut on the very day they entered the ' irginia Capes and headed for the entrance to Hampton Roads, a severe southeast squall struck their little vessel and they were driven helplessly across the Bay and thrown up on a sandy, pine- fringed shore, half drowned, more dead than alive. All that day and through most :|, of the night the storm raged. Towards morning the clouds blew away and the sun came out warm and clear to dry their clothes and cheer their discouraged spirits. The beach on which they had been cast up was so clean and white, the dark fringe of trees behind them was so beautiful, and they were so grateful for having I been saved from the sea, these brave souls knelt there on the sand and gave thanks to God for His mercy, and called the spot Point Comfort, which name it bears today. Later on, finding that the Jamestown settlers had called the promon- tory which marks the north entrance to Hampton Roads Point Comfort also, this was changed to Old Point Comfort and the shore in Matthews County was called New Point Comfort. After exploring the country which lay behind them and finding the soil to be K fertile and well-drained, the game plentiful, wild berries abundant, the rivers teeming with fish, and the native Red Skins friendly towards them, these men determined to make their future home there and not to push on to Jamestown. And so, today we have the Diggs , Hughes ' , Handys ' , Sibleys ' and Davis ' de- scendants of these early English settlers, living in the land which their fathers took from the natives; men simple but strong, kind b ut brave, bright of eye and red of cheek, and above all else, sailors who have sailed the seven seas and who for generations have gone down to the sea in ships. There are probably no better water men on earth than these great, two-fisted fishermen, who live in their boats and who learn to fight the sea in their boyhood. Among these people and in this environment was born to Philip and Martha Davis a son, whose name was John. This was in the year that Le« surrendered ' at Appomattox. W ' hile this year may be important to some because it marks a turning point in our nation ' s history, to us it is important because it was the year 5? in which our hero was bom ; the year in which John Davis first saw the light, and 3 watched the ships as they scudded up the Bay. There seems to be nothing in the early childhood of this boy to distinguish him from any of his playmates. We T S1tr TA TA Tlk t ' vtl«(t)S t7 tl«(  tl«tlr T - ?unxg iutiy;Miysuoy{MMMMM a Cl)e Colonial (lccf)0, 1921 can recall no stirring tales of how he out-swam, out-fought or out-played others of his age. On the contrary, he seems to have been a perfectly normal little chap, enjoying all the pranks of real boys, and having all of their pleasures and petty troubles. By the year 1878 trade with the North had become somewhat normal again, and we find large sailing vessels from Baltimore coming down the Bay in the winter months, buying up oysters from the small tongers and carrying them back to Baltimore to be sold in the markets there. Because of the trade, because of the lax enforcement of the laws, and the poor protection given traders, a band of pirates began to operate among the oyster fleet. In this year the schooner General JVasIiington, Captain Arnold Crone in com- mand, left Baltimore early in December and cruised south to buy up oysters for the Christmas trade. A heavy northeast blow coming on. Captain Crone ran in to North River to wait for better weather. While there he met Philip Davis, who told him that his boy, John, was very anxious to go to sea ; that he was full of the wanderlust and would not be happy until he had had a taste of a sailor ' s life. Captain Crone consented to take the boy along for a trip as cabin-boy, and promised to treat him well and bring him home safe in the spring. So, much against his mother ' s wishes and his father ' s advice, John went aboard the Gen- eral. Washington and assumed the duties of helper to the cook and handy man about the skipper ' s quarters. Thus began one of the most interesting careers of any sailor I have ever known. How little do we know what importance may be attached to one little step in our lives, and seldom do we realize how much of our lives is left to fate. •a. f Captain Crone got his cargo of oysters ; the blow wore itself out, and three i] days before Christmas the schooner was plowing her way up the Chesapeake. I John leaned over the rail and watched the icy waves rush by, thinking himself 1 already an old salt. Such is the confidence and optimism of youth. On docking in Baltimore the skipper had no trouble in disposing of his cargo, % for which he received a handsome sum. The members of the crew were given theur liberty and went up town to spend their money and celebrate Christmas among the dives and hovels of the great city ' s waterfront. Captain Crone, who lived in the city, went home to spend the night. Before going, however, he placed the money he had received for the oysters in the ship ' s safe, which was in the cabin aft. It was too late to go to the bank. Then, too, the mate said that he would be aboard at night, so it seemed safe enough. About sundown the sky began to spit a fine, stinging snow and soon t;ie harbor lights were yellow and blurred through the mist. It was fearfully cold and the rigging grew taut and snapped and popped. John cooked and ate his supper anil then went aft to the cabin where there was a fire in the stove. The mate had gone ashore to have a glass and renew old acquaintances. It was lonesome and much too quiet for a boy of thirteen away from home for the first time. Then, too, it was Christmas Eve, and as he thought of home and little Jimmy; the big fire with his mother sitting there sewing, it was all he could do to keep back a .sob and his eyes were wet with boyish tears. He was home- sick and just a little afraid of being left alone, when suddenly he heard a thud. Page 158 - - - r: p 33 Ci)c Colonial OBcfto, 1921 ? I 1 a as of someone falling on deck. His heart stopped beating, his muscles grew taut, fc and queer chills ran up and down his back. What was it? It might be only i:S snow falling out of the rigging; it might be the mate coming alx ard ; or, and [:}. his breath came faster, it might be the o ster pirates come to kill him and rob !• the safe. But he had little chance to worry long, for the slide on the companion- s ' way was rudely thrust open and with a rush of cold air and a flurry of snow E| the mate stumbled in, drunk, bleary-eyed and mean. He cursed John, the night, the snow, the vessel, and everything with which he came in contact, but soon the warm cabin began to make him drowsy and he rolled into his bunk on the port side of the cabin. Before long his deep, guttural breathing told the boy jB that the mate was disposed of till morning at least. II It was not late, and besides, the happenings of the evening did not tend a to make John sleepy, so he sat by the little ship ' s stove and thought and dreamed, i S as boys will. He was rudely awakened from one of these reveries by the thump- y ing of heavy boots on deck, which was quickly followed by a man ' s voice demand- IIJ, ing entrance to the cabin, and a pounding on the companionway slide. John r-- gj. knew that there was no one expected ; that the mate was already aboard, and EJ ' now he was sure that the callers could l e nobody but the oyster pirates. He H was the only one present to save the money, protect the drunken mate and % save his own life. Ij, Over the captain ' s bunk hung an old-fashioned shot-gun loaded with heavy duck shot, always kept handy for stray ducks and for protection. John grabbed this gun and ducked through a small opening in the bulkhead, or partition, which separated the cabin from the hold of the vessel. The hold was dark and ; John knew that he could not lie seen in there, while he could see all that took place in the yellow lantern light of the cabin. As he passed through the open- ing he bumped into a pile of wood on his right which blocked his movement i on that side. He crouched to the left and w aited. And here fate smiled on him, ■-- BJ. for he was left-handed by nature, and had the wood been piled on the left ' ;3 of the entrance it would have been impossible for him to have fired from that position. Great moments in our lives often hang on such seemingly small ' conditions. g As he turned and faced the companionway steps the great leather boots R gi i of a man began to descend the stairs The boots were followed by a hulking ;J body, topped by a muffled, bearded face. The man paused to let his blinking V eyes grow accustomed to the light. Over his shoulder peered another face, masked ' i ' by a bandana. The first man saw the mate, apparently asleep in his bunk, and 1 instantly he acted. With an oath, he fired twice at the outstretched form. The |j seaman never moved nor did he utter a sound. His life was snuffed out without al his knowing it. g| Then the two pirates jumped down on the cabin floor. They apparently thought that the mate was the sole occupant of the cabin. But John, crouching SJ ' in the darkness and trembling with fear, had loosened a stick of wood piled %, nenr him and it fell with a rattle. The two men whirled. The big fellow with the beard fired into the darkness from whence came the sound. John ' s life was now at stake. He did not hesitate. Leveling the old duck gun he fired full is into tie face of the pirate, then instantly shifting his aim he pulled on the iSSmsmSSS SmcumfSSSXfSSmSSXtigSiSllresci -■■lllllg mSii(ii CiSSf nSfS iteSrtSiitXrtSit iti rt(tri irei tfiSn Page 19 M r ' I i I other man. There were two blinding flashes and the cabin crashed with tiie violent ciischarges. There was an oath and a groan. The lantern swayed and i flickered and the air hung heavy with the fumes of burnt powder. John felt all grow black about him and he had a sick feeling in the pit of his stomach, but he did not lamt. He was not that kind. He realized that he had killed two men. Tliere lay their ghastly bodies, one with his head blown nearly off, the 1 other sprawled across his companion with a great, ragged hole in his body wi ' .ere S the full force of the shot had lodged itself. Leaping over the prostrate forn s, Sl John gained the slippery deck and jumped ashore. He ran as fast as his legs 1 would carry him. I do not know how far he would have gone had he not run into the arms of a policeman, as the officer of the law came out of police head- quarters. And it was then that John found out for the first time that he too had been wounded, for the revolver shot of the pirate had passed completely through I the calf of his left leg. He was now weak from loss of blood as well as suffering f from nervous shock. His wounds were dressed and he was carried to a hos- 1 pital for the night. Investigation by the police showed that John ' s story was true. On descend- ing the cabin stairs there lay the dead mate and the two pirates, they too having I paid the penalty of their crimes. The money was safe, but John was to be an I invalid for many weeks before he could walk, and it was a long, long while i before the faces of the two pirates left him in his dreams, and before he could , I go about at night without being nervous and afraid. As soon as he could travel, i Captain Crone took the boy home to his fireside in Matthews, but this did not i end the career on which he had started out. He was not satisfied with his first taste of the sea, harrowing as it had been. It seemed to make him the more fe eager to go, to struggle with men and the elements, and to drink fully of the | cup of experience. And so, we find him later a sailor, and finally a master of | vessels, a fighter and a strong man among men, circling the globe and making the name of American seamen glorious wherever he went. Jno. B. Bentley. I Page W) Cbc Colonirtl Ccljo, 1921 ?? I The Men ' s Student Council h ' .C. i i F. F. Chandler W. A. Dickinson W. L. Bland A. E. Hopkins S. E. Gunn W. E. Garber A. W. Tohnson i Page 161 UiMMMMiy MiMMMM ' C|)C COlOHial CCJ)0, 1921 gM M ' MMMMMi zvzTzyiJzy ■ ■ t. P 3 - ' •;-.;f .:,? J l-lc:.. Z i 4i ' - • r The Women ' s Student Council Helen Lannigon Josephine Benschoten Dorothy Terrill Ehzabeth Lee Beverly Ruffin Elizabeth Pate Martha Barksdale Pa!:e 162 . $ li jfeTiT ' TtKTih ' iiyyg ' it)« ii-f t 8tt« irnt iy A « ti«   ' ir s «« fr v BOOK V Secret Organizations and Clubs ' 4 Cbe Colonial Ccfto, l92i , I B I 4 i S ' ' it I ' age 153 igjpj nufJUtiUfMMi iyffiJBymm Ci)C Colonial (!Bcl)0, 1921 •J, ' ,-,.., ,, . .- ., — i. ' ' : .•,.,.,i.. ' .[. ,v.,.v;._..,, ;«,v,v - ;.,. Page 161 •? Cbe Colonial OBcbo, I92i I I ' k Phi Beta Kappa III , nil r.ETA KAPPA SOCIETY was organized at the College of William ami Mary December 5, 1776. The Child of the Revolu- tion, its founders were students, most of whom looked forward to careers as soldiers and statesmen. Debating was from the begin- ning the most prominent feature, one of the foundation rules being, That four niemliers be selected to perform at every session, two of whom in matters of argumentation and the others in opposite composition. The social side was also stressed. The Society was thus the ancestor of the College Literary Society and of the Greek Letter Fraternity as they have since developed on American soil. ' The first period of the Society lasted from 1776 to 1781, when on the ap- proach of Benedict Arnold the Society sealed up its records and placed them in the keeping of the college steward. After a chequered career they were returned to the college in her bi-centennial year, 1893, and now rest in the Library, an object of intense interest to visitors. Of the fifty initiates of this first period, many rose to eminence in the politi- cal life of ' irginia and of the Cnion. Most distinguished of all was John Mar- shall, destined to be the great Chief Justice, who, a young captain in the Revolu- tionary Army, was for a few weeks a student under George Wythe, professor of law. Up to this time Phi Beta Kappa had been merely a local society. Its spread in the form in which it was destined profoundly to affect the college fraternity world was due to a young man from New England, Elisha Parmalee by name, who had come South for his health. Through him, in 1780 and 1781, chapters were established at Harvard and Yale, and with the consent of the new mother chapter, at Dartmouth College. The old college, and with it, of course. Phi Beta Kappa, now fell on evil days, and the mother chapter of the Society gradually died. Her period of sus- pension lasted until 1849, when, by a remarkable instance of active and vigorous old age, one of the original fifty members, William Short, now a man 85 years old, came to the College, revived the mother chapter, and placed her destinies in the hands of the College faculty. A number of distinguished students were initiated. This period lasted twelve years, when war again sounded at the College gates and the Phi Beta Kappa boys threw down their lexicons, bade adieu to the old College, and entered the armies defending Mrginia. Again followed a period of suspended animation for the mother chapter, lasting until 1893, when Colonel William Lamb, soldier, lawyer, man of letters, loyal and enthusiastic son of the Society, revived it with the co-operation of the i ift fi71ffi y fi7 S1 S iftrifl ie ifi7 fi:?? tQ -ffr fi ■ !B ift tffr Past 165 !iiyi ' iutiUiiyiiumaMti.m p Cl)e Colonial (2Bct)0, 1921 w mmmmmmmmmmm venerable President, Colonel Ewell, the members of the Board of Visitors and the faculty, all of whom were initiated. Since 1893 Phi Beta Kappa at the College has had an unbroken career of growth and honor. Among the members are now listed most of the literar) ' men of Virginia and some in adjoining States. An interesting and significant feature of the meeting of December, 1920, was the initiation of three women eminent in the literary and public life of Mrginia: Miss Mary Johnston, MiSs Ellen Glasgow and Mrs. B. B. Munford. The larger part of the membership is, of course, the younger alumni of the College. According to the policy of the chapter, these are elected a few years after graduation, in token of their successful entrance upon professional work. Membership is counted one of the most signal honors that can come to a ' illiam and Mary man — the crown and seal of high purpose, splendid endeavor, promis- ing attainment. Phi Beta Kappa has long since discarded all obligation of secrecy and is in no sense a competitor with the college fraternities. Any student now on the roll — as every youthful recruit of Xapoleon had the marshal ' s baton in his knapsack — has it within his power to wear the key and to take part in the annual celebration of December 5, which, according to the traditional custom, begins with poem and oration and ends in jollity and mirth. . S3 Page 166 i iM I % S ;;j? jij? Fi ' n7 gff firifif etc Colonial ecfjo, 192 ' ■. I 8 a ' I i Epsilon Charge Theta Delta Qii Fraternity Founded Union College 1847 Charge Established May 12, 1853 Colors — Black, IVhite and Blue Flower — Carnation Gem — Ruby United Hearts and Souls 5 ' ' William Thomas Hodges John G. Warburton William H. Hoskins James A. Conway, Jr. Walter E. Garber J. Roderick Bland John W. Henderson Charles J. Duke, Jr. FRATRES IN FACULTATE Roscoe Conkling Young Robert Perry Wallace FRATRES IN COLLEGIO John G. Pollard, Jr. James D. Burfoot, Jr. Otho P. Smoot, Jr. W. Earle . ndre vs Samuel B. Badgett Thomas L. Jordan Harry D. Wilkins J. Christian Taylor Joseph C. Chandler Fairmount R. White Robert E. Jones William L. Bland Wallace S. Harwood William A. Sinton 3 I riJSSSSMi: Page 167 vjjmMMMJi mmmmmmm Cije Colonial Ccbo, 1921 m. wi M} m mdiMMMM : Page 168 ' arbe Colonial Ccfjo, I92i I Tlieta Delta Chi CHARGES Beta Cornell University, 1970. Beta Deuteron Iowa State College, 1919. Ga.m M A University of Michigan, 1889. Delta Deuteron University of California. Epsilon College of William and Mary, 1853. Zeta Brown University, 1853. Zeta Deuteron McGill University, 1901. Eta Bowdoin College, 1854. Eta Deuteron Leland Stanford University. Theta Deuteron Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1890. Iota Deuteron Williams College. 1891. Kappa Tufts College, 1856. Kappa Deuteron University of Illinois, 1908. Lambda Deuteron University of Toronto, 1913. Mu Deuteron Amherst College, 1885. Nu University of Virginia, 1857. Nu Deuteron Lehigh University, 1884. Xi Hobart College, 1857. Xi Deuteron L niversity of Washington, 1913. Omicron Deuteron Dartmouth College. 1869. Pi Deuteron College of New York, 1861. Rno Deuteron Columbia University, 1883. Sigma Deuteron University of Wisconsin. Tau Deuteron University of Minnesota. 1892. Phi Lafayette College, 1867. Phi Deuteron University of Pennsylvania, 1915. Chi University of Rochester, 1867. Chi Deuteron George Washington University, 1869. Psi Hamilton College, 1868. ' ' ierifiriftrarife '  ? ft! ' ' fi? a ' fr ' iflrift? mw tA r r r Tir r 8 ti ftSvTA r«vft T Page 169 mM m ' MmMmmiMM Ci)e Colonial dEctJo, 1921 mmmmmmmmmmmm I I Graduate Organizations of Theta Delta Chi Gamma Deuteron Association of Theta Delta Chi, 1889. Epsilon Alumna Association, 1904. Epsilon Deuteron Thirty Six Club, 1903. Zeta Alumni Association, 1902. Zeta Deuteron Alumni Association, 1902. Eta Chapter House Association, 1905. Iota Graduate Association, 1902, Lambda Graduate Association, 1889. Kappa Charge of the Delta Chi Fraternity Corporation, 1883. Theta Delta Chi Association of Williams College, 1906. Theta Delta Chi Building Association Champaign of Illinois. New York Association of Lambda Alumni. Mu Deuteron Association of Theta Delta Chi Society, 1890. Nu Deuteron Alumni Association, 1908. Xi Charge of Theta Survivors Association, 1908. Omicron Deuteron Alumni Association. Graduate Association of Pi Deuteron, 1906. Rho Alumni Association, 1907. Rho Deuteron Almuni Association, 1904. Sigma Deuteron Alumni Association of Theta Delta Chi, 1903. The Wisconsin Association of Theta Delta Chi, 1885. Tau Deuteron Alumni Association, 1904. Phi Alumni Association. Chi Alumni Association of New York, 1909. Chi Deuteron Graduate Association, 1901. Psi Alumni Association. Graduate Club of Theta Delta Chi of New York, 1896. New York Graduate Association, 1856. New England Association, 1884. Rhode Island Association of Theta Delta Chi, 1898. Central New York Graduate Association of Theta Delta Chi, 1905. Rochester Graduate Association of Theta Delta Chi, 1902. Buffalo Graduate Association, 1891. Graduate Association of Theta Delta Chi of Western Pennsylvania, 1903. Central Graduate Association, Chicago, 1890. Kansas City Graduate Association of Theta Delta Chi, 1907. Minnesota Association, 1900. The Theta Delta Chi, Montreal, 1907. •IS ¥ ' 2 mrir.r, ■ , 1]frfiife A7T it7 ilffTr if; ?S? ?Sy 0? Page 170 ; ;! m f!!mmm7 ' ; !( ' rf i ! i ' i. v. v. II ■ Cf)e Colonial Ccbo, 1921 Eastern Maine Association, 1907. The Connecticut Association of Theta Delta Chi, 1908. Theta Delta Chi Co-Operation of Rhode Island, 1908. The Connecticut Association of Theta Delta Chi, 1897. Northwestern Graduate Association of Theta Delta Chi, Seattle. 1909. The Boston Club of Theta Delta Chi. 1909. Cleveland Alumni Association of Theta Delta Chi, 1909. The Central Illinois Association of Theta Delta Chi, 1908. Kappa Semi-Centennial Fund Trustees. Phi Houses Trustees. Association of Theta Delta Chi, 1897. Theta Delta Chi Press, 1907. Theta Delta Chi Founders Association, 1906. Chi Deuteron Fund Trustees, 1906. Washington Graduate .Association of Theta Delta Chi, 1910. Columbia River Association of Theta Delta Chi, 1911. The Theta Delta Chi Association of Virginia, 1911. The Southern Tier Graduate Association of Theta Delta Chi, 1911. Southern California Graduate Association of Theta Delta Chi, 1912. Central Ohio Alumni Association of Theta Delta Chi, 1912. The Philadelphia Graduate .Association of Theta Delta Chi, 1913. Western Main Association of Theta Delta Chi, 1913. l 3 I 3. g? c . t:) Tri rr tI  Vri Tavrl« Tr ' t  (TrS Yl« tr4 T«lt T« t)«T« trt rrt Trg trs rrS tri iriara trS tr rrS tr yi tr trt trt Page in mmi Cfje Colonial Ccl)o, 1921 mmsmmmssm Gamma Chapter Pi Kappa Alpha {Founded March i, 1868, at University of Virginia) Colors — Garnet and Old Gold Flower — Lily of the Valley Chapter Flower — Pansy FRATRES IN COLLEGIO L. J. Gilliland J. L. Tompkins F. F. Chandler O. S. Lowe C. C. Robinson A. B. Belanger L. E. Davis T. G. Massey J. T. West W. S. Sorg FRATRES IN URBE Dr. G. A. Hankins C. W. Barnes M. R. Piland O. T. Swain E. C. W. Deitz J. y . Carraway B. E. Bradley H. Y. Hastings W. C. Schenck E. W. Brauer W. A. Steele H. A. Campbell Page 172 jTssaStsfiz? u iSi iC i ' jsuir COPrtt ' iMr n Cfte Colonicil Ccljo, 1921 Page 173 ?y5! A!PMMMMMMMlMMMi! CftC COlOlU ' al (iBCf)0, 1921 !SSJlSiJ 5U3U X !iM ummMmMdi ! •a?y jili? !ffiriafr te l jlj I, I 3i Cf)c Colonial ilTcbo, 1921 i Pi Kappa Alpha Directory FOUNDERS Frederick Soutiigatk Taylor, A. B Norfolk, Va. Julian Edward Wood, M. D Elizabeth City, N. C. Littleton Waller Tazewell Norfolk, 1 ' a. Robinson Howard, M.A., M.O., LL.D Washington, D. C. James Benjamin Schlater Richmond, Va. I NAME. Alpha Beta Gamma. . . Delta Zeta Eta Thcta Iota Kapfa .... %} % ACTIVE CHAPTERS LOCATION University of N ' irginia University, ' a- Davidson College Davidson, N. C. William and Mary College Williamsburg, Va. Birmingham-Southern College Birmingham, Ala. University of Tennessee Knoxville, Tenn. Tulane University New Orleans, La Southwestern Pres. University Clarksville, Tenn Hampden-Sidney College Hampden- Sidney, Va Transylvania University Lexington, Ky. Omlcrou L ' niversity of Richmond Richmond. Va. Pi Washington and Lee L niversity Lexington, a- Tau University of North Carolina Chapel Hill, N. C. Ppsilon Alabama Polytechnic Institute Auburn, Ala Psi North Georgia Agricultural College Dahlonega, Ga. Omega L ' niversity of Kentucky Lexington, Ky Alplia-Alpha Trinity College Durham, N. C Alpha-Gamma Louisiana State L ' niversity Baton Rouge, La. Alpha-Delta Georgia School of Technology Atlanta, Ga. Alpha-EpsUon North Carolina State College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts Raleigh, N. C. Alplia-Zeta University of Arkansas Fayetteville. Ark. Alpha-Eta University of State of Florida Gainesville, Fla. Alpha-Iota Millsaps College Jackson. Miss. Alpha-Kappa Missouri School of Mines RoUa. Mo. Alpha-Lambda Georgetown College Georgetown, Ky. Alpha-Xu L ' ni versity of Missouri Columbia. Mo. Alpha-Xi L ' niversity of Cincinnati Cincinnati, Ohio V6Srs Sri tr !ir Xft(iriKlriar srtSrt tr(iSriiSm Page ITS tUbt Colonial (Cct)0, 1921 msmmm. NAME. LOCATION Alpha-Omicron Southwestern University Georgetown, Texas Alpha-Pi Howard College East Lake, Ala. Alpha-Rho .Ohio State University Columbus, Ohio Alpha-Sigma University of California Berkeley, Cal. Alpha-Tail University of Utah Salt Lake City, Utah Alpha-Upsilon New York University New York City Alpha-Phi I. S. C. — Ames Ames, Iowa Alpha-Chi Syracuse University Syracuse, N. Y. Alpha-Psi Rutgers College New Brunswick. N. J. Alpha-Omega K. S. A. C. — Manhattan Manhattan, Kan. Beta-Alpha Pennsylvania State College State College, Pa. Beta-Beta University of Washington Seattle, Wash. Bea-Gamma University of Kansas Lawrence, Kan. Beta-Delta University of New Mexico Albuquerque, N. Mex. Beta-Epsilon Western Reserve University Cleveland, Ohio Beta-Zeta Southern Methodist University Dallas, Tex. Beta-Eta University of Illinois Champaign, 111. Bcta-Theta Cornell University Ithaca, N. Y. Beta-Iota Beloit College Beliot, Wis. Beta-Kappa Emory University Atlanta. Ga Bea-Lainbda Washington University St. Louis, Mo. Beta-Mu University of Texas Austin, Texas Beia-Nu Oregon Agricultural College Corvallis, Ore Beta-Xi University of Wisconsin Madison, Wis. Bcta-Omicron University of Oklahoma Norman, Okla. Bcta-Pi University of Pennslyvania Philadelphia, Pa. Beta-Rho Colorado College Colorado Springs, Colo. SvWiM niv?aw iy ir( li  l.Y«Yir AtY« Page 176 jimms 3!MMMM SMMmss ditie Colonial dBcfto, 1921 ' g- £! Aliinuii Chapters Alumnus Alpha Richmond, Va. Alumnus Beta Memphis. Tenn. Alumnus Gamma White Sulphur Springs, W. Va. .Mumnus Delta Charleston. S. C. . lumnus Epsilon Xorfolk, Va. Alumnus Zeta Dillon, S. C. Alumnus Eta New Orleans, La. Alumnus Theta Dallas, Texas. .• umnus Iota Knoxville, Tenn. Alumnus Kappa Charlottesville, Va. Alumnus Lambda Opelika, Ala. Alumnus Mu Fort Smith, Ark. Alumnus Nu Birmingham, Ala. Alumnus Xi Lynchburg. Va. .■Mumnus Omicron Spartanburg, S. C. Alumnus Pi Gainesville, Ga. Alumnus Rho Lexington, Ky. Alumnus Sigma Raleigh, N. C. Alumnus Tau Salisbury, N. C. Alumnus Upsilon Charlotte, N. C. Alumnus Phi Hattiesburg, Miss. Alumnus Cl.i Muskogee, Okla. Alumnus Psi Pensacola, Fla. Alumnus Omega Nashville, Tenn. Alumnus Alpha-Alpha Jacksonville, Fla. Alumnus Alpha- Beta Oakland. Gal. Alumnus Alpha-Gamma Atlanta, Ga. Alumnus Alpha-Delta Kansas City. Mo. Alumnus Alpha-Epsilon Brooklyn, N. Y. Alumnus Alpha-Zeta Columbus, Ohio. Alumnus Alpha-Et a Charleston, V. Va. Alumnus Alpha-Theta Chicago, 111. Alumnus Alpha-Iota Cincinnati, Ohio. Alumnus Alpha-Kappa Pittsburgh, Pa. Alumnus Alpha-Lambda Salt Lake City, Utah. Alumnus Alpha-Mu Germantown, Philadelphia, Pa. Alumnus Alpha- Nu St. Louis. Mo. Alumnus Alpha-Xi Akron, Ohio. Alumnus Alpha-Omicron Seattle. Wash. .Mumnus Alpha- Pi Tulsa, Okla. Alumnus Alpha- Rho Baton Rouge, La. V S TrAi« lr t  ti T« t)S t« T - T  tr tY ft8 tS«saS! Page 177 . ' yayuytiyju Ijiyiiyny; MMMMMS Cf)e Colonial (JBctO, 1921 ssjssjssjsjsuisJP}JiiUimM imuii Alpha Zeta Chapter of Kappa Alpha {Established in 1890) Colors — Crimson and Old Gold Flowers — Magnolia and Red Rose Chapter Flower — Fiolei Yell—K A Kappa K A Alpha Alpha Zeta Kappa Alpha! FRATRES IN FACULTATE Dr. J. A. C. Chandler, President Dr. W. a. Montgomery FRATRES IN COLLEGIO F. E. Ammons F. B. Allen J. B. Bentlej J. W. Bridgforth W. S. Chisholm W. T. Christian A. H. Cooke W. S. Custis W. E. Davis E. R. Graves R. C. Harper W. H. Irvine J. S. Lake C. A. Lowman H. M. Morrissette R. G. Moncure M. S. Nelson F. A. Ridout. Jr L. G. Tennis M. H. Tennis E. W. Wood W. F. Young Spencer Lane FRATRES IN URBE G. A. Dovell (Alumnus Adviser) f Clyde Tennis i i JS l  1l £vtrSvS. ' iv1!)M £ bS(t t S(ir« i t«vftsvK 1y• rA V . 1Y«■ 1,Y. ftS 1 s lM t«  s s Page 178 dLtit Colonial Ccfjo, 1921 3. O CiV. in; .-ir ' i ixtr fr iJifti Tfii Tr tr r« ftS tW t T s t Pagein ' jmUfM}iMMMMMMMMMMS CftC ColOllial (£Ec!)0, 1921 mMMMM MM miMM ; Active Chapters A — Washington and Lee University, Lexington, Virginia, F. J. Daughtrey, C. S. r — University of Georgia, J-Athens, Georgia, D. B. McDonald, C. S. A — Wofford College, Spartanburg, South Carolina. Walter Britton, Jr., C. S. E — Emory University, Emory University, Georgia, Elbert P. Peabody, C. S. Z — Randolph- Macon College, Ashland, Virginia, Francis Waters, C. S. H — Richmond College, Westhampton, Virginia, George Mitchell, C. S. — State University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky, Fred K. Augsburg, C. S. K — Mercer University, Macon, Georgia, L. M. Polhill, C. S. A — University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia, Charles Fox, C. S. N — Alabama Polytechnic Institute, Auburn, Alabama, Edwin H. Sims, C. S. S — Southwestern University, Georgetown, Texas, A. A. Graves, C. S. O — University of Texas, Austin, Texas, J. H. Foster, C. S. n — University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tennessee, C. S. Seay, C. S. 2 — Davidson College, Davidson, North Carolina, J. Eris Cassell, C. S. y_University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, T. W. Hawkins, Jr., C. S. X — Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee, E. C. Pringle, C. S. iff — Tulane University, New Orleans, Louisiana, R. B. Montgomery, C. S. n — Centre College, Danville, Kentucky, R. T. Edwards, C. S. A A — University of the South, Sewanee, Tennessee, Lyon Koch, C. S. A B — University of Alabama, University, Alabama, H. D. Pope, C. S. A r — Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, Louisiana, Byron A. Irwin, C. S. A A — William Jewell College, Liberty, Missouri, J. G. Jones, C. S. A Z— College of William and Mary, Williamsburg, Virginia, W. T. Christian, C. S. A H — Westminster College, Fulton, Missouri, Walter M. Simpson, C. S. A © — Transylvania University, Lexington, Kentucky, Paul Routt, C. S. A K — University of Missouri, Columbia, Missouri, Carl A. Ruber, C. S. A A — Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland, James K. Cullen, C. S. A M — Millsaps College, Jackson, Misssissippi, Leonard Calhoun, C. S. A N — George Washington University, Washington, D. C, W. C. Lyon, C. S. AS — University of California, Berkley, California, R. Rees Davis, C. S. A — University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, Arkansas, J. Wythe Walker, C. S. A n — Leland Stanford University, Stanford, California, Marvin Chamberlain, C. S. A P— University of West Virginia, Morgantovvn, West Virginia, A. E. Ford, C. S. I Cl)e Colonial Ccljo, 1921 i 1 i A 2 — Georgia School of Technology, Atlanta, Georgia, H. C. Moore, Jr., C. S. A T — Hampden-Sidney College, Hampden-Sidney. Virginia, E. R. Graves, C. S. A — Trinity College, Durham, North Carolina, R. P. Allen, C. S. A Q— North Carolina State College, Raleigh, North Carolina, A. G. Kendricks, C. S. B A — Missouri School of Mines, Rolla, Missouri, Thomas G, Weir, C. S. B B — Bethany College, Bethany, West Virginia, Wood B. Cundiff, C. S. I — College of Charleston, Charleston, South Carolina, Edwin Gaillard Dotterer, C. S. B A — Georgetown College, Georgetown, Kentucky, A. W. Macklin, C. S. B E — Delaware College, Newark, Delaware, T. Muncy Keith, C. H. B Z — University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, Frank Spain, Jr., C. S. B H — University of Oklahoma, Norman, Oklahoma. Walter Fears. C. S. B0 — Washington University, Saint Louis, Missouri, Joe C. Boggs, Jr., C. S. B I — Drury College, Springfield, Missouri, George W. O ' Bannon, C. S. B K — Maryland State College. College Park, Maryland, M. L. Raedy, C. S. B A — Southern Methodist University, Dallas. Te.xas, Henry Simpson, C. S. B JI — Saint John ' s College. Annapolis, Maryland, H. A. Milh, C. S. B N — Oglethorpe University, Oglethorpe, Georgia, T. L. Staton, C. S. B - — Oklahoma . ' . and M. College, Stillwater, Oklahoma, Dent N. Hand, C. S. Page 181 ' j MMMMMMMM iMM C i)C CoIOniSl (ZBci)0, 1921 «MMMMMMi Alumni Chapters and Secretaries Atlanta, Ga R- S. Fleet. Birmingham, Ala Wallace C. McAdory, 411 Empire Building. Boston, Mass George W. Hearne, 25 Trowbridge Street, Cambridge. Canal Zone Dr. William McC. James, Tivoli Hotel, Ancon. Charlotte, N. C Fred L. Wilson. Chattanooga, Tenn V. D. L. Robinson, 1012 Georgia Avenue Chicago, III M. S. Humphryes, Room 1525, 210 S. La Salle St. Clarksdale, Miss J. M. Cartwright. Columbia, S. C Edward P. Hodges. Columbus, Ga Jack B. Key. Fort Smith, Ark Harry B. Fink. Jackson, Miss Niles Moseley. Jacksonville, Fla Lee Guest, 112 Graham Building, Kansas City, Mo T. S. Jewett. Knoxville, Tenn J. Bailey Wray, Burwell Building. Lexington, Mo Jienry C. Chiles, K. C. Liberty, Mo John F. Peters. Los Angeles, Cal B. C. McCabe, 1716 Crenshaw Boulevard. Memphis, Tenn A. L, Heiskell, 103 Porter Building. Montgomery, Ala R. R, Rossell, Fourth National Bank. New Orleans, La R. A, Pierpont, 1036 Napoleon Avenue New York City John L. Sheppard, 1 Liberty Street. Oklahoma City, Okla H. Harrell. Richmond, Va., J. W. Hamilton, 415 Mutual Building. Saint Louis, Mo Elmer G. Glorious, 4140 Enright Avenue. San Antonio, Texas L. A. Casey, 419 Navarre Street. San Francisco, Cal J{. G. Thompson, 1209 Chronicle Building. Shawnee, Okla H. C. Smith, 224 North Broadway. Washington, D. C Leroy S. Boyd, Interstate Commerce Commission. i Page 182  1triav .««T) v« « 1  T  T« ¥rS i:  ti« tiS Vi« lVi ii« T)S Cfte Coloninl Ccljo, 1921 i I Nu Chapter of Kappa Sigma University of Bologna, 1400 University of Virginia, 1869 CovoRS—Scarlet, IVhite, and Emerald Green Flower— Li ji of the Valey FRATRES IN FACULTATE J. G. Driver FRATRES IN COLLEGIO C. G. Pierce W C. Johnston E. H. Pierce C. D. Garrett J. M. Bridges R A. Kenney L. E. Bennett H. C. Fields F. J. Berl J. T. Notthingham R. A. Stuart J. L. Hatcher C. H. Bush J. F. Hundley G. E. Flanders H S. Phillips P. Seay O. M. Geddy W. K. Close ALUMNUS ADVISER E. D. Spencer FRATRES Bathurst Dangerfield Peachy Thomas Peachy Spencer George Preston Coleman Vernon Merideth Geddy Thomas Henley Geddy George Benjamin Geddy Van Franklin Garrett, Jr. Jack Hundley George Jordan Lane IN URBE Joseph Farland Hall John Turner Henley Lionel Wynne Roberts John Leslie Hall. Jr. Henry Travillian Moncure Edward Dudley Spencer Harry Hundley Richard Leonard Henley Robert Southall Bright •. iY V.V MY xT S rtgt 183 gMMjU ' MM i y i fe ggMMigigac Ct)e Colonial (2Bct)0, 1921 mMJfMMMMMMMMMMm Page 1E4 : iJKnsSF Cl)c (Coloninl (Ocl)0, 1921 zon Active Chapters Mame Institution Location Beta I ' nivcrsity of Alabama University, Ala Gamma Louisinana State University Baton Rouge. La. Delta Davidson College Davidson, N. C. Eta Randolph-Macon College Ashland, Va. Eta Prime Trinity College Durham, N. C. Theta Cumberland University Georgetown, Tenn. Iota Southwestern University Georgetown, Tenn. Zeta University of Virginia University, Va. Kappa ' anderbilt University Nashville, Tenn. Lambda Washington and Lee L ' niversity Lexington, Va. Mu University of Tennessee Nashville, Tenn. Nu College of William and Mary Williamsburg. Va. Xi University of Arkansas Payetteville, Ark. Pi Swartbmore College Swarthmore, Pa. Sigma Tulane L niversity New Orleans, La. Tau University of Texas .Austin, Tex. Upsilon Southwestern Presbyterian University Clarksville, Tenn. Phi Hampden-Sidney College Hampden-Sidney, Va. Chi Purdue University Lafayette, Ind. Psi L ni versify of Maine Orono, Me. Omega L niversity of the South Sewanee, Tenn. Alpha- Alpha University of M ' aryland Baltimore, Md. Alpha-Beta Mercer University Macon, Ga. Alpha-Gamma University of Illinois Champaign, 111. Alpha-Delta Pennslyvania State College State College, Pa. Alpha-Epsilon University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia. Pa. Alph a-Zeta L ' niversity of Michigan .Ann Arbor, Mich. Alpha-Eta George Washington University Washington, D. C. Alpha-Kappa Cornell University Ithaca, N. Y. Alpha-Lambda University of Vermont Burlington, t. Alpha-Mu University of North Carolina Chapel Hill, N. C. Alpha-Pi Wabash College Crawfordville, Ind. Alpha-Rho Bowdoin College Brunswick, Me. Alph. -Tau Georgia School of Technology Atlanta, Ga. Alph. -Sigm. Ohio State University Columbus, O. Alph a-Upsilon Millsaps College Jackson, Miss. Alpha-Phi Bucknell University Lewisburg, Pa. Alpha-Chi Lake Forest University Lake Forest, 111. Alpha-Psi University of Nebraska Lincoln, Neb. AJ-pha-Omeca ■illiam Jewell College Liberty, Mo. Beta- Alph A Brown College Providence, R. I. Bet. -Beta Richmond College Richmond, a. Beta-Gamma Missouri State University Columbus, Mo. Beta-Delta Washington and Jefferson College Washington, Pa. 7 ' 1ff?ifli ' fl7Sft?Sft? ' ift? ffr I T S( aT ' • S ;v• • i; r ' lt l: ■ ..; ' • tA• « ' • . . •At ' r Vif. ISS iiU M ' A ' ' yiMiLa MliyiM.iyaLMiUMa C1)E Colonial (2BCf)0, 1921 MJiMiUiM iyMMM MSM-SJrjiM a i ACTIVE CHAPTERS— Continued Beta-Epsilon University of Wisconsin Madison, Wis. Beta-Zeta Leland Stanford University Berkeley, Cal. Beta- Eta Alabama Polytechnic Instituute Auburn, Ala. Beta-Theta University of Indiana Bloomington, Ind. Beta-Iota Lehigh University So. Bethlehem, Pa. Beta-Kappa New Hampshire State College Ehirham, N. H. Beta-Nu Kentucky State College Lexington, Ky. Beta-Mu University of Minneapolis Minneapolis, Minn. Beta-Lambda University of Georgia Athens, Ga. Beta-Xi University of California Berkeley, Cal. Beta-Omicron University of Dtnver Univ. Park, Colo. Beta- Pi Dickenson College Carlisle, Pa. Beta-Rho Unix ersity of Iowa Iowa City, la. Beta-Sigma Washington University St. Louis, Mo. Beta-Tau Baker University Baldwin. Kan. Beta-Upsilon North Carolina Agri. and Eng. Colege Raleigh, N. C. Beta- Phi Chase School of Applied Sciences Cleveland, O. Beta-Chi Missouri School of Mines JtoUa, Mo. Beta ' Psi University of Washington Seattle, Wash. Beta-Omega Colorado College Colo. Springs, Colo. Gamma Alpha University of Oregon Eugene, Ore. Gamma Beta University of Chicago Chicago, 111. Gamma Gamma Colorado School of Mines Gold, Colo. Gamma Delta Massachusetts Agricultural College Amherst, Mass. Gamma Etsilon Dartmouth College Hanover, N. H. Gamma Zeta New York University New York, N. Y. Gamma Theta University of Idaho Moscow, Idaho. Gamma Eta Harvard University Cambridge, Mass. Gamma Iota Syracuse University Syracuse, N. Y. Gamma Kappa University of Oklahoma Norman, Okla. Gamma Lambda Iowa State College Ames, la. Gamma Mu Washington State College Pullman, Wash. Ga.mma Nu Washburn College Topeka, Kan. Gamma Xi Dennison University Granville, O. Gamma Omicron University of Kansas Lawrence, Kan. Gamma Rho University of Arizona Tucson, Ariz. Gamma Pi Massachusetts Institute of Technology Boston, Mass. Gam MA Sigma Oregon Agricultural College Corvallis, Ore. Gamma Tau University of Colorado Boulder, Colo. Gamma Upsilon Rutgers College New Brunswick, N. J. Gamma Phi West Virginia University Morgantown, W. Va. Gam m a-Chi Kansas State Agricultural College Kansas Gamma-Psi Oklahoma A. and M. College Oklahoma Gamma-Omega Colorado College Colorado  ir« lt ir S liVi 1 S l.v T  tr ir« T( ir  i.y iW l.Y i!y. t« « Ti«v FagelSS ■mt vrt rri Vt Vrmri tr '  i rrf Cbc Colonial OBcIjo, 1921 Alumni Chapters Atlanta, Georgia Baltimore, Maryland Boston, Massachusetts Birmingham, Alabama Chicago, Illinois Cincinnati, Ohio Cleveland, Ohio Dallas, Texas Denver, Colorado East Tennessee, Tennessee Houston, Texas Ithaca, New York Indianapolis, Indiana Joplin, Missouri Kansas City, Missouri Lincoln, Nebraska Little Rock, Arkansas Los Angeles, California Portland, Maine Memphis, Tennessee Milwaukee, Wisconsin Minneapolis, Minnesota New York, New York Oakland, California Oklahoma City, Oklahoma Omaha, Nebraska Peoria, Illinois Philadelphia, Pennslyvania Pittsburg, Pennsylvania Portland, Oregon Roanoke, Virginia San Francisco, California Seattle, Washington St. Louis, Missouri Shreveport, Louisiana Southeastern Kansas, Independence, Kan. Spokane, Washington Syracuse, New York Topeka, Kansas Tucson. Arizona Tu ' sa, Oklahoma West Virginia, Parkersburg, W. Va. W ichita, Kansas tr r tft trt V t-Trt Xrt Vre Tr tre trtare Trt rr xm w Ti tm Tr£ rr trt 7r tit rrt rft rt 7 t rrt t i, XrttS I Page 187 mMMMMMMMMM MMMli CfjC ColOllial €cj)0, 1921 ! jy MM ' jiJ U MMMMMMM Sigma Phi Epsilon VIRGINIA DELTA CHAPTER Chartered 1904 CoWRi— Purple and Red Flowers — Amerieati Beauties and Violets Veil — Sic-a-laca Sic-a-laca Sic-a-laca sun Sigma Phi Sigma Phi Epsilon FRATRES IN COLLEGIO Jesse Clioate Phillips William Thompson Burch Frank Leighton Peake William Waldron Parrish Waverly Sidney Hansen, Jr. Julian Peghy Quisenberry Julius Frank Wilson Robin Hartwell Owen James Bathurst Smith Ratling Jack Parrish Herbert Lee Bridges, Jr. Edward Goode Jeffreys Fayette Funk Cline Word Day Peake Jr. FRATRES IN URBE Leslie Walter Simmons Walter Hughart Cheatham FOUNDERS Carter Ashton Jenkins Goldsboro, N C Benjamin Donald Gaw Stuarts Draft Va William Hugh Carter Chase City, Va. William Andrew Wallace Stuarts Draft, Va Thomas Temple Wright Ruther Glen. Va. William Lacell Phillips Newark. N. J  T VMS mm « '  te V ' S !trMrS tfM s !t s ttS tri Smm Page 188 S SSOilL 7JEI5S555 55 Cljc Colonial Ccljo, 1921 1 i fgnfflra5rifirife W 7 V; ' iOr8 r '  T -| Tr• Tri Tr• tr« Tr• 1y« Tr«(t svtSvv v ' • T -• Page 189 ui m ' ! ' ' i mjms mmM J m6m3B ChC Colonial CchO, 1921 gMMMM MMiLaiygyrMMM :a i i Active Chapters Virginia Alpha Richmond College, Richmond, Va. West Virginia Beta University of West Virginia, Morgantown, W. Va. Illinois Alpha University of Illinois, Champaign, 111. Colorado Alpha University of Colorado, Boulder, Colo. Pennsylvania Delta University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pa. Virginia Delta William and Mary College, Williamsburg, Va. NoRTH Carolina Beta North Carolina State College, West Raleigh, N. C. Ohio Alpha Ohio Northern University, Ada, O, Indiana Alpha Perdue University, West Lafayette, Ind. New York Alpha Syracuse University, Syracuse, N. Y. Virginia Epsilon Washington and Lee University, Lexington, Va. Virginia Zeta Randolph Macon College, Ashland, Va. Georgia Alpha Georgia School of Technics, Atlanta, Ga. Delaware Alpha Delaware College, Newark, Del. Virginia Eta University of Virginia, University, Va. Arkansas Alpha University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, Ark. Pennsylvania Epsilon Lehigh University, Bethlehem, Pa. Ohio Gamma Ohio State University, Columbus, O. Vermont Alpha Norwich University, Norfield, Vt. Alabama Alpha Alabama Polytechnic Institute, Auburn, Ala. North Carolina Gamma Trinity College, Durham, N. C. New Hampshire Alpha Dartmouth College, Hanover, N. H. District Columbia Alpha George Washington L ' niversity, Washington, D. C. Kansas Alpha Baker University. Baldwin, Kan. California Alpha University of California, Berkeley, Cal. Washington Alpha Washington State College, Pullman, Wash. Nebraska Alpha University of Nebraska, Lincoln, Neb. Massachusetts Alpha Massachusetts Agricultural College, Amherst, Mass. New York Beta Cornell University, Ithaca, N. Y. Michigan Alpha University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich. Iowa Alpha Iowa Wesleyan College, Mt. Pleasant, Iowa. Colorado Beta Denver University, Denver, Col. Tennessee Alpha L ' niversity of Tennessee. Knoxville, Tenn, Missouri Alpha , University of Missouri, Columbia, Mo. Wisconsin Alpha Lawrence College, Appleton, Wis. Pennsylvania Eta Penna. State College, State College, Pa. Ohio Epsilon Ohio Wesleyan University, Delaware, O, Colorado Gamma Colorado Agricultural College, Fort Collins, Colo. Minnesota Alpha University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minn. Iowa Beta Iowa State College, Ames, Iowa. loWA Gamma State University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa. Montana Alpha University of Mlontana, Missoula Mont. Oregon Alpha Canthorn Hall, Corvallais, Oregon. Kansas Beta Kansas Agricultural College, Manhattan, Kan Oklahoma Alpha Oklahoma A. and M. College, Stillwater, Okla. i 1 51 3, Page 190 11 S3! sa s s fr ' fr ; frR ' ir;iMMjZgil3iga: 5i j Cbe Colonial Ccbo, 1921 Alumni Chapters Denver Alumni Denver, Colo. Minnesota Alumni Minneapolis, Minn. Inland Empire Alumni Spokane, Wash. Richmond Alumni Richmond, Va. TiDE v. TER . lumni Newport News. Va. New York Alumni Brooklyn, N. Y. Chic. co Alumni Chicago, 111. Aksarber Alumni Omaha, Neb. Alabama Alumni Ass ' n Birmingham, Ala. Kansas City Alumni Ass ' n Kansas City, Mo. New England Alumni Ass ' n West Sommerville. Masi Indianai ' olis Alumni Ass ' n Indianapolis, Ind. Deleware State Alumni Ass ' n Newark. Del. Arkansas Alumni Ass ' n Little Rock, Ark. YouNGSTOWN Alumni . ss ' n Youngstown, O. Ohio Alumni Ass ' n Ft. Jennings, O. B. LTiM0RE Alumni Ass ' n Baltimore. Md. District of Columbia Alumni Ass ' n Washington, D. C. Detroit Alumni Ass ' n Detroit, Mich. Montana Alumni Ass ' n Billings, Mont. _ :■ iTJjjir iinST QiWa ' fni rsfi fi T f Pace 191 syauiii iya. ' tUfft Colonial (2Bci)0, 1921 JMMJiU ' iiJiM-immiiM mm Phi Tau Beta (Founded at the College of IVilliain and Mary, March 2, 1917) Yell—Uokeel Hokee! Hokee! Etal Wahoo! Wahoo! Phi! Tau! Beta! Colors — Red and Black Flower — Violet FRATRES IN COLLEGIO Isaac Dewey Akers Marion Sylvanus Bennett James Garland Eason James Oscar Faison, Jr. Edward Dudley Floyd George Ewell Fitzgerald John Frederick Frost Joseph Curtis Gray Horace Rowe Hicks Edward Brewer Huffman Richard Brewer Huffman John Anderson Jones Stanleigh H. Jones John Coriden Lyons Dewey Hobson Marshall James Brooke Pettis Lunsford Healy Settle Thomas James Young Leonard Hobbs Warren ' rf i«B BrSB? gft ffl? ffly ?l lJ JiJ JS? ffi Page 192 ir mim im ir ynirr ' rT i asns Cije Coloniiil OBdjo, 1921 Page 193 mmmmmM MmmmMM Ci)e Colonial (Ocl)0,n92l ummmmmmmmmmmmi i 3 ' Phi Alpha Zeta Fraternity in America IlifiUTip iZOXtfjUf SZe TO X fX0U XifTzySTz Colours of the Order Purple and White Flower of the Order Lily of the Field AT OE ANAPIOZ IIAPATrEMA acsXifoc John Boyd Bentley Hampton, Virginia RoYCE McCoLLoucH BuRDEN Miami, Florida Frank Cox Odd, Virginia Reginald George Davis Hackensack, New Jersey Morris William Derr Emmaus, Pennsylvania Carter Henry Harrison Cartersville, Virginia Arthur Warren Johnson Boston, Massachusetts Lynne Burgoyne Mead Roanoke, Virginia Robert Hinton Pride Williamsburg, Virginia Walter Josselyn Reed Philadelphia Pennsylvania Frederick Augustus Sapp Norfolk, Virginia m fff gjT ' gs tiif Sir f n S ' irm i © =j €bc Colonial lEcl)o, l92l S ' ft . ' IJ :g5 ' I I g) J -.. . w, . ■ ,,; i 1 E ' , Lj. i Phi Alpha Zeta Page 195 2MMMMM MMMMMMMM iit Colonifll (lBCi)0, 1921 Alpha Kappa Psi Professional Commerce Fraternity Chartered 1904 Established 1921 Colors — Dark Blue and Gold Flower — Chrysanthemum Omega Chapter FRATRES IN FACULTATE Professor R. L. Power FRATRES IN COLLEGIO Chester Gaver Pierce Julius Franklin Wilson Fletcher Summerfield Manson. Jr. Jesse Choate Phillips Wavehly Sidney Manson, Jr. Walter Scott Chisholm Laurence Janney Herr Henry Sinclair Phillips James Oscar Faison, Jr. Ernest Welford Brauer James Hugh Garnett Leonard Hobbs Warren Otey Bernard East Page 196 ■mSfSXmitrSxrs tri %y Tr Trt tri Tri TrS Cbe !roIoniaI Ccfto, 1921 % ' sJ 1, 1 i1 } . ' rn7 ; ? j ?ijg igsj ij f ar [ a j ' . {MaJayoytMMi i tUt t Colonial (2Bci)0, 1921 immtM m MMM mJiMuri iJ Chapters Alpha New York University Beta University of Denver Gamma Northwestern University Deta ; University of Pittsburg Epsilon University of Illinois Zeta University of Nebraska . Eta; ; .•. .-.,,. . , ' . ....... i .vv. . University of Cincinnati Theta. . ' ■; . ;■. r Oregon Agricultural College Iota University of Texas Kappa University of Oregon Lambda University of Oklahoma Mu Ohio State University Nu Boston University Xl Harvard University Omicron University of Montana Pi. Georgia Tech Rho University of Washington Sigma Colorado College Tau Oklahoma A, and M. College Upsilon University of Missouri Phi University of Michigan Chi Columbia University Psi. . .--,; . ; University of Kansas Omega. . ' . William and Mary College Alpha Beta Universitv of California Kiiri?tSvt Mtiri isr i;i i svii7S t« irrs Page IS8 iK saisSiii S3 3 ■ ' 3 • ' 3 ' s3 3 l 3 II Cf)e Colonial OBcfto, 1921 1-; Alpha Beta Kappa {Founded at College of WiUiam and Mary 1920) Motto— Fa Hiac et mores liberaies nan sine pulvere Colors— Red and White Flower— Magnolia WiUam H. Beyer Leslie E. Bush Roscoe D. Campbell T. ClitTord Clark William A. Dickinson Urshei- L. Fifer S. Eustace Gunn John G. Hudson Robert C. Jennings Charles B. Jones Alexander D. Joyner MEMBERS Albert R. Musick Charles E, Rorrer William S. Snyder ainton W. Stallard Willard F. Starnes Thomas R. AVitten Edgar L. Connellee William M. Dick James D. Carter Oscar H. Fulcher ' r, S ? i ? ;g ; ' ft; ;fiAfti j SA Page 199 s: Cije Colonial (!Bci)0, 1921 mMMJiM MMiuiMMiui.iJiMm « fi I V  tiMr -m tri Wi Vrt Vr rri Vm Tr tr tm cm Tre rm ! Cbe Colonial €cbo, 1921 i Tail Kappa Alpha Founded at Indianapolis, Indiana Colors — Dark Piiri lc and IJ ' liitc Virginia Chapter Established 191 1 Randolph-Macon College Emory and Henry College Washington and Lee University University of Richmond College of William and Mary HONORARY MEMBER Richard L. Morton, M. A., Ph.D. FRATRES IN COLLEGIO William A. Dickinson Rovce McC. Burden Savala E. Gunn J. CoRiDEN Lyoxs Chapman S. Moorman A. Warren Johnson ? 7 }p:rlf ffir l fr l! myittr6 tfSari ' mirri Vri m fmart Vt 7ia tri tr ' Page 201 f i I X b Hi iftfi?fe iS? Rff V?1fi7 ' i i ?l Cf)c Colon ial OBcbo, 1921 i i i T ' niversity of Alabama I ' niversity of Arkansas Bethany College Butler College University of Cincinnati Clark College Colorado College Columbia University L ' niversity of Denver Dickinson College Emory and Henry College Harvard University Illinois College Indiana University University of Kentucky Lafayette College Chapter Roll Lawrence College Louisiana State University Miami University Middlebury College I ' niversity of Mississippi Monmouth College University of Montana Muskingum College New York University University of North Carolina Occidental College Ohio University University of Oregon Pennsylvania College Purdue L niversity Randolph-Macon College Rhode Island State College Richmond College St. Lawrence University University of South Dakota L niversity of So. California So. Methodist, University University of Tennessee Trinity College University of Utah Vanderbilt University University of Vermont Wabash College University of Washington Westminster College College of William and Mary 5 1 --. v.VitfJ Bra;Vr;fi Vrifir ; f ifrSfr«fe tr• Tr• T - Tr Tr• T« t « t« v Il t  v •« T fgffla Page 2a SSMiH mimMMMMMMMM}i i)t COlOtUfll OBcbO, 1921 OMMMMjiMMMMMMM iSF -: I I I I % % i I Inter-Fraternity Council L. H. Settle President J. F. Wilson J ' ice-President J. D. BuRFORT Secretary Bed. F. J. Christian, W. T. Pierce, C. G. Chandler, F. F. Lowe, O. S. Pollard. J. G. Chisholm, W. S. Lyons, J. C. P. Wilson, J. F. Peake, V. D. Page 2M S3 fffr ' f iiTii ' vffiaaaaasiaasiji ' iiaiMsaaa i Cf)c Colonitil Orrljo, 1921 3i The Flat Hat Club I I HE I ' LAT HAT CLUI! is the successor to and modeled along the same general lines as the old Spotswood Club which was established bv three of the younger professors of the College in 1907, and which, until its euthanasia in 1916, listed on its rolls — at least so old Spots- woodians claimed — the cream of the brains and driving force among the student body. Its name perpetuated that of the dashing royal governor, who led from colonial Williamsburg his romantic Knights of the Golden Horseshoes on the first expedition across the Blue Ridge. It took for its motto their famous Sic Juvat Transcendere Montes. At the reorganization by the two sole members left in College in September, 1920, it was felt that the eternal fitness of things demanded that the time-honored name be left to rest in peace. The name of the Flat Hat Club was decided upon as that of the first social club known to have existed at the pre-Revolutionary College . Mr. JeiTerson in an interesting letter, dated 181 8, replying to a corre- spondent who sought to find in the Flat Hat Club the progenitor of the Phi Beta Kappa, himself having been a member, gives the only information known of the Club. Thus the College weekly paper and the Club have the name of the same organization. ' Both the old Spotswood and tlie present Flat Hat Clubs owe their origin to the wish to overleap the barriers — though in many respects inevitable and even necessary — between classes and groups and fraternities and even faculty and student body, by means of an organization which should so far as possible be representative of the many units and currents of College life. The younger club, as did the older, seeks to promote good fellowship by bi-weekly meetings iri rotation at the homes of the members, where simple refreshments and smok- ables and weighty matters are discussed ; to prospect watchfully for promising material in the student body at large, and to study in every way to further the interests of the dear old College. ' jRy tfe RTifti iftr fififif ar Page 29s I ' MM ' j iyB ysyjiiyiMMisiiSJMi! Cf)C Colonial cJBcJjo, 1921 si The Flat Hat Club Dr. Walter A. Montgomery Professor R. C. Young J. C. Lyons J. D. Burfoot, Jr. J. C. Phillips H. L. Bridges, Jr. L. H. Settle R. A. Kenney L. J. Gilliland Dr. Gary F. Jacobs Professor R. K. Gooch R. C. Harper C. S. Moorman Jno. B. Bentley F. F. Chandler S. E. Gunn Jno. Garland Pollard, Jr. Page 206 ' M i :i:i 1rsXr sm tre tre  ii T!mimm trM Cbc Colonial Ccbo, 1921 Rough Ashler Chib Dr. V. T. Hodges President Dr. J. A. C. Chandler Professor G. H. Gelsinger Professor E. J. Grimes B. M. Woolsey H. S. Holmes J. D. Burfoot. Jr. P. B. Scav E. Welford Brai:er Secretary-Treasurer L. J. GlLLIL. ND Vice-President Dr. K. J. Hoke Professor C. D. Hart C. S. Moorman W. D. Peake O. B. East F. S. Manson. Jr. J. S. Smith V  .« T  T  7«YlV«Nr 4V. ' « V(«Y.Y Y.Y«Yty«W  Yirti Page 207 MMM mMMMMMMsmmm Cf)c Colonial £ci)0, 1921 smj ssmmmmmmmmm Epicurean Club Motto — Dum vivimus vivamus OFFICERS L. J. GiLLiLAND President J. F. Wilson Vice-President C. J. Duke, Jk Secretary-Treasurer ■Bob Harper ' ■ Chaflain MEMBERS Standing, left to right— M. H. Tennis, J. C. Lyons, R. C. Harper, W. C. Schenck, C. W. Tennis. Sitting— C. J. Duke. Jr., F. J. Berl, L. J. Gilliland, J. F. Wilson, C. S. Moorman. Page 208, r 15rs ly 1y« ( TY ;v• iy• « « ;y s « Trr«Vf r(i ir T mm Cbc Colonial Crbo, 1921 ■ ii j g f ffi- fli ffiy ' tfrsfii ' sy s f RBlfl n- i rr - i rrt S- jQ n ia aaSaaaa a aaSi aS fiia; Paie2( ■ Mmsmmmm i M Ct)£ Colonial (2Bct)0, 1921 mjmiiuwi MJi iM ui i jii tmji i! i I I i i I i I 1 I i i Upsilon Delta Beta Colors — Blue and Cold Blanche Kennedy Dorothy Zirkle Sue W. Elder Lucy Jessup Mary Davis Dorothy Terrill Betty Sue Jessup MEMBERS Flowers — Fleur-de-lis Mary Nash Tatem Elizabeth Fristoe Frances Gibbons Emily Rice Mary Holman Maria Holman Page 210 in I ' trS trAl:rs friAr(iiltV trt Sr6 yve SriitrAtri S -tri(tri ti Cbe Colonial Ccbo, 1921 ' J i lb I) 6! ' ■I Upsilon Delta Beta -.:r, !fl? ' sfiwis i; as ?iip i frtR?  Br fiy fi7 wi Page 211 m nys aJiMM iysy pi tySiyiM aM! ! d)C Colonial dBCbO, 1921 .mgySiiGLIBUJM MMM Mi MiU; 73 I I I I I I Delta Phi Kappa Founded at College of IViUiam and Mary, Sefiteniber. 1920. Yell— Rip, Rah, Ray! Razzle! Dazzle! Sis-Boom-Bah ! Delta, Delta, Delta Phi ! Delta Phi, Rah! Rah! Rah! Colors — Purple and White ROLL OF MEMBERS Hilda Butler Ruth Cashion Sarah Cuthrell Helen Featherstone Inez Grey Etta Henderson Flower — Violet Sallie Mapp Jacob Cecil Norfleet Alice Person Rorothy Reeve Sara Rhodes Mavis Taylor Page 212 1ri tr 1  1 « 1y« 1y« t« r) t«vtrs T« 1y« 1y T« r Cbe Coloninl €ff)0, 1921 1 I ,y!fiSBriBy :W ftr ' ar ' !f Page 213 js yj I MyjMMMMMMMM ii Ct)C COlOtlial (!!Bcf)0, 1921 T M J iJSiMmMMdmiMMM fk Beta Sigma Chi CoLORS — Red and Black Flower — Poppy Yell— Beta, Rah! Beta, Rah ! Beta, Rah, Rhi! Sigma ! Sigma ! Beta Sigma Chi ! MEMBERS Hortetise Lewis JuHa Green Mildred Lane Charlotte Shipman Mary Wadsworth Margaret Bridges Thelma Conley Cary Stebbins Bertha Brooks Elizabeth Wadsworth Martha Flippo Elizabeth Smith Page 214 jsrm smmsi sa ' stfi sif i rSff C e Colonial OBcbo, 1921 Page 21S Li y yiMi Ct)e Colonial Ccfjo, 1921 ummmmmmmmmmmmi Gamma Omega Founded at College of William and Mary, January 9, 1921 Yell — Gamma O ! Gamma Me ! Gamma Ga ! Gamma Omega, Gamma Omega. Gamma Omega ! Colors — American Beauty and Green Flower — American Beauty Rose Patroness — Mrs. K. J. Hoke ROLL OF MEMBERS Lucille Brown Myree Hutchings Elizabeth Pate Elizabeth Scott Louise Waters Bettie Woodward Janet Coleman Juliet Garnett Margaret Tuthill Amelia Walker Virginia Isley Elizabeth Lee Marion McWhorter Emily Hall li jij aif«giiRrsiira f 7 ffi? Page 21fi Chf Colonial C-cho. 1921 j % 3; s 101 Gamma Omega ' •NV« ' «Vr«V( V, 7f«i.Yti , « .( Y«;,. -« rrtii Page 217 CI)c Colonial €ci)0, 1921 m Kappa Zeta Colors — Blue and Old Gold Flower — Pansy Yell— Sis-Ray ! Sis-Rah ! Kappa Zeta ! Rah — Rah- Kappa Zeta ! -Rah! MEMBERSHIP ROLL Virginia M. Reay Mona R. Kelton Nettie R. Kelton Mary M. VVeedon Mary E. Lehman Marie H. Wilkins Miriam G. Winder Page 218 W ' fsrimmsrmrmmmwwmm ■ Cl)c Colonial dBctjo, 1921 i Kappa Zeta  r v T  y« v • l: i v « (« ly« V(• v«r« v«  Jr4l. , i Page 219 ■ ' iuiM ' iyjissa iEgsaMMM a; d)0 Colonial Cct)0, 1921 ' mmsmmmmmmmmmm Page 220 s i Cfte Colonial Ccfto, 1921 b: 3.;; S. O. S. Yell — North, East, South, West, We are S. O. S. Oldest, Biggest and the Best ! North, East, South, West, We are S. O. S. ! Colors — Red and Blade KOLL Toby ' ' Berl Susie Bland Mac Bridges Tac Cooke Chisliolm Christian Lake Lead ' Bill •Bun Greasy Stuart FRATRES •Bob Wallace Monk White Sleepie Tennis ••Pete Hundley • ' Whitey Herr Swankie Swain Doc Lyons ' Piggy Pierce Baldie Schenck IN L ' RBE, ALUMNUS ADVISERS. ETC. Joseph William Bridgeforth ' •Croaker ' Tennis i tr6Xf6Xri tfS(trsttfi trssri trt rrttriSriSrt iri TftXrS f Xri Pige 221 m m ss: w!smsim!im3im?i C|)C Colonial Ccl)0, 1921 mmMJmiMMMiJiM iSitSM-:- B. I. C. {Founded 1917) Motto — Best in College Drinks — Corn Jttlefs Yell- -Who in the hell Who in the War-hoo-waa, w B. I. C. MEMBERS Flower — Milkweed Colors — Black and Blue . who in the hell, hell are we? ar-hoo-waa, Lead Amnions Earl Andrews Dan Burfoot Fredie Chandler Buck Custis Bob Harper Jimmie Hatcher Bill Hoskins Sol Johnston Snipe Hastings .rm sw fi immmr mi m m Tony Massey ■•Red Moncure ••Not Nottingham ••Rat ' Parrish ••Bill Parrish ' •Cl.et ' Pierce ••Kid Sorg Harrv Wilkins ••Prex ' Wilson ' •Buck Young Page 222 M (3 i li tri!im!m  :tra(i:ri i:rs(irS iis(trsSts la it SresreSfi C[)c Colonial €cf)o, 1921 I t m N. N. O, Yell— Oh, well ! Are you ready Who? You! Me! Yes! O N O ! N N O ! Colors — Blue and While MEMBERS Badgett, S. B. Close, W. K. Davis, L. E. Garber, N ' . E. Geddy. O. M. Geddy, . M. Geddy, G. B. Hall. C. M. MEMBERS IX CITY Harwood, W. S. Jordan. T. L. Lowe. O. S. Robinson, C. C. Simmons, L. W. Lane, George Peachy, B. D. •J I 4 -A. % i m trt fi rt triS(g trt tmtri(tri tri l iSfft!tmfm Page 223 m mM X!fM M M mMmMJ!t iJlM S Cf)e CoIOnii)! (2BCt)0 1921 MMMMmM ' MMMMM i MEMBERS C. J. Duke, Jr. R. H. Owen J. A. Conway, Jr. E. G. Jeffreys J. G. Pollard, Jr W. S. Manson J. C. Phillips J. O. Faison, Jr. W. T. Burch J. C. Gray F. A. Rideout, Jr. J. C. Chandler f i?fW fihi ? Sf Q? MiS? li ffi Page 224 a- ra-fr :s !fAi Mfi;ifinirii£ BOOK VI Athletics - VSMSffiaJ ? w :nj :i :i :; ;: iniiijLiosjra CftC Coloilial (2B(i)0, 1921 5} iijyy Ai Page22S 1 1 Coaches i Drixer GOOCH LllL ' NStLMAN Page 226 V s1| V jg srsSfiS Bni ii ■7 Cbc Colonial Ccbo, 1921 I I ii D CI o Page 227 I I I i ! With William and Mary on Many Fields HE growth of William and Mary under President Chandler ' s guid- ance is in no way better illustrated than in the gradual development of a definite athletic policy. With James Driver as general athletic director, and Dr. W. T. Hodges as faculty athletic adviser, the program of outdoor and indoor sports inaugurated this year prom- ises to boost the prestige of William and Mary in the sporting world. In football, Head Coach Driver had the assistance of Professor Bobby Gooch, famous ex-Virginia quarterback, and Professor J. S. Counselman, who handled the scrubs. Counselman was a star at V. P. I., and assistant coach to Heisman at Georgia Tech. He is a splendid tennis player, and his coaching already has developed some capable racqueters on the campus. Baseball found no less a person assisting the coach than Eppa Rixey. who wrested an M. A. in chemistry from the faculty of the University of X ' irginia, and who has been standing big league batsmen on their respective ears for several years. He coached the baseball squad for two weeks, before reporting to the Cincinnati club. Bill Fincher Is Secured. When college re-opens in September, football will be coached by Bill Fincher, All-American end, of Georgia Tech fame. He will have good material to build upon, and the result of his effort is awaited with keen interest by followers of inter-collegiate athletics throughout the South. These various additions to the coaching staff indicate a trend toward the top, where William and Mary belongs. The term 1919-1920 was a wonderful - year. It sent back to college men who had waded through fire and mud in Europe. They brought to college a spirit of renewed determination, and the heritage they bequeathed is one that is lifting ' illiam and Mary in clean, sports- manlike rivalry with respected foes. The football scores and a review of the season follows: University of Virginia 27 Virginia Polytechnic Institute. . .21 Gallaudet College 7 William and Mary o William and Mary o William and Mary 14 William and Mary 36 William and Mary 34 William and Mary o William and Mary o William and Mary 34 Mlliam and Mary 7 Total, 125; opponents ' score, 163. Iksy fig g Jiif fe-iffe ifiT firsSi ift? Page 228 Lynchburg College o Union Theological Seminary. . . . o University of Richmond 13 North Carolina A. and E 81 Randolph-Macon College o Hampden-Sidney College 14 fii ffiriiS Si Sg itraifr trifirier ■ ' -m CI)C Colonittl Ccbo, 1921 £: I I: I I ' w 11 i fw l7A nBf T JbR.Df i Joyi E R Cap-r. Close « 0A E A3T yc-j- Football Snapshots Page 229 ft MiMJUByBJ o ysysysiyi-iaiiMiaiii!. ' Cftc Colonial dBctfO, 1921 mms mMJS ' J In their first tiiree games, the Indians probably displayed their best form of the season. Virginia was able to gain only one touchdown each quarter, and Tech was held scoreless for three periods. Against the Gallaudet mutes, William and Mary scored two touchdowns, each as a result of forward passes, Jones to White. Both plays were sensational. With the brilliant Monk White starring at halfback, and Bake Jones displaying rare generalship at quarterback, the Orange and Black eleven next proceeded to wallop Lynchburg College and the Seminary aggregation. Then the offensive power of the Indians failed to pierce the Spiders ' armor, and the Richmond eleven won a 13-0 victory. Fumbling contributed to the Indians ' defeat. Although the Spiders made only five first downs, they took advantage of the breaks. Carter blocked a punt, which he turned into a touchdown. In the final period two Indians deflected a pass, thrown by Towill, into the outstretched arms of Snead, who had crossed the goal line. However, one touchdown proved sufificient to win. The loss of this game was a surprise, inasmuch as the Indian outplayed their rivals. Next fall the Indians and Spiders clash in Rich- mond on Thanksgiviiii. ' . Good Training for Track. Next came the 81-0 defeat suffered at the hands of Carolina State. The Tarheels ran wild that day, making touchdowns with consummate ease. The Indians fought valiantly, but to no avail. This game marked the retirement of Jones and White, as they had been declared ineligible to play in the champion- ship games with Randolph-Macon and Hampden-Sidney. Their retirement meant a new backfield, in effect. Randolph-Macon, despite a plucky fight, could not withstand the ' illiam and Mary team. This victory placed the Indians on equal terms with Hampden- Sidney for the Eastern Virginia Athletic Association Championship. Thanks- giving saw the Tigers and Indians battling on the gridiron in Newport News. A fumble cost the Indians the title and loving Trophy. The Tigers fought a grand battle against odds. That they won w as due to their following the ball at all times. The fumble which resulted in defeat occurred in the fourth quarter. The Indians came back with a rush, and had marched sixty-five yards on con- secutive aerial plays when inexorable Time called a halt. Captain Close rounded out his college career by giving a splendid exhibition of tackling. — Athletic Editor. ;2 ' ' S ' a is 1 sa. ifliisflSsvfi8fliSfl!)S tvs««vifa i  i,  t  i v i.v ir(M Page 230 ■ mis i: iftS it« T( ft T  iti« t« i; if i i.ywrr« iy T( tr - ftS ■ muM S dLbt Colonial !Bcl)o, 1921 m 3| I t I I I i i Ch mul-eh. h it ICK. 3LANII. Zcswjr AVGrr r Wilsor SncpHERJi. fL KNUEfiS OWENS Football Snapshots ■r- ' g !? ;7pS:ff S:!r S l Page r ' 31 mmm mmmmimmmMmm C 0 Colonial (Bc O, 1921 w,Wii¥iWMi i? j« i« ri«sKMgwfM3 Miss Myree Hutchings Basketball Sponsor S S Mmi i3M SiEi f rii: mr; ?wm Pa?e 232 3 €be Colonial Ccljo, 1921 ! I t2 F5f I ca H en 23 ifiAft? rt?? Z Page 233 . p5L mmmaiU ' ' !Ui ' ' Aiit; iytM ' -uaJ . ' Ci)C Colonial dBcfjO, 1921 smmmmmsmmmm mmm Splendid Record in Basketball T was evident soon after basketball practice began that illiam and Mary would be creditably represented on the court. Such proved to be the case, the Indians winning eight and losing three games. The score follows: ' illiam and William and William and William and ' iIliam illiam William William William and ' illian•l and William and Mary . Mary. Mary. Mary . and anrl and and •41 •15 .23 Mary 25 Mary 53 Mary 41 lary 45 Alary 36 Mary 28 Mary 38 Hampton Legion 22 (ieorge Washington University. .40 University of Virginia 46 Park View Athletic Association 34 Newport News Shipyards 18 Randolph-Macon College 26 Camp Eustis 17 University of Richmond 20 Medical College of irginia. . . .26 Randolph-Macon College 14 University of Richmond 2 , Total, 377; opponents ' total, 286. Here was cause for jubilation ! It will be seen that Coach Driver ' s quint had won seven consecutive victories when the season ended. Moreover, they walloped the Spiders twice by healthy margins. Cooke, forward, and Harwood, center, were not available in the X ' irginia game. In the light of iniam and Mary ' s double triumph over the University of Richmond five, and the fact that the night follow- ing our second victory over the Spiders, Virginia was forced to extend itself to win from the Spiders by a score of 35 to 30, at Westhampton, one of tW ' O things suggests itself: The Indians improved wonderfully, or ' irginia ' s game declined. Our entire team covered itself with glory, and students and alumni may safely say that the 1920-21 quint was the best developed here in many years. Captain Chester Pierce made forty-three field goals, and his floor work was excellent. Cooke, his running mate at forward, contributed thirty-nine field goals, and fifty foul goals. Jones, at guard, shot twenty-four field goals, while Harwood caged eighteen baskets. — Athletic Editor. [5saa iss« ' ?sss iirifl:sfflsvtsflravi sviss!rs Page 234 I S-4 Sr!li l)imr g!i! SiTm r!iyi ' i?mW ' m m Cbe Colonial OBcjjo, 1921 f i I i i 5 HARWOOD CAR PIERCE ri Ti« Tr Tr ' vti«v?i«vt vtJS tr tmt t sv yff r ; vra fe1iVr? Page 235 mMMMMMMMMMMMM? tH t COlOtlidl (2BCi)0, 1921 ■ il Miss Mary Gilliam Baseball Sponsor :irasnig ? ysiSn ri§f jfff?raifr Page 236 -• r  t( 1 t 1yi 1y« 1vs tyi •1 rS ftiS yrS rfS r(■ s««?s Cl)e Colonitil C-cf)o, 1921 El«e237 I pMMJ H mJiM lMMiUmaMMMi! Ct)E CoIOtlfal (iBcf)0. 1921 ' MMMMMMJ Winning Fame on Other Fields HE showing of the BIG TEAM on its State and Northern Jaunt added prestige to the college. In six successive days, playing in as many different places, William and Mary won four contests and lost two, each defeat being the result of ninth inning rallies. Everywhere the Indians were the recipients of laurels from newspaper scribes and spectators. Writers in Philadelphia dailies spoke of the William and Mary team as being the best seen on Franklin Field this year. The trip scores were as follows : William and Mary 8 William and Mary 5 William and Mary 6 William and Mary 11 William and Mary 4 William and Mary 6 Lynchburg College { 11 innings) 3 Washington and Lee i University of ' irginia 8 St. John ' s College 3 University of Pennsylvania 2 Lehigh University 7 Scores of games played before this book went to press were : William and Mary 4 Villiam and Mary 2 William and Mary 5 William and Mary 8 William and Mary 23 Villiam and Mary 8 William and Mary 10 William and Mary 5 Newport News Shipyard 3 Holy Cross College 7 New York University 7 University of Richmond 4 Camp Eustis i Ranuolph-Macon College 2 Williams College i Roanoke College o Games with V. P. I., Lynchburg College, Hampden-Sidney College, and University of Richmond will conclude the home season of the Indians. ' ictories -over Tech and Lynchburg will give William and Mary the best claim to the State championship. Pennsylvania had vanquished six rivals in a row, among them Cornell. Swarthmore, and Maryland State, when William and Mary upset the Quakers. Our victory over Penn gave us an enviable reputation. — Athletic Editor. Page 238 r« i;ni tAMta in« tw trii ra 1t s tie t)C T s T)« t S Trj Tr tr irrs ' V- Cbc Colonifll €cl)o, 1921 I r 1 •tl IM Men ' s Athletic Council Conch. Jainei Driver A. D. Joyner A. H. Cooke J. R. Bland ' . S. Harwood F. F. Chandler L. H. Settle V7 ?V? ' ; SJlg ? Bi? g { fi? ? ft? ?S7 iri trAtrii TfAtr£ t fm it Trt THt tiS tri nt Tititrti ' ftit Sft Page 39 ;pij MM i aMMJ M MMMMi5 Cf)C CoIOIIial (!BCI)0, 1921 1 i I 1 Miss Josephine Wuller Track Sponsor mmM mm fffm w w miSTwr mimii mrm ' iiSfm Page 240 ■iMMMMs ( t)c Colonial (Crbo. 1921 IK ' n. Rj Track Team Trt trii tri rrti tit Tit T:ri it Tft trtit. i Page 241 m i)t Colonial (Bcito, 1921 ili i i ' .3i-t3i4i iVW« ' M lWa tJ«3 8 College Snapshots Faire :-.: Si ' ' 3 3! l -v s3i ht) ir«i i:i '  Ar « T ii Tr« yrt AT  t) ' t t 8 T)g  8 T?g fiaa)i n? Cbe Colonial €cbo, l92l i i !■ H } I i 1 1 1 1e 61 1 ' ,3 ti — ; Page 243 ' mmMiMMMmmMmmMM C e Colonial (£cJ)o, 1921 MMM ' Mj:iMJ MiuiMMM m , l l H Hl Hffi H ; Hi I HI B - Bl iLH m B Vi K vl Ki.1 c d l ' H BVI - ' T R! HSr Vi ' ShhH M l l Women ' s Athletic Council Rae Booth Shaughnessy Director Martha Flippo President HORTENSE Lewis I ' ice-Presidcnt Maktha Barksdale ■. Secrclarv-Trcastirer Page 244 I ' Qrigra?1irriirvffi SJr iy tK=S!ffTiira rat n CI)C Colonitil (iCcbo, 1921 -■ I I Women ' s Athletics THLETICS have been moving witli a swing among the women stu- dents this season. The various branches, though new, have worked up the momentum to carry them on to a successful future. Enthu- siasm, determination, and interest in clean sportsmanship and athletics have done much to establish the women ' s department. The spirit displayed and the response to calls have shown the coach that there was sufficient excellent material to build up strong representation in each line. Basketball season closed with a fairly successful record. This was the first year for intercollegiate and outside contests. These games did much in bring- ing about a friendly feeling with other institutions and in giving William and Mary recognition in Women ' s Athletic activities. Tennis has always proved a most popular sport on this campus. Tourna- ments were staged last fall ; the preliminaries were worked off in singles, doubles and mi.xed doubles, all of which are to be concluded this spring. Keen competition abounds and the contestants and observers are anxiously awaiting the conclusion. Under the expert and careful training of the coach a promising baseball nine is fast rounding into shape. Whether there will be any intercollegiate games is at present uncertain. There will be, at all events, however, interclass events which are in the end, the strongest factors for establishing college spirit, class pride and distinction. Track facilities are limited, nevertheless a large number of competitors are finding time to train for the track meet and field day to be held in the near future. Prospects are particularly bright in this line. At present the keenest interest is displayed in the hiking clubs that have recently been formed. There are four clubs with a membership of twenty each. The several teams are excitedly endeavoring to pile up the greatest mileage in order to win out as wearers of the 1921 arm bands. Awards in the various branches are : Basketball Numerals Baseball William and Mary arm band Track 1921 arm band Tennis up Hiking 1921 arm band The goal, as manifest in the Women ' s Athletics at William and Mary, is the developing of the maximum efficiency of the powers, physical, mental and spiri- tual, of the participator. Nubility of soul and the moulding of character are the ends earnestly sought. vif V fly ftftfK• -Sr T iQ Page :4S Maktha Flippo Varsity Caftain Frances Gibbons Freshman Cal tain Martha Barksdale Manager Whittaker ) „ ,, ■ Center Marks J r-, ■ lae i enter (jIBBONS Garrison T d- ;, c j „ Kiglit Forv. ' ard Richardson J „ i- i-(? Forward Barksdale J Fraughnaugh 1 D- ; J ,,. Right Guard V adsworth I Elizabeth Smith , ■ „ Left Guard Berger Fage 245 tte Colonial dBcfto, 1921 - § s I I I 3 -1 -■ Si 5 i H u o i§. . ■ iy{MMMy MiM l i 4M t i! i ! ; M? CbC ColOUial (lBcf)0, 1921 UMM ifMU MMmMMMiUi I built a castle one beautiful night, I built it out of moonbeams bright, I built it of dreams, I built it of light, My wonderful castle in Spain. I built my castle in the air And never was castle half so fair. As the castk I built over there, Away in wonderful Spain. Every night ' tis there I go, Every one of its rooms I know. And ah! I love my castle so. My wonderful castle in Spain. But Spain is very far away, And I long for my castle while ' tis day. Shall I ever have it? Who can say! My wonderful castle in Spain. J. NET C0LEM. N. Page 248 5 Cbc Colonial OBcbo, 1921 ■ s Pag ' ! 249 Cf}e Colonial (ZBC{)0, 1921 wiJmMJmi]ui.iui mMn miuiMii I The Y. M. C. A. Record f HROUGHOL ' T the whole country and the world the past two years have been years of reorganization, realignment and search for the true purposes and relationship in every line of endeavor and in- terest. Particularly has this been true of the Y. j l. C. A. Emerging from its active war work with an unprecedented load of criticism and prejudice cast upon it at the very hour of its most strenuous service the Y was faced with the still larger tasks of assisting in world rehabilitation and at the same time finding itself — orienting itself to an unformed world which it must also help to form. The opportunity for vast social service was unparalelled, and, seeing this the Y almost lost sight of the deeper, hidden need back of and above social service — Soul Service, or the carrying of the Gospel to the heart of men rather than merely carrying creature comforts to men s bodies. Today the leaders and thinkers realize that there can be no effective, lasting social service which fails to make Soul Service its central, all-permeating spirit and aim. The interval betv. ' een the first impulsive dash after the social service illusion and the new realization that Soul Service is the highest social service, and that the two can not be separated, has been a period of flux, of finding the Y ' s real self and unifying its aims. Some may say that this state of things has not affected the College Y in general or the William and Mary organization in particular, but in so saying they betray a lack of realization of the true conditions. For the College Y also has been faced with its war and post-war problem of reorganization, redirection of aims and re-establishment of confidence in the face of difficulties, criticism, indif- ference and opposition. At William and Mary these difiiculties have been com- plicated and multiplied this year by the rapid expansion of the college and the unprecedented increase in student body. The Y was thus deprived of suitable quarters for the recreation room and similar activities. With this loss naturally came the loss of interest and support. Chaos was added to confusion and the plans for the year ' s program had to be modified. It is hoped that the adoption of the new system of financing and the supplying of necessary buildings next year will see the local Y firmly on its feet, properly serving the needs of the students and the College. The year has been far from a failure. Deprived of many means of service, the Y centered its efforts on the Bible Study part of its original program, with the result that our college has more students enrolled in active weekly student Bible classes than any other college in the State, and the ' illiam and ] Iary Bible Study System is being closely studied and adopted by other colleges. Our delegation to the State Student Volunteer Convention at Salem re- turned with a message to their fellow-students which has aroused interest in I ' oreign Missions to such an extent that a Student ' olunteer Band is in process Page 250 ' ttifgi7MrasrBi? srg?rag wrsffirsBi Cbe Coloninl Ccljo, 1921 5 ' I iG--- of formation. The representative at the ' Conference at Kandtjlph-Macon Col- lege brought baek new tire and entiuisiasm for the work among college men. Speakers at the Vesper Services have given practical and inspiring addresses to the students on the choice of life work, the vocations and other subjects. The receistion g;iven at the opening of the year was successful and served to introduce stutlents to their fellows and the I ' acuHy. The Handlxxjk, entirely rewfilten and enlarged, gave information to new ' and old students more effectively than hitherto. T-ooking back on these and lesser achievements, and realizing that often mere survival under difficulties is ultimate victory over them, remembering, too, tliat the greatest service of the V is intangible — the service of personal influence and contact — it would seem that the V for this year need not be discouraged over its record. r Tri trA Xf% TfS Trt Tm TrS Trii Xrm tr t g Tri trt Trv tr i t% Tr X myTrm ' 7; i Tft 7f i TrA Ttg T Page 251. i:, g!Mi!4i } MlM i uwsi {Miy!iia Cbe Colonial (2Bct)0, 1921 mmmmmsmmmm mm 1 I I American Legion William and Mary Post No. 90 S. E. GuNN Commander C. S. Moorman Vice-Coiiiiiiaiider A. B. Clarke Adjutant A. D. JoYNER Finance Office ' - R. D. Campbell Sergeant F. A. Sapp Chaplain Dr. D. W. Davis War Risk Officer ROLL Anderson, F. L. Driver, J. G. Manson, F. S., Jr. Andrews, W. E. Fifer, U. L. Morton, R. L. Ammons, F. E. Foster. M. D. Peake, W. D. Burden, R. Gilliland, L. J. Poulson, H. R. Burfoot, J. D., Jr. Grimes, E. J. Pettis, J. B. Bland, J. R. Garber, W. E. Roach, C. T. Carter, J. D. Maynard, L. H., ' 17 Sapp. F. A. Chandler, F. F. Wood, E. W. Sorg, W. S. Clarke, A. B. Goade, R. R. Waldrop, M. A. Campbell, R. D. Gunn, S. E. Stowitts. E. V. Chisholm, W. S. Hudson. D. H. White, F. R. Duke, C. J. Joyner, A. D. Weddle, W. M. Davis. D. W. Ketchum, E. T. Witten, T. R. Daviss. R. G. Lowe, O. S. Warburton, J. G. Derr, M. W, Moorman, C. S. Page 252 Cbe Colonial OBcbo, I92i a Edith M. Baer Club Motto — To Make llu World More Homelike .a. ' 41 Flcuer — Red Rose OFFICERS Catherine T. Desms President Mable Stratton Vice-President IxcER Scheie Secretary Elizabeth Pate Treasurer MEMBERS Catherine Bradford Eiila Howard Mvrtle Swingle .Tanie Bunting Etta Henderson Mfbel Stratton X ' irginia Blizzard Mona Kelton Margaret Tuthill Madeline Blakcy Nettie Kelton Mary W ' eedon Ruth Kline Hortense Lewis Amelia alker Margaret Davis Jean Moore Sarah Wesseils Catherine Dennis Maiy Paitsell Elizabeth Wadsworth Helen Featherstone Elizabeth Pate Marie W ' ilkins Mary Holman Sarah Rhodes Louise W aters Myree Hutchings Inger Scheie HONORARY MEMBERS Miss Hazel M. Gallagher Miss Francesca Shotwell 1 trtt Tr T «i r T S  rt T ■ T ' • T li ra Page 2S3 miP tMg SU ' iy!;iU- ' .iUi:iUig ;g ;gS Cf)0 COlOnial (IcCJ)0, 1921 MMMMMMMMMM MM! i Richmond Club Motto — Ours is a caf ' ital place Flower — Iris OFFICERS Robert C. Harper President James L. Hatcher Vice-President Miss Zaida Youell Secretary John F. Hundley Treasurer MEMBERSHIP Miss Virginia Page Miss Zaida Youell Miss ' irginia Isley Miss Ruth Kline Miss Ruth N ' aughan Miss Elizabeth Smith H. T. Hancock E. Wellford Brauer John F. Hundley James L. Hatcher Horace F. Hicks Robert C. Harper Emmett Graves Stuart Sorg Thorpe Purcell ' a ' frW WWWW ?i7 ' : f! !fl f? fr f?Wr rp , : m! mimr ffimmmmF if - - ,- : Page 254 €:iic Colonial Ccl)o, I92i i} I I -x. r Southside Club Motto — Xerer Trouble TroiMc ' Till Trouble Troubles You Colors — Sky Blue and Siiozu White Flowers — Broom Strati ' and lieu Crass Drixks — Moousliine and Persimmon Beer Pastime — Sporting Calico Yell— Rah— Ray— Ride, Bing-a-lang-a-slide. Rock-chalkiayhauk, Club — Soutlisicle. ' OFFICERS Herbert L. Spain- President S. E. Guxx Ficc-President J. C. Chandler Secretary-Treasurer EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Mis ' : L. E. Berger Charles B. Jones J. A. Conway, Jr. MEMBERS L. E. Berger H. L. Spain A. C. Echols J. A. Conway, Jr. Ida Mav Wilkinson 1!. T. White, Jr. C. A. Downing A. B. Clarke Lncille Roberts C. B. lones t. O. Faison. Jr. J. C. Chandler Thelma Lawsmi H. S. Clarke . . W. Hogwood J. C. Farrar S. E. Gunn J. A. Doyle J. D. Burfoot. Jr. O. B. East T. C. Clarke L. D. . bernathy R. R. Temple it 5 ' : 7. r ' rf??si;s fjj i ggM S £ l:•agg5:Msfj? f Page 255 mMMMiUiM SM MmmUMi Cfte Colonial (!BC!)0, 1921 MMMMSUlMM M mmMM . The Walking Sticks Motto — Never iia!k ivhen yon ean ride STICKS Song — On the Road Sometcherc Mary Holman Ecclesiastic Maria Holman Domestic Elizabeth Scott Optimistic Elizabeth Lee Fantastic . Janet Coleman Scholastic Sue Elder Sarcastic Emily Rice Altruistic Emily Hall Realistic Marthn Flippo Enthusiastic Inez Grey Mystic Helen Featherstone Elastic Suzanne Garrett Artistic iOm M 1: 1(art  1;ra 1;« t« 1 ft trt Tr. 1,• sfl:sfl.■«flSs 1Ssfl a Page €ff)0, 1921 I Rappahannock Club Motto — Paddle Your Own Canoe the boat comes once a month. Flowers — Water Lilies. Drink — Ole Hen. Colors — ll ' ater Colors. Song — Steamboat Bill. Yell — Kaf, rap, rap. a-knock. What knock? Raffiahanock! OFFICERS W. H. HosKiN Captain I F. F. Chandler Pilot L. H. Settle Mate ]. R. Bland Night Watchman M. D. Foster Purser MAIDS Hilda Haile H. R. Straughan Estelle Davis E. Harris J. C. Taylor Bettie Woodward Brent Boyd nr r v Amelia Walker Elizabeth Mercer LOOK Anna H:iile Ruth Shell LuTa Whittaker DECKHANDS p.p v.ttv Josephine Gray R. G. Haile FIREMEN Juliette Moody R. G. Moncure F. F. ilshin Mattie Davis Flovd Russell J. B. Smith S. C. Hall C. A. Ball PASSENGERS Fredericksburg Normal School Girls k ■ ' • ' lUi. fi 1 ' Pase2 7 pm MMM MmmmmsMM Cl)0 Colonial (ZBcfjo, 1921 aMMMMMMMMMMMMi g l The Overseas Club OFFICERS U. L. FiFER President S. E. GuNN Vice-President W. D. Peake Secretary-Treasurer MEMBERS U. L. Fifer Prof. E. J. Grimes W. E. Garber J. D. Carter A. D. Joyner Dr. D. W. Davis Bobby Gooch ' W. F. Young W. S. Chisholm L. J. Gilliland J. B. Pettis W. D. Peake S. E. Gunn C. J. Duke. Jr. C. S. Moorman Monk White M. A. Waldrop E. V. Stowitts A. H. Cooke F. B. West R. G. Davis H. R. Poulson mm i; TijniirBj7 ira7W ' !rsg B; s:g !o ;ft V7 fs ' Page 258 Cf)c Colonial Ccho, 1921 S Eastern Shore Club Flowers — Seaweed. Drink — Ex-tract of Paris Green. SoN ' G — Rocked ill the Cradle of the Deep. OFFICERS Secretary-Treasurer Catherine Bradford Vice-President F. A. Rideout, Jr. President Linwood Ward MEMBERS Catherine Bradford B. W. Parker W. S. Custis F. y. Parks Walter Elmore Elizabeth Pate U. K. Henderson P. W. Powell T. L. Jordan F. A. Rideout, Jr. Hortense Lewis Linwood Ward C. K. Mears Sarah Wessells M. S. Nelson H. D. Wilkins J. T. Nottingham r. ' Ti ri : ' X u ? ' .v r Tt jt T ' iTT ' ■T ' liiTi ■ ' ' t ' :-T ri f, v ■ ' ' ■ r,X ' T ji: 1 f •85 ' 1 1 - - tSS 1 Doctors ' Club Motto — We reap where others sew Pastime — Reading bank hooks Drink — Natural Itippuris acid Flower — Blood red rose Sponsor — Miss Irtna Fortune OFFICERS F. B. West President W. S. Snyder, Jr Vice-President J. SwANSON Smith Secretary and Treasurer SPECIALISTS A. B. Clark Nurses ' Favorite S. E. Gunn Women ' s Eye Specialist A. E. Hopkins Food Expert U. K. Henderson Quack Doctor P. T. Goade Tooth Cobbler J. G. Cox Posture Specialist J. B. Smith Works in Darkness O. H. Fulcher Neck and Shoulder Specialist C. W. Stallard Heart Specialist Janet Coleman Political Doctor C. B. Jones Women ' s Lip Specialist ASPIRATORS Doc. E. O ' Neill Doc. O. B, A. Sport Doc. R. A. Duncan Doc. C. B. Martin Doc. W. W. Rowell, Jr. Doc. C. A. Lowman, Jr. Doc. A. C. Echols Doc. W. Dick Doc. (Miss) Lotti Page 260 lSa5fv1twxir« ltf8 ltwvlrt l5rg irr ia«vMvMiW «  ii (t)S t)« ir« T« i.V8vT?e iy« T« T«i iy tniv Cbe OToIonial Ccbo, 1921 i f s I I Southwest Club i Motto — Drink today and drown all sorrozis FuDWER — Mint Colors— Craw green and hayseed yellow Favorite Drink — Mountain dew OFFICERS President W. A. Dickinson Vice-President Dorothy Terrill Secretary C. V. Stallard Treasurer Martha Flippo Chaplain J. G. Cox MEMBERS O. H. Fulcher Nona Boguess R. E. Kyle Francis L. Cox C. W. Stallard ' Tommy Thompkins Dorothy Terrill J. D. Carter F. L. Anderson W. S. Bond F. C. Bedsaul H. Z. Daugherty H. F. Dickenson Kanzo Barker V. D. Peake J. S. Smith Lillie Reynolds V. Weddle J. S. Cox B. G. Williams E. E. Cox E. E. Connor P. T. Goade I ' rances Gibbons C. S. Moorman Mary Paitsell F. B. W e?t Martha Flippo Delia Breeding F. L. Peake J. G. Cox M. Davis Eula Howard R. C. Dickinson T. R. Witten C. D. Garrett Dewey Marshall C. J. M. Kyle T. B. Meade W. F. Ward Pagt 261 JE MMIMiyiMMMMiMMyiMiJ: Cl)0 CoIOnial (!Bct)0, 1921 !PJ: MMJmmMM MmJmsiMJi U ' : IP i!fl l BR mPRIK ' m f f ? S3: w ■ 1 8 . mm GoK Club President , R. G. Davis Vice-President A. H. Cooke Secretary Dorothy Terrill Treasurer F. R. White Greeiikeeper T. R. Jordan Caddy R. G. MotJcuEE Motto — Cuss the Greeiikeeper Yell— F-O-R-E ! Favorite Flower — Honeysuckle Favorite Grink- — Old Taylor Mashie Favorite Pastime — Replacing the turf MEMBERS F. J. Berl VV. T. Christian Margaret Tuthill J. R. Bland J. A. Conway, Jr. Helen Lannigan J. M. Bridges Sue Elder Girard Moore E. W. Brauer Emily Rice E, C. W. Dietz ALUMNUS W. E. Andrews Page 262 31 I ■MMM iom C!)c Colonial (iBcbo, 1921 l '  Piedmont Clhb Flower — Apt !e Blossoms COLOR S Wf Drink — Home Brew Song — When the Moonshines on the Moonshine Pastime — Calico Sporting OFFICERS President • Helen Lannigan Viee-President J- G. Hudson Secretary James Jenkins Treasurer M- RY Deane Chaplain • Carter Harrison MEMBERS Abernathy, L. D. Fristo, Elizabeth Lotti, Anita Barksdale, Martba Garrison, Helen Pleasants Anna Burke, Alice Howison, Mary Riddell, Mary Blakey, Madeline Holland, Lutie Sorg. Stewart Cave, ' Eloise Hudson, B. H. Swain, Otis Clarke, T C. Hudson. J. G. Shackelford. T. M. Garke. Sarah Jessup, Lucy Toombs, Lillian Duff C D Jessup, Bettie Sue an Sickler, Mary Doyle, Due Jennings, R. C. Waldrop, M. A. Ely. A. R. Lowman, C. H. -f?y f?fayi?gwi w  ! iw sa::L Page 263 mmmmMM ' MMMMmiiji Ci)c Colonial (2Bcf)0, 1921 J ssji xiJSiMj imMJS iMmMJA Newport News Club Motto — Never do today what you can put off till tomorrow Favorite Drink — Tide-water Colors — Red and Green Flowers — Cauliflower OFFICERS President Wallace Harwood Vice-President Carter Robinson Secretary and Treasurer Sarah Rhodes MEMBERS Frances Waterfield Walter Rowell Sinclair Phillips Claude McCallum William Sinton Roy Hoskins Marjorie Bruelle Richard Huffman Anne Parker William Dick Fayette Cline Raymond Piland Marie Wilkins Si£ Itrri3rifin «!ii ' Cji ' fi Page 264 Cbe Colonial OEcbo, 1921 t i The Northern Lights ORGANIZED 1909 Motto — How far that little candle throws his beams! Drink — Canadian Club I ' OFFICERS R. A. Kenney President R. G. Davis Vice-President Louise Waters Secretary-Treasurer FROM LEFT TO RIGHT ABOVE R. G. Davis New Jersey Dr. D. W. Davis Pennsylvania W. J. Reed Pennsylvania A. W. Johnson Massachusetts SECOND ROW H. Dick New York L. J. Gilliland Pennsylvania F. J. Berl Delaware Mary Weedon Ohio Leota Eifert Iowa : ' ,ri src - rm ' iri ii jpgfi v !iNvff ! iSiW i M. W. Derr Pennsylvania E. C. W. Dietz Ohio Prof. G. H. Gelsinger Pennsylvania FROM LEFT TO RIGHT BELOW R. A. Kenney New York Reba Smith New Jersey Margaret Jenkins Ohio Louise Waters Maryland .A.nne Trundle Maryland Prof. C. D. Hart Massachusetts Page 26S . Monogram Club OFFICERS W. E. Career President W. S. Chisholm Vice-President (). S. Lowe Secretary-Treasurer James S. Driver, Coach R. P. Wallace, Ass ' t Coach 1 i 3 Page 266 ssajaasas fr fJTW in tiWjfSSriGT dLiie Colonial OBcbo, 1921 Wearers of the W. M. 1 I i $ Name Football Baseball Basketball Tr. ck Badgett, Sam 1 Bland, Siisie 1 (Mgr.) 1 Chandler, Ferdie 2 2 Chisholm, Chiz 1 Close, Runt 4 2 2 2 Cooke, Cookie 1 1 1 Flanders, George 1 Foster, Dewey 1 Garber, Joe 4 1 Harwood, Flicky 1 1 Hastings, Whitten 1 Hudson, Edy 1 Johnston, Carlisle 2 Jones, Bake : t 1 Jordan, Tommy 1 JojTier, Red 2 1 1 Lowe, Otto 2 1 Marshall, Ox 2 Owen, Pinkie 1 1 (Mgr.) Pierce, Chet 3 Settle, Big Chief 3 Shepherd, Shep . . 1 Wallace, Fats . . 4 1 (Mgr.) Wilson, Prex 3 1 (Mgr.) White, Monk 2 Young, Buck 2 1 i I i I ii3iS32i30 iZ3 L2 niL ;;iM- ill I-.-. Page %7 I I ' unM ' AJCjysMuaiygjLiBLmgMiUja i! Cfte Colonial dBcijo, 1921 ms mjmmkMMiUiMMMMs- i The Norfolk Club Motto — Stick Before You Get Stuck Drink — dam Broth with Dandelion Nip Flower — Early Rose Irish Potato Blossoms Colors — Elevated Yellow and White OFFICERS Walter C. Piggy Schenck President Otto S. Spike Lowe Vice-President J. B. Buzz Pettis Treasurer Lula M. Manning Secretary MEMBERS Mary Lehman Myree Hutchings A. D. Red Joyner O. T. Swain Nellie Richardson Margaret Tuthill W. C. Schenck ' J. B. Pettis Lula Manning Mary Nash Tatem Joseph Joe Gray Anna B. Pleasants Winifred Gray Sally Mapp Jacob F. R. Monk White Lennie Warren Aline Foreman Aubrey Hopkins Chas. J. Dukie ' ' Duke, Jr. Geo. E. Fitzgerald Mary Lee Perry Hilda Butler J. Eason Stanleigh Jones Sarah E. Cuthrell Bruce Bradley Otto Lowe Page £6? jyi a ;3 si Cf)e Colonic!! Ccbo, 1921 Tidewater Club OFFICERS Fairmount R. White President Chas. J. Duke, Jr Vice-President William C. Christian Secretary Sally Mapp Jacob Treasurer MEMBERS Sinclair Phillips Walter C. Sclienck Charles J. Duke, Jr. F. F. Chandler Rosaline Marks Ethel Hamilton Arline Foreman J. Roderick Bland F. S. Man son J. B. Smith James Conway Haley Settle Myree Hutchings Margaret Tuthill William Christian Girard Moore Mary Nash Tatem Anne ' . Parker raWiWritB QT Ti UJ. IL ' . iL. ' ! .•■■! Lucile Marston James Pettis Elizabeth Scott Anna Pleasants Fairmount R. White Maria Kohout Malcolm Bridges Harold Morrisette Mrs. Frederick Juchhoff Dorothy Reeves Cecile Norfleet Joseph C. Chandler Otis T. Swain T. B. Faison William L. Bland Eugenia eilan Sally Mapp Jacob Sarah Clarke T ' ' ' r{f: vfi Geo. Fitzgerald Richard C. Moncure J. Eason Mary Gilliam William Person Lennie Warren Mary Lee Perry Sara Rhodes Sarah E. Cuthrell Nell Richardson Lula M. Manning Aubrev Hopkins E. B. Moffitt Joseph Gray Winifred Gray Mary Lohman May E. King Etta Henderson C. T. Roach C. Jenkins R. Duncan Carter Robinson H. Straughan Chase Bush .• . W. Hogwood H. H. Johnson R. G. Haile, Jr. George Hess Mary Haile .■ nna Haile Sadie Forbes Florence Fleet Naomi Forrest Helen Berlin Mollie Sinclair F. R. White Tii ' T ' f t i :: ' i T ' S u ' , vS i : ' i v . ii iT aj rii: r. i. rn: ' I ' e r ij rn. {d; .tj? Page 269 psyiMMMSMSMMJiisysyiMi. ' Cl)e Colouial cf)0, 1921 mmmmjiMMMMMSMMjmM HH ■ { K m ' —-: ' ' ' i ' ' -- i i ' r ' - 1 J! [ liiife -r- -— i?; r ' ' ' j ' i  ' , , ' ' ' : : .- ' f x- ' ' nBB I H w cE ' ' - ' i ' ii Hk- ES H r ' 1 . f itE-j w § ■ i%i ( i - Vk E = li m 1 ■ ■f ' . pV E dtfl V 9 1 1 m M ■ Y. W. C. A. The Y. W. C. A. at W. and M. stands for high social, moral and religious ideals. In the past year it has attempted to provide the necessary information and welcome to the new girls. A number of entertainments have been given to insure enjoyment and good comradship. The Y. W. C. A. is newly organized and has accomplished much. It has been represented at Blue Ridge for the past two years. I ADVISORY BOARD Miss B. P. Taylor Miss Jessie Logan Dr. R. M. Crawford Dr. J. R. Geiger Prof. A. J. Williams Prof. H. E. Bennett OFFICERS Ruth Cushion President Janet Coleman Vice-President Ruth Harris Secretary BEfTiE Woodward Treasurer CABINET Janet Coleman Inger Scheie Mary Holman Virginia Thomson Mary Nash Tatem Madeline Blakey Bozena Kohout Beverley Ruffin Ruth Shell ; ? fii sijfSg1? ?jjf W ;tj y  rs : Page 270 ( T« lyri l  1 8 V i S 1ft 1  ftS t) T  T S  tT« iy« Wi t)S Cf)c Colonial Ccbo, 1921 R f¥0 % AH V ' tf1f g?gggyi : fil ' ifi? !ifr fi? ' Page 271 JlMMMM!imM3MM MMM Ci)e ColOinal (£CI)0, 1921 MMMM.JiMMMMMM 3 rr r bi G G © Motto — Be IVe Ever so Tired, the AUght ' s Never too Long, If It ' s Filled to the Brim With Wine, Women and Song OFFICERS F. F. Chandler President C. G. Pierce Vice-President J. C. Lyons Secretary-Treasurer L. D. Abernathy F. B. Allen F. E. Ammons A. B. Belanger L. E. Bennett J. R. Bland W. T. Christian S. B. Badgett F. J. Berl J. W. Bridgeforth W. F. Burch J. V. Caraway W. S. Chisholm F. F. Cline J. A. Conway, Jr. A. H. Cooke W. S. Custis F. F. Chandler J. C. Chandler J. G. Cox W. E. Davis J. A. Doyle E. C. Dietz J. S. Eason H. S. Fields J. E. Frost, Jr. MEMBERS E. D. Floyd S. E. Gunn J. C. Gray E. R. Graves R. C. Harper E. B. Huffman R. B. Huffman W. H. Hoskins J. L. Hatcher J. F. Hundley E. D. Hudson R. G. Moncure W. H. Irvine W. C. Johnston E. G. Jeffreys T. L. Jordan S. H. Jones O. S. Lowe J. S. Lake J. C. Lyons W. S. Manson F. S. Manson, Jr. T. J. Massey C. S. Moorman Due Metcalf M. S. Nelson J. H. Nottingham R. H. Owen C. G. Pierce E. H. Pierce J. G. Pollard, Jr. R. J. Parrish Thorpe Purcell H. S. Phillips J. C. Phillips F. A. Ridout, Jr. W. W. Rovs ' ell Carter Robinson VV. S. Schenck L. W. Simmons W. S. Sorg Russell Stuart L. G. Tennis M. H. Tennis J. R. Tucker H. D. Wilkins F. R. White L. H. ' arren B. W. Ward J. T. Wilson W. F. Young Page 272 Si 7 ig i?rsy jriffl? fc ff7 te i ! Cfje Colonial dBfbo, 192 I I CL i i OFFICERS HORTENSE Lewis President Myree Hutchincs Vice-President Thelma Conley Secretary Louise Waters Treasurer Amelia Walker Hettie Woodward Zaida Vouell Sarah Rhodes Mahel Stratton Elizabeth Van Laer Virginia Isley Juliet Garnett Sallie Mapp Jacob Mary Wadsworth Elizabeth Wadsworth Catherine Dennis MEMBERS Sara Cuthrell Hilda Butler Cecile Norfleet Sue Elder Frances Gibbons Martha Flippo Elizabeth Pate Helen Featherstone Inez Grey Mavis Taylor Mary Paitsell irginia Ellis |g.?jr fr fi? fi7 fii ifiy !h Maimie Engart Virginia Page Eugenia Neilon Elizabeth Smith Margaret Tuthill Dorothy Terrill Dorothy Zirkle Mary ash Tatem Lucy Jessup Elizabeth Scott Lucille Marston Page 273 MMM mMSmMMM ' MMM}: C!)0 COlOflial (ZBCt)0, 1921 MMMSH M MmMMM MM: Bill Christian President Walt Chisholm Vice-President Susie Bland Secretary Prex Wilson Treasurer Motto — If at first yon don ' t succeed, try, try again ' Pastime — Picking out crint js MEMBERS Carter Robinson Shorty Jeffries H. S. Holmes O. L. Hogge Susie Bland Miles Burcher (Will graduate at summer school, 1993.) Joe Bridgeforth O. T. Swain Runt Close Prex Wilson Bill Christian Ben Hudson Page 274 i t  tl« yi Vr 1r Tr4 V7  - tr« tr« tnivt vM1Ltni Tni l ' - ; ' a BOOK VII The Spice of Life f T ' ' ' j: Cfte Colonial €rf)o, 1921 ? The Spice of Life ft . 1 i g I l- ' irst Co-ed : Oli ! W hat are you going to wear to tlie dance? Second Co-ed: Oli dear! I ' m so distressed; I haven ' t a thing to wear. I ' irst Co-ed : Clieer up I You ' ll be right in stj ' k. (Biology) Dr. Davis: Mr. Goad, of what use are blood vessels? Due Goad : They er — help you to live. Dr. Davis: In what way? Due Goad: W ' hv they keep you from dying? Zirkde: Blam-he Kennedy has a reniarkalile mind; she liiinks like I do on every subject. Simmons, in dining hall (harshly) : Look here, ' Due ' I found a button in this soup. Due Wright (waiting on tahlej : Huh! I couldn ' t think what had become of that button. If Santa Claus can hide anything in the silk stockings they are using these days, it is more than these co-eds have been able to do. Dometic Science) Catherine: Billy, have you a match? Pilly Lane: Yes, Lm your match. Strike me and see if I don ' t light on you. Due Wright ( at Lynchburg College game) : What happened to that man they carried oft ' the tield ? Bessie Fifer: Guess he fractured a bone in his leg. Due Wright: Well, did he break it? Food for Angels Margaret made an angel cake For her darling William ' s sake, William ate it, every crumb. Then he heard the angel ' s drum. Calling softlv, William come. P. S. : Bill went. U Fajse 275 ; MMM ' Aiyoyoy5yi ' !!JiiutM iyyu y C|)0 Colonial !Bci)0, 1921 I ' MyiMMmmm MJ Lms. A Page From a Student ' s Bible Determine ye the Professors that make ye work. Then separate ye them, the one from the other. Take heed of all good counsel. Some courses are always easier than others. Almost all of the Professors have some vanity or weakness. Take heed of this and make good use of it, oh ye young students. Work hard and diligently in the beginning of thing. Make thou a name for thyself. All thy labors will then be rewarded. Thy Professor will be completely fooled. Verily I say unto you, the most dangerous Professor is the one who will make you want to learn. Mingle ye not with such, lest ye be tempted and fall into the paths of the wrise. Work ye diligently on the art of flattery. Use it on a Professor who likes to show ofif. Then will thy yoke be easy and thy burden light. Acquaint thyself with thy instructor ' s peculiarities. Dwell thou on these. Then will he talk of other things during the recitation and not think to mark thee. Let thy face be as innocent as the face of a new born babe. Let him think that thou admire and respect him. Attend thou him in his home. Be thou interested in his children. Beg books of wisdom from him. Let your tastes be as one, I beseech thee. - ' 3i Make him think of thee as thou are not, but as he would have thee. Sling . - thou a good line at all times. M Be not dismayed when called on to recite on some subject of which thou knowest nought. Rise boldly to thy feet. Talk thou on many subjects till thou find one which interests him. Dwell thou then on it. v Argument is dangerous. Guard thyself against this. Always agree with thy instructor in all things. Permit not thyself to be bored, lest thou be driven to study. Lest thou should do this, sleep both in the class-room and in bed. Many are the Professors who are honest, fair-minded and intelligent. Fol- low thou not in the footsteps of these, lest thy way be a long and rock) ' one. « Page 275 J Cbc Colonial €cf)o, 1921 I n w p « I The Moustache Chih The growth that grows beneath the nose, And groivs, and grows, and grozcs. Is 1 } Motto — Keep a stiff upper lip Pastime — Curling the ends RECIPE FOR MOUSTACHES BY A COLLEGE PROFESSOR For the benefit of those growing azi ' nings on the upper lip Rub the upper lip with salt at night before retiring. Then place a pail of water on the head of the bed. The thirsty hairs will come out for a drink. The aspirant must then quickly tie a knot in the hair and it will stay out. 6J Dr. Davis INSTRUCTORS Dr. Powers J. G. Hudson Jack Temple E. D. Hudson Due Hicks MEMBERS ' ' Dizzy Davis Due Ely Bob Harper J. B. Pettis Ti-tf flySfr ftnertf r -ifiFifg Page n7 €:i)c Colonial (£EcI)0, 1921 mj ss Can You Imagine? Joe Garber not getting a daily letter from Keyser? Bob Harper telling a good joke? Lucy Jessup being sophistocrated? Joe Garber in a bad humor? Dan Burfoot buying a package of cigarettes? Flicky Harwood not vamping the ladies ? Dr. Hall without his glasses? Dizzy Davis having a serious moment? Sherlock Holmes keeping awake all night? Thorpe without a girl? Dr. Jacob chewing tobacco? Dr. Young doing the shimmy ? Bobby Gooch not vamping i8i co-eds? Due Doyle playing football? Slim Ward running in the lOO-yard dash? Socrates toddling? Va. Page putting out energy ? Zaida Youell with a long dress on? Chis leaving the campus before she comes out ? Piggy Davis not raffling something? Virginia Isley not trying to vamp ' em? Gary Stebbins grown up ? Lucile Brown weighing 175? Due Metcalf giving somebody a reveille ? Shackleford not curling? Topping and Derr lounge lizarding at the Frau Shack? Reginald Kenney in overalls ? Sleepy Tennis staying awake. Red Moncure with black hair? Otto Lowe not falling in love ? Bill Hoskins not running to the Library? Bedsaul with a date? Ball being six feet tall? Snyder keeping his mouth shut in the lecture room? Fulcher not being ready with proper formula ? Monk White having a regular girl ? Kennard without a cigar? Weddle giving his suitcase to girls to carry? Burden getting a haircut? Fatty Ward and Billy Person as life guards? Louise Waters without a heavy lover ? Dick Amnions having a crush? Liz Wadsworth being bashful? Betty Sue Jessup making a public speech? Dickinson in Downing ' s trousers? =: Page 278 miimffmrs lfr tr Xrs trS Tr X  Xrs I I w Cfte Colonial (Ecfjo, 1921 I Date Glimmers Club I OFFICERS Bob Wallace President Emeritus J. C. Lyons President Tony Massie Vice-President O. T. Swain Secretary Due CusTis Treasurer Motto — Never make a date if you can gum one MEMBERS J. C. Lyons Pinky Owen Tonv Massie J- A. Conway O. T. Swain Dick Ammons Due Custis Sleepy Tennis Bob Harper Carter Robertson Reginald Kenney Red Moncure Susie Bland Flicky Harwood PLEDGES Due Rideout Due W ' ilkins Due Metcalf Due Kennard Due Meade Due Peake TINKLE TOWN ALUMNI ASSOCIATION OF DATE GUMMERS CLUB Rat Parrish, President Horace Allen, Secretary Joe Bridgeforth, ' ice-President Joe Jarman, Treasurer Monk Almond F. S. Manson Horace Allen Mike Love Rat Parrish l|i yi . ' • ' • ' • • ■• ' ' ■ ' ' • ' Joe Jarman W. S. Manson Joe Bridgeforth Taffy Hall Page 2 esiiU jyijU ' MMM mm ms M Cfte Colonial Ccljo, 1921 -j ii a mMJ MMMMM; Mack B. : Say, Dot, why is a caller like a lover? Andrews (approaching) : Come on and tell me, I won t tell. Dot: No, we can ' t tell you. Mack B. : Well, he comes to A-dore, gives the Bell a ring, gives the Maid his name, and if he doesn ' t find her out, he is taken in. Rollin Rose Sat on a Pin- Rollin Rose. IN MEMORIAM This space was to have been occupied with a joke on Tommy Jordan ' s feet, but it was so funny that the compositor died in convulsions and the staff forbade our publishing it. Mrs. Doyle: Son, how many are there at William and Mary this year? Due Doyle (intelligently) : Mother, there are about three hundred stu- dents and one hundred and seventy-seven girls. (Math. IV.) Prof. Councilman: Mr. Ward, why are you so certain that there is no such thing as the fourth dimension? Slim Ward (earnestly) : Because if there were such a dimension, I ' d have it. Professor: Frankly, madam, your son has no brains. Due ' s Mother: Please get them for him then immediately and send me the bill. Nothing shall stand in the way of my son ' s education. Due Riggins : Say, ' Red, ' did your watch stop when it fell on the sidewalk? Due Hicks: Why certainly it did. Did you expect it to keep on through? Alice Burke (at breakfast table) : Wilma, what is toddling? Wilma: I don ' t know, but who ' s got it? Chisholm: I can ' t talk to that girl. Rat. All she says is ' Uhuh. ' Rat (jealously) : Why does she say ' Uhuh ' ? Cliis : Force of habit, I guess. Lucy Jessup woke up at 3 a. m. and was heard to murmur: Oh dear me, I wish Bob Harper would fall for me. She (sweet young thing) : Sh-h-h! Have you heard the latest scandal? He (innocently) : No, what is it? She: Oh, I hate to pollute my dainty lips with scandal, but — He : Aw, come on ! She: Well, last Saturday night a girl was found with two boys in Per- son ' s Garage at i a. m. He (with mouth wide open) : Who were they, tell me quick? She: Lizzie Ford and the Dodge Bros. Jones : What would you say if I should kiss your forehead ? Helen: Oh, I would call you down. Page Z } ys Vi !!re ire mjsrs f!stSSti - itre tri imyi K ' Ig;, M S L-, ' O T O U d N D L E P ' I N i G T t H f: ' T C Cbc Colonial Ccfjo, 1921 g N I G H T C A M P U s B E N C H B E S T G I R L G F R U E Z E Z N Y G L f A I P P W S A w L E K L I L N G H E C A A D N E R P A R H I R A H C I G A R E T T E S Heaven V I L E G E S D E C O R U M m s Due Senior Page 281 Cije Colonial (ZBcf)0, 1921 smmmmmmmmmmmm Class 0 22 + ir Place of Meeting — Palace Time— 7:30— 11 ;00 Days — Monday. Tttesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday Motto — Never cut a class OFFICERS Charlie Garrett President P. W. AcKiss Vice-President W. D. Peake Secretary J. H. Garnet Treasurer Tony Massie O. T. Swain G. E. Fitzgerald Charlie Garrett P, W. Ackiss J, O. Faison Gus Myrick L. W. Simmons W-. E. Land E. W. Wood MEMBERS i Vfa VfaArtA iixri vrt Vr(t Vri tri Vrs tre VntAy Page 2E2 Miss Shaughnessy Rosalind Marks Thelma Lawson V. D. Peake Susie Bland Due Peake House Holmes ' irginia Ellis Madeline Blakey Sleepy Tennis Cftr Colonial Ccfjo, 1921 Student Talking In His Sleep As I sit alone a-dreaming, In my room, at close of day, My mind seems to waver and wander Back to the events of the day. And I see you again, my darling, As I bid you a last good-bye, When I left Old Tyler at ten P. M. With a long and sorrowful sigh. Several hours have passed since we parted, Long hours of toil and pain. But thoughts of you have cheered me, And on the morrow I ' ll see you again. The caressing touch of your chestnut hair On my cheek I fain would feel, As oft I have tried a little kiss. From those loving lips to steal. Oh, Co-ed, dear, if you only knew Of my love that will never die ; Tis a love that will haunt me ever. Till I go to my home on high. To Kitty How many kisses do I ask? Now you set me to my task. First, Sweet Kitty, will you tell me How many waves are in the sea? How many stars are in the sky ? How many lovers you make sigh? How many sands are on the shore ? I shall want just one kiss more. f  Tr V T -«VlY4•- ( ' •Y ■ i V  T« « • Vfil r Page 283 7SMM3?MSMMMJiMMMMiiM t)t C-OlOlllcll Cci)0, 1921 ' MMMi : lMJriJSiJi}UiM}!iJiiiMiM Comforting Remarks As the dining-hall bell rang. Dr. Bennett ' s dog started to howl. Peter, the chef, stepped to the door and said: What ' s the matter wid you, dawg? Y ' u-all don ' have to eat in here ! I WoNrER, IF Th«t WooLO Suit f l 6Bu Christian: Say, Joe, I heard you were seen studying. Bridgeforth : Yep, dad says it ' s a case of study or leave the ' house of many biscuits ! ' Tor Rent CHEAP 4- Koon BuNCiALOW.f During physical e.xam- ination Dr. King discov- ered Due F 1 i p p o ' s heart to be abnormal, having a Hoskins beat. Hoskinitis ! That ' s a new one ! Said the wind to the fluttering leaves one day. Come out into the meadow with me and play, — raved Dr. Jacob. Dr. Jacob: What comes after leaves? Ignorant Due : Rake, Dr. First Co-ed: Who is that boy? Second Co-ed : That ' s Schenck. First Co-ed: I know that ' s what they call him, but what ' s his right name? Notice : Bob Wallace says he can ' t afford to toddle because it wears out his vests. Due Frances Gibbons (to Flip) : I dreamed we went to heaven last night and when we got to the top of the ladder we had to write all of our sins on a big blackboard. When I was halfway up the ladder I met you coming back for more chalk. Mary Nash: Mr. Ward, what is the matter with you? Fatty Ward: I think Fve got the mumps. M. N. T.: Where? Dr. Bennett (in Education class): Loren, what is space? Brilliant Son: I can ' t explain it, but Fve got it in my head. Dr. Hall: Where is your daughter Fucile? Mrs. Brown: She ' s rubbing her gums on the doormat? Page 284 •;3 a i s3 tS iy« iy l  1  1V4 1 WrWiS T« tri Tr Tr 1 iNWi J T) ' vT Cfje Colonial Crbo, I92i Pony Club Motto — Don ' t fall off ' Pastime — Petting the Ponies OFFICERS Dapple Gray Kenney President Shetland Pony Fleet Vice-President Kentucky Bat Shipman Secretary Sorrel Top Scott Treasurer MEMBERS Broncho ' ' Reed Blaze Face Loyd King Pie-bald Derr Dapple Gray Kenney Kentucky Bay Shipman Maude Marks Texas Pony Topping Black Beauty Johnson High Stepping Dickinson Shetland Pony Fleet Sorrel Top Scott Colt Francis Cox is, Dr. Montgomery A. G. Williams. . Trainer Assistant Trainer i S ' ffi ' ff ! iff7 ftfsjiwR7 Sr @ Page 285 ii Sonnet to Any Frequenter of the Frau Shack Alone he sits o ' nights of her to dream In sweet melancholy, worshipping the while, Until the stars compassionately deign to seem As only her dear eyes could smile. As only lovers dreaming count. For seven nights he counted the seventh star ; And on the seventh, as waxing moon did mount, In sweet repose he dreaming wandered far. Thru fair meadows spring-time clad, And found her gently sleeping midst the posies ; Then bending low, his heart abeating mad. He kiss ' d her lips — like modest, blushing roses. Dreams that always are of you, Will they ever be untrue ? — Drowsy Waters. Ye Gods! n? Old Olio was calling the figures Above Mount Olympus ' snow, And other eight innocent muses Were wiggling a wicked toe. Orpheus was ragging a little jazz On a saxophonish shell, Little thinking that the chaperones Would find their hidden dell. U i;5 Terpischore was shaking a shimmy, Though they were all in bare skin dressed. Eato was dancing a solo cheek Fairly toddling were all the rest. Apollo of the floor committee Ran up in haste, his mouth a foam: Pipe down, the Chaperones have found you out, Orpheus, play ' Home Sweet Home. ' Page 286 S i ;fir (fr er Rrifi7 ff7 ffir iR? ; Cbe Colonial Ccho. 1921 ?? 5 . College Snapshots , a -fi7« r fi? iS iifr 8ytffr :?fr i Page 287 ■mM mm}umi:M.}iJtM M MMM i: ci)0 Colonial (lBci)0, 1921 I .G.pAv.S- MAN HATERS. Motto — Where singleness is bliss ' Tis folly to he wives Pastime — Dodging ' em Favorite Beverage — Orange Pekoe Tea Song — Just a Little Love, a Little Kiss Hymn — No Not One OFFICERS Baby Jessup President Petite Fristoe Vice-President Sis Pate Secretary Izzy Isley Treasurer MEMBERS Grandma Davis Squelch Mm Benschoten Pre-tensee Lewis Flicker Cuthrell Huckleberry Finn Neilon Mary Bevo Ruffin Cut-up Jenkins Wamp Woodward Bleety Blakey Tootsie Van Laer Page 288 % • - i mMMmmjs dTbt Colonicil Crbo, 1921 A Dilemma 6!. When J bcliDkl the roses sprouting which, Clad in damask mantles, deck the arbors, And then behold your lips where sweet love harbors My eyes present me with a double doubting: For, viewing both alike, hardly my mind supposes Whether the roses be your lips or your lips the roses. Arithmetic ii I I I i He ' s teaching her arithmetic, He said that was his mission. He kissed her once, he kissed her twice. And said, Now that ' s addition. And as he added smack by smack. In silent satisfaction. She sweetly gave him kisses back, And said, Now that ' s subtraction. Then he kissed her and she kissed him, Without any exclamation, Then both together smiled and said, Now that is multiplication. But dad appeared upon the scene, And made a quick decision. He kicked the lad three blocks away And said, That ' s long division. ji rSirm Sr Si ' nu. . Page 289 I MMm mmmmMM Cf)e Colonial (!Bcf)0, 1921 sMM mmsM jfifsffiy ffif jg ftTiW? ! Page 290 €bt Colonial Ccbo, I92i IF ' IW e? Campus Ballads A PROFESSIONAL SECRET? Tradition says that long ago Old Doc did sometimes pass !g Chaps who thought themselves to have a slim and only chance, IJ Exams would shove them upward into the doubtful class, He ' d obligingly lift them off the fence by the slack in the seat of their pants. Now we ' ve often wondered, in our thoughtless, harmless way, What tales Old Doc would tell, what words of wisdom say, If questioned rather closely on his methods of today. Since the coming of the co-eds and their passing his 4-A. TO THE BASHFUL CO-ED I want to meet you ; who are you ? I ' d like to greet you — only you. Like to smooch you, one or two. You are so cute, you, sweet clear thru, Little one, I love you, um-m, like pie, I love you much, but — who am I ? AN EPITAPH ' 3 S3 iai A lovely young lady I mourn in my rhymes ; She was pleasant, good-natured and civil (sometimes) ; Her figure was good, she had very fine eyes. ;|;. And her talk was a mixture of foolish and wise. eJ Her admirers were many, and one of them said: i%, She waltzed rather well — it ' s a pity she ' s dead. i u D ' _ I ' ' ' fc -Page 291 jyiMMMMMMMMMMl! CJ)C C-OlOtliSl (!Bcl)0, 1921 aM2I3?MMJS5H5SinS5SES5SM! It was a beautiful moonlit night and they were strolling slowly along the beach. She: Does the moon affect the tide? Deitz: No, dearest, only the un-tied. The Senior was made to do great things — In fact, all things, both great and small. But why on earth the Freshman was made Cannot be discovered at all. OiMME ft Ciaflf erre ! ' . Hey 17AVi5-(reT To Wor?K Hey AmpreWS - Jiflsy on i!t ' C=l ' c ' K fo: ■I 1?i . Tight customer in the College Shop : Thunder, this is nothing but a ten cent article. Bob Wallace : Yes, but war tax makes it a quarter. From Tyler Annex : When Kipling wrote ■ ' The Light that Failed he must have had in mind the W. M. Power Plant. Page 292 I 1 i 1 i Ti tr$ trSra!tr TrS rrS Tri Tr trSi Cbe Colonial €i:t)o, 1921 We Would Like to Know When Thoqje will cease to love the ladies. When the Profs, will meet all their classes. When Dr. Hall will pull off a new joke. When work will become a pleasure to all students. When Moorman will cease to make debate announcements. When Snyder will stop arguing. When every student will exhibit college spirit. When every seat in Chapel will be tilled. When there will be no mourning or moaning after e.xams. When moonshine will cease to be intoxicating to the love-lorn. When Doc Billups will fail to ring the bell. Due Flanders: Dearest, if I had known this tunnel was so long, I ' d have given you a jolly hug. Mrs. F. ; Didn ' t you? Why, somebody did. n I SOME THINGS ACTUALLY HEARD AT THE LYNCHBURC. COLLEGE FOOTBALL GAME How many quarters do they have in a game? ' Do they start the game all over again after each touch-down? Why does a player limp when his finger is hurt? Wliy do they call the full-back full? Why do they run when the ball is kicked? How many points make a game ? : ■ Due Jessup : What is a poncho ? Due Fristoe: I don ' t know whether it ' s a raincoat or a pony. Due Mary Davis : Get the French dictionary. Holmes: Cheer up. old man, there are just as many good fish in the matrimonial sea as ever were caught. Henpecked Pride : Yes, but my wife won ' t let me go fishing. Old Xegro (with bandaged jaw) : Suh, could you tell me where Dr. Hall lives? Due ' right : Yes, uncle, I can tell you where he lives, but he ain ' t the kind of doctor you think he is. Abernathy : My clutch is awful weak. Mary Weedon: So I have noticed. Prof. Young (discussing heat in physics class) : The lowest freezing point we find in Argon or Helium. Which is it. some of you expert chemists? Belanger: State your question please, Doc. S r ftTTiVT Tt t7 i Page 293 yjU ' MM?4 ! MMMMM MMMMi: Ct)0 CoIOtlial dBcfjO. 1921 si JiS Ji Jii JiM ii Jiii iiiiJi MJi Woman Haters Club Motto — Deliver us from all EVIL. Amen. Drink — Extracts and Hair Tonics of all sorts. Colors — Bolshevicki Red Flour — Gold Medal Brand Gem — Alley Apples (Bricks) Song — Not that we love the ladies less, Nor miss their tender sweet caress — But that we think it for our best To keep away from such a mess. Ours is a life of sweet repose, Whate ' er we do no woman knows ; But should we care for a life of strife, The answer is simple — just take a wife. Rustle, rustle, little skirt. As you go tripping by; Some other hearts you ' ll maybe hurt. But you ' ll never catch our eye. Co-eds may come and co-eds may go. They can have the other fellow — But we want the whole darn world to know, That we ' ll smile on forever. ?; s? fs ?B«ste iffly?f!y Page i -Duke-White. S 7ti i7 irii t7rT v ' Ti ' i?Tri7 ' riV? a ' i7 ' ht tiC r?: r, r. Tiff t ■• Yi % Ti ti iikv ' maMMMy Cbe Coloniiil Cc!)o, 1921 5? Fireman ' s Club Color — Kcd Motto — Let your clothes shine Drink — Cherry Smash Dorothy Reeve Flames Cynthia Coleman Fire Chief Sister ' Jennings Big Hose Sgiiirtcr MoNcuRE Helen Johnson Little Hose Squirter Mavis Taylor Siren Pinky Owen 1 Red Joyner [• Panicky Crowd Hancock J BLAZES IN FACULTY Misses Gallagher and Shotwell 3 I Barnyard Club Motto — Be a Bird Flower — Larks fi u r Pastime — Crowing on turkey trotting 5 MEMBERS I ' roud Peacock Reggie Kenney Cutest Due Doyle Loudest Due Mary Lee Perry L ' gly Duckling Flicky Harwood Bantam Rooster Garland Pollard Bantam Hen Eloise Cave Goose Thorpus Percellus Turkey Gobbler Socrates Moorman Guinea Inger Scheie Wild Due Red Moncure Biddies. . . .Betty Sue Jessup. Anne Trundle Chicken House Tyler Hall I -. • ' j s i iffl ' rajriBriBAfirS: Page 295 ■ mmmmmMmmMi msMM}: Ci)C Colonial (2Bci)0, 1921 mMMM Mm! smmm MjriJi I M William and Mary As She Looks to Most of Us Statistics of our School as Compiled by Deep Thinker Total number of men students 285 Total number that smoke 273 Total number that preach against it 2 Total number that can dance 13 Total number that think they can 285 Total number that are good looking 2 Total number that think they are 283 Total number that have a line the ladies believe 10 Total number that think they are lady killers 279 (Other 6 are married.) Total number that use cigarettes 273 Total number that buy cigarettes 7 Total number that expect to become famous 285 Total number of women students 181 Total number that claim to be vamps 181 Total number who are 3 Total number of women with cootie garages 166 (Rest have bobbed hair.) Total number who claim to be good looking 181 Total number who are 19 Total number of couples who think they are in love 11 Total number that think this is rotten 465 Total number that think this is fine i Page 2H6 1 svtJ 1tr 1rr• m r( M ) 1:r« ty« 1 i hs i t?i( t7irt)® E - Cbe Colonial Ccbo, 1921 Ravings of a DUccess I dedicate this poetry To a little boy named Scrap He is so bloomin ' cute that I ' d like to sit on his lap. He ' s afraid of all the ladies, And especially poor me, The only time he ' ll dance with me Is when he ' s on a spree. I hope I ' m not so awful That I scare poor Scrap away, If I am, maybe in the future, I ' ll change my scary way. Yours V.I. P. S.— Dear Scrap, I beg— I plead that my poetry you won ' t show, and if you ' ll tear it up right now I ' ll never write no mo. V. ■ He is lank and he is lean, His brothers call him Chili Bean ; He smokes a pipe which I adore, Each time I see him I love him more ; His hair is curly, his eyes are blue. If you knew him you ' d love him too ; Now see if you can guess his name, If you can ' t I ' m not to blame, For to describe him I ' ve done my best, I ' ll leave it to vou to do the rest. Page 297 [ j LaMiypiJ. ' ' MMMiUi:iutM}Uj ' iU5gg J)0 (ILoIoniSl (ZBcbO 1921 MMJ J MMM ' MMM MMM S SX: Colonial Echo Election Best All Around College Man Settle 89 Duke 63 Best All Around College Girl Flippo 77 Tuthill 64 Best Football Player White loi Jones 100 Best Basketball Player C. Pierce 107 Cooke 89 Best Baseball Player Settle 98 Chandler 57 Best Business Man Duke . Lyons 89 42 Best Dancer (Girl) Tuthill 29 Tatem 27 Best Dancer (Man) Johnston 36 Christian 27 Most Popular Man Settle 30 Bland 24 Most Popular Girl Tuthill 32 Wadsworth 25 Most Eccentric Man A. W. Johnson 60 Moorman 26 Biggest Tobacco Bum C. Pierce 20 Thompson 19 Biggest Loafer Justis 35 Swain 28 Biggest Bow-Wow Lowe 15 Hoskins 12 Biggest Grind {Man) Fulcher 82 Burfoot 52 Biggest Grind (Girl) Burke 33 Berger 16 Biggest Calico Sport Morrisette 20 Swain 16 Handsomest Man Harwood 40 Bridges 22 - Prettiest Girl M. Wadsworth 31 E. Wadsworth 31 Ideal Professor Gooch 39 Williams 23 The A ' cvkivardest Man Moorman 30 Bedsaull 27 Dill Picker Burfoot 48 Zirkle 24 ' 13 ii 8 Page 2Si! fir fiy ffi O? t7Tn-Ti iTT- r, r, tt ■- r: t -■ ■- 1 ' TTn7i WV? fJirifira ' T.- ' 1 i 5} I 5j CI)c Colonial (JBrbo, 1921 Tightest Man Moore 73 Owen 2,3 Laziest Man Chisholm 34 Custis 21 Heftiest Line Harper 31 Moorman 20 Greenest Due BedsauU 81 Jenkins 20 Nuisance Purcell 53 Moorman 17 It Cline 39 Dietz 23 Most Athletic Man Jones 96 Cooke 21 Most Athletic Girl Flippo 79 Barksdale 42 Most Original Davis 35 White 25 Wittiest White 37 Schenck 29 I I A 1 E sa g ■«Sf6S( XreSri ' iiiisr riXtiiSriSrtCirimSXfS SisXfi Page 299 ji ' Jimmmm iiyiMMMMMK ByB! Ci)0 COlOlU ' dl (2ECt)0, 1921 JiMMMMMMMMMM: iJi ' iM -i I Page 3C0 I jQr QraMrariQnfrarfljnQra Cf)c Colonial Crbo, 1921 Do Unto Others As You Would Have Them Do Unto You There ain ' t no place like home, is what they used to say, but if you haven ' t an ivory dome you use your head today. The fellows that made this book took all kinds of pains to gather these ads, so take a look and turn our losses to gains. Remem- ber, fellows, that all the ads help to make up the book by-gads — we asked for aid which they kindly gave, now altogether, studes, let ' s give ' em our trade. W. Kind reader, don ' t forget that these advertisements mean not only a lot to us but also a lot to you. Read them over care- fully and patronize them whenever possible. Do unto others as you woidd have them do unto you. They have helped us: surely we shall help them. Page 301 J MMM MMSmm MMS Cj|)C COiOlliclI (CcijO, 1921 mMMMJiMMMMMMMJiM g ' ESTABLISHED 1618 mtkmtn ' s ixvnis in MADISON AVENUE COR. FORTY-FOURTH STREET NEW YORK Telephone Murray Hill 8800 This is a complete Establishment operated con- tinuously for more than one hundred years under the same name and still in the control of the direct descendants of the founders. We specialize in the outfitting of Men and Boys from Head to Foot with Garments and Accesories for Every Requirement of Day or Evening Wear DRESS, BUSINESS, TRAVEL OR SPORT. Illustrated Catalogue on Request BOSTON Tremontcor. Boylstom N EWPORT 220 BELLEVUE AVENUE BROOKS BROTHERS ' New Building, convenient to Grand Central, Subway, and to many of the leading Hotels and Clubs. WHEN GOOD CLOTHES MEAN MUCH-- Figure out what good appearance means to you. You ' ll appreciate then how little good clothes cost. For that well-dressed feeling we suggest Society Brand Clothes. They give you all that good taste demands — and at reasonable prices. Our assortment will please you. i I STYLE HEADQUARTERS where Otitt Brand (Hlothea aresold GARNER CO., Inc. WILLIAMSBURG, VIRGINIA Page 302 . S3 sa   a rr Vi V v« 1iY sr ' «  rr lV(i T«hT(S tr« t tri T Tr Tri t«v , 7 €i)t Coloiiitil C-ff)0, 1921 n gs I? 6, 1 CASSEY ' S Two Stores ' ' Headquarters William and Mary Students t H _ 1 TENNIS DRUG STORE Clyde W. Tennis, Proprietor •« The Drug Store for College Men and Women • Meet Me on the Comer Dont Forget the Movies Course at the PALACE NO EXAMINATIONS Valuable instruction in NEWS, TOPICS, ETIQUETTE and other things Harry Hundley, Professor Williamsburg, Va. ♦♦ Class Begins at 7:30 Sharp Tuition, 25c ■+ THE GRAHAM COMPANY, Inc; QUALITY SHOE SHOP The only Exclusive Shoes Store in the city All the Latest Styles in Men ' s and Womens ' Shoes The Best Shoes for the Least Money Williamsburg, Va. Page 303 ' JlMMMMMMMMMM mm i)t COlOtlial (IBCl)0, 1921 SU!MM}:iSMMMM}l i!: MAM. ' i 1 J. E. Capps H. W. Vaden R. A. Jones CAPPS, VADEN JONES District Managers Pacific Mutual Life Insurance Company OF CALIFORNIA Unlimited opportunities for the young man who is willing to work. If you are interested in a real man ' s work and in earning a good income, see us at 608-10-12 Flatiron Bldg. or 201 First Nat ' l Bank Bldg. Norfolk, Virginia Newport News, Virginia H. S. Fentress E. A. Stephens W. M. Hope Special Representatives Mrs. H. E. Bennett Geo. Williams A. S. Browne, Jr. E. T. Terrell Wm. F. Thompson J. F. Johnson LIFE ACCIDENT HEALTH Page 304 msm C1)C Colonirtl (!Bff)o, Q2 P ' } } li Start Your Business Career with a Bank Account Accounts of Young Men Invited Four Per Cent Paid on Savings Deposits The Trust Company of Norfolk, Va. RESOURCES OVER S2,500,000 The S. GALESKI OPTICAL CO. ! I Leading and Largest Optical { House South I GOOD FOR THE EYES ! i Kodak Headquarters Developing and Printing I i 1 i J ! +- Main and 8th Sts Richmond. Va. 223 E. Broad St Richmond, Va. 273 Granby St Norfolk, Va. 211 Jefferson St Roanoke. Va. 520 Main St Danville, Va. it5 Rr iS1i i ' ' SB? ig nra g? ' QAffiy I FERGUSON Print Shop Opposite Post Office Phone 111 Commercial Job Printing and Stationery Williamsburg, Va. G. MULLEN Dealer in DRY GOODS NOTIONS Williamsburg, Va. Millinery and Notions MRS. J. L. SLATER Williamsburg, Va. Eat, Drink and Be Merry There is Only One Way to Do That in Williamsburg MEET ME AT THE NORFOLK CAFE For Ladies and Gentlemen .4ngelo Coslas, Prop. I - SzsiBSi? a li il Page 305 ' M xsm ' xsmMmMm m mmm Cjbc Colonial (2Bci)0, 1921 if MMMJ:-M!M;iJi ' Ui.ms ' MM 0 +..- THE E. B. TAYLOR COMPANY 1011 East Main Street :: 1010-1012 East Gary Street 13-15-17 West Broad Street RICHMOND, VIRGINIA We Carry Extensive Lines of DINNERWARE, FANCY CHINA, CUT GLASS, NICKEL-PLATED WARES, SILVERWARE, CLOCKS AND HOUSE FURNISHINGS, TOYS, DOLLS, WAGONS, VELOCIPEDES We cater especially to Schools, Hotels and Hospitals, and are prepared to supply COMPLETE DINING-ROOM AND KITCHEN EQUIPMENT Write Us for Quotations MAIL ORDERS GIVEN CAREFUL ATTENTION WHEN IN RICHMOND, MAKE YOUR HEADQUARTERS AT EITHER OF OUR STORES YOU ARE WELCOME Nelson S. Groom, President W. F. Darling, Vice-President The Bank of Hampton, Va. HAMPTON, VIRGINIA Solicits the Accounts of Banks, Banking Houses, Corporations and Individuals Capital, $ 100,000.00 Surplus Profits, $ 250,000.00 Resources, $3,000,000.00 A Progressive Bank with Progressive Management M. C. Armstrong J. B. Kimberley W. F. Darling A. Howe DIRECTORS W. W. Richardson Nelson S. Groome H. R. Houston Harry H. Holt J. C. Robinson J. T. Lee W. F. Face,Cas iier w f ? ' S yt ft ii ? i ' g !ff ffiy i Page 306 hl.-) l tr(tvt«vt« iyivtr a«(i:rsvl  t3ivb ti fi£ t3 t?£ I Ct)C (Colonial €-cf)o, 1921 W. IB, I + — . + HOTEL RUEGER 9Th and Bank Street RICHMOND. VA. European Plan for Ladies and Gentlemen NOTED FOR ITS FOOD Street Cars from all Depots and Boat Landin Direct to Hotel Capital, $1,000,000.00 Surplus and Profits, $1,150,000.00 Organized 1885 The Norfolk National Bank 242 MAIN STREET NORFOLK, VA. A Progressive Bank Invites Youn Accounts, Offering Intelligent Service and Care- ful Attention to Details + 4. ■ •— — + THE COLLEGE SHOP RIGHT ON THE CORNER Ideal Location — Beautiful Scenery Pool, Billiard and Shoe Shine Parlor Adjoining We Put Out a Good Line of All Sorts Sporting Returns Music While You Eat or Loaf Quick Service — Polite Attention R. P. WALLACE J. CHINQUAPIN JAS. G. DRIVER M: vjESZSQSSSSv ' Page 307 Cfte Colonial OBcfjo, 1921 m J Hotel Warwick 5 BEST ON THE HOTEL WARWICK. NEWrORT NEWS, VIROINIA VIRGIJSIA PENINSULA Restaurant Open All Day Rooms $1.50 and Up J. M. DERR, Manager WILLIAMSBURG DRUG COMPANY REXALL STORE We Carry a Full Line of FOUNTAIN DRINKS, CIGARS AND SUNDRIES Agents for GUTHS and LIGGETTS CANDIES Your Trade Solicited Incorporated 1832 The Virginia Fire and Marine Insurance Co. 1015 East Main Street RICHMOND, - - - VIRGINIA WM. H. PALMER President E. B. ADDISON Vice-President B. C. LEWIS, Jr Secretary J. C. WATSON Treasurer J. W. LEAKE General Agent -H. siSg taviS8vta ft8 i; t i:?8 T)r8 irr8 y« ' ir 8 ir 8 T.-r8v Tii ' ff ' i y sijijritsgfifis iife Page 308 Cbr Colonial Crbo. 1921 IK ' n I Mail Or ders Given Prompt Attention O ' NEILL - BARRY COMPANY INCORPORATED Sporting Goods Baseball, Tennis and Aililetir Supplies, Guns .ind Ammunition Full Line Amateur Photograph Supplies, Printing and Developing a Specialty 211-213 Main Street Norfolk, Virginia j PENINSULA BANK TRUST CO. I W illiamsburg, Virginia Prompt Service Courteous Treatment Your Account Solicited City and State Depository Branches: Toano and Yorktown Capitol and Surplus, $120,000 K m ' 5 ' ; i I IMEDICAL COLLEGE OF VIRGINIA MEDICINE : : PHARMACY DENTISTRY Stuart McGuire, M. D. New College Building completely equipped with modern Labora- tories. Extensive Dispensary service. Hospital facilities furnished four hundred clinical beds; individual instruction; expecienced faculty; practical curriculum, 83rd session. For Cataloge and Information Address: J. R. McCAULEY, Secretary 1150 E.AST Clay Street Richmond, Virginia I tre Trs sr ti TnMrt trs Tr Trg ve Ut t PaceSM MlJMMMMMMMMM g CJ)e ColOHial Ccl)0, 1921 ' SMMMi mmJlMMMMMMm i 1 R. L. Christian Co. 514 East Broad Street RICHMOND, :: VIRGINIA FANCY GROCERS Agents for Page Shaw ' s Candies Curers of Gordon Smitlifield Hams MAIL ORDERS SOLICITED a ?i !g iag ffiy fi? Page 310 ' Clje Colonial (Crfjo, I92i 1 KINGAN ' S Meats and Lard are Finest Quality ' ' RELIABLE SLICED BACON RELIABLE and F. F. V. HAMS KINGAN CO., Richmond, Virginia When You Go to the Post-Office REMEMBER— GROCERY STORE Former Co-Operative Always Stocked with GOOD FRUIT, CAKE, CANDY, ETC. FENNE SCHEIE Proprietors •+ •t i i THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK NEWPORT NEWS, VIRGINIA No bank can desire a better advertisement than a reputation for Satisfactory Service. This bank has earned such a reputation and maintains it. We invite you to investigate. RESOURCES OVER $6,000,000.00 OFFICERS H. L. Ferguson President J. K. SwiNERTON T ' ice-President Saxon W. Holt Vice-President J. A. WiLLETT Active Vice-President S. H. Plummer Cashier W. A. Shell Assistant Cashier D. L. DowMNT. Assistant Cashier Page 3U Cfje Colonial (Ccfjo, 1921 mmmmmmmmmmmm Murphy ' s Hotel and Annex RICHMOND, VIRGINIA The Only Hotel in This City ivith Garage Attached HEADQUARTERS FOR COLLEGE MEN This new Hotel is now open to the public, and it is the largest and most modem house south of New York. This house is located on direct car lines to all railroad stations. And it is famous for its excellent Sun-bridge and Mezzanine Parlors. EUROPEAN PLAN WRITE FOR BOOKLET WILLIAM AND MARY GRADUATES have been our best clients. We have placed many in excellent positions. If you teach, we can help you. Ask for literature. THREE OFFICES ONE ENROLLMENT Southern Teachers Agency W. H. Jones, Manager COLUMBIA, S. C. RICHMOND, VA. CHATTANOOGA, TENN. Page 313 iffii ' ifr ' «™i; 7 Cl)c Colonitil Ocbo, 1921 ?? ' r: ' . |l ? I !!:• 1 The William Byrd Press PRINTERS 1430-34 East Franklin Street Richmond, Va. We printed this issue of The Colonial Echo At Your Service Always i t M  tri rit rra trs tia tr  7ri tA 7rs ttit tr gjSiMSgBffi iffi ' ag ' sgyff ST i : Page 313 giy tajoua au iyiiMMiui MMiuiiu iig Cf)0 Colonial (ZBci)0, 1921 ' JMMMMM MMM - jjf WILLIAMSON ' S SHOE COMPANY Shoes for College Men Good Shoes at Attractive Prices For All Kinds of Feet EXCEPTIONAL VALUES TO ALL COLLEGE STUDENTS Washington Avenue, - - - Newport News, Virginia Your Book of Knowledge I KNOW ? What do you know? Have you learned the first lesson of wealth? It is not easy to learn, but it pays large rewards. Learn this lesson and wealth is yours: BANK EVERY DAY A PART OF THE MONEY YOU MAKE THE VIRGINIA NATIONAL BANK OF NORFOLK, VIRGINLV Stop at THE ATLANTIC HOTEL WHEN IN NORFOLK, VIRGINIA Theo. Barrow, Manager IN THE HEART OF THE CITY MODERN IN EVERY DETAIL FREE SHOWER BATHS ON ALL FLOORS Rates: Single, $2.00 and Up. Double, $3.00 and Up. Page 314 Cbr Colonial (i:;ffjo, l92l I I + 4 ' Hotel Williamsburg Opposite Courthouse Williamsburg, Va. All American Service Special Service to Automobile Parties Geo. S. Martin, Prop. W. A. HILL HIGH CLASS BARBER That ' s Air Stearns Building NEWPORT NEWS, VA. Elite Millinery and Fashion Shop Modish Outer Garments Women, Misses, Juniors and Children C. Lumsden Son Jewelers and Silversmiths Diamonds — Watches — Jewell School and Athletic Medals Class Rings PRIZE CUPS 731 Main St. Richmond, Va. STOP AT STUMPF Eighth and Main Sts., Richmond, Va. Excellent Service and Reasonable Rates A Good Place to Meet Your Friends R. V. Richardson Construction Company HAMPTON, VIRGINIA Pige 315 ynyiiiyHU ' MMMiyJjyiMiyMi! 2rf)0 ColOUial vJBchO, 1921 MM iM iMMMMMMMS MRS. COOK ' S CAFETERIA 805-807 EAST GRACE ST., OPPOSITE HOTEL RICHMOND I 3 % n did Food and Service j I We Are Known For Our Splen- i i I i l- S J Use This Trade Mark as a Guide to Better Food CAFETERIA ' eV ood t tc tAin Schmelz National Bank NEWPORT NEWS, VIRGINIA Strongest Bank in the City Ample Security Superior Service 4 Per Cent on Savings LANGLEY HOTEL HAMPTON, VIRGINIA Catering to Refined Patronage And Our Rates Are Reasonable I ftirr 1 S tW ti« Tr«I)S 1l S ftSvtl« 1fi« tr ftS ftS TrS Wi t« 1 ' T Cfte Colonial €cJ)o, 1921 ? — + +- J. B. PADGETT ! Dry Cleaning, Pressing ami Dyeing Clothes Called For and Delivered Our Readers are Kindly Aeked to Patronize the Dew Drop Iim The Home of Good Eats ' ' All work guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction Operated by Misses Holman ' s, Dennis, Blakey, Cashion, Jacob, Hamilton, Scheie, Stratton, Waters, Hutchins and Co. 1 ■ 1860 1920 60th year J. Chambers Bristow General Agent Home Life Insurance Co. of New York 101213 Mutual Building Richmond, Va. O Students desiring to enter the busi- ness during vacation or permanently, please write for particulars. GARDNER T. BROOKS, Local Agent Williamsburg, Va. T. ROGERS Cleaning, Pressing and Repairing ALL WORK CALLED FOR AND DELIVERED Ladies ' Work a Specialty All Work Guaranteed i ! -+ + — ■ - . -ifr fl71fty fi i ? fti ftFg ' ' 3! 1 age 317 i p Ci)e Colonial Ccbo, 1921 mmu mjiMMMMM MMMs HENRY BINNS COMMERCIAL PHOTOGRAPHY A complete line of Snapshots covering every phase of college life — athletics, campus scenes, dramatics — and then some that are unclassified. Better come down and see these. DEVELOPING AND PRINTING O. B. EAST, Student Representative WILLIAMSBURG :: VIRGINIA S3 .si si Page 318 T Cbe Colonirtl OBcbo, 1921 s IK ' s i c. ff ftfx-fty fi r Rf fir ftf Of Sft Srt ftS T« Taf T T S T«M«f( Pase 319 j UiiXIi]UmmWiMJ. iMX MiUiMM S Cf)0 Colonial (CCt)0, 1921 BS35gMMjyjjytMMMM MMi Uj , Cheyne ' s Studio in Hampton Come to see us. We make you beautiful, and if you are already beautiful we make you more beautiful. There is always room for improvement because we do our work right and with the greatest skill and pains of artists who have spent their entire hfe at this kind of work. We guarantee to satisfy you in every respect. Ask the students at William and Mary CoUege-they know. We ask for no better advertisement than the pictures contained herein. We took them all. Come to see us. E. C. CHEYNE HAMPTON :: :: VIRGINIA ! 1 in s2 Page 320 J €bt Colonial «l£rl)o, 1921 mmmmK-. What Is Research? SUPPOSE that a stove burns too much coal for the amount of heat that it radiates. The manufacturer hires a man famiUar with the principles of combus- tion and heat radiation to make experiments which will indicate desirable changes in design. The stove selected as the most efficient is the result of research. Suppose that you want to make a ruby in a factory — not a mere imitation, but a real ruby, indistinguishable by any chemical or physical test from the natural stone. You begin by analyzing rubies chemically and physically. Then you try to make rubies just as nature did, with the same chemicals and under similar conditions. Your rubies are the result of research — research of a different type from that required to improve the stove. Suppose, as you melted up your chemicals to produce rubies and experimented with high temperatures, you began to wonder how hot the earth must have been millions of years ago when rubies were first crystallized, and what were the forces at play that made this planet what it is. You begin an investigation that leads you far from rubies and causes you to formulate theories to explain how the earth, and, for that matter, how the whole solar system was created. That would be research of a still different type — pioneering into the unknown to satisfy an insatiable curiosity. Research of all three types is conducted in the Laboratories of the General Electric Company. But it is the third type of research — pioneering into the unknown — that means most, in the long run, even though it is undertaken with no practical benefit in view. At the present time, for example, the Research Laboratories of the General Electric Company are exploring matter with X-rays in order to discover not only how the atoms in different substances are arranged but how the atoms themselves are built up. The more you know about a substance, the more you can do with it. Some day this X-ray work will enable scientists to answer more definitely than they can now the question: Why is iron magnetic? And then the electrical industry will take a great step forward, and more real progress will be made in five years than can be made in a century of experimenting with existing electrical apparatus. You can add wings and stories to an old house. But to build a new house, you must begin with the foundation. Office COmnipaiW Sche General lenectady, N. Y. x-m-B S ir« iy M-fS  t s t iT« fii?r«;T7« - Page 321 mmmmMJi ' m ' ' Xmm t t Colonial (Cff)0, 1921 gMMOAAiL FiUeuMMM iUfMiue i j O. A. MEISTER G. R. SMETHIE MEISTER SMETHIE Bookbinders Blank Book Manufacturers Loose Leaf Sheet to Order Gold Lettering and Stamping College Annuals Law Books Magazines 105-107 Governor St. - - - Richmond, Va. We bound this Annual. Note workmanship Telephone, Hampton No. 3 Deliver by C. O. Ry. or Barge SAND AND GRAVEL J. V. BICKFORD BUILDING MATERIAL Terms Cash Roofing, Pilch, Stone. Bricfc, Cement. Lime. Plaster, Sewer Pipe, Building Tile anil Fire Brick HAMPTON, ms i wmmm tr Sf tmfm!rSimimmissi(!Si! Page 322


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College of William and Mary - Colonial Echo Yearbook (Williamsburg, VA) online collection, 1918 Edition, Page 1

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College of William and Mary - Colonial Echo Yearbook (Williamsburg, VA) online collection, 1919 Edition, Page 1

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College of William and Mary - Colonial Echo Yearbook (Williamsburg, VA) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 1

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College of William and Mary - Colonial Echo Yearbook (Williamsburg, VA) online collection, 1924 Edition, Page 1

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