College of William and Mary - Colonial Echo Yearbook (Williamsburg, VA)
- Class of 1939
Page 1 of 278
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 278 of the 1939 volume:
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. ' ' r3u: 3r— .73 — tV ' . ' ■) . Ml ' v ' l !): ' . . ' ! - - --: ' v;: lllPiT :mm : lVf n Tm , P--Jrz)33:: = =J-:z:-ij 3 rnrii ■_::); i ; , ' 1 mi m -ii ri . ' - « WV t ' .r ? r r : V . O. ; ;,_: •i? Y?:i i -J -J slfft flli • -- ,. ' ■' T :- r Jr fl HUiM p|?IH;3na ifHH iKiii ' V ' .V ' -;f ' .V llirAft. u«ij| ( : ' iMv. L ' ' .. ' fii;pi ' ■j uniLi 33 tf a . zcy Cmionialy Ccyruy mrvfiEEW • iHiRfY-mwE rRAWH D tMROSCH, III, Editor • YHOS. C. HELmiCH, Manager a ffji YU U T ' ' ■' ' i ' ? t ' ' ' r ' ' ■' • ' ' ■: ■V A ' ■f ' t ' ' Ti ' l K , ' ■t ' ' ' ' ■' ' v ' ' ' ' ' ' ; ' ;■[ ' T ' ' ' ' ' J ' ' v ' |j ' ' i ' f ?v ' j! ' J7v JS T:- 1 f BSBF am-ii r- . • 1 1 11 I r; I?- -i- i 1 1 L p 1 - |g|r tranu iL PUBLic iiioii or ihe colleoe or wiLLi m m m iry liliil il§BUR«. 1 IReiWI .-.sagsiste,. J lilE§ WliHiraSOW MILLER J). EAN OF THE FACULTY OF THE COLLEGE OF WILLIAM AND MARY. WE DEDICATE THIS 1939 COLONIAL ECHO AS A SINCERE EXPRESSION OF THE ESTEEM IN WHICH HE IS HELD BY THE STU- DENT BODY FOR HIS FRESH VIGOR IN THE CLASSROOM, FOR HIS DISARM- INGLY GENUINE NATURE. AND FOR HIS YOUTHFUL SINCERITY. DURING HIS BRIEF STAY ON CAMPUS, HE HAS WON A WARM PLACE IN THE HEARTS OF ALL WHO KNOW HIM. Cai¥El¥§ BOOK ONE • • • COLLEGE BOOK TWO • • • CLASSES BOOK THREE • • ATHLETICS BOOK FOUR • FRATERNITIES BOOK FIVE • ORGANIZATIONS BOOK SIX • • • FEATURES a-OAi v (;hen enough time has passed to dim the memory of the years at william and mary. it is hoped that this colonial echo will serve to recall every precious moment to you. in preparing this volume. the material was selected that would most vividly portray the events which we feel were representative of this year. AND INSTEAD OF MEMORIES GROWING DIMMER. MAY THIS BOOK KEEP THEM CONSTANTLY FRESH BEFORE YOU. IT IS WITH THIS PURPOSE IN VIEW THAT THE 1939 COLONIAL ECHO HAS BEEN PUBLISHED. % he College of William and Mary, char- tered in 1693, is the second oldest college in this country. Founded with the purpose of bringing a higher education to a struggling young country, it now carries on its tradition in a mature nation by turning out men and women who will be good citizens and leaders. . sr«r K • ••v t-  f ' i ' tA l (A 1 ; ♦• C f iii In Memori i Peter Paul Peebles and Greta Gra on J he vine covered buildings, the shaded brick walks, and many vistas of impressing beauty, are but the outward symbols of the true life and spirit of the college which flow in a deeper and hidden vein. JOHN STEWART BRYAN • PRESIDENT liJ. HEN a class graduates, a new door is opened through which there is no returning. Like any other violent change, this severing of accustomed bonds has in it both a sense of loss and the exciting stimulus of novelty. No matter how happy and peaceful college life may be, we all know — faculty and students — that no one can remain an under- graduate forever and keep on growing. Equal- ly deep is the certainty that he who would have the fullness of life must have the fullness of opportunity to fall as well as the chance to rise. Here at William and Mary the class of 1939 has had a foretaste of honors and successes, of trials and disappointments. The world outside can only intensify these experiences; it cannot essentially change them. But William and Mary, in its influence and training, can and does give to its students the will to go forward, the courage to endure, the power to rise, and the resilience to recover. There is no substitute for the will to win, and no energy can replace indomitable spirit. That is what Edmund Burke meant when he cried, as the class of 1939 must cry in its day and generation: Let us pass on! In God ' s name, Let us pass on! John Stewart Bryan [21] BOARD OF VISITORS James Hardv Dillard Rector GEORCt Walter Mapp Vice-Rector To March 7, 1940 Alvan Herbert Foreman Norfolk, Virginia Lui.u D. Metz Manassas, Virginia A. Obici Suffolk, Virginia Gabriella Pace Riclimond, Virginia John Archer Wilson Roanoke, Virginia To March 7, 1942 James Hardy Dillard Charlottesville, Virginia J. Gordon Bohannan Petersburg, Virginia George Walter Mapp Accomac, Virginia Homer Lenoir Ferguson Newport News, Virginia Channing Moore Hall Williamsburg, Virginia The State Superintendent of Public Instruction Ex-Offkio Sidney B. Hall Richmond, Virginia Secretary to the Board of Visitors CiiARi es J. Duke Williamsburg, Virginia 122] OFFICERS OF ADMINISTRATION John Stewart Bryan M.A., LL.B., LiTT.D., LL.D. President of the College James W. Miller, Ph.D. Dean of the Faculty Charles J. Duke, Jr., B.S. Bursar and Assistant to President Theodore S. Cox, A.B., LL.B. Dean of the Department of Jurisprudence Albion Guilford Taylor, Ph.D. Assistant Dean of the Marshall- fFythe School of Gov- ernment and Citizenship and Head of the Department of Economics K. J. Hoke, Ph.D. Dean of the Summer Session and Head of the Department of Education Grace Warren Landrum, Ph.D. Dean of Women J. Wilfred Lambert, A.B. Dean of Men E. G. SwEM, A.M., Litt.D. Librarian Marguerite Wynne-Roberts, B.S. As sistant Dean of Women John E. Hocutt, B.S., M.Sc. Assistant Dean of Men Kathleen Alsop, A.B. Registrar Vernon L. Nunn, B.S. Auditor [2}] JAMES W. MILLER Dean of the Faculty OFFICERS OF INSTRUCTION John Stewart Bryan B.A., M.A., LL.B., Litt.D., LL.D. President Daniel James Blocker B.A., M.A., B.D., D.D. Professor of Sociology Theodore Sullivan Cox B.A., LL.B. Professor of furisprudence Lillian A. Cummings B.A., M.A. Professor of Home Economics Donald Walton Davis B.A., Ph.D. Professor of Biology John Roberts Fisher B.A., M.A., Ph.D. Professor of Modern Languages Wayne Fulton Gibbs B.S., M.S., C.P.A. Professor of Accountancy William George Guy N.B., B.Sc, B.A., Ph.D. Professor of Chemistry Inga Olla Helseth B.A., M.A., Ph.D. Professor of Education Kremer J. Hoke B.A., M.A., Ph.D. Professor of Education Jess Hamilton Jackson B.A., M.A., Ph.D. Professor of English John Rochelle Lee Johnson B.A., M.A. Professor of English L. Tucker Jonbs B.S. Professor of Physical Education Grace Warren Landrum B.A., M.A., Ph.D. Professor of English Charles Franklin Marsh B.A., M.A., Ph.D. Professor of Economics Richard Lee Morton B.A., M.A., Ph.D., Litt.D. Professor of History William Warner Moss, Jr. . B.A., M.A., Ph.D. Professor of Government James Ernest Pate B.A., M.A., Ph.D. Professor of Political Science Robert Gilchrist Robb B.A., B.S., M.A., ScD. Professor of Organic Chemistry Archie Garnett Ryland B.A., M.A., Ph.D. Professor of French Shirley Donald Southworth B.A., M.A., Ph.D. Professor of Economics John Minor Stetson B.A., Ph.D. Professor of Mathematics Charles H. Stone B.S., M.A., B.L.S. Professor of Library Science Earl Gregg Sweh B.A., M.A., Litt.D. Librarian Albion Guilford Taylor B.A., M.A., Ph.D. Professor of Political Economy Anthony Pelzer Wagener B.A., Ph.D. Profesior of Ancient Languages Helen Foss Weeks B.S., M.A., Ph.D. Professor of Education Dudley Warner Woodbridge B.A.. J.D. Professor of furisprudence Roscoe Conkling Young B.A., B.S., M.A., Ph.D. Professor of Physics George H. Armacost B.A., M.A. Associate Professor of Education Martha Elizabeth Barksdale O.D., B.A., M.A. Associate Professor of Physical Education James David Carter, Jr B.A., Doctcur de TUnivcidte de Toulouse A ssociate Professor of French Joseph C. Chandler B.S., M.A. Associate Professor of Physical Education Graves Glenwood Clark LL.B., B.A., M.A. A ssociate Professor of Enjtt. h Hibbert Dell Corey B.A., M.A. Associate Professor of Economics Charles Duncan Gregory B.S., M.A. A ssociate Professor of Mathematics Charles Trawick Harrison B.A., M.A., Ph.D. Associate Professor of English Andrew Edward Harvey B.A., Ph.D. Associate Professor of Modern Languages Althea Hunt B.A., M.A. Associate Professor of Arts of the Theater Victor Iturraldb B.A., Doctur en Letras, University of Madrid Associate Professor of Spanish and French W. Melville Jones BA., M.A. Associate Profes:or of English Ben Clyde McCary B.A., Doctcur de I ' Univerrite de Toulouce A ssociate Profes: or of French Donald Meiklejohn B.A., Ph.D. Associate Professor of Philosophy William Walter Merrymon B.A., M.A., Ph.D. Associate Professor of Physics James Wilkinson Miller B.A., M.A., Ph.D. Associate Professor of Philosophy Peter Paul Peebles B.A., B.S., M.A., B.L.. LL M. Associate Professor of jurisprudence Beulah Russell B.A., M.A. Associate Professor of Mathematics George M. Small Mus.B. Associate Professor of Mutic J. WiLi-RED Lambert Dean of Men Grace Warren Landrum Dean of Women [241 Jban J. Stewart B.S., M.A. Associate Professor of Home Economics T. J. Stubbs, Jr B.A., M.A. Associate Professor of History Raymond Leech Taylor B.S., M.S., Sc.D. A ssociate Professor of Biology Kathleen Alsop B.A. Assistant Professor of Secretarial Science Alfred R. Armstrong B.S., M.A. Assistant Professor of Chemistry Roy Phillip Ash B.A., M.A.. Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Biology J. G. Baldwin, Jr B.A.. Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Biology Grace J. Blank A.B. Assistant Professor of Biology M. Eugene Borish B.A., M.A., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of English Leslie Cheek, Jr B.S., B.F.A. Assistant Professor of Fine Arts Ramon G. Douse B.Mus.. M.Mus. Assistant Professor of Music Harold Lees Fowler B.A., M.A., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of History Mae Graham B.A., B.S. Assistant Professor of Library Science Francis Samuel Haserot B.S., M.A., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Philosophy Richard Hubard Henneman B.A., M.A., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Psychology Lionel H. Laing B.A., M.A., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Government J. Wilfred Lambert B.A. Assistant Professor of Psycholoi;y Lucille Lowry B.S. Assistant Professor of Physical Education William R. Richardson B.A., M.A., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of English George J. Ryan B.A., M.A., Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Ancient Languages Sharvy G. Umbeck B.A., M.A. Assistant Professor of Sociology Alma Wilkin B.S., M.A. Assistant Professor of Home Economics Emily Eleanor Calkins B.A. Instructor in Mathematics Otis W. Douglas, Jr B.S. Instructor in Physical Education; Supervisor of Intramurals Irma Devillers Earp .... Graduate of Cincinnati Conservatory of Music; Student at Fontainebleau Conservatory of Music Instructor in Piano William L. Duncan B.S., M.A. Instructor m Chemistry JOSEPH R. Flickinger B.S., Instructor in Physical Education Margo Frankel , B.F.A. Instructor in Fine A rts Leonard V. Haber B.F.A. Instructor in Fine Arts Emily Moore Hall B.A., M.A. Instructor in English Homer Halverson B.A., M.A., Ph.D. Instructor in English F. W. Hoeing B.A., M.A. Instructor m History Walter Edward Hoffman B.S., LL.B. Instructor in lurisprudence Maximo Iturralde B.A., M.A. Instructor in Modern Languages Esther Kessler B.S. Instructor in Secretarial Science John Latane Lewis B.A., B.L., LL.M. Instructor in lurisprudence William H. Marsh B.S. Instructor in Physics Josephine Beverly Massei B.A. Dottore in Lettcrc. Dell Universita di Firenze, Italia Instructor in Modern Languages Cecil R. Morales B.A., M.A. Instructor in Spanish Eraser Neiman B.A., M.A. Instructor in English Edwin C. Rust B.F.A. Instructor tn Fine Arts Virginia Dix Sterling B.S. Instructor in Physical Education Roger R. Walterhouse B.A., Ph.D. InstiuctOT in English George Woodford Brown M.D. Lecturer in Clinical Psychology and Superintendent of the Eastern State Hospital James Lowry Cogar B.A., M.A. Lecturer in History Charles P. Sherman B.A., LL.B., D.C.L., LL.D. Lecturer on Roman Canon and Civil Law SUPERVISORS OF TEACHER TRAINING Jesse Rawls Byrd B.A.. M.A. Principal of Training School Mary Wall Christian B.A. Teacher Training Supervisor in Fine Arts Myrtle Cooper B.A. Teacher Training Supervisor in Sixth Grade CoMpTON Crook B.S., M.A. Teacher Training Supervisor in Science Margaret G. Finch B_s. Teacher Training Supervisor in Second Grade Ellen Fletcher B.A. Teacher Training Supervisor in Library Science Librarian of Matthew Whaley School George C. Pitts, Jr B.A. Assistant Teacher Training Supervisor in Mathematics Eunice L. Hall B.A., M.A. Teacher Training Supervisor in English and Social Studies Sallie B. Harrison B.S., M.S. Teacher Training Supervisor in Home Economics Mary Scott Howison B.A. Teacher Training Supervisor in Mathematics Elsie West Low B.A. Teacher Training Supervisor in French Mildred B. Matier B.A. Assistant Teacher Training Supervisor in English Shirley Payne B.A., M.A. Teacher Training Supervisor in English Geraldine Rowe B.A, Teacher Training Supervisor in Latin Carrie Curle Sinclair B.S. Teacher Training Supervisor in Physical Education Ida p. Trosvig B.A., M.A. Teacher Training Supervisor tn Social Studies A. G. Taylor Dean of Marshall-Wythe School Theodore S. Cox Dean of lurisprudence [25] Jrom freshman to Senior is a period of but four brief years; years which are crowded with the experiences in classrooms, athletic field and campus; experiences which we call Education. % w s ' i ' lJk y ' .IH WbM i ' W% ' % ISkv illr ' iMIf 0 Mi Sv ? ' l ' ' iiiil k wm ' -mimlk A §EWIOR CL 1$$ Officers Edward Themak, Jr President Robert Bruce Mattson Vice-President Winifred Wheeler Secretary-Treasurer John Adam NEW YORK CITY Phi Kappa Tau; Freshman Swimming; Varsity Swimming; Physical Education Oub. SENIOR CLASS Mercedes Allen BRIDGEWATER, VIRGINIA Kappa Delta; Kappa Omicron Phi; Basketball; Y. W. C. A.; German Club. Kate Waller Barrett Alfriend ALEXANDRIA, VIRGINIA Mortar Board; Colonial Echo, Sorority Editor; Flat Hat Edi- torial Board; Royalist Copy Editor; Scarab Club, President; Backdrop Club, Vice-President; College Executive Committee; Senior Qass Publicity Chairman. William L. Altenburg JAMAICA, LONG ISLAND, NEW YORK Phi Kappa Tau; 13 Club; Freshman Basketball. Moss William Armistead CHURCHLAND, VIRGINIA Pi Kappa Alpha; Theta Chi Delta; Euclid Club; Phoenix Literary Society; Camera Club. Alexander Apostolou ROANOKE, VIRGINIA Transfer from Roanoke College. 1301 Jane Austin AMARILLO, TEXAS Kappa Alpha Theta. SENIOR CLASS Jane Alberta Baker LAKEWOOD, OHIO Pi Beta Phi; Lambda Phi Sigma; Class Historian; College Choir, Secretary; Women ' s Glee Club, Sec- retary; Operettas; Boot and Spur Qub; Spanish Club; Pan-American League; Y. W. C. A.; J. Lessiie Mall Literary Society; Scarab Oub; German Club. James Henry Bailey PETERSBURG, VIRGINIA Theta Alpha Phi; [ araatic Club; Flat Hal Staff. Jean Grace Baker LAKEWOOD, OHIO Pi Beta Phi; Lambda Phi Sigma; Qass Poet; Col- lege Choir; Women ' s Glee Club, President; Oper- ettas; Spanish Club; Scarab Club; Pan-American League; J. Lessiie Hall Literary Society; Y. W. C. A.; German Club. Mary Alice Barnes FLUSHING, NEW YORK Pi Beta Phi; Chi Delta Phi; J. Lessiie Hall Lit- erary Society, Program Chairman; Colonial Echo Staff, Literary Magazine Staff; German Club. Elizabeth Archer Barnard PRINCE GEORGE, VIRGINIA Transfer from Farmville State Teachers ' College; Euclid Oub; Clayton-Grimes Biological Society; J. Lessiie Hall Literary So- ciety; Y. W. C. A. 131] 1939 Kendall C. Beavers, Jr. NORFOLK, VIRGINIA Lambda Phi Sigma, President; College Choir; Men ' s Glee Qub; Band; Orchestra; Colonial Collegians. SENIOR CLASS Elaine Bentley WILLIAMSBURG, VIRGINIA Kappa Omicron Phi, Secretary; Kappa Delta Pi; Euclid Qub; Burghers, Secretary. Helen Browne Bennett CHEVY CHASE, MARYLAND Kappa Kappa Gamma; Monogram Club; Archery Manager; Boot and Spur Qub; Oayton-Grimcs Biological Qub; Camera Qub; Psychology Club; Y. W. C. A.; ]. Lcsslic Hall Literary So- ciety; German Qub. Janet Carolyn Billet SABOT, VIRGINIA Alpha Chi Omega; Theta Alpha Phi, Treasurer, Vice-President; Dramatic Qub, Vice-President; J. Lesslie Hall Literary Society, Program Chairman; Scarab Qub; Backdrop Qub; College Choir. Daniel James Blocker, Jr. WILLIAMSBURG, VIRGINIA Theta Delta Chi; International Relations Qub; Y. M. C. A.; Men ' s Glee Club, Ada Therese Bischoff WESTWOOD, NEW JERSEY Transfer from Syracuse University; Thomas R. Dew Economics Club; Backdrop Club; German Club. [32] ■B M Lisa Bloede CATONSVILLE, MARYLAND Chi Omega; Varsity Tennis; Monogram Club; Boot and Spur Club, Vice-President; Scarab Qub; Back- drop Club. SENIOR CLASS Marjorie Bowman HAWTHORNE; NEW JERSEY History Qub; German Qub. Doris Kathleen Bluford NORFOLK; VIRGINIA Phi Mu; J. Lesslie Hall Literary Society; Gibbons Qub. William Henry Braithwaite WILLIAMSBURG, VIRGINIA Ruth Ellen Brill DANBURY, CONNECTICUT Kappa Delta; Kappa Omicron Pi; Basketball, As- sistant Manager; French Club; Y. W. C. A.; Back- clrop Oub; German Qub. Art Henry Brennison PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA Kappa Alpha; Lambda Phi Sigma; College Choir; Men ' s Glee Qub; Operettas. [33] OTU J9 ■J Elizabeth P. Broaddus GLEN ALLEN, VIRGINIA Transfer from Averett College; J. Lesslie Hall Lit- erary Society; Y. W. C. A. SENIOR CLASS Frederick L. Brown CHESTER, PENNSYLVANIA Phi Kappa Tau; Freshman Swimming; Freshman Track; Varsity Swimming; Flat Hat, Circulation Manager. Barbara Brown NEWPORT NEWS, VIRGINIA Transfer from Randolph-Macon Woman ' s College; College Choir; Glee Qub; Operetta; French Qub; Y. W. C. A.; J. Lesslie Hall Literary Society. Annabel Brubaker LEBANON, PENNSYLVANIA Gamma Phi Beta; Delta Psi Kappa; Freshman Bas- ketball; Freshman Hockey; Varsity Hockey; Hockey Manager; Women ' s Intercollegiate Fencing Associa- tion, Vice-President; Monogram Club; Varsity Show, Dance Direaor; German Qub. Evelyn Bayly Bucher BAYSIDE, LONG ISLAND, NEW YORK Kappa Alpha Theta; Phi Sigma; Colonial Echo Business Staff; Pan-Hellenic Council; Scarab Qub; Y. W. C. A. Olive Pearl Brueger MAPLEWOOD, NEW JERSEY Pi Beta Phi; Colonial Echo Staff; flat Hat Staff; J. Lesslie Hall Literary Society; German Club. [34 1 Neoma Ellsworth Bunting NORFOLK, VIRGINIA Euclid Qub; Women ' s Glee Club; Y, W. C. A.; J. Lesslie Hall Literary Society. SENIOR CLASS Wyatt B. Carneal, Jr. RICHMOND, VIRGINIA Theta Delta Chi; 13 Club; Freshman Football; Varsity Football; Royalist Business Staff; Backdrop Club. LuciLE Ferryman Bybee NORFOLK, VIRGINIA Chi Omega; Kappa Delta Pi; Library Science Club, Vice-Presi- dent; Royalist Staff; J. Lesslie Hall Literary Society; Y. W. C. A. May R. Carruth NORFOLK, VIRGINIA Transfer from Norfolle Division; Kappa Kappa Gamma; Women ' s Glee Club; Y. W. C. A. Jack Clare MAPLEWOOD, NEW JERSEY Phi Alpha; Track Team; Theta Chi Delta. Carl S. Casella LODI, NEW JERSEY Sigma Rho; Theta Chi Delta; Sigma Pi Sigma; Euclid Qub; Gibbons Qub. [35] OTU 93 1939 Carrington Samuel Cockrell MISKIMON, VIRGINIA Transfer from Norfolk Division; Sigma Pi; Fresh- man Baseball; Varsity Baseball, Manager; Freshman Track; Phoenix Literary Society; Y. M. C. A. SENIOR CLASS Charles Anthony Cogliandro NORFOLK, VIRGINIA Transfer from Norfolk Division. Mildred Lorraine Coe PEARL RIVER, NEW YORK Y. W. C. A. Eva Rose Colby PORT JERVIS, NEW YORK Scarab Club; J, Lesslie Hall Literary Society; Y. W. C. A.; German Club. Mary A. Comstock NEWPORT NEWS, VIRGINIA Sigma Pi Sigma, Secretary; Executive Council, Rep- resentative-at-Largc; Euclid Qub, President; French Qub; J. Lesslie Hall Literary Society; Y. W. C. A. Sara E. Cole MONTCLAIR, NEW JERSEY Kappa Kappa Gamma; History Club; Y. W. C. A.; J. Lesslie Hall Literary Society; Camera Club; International Relations Qub. [36] Mary Virginia Cook PETERSBURG, VIRGINIA Alpha Chi Omega; Judicial Council; Freshman Hockey Squad; President of Barrett Hall; Flat Hat Business Staff; Thomas R. Dew Economics Club; J. Lesslie Hall Literary Society; Y. W. C. A. SENIOR CLASS Armina Elizabeth Crosby DRYDEN, NEW YORK Transfer from Dickinson Junior College; Kappa Delta Pi, Treasurer; Library Science Qub; Boot and Spur Club; History Qub; Y. W. C. A.; J. Lesslie Hall Literary Society. Stewart K, Cotterman MANILA, PHILIPPINE ISLANDS Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Omicron Delta Kappa, President; Phi Sigma, Vice-President; Men ' s Honor Council, Vice-President; Freshman Football; Freshman Swimming; Varsity Swimming; Clayton -Grimes Biological Club; Inter-Religious Council, Rep- resentative for Men ' s Student Body. Benjamin F. Crowson, Jr. CHARLOTTE HALL, MARYLAND Sigma Nu; Band, Drum Major; Spanish Club; Pan- American League. Shirley Daiger baltimore, maryland Kappa Kap pa Gamma; Phi Beta Kappa; Mortar Board; Freshman Hockey; Freshman Basketball; Tliomas R. Dew Economics Oub, President; Y. W. C. A., Secretary, Vice-President; International Re- lations Oub. Elizabeth Cutler newport news, virginia Transfer from Lynchburg College; Pi Beta Phi; College Choir; Women ' s Glee Club; Library Science Club; J. Lesslie Hall Lit- erary Society. CJ7] ' 939 L- ' U U V John Thurston Davidson palisades park, new jersey Sigma Pi; Phi Epsilon Delta, President; F. H. C. Society: Freshman Football; Varsity Football; Var- sity Club; Spanish Club. SENIOR CLASS Margaret Frances Davis NORFOLK, VIRGINIA Gamma Phi Beta; Library Science Club; Y. W. C. A.; German Club. Jennie Davis warsaw, kentucky Transfer from Birmingham-Southern College; Gamma Phi Beta; Y. W. C. A.; J. Lesslie Hall Literary Society; German Qub. Ruth Borden Davis VONKERS, NEW YORK Eta Sigma Phi; Qayton-Grimes Biological Club; Spanish Club. Minnie Richelieu Dobie STONY CREEK, VIRGINIA Delta Delta Delta; Women ' s Glee Club; Royalist Staff; Freshman Orientation Sponsor; History Oub, Secretary; Pan-Hellenic Council; Backdrop Club; J. Lesslie Hall Literary Society; German Club. Dorothy Dickie SOUTH ORANGE, NEW JERSEY Kappa Alpha Theta; Scarab Club; Y. W. C. A.; J. Lesslie Hall Literary Society; German Club. t38] Margaret M, Doran BROOKLYN, NEW YORK Transfer from Savage School; Women ' s Glee Club; Gibbons Club. SENIOR CLASS Ransom Duke, Jr. HENDERSON, NORTH CAROLINA Theta Delta Chi; Varsity Track, Captain; Varsity Club; Accounting Club, Treasurer; Student Inter- Religious Council; Y. M. C. A.; Spanish Oub. ■Raymond Wilson Dudley SUFFOLK, VIRGINIA Pi Kappa Alpha; Chi Beta Ph i, President; Men ' s Honor Coun- cil, Junior Member, President; 15 Qub; Varsity Track. Andrew J. Dunkle EVERETT, PENNSYLVANIA Phi Beta Kappa; Sigma Pi Sigma; Euclid Club, Lucille Edwards LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY Transfer from DePauw University; Chi Omega; Royatist Circulation Staff; Thomas R. Dew E:co- nomics Club; Backdrop Club; Scarab Club; Psychol- ogy Oub; Y. W. C. a.; J. Lesslie Hall Literary Society. Eliza Craddock East ALTAVISTA, VIRGINIA Transfer from HoUins College; Chi Omega; Clayton-Grimes Biological Club; Y. W. C, A. [39] 0 ' 7 ' U r AAA 9 1939 Ly Frances Natalie Eells BETHESDA, MARYLAND Transfer from American University; Pi Beta Phi; Colonial Echo, Activities Editor; College Choir, Secretary; Women ' s Glee Club, Librarian; Operetta; Y. W. C. A.; Spanish Oub; German Club. SENIOR CLASS Anna Lucille Eldridge HACERSTOWN, MARYLAND Pi Beta Phi; Theta Alpha Phi; Lambda Phi Sigma; Dramatic Club; College Choir; Women ' s Glee Club; Operettas; Boot and Spur Club; Y. W. C. A. Dorothy Farnham Evans SCRANTON, PENNSYLVANIA Transfer from DePauw University; Delta Delta Delta; Theta Alpha Phi, Secretary; Dramatic Club; J. Lesslie Hall Literary Society; Y. W. C. A. Gwendolyn Virginia Evans GRAND RAPIDS, MICHIGAN Transfer from Greenbriar College; Kappa Alpha Theta; Dramatic Club; International Relations Club; ). Lesslie Hall Literary Society; Y. W. C, A.; German Club. Edwin C. Ferguson, Jr. SUFFOLK, VIRGINIA Pi Kappa Alpha; Freshman Track, Manager; Fresh- man Debate Team; Men ' s Debate Council; Varsity Debate Team; Spanish Club; International Relations Club; Wythe Law Club, Rosa Mae Evans ARLINGTON, VIRGINIA Kappa Delta; Phi Beta Kappa; Mortar Board; Executive Coun- cil, Secretary; Honor Council, Chairman; Who ' s Who Among Students in American Colleges and Universities; Colonial Echo Staff; F at Hal Business Staff; French Club, Vice-Presi- dent; Thomas R. Dew Economics Oub, Vice-President; Ac- counting Club, Secretary; Junior Monogram Club; Backdrop Qub; J. Lesslie Hall Literary Society; Y. W. C. A.; Pan- Hellenic Council; German Club. [40 1 William B. Fernandez NEWTON, MASSACHUSETTS Phi Alpha; Scarab Qub; Accounting Qub; Spanish Qub. SENIOR CLASS LuRA Lee Foreman NORFOLK, VIRGINIA Transfer from Norfolk Division; Alpha Chi Ome- ga; French Club; Y. W. C. A.; J. Usslie Hall Literary Society. Margaret Roberta Field BROOKLYN, NEW YORK Freshman Hockey; Monogram Club; Boot and Spur Club; J. Lesslie Hall Literary Society; German Club. Thomas Marshall Forsyth, Jr. THE PLAINS, VIRGINIA Kappa Sigma; Theta Alpha Phi; Freshman Swim- ming Team; Royalist Staff; Flat Hat Staff; Psychol- ogy Qub; Drapiatic Club; International Relations Club; Men ' s Glee Club. Robert Newell Fricke WILLIAMSBURG, VIRGINIA Transfer from Purdue University; Lambda Chi Al- pha; Lambda Phi Sigma; Freshman Football; Men ' s Glee Qub; Band; Orchestra; Thomas R. Dew Eco- nomics Club. Alexander W. Fraser WILMINGION, DELAWARE Transfer from Dartmouth; Theta Delta Chi. [41] Richard E. Fuqua WILLIAMSBURG, VIRGINIA Tiansfer from Norfolk Division; Pi Kappa Alpha; Colonial Echo Staff; Accounting Club; Spanish Club. SENIOR CLASS Oscar R. Gelotte QUIN ' CV, MASSACHUSETTS Thomas R. Dew Economics Club. Dorothy Comyn Gammack HAMPTON, VIRGINIA Alpha Chi Omega; Flat Hat Business Staff; Boot and Spur Club; Backdrop Club; Scarab Club; J. Lcsslie Hall Literary Society; Y. W. C. A. Helen J. Gibson RICHMOND, VIRGINIA Transfer from Norfolk Division; J. Lesslie Hall Literary Society; Y, W, C, A. LuRA W. Goddin TOANO, VIRGINIA Phi Mu; Day Students Oub; Boot and Spur Club; Library Science Club; Scarab Club. Virginia Lee Gilbert WILLIAMSBURG, VIRGINIA Phi Mu; Hammer and Brush International; Scarab Oub; J. Lesslie Hall Literary Society; Backdrop Club; Y. W. C. A. [42] Leonard Arthur Goldberg FAR ROCKAWAY, NEW YORK Phi Alpha; Freshman Swimming; Varsity Swim- ming; Spanish Oub. SENIOR CLASS Marie Goodman WEST NEW YORK, NEW YORK International Relations Club; Euclid Oub; Boot and Spur Club. Benjamin Goldstein EAST BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS Phi Alpha; Varsity Track; Phoenix Literary Society. Maria Leb Goodwin WAYNESBORO, VIRGINIA Transfer from Richmond Division; Chi Delta Phi, Secretary-Treasurer; Royalist Staff, Poetry Editor; Colonial Echo Staff; Student In ter-Religious Council; Pan-American League; French Club; Sca- rab Club; Y. W. C. A.; J. Lcsslie Hall Literary Society. Martin Gracey hampton, virginia Transfer from Virginia Polytechnic Institute; Phi Kappa Tau. Arthur Gordon NEWPORT NEWS, VIRGINIA Phi Alpha; Balfour Qub; French Club. [4J] n (yiu rucuyu 1693 1939 Marie Loyall Gratz SENIOR Edgar A. Green RICHMOND, VIRGINIA Transfer from Richmond Division; Varsity Hockey; Monogram Qub. CLASS Harry C. Gravely MARTINSVILLE, VIRGINIA WILLIAMSBURG, VIRGINIA Band. Pi Kappa Alpha; Varsity Basketball; Varsity Track. William Lawrence Greene Rachael Griffin BROOKLYN, NEW YORK NASHVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA Sigma Alpha Epstlon; Lambda Phi Sigma, Presi- dent; President ' s Aide; Flat Hat, Editor-in-Chief; Colonial Echo, Sports Editor; Backdrop Club; Interfraternity Council; Dance Band. Jerome B. Griffin, Jr. NORFOLK, VIRGINIA Transfer from Norfolk Division. Transfer from Women ' s College of the University of North Carolina; Kappa Delta; Thomas R. Dew- Economics Qub, Secretary-Treasurer; Accounting Club; Spanish Club; Pan-Hellenic Council, Secre- tary-Treasurer; Backdrop Club; Student Inter-Reli- gious Council; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet; German Qub, President. [44] Frances Louise Grodecoeur MONONGAHELA, PENNSYLVANIA Alpha Chi Omega; Thomas R. Dew Economics Club; History Qub; Pan-Hellenic Council, Presi- dent; Colonial Echo Staff; Royalist Staff; Back- drop Club; Y. W. C. A.; J. Lesslie Hall Literary Society; German Club, Vice-President. SENIOR CLASS Pearl Janet Haigis FOXBORO, MASSACHUSETTS Phi Mu; Scarab Qub; Y. W. C. A.; J. Lesslie Hall Literary Society; German Club. Mary Boyce Gwaltney smithfield, virginia Y. W. c. a. Sarah Louise Hall HEATHSVILLE, VIRGINIA Kappa Alpha Thcta; Phi Beta Kappa; Mortar Board; Mortar Board Scholarship Cup; President of Women ' s Student Cooperative Government Associa- tion; Honor Council; Colonial Echo Staff; Ftat Hat Staff; Backdrop Club. Arthur B. Hanson BETHESDA, MARYLAND Transfer from Cornell University; Theta Alpha Phi; President ' s Aide; F. H. C. Society; Dramatic Club; Wythe Law Club; International Relations Club; President of Southeastern Conference of Interna- tional Relations Clubs; Boot and Spur Club, Presi- dent, Cynthia Clare Hamm PAUl.SBORO, NEW JERSEY Library Science Qub, Treasurer; Y. W. C. A.; Gibbons Qub. [45] 09tt V A . A , ' J Florine Elizabeth Harris NORFOLK, VIRGINIA Clayton-Grimes Biological Club; Y. W. C. A. SENIOR CLASS Mae Berkeley Hawkins LYNCHBURG, VIRGINIA Kappa Delta Pi, Corresponding Secretary; History Club; Library Science Club; Women ' s Glee Oub; Flat Hat Staff; Y. W. C. A.; Wesley Foundation Cabinet. Claude Hartog PARIS, FRANCE Exchange Student; Diplome des Hautes Commerciales; Lambda Chi Alpha; French Club; Foreign Travel Oub. Jeanette McDaniel Haydon IRVINCTON, VIRGINIA Transfer from Averctt College; J. Lcsslie Hall Lit- erary Society; Y. W. C. A. Stanley Alan Hecker NEW YORK CITY Transfer from St. John ' s University; Phi Alpha; Stage Manager; Freshman Swimming; History Qub; Backdrop Club; Balfour Club. Lucille M. Haynes PORT WASHINGTON, NEW YORK Pi Beta Phi; Eta Sigma Phi; College Choir; Women ' s Glee Qub; Operettas; French Club, President; Royalist Staff; Flat Hat Staff; Freshman Orientation Sponsor; Boot and Spur Club; Scarab Club; J. Lesslie Hall Literary Society; Spanish Oub. [46] Myrick v. Hedgepeth PHOEBUS, VIRGINIA Kappa Delta Pi; Men ' s Glee Club; College Choir; Wesley Foundation Cabinet. SENIOR CLASS Charles Edwin Hern STOUGHTON, MASSACHUSETTS Varsity Qub; Freshman Football; Varsity Football; Freshman Baseball; Varsity Baseball; Freshman Bas- ketball. Thomas C. Helfrich CATONSVILLE, MARYLAND Theta Delta Chi; Thomas R. Dew Economics Oub, Treasurer; Accounting Qub; German Language Club; Vice-President of Sophomore Class; Freshman Swimming; Varsity Swimming; Freshman Track; Colonial Echo, Business Manager; Pan- American League. Frances Winston Hiden NEWPORT NEWS, VIRGINIA Alpha Chi Omega; Eta Sigma Phi. E. Virginia Hinkins WASHINGTON, PENNSYLVANIA Sigma Pi Sigma; Euclid Club; Y. W. C. A.; J. Lesslie Hall Literary Society. Anna Bryant Hill ALEXANDRIA, VIRGINIA Lambda Phi Sigma; Hammer and Brush International; French Club; Freshman Hockey; College Choir; Women ' s Glee Club; Operettas; Scarab Club; Y. W. C. A. [47] cyntOA 1693 1939 Ruth Hollands HORNELL, NEW YORK Transfer from Wcllesley College; Delta Delta Del- ta; History Club; Scarab Club; J. Lesslie Hall Lit- erary Society. SENIOR CLASS Michael J. Hook ERIE, PENNSYLVANIA Sigma Rho; Kappa Delta Pi; Sigma Pi Sigma; President ' s Aide; Omicron Delta Kappa; 13 Club; Euclid Club, President; Freshman Track; Freshman Football; Varsity Football; Varsity Qub; Gibbons Club; Backdrop Qub; Who ' s Who Among Stu- dents in American Colleges and Univcisities. Elsie Phyllis Hornsby norfolk, virginia Alpha Chi Omega; Kappa Delta Pi; Scarab Club; Backdrop Qub; Royalist Staff. Dorothy Hosford MAPLEWOOD, NEW JERSEY Alpha Chi Omega; Phi Beta Kappa; Mortar Board; Judicial Council, Chairman, Secretary, Sophomore Representative, Freshman Representative; Psychology Qub; French Club; Colonial Echo Staff; J. Less- lie Hall Literary Society; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet. Fred A. Howard ISLAND PARK, NEW YORK Transfer from Randolph-Macon Men ' s College; Sig- ma Alpha Epsilon; Interfraternity Council; Fresh- man Basketball; Flat Hat Editorial Board. Margie Allen Hoskins JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA Kappa Kappa Gamma; Chi Delta Phi, Vice-President; Pan-Hel- lenic Council; Freshman Orientation Sponsor; French Club; Royaliil Staff; Scarab Club; Backdrop Club; Y. W. C. A., Treasurer; J. Lesslie Hall Literary Society. [48] p m Edna Laughton Howell MAPLEWOOD, NEW JERSEY Kappa Delta; Kappa Delta Pi, Vice-President; Eu- clid Club, Vice-President; Student Aaivities Com- mittee; Judicial Council; President of Jefferson Hall; Women ' s Debate Council, President, Manager; Y. W. C. A.; J, Lesslie Hall Literary Society; Ger- man Oub. SENIOR CLASS Carroll Whitney Hutton MILBURN, NEW JERSEY Kappa Delta Pi; Library Science Club, President; History Club; Boot and Spur Club; Backdrop Club; Y. W. C. A.; Wesley Foundation Cabinet; German Qub. Jane R. Hutcheson RUSHMERE, VIRGINIA Chi Omega; History Club; Spanish Oub; Monogram Club, President; Pan-Hellenic Council; Varsity Basketball; Freshman Hockey; Y. W. C. A., Freshman Cabinet. Margaret Hutton SUFFOLK, VIRGINIA Kappa Delta; Y. W. C. A.; German Qub. Sidney Jaffe SUFFOLK, VIRGINIA Pi Lambda Phi; Omicron Delta Kappa; Interna- tional Relations Club, President; Freshman Basket- ball; Varsity Tennis; Colonial Echo, Assistant Editor; RoyalisI, Articles Editor; Flat Hal, Man- aging Editor; Student Inter-Religious Council, Pres- ident; Balfour Club, Joyce Tucker Jackson SUFFOLK, VIRGINIA Alpha Chi Omega; Women ' s Debate Council; Backdrop Qub; J. Lesslie Hall Literary Society; Y. W. C. A.; German Qub. [49] oru J Josephine Jenkins CREWE, VIRGINIA Chi Omega; Executive Council, Vice-President, Rep- resentative-at-Large; Freshman Orientation Sponsor; Women ' s Glee Club; Y. W. C. A., President; Student Inter-Religious Council, Vice-President; German Club, Secretary. SENIOR CLASS Elizabeth Ann Jones BALTIMORE, MARYLAND Kappa Delta; Spanish Club; Y. W. C. A. Yvonne Divine Johnson RICHMOND, VIRGINIA Kappa Kappa Gamma; French Club, Secretary; Spanish Club; Scarab Club; Backdrop Club; Varsity Show; Y. W. C. A. E. Langford Jones SUFFOLK, VIRGINIA Sigma Rho; Theta Chi Delta, Secretary; Chi Beta Phi. Ruby Cecil Jones DANVILLE, VIRGINIA Transfer from Averett College; History Club; J. Lesslic Hall Literary Society; Y. W. C. A. Letitia Jones NORFOLK, VIRGINIA Pi Beta Phi; J. Lesslie Hall Literary Society; German Club; Y. W. C. A. [50] Ethel Jordan DUBLIN, VIRGINIA DUBLIN, VIRGINIA Alpha Chi Omega; Thomas R. Dew Economics Club; Backdrop Club, Business Staff; ]. Lesslic Hall Literary Society; Y. W. C. A. SENIOR CLASS Florence Rogers Joynes NORFOLK, VIRGINIA Transfer from Mary Baldwin College; Delta Delta Delta; Spanish Club; J. Lesslie Hall Literary So- ciety; Y. W. C. A. Rosa-Elizabeth Jordan NORFOLK, VIRGINIA Phi Mu; Eta Sigma Phi; French Club; Monogram Club; Intra mural Council; Scarab Qub; Freshman Hockey; J. Lesslie Ha Literary Society; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet; German Club. Stanley W. Kamen JAMAICA, NEW YORK Sigma Rho; Varsity Club; Freshman Football; Fresh- man Basketball; Freshman Baseball; Varsity Foot- ball; Varsity Basketball; Physical Education Club; Gibbons Club. Mary Allen Kearney NORFOLK, VIRGINIA Alpha Chi Omega; Gibbons Club. Frederick T. Kayser WHITE PLAINS, NEW YORK Sigma Alpha Epsilon. t«] 1693 1939 John F. Kegebein, Jr. NORFOLK, VIRGINIA Transfer from Norfolk Division; Sigma Pi; Phoenix Literary Society. SENIOR CLASS Robert E. Kendig Stuart ' s draft, Virginia Sigma Pi; International Relations Oub; Spanish Club; Virginia Social Science Association; Varsity Basketball, Manager; College Choir; Men ' s Glee Club; Operetta; Student Inter-Religious Council. Frances Jane Kemp crown point, indiana Spanish Club; Women ' s Glee Club; Y. W. C. A;; German Club; J. Lesslie Hall Literary Society. Frank Bartholomew Koss MOOSUP, CONNECTICUT Sigma Rho; Phi Sigma, President; Euclid Club; Clayton-Grimes Biological Club, President; Varsity Club; Freshman Football; Freshman Baseball; Var- sity Football; Varsity Baseball; Inter- Religious Coun- cil; Gibbons Club, President. Winifred La Crosse WESTFIEI.D, NEW JERSEY Kappa Alpha Theta; Spanish Club; Women ' s Glee Oub; Colonial Echo Business Staff. Herbert Armstrong Krueger everett, massachusetts Omicron Delta Kappa; President ' s Aide; Spanish Club; Varsity Club; Freshman Football; Freshman Basketball; Varsity Foot- ball, Captain. £52] Eldon N. Langbauer MARIETTA, OHIO Phi Kappa Tau; Spanish Club; Junior Class Presi- dent; Freshman Track; Freshman Swimming; Var- sity Track; Varsity Swimming; Men ' s Tribunal. SENIOR CLASS Helen Virginia Lindsay WILLIAMSBURG, VIRGINIA Eta Sigma Phi; Burghers, Emory Lewis CHINCOTEAGUE, VIRGINIA Eta Sigma Phi; Royalist Associate Editor. Rosemary Lyne SHEPHERDSTOWN, WEST VIRGINIA Transfer from Shepherd State Teachers ' College; Monogram Club; Varsity Basketball; Y. W. C. A. David Gavin MacMillan NORFOLK, VIRGINIA Transfer from Davidson College; Pi Kappa Alpha. Elliot Albert Macklow FAR ROCKAWAV, NEW YORK Lambda Phi Sigma; Camera Club, President; Operetta. Student Conduaor; Symphony Orchestra; Field Band; Dance Orchestra. [53 1 OTU Virginia Estelle Martin PALMERTON, PENNSYLVANIA Kappa Omicron Phi, President; Pan-American League; Scarab Club; Women ' s Glee Club; J. Less- lie Hall Literary Society. SENIOR CLASS Robert Bruce Mattson VVOODSIDE, NEW YORK Pi Kappa Alpha; International Relations Club; Color Guard; Sophomore Class. Secretary-Treasurer; Senior Qass Vice-President; Freshman Track, Freshman Cross-Country, Varsity Track, Varsity Cross-Coun- try. Manager; Y. M. C. A., President; Chapel Committee; Student Inter- Religious Council, Presi- dent. Katherine Matejka OCEANPORT, NEW JERSEY Kappa Kappa Gamma; Clayton-Grimes Biological Club; French Club; Fldl Hal Business Stafi; J. Lesslie Hall Literary Society; Y. W. C. A.; Gibbons Club. Thomas Day McCahill PORTSMOUTH, VIRGINIA Phi Sigma; Qayton-Grimes Biological Qub. Martha McCarty CORNING, NEW YORK Transfer from Bucknell University; Delta Delta Delta; History Qub; Boot and Spur; J. Lesslie Hall Literary Society. Julian W. McClure NEWPORT, RHODE ISLAND Pi Kappa Alpha; Varsity Football, Manager; Phoenix Literary Society; Y. M. C. A. [J41 Agnes Mercer NORFOLK, VIRGINIA SENIOR CLASS Mildred Mode WHITE PLAIN ' S, NEW YORK Dramatic Qub; Monogram Club; Intramurals, Stu- dent Manager; Varsity Hockey; Symphony Orches- tra; J. Lesslie Hall Literary Society. Rhea Selma Mirmelstein newport news, virginia Eta Sigma Phi; Kappa Delta Pi; History Qub; International Relations Club; Fla: Hat Business Staff; J. Lesslie Hall Lit- erary Society; Balfour Club, Secretary. Arthur Thomas Mo nahon, Jr. WELLESLEY, MASSACHUSETTS Lambda Chi Alpha; Spanish Oub; Varsity Tennis; Gibbons Club. Mary Morse HORNSBYVILLE, VIRGINIA Library Science Club; Day Students Club, Agent. %■James Oliver Moore MII.LBURN, NEW JERSEY Thcta Delta Chi; Omicron Delta Kappa, Vice-President; F. H. C. Society; Accounting Club, Vice-President; Freshman Swim- ming; Varsity Swimming; Royalist, Circulation Manager. [55] } - 1939 Charles F. Mort winchester, virginia Transfer from Brown University; Delta Kappa Ep- silon. SENIOR CLASS Janet Stuart Murray HARTFORD, CONNECTICUT Pi Beta Phi; Sigma Pi Sigma, Secretary-Treasurer; Theta Alpha Phi, President; Dramatic Qub. Edward Newton Motley PETERSBURG, VIRGINIA Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Spanish Club; 13 Club; Varsity Club; Freshman Football; Freshman Baseball; Freshman Basketball; Freshman Swimming; Varsity Football; Varsity Baseball; Physi- cal Education Fraternity. George A. Nea WAIXASTON, MASSACHUSETTS Transfer from Harvard University; Phi Kappa Tau; Thomas R. Dew Economic Club; FUl Hal Staff; Camera Club; Backdrop Club. T. Edgar Omohundro LYELLS, VIRGINIA Phoenix Literary Society; Pan-American Club; Y. M. C. A. Lawrence Oliver SUFFOLK, VIRGINIA Pi Kappa Alpha; 13 Club; Varsity Club; Freshman Foot- ball; Freshman Basketball; Freshman Baseball; Varsity Football; Varsity Basketball; Varsity Baseball. [56 J Elizabeth Page ROCHESTER, NEW YORK Phi Mu; J. Lesslie Hall Literary Society; Y. W. C. A. SENIOR CLASS Margaret Palmer MEDIA, PENNSYLVANIA Transfer from Wells College; Pi Beta Phi; Eta Sigma Phi; J. Lesslie Hall Literary Society; Y. W C. A. Roberta Ann Page ROANOKE, VIRGINIA Kappa Delta. Elizabeth Peck GLEN RIDGE, NEW JERSEY Phi Mu; Pan-Hellenic Council; Freshman Orienta- tion Sponsor; Scarab Club; Boot and Spur Club; Women ' s Glee Club; Y. W, C. A.; German Club. Torsten Edward Peterson hopewell, virginia Kappa Alpha; Phi Sigma. Vice President; Oayton- Griines Biological Club; Freshman Football; Varsity Football; Freshman Cross-Country; Freshman Indoor I rack; Freshman Track; Varsity Cross-Country; Var- sity Indoor Track; Varsity Track. LouE Elizabeth Pendleton NORFOLK, VIRGINIA Transfer from Norfolk Division; Phi Beta Kappa; Kappa Delta Pi President; Library Science Qub; Y. W. C. A. t571 fN Norma Adeline Petillo RICHMOND, VIRGINIA Transfer from Richmond Division; Kappa Delta Pi; Lambda Phi Sigma; Scarab Club; Symphony Orchestra; College Choir; Women ' s Glee Qub. SENIOR CLASS Emily Petuske MARTINSVILLE, VIRGINIA Spanish Club; Royalisl Staff; Colonial Echo Staff; Scarab Club. William George Pollock BROOKLYN, NEW YORK Sigma Rho. William S. Portlock, Jr. NORFOLK, VIRGINIA Pi Kappa Alpha; Orchestra. Margaret Fay Prickett WEST POINT, NEW YORK Alpha Chi Omega; Chi Delta Phi, President; Mor- tar Board, President; Most Outstanding Freshman Award; Colonial Echo Business Staff; Colonial Echo Editorial Staff; Flat Hat Editorial Staff; Royalist Staff, Feature Editor; Honor Council, Junior Representative, Senior Representative; Debate Council; William and Mary Players, Head Usher; Concert Orchestra; Senior Class Social Activities Chairman; Freshman Y. W. C. A. Cabinet; Senior Y. W. C. A. Cabinet. Sally Ann Price glen rock, new jersey Delta Delta Delta; Freshman Orientation Sponsor; Pan-Hel- lenic Council; History Club; J. LessHe Hall Literary Society; Y. W. C. A.; German Qub. [58] Ragan Bradshaw Pulley IVOR, VIRGINIA Kappa Alpha; Phi Beta Kappa; Euclid Qub, Treas- urer; Student Religious Council. SENIOR CLASS Waldo W. Randall MT. SINAI, I.OKG ISLAND, NEW YORK Theta Delta Chi. Milton Quinn HAMPTON, VIRGINIA Phi Kappa Tau; Spanish Club; Accounting Club; FUt Htil Business Staff; Y. M. C. A.; Student Religious Council. Edward B. Reinhard NORFOLK, VIRGINIA Theta Delta Chi; Accounting Club; Spanish Club. President; Interfraternity Council; Freshman Foot- ball; Fiat Hat Business Manager; Student Inter- Religious Council; Gibbons Club, Treasurer. Francis Elizabeth Ripley PORTSMOUTH, VIRGINIA Transfer from Norfolk Division; Gamma Phi Beta; History Club; Women ' s Glee Club; Colonial Echo Staff; Scarab Club; Backdrop Club. Mary Elizabeth Richardson REIFFTON, PENNSYLVANIA Transfer from Wells College; Delta Delta Delta; Psychology Qub; Women ' s Glee Club; Scarab Club; Backdrop Club; Mod- ern Dance Club; Y. W. C. A. [59] yrucayu V 1693 1939 Nancy Magruder Ripley PORTSMOUTH, VIRGINIA Transfer from Norfolk Division; Gamma Phi Beta; Kappa Delta Pi; French Club; Women ' s Glee Club; Colon lAL Echo Staff; Scarab Club; Backdrop Club. SENIOR CLASS George S. Roller HARRISONBURG, VIRGINIA Freshman Track; Varsity Track, Captain; Varsity Qub, Charter Member. Carson Roberts BONNY BLUE, VIRGINIA Sigma Pi . Roberta Ina Rosendale WESTFIELD, NEW JERSEY Kappa Alpha Theta; International Relations Club; History Club; Spanish Qub; Operetta, Production Staff. Robert C. Rowland NORFOLK, VIRGINIA Pi Kappa Alpha; Sigma Pi Sigma; Chi Beta Phi, Secretary-Treasurer; Vice-President of Student Body; Freshman Track; Varsity Track; Varsity Club. C. E. Rountree WHALEYVILI.E, VIRGINIA Sigma Pi; Accounting Club, President; Thomas R, Dew Eco- nomics Club; Freshman Football, Manager; Freshman Basket- ball, Manager; Interfraternity Council; Flat Hat Business Staff. £60] Lucy Gary Ruffin HOLDCROFT, VIRGINIA Kappa Delta Pi; Library Science Club; Spanish Club; French Club; Vice-President of Jefferson Hall; J. Lesslie Hall Literary Society; Y. W. C. A. SENIOR CLASS Franklin Pierce Ryder HARRISBURC, PENNSYLVANIA Kappa Alpha ; Omicron Delta Kappa; 1 3 Club; President ' s Aide; President of Sophomore Class; President of Men ' s Stu- dent Body; Tennis Team, Captain; Varsity Swimming; Flat Hat Business Staff; Orchestra; College Choir; Men ' s Glee Club. Kathryn Beal Sale WASHINGTON, D. C. Pi Beta Phi; Mortar Board. Secretary; Judicial Council, Junior Representative, Representative-at- Large; Who ' s Who in American Colleges and Uni- versities; Freshman Hockey; Varsity Hockey; Fresh- man Basketball; Monogram Club; Orientation Spon- sor; Orientation Group Leader; College Choir, Pres- ident; Women ' s Glee Club; Operetta; J. Lesslie Hall Literary Society; Y. W. C. A.; Clayton- Grimes Biological Club, Treasurer, George Dewey Sands, Jr. newport news, virginia Kappa Alpha; Theta Cht Delta; Sigma Pi Sigma; Royalist Staff; Phoenix Literary Society, President; Pan-American League; Euclid Club. Thomas Daley Savage WILLIAMSBURG, VIRGINIA Kappa Alpha; F. H. C. Society, President; 13 Club; Freshman Basketball; Freshman Baseball; Freshman Orientation; Interfraternity Council; Col- lege Band; Colonial Collegians; Colonial Echo Staff; Spanish Club; Backdrop Club; Thomas R. Dew Economics Club. Jane Beale Saunders NEWPORT NEWS, VIRGINIA Chi Omega; Flat Hat Business Staff; Library Science Club; J. Lesslie Hall Literary Society; Y, W. C. A.; German Club, Treasurer. [61] OT ' Zt Ann Prudence Searle OLD GREENWICH, CONNECTICUT Kappa Delta Pi, Secretary; Phi Sigma, Treasurer; Freshman Hockey; Freshman Basketball; Varsity Basketball; Monogram Club; Clayton -Grimes Bio- logical Club; Y. W. C. A.; J. Lesslie Hall Lit- erary Society. SENIOR CLASS Frances Segal NORFOLK, VIRGINIA Transfer from Norfolk Division; Thomas R. Dei Economics Club; Scarab Club; Balfour Club. Octavia Seawell GLASS, VIRGINIA Phi Beta Kappa; Eta Sigma Phi; Spanish Club; Pan-American League; J. Lesslie Hall Literary Society. Gertrude M, Shaffer CASS, WEST VIRGINIA Pi Beta Phi; Honor Council, Secretary; History Oub; Spanish Club; Boot and Spur Club; German Oub. H. Lee Shimberg BROOKLYN, NEW YORK Transfer from New Vork University; Phi Alpha; Kappa Delta Pi. Jeanne Sheridan ENDICOTT, NEW YORK Freshman Basketball; Freshman Hockey; Monogram Club; Host- ess, Manager for Girls ' Athletic Association; Pan-American League; Library Science Club; Backdrop Qub; Y. W. C. A.; J. Lesslie Hall Literary Society. 1621 R. Jordan Sizemore VIRGILIN ' A, VIRGIMA Thomas R. Dew Economics Club; Accounting Club; Phoenix Literary Society. SENIOR CLASS Audrey Gardiner Smith CINCINNATI, OHIO Transfer from Mills College; Pi Beta Phi; Scarab Club; Boot and Spur Club; J. Lesslie Hall Literary Society. Elbert Goodwin Slaughter NORFOLK, VIRGINIA Transfer from Norfolk Division; Pi Kappa Alpha; Varsity Track; Men ' s Glee Club; FUl Hal Staff; Royaliit Staff; Span- ish Club. Mary Webb Smithwick NORFOLK, VIRGINIA Transfer from Norfolk Division; Y. W. C. A. Dorothy Dana Spence ARLINGTON, VIRGINIA Kappa Kappa Gamma; Flat Hat Staff, Managing Editor; Royalist Press Representative; Thomas R. Dew Economics Club; Varsity Show, Publicity Manager; Backdrop Club; J. Lesslie Hall Literary Society, Group Leader; Psychology Club; Y. W. C. A.; German Club. Cora Jean Snyder NORFOLK, VIRGINIA Phi Sigma, Secretary; Qayton-Grimes Biological Qub; Y. W. C. A. [63] O ' u u O 1939 Lucille Virginia Spivey RICHMOND, VIRGINIA Transfer from Richmond Division; Delta Delta Delta; Psychology Club; Y. W. C. A.; J. Lesslie Hall Literary Society; German Club. SENIOR CLASS Joseph Lesley Stone WILLIAMSBURG, VIRGINIA Lambda Chi Alpha; Men ' s Debate Council, Presi- dent, Manager; Flat Hat Staff; Phoenix Literary Society, Secretary; Interfraternity Council; Student Inter- Religious Council; Spanish Club; French Club. Wynne A. Stevens, Jr. NORFOLK, VIRGINIA Pi Kappa Alpha. Henry Vernon Strand NORGE, VIRGINIA Sigma Pi Sigma. Carlton S. Stublen, Jr. PORTSMOUTH, VIRGINIA Pi Kappa Alpha; Men ' s Honor Council, Senior Member; International Relations Qub; Thomas R. Dew Economics Club; Varsity Tennis. Phyllis Maurine Stuart WASHINGTON, D. C. Transfer from George Washington University; Pi Beta Phi; Thomas R. Dew Economics Club; Women ' s Glee Club; Span- ish Club; Y. W. C. A.; J. Lesslie Hall Literary Society. [64] Alvin Tabankin NEWARK, NEW JERSEY Phi Alpha; Phi Beta Kappa; Theta Chi Delta, Vice- President, Corresponding Secretary; Secretary -Treas- urer of Men ' s Student Body; Phoenix Literary So- ciety. SENIOR CLASS Arthur 1 . Tanner RIDGEFIELD PARK, NEW JERSEY Sigma Rho; Phi Beta Kappa; Theta Chi Delta, President; Who ' s X o Among Students in Ameri- can Colleges and Universities; President ' s Aide; Men ' s Honor Council, Junior Member; Freshman Football; Varsity Football. Phyllis Broughton Tall BALTIMORE, MARYLAND Kappa Delta; Spanish Qub; Y. W. C. A. Dorothy Kathleen Taylor WILLIAMSBURG, VIRGINIA Euclid Qub; Accounting Club; Intramural Council; Day Students Qub, President. Mary Myers Taylor RICHMOND, VIRGINIA Transfer from Virginia Intermont College; Kappa Kappa Gamma ; Thomas R . Dew Economics Qub ; Flat Hat Business Staff; Backdrop Qub; Y. W. C A.; German Qub. Margaret Elizabeth Taylor NORFOLK, VIRGINIA Kappa Kappa Gamma; J. Lesslie Hall Literary Society; Y. W. C. A.; German Qub. (yru, [63] •V L- John Winthrop Teal RICHMOND, VIRGINIA Theta Delta Chi; Spanish Oub; Varsity Tennis. SENIOR CLASS Frank L. Thompson DUXDAS, VIRGINIA Kappa Sigma; Euclid Club; Spanish Qub; Phoenix Literary Society; Pan-American League. Minor Wine Thomas, Jr, EAST RADFORD, VIRGINIA Lambda Chi Alpha; Theta Chi Delta, President; Chi Beta Phi, Vice-President; Sigma Pi Sigma; Euclid Club; Concert Orches- tra; Band. John Parker Thompson CORLAIN, MASSACHUSETTS Lambda Chi Alpha; Inter national Relations Club; History Club; Tennis Manager; Royalist Business Staff; Interfraternity Council; Phoenix Literary So- ciety; Band. John Tinsley LYNCHBURG, VIRGINIA Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Phi Sigma; Qayton-Grimes Biological Club; 13 Qub; Varsity Swimming; Symphony Orchestra; College Band. Rebecca Anthony Timberlake WILLIAMSBURG, VIRGINIA Library Science Club, Secretary; Monogram Club; Women ' s Intramural Council; Freshman Basketball; Varsity Tennis; Day Students Club; Intramural Manager. [66] Alfred Paul Tirelis STOUGllTON, MASSACHUSETTS Phi Kappa Tau; Phi Epsilon Delta, Vice-President; Clayton-Grimes Biological Club; Freshman Football; Freshman Basketball; Freshman Baseball; Varsity Club; Varsity Football; Varsity Baseball; Flat Hat Circulation Staff; Gibbons Qub. SENIOR CLASS Ruth Trimble WINCHESTER, VIRGINIA Gamma Phi Beta; Eta Sigma Phi; Honor Council, Senior Representative; Monogram Club; Varsity Hockey; Basketball Manager; Baseball Manager; Williamsburg Board of Basketball Officials, Secre- tary; J. Lesslie Hall Literary Society; Y. W. C. A. Mary Anne Adams Travis HILLSIDE, NEW JERSEY Phi Mu; History Club; Scarab Club; J. Lcsslic Hall Literary Society; Boot and Spur Qub. Alma Van Blarcom PEERSKILL, NEW YORK President of Brown Hall; Education Club; Wom- en ' s Glee Qub; Y. W. C. A.; J. Lesslie Hall Lit- erary Society. Anthony P. Wagener WILLIAMSBURG, VIRGINIA Pi Kappa Alpha; Sigma Pi Sigma; Euclid Club; Varsity Track, Assistant Manager; College Band. Jean Vosburgh new rochelle, new york Alpha Chi Omega; Kappa Omicron Phi, Treasurer; Monogram Club, Vice-President; Freshman Orientation, Sponsor; Varsity Basketball, Captain; Varsity Tennis; Varsity Swimming; Cheer- leader; J. Lesslie Hall Literary Society; German Club. o ru ' C 7] Y e AAA 9 • J U Vvi -« rv 19 LoRiMER Walker WINCHESTER, MASSACHUSETTS Sigma Pi; Eta Sigma Phi; Varsity Tennis; College Choir; Phoenix Literary Society; Student Inter-Reli- gious Council. SENIOR CLASS Ottaway Marie Walker SANDSTON, VIRGINIA Transfer from Richmond Division; Clayton-Grimes Biological Club; Psychology Oub. Nancy Cole Walker DANVILLE, VIRGINIA Transfer from Averett College; Euclid Qub. Aletha Winston Ward ATLANTIC CITY, NEW JERSEY Alpha Chi Omega; History Club; J. Lesslie Hall Literary Society; Y. W. C. A. Charles Harper Ward POCAHONTAS, VIRGINIA Kappa Alpha; Qayton-Grimes Biological Club; Y. M. C. A.; Student Inter-Religious Council. Arthur Joseph Ward ROCKAWAY beach, new YORK Phi Kappa Tau; Physical Education Club; Freshman Swimming; Freshman Track; Varsity Swimming; Varsity Track; Gibbons Club. [68] Edward M. Ware WILLIAMSBURG, VIRGINIA Theta Delta Chi; Sigma Pi Sigma, President; Color Guard; Freshman Football; Freshman Basketball; Varsity Fencing, Manager, Captain; Flat Hat Busi- ness Staff. SENIOR CLASS PowEL F. Wartel BROOKLYN, NEW YORK Phi Alpha; Thomas R. Dew Economics Qub; Span- ish Qub; Freshman Track; Cheerleader; Scarab Club; Phoenix Literary Society; Balfour Club. Jean Warren WASHINGTON, D. C. Pi Beta Phi; International Relations Club. Secretary-Treasurer; Thomas R. Dew Economics Club; Spanish Club; Freshman Ori- entation Sponsor; Pan-Hellenic Council; J. Lesslie Hall Literary Society, President; Y. W. C. A. Barbara Felton Wastcoat RIDGEWOOD, NEW JERSEY Alpha Chi Omega; Thomas R. Dew Economics Club; Psychology Qub; Women ' s Glee Club; Y. W. C. A.; J. Lesslie Hall Literary Society; Ger- man Qub. Fletcher E. Weathers NEWMAN, ILLINOIS Theta Delta Chi; Alpha Kappa Psi; Flat Hal Ad- vertising Manager; Wranglers Qub, Secretary. Seymour Waxman NEW YORK CITY Lambda Phi Sigma; Orchestra; Flat Hat Staff; Camera Club. [69] cyru Howard F. Wheeler baldwin, new york Kappa Alpha; Omicron Delta Kappa; International Relations Club; Student Activities Committee; Men ' s Honor Council; Royalist, Editor-in-Chief; Literary Magazine Staff; Y. M. C. A.; Band; Orchestra. SENIOR CLASS Nancy Fairbanks White SHAKER HEIGHTS, OHIO Kappa Kappa Gamma; Spanish Club; Colonial Echo Staff; I. Lcsslie Hall Literary Society; Y. W. C. A. Winifred Louise Wheeler BALDWIN, NEW YORK Delta Delta Delta; History Club; Dramatic Club; Monogram Club; Freshman Orientation Sponsor; Secretary-Treasurer of Junior Class; Secretary-Treasurer of Senior Qass; Freshman Hockey; Varsity Hockey; Royalist Staff; J. Lesslie Hall Lit- erary Society; Y. W. C. A., Freshman Cabinet; German Club. Sara Jane White NORFOLK, VIRGINIA Transfer from Norfolk Division; Delta Delta De l- ta; Psychology Club; Dramatic Club; Y. W. C. A. William W. Woodbridge, Jr. SEATTLE, WASHINGTON Sigma Phi Epsilon; Omicron Delta Kappa, Treas- urer; Theta Alpha Phi, President; Dramatic Club; International Relations Oub; Who ' s Who in American Colleges and Universities; Chief of Pres- ident ' s Aides; F. H. C. Society, Treasurer; 13 Club; Colonial Echo, Editor-in-Chief; Varsity Fencing, Captain; Cheerleader; Phoenix Literary Society. Margaret-Helen Williams FOREST HILLS, NEW YORK Chi Omega; Lambda Phi Sigma, Vice-President; Freshman Hockey; Freshman Basketball; College Choir; Operettas; Wom- en ' s Glee Qub; J. Lesslie Hall Literary Society; Y. W. C. A.; German Qub. [70] SENIOR CLASS Elaine Wooddy BALTIMORE, MARYLAND Kappa Alpha Thcta; History Club, Vice-President; International Relations Club; Colonial Echo Busi- ness Staff; Scarab Club; Backdrop Club; Stage Crew. OTU-. [71] JUIIOR CL 1$$ Officers Elmo Turton Legg President Alfred Leneir Alley Vice-President Otto T. Boysen Secretary-Treasurer JUNIOR CLASS RosANKE Abbott Alfred Lenier Alley Howard P. Anderson Martha Anderson Edith Jeannette Appleby Charlotte Bacot John A. Barba, Jr. Josephine Elizabeth Barker Becky Bates Charley Hoomes Beale, Jr. GiFFORD Reynolds Beal Sarah Harris Bell Thelma Leigh Bell Dorothy Hope Bitting Margaret Black Marva Lillian Blair Marcia Bourne Otto T. Boysen [74] JUNIOR CLASS Daniel Burr Bradley Virginia Brenn Mary Boiseau Britton Mary Rayner Brookfield Mary Caldwell Fay Ashton Carmines JuANiCE Campbell Margaret Helms Carper Betty Virginia Carter Thomas B. Cartwright Arthur C. Cason, Jr. Betty Lou Chambers Jean Clarahan Ann Louise Clarke Virginia J. Claudon Mae Myers Coggin Elizabeth Jane Cook Dorothy Copfridce [75] OTIM ZF j :y JUNIOR CLASS Virginia Lee Coulbourn Christine Cowan Russell Mills Cox, Jr- Laura Elizabeth Craig Robert Critchfield Anne Pettit Cross Frank Damrosch 3RD Frances Haines Darby Maxey Davis James Dill John Dillard Ruth Doerschuk Lindsay Dorrier Robert Douglas Lucie Lorraine Dreyer Dorothy Duncan Frances M. Duryea Stanley Ebb [76] JUNIOR CLASS Emily Ardith Edcerton Grace Hamilton Elliott Rosa L ' Encle Ellis Louise Howell Ely Alvenne Louise Eppincer Mary Catherine Ewinc Jean Wallace Farr Palmer Farrington Orion Feaster Ethel Ford Sara Virginia Forwood Merritt Foster Vance Fowler Florence Mae Francioni Charles Frey Richard Gall Frances W. Garrett John Garrett, Jr. [77] yrvL JUNIOR CLASS Alice Heath Gates Harry Gebauer Rupert Gilmore Harry Click Geraldine Mabel Gorden George Gotshall Jane Groggins Helen Marie Gudebrod James Hanley Lucille Harder Marie Harris Charles Hayden Marguerite Hill Maxine Hines Gordon Holland Mary Augusta Holmes WiLLETHA Emma Holmes Ruth Ann Holzmueller [78] JUNIOR CLASS Mary Madelene Howard Mattie Virginia Hoyle Hope Hunt Joan Jarrett Catherine Roddey Jones Helen Elizabeth Jones Reba Jean Jordan Frances Jourdan Ruth Virginia Keat Marian Lucille Kelley Herbert Kelly Barbara Fletcher Kern Robert Klein Elizabeth Anne Knoll Mary Knox Carlton Laing Noel Patricia Lambert Robert Lansburgh [79] V- 1939 JUNIOR CLASS Margaret Benson Laughner Lois Virginia Leach Elmo Lego NORRIS LiNEWEAVER Doris Jeanne Locke Margaret Lee Longley Virginia St. Clair MacDonald Jayne L. Magee Paul Makler Carrie W. Massenburc Catherine Mavor Carlin May George McComb Helen Frances McDermott James McNiff Helen Isabelle Melvin Florence Merryman Edward Miller [80] JUNIOR CLASS Miriam Mollen Elizabeth Moore William Musser Robert Neslaw Robert Newton John Owen Nancy Lucile Owens Jeanne Parker Ellis Parry Alvin Phillips Edward Phillips Emelie Morris Phillips Susie Katherine Plunkett Clark Presbrey Robert Pride Charles Quittmeyer Muriel Eleanor Ranges Margaret Ellen Richards [81] orut. 16 JUNIOR CLASS Florence Ricketts Charles Roberts Otelia Dean Robertson Evelyn Blackwell Robinson Edith Rogers Janet Ruth Rosenson Bernard Russell Janet Josephine Rust Dorothy Pell Schmitz Beatrice Schneider William Seamans Dorothy Helen Sease Anne Harris Seward Shirley Gordon Sheain Mildred Anne Shepherd Raymond Stephens Helen Furz Strange Ruth F. Strumincer [82] JUNIOR CLASS Lillian Styer Hubert Sumner John Sumner Dorothy Ellen Swan James Tallev Eleanor Jenkins Taylor Kathleen Joan Taylor Ann Terrell Frank Thomas McKiE Trotter Constance Bainbridge Truxtun Rudolph Tucker Betty Parker Tyler Helen Bernice Vince Susie Elizabeth Vincent Elsie May Vreeland Frances Wacener Gervais Wallace [83] oTuoA. JUNIOR CLASS Dorothy Edwards Walling Jean Walworth Lillian Davis Waymack Mary Stanley Weaver Norman Weinberg Margaret B. West Nella Inez Whitaker Irene White Elsie Margaret Wilde Ruth Maclin Williams Virginia Wilson Frances Jane Wolf Mary Eileen Woods June Worley Fred Worster Dorothy Alice Wright Lucy D. Yeaman Conrad Yocum Ellen L. Younb CM] SOPHOMORE €L 1§§ Officers Sterling T. Strange Jr President Raymond Lee Haynie, Jr Vice-President Robert Edward Griffin Secretary-Treasurer avm SOPHOMORE CLASS Hattie Willis Abbitt Saunders M. Almond WiLLARD B. ApPENZELLER Arthur D. Appleby Virginia Armstrong Margaret Anne Apperly Houston Ashworth Margaret Averill Ruth Barton Virginia Louise Began Theodore D. Benjovskv, Jr. Lucie Agnew Bennett Charles Beville Margaret Ruth Bigler Elizabeth C. Blair Marion Blair Margaret Blasingame Richard E. Bohannan Beverly Boone Kemp Boot Betty Maxine Boyd [86] SOPHOMORE CLASS Grace E. Briel John Brennan Thomas J. Brennan Kitty Jane Britton Robert Sidney Broocks, Jr. William George Brown Francis Eppes Bryant Griffin Callahan David Bennett Camp Alphonse Chestnut Dorothy Chick Nancy Chisholm Patrick Ciri Franklin Lee Clark James H. Clark, Jr. Mary Holmes Clark Rose Coffin Dorothy Louise Cole Marie C. Cole Jean Collmus Mary A. Colpiits (ynJL [87] ie SOPHOMORE CLASS Elizabeth H. Cook Li.ovD M. Cornell Arihur Strong Cosgrove Horace Irvin Coward Jean Ridgeway Cox Martha Wooldridce Cox Marion Edith Craft Jean Louise Crist Louis Crooks Paul James Crouse Mary McKay Darragh Myrtle Elizabeth Davis Thomas Crawley Davis, Jr. Ella C. Dickenson David Diamond Harry Dilworth Lucy Meade Dobie Ethel Russell Donnelly Robert Donnelly Lillian Arnold Douglas Richard Earle [88] SOPHOMORE CLASS Mary Katherine Edikcer Hazel Edyvean William Edwards Eugene Ellis Jane Elizabeth Ensor William Farmer William Fisher Grace Flavell Margaret Stuart Ford David Forer Elizabeth Foster Abner Charles Fox Geraldine Gretna Garst Erwin Geiger Leonard Geyer Marjorie Gildner Helen Gray Robert Greene Huber Griffin Robert Griffin Frank Grimes mj [89] 09 9 SOPHOMORE CLASS Frances Mary Gullion pHit.i.ip Haddock Harry Hall James Hargis, Jr. Armand Harkless John Harper Raymond Haynie, Jr. Samuel Hedgecock Marie E. Hellers Ann Shirley Hobbs Carter Holbrook, Jr. Grace C. Hopkins Kathryn Marie Hoover Helen Hubbard Betty Jane Hui.sey Mary Jane Hutchinson Jeanne Louise Ivey Margaret Louise Jahnke Shirley ' James Jeanne Jefferson David Jones [90] SOPHOMORE CLASS Rosalie Durette Jones Dorothy Y. Judd Richard Kaufman Flora McLaughlin Kearney Margaret Hamilton Kelly Barbara Margaret Kempf Evelyn Winifred Kempfer Robert Kern Edna Louise Klinge Arthur Kneip Frances Knight Horace Latta John Lawson Peggy Lebair Frances Lewis Dorothy Lindquist Ellen Frances Lindsay Arthur H. London David Low June Elizabeth Lucas Irma Grace Luxton [91] ?vt SOPHOMORE CLASS Virginia Markell Nancy McCall Jack McCarthy Jean Evans McEldowney Alice McKain Walter Measday David Meyer Marian E. Milne Ann Mitchell Margaret Hull Mitchell Mary Bush Moncure Louise Oberrender Dorothy Miller Ogden Mary Virginia Osborne William Parry Frances Olivia Paul Lawrence Pettet William Pettit William Edward Plitt Mary Murray Prickett CORTEZ QuICKEL [92] SOPHOMORE CLASS Coleman Ransone Ruth Evelyn Rapp Bertel Rasmussen Frances Josephine Reeder Jean Riddick Louis Rives Margaret Hunt Ripperton Austin Roberts Lillian Halsey Robinson Eleanor Rowan Charles Sale Wharton Sanders Aura R. Schroeder Jane Day Scofield Charles Scott Robert Scripps Frances Carolyn Seymour Seymour Simerman Dorothy Olivia Simpson Elmer Skillman Berthold Sorby [93] yn 139 U (J - SOPHOMORE CLASS Gene Agnes Spracher Ruth Staebner Robert Stainton Margaret Stigall Charles Stousi.and Sterling Strange LiNwooD Tabb Guilford Taylor Paul Taylor Ruby Wellington Trice Gertrude Van Wyck Mildred Spottswood Ware James Welsh BoTTY Blaine Whitehill Dorothy P. Whitfield Richard Whiting Everett Williams Arthur Dale Williams Mildred Barksoale Wiltshire Camille Woltz Vincent Woolley t94] SOPHOMORE CLASS Norman Workman Herbert Young Charles Young [95] oru. m. E$H il 1 W CL 1§§ Officers Francis J. Acosta, Jr President C. Malcolm Sullivan Vice-President Patricia Nixon Secretary-Treasurer Virginia Tripp Historian rRE§Hil lW ClUSS FRESHMEN WOMEN Alden, Jane Alexander, Margaret Lee Allen, Lucy Burke Allen, Margaret B. Ammer, Christel G. Anderson, Barbara Jane Anderson, Jeannette Lee Andersen, Helen Lucille Anderson, Mary Louise Ansell, Laura Virginia Apperly, Margaret Ann Averill, Margaret S. Bankard, Jeanne Marie Barnhardt, Elizabeth Ann Bayliss, Jane Elizabeth Beck, Elizabeth Irene Bell, Virginia C. Benner, Caroline Todd Berg-Johnsen, Doris Bidelspacher, Catherine Biele, Myrtle Elsanna Black, Alice Ruth Black, Mary Ruth Blasingame, Margaret Boardman, Virginia Jane Boatwright, Nancy Allen Boger, Elise Martin Bolton, Evelyn A. Bonynge, Emilie Bourquin, Emma Bradshaw, Ann Amory Brenner, Isabel W. Buchan, Irene Jessie Buchser, Virginia Budina, Margaret Hull, Elizabeth Louise Butterfield, Kathryn Cady, Phyllis G. Campbell, Janet E. Carter, Annette Jane Catlett, Lucy W. Cloud, Ruth C. Cook, Caroline Cooke, Wanda Cotterman, Catherine Craighead, Elizabeth E. Creighton, Bettie M. Davies, Edith L. Davis, Eleanor Ames Derr, Elinor Marion Dial, Dorian Lee Dickerman, Emily Elizabeth Dodson, Jean Virginia Doepke, Virginia Donald, Katharine Lea Dority, Lucy Carter Douglas, Elizabeth M. Edwards, Jean Rhodes Ely, Eleanor Ervin, Mae Brown Everett, Margaret L. Ewing, Emalee Isola Farmer, Charlotte Figley, Mary Margaret Fitz Hugh, Virginia Ann Funsten, Florence Furbee, Helen Mae Goehring, Iva Adele Gordon, Louise DuBose Gotshall, M. Rowcna Gould, Virginia Ruth Green, Kitty Trudell Griffin, Dorothy Virginia Grimes, Marie Elizabeth Hagarty, Ellen Hall, Elizabeth Ann Hampton, Gertrude E. Mae Harden, Jane Harrell, Emily Katherine Harvey, Janice Elizabeth Heckman, Marianne Henderson, Mary E. Henderson, Virginia C. Henderson, Virginia Charlotte Hiden, Mary Nelson W. Hile, Phyllis Hill, Mildred Anne Hodges, Lois Ann Hogshire, Dorothy L. Hooper, Betsy Lee Hopkins, Marjorie E. Hopkins, Sarah Miriam Hulcher, Claire L. Jennings, Sara Lucile Jones, Alice Goodwin Jones, Mary Coleman Julius, Louise C. Kelcey, Theo Kerr, Frances C. Kerr, Jean Randall Langsner, Marian Latimer, Mary B. Lee, Joan Lucinda Lehman, Joan du Laux Leikin, Beverly Lockwood, Rosemary Longino, Virginia Ann Lovell, Jean Elizabeth Lucas, Margaret Marie McClure, Lucy M. McCormick, Camilla Mackler, Florence G. Markle, Virginia Lee Mathes, Joyce Mercer, Jane Miller, Anne Louise Miras, Patricia M. Molloy, Harriet Ann Mooers, Charlotte R. Moore, Sarah Elizabeth Mordan, Betty Jeanne Morris, Muriel H. Murray, Harriet Elizabeth Nason, Nancy Gardner Nichols, Natalie Nichols, Patricia Nixon, Patricia Nottingham, Eleanor L. Obenchain, Jane Overholser, Dorothy Parker, Nancy Jordan Pate, Marion Anne Patten, Mary Marie Pence, Louvia Irene Phillips, L. Jacqueline Phillips, Roberta Poarche, Frances E. Price, Nancy Fiske Rathbun, Edith G. Reiff, Jean Dorothy Reindollar, Jeanne L. Reitz, Marie Louise Robinson, Margaret Ada Robinson, Mary Anne Rogers, Natalie Jane Ronalds, Margaret S. Ross, Dorothy Jean Ross, Jane Custis Rossbacher, Agnes H. Roulstone, Frances Rubin, Edna Rudasill, Frances D. Schmitz, Marjorie T. Schreiber, Eleanor Scott, Katherine B. Sears, Adeline G. Shafer, Susan Patricia Smith, Doris Charles Smith, Elizabeth Ann Smith, Virginia M. Spaeth, Mary Elizabeth Sprague, Harriet Ford Sterne, Frances Virginia Stewart, Janet G. Stilson, Dorothy Summerfield, Mary W. Taylor, Tabb Teal, Ethel Virginia Trice, Nancy Webster Triplett, Mary Arther Tripp, Virginia Alice Tweedy, Cleo Elizabeth Van Auken, Marjorie Vogel, Dorothy Walker, Sally Bet Walker, Virginia Jane Wallace, Audrey Lee Wallace, Etta Louise Walton, Alice Lillian Warren, Annette G. Warriner, Anne H. Weaver, Louise Anna White, Eizabeth C. White, Jean Carol White, Prudence Whorley, Mildred Edith Wiegand, Jean Wilkinson, Eleanor Virginia Witherbee, Elizabeth A. Wrentmore, Ann C. Wright, Julia Lewis Yachnin, Florence R. Zimmerman, Dorothy E. Zimmerman, Elizabeth S. FRESHMEN MEN Acosta, Francis J., Jr. Aldrich, Robert D. Allen, Russell A., Jr. Amonette, Robert L., Jr. Andrews, Hunter B. Arend, Frederick H. Baker, Chester S., Jr. Basley, George W. Batchelder, Clarke G. Bergwall, Willard A. Bessman, Samuel Paul Blake, Francis H., Jr. Blanford, George T. Bowl, Robert Franklin Bremer, Marvin Broughton, Henry W. Bunch, Melvin Elbert Burns, Brendan A., Jr. Butler, William Joseph Camp, David Bennett Carol, Arthur George Cholko, Alphonse F. Cirigliano, Patrick E. Clarke, Francis Cline, Richard Emory Cohen, Sherman L Cook, Edward Morrison Court, Jack Commings Crane, Thomas Frederick Creekman, James L., Jr. Curtis, Huntington W. Daughton, Kilmer Earl Davis, Richard J. Davis, Thomas C, Jr. Davis, William M. DeHaven,. Phillip Diamond, Eli Conrad Diggs, Harold A. Dixon, Arthur W., Jr. Douglas, James S. Dratz, Edward Fulliam Duke, F. Raymond, Jr. duPont, Coleman Edwards, Charles B., Jr. Ehmig, George Charles Ellenson, Samuel Leon Esposito, Benjamin William Factor, Irving David Parish, George Farnsworth, Delmar J. Ferris, Abraham Fisher, Edgar J., Jr. Fitchett, Gilmer Trower Flamberg, Morton Flowers, Robert C. Fester, H. Oliver Fox, A. McKindrad, Jr. Funsten, Norman B. Gage, Frederick A. Garwood, William H. Golomb, David Leonard Goodlow, William Francis Griffin, Perry B. Hanley, Joseph James Hanson, Gordon E. Harrington, Albert A., Jr. Hayner, Alex Walton Henning, Robert Leonard Hickey, James Benton Howard, James Edward Jeffrey, Joseph Jones, John Melvin Kanter, Martin Harold Kaylin, Walter Keeney, Arthur H. Kelley, Claude Kelso Kemp, Carl Kendall, Herbert, Jr. Kent, Richard, Jr. Kitchin, Melville Know lton, Harold Ray Kohrs, Frank W., Jr. LaFrance, Richard Paul Laws, Winfield Lazaron, Harold V. Leftwich, James Davis Leshan, Laurence Lewis, Wells C. Lillis, James Low, David Story McNiff, James L. Maisch, Harry C. Manzi, Anthony B. Masters, Harlie Hugh Maucione, Anthony William May, Edward C, Jr. May, John Duvall Mears, Richard McMath Meeks, Charles Meeks, Montie S. Merritt, Roy Barclay Miller, J. William Moncure, Thomas M. Moore, Eugene Russell, Jr. Moore, William Gaston Morell, William N., Jr. Morewitz, Burt Merle Mougey, John Thomas Musante, Harry Nowak, Roger Peter Ogden, Judd Talbot O ' Reilly, Lee Parker, Vincent Luke Paskus, Garrison Payne, Wade C, Js. Paynter, Thomas G. Pence, Robert W. Pettit, William S., II Quickel, Cortez S. Quinlan, David Francis Raschi, Victor John Read, Benjamin Smith Reed, John Bertram, Jr. Revell, Everett C. Robbins, Douglas Robert Robbins, Samuel B., Jr. Rogow, Howard Alan Rose, Gerald Jacob Rosseau, Charles B. Rougan, James Edmund Rubin, Saul St. John, William James Sanders, Wharton S., Jr. Schneider, Warren Jerome Scott, Howard Pollard Scripps, Charles Edward Segoine, H. Richard, Jr. Shryock, Thomas J., Ill Sills, Richard Lee Simerman, Albert Simonson, Louis A. Sinclair, Clement Forrest Sisk, Thomas Joseph Sizemore, Julian C. Slack, Munsey, Jr. Slater, William Leon, Jr. Smith, Thomas Emmett Sparber, David Stallman, Howard Anthony Strange, Thomas Edward, Jr. Sturges, Philip S. Sullivan, Charles Malcolm Svetkey, Edward Robert Swanson, Arthur Vick Taylor, Charles Perry Tepper, Robert Tillinghast, William B., Jr. Tucker, Robert Alex Tunstall, Garnett T. Wade, Robert M., Jr. Wallach, Elliot A. Warren, Elwood Minton Watson, Darrell A. Watson, Hugh Latimer Wein, Sidney Fred Wiatt, Charles Graham Williams, Douglas Gordon Williams, Henry C. Winder, Augustus Milton Woodward, Woodson W. Woolsey, Ned Moore Wright, Richard H. Young, George W., Jr. J4 sound mind in a strong body is a jilting motto for athletics at William and Mary. With a well-organized system of intramural sports and well-trained teams to meet rival colleges, all students have the opportunity to participate. 1 9 3 8 • S port S eason ' 1 9 3 9 Here are the possibilities of another field ' s being led by William and Mary. Gradually our teams are breaking their leases on the base- ment and rising toward the penthouse. Our football team presents the big question mark; and we are optimistic. Let our team be half as good as we think it will be, and it will still be up with the elite of athletics. Fencing and swimming have always attracted stars here. It has got to the point where, if we weren ' t William and Mary people, we ' d be in- clined to be vain. Possibly the most heartening sign of this sea- son has been the greatly increased power, finesse, and scoring ability of our basketball team. This sophomore group is headed for bigger triumphs. The young ladies, too, keep quietly and po- litely advancing on their part. The men ' s student body keeps an interested eye directed toward them. Ability and courage, competitive spirit and sportsmanship are herein embodied and herein flourish. [103] BRANCH BOCOCK The qA t h I e t i c s T) i r e c t o r As always when it becomes necessary for a man to leave the college who has by his personality and ability made himself im- portant in the lives of the students, we feel considerable regret. In the case of James Branch Bocock we feel more than the usual regret, because he has been for many years an influential and genial member of our college community. Coach Bocock was graduated from Georgetown University and began his career in the legal department of the South- ern Railway Company. During the past thirty-two years he has served as head coach and athletic director of six well-known col- leges and universities; he has spent five years with the Restoration; and he has even spent four years as Special Agent in the Department of Justice. In nineteen- twenty-eight Mr. Bocock came to the Col- lege of William and Mary as head of foot- ball. He left in nineteen-thirty-one to ac- cept a position with the Restoration. Five years later he returned to William and Mary as coach of football, and in nineteen- thirty-seven was appointed Director of Ath- letics at the College. We say goodbye and good luck to Coach Bocock with the sincere hope that he will be as successful and valuable in his next position as he has been in this. [104] The football team is the big question mark in the eyes of the loyal followers of William and Mary ' s colors. We ' ve always seen unrelenting effort, spirit, and, occasionally, have tasted of the fruits of victory. Now we look forward optimistically to a team whose power and scoring ability will not trail its other capacities. Our new coach, Carl Voyles, of no mean reputation, has aimed us at a star, and it only remains to be seen whether or not he will supply the impetus he has promised. But, come what may, we know our future teams will preserve inviolate the tradition for good sportsmanship and dogged courage in the face of victory and defeat with which they have been entrusted. F o o tb al [ 105] y. V Seamans running wide in the V. M. I. game. Qdptdin Herb Krueger Herb Krueger has been not only the most popu- lar man on the football squad, admired by his fellow-players and the rest of the college as well, but he has been second to none in his ability on the field. He has shown strength, endurance, aggressiveness, grit, and good football sense while playing a difficult key position. Herb graduates this year with our good wishes, and sincere regrets. He will be missed by all in the field and on the campus. Cuseo being tackled in the Apprentice game. Here lies the 1938 football team of the College of William and Mary, which fought its heart out and played to the best of its abiliy. Such could be a fitting epitaph for any number of unsuccessful gridiron teams of this past season or any season, and judged from the standpoint of victories and defeats, the Indian eleven was literally buried in defeats, winning only two of its nine scheduled games. Fortunately, however, a win cr a loss was not as vital a factor as with some of the other teams in the nation, and while the 1938 Bocock-coached edition was out to win every game; that it went down fighting was a measure of success in itself and lessened some- what the sting of defeats. The season was opened in customary fashion — a William and Mary defeat at the hands of superiorly manned Navy at Annapolis. Th; score was typical, 26-c, but the Indians played a fairly good brand of ball and even sericusly threatened to score. Most of the damage was done by Navy passes, and from this game on, the opposition took advantage of the Tribe ' s weak aerial defense. In spite of the defeat at the hands of the Midshipmen, it was a rather optimistic squad which went out on the local playing field the following Saturday to engage a smartly-coached team representing the Newport News Apprentice School, which, incidentally, brought along some fifteen hundred enthusiastic supporters. The Shipbuilders turned out to be a band of oppor- tunists, and with the home eleven graciously obliging by playing its poorest game of the year, Newport News recorded a stunning 9-8 upset victory. Next in line was the yearly battle with Virginia Tech, and the Tribesmen had to travel all the way to Blacksburg to take a 27-0 lacing. Rather than say it was a bad day for the Indians, the better observation is that the Tech- men could do no wrong that day and easily turned in thtir peak periormance of the season. On Friday, October 14th, woefully weak little Guilford came to Williams- burg to make the Indians look like champs. The Quakers did just that, and the whole squad took part in the 45-0 win. In a way the victory was not so sweet because the home forces lost the services of John Dillard, regular right tackle, for the tough V. M. I. game coming up. Without Dillard, the rest of the forward wall played bang-up ball against the hard-hitting V. M. I. boys in the Indians ' Homecoming Day battle. The Keydets figured to win in a romp, but heroic performances by Davidson, Walker, Hook, and Captain Krueger — all seniors — forced the scarlet-clad visitors to take to the air for their only well-deserved touchdown. Keydet aerials worked the ball to the Indian 7-yard line from which point Sonny Shelby fired a pass to Paul Shu standing all alone in the end zone. Early in the third quarter when it looked like the game would be tied up, Ruett, Keydet guard, intercepted an attempted Indian pass and dashed 74 yards for the second and final V. M. I. touchdown. The Keydets ' all-Southern Conference back, Shu, place-kicked both extra points for a 14-0 score. Charlottesville was the next stop, and in spite of a valiant fight by the Indians, the combination of their own injuries and Virginia ' s strength spelled a 34-0 defeat. It was Commonwealth Day and the Cavaliers preserved their record of never having been scored on by a William and Mary football team. Back home on the following Saturday, Hampden-Sydney supplied just the needed tonic to start the Indians clicking for a change, when the visiting Tigers tallied a third period touchdown and extra-point to take a 7-6 lead. The enraged Indians came bounding back with two touchdowns and a neat 18-7 win. Any hopes of a William and Mary victory over Washington and Lee in Lexington on the following Saturday were soon shattered when the Generals ' big line began mowing down the Indians ' offense and opening up large holes in the Tribe ' s line. Without a good set of backs the CJenerals won easily 27-0. This left the team facing the traditional Thanksgiving Day battle with the University of Richmond as the only hope of salvaging the season; and the coaches and the entire campus urged the Tribe to forget all the reverses they had sustained. They did just that and came within an ace of upsetiing the highly favored Spiders. A sustained first-period drive netted a Wiiliam and Mary score, and their 7 to o lead appeared safe for half-time at least, but a touchdown pass by Arthur Jones, Richmond back, with thirty seconds remaining in the half put the Spiders back on even terms. This same Jones booted a field goal in the third quarter to give Richmond a 10 to 7 winning margin. If any team was out to beat Richmond, it was this William and Mary team; it made a gallant attempt at it and came very close to succeeding. Next season, Carl Voyles, a former assistant to Wallace Wade at Duke, will take over the destinies of the Indians, succeeding Branch Bocock as head coach. He faces a none-too-bright outlook, as graduation takes six regulars from the starting line-up, and little help may be expected from the freshman squad which won but one of its five games. COACH DOUGLAS COACH KELLISON COACH FLICKINGER [107] DOUGLAS ■HANNA CAPTAIN KREUOER +IOOK Summary of the ' flayers CAPTAIN HERBERT KRUEGER — Center, from Everett, Mass. Herb is a smart ball player who took over the center position in his sophomore year, and since then he has not been replaced. For sheer grit and aggressiveness, there is no equal on the squad to this 165-pound center. Much to his regret Herb has played his last game of college football. SAM WALKER— Tackle, from Brooklyn, who weighs 200 pounds and is as fast as any back on the squad. Sam plays guard on the offense and tackle on the defense. He was alternate captain on the Indian eleven this year, and he is easily the cream of the squad in football ability. After this year ' s performance, Sam should be ranked and compared with William and Mary ' s All-Time grid greats. LLOYD PHILLIPS— Back, from Lynchburg, and the fastest man on the entire squad. Lloyd hits his stride in broken-field running and end-run plays. A potential candidate for a Rhodes scholarship, he is also a mainstay on the track team. Next year in his senior year he will come under the tutelage of the new coaching staff, which may make him into one of the best backs in the South. TOMMY DELLA TORRE— Back, from Rich- field Park, N. J., is one of the best defensive backs on the team. Tommy stands only five feet seven inches, but every bit of it is dynamite. He is on the throwing end of the aerial attack and many of his bullet passes were responsible for long gains. Tommy also has played his last college football game. JOHN DAVIDSON — Guard, from Palisades Park, N. J. Johnny came here from Bergen Junior College and stepped in and took over a regular guard position on the Indian eleven. He is a dependable player on both offense and defense. Although not a Hashy player every play finds him in the midst of the heap. Johnny also has played his last game for William and Mary. MIKE HOOK— Guard, from Erie, Pa., is one of the best liked boys on the squad and one of the most dependable men on the team. He combines his 210 pounds, six feet one inch, with enough foot- ball intelligence to hold down a regular guard berth on the team. This is also Mike ' s last year of foot- ball. [ 108] BYRNE GONDAKr ISAMCN SEAMENS STAN KAMEN— End, from Jamaica, N. Y., is smart and aggressive, and is at his best on the receiv- ing end of forward passes. During the 1937 season he was hampered by injuries and much was expected of him this year. However, again the injury jinx trailed him, but fortunately this year he was able to score on many passes. JOHN DILLARD — Tackle, from Norfolk. Dillard came to William and Mary, and in his sophomore year he earned a regular position at tackle. He plays sound, dependable football, is sel- dom sensational, but always consistent. John is one of the iron men of the squad, and he will be a very handy man next year in the New Deal. DONALD DeLUCA— Back and lineman, from Melrose, Mass. Don started the season at end but by the time of the Richmond game he had seen service as a tackle, end, and back. In the backfield he showed up as a consistent gainer in line plunges and as a reliable line backer. As a tackle he was the hardest hitting line man on the field. Don is another of those players who will receive serious attention from the new coaches — -for he has two more years of varsity play before him. ROBERT DOUGLAS— Guard, from Readville, Va. Bob is the largest player on the squad, stand- ing six feet four inches and weighing 210 pounds. Despite the fact that he had never played football before coming to William and Mary, and also that he was hampered by a bad knee injury, Bob ' s play- ing has been of a high calibre. An injury, received this year, might mark an end to his football career just as he is entering his senior year. CHARLES GONDAK — End, from Springdale, Pa. Charlie, as a sophomore, was ranked as one of the first four ends of this year ' s team. His minutes of play this season were numbered by injuries, but when he was playing he showed great ability as a defensive player. Gondak expects to look forward to a good year under the tutelage of the new coach- ing staf?. BILL BYRNE— Back, from Evander Childs, N. Y. Bill has showed more improvement than any other sophomore on the squad. He is a shifty runner, a smart passer, and is a hard-hitting line bucket. The educated toe of this lad was responsible for many of the long punts which gave the Indians new hope when the ball was deep in their own territory. Two years of training under Coach Voyles should make Bill one of the best backs that William and Mary has seen in years. RUDOLPH TUCKER— Center, from Norfolk. Rudy is another product of Maury High who is making good at this school. He is a hard-fighting defensive player who has been overshadowed this year by Captain Krueger. Next year he is expected to be the regular center. WILLIAM SEAMANS — Back, from Keystone, Pa. Seamans came to William and Mary this fall from Keystone Junior College in Pennsylvania. Used as a reserve back. Bill was a dependable substi- tute who was called upon frequently to enter the fracas, and therein he displayed his ability as a high- stepping, hard-running back. [109] The new athletic director is Carl M. Voyles, who comes to William and Mary from Duke Uni- versity with the reputation of being one of the most outstanding coaches in the South. A native of McCloud, Oklahoma, Voyles at- tended Oklahoma A. and M. College. After his graduation, Mr. Voyles began his coaching career at Altus High School, Oklahoma. From there he went to Southwestern State Teachers ' College as head coach and athletic director, and from the Teachers ' College to the University of Illinois as assistant coach. In 1931 he accepted the position of assistant to Wallace Wade at Duke. He was Wade ' s right-hand man, acting as end coach and varsity scout along with his job as track coach. At William and Mary, Voyles will be Director of Athletics and head coach in basketball and foot- ball. CARL M. VOYLES f ' M PfllLUPS nAN IDSON nil I JiQD TUCKtn . m vmssmm mmS . . H 1. New additions to the coaching staff for the 1939 sea- son are line coach Werner and backfield coach McCray JULIAN McCLURE Manager Wampo, after a touchdown The Band in letter formation [ ll.M Phillips being brought down from be- hind in the V. P. I. game. [ 113] spring Training Season The spring football training season lasted for six weeks, during which time about sixty interested candidates were put through a gruelling program. The two scrimmage games held with Georgetown, the first played at Georgetown and the second here, showed the Indian squad to have a great deal of spirit and willingness to work. The spring training season has now become a part of the athletic cur- riculum, and is expected to improve the calibre of future teams. t 114] Freshman Football Season The 1938 William and Mary Freshman team completed its season with a record of one game won, one tied, and three lost. The season opened with a victory, and as a result prospects for a successful season were very bright. Otis Doug- las, starting his second year as Freshman coach, was called in to assist the varsity staff, and con- sequently was not able to concentrate all of his attention on the Freshman squad. This loss had dire effects on the team. In the opening contest with the Norfolk Ship- building Apprentice team at home, the Papooses scored two minutes after the opening whistle. Jim Hickey scored on a line buck, and also con- verted the extra point on a line buck. Later in the same quarter, Walt Matthews scored on a twenty-five-yard run behind beautiful interfer- ence. He also kicked the extra point from place- ment. In the final period Jimmie Howard in a beautiful exhibition of broken-field running scored the final touchdown, making the score 20-0. The second game, also played at home, was lost to the Fork Union Military Academy by the score of 7-0. Not until the final period was the enemy able to cross the last white stripe. Dick La France, Papoose end, almost tied the score when he recovered a fumble across the goal line for what looked like a touchdown, only to have the play called back because he had kicked the ball in his attempt to recover it. The punting of Jim Hickey was the outstanding feature of the game. The Frosh, hampered by injuries and eligibil- ity rules, lost a hard-fought game to the Univer- sity of Richmond Freshmen by the score of 1 3-0. The frosh played good ball, but the absence of several of the regulars played an important part in the defeat. Playing their best game of the season, the little Indians tied the much-favored Norfolk Division team by the score of 6-6. The Papooses scored their only touchdown in the second quarter on a pass from Jim Hickey to Dick La France. The frosh outplayed their rivals in the second half of the game, led by the brilliant tackle play of El- wood Warren. The final game of the season at the Naval Training Station was lost by the score of 26-14. The frosh were riddled by injuries received in the Division game, and consequently were forced to use a revamped lineup. The Boots scored in every quarter, but the frosh scored only in the first and third quarters. The play of Jack Moore in the backfield and the play of Warren in the line was especially outstanding throughout this game. tI15J Bottom Row: Taffe, Fowler, Gondak, Mackey, Hedgecock Second Row: Kellison, Broocks, Oliver, Seamens, Kendig, Manager Third Row: V. Andrews, T. Andrews William and Mary ' s basketball team, always a strong and de- pendable element in the field of sports, feels the influence of a new hand at the tiller. And new guidance brings greater expec- tations. Our team has completed a season of which it and we may be justly proud. It heard an impressive list of victories made all the more an item for rejoicing when we consider that the team is composed almost entirely of sophomores. This fact in itself makes our team a strong factor in the Conference race next year, and one to merit our hearty support and whole-hearted confidence. Basketball [ 116 ] Varsity basketball SCHEDULE W. w. w. w. w. w. w. w. w. w. w. w. w. w. w. w. w. w. w. w. and M 35 ; and M 32; and M 35 ; and M 48; and M 42; and M 43 ; and M 46 ; and M 60; and M 64; and M 57 ; and M 36 ; and M 37 ; and M 36; and M 43 ; and M 57 ; and M 29; and M 30; and M 37 ; and M 42 ; and M 31 ; Davidson 55 N. C. State .... 27 Wake Forest .... 58 I ' , of Virginia W. and L. . . V. M. 1. . . . V. P. I. ... Randolph-Macon Hampden-Sydney V. P. I. ... Randolph-Macon U. of V irginia Richmond St. Joseph ' s . . U. cf Maryland Navy V. M. I. . . . W. and L. . . Wake Forest Richmond 38 62 48 33 37 40 30 25 39 39 52 49 53 45 46 46 40 The 1938 basketball season opened uith much doubt and tear as to the success of tne William and Mary quintet. With Lusardi on the ineligible list, Coacn Kellison had to rely on sophaincre material for his hrst-string ccmbination. In the opening engagement, the Indians fell victims to a pouertui Davidson team, by the score of 55-35. After this bad beginning, the Graves set out on a short tvvc-game trip in Nortiv Carolina. At Raleigh, the sophomore lint-up of Mackey, Taffe, Gundak, and the Andrews brothers pulled a big surprise by upsetting the favored North Carolina State team by a 32-28 win. The following night the Tribesmen were taken to the tune of 58-35 by the veteran, league-leading Wake Forest five. The University of Virginia ' s previously unbeaten Cavaliers were toppled by a 48-38 score in the last few minutes of the game. Against Washington and Lee, the Indians could not keep up their early pace and soon fell far behind. In the second quarter, the Comets burst forth in a scoring spree to finish the game with a final score of 62-42. The Braves went on the warpath the following evening in Blacksburg and took everything but V. P. I. ' s gym where they administered a 46-33 drubbing. The Gobblers jumped to an early lead, which soon faded when the Indians got their passing under con- trol, and began making their shots with more regu- larity. The travel-worn Indians returned to Lexington to test the V. M. I. team and showed the effects of the two previous games when they fell before the fast, rough Keydet quintet. The Keydets came out on top with 48 points, despite the 43 points scored by the W. and M. quintet. Back home again on a familiar court, the Tribe put on a display of scoring power that has rarely been seen in Blow Gym. Led by Mackey, who rang up a total of 23 points, the team went wild at the expense of Randolph-Macon. Scoring over fifty per cent of their shots, the Indians displayed the best offense of the whole year. The final score was 60-37. Two nights later, Tom Andrews went Mackey one better and tossed in 24 points during the Tribe ' s 64-40 triumph over Hampden-Sydney. Then, V. P. I. fell again be- fore the Indian ' s mastery, this time 57-30. Starting the second half of its twenty-game schedule, the Tribesmen invaded Ashland for a return game with Randolph-Macon. W. and M. won 36-25 after a tough first half. A second game with the University of Virginia, this time in Charlottesville, resulted in a 39-37 victory for the Cavaliers. In the next game, Richmond subdued the Tribesmen 39-36 and maintained its four-year record of never COACH KELLISON losing a basketball game to W. and M. During the third period, W. and M rallied three times to tie the score, but each time Richmond climbed back to regain their margin. Red Taffe accounted for seventeen points for the Tribe, and Burge scored the same num- ber for Richmond. The next week found the Indian squad traveling to Philadelphia to tackle St. Joseph ' s, the same team that rocketed to national fame last year. One notable fact about the game was that against competition of such class the Indian sharp-shooters continued to roll up their forty points. In spite of this, however, the St. Joseph team emerged on the high side of the 52-43 score. At College Park, the Indians trounced the University of Maryland to the score of 57-49. Against the Terps, the Indians played one cf the best games of the entire year. The Maryland team was unable to cope with the outstanding shooting of the Indians, who were scor- ing from all angles. In the Navy game, the Indians, after a scoreless first half, began to score, but the game was already on the ice for the Navy, and the score at the end was 53-29. Wake Forest brought their team to Williamsburg for a return game and gave Kellison ' s sophomores their hardest fought game of the season. Half-time found W. and M. in front by six points, but early in the final period, the Deacons put en a display of shooting that swept the tiring Indians off their feet. Tom Andrews tied it up late in the quarter, but in the final seconds. Wake Forest came through with two baskets that gave them the game, 46-42. In the second contest with W. and L. the William and Mary cagemen played even ball with the Comets for three full periods. The pace soon proved too hot for the Indians, and they fell behind 40-29 with eight minutes left to play. The Tribesmen were unable to catch up and so went down to defeat, 46-37. At Richmond, the Braves played inspiring ball dur- ing the first half and led 18-15, but the absence of the Andrews brothers was sorely felt, and the team lost, 40-31. Again, without the aid of the Andrews brothers, the Indians ' offense lacked its usual punch, and so went to defeat in a rough game at the hands of V. M. I. It was William and Mary ' s final game of the season, and although the skeleton line-up played its heart out, the pace was too fast and the Keydets took the game, 45-30. [117] Cage Stars of 1939 V, ANDR€WV CHARLES eONDAK LAWRENCE OLIVER FRANCIS YEAGER Center Guard t-orward MORGAN MACKEY VANCE FOWLER JOHN TAFFE uard Guard Guard STANLEY KAMEN VIRGIL ANDREWS THOMAS ANDREWS Forward Forward Forward [118] Freshman basketball Season The 1939 freshman basketball season found Joe Flickenger at the coaching reins for his second year. From the fifteen candidates that reported, Joe had to shape a quintet that would compare favorably with the sensational freshman team of 1938. The ' 39 frosh proved themselves a very gnod match for their predecessors by playing a schedule of 16 games, of which they won 14 and lost only 2; both teams that defeated them were later taken into camp. The little Indians decisively defeated Woodrow Wilson High of Portsmouth in the opening contest, in which the entire squad saw action. In the next game, the Papooses found little difficulty in doubling the score on the Randolph- Macon frosh. In their first game away from home, the fast- moving freshman quintet met defeat at the hands of Norfolk Division. Their little brothers from Norfolk led all the way, and the closing gun found the freshmen on the short end of a 38-31 score. In the next four games, Benedictine High, Newport News High, 96th Bombing Division (Lang- ley Field), and McGuires fell victims to the now well- rounded freshman team. In their second game away from home, the baby Indians lost a close battle to the Randolph-Macon frosh by the score of 30-28. Putting on a display of steady basketball on suc- cessive nights, the frosh defeated Thomas Jefferson High of Richmond and Fork Union Military Academy. Then came the traditional game with the University of Richmond frosh, which the local team took with ease. The next encounter found the frosh defeating South Norfolk High in a hard fought game that went into an overtime period. The freshmen closed the season in a blaze of glory by out- playing Norfolk Division, University of Richmond frosh, Maury High of Norfolk, and Hopewell High in quick suc- cession. The whole squad played an excellent brand of ball throughout the season; however, those showing the most promise were Raschi, Chalko, Matthews, Hickey, and Crane. These men will provide the much-needed reserve strength for the varsity squad during the 19+0 season. COACH FLICKINGER Front Row: Crane, Matthews, Morell, Raschi, Duke, Cholko, Hickey B ck Row: WnlLich, How.ird, Gatsik, Jonos, Maucione, Sills, Court, Coach Flickenget [119] ssi Front Row: Tirelis, Hern, Beale, Godfrey, Baltimore, Trower, Edwards, T. Andrews, V. Andrews, Stephens Back Row; McCray, Fowler, Byrne, Dennis, Yeager, Chestnut, Tucker, Cornell, Koss, Major, Menz, Cockrell Baseball, too, has joined in with the crowd, and it will meet the coming season with a new pilot. Rube Mc- Cray has come out of the Wesleyan (Tennessee) to streng- then an already strong William and Mary baseball team. We have had and now have men of big-league talent, and it remains for Mr. McCray to guide the power into the proper channels; a job requiring no little ability. We experience the usual difficulty in peering into the future, but we are confident in forecasting another successful year for our bat wielders. B a s eb al I 120] The 193 8 Season on the Diamond The 1938 varsity baseball team won the state championship with a record of thirteen victories and nine losses. Rosy Waugh turned in a startling record of twelve of the team ' s victories while losing only one game. Included in these twelve victories was an almost perfect game pitched against the University of Maryland. At the be- ginning of the northern trip the team lost the services of co-captain Bob Adams for the season. The remainder of the pitching staff consisted of Purtill and Oliver who turned in creditable relief hurling. The team led by co-captains Bud Metheny and Bob Adams played heads-up baseball all season. Metheny was a powerhouse at the bat with hii; .750 batting average on the northern trip. Coach Kellison ' s infield consisted of Frank Yeager at first, Frank Koss at second, Charlie Beale at short, and Red Hern at third. The outer garden was well patrolled by the hard-hitting Bud Metheny, Charlie Baltimore, and Rudy Tucker. The varsity nine travelling southwards opened their season by defeating North Carolina State, and the next day emerged on the short end of a 5-1 score with Wake Forest. The Wake Forest team was the only club to take two games from the Indians throughout the season. The team came back to defeat Washington and Lee, Ver- mont, and V. P. I. in order. Although the next game was won by V. P. I., the Indians followed with victories over V. M. I. and the University of Maryland. The northern trip was a success, for the Green and Gold team won four and lost two. The Indians lost their first game of this trip in a drizzling rain to Vermont, and also lost the serv- ices of Bob Adams, when he was struck on the wrist by a line drive. The next day at Dartmouth €AL£ D£NNi$ SH| g Tirells throws out a Dartmouth player on an attempted bunt the southern Indians pushed over ten runs in the tenth inning to beat their northern cousins by the score of 12-3. Although Rutgers stopped their winning streak, the Tribe behind Rosy Waugh ' s pitching sank the Midshipmen at Annapolis to thi; tune of 7 to 3. In the first home game after the northern trip, Wake Forest took the Indians 2 to 1, and then the Tribe faced the University of Richmond and the state title. The first game was rained out, but the second proved a brilliant victory for William and Mary. The Indians scalped the Spiders by a 6 to score, thus capturing the title. Will am Will am Will am Will am Will am Will am Will am Will am Will lam Will am Will am Will am Will am Will am Will lam Will lam Will am Will lam 1938 BASEBALL RECORD 5 ; North Carolina State . 4 I ; Wake Forest .... 5 9; Washington and Lee . 8 5 ; Vermont 4 6; Virginia Poly. Institute i 8 ; Virginia Poly. Institute 14 8 ; Va. Military Institute 4; U. of Maryland 4; U. of Virginia 16; Naval Officer ' s Base 2 ; U. of Maryland 5 ; Vermont . 15; Vermont and Mary . and Mary . and Mary . and Mary . and Mary . and Mary . and Mary . and Mary . and Mary . and Mary . and Mary . and Mary . and Mary . and Mary . and Mary . and Mary . and Mary . and Mary . 12; Dartmouth 3 ; Rutgers . . 7; Navy Wake Forest . . U. of Richmond MANAGER COCKRGLL r COACH McCRAY CAPTAIN BALTIMORE r I I 122] The 1938 Freshman Baseball Season Under the capable direction of Coach William Gooch, the 1938 Freshman Base- ball Team kept pace with the championship play of the varsity. Out of ten games played, nine were victories. Among the teams played were: Highland Springs, South Norfolk High, the Norfolk Divi- sion of Wm. and Mary, Crewe High School, Thomas Jefferson High, John Marshall, Maury, and Fork Union. Two games were played against the Norfolk Division, and both were victories for our Freshmen. The hard-hitting outfield of Menz, Chestnut, and V. Andrews, together with the sterling pitching of Mackey and Cornell all helped to make the season successful. Al Chestnut almost equalled the school batting record when he averaged .528 for the year, and Lloyd Cornell proved his ability by pitching two five hitters, one against Maury and the other against Thomas Jefferson High. Steve Dennis also did a fine job for the Frosh behind the bat. With this splendid material coming up, the Varsity can look forward to a suc- cessful season in 1939. COACH WERNER Front Row: Morell, Moncure, Woolsey, Leftwich, Chalko, Lewis, Crane Back Row: Werner, Read, Sills, Laws, Tunstall, Raschi, Merritt, Cockrell tl23]  m Back Row: Taylor, Hedgcock, Haynie, Douglas, Phillips, Whitehouse, Barr Second How: Chandler, Kaufman, Slaughter, Duke, Rowland, Rawls, Mattson From Row: Maisch, Glick, Cason, Hudson, Dudley The track team is unique in that it remains under the tutelage of a coach of long standing at Wil- liam and Mary. Scrap Chandler still holds the reins, a fact which attests to the confidence that he commands and to the calibre of the teams that he has turned out. The student body shares the administration ' s faith in you, Scrap, and we feel no qualms as to the team ' s chances for success this coming year. 1939 Trac I 124] T h e d s n The varsity track team of William and Mary under the coaching of Scrap Chandler and captained by George Roller closed the 1938 season with a record of one victory and five defeats. The absence of our for- mer stars of the 1937 season, including Captain Al Degutis, Walt Zable, and Bill Maury, was a consider- able loss to the team. In the Tribe ' s only indoor meet it met with defeat at the hands of the more experienced University of Virginia team. Virginia took first place in the 100 and the 200-yard dashes, as well as the high and low hur- dles. The first spring meet was held at Lexington with V. M. I. Our defeat of 69 4-56% exhibited our con- sequent weakness in the field events. The lone victory of the season was against Hamp- den-Sidney with a score of 74-52. The squad, although bolstered by its previous win, went down to defeat at the hands of the Washington and Lee team. In the Maryland meet, although Roller, Marsh, and Alley turned in creditable races, they were outstepped by Maryland ' s star miler, Conister. The 80 3-4-45 1-4 score was also due to the excellent showing of Headly and Cronon, two other Maryland stars. The closing meet of the year with the University of Richmond, after once having been postponed, was finally held with poor results for the Indians. The superiority of Richmond in the field events settled the meet. In spite of the squad ' s poor record. Captain George Roller and Bill Marsh, after a successful cross-country season, turned in enviable records in the mile and two- mile events, respectively. Alley, Hayden, Hudson, and Phillips, Sophomore members of the team, turned in excellent performances COACH CHANDLER CAPTAIN DUKE ffAYNIE ROWLAMD r cAM nAtir.i AC mini cv Glick running a close second in the 220-yard event with V. M, I. for the year. The Freshman prospects show promise of being valuable additions to the varsity squad. Coming up from the Freshman squad are Chestnut and Whitehouse, two outstanding weight men, who should strengthen the varsity field department; Ever- ett Williams and Paul Taylor, mainstays of the frosh squad, who will supplement Phillips and Duke; Maisch, a constant winner in the 440 and low hurdles, who will be a welcome addition to the varsity timber toppers; Bob Greene, frosh half-miler, who will join Jack Hudson and is expected to give creditable per- formances in that event; Harry Barr, cross-country runner and frosh miler, who will be a running mate for George Roller; and Sam Hedgecock, who will graduate to the varsity squad in the high jump to sup- plement Vince Lusardi. Coach Chandler and Captain-elect Duke predict a good season for the Indians in 1939 because of the re- turn of almost the entire 1938 squad and also the in- creased strength from the Freshman team. Duke leading in the hurdles against V. M. 1. [ 126] Freshman Track Scrap Chandler ' s 1938 squad of fresh- men finished the season in the same manner in which the Papooses have finished for the past two years, with a record of one win, three losses, and a second place in the tri- angle meet with Maury and John Marshall High Schools. The lone win of the season being a 74 to 43 massacre of the little Fly- ing Keydets of V. M. I. The traditional meet with Richmond was for the second consecutive year a defeat for the little In- dians; the score was 71 to 44. The freshmen gave a line display of courage, stamina, and true Indian spirit despite the fact that they were hopelessly outclassed by such opponents as Newport News High and the Norfolk Division. The size of the squad and the inability to take many second and third places caused their downfall throughout these meets. Under the guidance of Coach Chandler the Papooses developed such stars as Everett Williams and Paul Taylor, steady point winners in the 100 and 200; AI Chestnut and Hank Whitehouse in the weights; Marry Maisch, Walter Marsh, Bob Greene, Harry Barr, and Sam Hedge- cock in the distance. With the experience gained on the frosh team these above men- tioned men are expected to aid the 1939 varsity team to a great extent. Front Row: Clark, Moore, De Haven, Callahan, Fisher, Mougcy, Appleby Second Rov: Sinclair, Sumner, Scripps, Blanford, Kelley, La France, Edwards Third Ron: Brewer, Hanson, Hanley, Dixon, Kendall. Bergwall t 127] %) a r s i t y Tennis For the past five years the WiUiam and Mary tennis team has shown gradual improvement. The 1938 season gave no startling series of vv ' ins but it showed a strong team winning half of its games by easy scores. Led by Captain Ryder with veterans Walker, Rennolds and Jaffe giving strong support, the 1938 team ended the spring tours winning six matches and losing six. Carlton Stublen and Ben Letson played their first year with the squad, bearing up well under the competition. Both men showed their merit by making steady progress, coming up from fifth and sixth positions on the team to third and fourth positions respectively. Getting ofi to a head start, the team seemed unbeatable, winning con- secutive games from Furman by 4-3, from St. John ' s by 7-2, and again from St. John ' s by 8-1, before being overwhelmed by Maryland by a 7-0 score. Regaining their stride, the team stepped in to take two more games from V. P. I. by 7-2 and from Norfolk Division by 7-2. Then, hitting a slump, the boys lost four straight games to Maryland g-o, University of Virginia, 9-0, University of Richmond 7-2, and North Carolina State 6-1. Hampden-Sydney was taken by 6-3 and, closing the season, Richmond made it two wins over the Indian racqueters by 7-2. Playing in the number one position. Captain Ryder was the mainstay of the team, with Lorimer, Walker, Jaffe, and Stublen winning more than half their matches. Rennolds, Teal, Letson completed the squad. Coach Lewis is optimistic for the 1939 year with several sophomores coming in to give strength to the lower brackets. And the team will need strength, for the coming year ' s schedule is the hardest a William and Mary team has faced in several years. Williams College and Navy are on the schedule in addition to Manhattan College, all three schools somewhat out of the Indian ' s usual list of opponents. But having lost only one man from 1938, the Indian team should be at their top strength. The 1939 tennis team will probably include Ryder, Walker, Jaffe, Stu- blen, and Letson. Douglas, Snowden, Letson, Ryder, Jaffec, Walker, Stublen, Teal, Littleton, Gebauer, Lewis, Coach CI28J Top Row: Myers Williams, Bessman, Harkless Bottom Row: Ktbel, Ware, Woodbridge, Jones, Makler, Rang, Fencing %) a r s it y Fencing Under the able leadership of Co-Captains Nick Woodbridge and Ed Ware, the William and Mary fencing team completed a highly successful season with five victories and one defeat. Despite a small squad, the team may be classed as one of the best in the East after placing second in the Eastern Intercollegiate Meet held at Dartmouth. The team will again have a chance to assert its ability in the Southern Conference Tournament which will be held here. Coached by Tucker Jones, the team was composed of Nick Woodbridge, Ed Ware, Paul Makler, Sam Bessman, Dave Meyer, Armand Harkless, Henry Kibel, Bernie Rang, and Dale Williams. William and Mary . . William and Mary . . William and Mary . . William and Mary . . William and Mary . . William and Mary . . SCHEDULE 19 ; Virginia 8 10 ; V. P. 1 7 14 ; Maryland 13 12 ' 2; North Carolina . . . H ' z 11 ; Lehigh 6 13 ; Rutgers 4 t 129 1 Varsity Swimming W. M. . W. M. . W. M. . W. M. . W. M. . W. M. . W. M. . SCHEDULE 53 ; Randolph-Macon 30; Duke . . . 31; Virginia . 36; V. M. I. . 54; W. L. . 42; N. C. State 54; V.P.I. . . 23 45 44 39 21 33 21 The William and Mary varsity swimming team, competing against much superior teams than their last year ' s opponents, turned in a record of four wins and three losses. The team was led by Co-Captains Goldberg and Adams and was ably coached by Otis Douglas. Six members of the 1938 freshman swimming team strengthened the varsity squad. ADAMS, Co-Captain GOLDBERG, Co-Captain The Indians opened the season by swamping the Randolph-Macon team by the score of 53- 22. In this meet the team ' s fundamental weak- ness in the 100-yard free-style event was very apparent. The Duke Blue Devils invaded the Indian territory several weeks later to find a team crippled by the temporary loss of Adams, vet- eran diver, and Pu rtill, 440-yard swimmer. Back Row: Brown, Adams, Walker, Almond, Goldberg, J. Brennan, Moore, T. Brcnnan Bottom Row: Purtill, Senft, Woolley, Allen, Tinsley [130] At the University of Virginia and at V. M. I. in the following week, the W. and M. mer- men fell prey to determined rivals and were beaten in turn 44-31 and 39-36. In both meets the outcome depended on the 400-yard relay, wherein the Tribe failed to produce the neces- sary place. The following week the Douglasmen met a raiding Washington and Lee team, which had a record of 54 straight wins. In one of the most pleasing spectacles witnessed by a Wil- liamsburg audience in many years, the Tribes- men trounced the surprised Generals to the tune of 54-21, allowing them only two first places. Within the next seven days North Carolina State and V. P. I. were defeated easily by scores of 42-33 and 51-24 respectively. At the Southern Conference meet Lenny Goldberg won the breast stroke for his third consecutive year. Johnny Adams gracefully brought the coveted diving crown back to Wil- liam and Mary. The other members responsible for many points throughout the year are J. Brennan, T. Brennan, Brown, Moore, Purtill, Stainton, R. Walker, and Wooley. Fresh man jwimmin s eason The freshman swimming team had a very disappointing season, due to a misunderstand- ing of the schedule. There were only two meets held. The record for the season was one game won and one lost. In the Norfolk Division meet the freshmen showed a strong team while decisively defeating the other Indians by the score of 45-21. In this meet the Papooses won firsts in all but two events. The outstanding members of the team were Lowe, Merrit, Knowlton, and Scripps in the free-style; Kohrs and Segoine in the back- stroke; Hanson in the breast-stroke; and Rubin in diving. However, later in the season an unexpectea Massanutten team came here to find a depleted team. As a result of this depletion a complete meet was not held and the final score was in favor of the invaders to the tune of 16-41. Harold Knowlton, Saul Rubin, Charles Scripps, Richard Segoine, James LilHs, Roy Merrit, Gordon Hanson [ 131 ] The Varsity Qlub Herbert A. Krueger John Stewart Bryan Charles Duke Officers President Samuel Y. Walker . . Michael J. Hook Secretary-Treasurer Honorary Members Otis Douglas Joseph Flickincer William S. Gooch . Vice-President Carl Voyles Rube McCray Charles Beale Charles Baltimore George Bunch Vincent Burgess John Davidson Thomas Della Torre John Dillard Robert Douglas Ransom Duke Vance Fowler Members Robert Goellnicht Gordon Hanna Leon Hayden Charles Hern Michael Hook Jack Hudson Stanley Kamen Frank Koss Herbert Krueger Elmo Lego Vincent Lusardi William Marsh Arthur Metheny Edward Motley Lloyd Phillips George Roller Robert Rowland Alfred Tirei.is Rudolph Tucker Samuel Walker Frank Yeacer The Varsity Club was founded on the order of the Green Key Club of Dartmouth. The purposes of this organization are ( I ) to promote the general welfare of the College of William and Mary (2) to encourage wholesome com- radeship and sportsmanship among the athletes and other students of the college (3) to encourage loyalty to the customs and traditions of the col- lege (4) to promote constructive athletics at the college. A custom has been established which requires all members of the club to wear their monogram sweaters on each Thursday during the college year. Any student currently matriculated and enrolled at the college and who has formally re- ceived an award in any major sport of a varsity monogram is eligible to active membership in the Varsity Club. This club, which was founded to take the place of the inactive Monogram Club, has completed its second full year on the campus, and has en- deavored to carry out its purposes and to cooper- ate with any other group whose aim is to benefit the college. tlJ2] : Women In Sports I 133] Top Row: Helen Strange, Claudia Torrence, Peggy Gildner Bottom Row: Martha Barksdale, Tucker Jones, Lucille Lowry W m e n s Athletic Council L. Tucker Jones Faculty Lucille Lowry Martha Barksdale Claudia Torrence Students Helen Strange Peggy Gildner The general supervision of athletics for wom- en in the College has been delegated by the President to the Women ' s Athletic Council. This Council consists of three faculty members appointed by the President, and three students who are elected by the Women ' s Athletic As- sociation. The Senior representative acts as President of the Council, the Junior representa- tive is the Point Recorder, while the Sophomore representative is the Secretary of the organiza- tion. The Council acts as a directing body for athletics, instigating activities and carrying out requests for new types of programs. The activ- ities of this organization are varied. Each year it supervises the promotion of intramural pro- grams between the sororities and dormitories. In addition, intercollegiate games are scheduled in the four varsity sports by the Council. Through these activities, everyone who is inter- ested is able to participate in any branch of athletics. tl34] Back Row: TimberUke. Torrence, Waldman Front Row: King, Wilkcn, Bloede Women s Tennis 1938 The William and Mary women ' s tennis team had a very successful season, losing only two of their many meets. The season started with the New York trip, where they defeated Manhattanville but lost to Bryn Mawr and Swarthmore. The members of the team who went on the trip were Lisa Bloede, Becky Timberlake, Sally Holladay, Harriet McCarthy, Peggy Lebair, and Betty Wilkins. William and Mary was host to Sweetbriar, New York University, Farmville, Westhampton, and Mary Washington for a meet late in April. William and Mary won the meet, taking half of the singles matches and all of the doubles matches. - • 3 ii M Women s Fencing Front Row: Knight, Lowry, Jones, Mode, Locke Hack Row: Prickett, Boaidman, Teal, Carter, Reindollar, Robinson Moncure, Hill, Green The William and Mary women ' s fencing team started its season with the trip to New York late in February. The team fenced Brooklyn College and Wagoner College, losing one match and winning the other. Both New York University and Hofstra College defeated the team. William and Mary was host to Rollins College late in March, defeating them 7-2. The Eleventh Annual Women ' s Intercollegiate fencing tournament was held at Brooklyn in April. Here William and Mary showed improvement and ability. The regular team is composed of Doris Locke, Captain ; Florence Mode, Frances Reeder and Frances Knight. Carrie Massenburg is manager, and Tucker Jones is the coach. C135] ipp 1 n J 3 k. t ' jt H LJ ■j w k Hk ' i H ; j; 1 I H v Btf ' xl l B H k _ .A. Jp Mk. . H ' VilMiril ■■v m rv ■1 ISi ■f ' t lHjj B. m m, iJ 4 i| H Bm sit m itl S J V BB I 2S Hr iJ H Hm i B . HiMH i Grace Flavell, Mary Jane Miller, Eileen Woods, Rosemary Lyne, Alice Laubach, Mildred Mode, Emily Edgerton, Peggy Lebair, Betty Cook, Marie Gratz, Ruth Trimble, Dorothy Copperidge, Peggy Gildner Varsity H o c k e y — 1 9 3 9 The varsity hockey team was fortunate in having practically all of its last year ' s team back, and with the help of Miss Appleby, who coached them for a week before their first game, the varsity developed into a fast, well-coordi- nated team. The opening game of the season was played with Ursinus on the William and Mary field. The varsity was defeated after a hard fight. The State Tournament was held at Fred- ericksburg, where the varsity met Sweet Briar and Mary Washington. The purpose of the tournament was to choose individual players for the all-Virginia team which was to represent the state in the Southeastern State Tournament. Six players were chosen from the William and Mary team as members of the all-state team. Douglas, Miller, Burger placed on the first team, the latter two repeating last year ' s suc- cess. Flavell, Lowry, and Woods placed on the Reserves. The final game of the Southeast Tournament was played in Washington over Thanksgiving and Douglas placed as a second alternate on the Reserve Southeastern Team. The varsity lost to Beaver College and to Swarthmore in strongly contested games played in Philadelphia the week-end of November twenty-first and twenty-second. tnsj Miss Martha Barksdale, associate professor of Physical Education, was a graduate of William and Mary in 1921. While a student, she was voted the most athletic girl in the college. She was president of Women ' s Student Government, and aided in the formation of the Alpha Club which later became the Mortar Board. Last year, Miss Barksdale was awarded the alumnae medalian for student service in athletics. MARTHA BARKSDALE LAUBACH MILLEP, [H7] Cieo Tweedy, Harriet Molloy , Peggy Allen , Florence Yachnin , Ethel Teal , Virginia Bell , Dorothy Zimmerman, Evelyn Bolton, Alice Walton, Elizabeth Beck, Ruth Cloud Freshman Hockey VIRGINIA DIX STERLING Miss Sterling became an instructor of Physical Education here in 1936. At the present time she is Assistant Di- rector of Women ' s Intramurals and Coach of Freshman Hockey. The freshman hockey squad of this year showed a decided bit of improvement over those of former years, although there was not much chance to show its ability due to the extremely short season. The team played the Norfolk Division and won the game 3-1. Peggy Allen, as center forward, was the star for our home squad, scoring all three points. She played a good, fast game and kept the other team alert for action. The freshman team as a body did not play any more games. They joined up with the Reserve squad and helped in mak- ing an excellent showing against the Rich- mond Division. The girls who were pro- moted to this squad were: Dolly Hiden, Harriet Molloy, Ruth Cloud, Peggy Allen and Trudy Green. I H8 1 Varsity basketball William William lliam lliam W W Willi W Wi w nam lliam lliam lliam William and Mary and Mary and Mary and Mary and Mary and Mary and Mary and Mary and Mary SCHEDULE . 54; Charleston 49 . 25; Farmville 32 . 30; Sweet Briar 16 . 15; New College 16 . 35; Manhattonville 25 . 14; Hofstra .14 . 31; Panzar 13 . 22; Shepherd 11 . 29; All Sorority 3 JEARLE LYNE amm; DOUGIAS YACHNIN [ 139] Varsity basketball S e a s o n The varsity basketball team had an un- usually good season this year, winning six and tying one out of the nine scheduled games. A surprise victory came to our team on the New York trip. The strong Manhat- tonville opponents had held our team to seven years of defeat. This year the jinx was broken when we conquered them by ten points. An unusual feature this year was the game with an All-Sorority team. The var- sity romped all over the stars, not even al- lowing them to score a field goal. Ann Mitchell and Lucy Bennett will re- main to build next year ' s team around. These, plus a better than average freshman team, make the prospect for next year ap- pear good. Freshman basketball Season The first game of the freshman team was played in Jefferson Gym on January 14 with the Norfolk Division. During the first half, the co-eds from William and Mary managed to keep well in the lead, but at the end of the game the score stood at 28-19, in favor of the Division. On the 18th of the same month, the freshmen went to Norfolk to seek their revenge. This time the local team won by seventeen points. The last game of the limited freshman season was with St. Catherine ' s School. The score was 30-20 in favor of the Rich- mond school. An Top Row: Beck. Bolton, Mims. Lowry, coach; Longino , Bull . Douglas, Bottom Row: Teal, Ross, Figley. Yachnin, Catlett, Allen, Spaeth. iMonogram Qluh Helen B. Bennett Annabel Brubaker Mary Caldwell Barbara Clawson Emily Edgerton Grace H. Eluote Rosa M. Evans Margaret Field Grace Flavell Frances Garrett Peggy Gildner Marie Gratz Jane Grcxjgins Mary Holmes Willetha Holmes Ruth A. Holzmueller Jane Hutcheson Rosa Elizabeth Jordan Dorothy Judd Alice K. Laubach Peggy Lebair Evelyn Lengnick Doris Locke Rosemary Lyne Helen McDermott Carrie Massenburg Mary Jane Miller Ann Mitchell Margaret Mitchell Florence Mode Mildred Mode Beal Sale Dorothy Schmitz Prudence Searle Jeanna Sheridan Helen Strange Lillian Styer Kathleen Taylor Becky A. Timberlake Claudia Torrence Ruth Trimble Jean Vosburgh Anne White Dorothy Whitfield Eileen Woods Lisa Bloede r 141 ] Intramural Qouncil Miss Lowry Director Miss Stirling Assistant Director Mildred Mode Manager Anne White Assistant Manager Members Lillian Styer Frances Reeder Margaret Mitchell Marie Gratz Frances Kuhn Dorothy Taylor Evelyn Lengnick Lucy Yeaman Nella Whitaker Dorothy Schmitz Jane Hutchison Florence Mode Jane Groggins Lucy Dobie [142] Pi Beta Phi — First In Sorority Song Contest Jefferson Hall Hockey Champions [143] i • m ft HP ° K I 11 jiMH ■k. L .- ' mi:V.- BB 2iK HB i U l gK; ' Fr Jt J Pf m ™ yy . i V ' IMri i4 I , 4, ' - ' - 1 ||L 3 PHI MU Sorority Tennis Champions DAY STUDENTS Tennis Dormitory Champions ARCHERY JEFFERSON HALL Dormitory Badminton Champions CANOEING CHAMPIONS CHANDLER HALL Dormitory Ping Pong Champions KAPPA ALPHA THETA Badminton JEFFERSON HALL Dormitory Basketball Champ ons • i rwM ■i ' ■■1 i . ' w. A Jh ' - ' . IF «— i 3 1 l ■f T L w. , H 1 ' v B lv I • 1 If BROWN HALL First Place Dormitory Song Contest DELTA DELTA DELTA Sorority Badminton Champions sjraternities play a large and important role on the campus of William and Mary. Their purpose is not only to promote the friendly atmosphere of brotherhood, but also to lead the way in the various phases of college social life. :rii i? ' rff : :J!-i ' .! ;s; ' ? ; ' --: r: ' v.i i; r r( . ' : T FRATERNITY AND SORORITY CHAPTERS ON CAMPUS Theta Delta Chi Epsilon Charge Sigma Alpha Epsilon Virginia Kappa Chapter Pi Kappa Alpha Gamma Chapte; Kappa Alpha Alpha Zeta Chapter Phi Kappa Tau Alpha Theta Chapter Lambda Chi Alpha Epsilon Alpha Zeta Phi Alpha Tau Chapter Sigma Pi Alpha Eta Chapter Pi Lambda Phi Psi Chapter Chi Omega Omicron Beta Chapter Kappa Alpha Theta Beta Lambda Chapter Kappa Kappa Gamma Gamma Kappa Chapter Pi Beta Phi , Virginia Gamma Chapter Phi Mu Gamma Alpha Chapter Alpha Chi Omega Beta Delta Chapter Kappa Delta Alpha Pi Chapter Delta Delta Delta Alpha Mu Chapter Gamma Phi Beta Alpha Chi Chapter Kappa Sigma Nu Chapter Sigma Rho Local Fraternity [149] ' fc A A A ' H ii J First Row: Daniel Blocker Kemp Boot Wyatt Carneal Arthur Cason Second Row: Robert Critchfield James Dill Mack Dill Robert Douglas Third Row: Ransom Duke Palmer Harrington Vance Fowler Alexander Fraser I ' ourth Row: Charles Frey Armand Harkless Thomas Helfrich James Moore Fifth Row: Lawrence Pettct Edward Phillips Waldo Randall Edward Reinhard Sixth Row: John Teal Edward Ware Fletcher Weathers James Welsh Seventh Row: Dale Williams Herbert Young [ 150] THETA DELTA CHI Founded at Union College, 1847 EPSILON CHARGE Establislied i8S3 Marion Bozarth Lowell Ayres C. E. Chandler Fratres in Urbe R. p. Wallace Cecil Harper William Bozarth Charles A. Taylor John Warburton William Scott Charles Duke R. C. Young Fratres in Facultate J. C. Chandler Fratres in Collegio Graduate Student Robert L. Simpson Daniel Blocker, Jr Williamsburg, Va Wyatt B. Carneal, Jr Richmond, Va James O. Moore Milburn, N. J Edward E. Phillips Springfield, N. J Edward Reinhard Norfolk, Va John W. Teal Richmond, Va 1939 Alexander Fraser Wilmington, Del. Edward M. Ware Williamsburg, Va. Ransom H. Duke Henderson, N. C. Thomas Helfrich Catonsville, Md. Robert Taylor Williamsburg, Va. Waldo W. Randall . . . . M=unt Sinai, N. Y. Fletcher Weathers Newman, 111. 1940 James N. Dill McKeesport, Pa, Robert A. Douglas Reedville, Va Vance Fowler Norfolk, Va Benjamin W. Letson Metuchen, N. J Walter Snowden Cranford, N. J Joseph Lawler Norfolk, Va. Bruce Simons Detroit, Mich. Hugh Mack Dill McKeespcrt, Pa. Palmer Farrington Lawrence, N. Y. Charles Frey Roselle Park, N. J. 1941 Herbert Young Williamsburg, Va. S. Kemp Boot Bethlehem, Pa. Armand Harkless Kennett Square, Pa. A. Dale Williams Mt. Lebanon, Pa. J. H. Welsh Shamokin. Pa. Lawrence Pettet Lakewood, N. J. PLEDGES Arthur Appleby Spottswood, N. J. Clark Batchelder Marble Head, Mass WiLLARD Bergwall Vallejo, Calif Robert Bowl West Medford, Mass. Brendon Burns New York, N. Y Caldwell Cason London Bridge, Va Robert Critchfield Johnstown, Pa Arthur Dixon Montclair, N. J Coleman duPont Wilmington, Del Alex. Hayner Boston, Ma s Arthur Keeney Edinburg, Ind Thomas Mougey Wilmette, 111 Carl Muecke Bridgeton, N. J Judd Ogden West Hartford, Conn David Quinlan Brooklyn, N. Y, Benjamin Read Norfolk, Va, Charles Scripps Miramar, Calif, Richard Segoine New Brunswick, N. J, Thomas Shryock Morristown, N. J, Howard Stallman Columljus, O, CSoRDON Williams Evanston, III CJeorge Young Chicago, III ( 151 ] 16 First Row: Charley Beale Richard Bohannan Lloyd Cornell Second Row: Stewart Cotterman Crawley Davis John Dillard Third Row: William Greene James Hanley Carter Holbroolc Fourth Row: Edward Motley Frank Thomas John Tinsley Fifth Row: Rudolph Tucker [152] sHjMA alpha EPSILON Founded at University of Alabama, 1856 VIRGINIA KAPPA CHAPTER Established iSs7 Fratres in Urbe HoRACR Hekdersok Phii.i.ip Nelson Frater IX Facultate Jess Jackson Fratres in Collegio Graduate Students George Bunch 1939 Stewart Cotterman Manila, P. I. Wii.i.iAM Greene Brooklyn, N. Y. Fredrick Howard Long Island, N. Y. Frederick Kayser White Plains, N. Y. Cari. Kleinknecht Richmond, Ind. Edward Themak Northport, N. Y. John Tinsley Lynchburg, Va. Frank Yeager Lansdowne, Pa. 1940 Charles Beale Hague, Va. John Dillard Norfolk, Va. Austin Lee Roxborough, Pa. Vincent Lusardi Cranford, N. J. Frank Thomas Norfolk, Va. Rudolph Tucker Norfolk, Va. 1941 Richard Bohannon Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Lloyd Cornell Chappaqua, N. Y. Crawley Davis Wilmington, Del. Carter Hoi.brook Roanoke, Va. Robert Taylor East McKeesport, Pa. Raymond Walker Hamden, Conn. PLEDGES Robert Amonette Lynchburg, Va. Chester Baker Lowell, Mass. Melvin Bunch Norfolk, Va. Edward Cook Washington, D. C. Joseph Hanley Garden City, L. L Huber Griffin Winter Haven, Fla. James Howard Richmond, Va. Joseph Jeffrey Brunswick, Me. Harold Knowlton Milwaukee, Wis. Richard La France Ithaca, N. Y. Waldo Matthews Franklin, O. Robert Rawi Norfolk, Va. Douglas Robbins Jamestown, N. Y. Samuel Robbins Jamestown, N. Y. Richard Simonson Petersburg, Va. Henry Williams Pittsburgh, Pa. William Peitit Inwood, L. L t 153] First Row: Moss Armistead Daniel Bradley Russell Cox Raymond Dudley Second Row: Orion Feaster Richard Fuqua Harry Gravely John Haiper Third Row: Charles Hayden Raymond Haynie, Jr. David Jones David Macmillan Fourth Row: Robert Mattson Julian McClure Robert Newton John Owen Fifth Row: William Portlock Louis Rives Robert Rowland Elbert Slaughter Sixth Row: Wynne Stevens Mac Trotter Anthony Wagcner [ 154 I IM KAPPA ALPHA Founded at University of Virginia, 1868 GAMMA CHAPTER Established 1871 Dr. W. L. Smoot B. E. Steele Fratres in Urbe r. g. b e aston- MoNiER Williams H. DE S. Henlev W. T. Henley Frater in Facultate Dr. James Ernest Pate Fratres in Collegio Graduate Students James Binford Thompson, Jr. 1939 Moss William Armistead Robert Bruce Mattson McKiE M. Trotter . . Robert C. Rowland . . . A. P. Wagener, Jr. . . Julien McClure . . . . Raymond W. Dudley . Harry Gravely .... Robert Newton Daniel Bradley Russell Cox Charles Major . Churchland, Va. . Woodside, N. Y. . . LaGrange, Ga. . South Norfolk, Va. Williamsburg, Va. . Washington, D. C. . . . Suffolk, Va. . Martinsville, Va. 19+0 . Hampton, Va. Westport, Conn. Portsmouth, Va. Portsmouth, Va. J. Robert deVignier Arlington, Va. Ned Ferguson Suffolk, Va. William S. Portlock, Jr Norfolk, Va. Elbert G. Slaughter Norfolk, Va. David MacMillan Abington, Va. Wynne Alan Stevens, Jr Norfolk, Va. Carlton Stublen Portsmouth, Va. Lerov Oliver Suffolk, Va. Robert C. Graham Cerona, N. J. Orion Otis Feaster, Jr St. Petersburg, Fla. Joseph Kennedy Lynchburg, Va. Charles Leon Havden Danville, Va. 1941 Walter Clifion Cross, Jr. Raymond Lee Haynie . . David Humphreys Jones . Portsmouth, Va. . . Reedville, Va. Morristown, N. J. Louis Hubert Rives, Jr Norfolk, Va. Harolq E. Tower Beloit, Wis. William Clyde West, Jr Danville, Va. PLEDGES Thomas Crane . James Creekman Dan Crooks . . Richard Fuoua Robert Hornsby Robert Pence Montie Meeks Arthur Murray Northampton, Mass. Los Angeles, Calif. . . RichTTiond, Va. . . Portsmouth, Va. . Yorktown, Va. Harrisonburg, Va. Charlottesville, Va. . . Richmond, Va. Roger Novvak . . . Cleveland, Ohio Vincent Parker Portsmouth, Va. Howard Scott Omaha, Neb. William St. John Bridgeport, Conn. Clarence Suber Norfolk, Va. Malcolm Sullivan Upper Darby, Pa. Edward Dratz Williamsburg, Va. Hugh Watson Portsmouth, Va. [155] O ' J U J First Row: Alfred Alley Saunders Almond Art Brennison Robert Broocks Francis Bryant Second Row: Lindsay Dorrien Richard Earle William Edwards William Farmer Merritt Foster Third Row: Phillip Haddock James Hargis Samuel Hedgecock Elmo Legg David Low Fourth Row: William Musser Torsten Peterson William Plitt Robert Pride Bradshaw Pulley Fifth Row: Bernard Russell George Sands Thomas Savage Charles Stousland Sterling Strange Sixth Row: Hubert Sumner Charles Ward Howard Wheeler Fred Worster [156] KAPPA ALPHA Founded at Washington and Lee, 1865 Champian Armistead Robert Armistead Thomas J. Stubbs, Jr. Carl Buffincton ALPHA ZETA CHAPTER Established Sgo Fratres in Urbe Sidney Broocks Thomas Cocke Hiram Davis ashton dovei.l Fratres in Facultate John L. Lewis James Cogar Wagner Moss Fratres in Collegio Graduate Students Harold Gouldman Winder Lane John Ethridoe Robert Land L. Tucker Jones Bankhead Davies 1939 Arthur Brennison St. Petersburg, Fla. Franklin Ryder Harrisburg, Pa. Thomas Savage Williamsburg, Va. Howard Wheeler Baldwin, N. Y. ToRSTEN Peterson Hopewell, Va. Harper Ward Pocahontas. Va. 1940 Alfred L. Alley Richmond, Va. . C. Harper Anderson Cramerton, N. C. Gordon Dorrier Scottsville, Va. William S. Farmer Harrodsburg, Ky. Price Glover Arvonia, Va. Merritt W. Foster Williamsburg, Va. Thomas E. Strange . . Elmo T. Lego . Arlington, Va. Fred S. Worster Hampton, Va. William M. Musser Lampeter, Pa. Bernard F. Russell Accomac, Va. Marshall F. Allen Lccust Grove, Va. Charles F. Curry Pacific Grove . . . . Annapolis, Md. Calif. 1 9+1 Sidney Broocks, Jr Williamsburg, Va. William Land Danville, Va. Francis Bryant Petersburg, Va. W. Edward Plitt Baltimore, Md. Sterling Strange Richmond, Va. PLEDGES Saunders Almond Round Bay, Md. Henry Davis Williamsburg Va. Richard Earle Verona, N. J. William Edwards Irvington, Va. George Parish Camden, Ala. Edgar Fisher New York, N. V. Oliver Foster Williamsburg, Va. Norman Funsten Burlingame, Calif. William Garwood Pittsburgh, Pa. Philip Haddock St. Petersburg, Fla. James Hargis Carlisle, Pa. Samuel Hedgecock Martinsville, Va. Robert Henning Arlington, Va. Richard Kent St. Louis, Mo. Paul Kratzig Norfolk, Va. David Low Hanover, N. H. Maurice Mather Princeton, N. J. Edward May Wilmington, Del. William Miller Port Republic, Va. Bradshaw Pulley Ivor, Va. Frank Pulley Ivor, Va. Charles Sale Boston, Mass. George Sands Newport News, Va. Thomas Sisk Baltimore, Md. MuNSEY Slack Bristol, Tenn. Charles Stousland Arlington, Va. Hubert Sumner Gastonia, N. C. ViCK SwANSON Evanstqn, 111. Ben Trower Eastville, Va. Robert Wade Roanoke, Va. Richard Wright Washingtcn, D. C. Bailey Wii.kenson Windsor, Va. 1157] ) OTU n Lj . , «r William Altenburg John Brennan Frederick Brown Frank Clark Second Row: Arthur Cosgrove Richard Gall Leonard Geyer George Gotshall Third Row: Martin Gracey Robert Greene Eldon Langbauer James McNiff Fourth Row: George Nea Wilton Quinn Robert Stainton Alfred Tirclis l-tjth Row: Arthur Ward Richard Whiting I 158 J PHI KAPPA TAU Founded at Miami University, 1906 ALPHA THETA CHAPTER Established iQzd Thomas G. McCaskey David Rutledce Fratres in Urbe James Ayres Richard Velz Louis Willoucby Charles F. Marsh Fratres in Facultate E. L. Lambert Otis Douglas Fratres in Collegio Graduate Students Ralph T. Baker Newport News, Va. 1939 Frederick L. Brown Chester, Pa. Milton Quinn Hampton, Va. Martin Gracey Hampton, Va. William Altenburg Jamaica, L. L Alfred Tirelis Stoughton, Mass. George A. Nea . . James C. Pye . . . Arthur B. Metheny William Sadler . . Arthur Ward . . . . Wollaston, Mass. . . Stoughton, Mass. . . . . Catlett, Va. . . Willamette, 111. Far Rockaway, L. L 1940 Richard Gall Cleveland, O. Robert Dunning . . James McNiff Muskegon, Mich. Robert Stainton . . Leonard Guyer Montclair, N. J. Bridgeport, Conn. . . Chester, Pa. 1941 Arthur Cosgrove Le Sueur, Minn. Robert Greene Pelham, N. Y. William Allen Ridgefield Park, N. J. Franklin Clark Williamsburg, Va. Richard Whiting Belmont, Mass. PLEDGES Herbert Krueger Everett, Mass. Vincent Wooley Rushmere, Va. John Brennan Rockaway Beach, L. L Thomas Brennan Rockaway Beach, L. L Alphonse Chesnut Stoughton, Mass. John Adam Far Rockaway, L. L Paul Post Hamilton, O. Charles Hern Stoughton, Mass. Harrison Bird Detroit, Mich. George Gotshall Detroit, Mich. Russell Allen Jackson, Mich. Robert Aldrich Concord, Mich. Francis Blake Albion, N. Y. C. B. Edwards Newport News, Va. McKiNDREW Fox Crewe, Va. Gordon Harrison Ridgefield, N. J. Herbert Kendai.i New York, N. Y. Peter Laws Catlett, Va. NoRRis Lineweaver Eckhart Mines, Md. Tom Paynter Westport, Conn. James Rougan Brooklyn, N. Y. Edward Sierks Roosevelt, N. Y. Richard Sills Bethesda, Md. William Slater Williamsburg, Va. Philip Sturges Georgetown, Conn. Ned Woolsey Warsaw, Va. C 159 1 . ■. 9 M aA ' -r -I - ' ° ■M First Row: John Barba Gifford Bcal Otto Boysen Robert Donnelly Second Row: Eugene Ellis Robert Fricke John Garrett Harry Gcbaucr Third Row: Harry Hall John Lawson John McCarthy Edward Miller Fourth Row: Arthur Monahon Claik Presbrey Berte! Rasmusson Austin Roberts Fifth Row: Charles Roberts Joseph Stone Minor Thomas Jack Thompson [ 160] LAMBDA (; H I ALPHA Founded at Boston University, 1909 EPSILON ALPHA ZETA CHAPTER Established 1927 Charles H. Stoke Fratres in Facultate Harold L. Fowler Wayne F. Gibbs Fratres in Collegio Graduate Students IvERsoN Hawthorne Almond Minor Wine Thomas 1939 Robert N. Fricke Columbus, O. Arthur J. Monahon Wellsley, Mass. John Parker Thompson Joseph L. Stone . . . . Colraine, Mass. Williamsburg, Va. 1940 John A. Barba, Jr Arlington, N. J Clark Presbrey Little Falls, N. J Edward H. Miller Lebanon, Pa Otto T. Boysen Egg Harbor, N. J Harry L. Gebauer . John H. Garrett, Jr Richmond, V ' a. Charles Edwards Roberts .... Cranford, N. J. GiFFORD R. Beal New York, N. Y. R. Conrad Forbes Gunie Mills, Va. . . . Montclair, N. J. 1 941 Bertel R. Rasmussen Arlington, N. J. Austin Leonard Roberts, Jr. . . . Cranford, N. J. Jack Nestor McCarthy Arlington, Va. John C. -Lawson, Jr Williamson, W. Va. Robert E. Donnelly, Jr Arlington, N. J. Walter A. Bara, Jr South River, N. J. PLEDGES George Warren Basley .... Haverstraw, N. Y. Claude Hartog Paris, France Eugene Webster Ellis, Jr. . . . Westford, Conn. Anthony William Maucione . . . Millburn, N. J. Robert Collins Flowers Lebanon, Pa. Donald O ' Brien Richmond, Va. Perry Borgman Griffin .... New York, N. Y. Daniel Watson Chinccteague, Va. John A. Wavle Cortland, N. Y. [161] AikJiM First Row: Jack Clare David Diamond Leonard Goldberg Second Row: Benjamin Goldstein Arthur Gordon Stanley Hecker Third Row: Richard Kaufman Robert Klein Paul Makler Fourth Row: Herbert Shimburg Alvin Tabankin Powel Wartcl [162] PHI ALPHA Founded at George Washington University, 1914 TAU CHAPTER Establislied iQ2y FrATRES in COLLEGIO 1939 Pow EI, F. Wartel Brooklyn, N. Y Wii.uAM B. Fernandez Newton, Mass, Alvin Tabankin Newark, N. J Jack Clare Newark, N. J, Stanley A. Hecker Ne%v York, N. Y Benjamin Goldstein Boston, Mass. Leonard Goldberg Far Rockaway, N. Y. MoE Brill Arverne, N. Y. H. Lee Shimberc Brooklyn, N. Y. Arthur H. Gordon ..... Newport News, Va. Paul Todd Makler Philadelphia, Pa. Frank Raflo Leesburg, Va. Seymour Shwiller . . 1940 Henry Kibel Far Rockaway, N. Y. Robert J. Klein ........ Brooklyn, N. Y. . Richmond Hill, N. Y David Diamond 1 941 . . . Brooklyn, N. Y. David Cohen . . . . Richard Kaufman Brooklyn, N. Y. Elizabeth, N. J. PLEDGES Samuel Bessman Newark, N. J Marvin Bremer Rockaway, N. Y Alfred Carol Long Beach, N. Y Eli Diamond New York, N. Y Sidney Wien . . . William Fisher New York, N. Y. William Gatsik Mountaindale, N. Y. Arthur London Kingston, N. Y. Daniel Meyer Greenwich Village, N. Y. . . . . Passaic, N. J. [163] SX o ' ' %jrd First Row: Howard P. Anderson Charles Beville Carrington Cockrell Second Row: Paul James Grouse John Davidson Maxey Davis third Row: Gordon Holland John Kegebein Herbert Kelly Fourth Row: Robert Kendig George McComb Carson Roberts Fifth Row: Clifton Rountree Paul Taylor Loritner Walker [IM] SIGMA PI Founded at Vincennes University, 1897 ALPHA ETA CHAPTER Established iq i Fratres in Urbe Li.oYD Williams James Stone Fratres in Facultate J. D. Carter Richard Morton Glenwood Clark Benjamin McCary Fratres in Collegio 1939 Maxey Davis . Edwin Rountree . . . Church ' Road, Va. Robert Kendig . . . . . . Whaleyville, Va. Lorimer Walker . . John Davidson Palisades Park, N. J. Stuart ' s Draft, Va. . Winchester, Mass. George McComb Herbert Kei.ley 1940 . . . Stuart ' s Draft, Va. Stedman Eure Suffolk, Va. . . Williamsburg, Va. Marshall Garth Haymarket, Va. Gordon Holland Surry, Va. 1941 Charles Seville Peter Stone Paul Taylor . . Church Read, Va. . Walpole, Mass. Staten Island, N. Y. John Kegebein Norfolk, Va. CouLBOURN Godfrey Whaleyville, Va. Sanford Warren Churchland. Va. PLEDGES Walter Measday . . . Paul Crouse Willard B. Appenzeller William B. Bishop . . . William J. Butler . . Griffin Callahan . . Roland Eastwood . . . Robert E. Griffin . . . Clarence J. Grogan . . Claude K. Kelley . . . Robert J. Kern . . . . . . . Westwood, N. J. Hampton Institute, Va. . . . Portsmouth, Va. . . . . Jabridge, Va. . . ■Bronxville, N. Y. . . Bluefield, W. Va. . . Westhampton, N. Y. . . . Churchland, Va. . . . . Danville, Va. Aylett, Va. . . . Millburn, N. J. James D. Leftwich Southland, Va. Hari.ie Hugh Masters Lynn, Mass. Roy B. Merritt Pelham, N. Y. Mack Moncure Stafford, Va. William G. Moore Portsmouth, Va. Lee O ' Reilly Hampton, Va. Wade C. Payne Haymarketi Va. Carson Roberts Bonny Blue, Va. C. Forest Sinclair Gainesville, Va. R. Jordan Sizemore Virgilina, Va. Augustus M. Winder Greenfield, Mass. [165] First Row: Stanley Ebb Abner Charles Fox Second Row: Harry GUck Sidney Jaffe Third Row: Robert Lansburgh Norman Weinberg t 166] t PI LAMBDA PHI Founded at Yale University, 1895 PSI CHAPTER Established 1921 Fratres in Collegio 1939 Richard Crane New Yorl;, N. Y. Sidney Jaffe Suffolk, Va. Stanley Ebb 1940 .... Boston, Mass. Robert Lansburgh . . Norman Weinberg Boston, Mass. Baltimore, Md. 1941 David Forer New York, N. Y. PLEDGES Martin Kanter Newport News, Va. David Goi.omb New York, N. Y. Arthur Kniep Newport News, Va. Garry Paskus New York, N. Y. Harry Glick Norfolk, Va. Harold Lazaron Baltimore, Md. rving Factor Boston, Mass. Abner Fox New York, N. Y. Saul Rubin New York, N. Y. [ 167] li f) First Row: Lucy Allen Marion Blair Lisa Bloede Lucille Bybee Margaret Carper Second Row: Mary Qark Dorothy Louise Cole Ethel Donnelly Eliza East Catherine Edge Third Row: Lucille Edwards Rosa Ellis Mary M. Figley Virginia Forwood Alice Gates Fourth Row: Marie Harris Ruth Ann Holzmueller Jane Hutcheson Josephine Jenkins Helen Elizabeth Jones Fifth Row: Frances Jourdon Jayne Magee Florence Merryman Emelie Phillips Jane- Saunders Sixth Row: Ann Terrell Lillian Waymack Margaret Helen Williams Lucy Yeaman [168] CHI OMEGA Founded at University of Arkansas, 1895 OMICRON BETA CHAPTER Established ig2l Mrs. R. p. Wallace Mrs. Van Garrett SORORES IN UrBE Mrs. a. L. Meisel Mrs. G. T. Brooks Mrs. S. p. Moorehead Mrs. R. McCreary Miss Margaret Bridges Mrs. J. R. Geiger SoRORES IN COLLEGIO 1939 Lisa Bloede Catonsville, Md. Lucille Bybee Norfolk, Va. Eliza East Altavista, Va. Catherine Edge Rishmond, Va. Ruth Ann Holzmueller Milford, Del. Jane Hutchison Massopiqua, N. Y. Josephine Jenkins Crewe, Va. Jane Saunders Newport News, Va. Margaret Helen Williams . . Forest Hills, N. Y. 1940 Marjorie Barnes Chattahoochee, Fla. Rosa Ellis Richmond, Va. Virginia Forewood .... Havre de Grace, Md. Alice Gates Chester, Va. Marie Harris New Rochelle, N. Y. Frances Jourdan Meriden, Conn. JAYNE Magee Baltimore, Md Florence Merrymen Lynchburg, Va, Emelie Phillips Hammonton, N. J, Ann Terrill Richmond, Va, Lilian Weymack Richmond, Va, Denny Yeaman Ridgefield Park, N. J 1941 Marion Blair Buffalo, N. Y. Louise Cole Chicago, III. Ethel Donnelly Washington, D. C. Jean Stevenson Washington, D. G. PLEDGES Lucy Burke Allen Richmond, Va. Mildred Anne Hill Richmond, Va. Margaret Carper Roanoke, Va. Helen Jones Richmond, Va. Mary Homes Clark Washington, D. C. Frances Kerr Fort Monroe, Va. Mary Margaret Figley Canton, Ohio Charlotte Mooers Richmond, Va. Nancy Price Newport News, Va. [169] y? t Fin Ko-w: Jane Austin Charlotte Bagot Ruth Barton Evelyn Bolton Second Row: Elizabeth Boyd Kitty Jane Britten Bayly Bucher Jean Clarahan Thhd Row: Elizabeth Jane Cook Christine Cowan Dorothy Dickie Katherine Donald Fourth Row: Gwendolyn Evans Mary Kay Ewing Elizabeth Foster Katherine Hoover I-tfth Row: Winifred La Cross Margaret Laughner Joan Lehman Virginia Markell Sixth Row: Helen Melvin Frances Reeder Roberta Rosendale Carol White Elaine Wooddy [ 170] I.APPA ALPHA THETA Founded at DePauw University, 1870 BETA LAMBDA CHAPTER Established IQ22 Mrs. Y. O. Kent Mrs. J. R. Fisher Miss Anne Hall SORORES IN UrBE Mrs. J. Henderson Mrs. Histler Miss Nancy Smoot Mrs. R. E. Lee Miss Mary King Lee Miss Emily Hall Sorores in Collegio •939 Bayly Bucher Bayside, N. Y. Barbara Bundy Newport, R. L GwEN Evans Grand Rapids, Mich. Dorothy Dickie Maplewood, N. J. Sarah Hall Newark, N. J. Winifred LaCrosse Westfield, N. J. Roberta Rosendale Westfield, N. J. Elaine Woody Baltimore, Md. 1940 Charlotte Bagot Buffalo, N. Y. Jean Clarahan Floral Park, N. Y. Elizabeth Cook Washington, D. C. Christine Cowan Plainfield, N. J. Mary Kay Ewing Alean, N. Y. Anne White New London, Conn. 1 941 Ruth Barton Stoneham, Mass. Elizabeth Foster Marion, Ohio Kitty Britton Lansdowne, Penn. Kay Hoover Plainfield, N. J. Elizabeth Boyd Lansdowne, Penn. Virginia Markell Wheeling, W. Va. Frances Reeder Easton, Penn. PLEDGES Jane Austin Amarillo, Texas Peggy Lauchner . . Evelyn Bolton Philadelphia, Penn. Joan Lehman . . . Kay Donald Washington, D. C. Helen Mei.vin . . . Carol White New London, Conn. St. Petersburg, Fla. . . Quantico, Va. St. Petersburg, Fla. [171] OTIL } o ' ;j u j €V9 ? 9CVC First Row: Sarah Betl Helen Bennett Lucie Bennett Margaret Blasingame Isabel Brenner Second Row: May Carruth Virginia Claudon Sarah Elizabeth Cole Caroline Cook Anne Cross Third Row: Shirley Daiger Dorian Dial Elizabeth M. Dougia; Betty Ensor Iva Goehring Fourth Row: Frances GuUion Jane Harden Margie Hosleins Hope Hunt Joan Jarrett Ftfth Row: Yvonne Johnson Edna Klinge Katherine Matejka Camilla McCormick Marian Milne Sixth Row: Ann Mitchell Patricia Nixon Lillian Robinson Frances Carolyn Seymour Virginia Smith Seventh Row: Dorothy Spense Janet Stewart Helen Strange Margaret Elizabeth Taylor Mary M. Taylor Nancy White [ 172] KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA Founded at Monmouth College, 1870 GAMMA KAPPA CHAPTER Established 1923 Mrs. Rutherford Goodwin SORORES IN UrBE Mrs. Dalter Bozarth Mrs. J. Wilfred Lambert Miss Letitia Armistead SoRORES IN COLLEGIO 1939 Helen Bennett ....... Chevy Chase, Md. May Carruth Norfolk, Va. Shirley Daiger Washington, D. C. Margie Hoskins Jacksonville, Fla. Yvonne Johnson Richmond, Va. Katherine Matejka .... Fort Monmouth, N. J. Dorothy Spence Arlington, Va. Margaret Taylor Norfolk, Va. Mary M. Taylor Richmond, Va. Nancy White Shaker Heights, Ohio 1940 Sarah Bell Shaker Heights, Ohio Judith Birdseye Flushing, N. Y. Anne Cross Suffolk, Va. Helen Strange Richmond, Va. Hope Hunt Washington, D. C. Gardina Matejka .... Fort Monmouth, N. J. Caroline Moses Appomattox, Va. Joan Jarrett Bloomington, 111. 1941 Lucie Bennett Chevy Chase, Md. Frances Gullion Washington, D. C. Margaret Heydecker Bronxville, N. Y. Edna Klinge Silver Springs, Md. Marion Milne Summit, N. J. Anne Mitchell Atlanta, Ga. Lillian Robinson Sayville, N. Y. PLEDGES Jeanette Anderson Easton, Penn. Virginia Bell Shaker Heights, Ohio Patricia Beverly-Giddings . . . Williamsburg, Va. Margarei Blasincame Plainview, Texas Isabel Brenner Brant, Mont. Carolina Cook Portsmouth, Va. Virginia Claudon Fairsburg, 111. Dor ian Dial San Francisco, Calif. Betty Douglas Swarthmore, Penn. Elizabeth Ensor Omaha, Neb. Florence Funston San Francisco, Calif. IVA GOEHRINC Germantown, Penn. Trudy Green Norristown, Penn. Jane Harden Philippine Islands Charlotte Henderson .... Williamsburg, Va. Betsy Lee Hooper Arlington, Va. Jean Kerr Atlanta, Ga. Camilla -McCoRMiCK Missoula, Mont. Patricia Nixon Rochester, N: Y. Dorothy Overhoeser Washington, D. C. Mary Anne Robinson .... Fort Benning, Ga. Margaret Ronalds Alexandria, Va. Frances Roulstone New York City Frances Seymour Maplewood, N. J. Susan Shafer Cleveland Heights Virginia Smith Honolulu, Hawaii Janet Stewart Glen Ellyn, 111. Ann Wrentmore Chagrin Falls, Ohio [173] (yio nxa L y jyfi ' n a r n _ C C Ci a f f) Vint Row: Jeannette Appleby Jane Baker Jean Baker Jeanne Marie Bankard Mary Alice Barnes Thelma Leigh Bell Second Row: Marva Blair Virginia Boardman Pearl Brueger Catherine Cotterman Elizabeth Cutler Ella Dickenson Third Row: Frances Eells Lucille Eldridge Grace Elliott Eleanor Ely Grace Flavcll Margaret Ford Fourth Row: Louise Gordon Rowena Gotshall Lucille Harder Lucille Haynes Marguerite Hill Betty Jane Hulsey Fifth Row: Catherine Jones Letty Jones Theo Kelcey Dorothy Lindquist Margaret Longley Nancy McCall Sixth Row: Helen Frances McDermott Jane Mercer Margaret Mitchell Harriet Molloy Betty Moore Muriel Morris Seventh Row: Janet Murray Natalie Nichols Margaret Palmer Ruth Rapp Edith Rathbun fieal Sale Eighth Row: Gertrude Shaffer Audrey Smith Maurtne Stuart Dorothy Swan Elsie Vreeland Frances Wagener Ntnth Row: Jean Warren Margaret West Eleanor Wilkinson Ruth WiUianu [ 174] I ' 1 BETA PHI Founded at Monmouth College, 1867 VIRGINIA GAMMA CHAPTER Established l()25 Mrs. Floyd Avers Miss Alice Person SORORES IN UrBE Mrs. D. J. Blocker Sorores in Collegio Mrs. J. G. Warburton Miss Mae Wright 1939 Jane Baker Lakewood, Ohio Jean Baker Lakewood, Ohio Mary A. Barnes Flushing, N. Y. Pearl Brueger Maplewood, N. J. Elizabeth Cutler Newport News, Va. Frances Eells Bethesda, Md. Lucille Eldridge Hagerstown, Md. Lucille Haynes .... Port Washington, N. Y. Letitia Jones Norfolk, Va. Janet Murray Hartford, Conn. Margaret Palmer Media, Penn. Beal Sale Washington, D. C. Gertrude Shaffer Cass, W. Va. Audrey Smith Cincinnati, Ohio Maurine Stewart Washington, D. C. Jean Warren Washington, D. C. 1940 Jeannette Appleby Harrisburg, Penn. Marva Blair Springfield, Mo. Grace Elliott Freeport, N. Y. Lucille Harder Grand Rapids, Mich. Martha Johnson Walters, Va. Marjorie Lytle Salisbury, Penn. Helen McDermott New York, N. Y. Elizabeth Moore Latrobe, Penn. Evelyn Robinson Baltimore, Md. Dorothy Swan Shaker Heights, Ohio Elsie Vreeland Rocky Hill, N. J. Frances Wagener Williamsburg, Va. 1941 Grace Flavell Philadelphia, Penn. Elizabeth Imus Mt. Rainier, Md. Alice Kay Laubach Woodbury, N. J. Dorothy Lindquist Tuckahoe, N. Y. Ruth Rapp Jamaica, N. Y. Nancy McCali Larchmont, N. Y. Daphne McGavock New York, N. Y. M rcaret Mitchell Silver Springs, Md. Margaret Peck Oklahoma City, Okla. PLEDGES Jean Bankard Chicago, 111. Thelma Bell Norfolk, Va. Virginia Boardman Jackson, Mich. Kay Butterfield .... Cleveland Heights, Ohio Catherine Cotterman Manila, P. L Ella Dickenson Mt. Lebanon, Va. Virginia Doepke Harrisburg, Penn. Eleanor Ely Hutchinson, Kan. Margaret Ford Roxboro, N. C. Louise Gordon Washington, D. C. Rowena Gotshali Westown, Penn. Marguerite Hill Norfolk, Va. Betty Jane Hulsey .... Oklahoma City, Okla. Ruth Williams . . . Catherine Jones Norfolk, Va. Theo Kelcey Westfield, N. J. Peggy Longley Wahiawa, Oahu, T. H. Jane Mercer San Diego, Calif. Harriet Molloy Brooklyn, N. Y. Muriel Morris San Francisco, Calif. Natalie Nichols Great Neck, N. Y. Marian Pate Williamsburg, Va. Edith Rathbun Washington, D. C. Ethel Teal Richmond, Va. Norma Warren Belmont, Calif. Peggy West Honolulu, T. H. Eleanor Wilkinson San Diego, Calif. .... Norfolk, Va. [ 175] fx First Row: Margaret Black Doris Bluford Jean Collmus Virginia Coulbourn Charlotte Farmer Second Row: Helen Furbee Frances Garrett Vi rginia Gilbert Lura Goddin Helen Gray Third Row: Pearl Haigis Marjorie Hopkins Mary Jane Hutchison Rosa Elizabeth Jordan Ruth Keat Fourth Row: Noel Lambert Mary Latimer Alice McKain Betty Mordon Jane Obenchain Fifth Row: Louise Oberrender Betty Page Mary Patton Betty Peck Jean ReifF Sixth Row: Dean Robertson Agnes Rossbacher Mildred Shepherd Harriet Sprague Lillian Styer Seventh Row: Tabb Taylor Ann Travis Ruby Trice Betty Tyler Marjorie Van Auken Prudence White 1176] P H I M U Founded at Wesleyan College, 1852 GAMMA ALPHA CHAPTER Established JQ36 Miss Thelma Brown Miss Sophia Croxton SORORES IN UrBE Miss Marguerite Stribung Mrs. Branch Bocock Miss Nancy Richardson Mrs. J. Lyniwn Sorores in Collegio 1939 Elizabeth Carr Leesburg, Va. Virginia Gilbert Darien, Conn. LuRA GODDIN Toano, Va. Pearl J. Haigis Foxboro, Mass. Rosa-Elizabeth Jordan Norfolk, Va. Ann Travis Elizabeth, N. J. Elizabeth Page Rochester, N. Y. Betty Pfck Glen Ridge, N. J. 1940 Constance Crabtree .... Newton Center, Mass. Frances Garrett Danville, Va. Frances Jacobs Steubenville, Ohio Mildred Shepherd Richmond, Va. Lillian Styer Bordentown, N. J. Betty Tyler Annapolis, Md. Jean Collmus 1941 . . . . Frederick, Md. Jane Hutchinson . . Louise Oberrender Ventnor, N. J. Paoli, Penn. PLEDGES Sara Margaret Black Sea-View, Va. Doris Kathleen Bluford .... Ocean View, Va. Sarah Burton Norton, Va. Phyllis Cady Philadelphia, Penn. Virginia Lee Coulbourn Shanghai, Va. Charlotte Farmer Portsmouth, Va. Helen Mae Fupbee Norfolk, Va. Helen Gray Chatham, Va. Marjorie Hopkins Fredericksburg, Va. Noel Patricia Lambert Norfolk, Va. Mary Latimer Silver Springs, Md. Alice McKain Pittsburg, Penn. Betty Jeanne Morden Snyder, N. Y. Jane Obenchain South Bend, Ind. Mary Patten Marblehead, Mass. Jean Dorothy Reiff Allenton, Penn. Dean Robertson Durham, N. C. Agnes Rossbacher Westfield, N. J. Harriet Spracue Cleveland, Ohio Tabb Taylor Warrentown, Va. Ruby Trice Toano, Va. Marjorie Van Auken Brookline, Mass. Prudence White Charlottesville, Va. [177] r r ■irsr Row: Doris Berg-Johnsen Catherine Bidelspacher Janet Billet Virginia Brenn Rose Coffin Second Row: Betty Cook Peggy Cook Dorothy Coppridge Betty Craig Elinor Derr Third Row: Louise Ely Lura Lee Foreman Dorothy Gammack Peggy Gildner Frances Grodecoeur Fourth Row: Frances Hiden Mary Hiden Phyllis Hornsby Dorothy Hosford Joyce Jacks on Fifth Row: Shirley James Ethel Jordan Mary Allen Kearney Frances Lewis June Lucas Sixth Row: Mary Willis O ' Farrell Margaret Prickett Polly Prickett Jane Scofield Betty Smith Seventh Row: Dorothy Stilson Eleanor Taylor Jean Vosburgh Aletha Ward Barbara Wastcoat Eighth Row: Nella Whitaker Dorothy Wright [178] m i tm0 ALPHA CHI OMEGA Founded at DePauw University, 1885 Mrs. J. C. Chandler Miss Kathleen Alsop BETA DELTA CHAPTER Established 1927 SORORES IN UrBE Miss Mae Chandler Mrs. John Zaharov SoRORES IN FaCULTATE Miss Althea Hunt Mrs. W. M. Jones Miss Alma Wilkin SoRORES IN COLLEGIO ' 939 Janet Billet Sabot, Va. Peggy Cook Petersburg, Va. LuRA Lee Foreman Norfolk, Va. Frances Grodecoeur .... Monongahela, Penn. Frances Hiden Newport News, Va. Phyllis Hornsby Norfolk, Va. Dorothy Hosford Maplewood, N. J. Joyce Jackson Suflfolf, Va Ethel Jordan Dublin, Va Mary Allen Kearney Norfolk, Va Peggy Prickett West Point, N. Y Jane Robertson Elkton, Md Jean Vosburgh New Rochelle, N. J Althea Ward Atlantic City, N. J Barbara Wastcoat Ridgewood, N. J. 1940 Jane Brandt Wilmette, 111. Virginia Brenn Indianapolis, Ind. Betty Craig Ridgewood, N. J. Madge Dunn Richmond, Va. Louise Ely Manila, P. I. Mary Willis O ' Farrell .... Petersburg, Va. Harriet Ricketson New Rochelle, N. Y. Eleanor Taylor Dover, N. J. Nella Whitaker Upper Darby, Penn. Harriet Williams New Rochelle, N. Y. 1941 Rose Coffin White Plains, N. Y. Shirley James Milwaukee, Wis. Peggy Gildner Springfield, Penn. June Lucas Wallingford, Conn. Polly Prickett West Point, N. Y. PLEDGES Doris Berg-Johnson Bloomingdale, N. J. Catherine Bidei.spacher . . . Williamsport, Penn. Peggy Dudina Richmond, Va. Dorothy Coppridge Norfolk, Va. Elinor Derr Williamsport, Penn. Emily Dickerman Cynwyd, Penn. Ann Fitz Hugh McKeesport, Penn. Dolly Hiden Warrenton, Va. Harriet McCarthy Jersey City, N. J. Lucy McClure Buffalo, N. Y. Jean Ross Ridgewood, N. J. Jane Scofield New York, N. Y. Betie Smith Fort Benning, Ga. Dorothy Stilson Canal Zone Mary Triplett Baltimore, Md. Jean Wiegand Montclair, N. J. Dorothy Wright Farmville, ' Va. Ellen Young Hutchinson, Kan. [ 179] oru First Row: Jane Alden Mercedes Allen Martha Anderson Mary L. Anderson Ruth Brill econd Row: Mary Darragh Eleanor A. Davis Emily Edgerton Mae Ervin Rosa Evans Third Row: Rachael Griffin Helen Gudebrod Elizabeth Anne Hall Edythe Harriss Edna Howell Fourth Row: Helen Hubbard Margaret Hutton Margaret Jahnke Elizabeth Ann Jones Irma Luxton Fifth Row: Catherine Mavor Carlin May Patricia Mims Nancy Lucille Owens Roberta Ann Page Sixth Row: Jean Riddick Jane Custis Ross Eltanor Rowan Aura Schroeder Doris Smith Seventh Row: Phyliss Tall Betty WhitehiU Dorothy Whitfield Elizabeth Anne Witherbe June Worly [180] IJ f , ij-H ill j 1 1 IS- ftfe ■jP jB KAPPA DELTA Founded at State Teacher ' s College, Farmville, Va., 1897 ALPHA PI CHAPTER Established 192s Mrs. R. p. Cocke Mrs. Charles Marsh SORORES IN UrBE Miss Annie Bozarth Mrs. Stanley Kitchens Miss Virginia Sterling Mrs. Phillip Nelson SoRORES IN COLLEGIO 1939 Ruth Brill Danbury, Conn. Rosa Evans Arlington, Va. Rachel Griffin Nashville, N. C. Edna Howell Maplewood, N. J. Margaret Button Suffolk, Va. Bettie Ann Jones Baltimore, Md. Ann Page Roanoke, Va. Phyllis Tall Baltimore, Md. Emily Edcerton 1940 . . . Narbeth, Penn. Helen Guderbrod . . Evelyn Lengnick Westfield, N. J. St. Davids, Penn. 1941 Margaret Jahnke Mount Vernon, Ohio Edna White Roanoke, Va. Eleanor Rowan Williamsburg, Va. Betty Whitehii.i Washington, D. C. Aura Schroedor Ridgewocd, N. J. Dot Whitfield Mapleviood, N. J. Eloise Whittington Baltimore, Md. PLEDGES Jane Alden Norfolk, Va Martha Anderson Richmond, Va Mary Louise Anderson Portsmouth, Va Alice Black Cranford, N. J Elsie Bober Concord, N. C Eleanor Davis Accomac, Va Mae Ervin Maplewocd, N. J Betty Ann Hall Durham, N. C Edyth Harriss Norfolk, Va Dot Hogshire Douglaston, N. J Helen Hubbarh Lima, Peru Mary Kelly Bristol, Va Irma Luxton Nutlev, N. J Anne Warriner . . Kitty Mavor Waverly, Va. Carlin May Norfolk, Va. Patsy Mims Luray, Va. Mary Morgan Martinsville, Va. Nancy Owens Richmond, Va. Jean Riddick Portsmouth, Va. Mary Robinson Crawford, N. J. Jane Ross Accomac, Va. Frances Rudasili Baltimore, Md. Doris Smith Westfield, N. J. Nancy Trice Schenectady, N. Y. Virginia Tripp Albany, N. Y. Dot Vogel Baltimore, Md. . . . . Blackbury, Va. [181] oim D I :j ' j j K f U U ' •— ' Jane Bayliss Elizabeth Charlotte Blair Dorothy Chick Jean Cox Martha Cox Second Row: Lucy Dobie Minnie Dobie Ruth Doerschuk Frances Duryea Dorothy Evans Third Row: Jean Farr Geraldine Gordon Virginia Gould Ruth Hollands Mary M. Howard I ' ourlh Row: Nancy (Florence) Joynes Frances Knight Elizabeth Knoll Martha McCarty Jean McEldownely Fifth Row: Jean Parker Sally Ann Price Mary Elizabeth Richardson Florence Ricketts Dorothy Sease Sixth Row: Shirley Sheain Lucille Spivey Gervais Wallace Louise Weaver tA ry Weaver Seventh Row: Winifred Wheeler Sarah Jane White Mildred Wiltshire [ 182] Jf m J DELTA DELTA DELTA Founded at Boston University, 1888 ALPHA MU CHAPTER Established 1928 SORORES IN COLLEGIO 1939 Minnie Dobie . . Dorothy Evans . Ruth Hollands . Nancy Joynes . . Martha McCarthy Stony Creek, Va. Scranton, Penn. . Hornell, N. Y. . Norfolk, Va. Corning, N. Y. Sally Ann Price Glen Rock, N. J. Mary E. Richardson Reading, Penn. Lucille Spivey Richmond, Va. Claudia Torrence Hot Springs, Va. Winifred Wheeler ...... Baldwin, N. Y. Sara Jane White Norfolk, Va. 1940 Mary Mildred Eastlack Parlin, N. J Jean W. Farr Wenonah, N. J Gerry Gorden Brooklyn, N. Y Adele Harris Flushing, N. Y Georcie Ann Holton .... Long Beach, Calif Madeline Howard Harrisburg, Penn. Elizabeth Knoll Dayton, Ohio Jeanne Parker Norfolk, Va. Dorothy Sease Richmond, Va. Shirley Sheain Richmond, Va. 194 Elizabeth Blair Brooklyn, N. Y. Nancy Causer Elmira, N. Y. Jean Cox Norfolk, Va. Dorothy Chick Ocawana, N. Y. Lucy M. Dobie Stony Creek, Va. Frances Knight Washington, D. C. Jean McEldowney Philadelphia, Penn. ' Mildred Wiltshire Richmond, Va. PLEDGES Jane Bayliss Richmond, Va. Martha Cox Richmond, Va. Jean Dodson Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Ruth Doerschuk Baden, N. C. Frances Duryea St. Petersburg, Fla. Virginia Gould Quantico, Va. Lois Ann Hodges Langley Field, Va. Rosemary Lockuood Stanford, Conn. Florence Ricketts Orange, Va. Elizabeth Turner Cherleston, W. Va. Gervais Wallace Norfolk, Va. Louise Weaver HoUis, Long Island Mary Weaver Gloucester, Va. [ J83] cynz. i First Row: Margaret Averill Virginia Becan Hope Bitting Ann Bradshaw Grace B riel Second Row: Annabel Brubaker Elizabeth Bull Betty Carter Nancy Chisholm Mae Coggin Third Row: Marion Craft Frances Darby Jennie Davis Margaret Davis Lillian Douglas Fourth Row: Mary K. Edinger Alveiine L. Eppinger Marie E. Grimes Jane Groggins Phylis Hile Fifth Row: Mary Holmes Willetha Holmes Grace Hopkins Evelyn Kempfer Ellen Frances Lindsay Sixth Row: Carrie Massenburg Nancy Nason Frances Paul Margaret E. Richards Francis Ripley Seventh Row: Nancy Ripley Ruth Trimble [184 3 GAMMA PHI BETA Founded at Syracuse University, 1874 ALPHA CHI CHAPTER Established 1933 Miss Nellie Bloxton SORORES IN UrBE SORORES IN COLLEGIO 1939 Miss Ann Chapman Annabel Brubaker Lebanon, Penn. Frances Davis Ocean View, Va. Jennie Davis Warsaw, Ky. Frances Ripley Portsmouth, Va. Nancv Ripley Portsmoutli, Va. Ruth Trimble Winchester, Va. 1940 Hope Bitting Perth Amboy, N. J. Betty Carter Brooklyn, N. Y. Frances Darby Baltimore, Md. Jane Groggins Washington, D. C. Louise Eppinger Chambersburg, Penn. Carrie Massenburg Hampton, Va. Mary Holmes Newburg, N. Y. Willetha Holmes Newburg, N. Y. Eleanor Roth Allentown, Penn. Betty Wood Washington, D. C. Janet Wood Roanoke, Va. 1 941 Virginia Beacon Newport News, Va. Grace Briel Richmond, Va. Nancy Chisholm Richmond, Va. Lillian Douglas Alta Vista, Va. Mary K. Edinger Woodstock, 111. Grace Hopkins Dayton, Ohio Evelyn Kempfer Alexandria, Va. Ellen Lindsay Washington, D. C. Frances Paul Fortress Monroe, Va. PLEDGES Margaret Averill . . . Washington Depot, Conn. Margaret Allfn New Haven, Conn. Betty Beck Nazareth, Penn. Caroline Benner Hartford, Conn. Ann Bradshaw Hampton, Va. Betty Bull Washington, D. C. Lucy Catlett Hampton, Va. Maisie Coggin Warsaw, Va. Marion Craft Long Island, N. Y. Betty Creighton Fort Bragg, N. C. Edith Davies Langley Field, Va. Marie Grimes Lansdowne, Penn. Sally Holladay Minneapolis, Minn. Phyllis Hile Washington, D. C. Alice Jones Hampton, Va. Betty Moore Hampton, Va. Nancy Nason Albany, N. Y. Jackie Phillips Petersburg, Va. Marjorie Schmitz Brooklyn, N. Y. Sally Bet Walker .... Matthews County, Va. Betty Zimmerman Sheboygan, Wis. [185] 07tt x:A r ..o 39 KAPPA SIGMA Founded at the University of Virginia in 1869 NU CHAPTER Established in 1800 Fratres in Urbe W. Person Vernon Geddy N. Coleman F. Person C. M. Geddy B. C. Peachy T. M. Halligan E. Wilson Richard E. Lee Leonard Graves Frater in Facultate J. Wilfred Lambert Fratres in Collegio 1939 Jerome B. Griffin, Jr. 1940 JUDD W. Lewis, Jr Norfolk, Va. 1 941 Norfolk, Va. Lynwood B. Tabb, Jr. Norfolk, Va. Cort S. Quickel . . Albuquerque, N. M. Pledges Salida, Colo. George W. Graves Carl Kemp . . . King Norfolk, Va. and Queen Court House, Va. Charles P. Taylor . . Meredithville, Va. Frank Thompson Dundas, Va. Theodore Benjovsky, Jr. Charles A. Cocliandro . . Norfolk, Va. Gilmer T. Fitchett . . Cape Charles, Va. Thomas M. Forsyth, Jr. . The Plains, Va. John Glaser Yorktown, Va. John V. Gottland . Pacific Grove, Calif. The Kappa Sigma Fraternity was founded December 10, 1869, at the University of Virginia. It has expanded rapidly since that date throughout the United States and Canada until now it is composed of 107 active chapters. With the encouragement of the late Dr. Lyon G. Tyler, a Kappa Sigma from the University of Virginia, who became President of the College of William and Mary two years before, Nu Chapter was established in 1890 with 14 charter members. [186] PANHELLENIC COUNCIL Officers Frances Grodecoeur Rachel Griffin . . . . President Vice-President Alplia Clii Omega Frances Grodecoeur Polly Prickett Representatives Gamma Plii Beta Frances Darby Frances Davis Kappa Kappa Gamma Margie Hoskins Gardina Matejka Chi Omega Jane Hutcheson Emilie Phillips Kappa Alpha Theia Bayly Bucher Jean Clarahan Phi Mu Virginia Gilbert Betty Tyler Delta Delta Delta Minnie Dobie Madeleine Howard Kappa Delta Rachel Griffin Helen Gudebrod Pi Beta Phi Jean Warren Frances Wagener [187] OTU Kjhe quantity and the quality of the organ- izations at William and Mary enable all stu- dents to develop their interests in extra- curricular activities. Not only are there honor societies to strive for, but also numerous clubs in which the theoretical knowledge of the classroom may be put into actual service. - - ' T ' ' «ai«, PHI BETA KAPPA ALPHA OF VIRGINIA Officers James Southall Wilson President T. J. Stubbs, Jr Corresponding Secretary E. G. SwEM Vice-President D. W. Davis Recording Secretary R. G. RoBB Treasurer R. L. Morton Historian Mos s William Armisteao, Jr. Barbara R. Brown Shirley Daicer Andrew Jackson Dunkle LuaLLE Edwards Rosa Mae Evans Marie Goodman Initiates in Course from the Class of igjg Sarah Louise Hall Michael J. Hook, Jr. Dorothy Hosford Sidney Jaffe Ann Page LouE Elizabeth Pendleton R. Bradshaw Pulley George D. Sands, Jr. Octavia Willey Seawell Wynne A. Stevens, Jr. Alvin Tabankin Arthur T. Tanner M. Elizabeth Taylor Jean Harper Warren Kathleen M. Alsop Lettie Gregory Armistead Alfred R. Armstrong J. T. Baldwin, Jr. Martha E. Barksdale D. J. Blocker H. L. Bridges Margaret F. Bridges Eleanor Calkins Donald W. Davis Members in Residence Ashton Dovell Charles J. Duke, Jr. Vernon M. Geddy W. A. R. Goodwin William G. Guy Channing M. Hall Emily Moore Hall John E. Hocutt K. J. Hoke Affiliated Members J. R. L. Johnson J. Wilfred Lambert Frank A. MacDonald Vernon L. Nunn R. G. RoBB T. J. Stubbs, Jr. Mrs. T. j. Stubbs, Jr. A. G. Taylor R. C. Young Mrs. John Zaharov John Stewart Brvan Beta of Virginia Leslie Cheek, Jr Alpha of Massachusetts T. S. Cox Beta of Virginia Frances H. Craichill, Jr. . . . Beta of Tennessee J. H. DiLLARD Gamma of Virginia John R. Fisher Alpha of Tennessee Mrs. j. R. Fisher Alpha of Tennessee B. Floyd Flickinger . . . Gamma of Pennsylvania Ernest W. Gray Alpha of Rhode Island John D. Green Beta of Virginia Charles T. Harrison Alpha of Alabama Inga Olla Helseth Alpha of Florida Richard H. Henneman Beta of Virginia Frederick W. Hoeing . . . Beta of Massachusetts Althea Hunt Eta of Pennsylvania Jess H. Jackson Alpha of Alabama E. RuFFiN Jones, Jr Beta of Virginia L. H. Jones Beta of California I. S. Zfass Grace W. Landrum .... Iota of Massachusetts Charles F. Marsh .... Gamma of IVisconsin Mrs. C. F. Marsh Gamma of IVisconsin R. C. McClelland . . . Alpha of IV est Virginia Jeannette S. McConnell . . . Delta of Virginia Donald Meiklejohn .... Alpha of IVisconsin James W. Miller Alpha of Michigan R. L. Morton Beta of Virginia Bela W. Norton Alpha of Maine Cherry Nottingham Beta of Illinois Thomas Pinckney Beta of Virginia David S. Prosser Epsilon of Ohio John D. Rockefeller, Jr. . Alpha of Rhode Island S. D. Southworth Beta of Neiv Jersey John M. Stetson Alpha of Connecticut Charles H. Stone Alpha of Georgia E. G. Swem Gamma of Pennsylvania A. P. Wagener Alpha of Maryland . . . Beta of Virginia [191] rx ... x) OMICRON DELTA KAPPA ETA CIRCLE Officers Stewart Cotterman President H. D. Corey Secretary James Moore W. W. Woodbridge, Jr. Vice-President Treasurer Fratres in D. J. Blocker H. L. Bridges James D. Carter J. C. Chandler G. Glenwood Clark H. D. Corey Theodore S. Cox Donald W. Davis Otis Douglas Charles J. Duke, Jr. Wayne F. Gibbs W. S. GoocH W. G. Guy L. Tucker Jones Facultate J. S. Kellison Y. O. Kent J. Wilfred Lambert John L. Lewis, Jr. C. F. Marsh Richard Morton P. P. Peebles G. M. Small T. J. Stubbs, Jr. E. G. Swem A. G. Taylor A. Pelzer Wagener D. W. Woodbridge R. C. Young Fratres in Collegio Carl E. Buffington Herbert Krueger Slew art Cotterman James O. Moore Harold Gouldman Franklin P. Ryder Michael J. Hook Edward Themak, Jr. Sidney Jaffe Howard Wheeler W. W. Woodbridge, Jr. t 192] MORTAR BOARD NATIONAL WOMEN ' S HONOR SOCIETY Margaret Prickett President Rosa Evans Vice-President Beal Sale Secretary Shirley Daiger Treasurer Kate Alfriend Editor Dorothy Hosford Historian Sally Hall [ 193 1 ru. clZ L x ur 193 9 EXECUTIVE COUNCIL Sally Hall President Anne Cross Vice-President Betty Knoll Secretary June Lucas Treasurer Josephine Jenkins Representative-at-Large Mary Comstock Representative-at-Large Ann Warriner Freshman Representative WOMEN ' S STUDENT COOPERATIVE GOVERNMENT [194] WOMEN ' S JUDICIAL COUNCIL OFFICERS Dorothy Hosford Cliairman Rosa Ellis Secretary Virginia Brenn Junior Representative Betty Blair Sophomore Representative Caroline Cook Freshman Representative Beal Sale Representative-at-Large Edna White Representative-at-Large Jane I. Macdonald Chandler House President Peggy Cook Barrett House President EuNA Howell Jefferson House President Alima Van Blarcom Broiiin House President [195] o-ru Yl -Tfe, C aaa 9 Ly J u v- 1939 OFFICERS Rosa Evans Chairman Betty Moore Secretary Peggy Prickett Senior Member Ruth Trimble Senior Member Jeannette Appleby Junior Member Frances Garrett Junior Member Lucie Meade Dobie Sophomore Member WOMEN ' S HONOR COUNCIL [ 196] J m ' ■■' ■a?  : HjjSHH i-i ' W Hj , . m . «gi mm ' ■1 MEN ' S HONOR COUNCIL Raymond Dudley President John Dillard Secretary Ward Wheeler Senior Member Carlton Stublen Senior Membe Robert Newton Junior Member Lloyd Phillips Junior Member Dick Kaufman ' . Sophomore Member [197] OTIL 939 i) J FRANK DAMROSCH, HI THOMAS HELFRICH THE COLONIAL ECHO [ 198] THE COLONIAL ECHO EDITORIAL STAFF Frank Damrosch, III Editor Sidney Jaffe Associate Editor John Prinzivali.i Assistant Editor Betty Moore Activities Editor Frances Eells Activities Editor Stanley Ebb Men ' s Athletic Editor Lawrence Pettet Men ' s Athletic Assistant Editor Joan Jarrett If omen ' s Athletic Editor Frances Grodecoeur fVomen ' s Athletic Assistant Editor Marion Keli.ev Faculty Editor John Sumner Fraternity Editor Kate Alfriend Sorority Editor Jack Garrett Photographer Mary Alice Barnes Chief of Typist Stag Margaret Peck Hope Hunt Eleanor Ely Jane Harden Edith Rathbun Jean Kerr Ruth Rapp Beverly Boone Virginia Tripp Activities Margaret Alexander Peggy Stigall Ann Fitz Hugh Mary Hiden Jean Reiff Margaret Budina Nancy Ripley Virginia Gould Nancy Causer Polly Prickett Peggy Gildner Ruth Williams Athletics Carrie Massenburc Margaret Mitchell Madge Dunn Saunders Almond Norman Weinberg Edward Svetkey Charles Stousland Robert Stainton Richard Davis Alice McKain Mary K. Edinger Ada Bischoff Fraternities and Sororities Louise Cole Jean Collmus Sarah Burton James Douglas Shirley James Mildred Wiltshire Dorothy Sease Nancy McCall Edna White Nancy White Theodosia Kelcey Lucy Dority Snapshots Lucy McClure Irma Luxton Jeannette Appleby Dale Williams Thomas Mougey Richard Mears Lois Leach Virginia MacDonald Emily Petuske Jeanne Reindollar Phyllis Hile Lucille Harder Eth el Ford Typists Martha Johnson Mary Frances Ripley Reitz Brown Peggy Duryea Dorothy Swan BUSINESS STAFF Thomas Helfrich Bayley Bucher Business Manager Advertising Manager Edward Miller Caldwell Cason A ctivities Head Photography Head General Staff Elizabeth Jane Cook Winifred LaCrosse Elaine Woody William Fernandez George McComb Clark Presbrey Maxie Davis Palmer Farkington Jean Clarahan Ca roline Moses Robert Critchfield Gardina Matejka James Welsh Edna Klinge Frances Gullion Frances Lewis Kemp Boot Frank Kuhn Armand Harkless Malcolm Sullivan Mary Spaith Marjorie Van Auken Robert Aldrich Dorothy Overholser Louise Gordon Nancy Parker Alice Black Margaret Robinson Louise Weaver Arthur Appleby Virginia Began Ray Walker JUDD OGDON Natalie Nichols Howard Anderson Robert Burns Arthur Dixon Typist Lucie Bennett (JT ' ZjL C199] J9 L WILLIAM L. GREENE EDWARD B, REINHARD THE FLAT HAT [ 200] THE FLAT HAT EDITORIAL STAFF William L. Greene Editor-in-Chief Sidney Jaffe and Dorothy Spence Managing Editors Edward Themak Peggy Prickett Fred Howard Jane Macdonald Kate Alfriend Edith Harris Frank Raflo, Rosa Ellis Sports Editors Richard Velz Associated Press Representative Virginia Forwood Social Editor Jack Garrett Photographer Frederick Kayser Cartoonist Tim Hanson Joseph Stone Robert Stainton Reportorial Staff Men Charles Beale Walter Bara LoYE Minor Elbert Slaughter Robert Greene Vance Fowler James Bailey Ellen Lindsay Helen Gray Edward Reinhard . Milton Quinn Women Madge Dunn Anne Cross Pat Bankard . . . First Semester Business Manager Second Semester Business Manager Harry Gebauer BUSINESS STAFF Men Arthur Cosgrove Palmer Farrington Dorothy Gammack Peggy Cook Women Jane Saunders Mary Meyers Taylor Sarah Bell Edna Klinge Betty Knoll Fred Brown Circulation Manager 1201] 139 HOWARD F. WHEELER DAVID FORER EMORY LEWIS THE ROYALIST [202] THE ROYALIST EDITORIAL BOARD Ward Wheeler Editor Emory Lewis Managing Editor David Forer Art Editor Two years ago there appeared on the campus of William and Mary a pocket-size publica- tion called The Royalist. Neither a literary magazine, nor a humor magazine, The Royal- ist, frankly experimental, aimed to be a college magazine. Published entirely by the stu- dents and designed to appeal to the whole student body, it included illustrated articles and fiction, cartoons and other humorous features, poetry, book reviews, and photographs of the college. Enthusiastically received from the beginning, it continued to hold student in- terest through the ever-improving quality of its content and make-up, through the close contact it has kept with the college, and through its spirit of enterprise. Sidney Jaffe . . Articles John Sumner . . Fiction Maria Lee Goodwin . . Edith Harris Munsey Slack . Fiction Poetry Fiction Editor Adele Harris . . Fiction Benjamin Letson . Books Merritt Foster . Features Art Staff Charles Curry . Director Lucille Bybee Phyllis Hornsby David Golomb Frances Reeder Charles Curry Fashions David Forer John H. Garrett, Jr. Roberta Rosendale Photography John H. Garrett, Jr. BUSINESS STAFF Dorothy Spence Press Representative Stanley Ebb, Jean Kerr Circulation Robert Lansburgh Exchanges [20)] 169 3 1939 SIGMA PI SIGMA Honorary Physics Fraternity Officers Edward M. Ware President Mary Comstock Vice-President Janet Murray Secretary-Treasurer Dr. W. W. Merrymon Faculty Advisor Faculty Members Dr. W. G. Guy Dr. R. C. Young William Duncan Dr. J. M. Stetson William Marsh Members Frank Bader Robert Newton Seymour Shwiller Carl Casella Pauline Obst Vernon Strand Jack Dunkle Robert Rowland James Talley Virginia Hinkins George Sands Minor Thomas Michael Hook Anthony Wagener [204] KAPPA OMICRON PHI Honorary Home Economics Society Officers Virginia Martin President Elaine Bentley Secretary Jean Vosburgh Treasurer Members Ruth Brill Marguerite Hill Mercedes Allen Clara Gaetjens Marva Blair Margaret West Eileen Woods C20)] 93 1939 ETA SIGMA PHI National Honorary Classical Fraternity Officers Roberta Ann Page President Merritt Foster Vice-President A. Conrad Forbes Secretary Frances Wagener Treasurer Edith Harris Corresponding Secretory Alfred Alley Sergeant-at-Arms Honorary Members Mrs. p. W. Hiden Dr. A. P. Wagener Dr. Grace Warren Landrum Dr. G. J. Ryan Mr. Robert McClelland Miss Margaret D. Wright Mrs. W. a. Peery Ruth Davis Frances Hiden Gordon Holland Virginia Hoyle Rosa-Elizabeth Jordan Nancy Joynes Emory Lewis Active Members Ellen Lindsay Helen Lindsay Rhea Mirmelstein Margaret Palmer Jeanne Parker David Quinlan Dorothy Schmitz Octavia Seawell Elizabeth Smith John Sumner . Kathleen Taylor Ruth Trimble Lorimer Walker Emily Wilson [206] KAPPA DELTA PI National Educational Fraternity Officers LouE Pendleton President Edna Howell Vice-President Prudence Searle Recording Secretary Mae Hawkins Corresponding Secretary Armina Crosby Treasurer LuciLE Bybee Reporter Dr. Weeks Faculty Advisor Members Lee Shimberg , Elaine Bentley Rhea Mirmelstein Lucy Ruffin Carroll Hutton Nancy Ripley Mike Hook Phyllis Hornsry Mike Hedgepeth [207] THETA CHI DELTA Honorary Chemistry Fraternity Officers Arthur Tanner President Alvin Tabankin Vice-President Lloyd Phillips Treasurer Langford Jones Recording Secretary Carl Casella Corresponding Secretary Jack Clare Crucible Reporter Faculty Members Dr. R. G. Robb a. R. Armstrong J. E. Hocutt Dr. W. G. Guy William Duncan Honorary Members Dr. H. N. Cai.derwood, Jr. Mr. G. C. Barclay Active Members M. W. Thomas Winder Lane Benjamin Foley Vincent Burgess Seymour Simerman Frank Bader Moss Armistead David Camp Robert Douglas James Johnson Sidney Hanley Ashton Carmines George Sands Frank Grimes John Owen Clarence Suber Conrad Yocum Walter Measday Charles Cogliandro Phillip Francis [208] PHI SIGMA Honorary Biology Fraternity Officers Frank B. Koss President Stewart Cotterman Vice-President Jean Snyder Secretary Prudence Searle Treasurer Faculty Advisors Dr. Donald W. Davis Dr. J. P. Baldwin Dr. Roy P. Ash Miss Blank Members Baily Bucher John C. Tinsley Thomas D. McCahill Charles Cogliandro ToRSTEN Peterson [209] I (XLcrrucayu 1693 1939 CHI DELTA PHI National Honorary Literary Society Officers Margaret Prickett President Margie Hoskins Vice-President Lee Goodwin Secretary-Treasurer Members Adele Harris Anne Cross Edith Harris Betty Knoll Mary Willis O ' Farrell Florence Mode Betsy Richardson [210] 13 CLUB Officers Michael J. Hook President Franklin P. Ryder Vice-President Elmo T. Legg Treasurer Faculty Members HiBBERT D. Corey W. Melville Jones George J. Ryan Undergraduate Members William Altenburg Lawrence Oliver Wyatt Carneal Thomas Savage Raymond Dudley • John Tinsley Robert Goellnicht William Woodbridge Edward Motley Frank Yeager Graduate Members William Arthur George Bunch Harold Gouldman [211] (y? ljt r ..x ' F. H. C. SOCIETY Founded 1750 Officers Thomas D. Savage President James O. Moore Secretary W. W. WooDBRiDGE, Jr Treasurer Joseph C. Chandler Permanent Secretary Members J. C. Chandler Arthur Hanson Harold M. Gouldman Dr. R. C. Young Roger B. Child John Davidson Pres. J. S. Bryan B. D. Peachy Elmo T. Legg Dean J. W. Lambert C. M. Hall Joseph Lawler Dr. H. L. Fowler Rutherford Goodwin John Dillard Carl Buffington Y. O. Kent John Garrett Gordon Holland William Murphy The F. H. C. Society is the oldest social organization in the United States, ante- dating Phi Beta Kappa by 26 years. The Society selects six outstanding juniors each year. Included among its most prominent members are: Edmund Randolph, Thomas Jefferson, St. George Tucker, and George Wythe. 1212] TRIBUNAL Franklin P. Ryder Elmo Legg Edward Themak Sterling Strange Charles Gondak Jane I. Macdonald Peggy Gildner Betty Cook Betty Knoll [213] n O , U D iiKJ 139 PRESIDENT ' S AIDES Officers William W. Woodbridge Chief Aide Charles Beale Carl Buffington John Dillard William Greene Harold Gouldman Arthur Hanson Leon Hayden Michael Hook Herbert Krueger Elmo Legg Lloyd Phillips Franklin Ryder Arthur Tanner [214] GIBBONS CLUB Officers Michael J. Hook President Mary Allen Kearney Vice-President Florence Francioni Secretary Thomas Dell a Torre Treasurer Dr. George J. Ryan Faculty Advisor Father Cornelius Pastor Arthur Appleby James Bailev Edward Bloom Doris Bluford John Brennan Thomas Brennan Robert Burns Arthur Butler William Byrne Alphonse Chestnut Louise Clarke Rose Coffin Charles Cochandro Marie Cole Dorothy Copperidge Thomas Crane Members Steve Dennis Margaret Doran Betty Ensor Ethel Ford Charles Gondak Edward Goodlow William Goodlow Robert Griffin • James Hanley Joseph Hanley Stanley Kamen Robert Kern Frank Koss Noel Lambert Stephen Lenzi Frances Lewis John Menz Leo Mitkeivtcz Thomas Mougey Arthur Murray Mary Willis O ' Farrell Nancy Parker Henry Polombo Bernard Rang Victor Raschi William St. John Hariston Seawell Henry Sivik Vincent Taffe Robert Vining Evelyn Volpe Raymond Walker Eileen Woods OTLtaA [215] O f) u SPANISH CLUB Hugh Mack Dill Lawrence Pettit Officers . . President Virginia Brenn . . Vice-President Elizabeth Jane Cook Secretary Treasurer Members James Hedrick George Moore June Worley Edgar Legum Virgil Andrews Vincent Taffe Frank Pulley Marcia Bourne Ruth Barton Margaret Ford Mildred Russell Frances Gullion R. L. Haynie, Jr. Wayne Harper Louise Ely Phyllis Tall Bettie Ann Jones Camilla Waltz Arthur Kneip Robert Kern Paul Taylor Lloyd Cornell Henry Polombo, Jr. Bette Smith Edith Rathbun Harriet Murray Charlotte Mooers Robert Neslaw Houston Ashworth Sanford Warren Charles Gondak Margaret Richards Jane Baker Ethel Teal Louise Gordon Frances Kemp Virginia Smith Lois Hodges Betty Moore Hazel Edyvean Edith Davies Mary Knox Frances Knight Caldwell Cason Thomas Andrews Robert Tucker Joseph Stone Adrienne Eastment Saunders Almond Paul Post Tim Shryock Doris Murch Myrtle Biele Hugh Watson Evelyn Wells Harry Hall Arthur Appleby Sam Walker Jack Geddes Anthony Maucione Frances Lewis Jane Browne Carlton Laing Lillian Waymack Sam Ellenson Ruth Davis Robert Scripps Robert Tepper Virginia Gould Frances Clarke Elsie Vreeland Jeannette Appleby Ann Fitz Hugh William Butler Frances Paul Charles Taylor Elizabeth Turner Wade Payne James Howard Warren Bosley Alex Hayner Irving Factor Winifred LaCrosse Harry Gebauer Shirley Sheain Richard Wright Katherine Donald Patricia Mims Joseph Hanley Betty Knoll Marion Blair Edna Rubin Herbert Young Margaret Sticall Mildred Ware Jane Dunn Kathryn Butterfield James Creekman Gerald Rose Phyllis Cady Gerard LaVay Conrad Forbes Andrew Wavle Garrett Turnstall Jane Ross Douglas Robbin William Garwood Edward Drat Perry Griffin H. D. Sumner Walter Kaplen Dorothy Judd Manuel San Juan Dorothy Stilson Nancy Joynes [216] EUCLID CLUB Officers Michael Hook President Edna Howell yice-President Jane Groggins Secretary Bradshaw Pulley Treasurer Dr. Stetson Faculty Advisors Miss Calkins Miss Russell Mr. Gregory Moss Armistead Elizabeth Barnard Neoma Bunting Carl Casella Mary Comstock Jack Dunkle Alice Gates Marie Goodman Betty Holt Robert Newton Members Seymour Shwiller Nancy Walker , Anthony Wagener Mary Weaver Charles Beville William Brown Rosa Ellis Philip Francis Erwin Geiger CouLBOURN Godfrey Harry Gravely Clarence Grogan Julian McClure Jean McEldowney William Miller Harriet Ricketson Astrid Riffolt George Sands James Talley Frank Thompson [217] crru n 1939 HISTORY CLUB Officers James Pye President Elaine Woody Vice-President Minnie L ou Dobie Secretary Jean Clarahan Treasurer Charlotte Bagot James Bailey Marjorie Barnes Mary Britton Marjorie Bowman Mae Coggin Sara Cole Christine Cowan Armina Crosby GwEN Evans Elizabeth Green Frances Grodecoeur Mae Hawkins Ruth Hollands Members Madeleine Howard John Hudson Jane Hutch eson Caroll Hutton Frances Jacobs Ruby Jones Barbara Kern Peggy Laughner Gardina Matejka Florence Merryman Rhea Mirmelstein Elizabeth Page Sally Ann Price Frances Ripley Evelyn Robinson Roberta Rosendale Beatrice Schneider Gertrude Shaffer Ruth Struminger Ann Terrell Robert Tilden Ann Travis Dorothy Walling Aletha Ward Robert Watkins Winifred Wheeler Elsie Wilde June Worley [2)8] nt 1 1 f « t ft I 1 t t¥t f t i t I I t 1 il ' ' 4 t COLLEGE CHAPEL CHOIR Officers Beal Sale President Robert Kendig Vice-President Frances Eells Secretary John Prinzivalli Librarian Mr. Small Director Hattie Abbitt Janet Billet Barbara Brown Sarah Burton Elizabeth Cutler Jane Dunn Adrienne Eastment Lucille Eldridge Betty Ann Hall Lucille Haynes Anna Hill Members Maxine Hikes Margaret Jahnke Norma Petillo Jean Stevenson ., Dorothy Walling Margaret Williams Chester Baker Kendall Beavers Art Brennison Roger Child Pat Damrosch Hub Griffin Armand Harkless NORRIS LiNEWEAVER Bill Parry Bernard Russell Walter Snowden Clarence Suber John Sumner Lorimer Walker Raymond Walker L219] J J J WOMEN ' S GLEE CLUB Officers Jean Baker . . President Anna Hill Vice-President Margaret Peck Treasurer Jane Baker Secretary Hattie Abbitt Thelma Leigh Bell Marva Blair Barbara Brown Neoma Bunting May Carruth Betty Lou Chambers Louise Cole Mary Clark Elizabeth Cutler Marion Craft Frances Darby Frances Davis Dorothy Dickie Margaret Dorian Members Margaret Durvea Esther Goldberg Helen Gray Adele Harris Marjorie Haupt Marguerite Hill Mary Holmes WiLETHA Holmes Margaret Jahnke Barbara Kempf Virginia Martin Alice McKain Carrie Massenburg Marian Mollen Norma Petillo Ruth Rapp Frances Reeder Betsy Richardson Frances Ripley Nancy Ripley Evelyn Robinson Jean Stevenson Maurine Stuart Constance Truxtok Elsie Vreeland Dorothy Walling Edna White Betty Whitehill Betty Wood £220] PHOENIX LITERARY SOCIETY Officers Fred Worster President Robert Kern Vice-President Horace Latta Recording Secretary Stedman Eure Program Secretary Anthony Stallman Treasurer George Sands Critic Carrington Cockreli Chaplain Seymour Simerman Sergeant-at-Arms Members Alfred Alley Gordon Holland Howard Anderson John Kegebein Frederick Arend Thomas Mougey Moss Armistead Edward Plitt David Camp Frank Rafto Richard Earle Albert Simerman Eugene Ellis Robert Tepper Frank Thompson [221] 19 v y J U -s MEN ' S DEBATE COUNCIL Officers Anthony Champa President Louis Rives Vice-President Stedman Eure Secretary Edwin Ferguson Program Chairman Joseph Stone Manager of Debates Members Varsity Squad Joseph Herman Paul Kratzig Louis Rives Anthony Champa Gerard LaVay Joseph Stone Stedman Eure Robert Measday J. B. Thompson Edwin Ferguson Bernard Ransome Freshman Squad James Watkins Frank Acosta Lawrence Lesham Anthony Maucione Sam Bessman Colleges Met Robert Tepper Washington and Lee Illinois Harvard Ohio Wesleyan Purdue Amherst Western Reserve Indiana Rutgers John Carroll Georgetown Princeton Notre Dame Maryland Hofstra University of Chicago Haverford Temple Loyola at Chicago New York University Drew Northwestern Rhode Island State Dartmouth Duke [222] WOMEN ' S DEBATE COUNCIL Officers Edna Howell President Anne Cross Vice-President Betty Moore Secretary-Treasurer Mr. John Lewis Coach Council Committee Dr. Fowler Dr. Marsh Members Joyce Jackson Frances Wagener Frances Paul Mary Willis O ' Farrell Betty Wood Gertrude Van Wyck Louise Eppinger Margaret West- Betty Blair Martha Johnson Daphne McGavack Edith Davies Edith Rodgers Margaret Mitchell Nancy Nason Eleanor Taylor Betty Zimmerman [223 3 THE PAN-AMERICAN LEAGUE To foster friendly relations among the students of the Americas Officers William Brown President Robert Neslaw Vice-President Jane Obenchain Secretary-Treasurer Ben Crowson Corresponding Secretary Faculty Sponsors Dr. J. R. Fisher Mr. G. G. Clark Dr. Earl Swem Members Martha Anderson Marjorie Haupt Tom Pavnter Emalie Ewing Helen Hubbard Elizabeth Rubin Samuel Ellenson Norris Lineweaver Hubert Sumner Gilmer Fitchett Frances Knight Frank Thompson Helen Furbee Harriet Murray Mildred Ware Dorothy Griffin Virginia Martin June Worley Edgar Omohundro Esta liga fue fundada per Sr. Ben F. Crowson el primero de noviembre de 1937 para proniover interes y aniistad entre los estudiantes de las Americas per el estudio de las asignaturas de musica, geografia, historia, gobierno, y los idiomas de la gente de Sud-America. [224] ACCOUNTING CLUB Officers C. Edwin Rountree President James Moore Vice-President Rosa E ans Secretary Ransom Duke Treasurer Members William Fernandez Dorothy Taylor Rachel Griffin Thomas Helfrich Helen Gudebrod Caldwell Cason LiNwooD Owen Alex Curyk Milton Quinn -.Harry Glick Edward Reinhard Donald P yle Jordan Sizemore Maxie Davis Honorary Member Wayne F. Gibbs [225] J 39 THOMAS R. DEW ECONOMICS CLUB Officers Shirley Daiger President James Pye Vice-President Rachel Griffin Secretary Thomas Helfrich Treasurer Raymond Dudley Leon Hayden Carl Kleinknecht William Braithwaite Elizabeth Carr Helen Gudebrod Marjorie Lytle Frances Segal Jordan Sizemore Robert Fuqua Marie Goodman Frederick Howard Oscar Gelotte Stanley Ebb Powell Wartel Members Robert Klein Milton Quinn Thomas Cartwright Ransom Duke Dorothy Schmitz Leonard Goldberg Bradshaw Pulley Dorothy Spence Lillian Styer Nella Whitaker John Dillard Fletcher Weathers Lucille Harder Maxey Davis Gordon Holland William Musser Thomas Savage Edwin Rountree Wyatt Carneal Betty Moore Lucille Edwards Ethel Jordan Art Brennison George McComb Eleanor Taylor Edward Miller George Nea Frances Grodecoeur Carlton Stublen Rosa Evans [226] BOOT AND SPUR CLUB Officers Arthur B. Hanson President Lisa Bloede Vice-President Gertrude Shaffer Secretary Joan Jarrett Treasurer Isabel Brenner Helen Bennett Hope Bitting Joan Bowers Saunders Almond Elizabeth Jane Cook Annette Carter Lucy Dority Members Margaret Field Marie Harris Frances Jourdan Lucille Jennings • Louise Gordon LuciNDA Lee Thomas Mougey Florence Mackler Camilla McCormick Dorothy Lindquist Patricia Nixon William Parry Mildred Russell Dorothy Swan Edward Svetkey ViCK SWANSON Frances Wolf 1227) oru FRENCH CLUB Officers Lucille M. Haynes President Betty Moore Vice-President Harry Hali Secretary Lee Phillips Treasurer Muriel Ranges Program Chairman Virginia Forwood Assistant Program Chairman Dr. J. D. Carter Faculty Sponsors Claude Hartog Virginia Armstrong Jeannette Appleby Josephine Barker Walter Bara Marva Blair Mary Comstock Emily Dickerman Grace Elliott Richard Earle Jean Farr Gerry Gorden Members Grace Hopkins Madeleine Howard Betty Ann Jones Frances Jourdon Mary Knox Robert Lansburch Ben Letson Peggy Lebair Florence Mode Frances Paul Bradshaw Pulley Margaret Ronalds Ruth Rap? Aura Schroeder Joseph Stone Ruth Struminger John Sumner Phyllis Tall Frances Wagener Margaret West Betty Whitehill [228] mst) . . ai«« ! CLAYTON-GRIMES BIOLOGICAL CLUB Officers Frank Koss President Ann White Vice-President Rosa Ellis Secretary Alfonse Chestnut Treasurer D. W. Davis Faculty Advisor Members Becky Bates Jack Mathy L. H. Ward Helen Bennett Katherine Matejka Dale Williams Stewart Cotterman Thomas McCahill Dorothy Wright Ruth Davis Leo Mitkievicz Anne Seward Madge Dunn Florence Mode Al Tirelis Eliza East Jean Snyder Conrad Yocum . Harry Gebauer John Tinsley Eugene Ellis Benjamin Goldstein Elsie Vreeland Anthony Stallman Peggy Longley Marie Walker J. T. Baldwin, Jr. [229] (yru cy {i O 1939 J. LESSLIE HALL LITERARY SOCIETY Officers Jean Warren President Judith Birdseye Vice-President Edna White Secretary Margaret Peck Treasurer Janet Billet Program Chairman Betty Blair Jean Cox Florence Ricketts Rosalie Jones Elizabeth Broaddus Jeannette Haydon Gertrude Van Wyck Lucy Burke Allen Betty MordAn Mary Patten Virginia McDonald Edythe Harris Mary Triplett Caroline Cook Jane Alden Doris Smith Mae Cocci n Anne Miller Members Peggy Ford Virginia Began LuciNDA Lee Mildred Anne Hill Frances Roulstone Mary Hiden Harriet Molloy Jeanne Reindollar Marie Grimes Mary Spaeth Mary Latimer M. A. Van Auken Jean Reiff Janet Stewart Dorian Dial Phyllis Cady Jane Harden Margaret Apperly Mildred Wiltshire Mildred Russell Ruth Stackner Virginia Armstrong Armina Crosby Edna White Marcia Bourne Lucy Dobie Ethel Donnelly Ethel Jordan Betty Moore Dorothy Simpson Elizabeth Barnard Louise Wallace Nancy Nason Dorothy Dickie Edith Rathbun Frances Kemp [230] LIBRARY SCIENCE CLUB Officers Carroll Hutton President Lucille Bybee Vice-President Cynthia Hamm Treasurer Margaret Edwards Secretary Martha Johnson .... Reporter to the Flat Hat Members Sarah Burton Rebecca Timberlake Virginia MacDonald Armina Crosby Jane Saunders Catherine Mavor Elizabeth Cutler Becky Bates Carolyn Moses Francis Davis Virginia Coulbourn Loue Pendelton LuRA Goddin Catherine Counts Sue Plunket Mae Hawkins Ethel Ford Dean Robertson Mary Morse Emma Harrison Edith Rodgers Lucy Ruffin Virginia Garrett Ellen Young Jeanne Sheridan Joan Jarrett Mary Holmes Doris Locke o-nt. [231] jyyur v RACHAEL E. GRIFFIN President GERMAN CLUB Rachel Griffin . . Franxes Grodecoeur Officers . , President Frances Darbv ice-President Jane Saunders Secretary Treasurer Members Hattie Abbitt Rosann Abbott Jane Alden Margaret Alexander Lucy Allen Mercedes Allen Barbara Anderson Jeannette Anderson Mary Louise Anderson Laura Ansel 1 Jeannette Appleby Jane Baker Jean Baker Mary Alice Barnes Betty Beck Thelma Leigh Bell Virginia Bell Doris Berg-Johnson Myrtle Biele Terry Bischoff Hope Bitting Alice Black Mary Ruth Black Margaret Black Betty Blair Marion Blair Marva Blair Nancy Boatwright Evelyn Bolton Marjorie Bowman Betty Boyd Ann Bradshaw Virginia Brenn Isabel Brenner Ruth Brill Mary Britton Annabel Brubaker Pearl Brueger Sarah Burton Kathryn Butterfield Janet Campbell Margaret Carper Annette Carter Betty Carter Nancy Causer Dorothy Chick Nancy Chisholm Jean Clarahan Mary Holmes Clark Louise Clarke Virginia Claudon Barbara Oawson Ruth Cloud Rose Coffin Mae Coggin Eva Colby Lou Cole Jean Collmus Caroline Cook Elizabeth Jane Cook Peggy Cook Virginia Coulbourn Jean Cox Martha Cox Marion Craft Betty Craig Anne Cross Edith Davies Betty Davis Eleanor Davis Jennie Davis Dorothy Dickie Ella Dickenson Lucy Dobie Minnie Dobie Virginia Doepke Katharine Donald Ethel Donnelly Margaret Doran Lucy Dority Betty Douglas Lillian Douglas Dorothy Dungan Madge Dunn Catherine Edge Mary Edinger Jean Edwards Frances Eells Lucille Eldridge Rosa Ellis Eleanor Ely Louise Ely Louise Eppinger Betty Ensor Mac Ervin Gwen Evans Rosa Evans Charlotte Farmer Margaret Fields Marx Figley Ann Fitz Hugh Virginia Forwood Helen Furbee Alice Gates Peggy Gildner Iva Goehring Geraldine Gordcn Louise Gordon Virginia Gould Helen Gray Trudy Green Jane Groggins Frances GuUion Ellen Hagarty Jane Harden Lucille Harder Emily Harrell Marie Harris Mary Hiden Shirley Hobbs Lois Hodges Dorothy Hogshire George Ann Hotton Ruth Holzmueller Kathryn Hoover Grace Hopkins Marjorie Hopkins Edna Howell Virginia Hoyle Helen Hubbard Hope Hunt CaroU Hutton Margaret Hutton Joyce Jackson Shirley James Josephine Jenkins Lucile Jennings Helen Jones Catherine Jones Letitia Jones MoUy Jones Frances Jourdan Theo Kelcey Evelyn Kempfer Jean Kerr Margaret Laughner Luctnda Lee Joan Lehman Evelyn Lengnick Frances Lewis Rosemary Lockwood Margaret Longlcy Jean Lovell June Lucas Florence Mackler Virginia Markle Carrie Massenburg Joyce Mathes Muriel Matier Helen Melvin Jane Mercer Florence Merryman Patricia Mims Margaret Mitchell Harriet Molloy Mary Moncure Betty Moore Betty Moore Mary Morgan Muriel Morris Carolyn Moses Lelia Ann Muncs Harriet Murray Nancy McCall Harriet McCarthy Lucy McClure Camilla McCormick Helen McDermott Jane Macdonald Jean McEIdowncy Daphne McGavack Alice McKain Nancy Nason Natalie Nichols Patricia Nixon Jane Obenchain Mary O ' Farrell Dorothy Overholser Ruth Rapp Edith Rathbun Frances Reeder Jeanne Reindollar Florence Ricketts Jean Riddick Margaret Ripperton Dean Robertson Evelyn Robinson Margaret Robinson Mary Ann Robinson Natalie Rogers Jane Ross Jean Ross Frances Rudasill Janet Rust Beal Sale Aura Schroeder Dorothy Sease Anne Seward Gertrude Shaffer Susan Shafer Shirley Sheaen Doris Smith Virginia Smith Dorothy Spence Lucille Spivey Harriet Sprague Virginia Sterne Janet Stewart Jean Stevenson Dorothy StiUon I lolda Suton Dorothy Swan Eleanor Taylor Margaret Taylor Mary Taylor Ann Terrell Virginia Tripp Qeo Tweedy Alma Van Blarcom Dorothy Vogel Frances Wagener Sally Walker Gervais Wallace Maxie Walton Jean Walworth Ann Warriner Barbara Wastcoat Lillian Waymack Louise Weaver Carol White Edna White Irene White Prudence White Betty Whitehill Edith Whorley Jean Wicgand Eleanor Wilkinson Harriet Williams Margaret Williams Ruth Williams Betty Witherbee Elizabeth Wood Eileen Woods June Worley Ann Wrentmore Julia Wright Lucy Yeaman Dorothy Zimmerman [232] JOSEPHINE S. JENKINS President Y. W. C. A. Officers Josephine Jenkins President Shirley Daiger Vice-President Jayne Magee Secretary Alice McKain Treasurer Cabinet Members Betty Moore Senior Program Chairman Frances Wagener . . . Junior Program Chairman Frances Garrett Music Chairman Judith Birdseye Worship Chairman Lucy Meade Dobie . . Assistant Worship Chairman Betty Blair Social Chairman Sarah Bell Public Affairs Chairman Virginia Forwood Flat Hat Representative Rosa-Elizabeth Jordan .... Publicity Chairman [23?] 1939 v- u y O BACKDROP CLUB Officers William Greene President Kate Alfriend Vice-President Arthur Hanson Treasurer Eleanor Taylor Secretary Members Saunders Almond Mary Lou Anderson Ruth Barton Jane Bayliss C. B. Benner Lucy Bennett Doris Berg-Johnson Catherine Bidelspacher Myrtle Biele Terry Bischoff Hope Bitting Betty Blair Margaret Bias in game Virginia Boardman Evelyn Bolton Beverly Boone Dora Bouldin Ann Bradshaw Jane Brandt Virginia Brenn Isabel Brenner Kitty Britton Annabel Brubaker Phyllis Cady Janet Campbell Thomas Cartwright Wyatt Carneal Annette Carter Lucy Catlett Nancy Chisholm Jean Clarahan Virginia Claudon Dorothy Chick Rost Coffin Mae Myers Coggin Marie Cole Betty Cook Elizabeth Jane Cook Katherine Cotterman Margaret Coverley-Smit! Christine Cowan Betty Craig Dick Crane Frances Darby Mary Darragh Edith Davies Dorian Dial Virginia Doepke Margaret Doran Lucy Dority James Douglas Dede Eastlack Emily Edgerton Mary K. Edinger Jean Edwards Lucille Edwards Grace Elliott Louise Ely Betty Ensor Louise Eppinger Gwen Evans Charlotte Farmer Jean Farr Ann Fitz Hugh Betty Foster Peg Gildner :h Iva Goehring Gerry Gorden Louise Gordon G. W. Gotshall Trudie Green Frances Grodecoeur Frances GuUion Jane Harden Dolly Hiden Phyllis Hile Anna B. Hill Dorothy Hogshire Sally Holladay Mary Holmes Wiletha Holmes Phyllis Hornsby Madeleine Howard Hope Hunt Elizabeth Imus Shirley James Jeanne Jefferson Alice Jones Rosa-Elizabeth Jordan Nancy Joynes Ruth Keat Marion Kelly Jean Kerr Frank Knight Frank Kohrs Henry Kibel Betty Knoll Margaret Laughner Lucinda Lee Paul Macklcr Virginia Markel Carrie Massenberg Ed May Harriet McCarthy Lucy McClure Camilla McCormick Helen McDermott Daphne McGavack Betty Moore Nancy Nason Bob Neslaw Jeanne Parker Nancy Parker Margaret Peck Emily Petuski Nancy Price Polly Prickett Frank Raflo Ruth Rapp Edith Rathbun Frances Reeder Betsy Richardson Nancy Ripley Jane Robertson Ronnie Ronalds Jean Ross Agnes Rossbacher Aura Schroeder Jane Scofield Adeline Sears Dorothy Sease Shirley Sheain Dorothy Spence Betty Smith Lucille Spivey Harriet Sprague Virginia Sterne Margaret Stigall Lillian Styer Golda Mae Sutton James Talley Mary M. Taylor Nancy Trice Virginia Tripp Gervais Wallace Lillian Waymack Gus Welsh Edna White Dorothy Whitfield Dale Williams Gordon Williams Harriet Williams Emily Wilson Mildred Wiltshire Betty Wood ■Eileen Woods Dorothy Wright Lucy Yeaman Ellen Young Betty Zimmerman [234] MEN ' S STUDENT BODY Officers Franklin P. Ryder President Robert Rowland Vice-President Alvin Tabankin Secretary-Treasurer [235] 1939 THETA ALPHA PHI Janet Murray . . Dorothy Evans . . William Woodbridge Officers President Janet Billet Vice-President Secretary Thomas Fors th Treasurer Historian Miss Althea Hunt Faculty Advisor Carl Buffington Arthur B. Hanson Members Merritt Foster John Sumner Lucille Eldridge Arthur Coscrove James Bailey DRAMATIC CLUB Roger Child Anne Cross . Officers President Thomas Forsyth Vice-President Secretary John Sumner Treasurer Miss Althea Hunt Faculty Advisor Carl Buffington Janet Billet Nick Woodbridge Dorothy Evans Janet Murray Members Merritt Foster Lucille Eldridge Arthur Cosgrove James Bailey GwEN Evans Betty Blair James Pye Travis Turner Walter Bara Guilford Taylor Louise Eppinger Hattie Abbitt Virginia Brenn Winifred Wheeler Elizabeth Cutler Arthur B. Hanson Margaret Coverley-Smith Edna White [236] The Wesley Foun- dation of the Meth- odist Church en- deavors to minister to the religious life and needs of the col- lege community. WESLEY FOUNDATION Officers Joseph Stone President Elaine Bentley Vice-President Mae Hawkins Secretary Stedman Eure Treasurer Rev. T. J. Hawkins Director Committee Chairmen Jane Dunn IVorship and Program Jeanne Sheridan Social and Recreation William Brown ...... IVorld Friendship Anne Cross Personnel Wells Lewis Arrangements Carroll Hutton Publicity LAMBDA PHI SIGMA Honorary Society for Lovers of Music Officers Kendall Beavers President Art Brennison Secretary-Treasurer William Greene Reporter Margaref Williams Vice-President Norma Petillo Activities Chairman Mr. Small Advisor Dean Landrum Honorary Members Dr. Laing Mr. Douse Members Jane Baker Jean Baker Lucille Eldridge Anna Hill William Arthur Roger Child Robert Fricke Seymour Waxman I 237] crC j J ' he Features section of the book enables various campus leaders to choose sponsors for their activities. It also enables the editor to present by means of informal snapshots some of the less serious phases of college life. ..■' «?;, ;. 1 . ■O- -r. i5 4 m ' ' - T  ■=« ■' ' m ■' ■■' 4 ■ «   .  i y ;55ir ?jcp j: • . ■■.i mx  « i -X f ' i ■. s, 7 amo-t MISS F=RANCES NATALIE EELLS Colonial Echo MISS ELSIE VREELAND O. D. K. MISS WINIFRED WHEELER Royalist MISS EVELYN VOLPE Baseball MRS. CHARLES HARRISON W. S. C. S. A. MISS HELEN WALL Flat Hat MISS E. DOROTHY ANDERSON Football MISS GERVAIS WALLACE Junior Class MISS ELEANOR ROWAN Track MISS SARAH L. HALL Men ' s Student Body yviu :z:yta cc J Vatalu ( eiU yl iiA ( Lue UteeianJi SiJ - :- fc. • yMi,J 14JinifejyULeL I J. f I Jl • • • ti . y katies yit atti at yHh. JleLlAJji • ii ( . = Daxotku ciz ndi V etiai yi iu Cy ti i l Vallacc • • Mu a eanot awa i atalt J—. ; ' i all ?rr7!S !rsgT f? ssifflssE! ON THE CAMPUS SNAPS AROUND THE COLLEGE COLLEGE LIFE PEOPLE PEOPLE • • AND THINGS EVENTS PHOTOGRAPHIC HASH PENINSULA BANK AND TRUST COMPANY PROTECTS STUDENT GOVERNMENT FUNDS -n CAPITAL, SURPLUS AND PROFITS $210,000.00 STATE AND CITY DEPOSITORY PROMPT SERVICE COURTEOUS TREATMENT • - --? PilltantHburg. Virginia IFeaturing thr mnHt pnpular natinnally abtiprtiapJn ftppartm? nt start lint (Caarg ' a 9trrrt JFlaor Jbral ilratrtg Srttartntrnt (Casrg ' a fflrxzaninr JfTloor (Saarg ' a Srafiy-ta-nrar Sr iartmritt (Saarg ' a irre %aaba 9r)iarttnrnt 3Fnr ixt - fuftt f para SI1|p pptttnaula - WILLIAMSBURG LODGE Rooms and Meals at Moderate Prices Also Under the Same Management WILLIAMSBURG INN TRAVIS HOUSE MARKET SQUARE TAVERN ► Division of Taverns and Ordinaries Williamsburg Restoration, Incorporated ' THE WILLIAMSBURG THEATRE Serves the entertainment needs of the College with the finest quality programs that can be ob- tained, selecting from the entire film market the best in features and short subjects, and presenting a wide variety of first run pictures in five changes per week at current popular prices. TOM McCASKEY, Class of 32, Manager WILLIAMSBURG DRUG COMPANY The Rexall Store We Carry a Full Line of Fountain Drinks, Cigars, and Sundries AGENTS FOR WHITMAN ' S CANDIES Your Trade Solicited COMPLIMENTS OF COLLEGE BILLIARDS PETER NARDI Manager POOL Five Cents a Rack HB Fountain H|| BmR r j SHB H American and Luncheonette and Chinese Foods COLONIAL RESTAURANT The Leading Eating Place in Williamsburg Special Attention to Students We Deliver Under Personal Direction of Steve Sacalls Williamsburg, Va. Phone 794 Famous House of Good Food COLLEGE SHOP SODA. RESTAURANT AND TEA ROOM SERVICE Textbooks, School Supplies Sifts, Souvenirs, and Novelties BAND BOX CLEANERS, INC. Superlative Dry Cleaning Service COLONIAL BOWLING PARLOR Bowl for Health ' s Sake Operated by BOB WALLACE, ' 20 THE COLONIAL ECHO STAFF REQUESTS OF THE STUDENTS THAT THEY PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS MERIN-BALIBAN 1010 CHESTNUT STREET PHILADELPHIA, PENN. OmCI ll. PHO¥OQR lPHER§ ¥0 fHE COLOWI IL ECHO won IIIEIEEW THIRIY- §IX, IIIEEEEI IHIRT¥-$EVEW, IIWEIEEW IHIRf Y-EIGHT IWD IIIETEEI IHIRIY- IIIE. SPECIALISTS TO SCHOOLS- COLLEGES — UNIVERSITIES — CLUBS SPECIAL RATES TO STUDENTS IN successfully fulfilling the requirements of the ' modern College Annual Staff we have combined a comprehensive and systematic servicing program with that high standard of quality so essential in the production of fine yearbooks. Lynchburg engraved annuals are built by an organization specializing on school annuals exclusively, there- by assuring each staff of the personal and In- telligent assistance so necessary in the planning and designing of a truly satisfactory book. LYNCHBURG ENGRAVING •COMPANY- LYNCHBURG • VIRGINIA Cf rUilxieAA of CT ttteA c:: nnijut£ F •f M THIS BOOK D E S I C n E D A n D P R I n T E D BX L. Otmscm. p R 1 ni I n c c m p A n Y tv n A s H Y I LLE o. oAutographs cAutographs cAutographs v , ; , ' .. 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