Hampden Sydney College - Kaleidoscope Yearbook (Hampden Sydney, VA)

 - Class of 1978

Page 1 of 280

 

Hampden Sydney College - Kaleidoscope Yearbook (Hampden Sydney, VA) online collection, 1978 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 280 of the 1978 volume:

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'J 11,-5 Ls y '-wfwr. fn' --: -I 1 ' Air P5 . .g,f 'Q Hf,1..I' 'f ..Q:'v..J-1: f .4l ,, 1 .x,Q..t,1,f' ' -. Q.-'Q--'C ' 412' Yi ,, .. Jfff. .ay- 1.7 05-,Q x-S ifq :..... 1 -fznltln QIYZA ' are 47250 dC C3 , atlktzb 4, 3 -' l gi - ' . 'T - 5 A A hu' ' Q. sf- I 4 - 4- 'J Y gg. ' c -1, if V-.f 1' P - - ,-L-ra-'V4g,j ,, ' , lr ' ' , . fi si, --- our - 'vw'-sang, Ty .-nur 're4- ' .?TIruf .- 4,5 ' W f -fri, Ax, W TT' T 'ff Y 4' 3 P vs- 4,41 K r 6 J-- 'K mai HW -' ' . . . ' MQQL- fl' lx - ' ,, Y . , . W, ff' V -.- gif' Jflzkvk' area! 6fzff5zzJ1Zz.f5'f1z- tif? KUQQK C0f7wz11f2zizyff7za5f W ffzf-JZ .cv f fzflffzkzcizbf. if ,ILELB4 F' ATX 3 'K 'rf 8 For his devotion to Hampden-Sydney College, For his helpfulness throughout the year, For the tremendous job he has done as the Dean of Students, We proudly dedicate the KALEIDOSCOPE to Thomas H. Shomo, truly a progressive, innovative man in a traditional school. CO--1 J. gi: A H. F5 G P W ., - E Q 5. .Qlliq ZQm4bWMmMZm Qwafgfy - ...G C' . 1 , A :i-i.:'ff4e?3?::bQ?:i?T'.z4'?fff?-'A.W -1 .Lia--rf +-1g,.f ,. . I ,. -, . - . , ' ' N . A 7 -. . j K-3 Vps' - 1 'WE' . .- .. -- - A 5 5 .,-' - ,uf ' - :Y 'T .-' ',-F31-,Q-:,j5a,',, .' Ilia- ,-T ',g4q.,.?f rggfggfgcijz .,-M, I 1 p I ' . - -. -- ' - f ,gi.f i .- , '- 'lf' --W ,,,,,.,, J. - ,V .. .l,- Y1 '1 sg- M v v ,i4.3,..:,,,,:-L.,,.':f'a:'i,g- ,Q in . .- - . 3' ' 'I-F' -. ' Q6 ' 'l?f .. iIo1'aL'...:f-..:'-5.'-L 'Yiff M .-.1 .1 'I' 94 John A. Field, Jr., LL.D. William C. Finch, Ph.D. Herbert W. Jackson, III Mrs. William T. Reed, Jr. James L. Trinkle Joseph T. Trotter Richard M. Venable, Jr. Royal E. Cabell, Jr. S. Douglas Fleet, Chairman Albert R. Gillespie, M.D. C. Randolph Hudgins. Jr. Robert W. Lawson, Jr. Alton W. Whitehouse, Jr. Lewis G. Chewning, LL.D. Charles J. Geyer, Jr., Ph.D. Richard A. Michaux, M.D. William M. Passano, Jr. Benjamin A. Soyars George E. Taylor Donald A. Tollefson W. Cecil Carpenter George B. Cartledge, Jr. J. Bruce James Sherwood E. Liles, Jr. Mrs. William E. McBrat Henry C. Spalding, Jr. William F. Spotswood Bernard E. Bain, D.D. T. Kyle Baldwin William R. Hill, Jr. Peter A. Leggett John B. Long William R. Middelthon, Gordon C. Willis ney Jr. I 4 F . It is the presumption of those who teach in a college dedicated to the pursuit of excellence in liberal studies that those studies have a time-worn and proven tit- ness for preparing their students to think better: by this we mean nothing more than you learn to assemble evidence pa- tiently and thoroughly before you make 2 .. . 5 :A A. 1 r Q3 , E77 decisions and judgementsg that you learn courageously to uphold those decisions and judgementsg that you be prepared to argue them eloquentlyg that your minds be free of prejudiceg that you learn to appreciate arguments and points-of-view opposed to your own, for in them is often more truth than in your owng and that you will esteem both the lifelong cultiva- tion of the mind and the gift of that mind, and the character that sustains it, and the willingness to place these at the service of others, as your highest callingg finally that the heart has its reasons which the mind cannot comprehend, 13 . V if ' 'J- B. Calvin Bass Dr. L. Neel Beard Richard S. Benner Chemistry 84 Physics Physics Director of Counseling 8L Career Planning Dr. William F. Bliss Thomas D, Bondurant 101111 L- B.I'il1klCY History Asst. Business Manager CIHSSICS 8L Treasurer Clerk of the Faculty Pk, ,,,.... Gb' ,,,.......-A . -iw 1 ls ..' 3- ' x f. ff I'-.A Richard A. Burrell Athletics Edward A. Crawford Biology ' ' 3 . ww- 'wirv' ef:-- -A 'il ,fs . 'w- QJX G, , ' - .. ,,. .. .,-. 3, Jiuk, S' ' N.. ' 5' .,, ,iii-.-,. f J ' F3191-'f 5.-Q .G , f-A v. A 1, L , 4' 495 3296. , 60.1 J 16 -... Rini -V 'Q l i J' . 'oi . ' ajft-1,-P ffl. Lf' .fy N: -gig mfl., ,. f.T,i:5l'r , - ,uh -Q, Gerald T. Carney Bible 84 Religion l i .va ' . 1 'P' 'l '52, A fi . r' 9 lieu... . -' ' 5'L'Bk '.- N' 3 '3 -Ei: . M-..,, :iii Sung 4 sf 75, --.-.'. ,- ,, ' f'-:'a5f'f 'f 5-3-gc. ' ...ywg ,gin 4 -:,', .neg . .rgffvz 9.1,-an 'will 1 . .,-'- yu r '7-7-L'f,f,9-' if-' -gI35 'f,, ,' .ff , A V in P 4 1 'XX ': v I Q , of 1' - : M? v4'4'l'K1,, 'zIf10l'1'I', 1',9fV Q' ' f : - 'YI' nd-1.71411 Ji n- V ll! -V, ,ff i 7' rzhm-2-.w',': 1:-1 z, 4 ' ...,. ,. V V H -uf 'f Y 6' ffl 'Y I .i 1.-4 . fl? f'f'o . V - '94, . . '-i3Lvg,'9'4 1-'if' T- 23-nw . 9 .' N 1 4L1,l1V5 'ff '11.L'pf '.'. .' ,4pbw4'4 .:,, .-.t .. , . . ,. - it 944 4 -- A f f' ',-.' f 441999 qw 82' n b P r w,,!.'w '.' ,, .- E' -- I 1,9 'I Q94-fi 1: :Hai -M4 . '. 'Z' 'fflyvifbilivl ' rf R. B. Lee Carter Admissions Dr. T. Edward Crawley Harrison L, DeLancy English Natural Sciences Glee Club Director vvx, v ',Xi K1 Vi .-:ik , :ua -img' nz- at Q . ff53R.' w FNQQ '- Ria F, ., m i . . N . Pglffiagfe is f' Az! P Z . , 25 52-5-. -- as .-.farm twq. f 5 A 1 I -1 Dr. Thomas E. DeWolfe 2' 1-ii. A-A, y. ,D 1- I ,- 4' 'ill x. ' 'ag I -4 1, - ' d N Q 1' ...5 Q7 'f f 'Li I ' yfli ffflfi 11-1- r' . Ti b f-Hui? I - . 1 . e- Q ' . .- i ' - f'-J-Jas- of 51 .A -'ilhgyid 1 - 4. Y Y .Al-dp..--xx Y . 'J' b ..., - ii!! gg if ,TA Vu n f. .4,.,..-vb-L' D --U' ' -.Q N 'D V - .N ' - x..ab, .4 -W-'V f que, - . V I ' sew- Tx-M -xfI' A 4:- .1 I ., , ' ' -. ' Lt: hx M . ' fn ,. KA X- A-WAIW in , 4 -iii, A --xxx .,. V as A f - ,is . . I f-.bw L. - I '1 g , . Y' --D K . A .X .45-Q-L, - A L. ' I M' ,,. n ' ' , I -e . a .fm A , . 1 a if . -- 4, 1. lx,,. 1 4 Hugs 35.5, . l ' V - Q-Wwg ilt. it y . b J is Does man ever tire of playing with Lincoln Psychology L0gS Dr. Merrill A. Espigh Registrar Mathematics Dr. Alan F. Farrell Modern Languages . L' Sl. nv ,M W lv. 01-Us ,z s ,4, ' Dr. Keith W. Fitch History 'au ' 'QW' '2- in 17 ..- Q . A !,4, , 45 ' Qfzg,-.L 4-H'-2' Gustav H. Franke Mathematics Dr. Joseph E. Goldberg Government 8L Foreign Affairs 18 rt. .hx X x -9 1 Q g r Y R E 4 E-ff it wi: X an-x OO' En ' v fa f 1 ' f , 1 fi tsp? N gn. ark 4 , L, , ,. ,,,i-...., J. Stokeley Fulton Athletic Director Eleanor M. Grier Acquisitions Librarian si. Dr. Stanley R. Gemborys Biology Paul L. Grier Librarian L 'Skis ' - fb w X 'X as ix, fi' I g V N it ' , 'fs ij s?1g,.uv 'fir 2253.5 ,Q . gag l i , l l l l ' lf ., X 7 ,Zh l' 'ju Robert B. Harris Dr. Ronald L. Heinemann ' Economics Dr. William R. Hendley Economics History James F. Hilliard Development Officer s..' X , Q f . v H 4' ' 1 1 . ,Y M., 7 . y Q 5 ' V ' ' - ,ii , ' f AV fx! lil' 5 3 ' f I ' I if A h ' Q , ' . t ,ff E 2 'Zigi' l'KH'm,W ,MJ f if ' , rf? ' kc g ' 'R rs.. - ' -'el A ' W. Q Ne- Simi- f E Wg? ' j Y ' a?: '.1ZQ' I ..,, 1 ima 1 S ' - N ,Q F H. '917F.4a,,F-2?LEl7c1'l' ' . 5 2 frr 'N .. .dxf E . wily N5 C N U f A -, P l2EfLQ5QQ' 1 ,4-' A, ' f Sandra W. Heinemann Catalogue Librarian C3 O 4 91 :U an GJ :U 'Q 25: O0 R tram :12 3,14 VI E7 1 U3 l l i l 1 l fi . .g..:..a.' 1' ,I K . 'law-N, 19 35, if Y 'L 't'r if J X Dr. Robert T. Hubbard, Jr. Dr. Vincent A. Iverson Dr. Paul A. Jagasich Government 8a Foreign Affairs Philosophy Modern Languages Professor Laine keeps another unprepared student after class. f' K 5 oc: y Dr. W. Thomas Joyner Physics Dr. Amos Lee Laine History 33- L. .x!. , iff, F, Q? ,PNP E... Dr. Edward M. Kiess Victor G. Kriss Physics Physics Robert W. Leiby Dr. Anne C. Lund Chemistry Biology ? 1 ,.,?q NX Ffa ,, NL 'Q wi., 'Hx f 'Tina i K 1 David E. Marion Dr. Lawrence H. Martin Government Cgl. Foreign Affairs English Dr. Richard C. McClintock Dr. Thomas T. Mayo. IV Communications Assistant Physics Classics nfl sv Elna Ann Mayo Assistant Reference 8L Series Librarian Dr. Paul Mercken Classics 84 Philosophy T gurl' 22 -Q 'U' ' x xx 1 X. Dr. Moses S. Musoke Economics Thomas J. O'Grady English -ev if: 4 NFA, .xx pf: 'g' ,, v '- wine 1+ ap. A ,M is 'ku ' WM i , , v 1 wi? 4' 'ng' swf, 19 1 , 1,4 L . .f J I I if-.fi A , ,h,,f5 'Q' is 'X Howard Myers, Jr. Athletics Dr. Donald R. Ortner Psychology College Psychologist YXI J Qi 11 ix. ,fe Af. 6 4 V5 55 9 r l inf' ' 4 I -u ...... ..,....... - .... -..- ........ ........,,,,,,.,, ' ' 'Y 'Q If fgy-'A . . - 4 'q- Y fl x V' , , AQL 4 -' 'N ffgfi , yr'- ' 1 1 E. ,, .,......,.....m Dr. Owen L. Norment. Jr. Bible 84 Religion .K L ..u.,A,l 23 i f e Ai -Q. C A' l i .,,.! , . . AF' A ff,-Sm 'iw 'f I A ,QV , 4, X ' Q uf X l .b, -, . Dr. William W. Porterlielcl Chemistry Dr. Joseph Rubenstein Psychology 24 Rev. John B. Rice Dr. Robert G. -Rogers College Chaplain Bible 8a Religion Dr. Jack P. Sanders Dr. Mary M. Saunders Mathematics English SN' age N 'Q...:fl Bobby G. Saylor Asst. Athletic Director Dr. William A. Schear Biology 1' ifflg' ff .l gg: ', 213' f K' , -zgffiilpi' ' ' A fx- f-. 51.623 1' ' 'lair , ' , as - N -4- 'fi-.f' ,. A2555 ' i Dr. Brian E. Schrag -'Tv S, - .,.ooooYo H. ,.t, ,w,.e.e,..,ool . if lsf-TAM l l ., K 2 2 '3 - X ' ' , V , -Q-X, . x J Irv: , S 1 1 -an v , U-,iii xv-J, -svn: , 4 V. .P ,ii 4, , ...I ,A- Dr. George M. Schurr Philosophy Dean of the Faculty A X. l L i w if fx-3' ,L Martin M. Sherrod Director of Communications Dr. Frank J. Simes Psychology Thomas H. Shomo Acting Dean of Students Director of Financial Aid Dr. Gilman Z. Simms Athletics f.. ,ea Qu' A, ,W - A I ' 4, , Dr. Jorge A. Silveira Modern Languages Dr. James Y. Simms History 26 l F .W ., , - O F-EN ' l ' i ,..X,., 4' - it . fix f' W ir 'Y i 9'3- Dr. Hassell A. Simpson English Reginald G. Smith Chemistry -1 l , P ' Q l -4...--ff ' .fs 1- f . - , i .px '- K nf , . Qu' 'ti' .1 ka 'W' 'JZ 'N -- ' Q2-.. x TA 'S if53.- Q w- ' :, , , . A fajgl V a V: ft- . V . 42r4J '-gf - ' :2'f53?'Ji-tiiilw X ! X A 'K 5 A . 41 ' M053 --Q ggi' 1 'sf f R- Jr, 't V 4 n Q ,A ' K i M, .2 -fy.: -2 .HV . nil, 461- Q ,if li FTW. '- QS?'g'gf1-it 9. .wi S. ' 'yafaw.'v4. Of 'R' ' f':fa' -- 'x ,fn +:Jf'f1-' ,Yfg'.S,?if3i:',.m1zE,s3:s?fQvQ xd M- -v.',t' . K ' ? f i .5.,-xi: -. I . '..r 41 ' 'vH'Gl..:g:i.7.u,i5.1 Dr. Herbert Sipe. Jr. Dr. Herbert B. Skerry Chemistry Mathematics Dr. Frank J. Spreng Margaret W. Swartz Economics Alumni Director A Q 89 0 Y 5- x 27 awww -1-s'--'-'Z' ,s. ., -. ... , .s L: A .. 3- W- W4 QQ QL , 'S .Y . s. 3y!:22:'.?,' , .N, 4111211111: ., f. -... -MQ Q ,X :S 1. a IS'? s.,,c,y 1' ze- az' :fi Q P: :T D ' gg' 4 . 12' sr Slip.. 15 -, X 0 11' 11' my 'YQ ,X XX Assoc Dlrector of Admlsslons Don P. Thompson Dr. Douglas S. Thompson Dr Graves H Thompson Athletics Chemistry Classlcs 28 'M' gg ,.. f Dr. C. Wayne Tucker Dr. Tully H. Turney Louis A. Wacker Classics Biology Athletics John H. Waters Dr. Joseph W. Whitted Dr. Alan F. Zoellner Director of Admissions Modem Languages Reference Librarian N'-X 1 'WQE5 49,4- M 4. ,L f we X151 M S X -..... .,.. .. 'NN . Wiffh. A if LH' 5 6532 , z if-: up - N, X .ml u9'P' ,v .NA , fgifa.,L. H':LJ. N--...Z 4 ' f ,. s S on Jjefubfsv 32 Y, ir Z e a X 1 William Lewis Abbott John William Allan. Jr. Alvan Macauley Aron, Jr B.A. History B.A. Bible 8: Religion B.A. Mathematics!Economics M iii N , . 12:3- -4, I' , r David Terry Beasley Alexander Herbert Bell, II Scott Wesley Berglund B.A. Economics B.A. English B.A. History and 4-'J' Richard Harrod Blank, Jr. B.A. Govemment and Spanish Bible 84 Religion vs. Orran Lee Brown B.A. Government .X :K .D 4. . -, r-, W- K i' ,' - Paul Garland Brown B.S. Chemistry ,of- ffm Dennis Dickens Bryant B.A. English ,x 05.1.4 q '9' George Keller Bumgardner B.S. Chemistry ' au' ' , j -- , ,fi - -- - ar-9' Robert Alton Burrell Stokely Gray Caldwell, Jr. John Walter Fitchett Canter B.A. Psychology B.A. Economics B.A. Government 'S' K 1 .Y Nt' . .-4? .i5s 1f gs mxljt pi MV? 5 -nn V114 Ben Montgomery Cart. 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AU' an ff ,A.F1 . rx IV A I ': 1 X, 3 CF 7. ,f fi -su, ,,... ... -475,4 ' Tracy Gammon Ward Good Billy Grier Bruce Gunn Fred Haar 111' ' 'j if Henry Hale ' J Bill Hancock David Harrington , K David Haw 1 Tim Henry I 'E Louis Holgate David Huddle 'Birg- 5 Q-1 I ' 1 , ,V I rl ' Q . 'wir , . I , K ' Ward Huntley Danny Huskey o ' :bfi sf ,B , Q f Q 5 Mi 7 gziilf. 1 al. , -I ' , 'wifieff' X-I , -' gh 5 --1fr,.' , Fred Irving F r f., in Bill Jervey L - rv-. 5 .- v - ' .-- I s.- ,iif 'iii' f Bill Jones 'Q Mike Joynes G 3 742 Q1 rf' .JT '21 Ali' ,' Drew Karo Dan Keane wr - A ' John Keesling Scott Keller 0' 'Q I ..- -,N .,! V .al .3 Tony Kent Phillip Key Ken Kilgour ' 'vi Z' I John Kyle U. Keith Leach Ken Leach Cary Levering Bolling Lewis Marty Long Ed Mack Kevin Mahoney ,F nv Walter Malone Walt Manger Camp Marks Allen Mason Jon Mastropaolo ,-. ,J- S.,- Mayor McCulloch Scott Moorhead Bill Morgan Reggie Morris Dabo Noftsinger 78 QU: , -in .A if ' ' Y' .i f ,Mt f .- A ' 'riezei-:ii . 1 P , if 35,4 - -X4 George Norrlngton .XL is P. - s J O' sn..- I . f r ri' -.N ', rj, WJ if X 4,1 xt L. virgin. gg 4- ' ' K 4 gi 1 I A ,Q XF' Q o 'Ni 35. ge' 94 xl ,- l w ,tsfkgeii 3 ,- Q R ,T- it 5- 'R if ,.. ,R it .Al xrtf Jon Pananas Manie Parker Mitch Peterson Andy Pollock Dave Portertield Warren Quinn Craig Ramsey Randy Randolph Randy Reed Everett Revell Mike Rhea John Rhodes Fritz Rjtch James Robertson Ted Robertson Robert Rose Doug Ross Scot Ross Andy Rowe Mark Rummel Raiford Rustin Lee Salsbery Skip Sawyer Danny Schein Wes Schuessler Mike Schumacher Slade Screven Kevin Seay Rhea Shelton David Sherrod Don Silvester Rucker Snead Bobby Snidow Bill Stephenson Gordy Stokes Jim Taylor Phil Taylor Jay Thompson Warren Thompson il il i fl' fl ' l . -es.,-L 532: .1,- I ,4 WJ, e--- 'f ir' ff' J fi .Cx-5. A f7t43' ... fsefp., ,Q rg UI -f' ,.,..:, t X I 5. Pete Thornhill Bill Thornton Royster Tucker Francis Vanboncoeur Craig Vranian George Waldrop Richard Ware Frank Watkins Doug Watson Robbie Watson Jim Weaver Bruce Webb Dwight Webb David West Greg Wilkerson Richard Willis Bill Winfield Leonard Winslow Taylor Wootton Bob Wrenn Pete Wyeth x-t ,LQ ,wiki-wink - IU 4 vm ' 4 xX Infirmary Dr. A.B. Ad ams Mrs. Roberta C M L d M t rs. in a Campus Security Charles McFadd Buildings and Grounds 1 I, wr v'- N V-, I.D. Beaumont CW. Cason SW. Kernodle R.E. Oliver W.H. Paige G.W. Sheffield J.M. Spitlle Mrs. Queta Watson Mrs. Merle Wells S. Womack Book Store W. Wilson Watson, Manager Erlene Bowman Joyce Eggleston H-S Museum 86 Mrs. P.T. Atkinson, Curator -A xP:-s iai,-! n I x -N' K 4 -r, 1 n ' , . V Q . Q---ww-- , ,AFT t .,- -1 IW It ' Y' .Gi Fe vb- . MWQ sf? 5.. 5 5 W L . 1 ny 1 1,221 hM.. , ' T' 5YvQ355JiF?T. ff-W fs - J, ' :- X -KN sd vvffi 4 , . . 44444k4 Aaadgg. Slater Secretaries First Row: Vickie Wilson. Brenda Garrett. Kathy Smith. Merci Lackes. Barbara Livingston. Second Row: Shirley Mottley, Florence Seamster. Nancy Saylor. Joyce Thompson, Linnie Kemodle Business Office K ', X' -Q Hi' .... A i l i Virginia McFadden. Doris Cook. Barbara Reinhardt. Erma Clements 88 i. bv, Y i FI -yvfk' 5 al w v' fr I 'l x '15 4' 4 Q n l v X 'W ' , 'Lf 1, 5 x ww A x 1 '-'ss' any -La ,A s 0, ' 'X nfs? V 4. 1 er' v I fs M-It y M T 'W ' L . .ff W W k-JH ,K I .Y fi fm? M x Lqq , I v K-L31 ,fix Fi N H E7 Ly f' 1. if 7 . . A. IT 4 M 0 W D lv 5 ,Wk .Al F V 5 ' 1 A5119 , , W iq.,-1 .M 64 -.. Q4 l t. 1 ' 5' N 8.1 9175 uhh 55... yn iw von -4 vi A , V v Y M V .xx NQF. ' .. N J 1' . .,- .-..,. . I xr., i 4' J ni- I ' K Ran Henry, Editor in Chief The Tiger fl.. - Ted O'Hanlan, Review Editor Steve Wall, News Editor Larry Willis, Sports Editor xr. Y First Row: Bill Rusher, David Klein, Jay Best. Ken Woodley, Howard Rodman. Second Row: Sel Harris, Eddie Whealton, Lewis Bell, Fritz Ritsch, Marc Sherrod. Ed Mack, Sam Eggleston, Bill Redd. Joe Richardson. Third Row: David Sherrod. Overton McGehee. Fred Thompson, Mike Fay, Mark Moms, Absent: Allen Rosen, Shep Haw, Mike McCahey. Jeff James. Bill Darden, Barry Cutright. Tim Fitzpatrick. Steve Fanhing. Ken Kilgour, Sam Groseclose, Greg DeFrancesco. Greg Haley. Orran Brown, Billy Wimburn. 94 Glee Club lxx 1-ni - 4.- r -- ... df. lj - First Row: Pete Thornhill, Bill Wingtield. Andy Owens. Paul Brown, John Jeans, Lee Salsbery. Louis Holgate. Jim Richards, Robert Rose Second Row Dolph Rustin, Stewart Bond. Warren Quinn, Jim Chou. Phill Bayliss. Dr. Paul Jagasich. Third Row: Robert Snidow, Taylor Boyd Mark Rummel John Canter. Wade Kirby. James Whitehead. Francis Varboncoeur. Randy Traynham, Wes Schuessler. Back Row: Mike Rhea. Rick Cash Doug Hilton John Rhodes, Jerome Laux, Waring Trible. Jeff James, Dr. Wayne Tucker. Jim Jones. David Heppner. Marc Sherrod. Fred Irving I ,4 Q , t 31116 xi? 'Nm v i ' I xx 4 l 'X gy 1 X -41522. ff fs S? f 9 5 A iw' ' .1, N-i , r - el 1,2 A ,J X I in 'J , 1 J X ii li 5 I J 4. 1' f' is ' R it C -Y' . . ' 1 ie. 1 7 f I . ,g I if 'J rf W X V llhif Wi . ,,. , F -QA ....-.- 52' X Q li 'A 4' 1- ' A5 it if llllilf .es- ,,,.,...-- im., Q42 fo, , Dan Groseclose, Editor Lee Driskill, Business Manager David Klein Marc Sherrod lnterfraternity Council First Semester Ted O'Hanlan - President Tom Coyle - Vice President Greg Feldman - Sec.-Treas. Second Semester Tom Coyle - President Drew Fuller - Vice President Brian Cann - Sec.-Trcas. Campus Activities Committee Q...--1-47 ': ?-in l ' '- -1 i '2ggggggpgipiiiaaszassess:-Q w2Hg.a,t44gggfgga,ggggg1 - f , C. ' P P to 'N X ' 5? P .... 7 iiiisxxiiamsaa, .ct. .-aw 3 it - X 5 ' STEREOW' wg! , O ,svmemsiy i:'.i,o:' ' P QM ffrft Aa Ben Brown, Sam Croseclose, Ken Johnston Tri-Chairmen 96 Kaleidoscope Jay Moore. Co-Editor ll A ...-ll 1-1- 0 N ' :si fa-if :air Jay Earhart, Co-Editor . 5, Agn? ' - J 'fl ' 1 YF , K 'x Other Staff George Wright. Business Manager Photographers: Lewis Bell Andy Pollock Howard Rodman Steve Wall Billy Winburn Layout Staff: Louis Holgate Steve Tedesco Art Staff: Anne Joyner Kathy Rogers Cathy Hull X iQ New -,l Q? 'X First Row QL to Rl - Craig LaMond. Pat Berg. Orrin Whyte. Wilbert Parker. Rory Murphy. Howard Rodman. Jerome Laux. Jim Alexander lbelowl - Paul Smith tabovel - Jay Best. Rob Cox. Mark Longerbeam. Bud Fidler. Irv Gratch. James Jennings. Second Row IL to Rl - Dan Doherty. Ron Bath- ner. 'llgom Bernard. James Whitehead, Amos Saunders. Andy Pollock. Bill Grier. Mike Fay. Kevin Seay. Matt Kasun, Jim Sadighian. Spic Baker. Bill Leac . V 1 A W' sr ' 34 W Y ' gl' , :Q Jew' Tlhe Melee of IH!-S C L-5 ,uv Radio Publications Station Paul Smith ..... General Manager John Fidler ...... Station Manager Jerome Laux . . . Program Director Harrison DeLancy . . . . . . Chief Engineer Dick Boyd .... Personnel Director Bill Darden ....... News Director Dr. Jorge Silveira . . . . . . Faculty Advisor John Boross . . Production Director Jim Alexander .... Sports Director Jane Pace Mary Thompson . . . . . . Entertainment Directors A :. 1 k in Student Government Officers Rick Curtis, Secretary-Treasurer: Bill Redd. Presidentg Orran Brown. Chairman of the Student Court Student Court First Row: Orran Brown, Doug . Freeman. Second Row: Marc Sherrod, Doug Watson. Third Row: Sam Eggleston. Bill Pantele. Fourth Row: Waring Trible, Greg Feldman. Fifth Row: Tom Jackson, Drew Davis. Sixth Row: Bill Morgan. Absent: David Klein, Billy Winburn. Student Senate Mike Harcum Tulane Patterson Ed Synder Bob Chadwick Thomas Goode Joe Marchetti John Corey Tim Keena David Newton 100 Fire Department A 1 :?- .,a6:..- Bob Livingston Gcor fe Bum 'ardncr D L L Scott Schocnhut Marvin Goin Mark Longcrbcam -SSE ..,,, , I I 2-1 Al 41 Chief Bob Livingston Y ,.., -,Q L.: . Nflvfrxt' ' 'fi N Barry Riddle Mark Morris Overton McGahee Joc Lcming Mike Dowlcr T..l. Jackson Ralph Crawley Patil Smith John Walkc Bucky Durham Jeff James Jeff Alloway Andy Pollock Doug Ross .lamcm Robertson Bob Wrenn Bob Kccfcr David White David Newton Keith Tignor Patil Peters Ray Williams Bart Floyd Ben .loncs Walt Manger David Barrs Lylc Morton Nat Wilkerson Lee Salsbery -at 1 1 rf' ,r .t,. - '-thi t r - ' .4 ' tg, .,-.7 J 4 .Q , ,ra .diufi 101 A, x 'Iota Beta Sigma is a honormg excellence m Jay Best Dick Boyd Charles Clark Bill Darden Bud Fildler ll Jerome Laux Amos Saunders l ' Paul Smith ,ll Orrin Whyte l Dre. Jorge Silveiraik ll ll M llll we NPQJ' N V4 :Nw 1 ro S 4 - - tu, ,F 'I' if Heh. I N I wp. r . -L, , '-ff?5f,n ' W' 333 -sf 1 lj ,,. . I mf 4.411 'll E li ' ,Q .,Anv'-'13, ' 5.4-xl .lik ' .fy A ,..: iq., ,4 - .,3. 9 Y.-rv, nr. - -4, 'A ,. 4 2 4 V V C 2 i n ,..,,.,.,... X5 -I ,Tix fkQi5 Qia. 'V ,Ib , ' 'U-2135593-'Ar 1 roi 4 as- W X Fratres in Collegio: Orran Lee Brown Samuel Lee Groseclose Scott Sheldon Twentyman Edward Theodore Wolanski Robert Daniel Ciroseclose Philip Martin Bayliss Scott Wesley Berglund Paul Garland Brown Joseph Thomas Francis. Jr. Taeho Kim Robert Elford Livingston. Jr. William DeHart Redd Paul English Smith Frank Dew Stoneburner. Jr. Barrye Langhorne Wall Thomas Craven Wall Fratres in Facultate: Dr. Bagby Mr. Brinkley Dr. Crawley Dr. Farrell Dr. Heinemann Dr. Joyner Dr. Norment Dr. Porterfield Dr. Sanders Dr. D.S. Thompson Dr. G.H. Thompson Dr. Tucker E XBCP Fratres in Urbe: Mr. Sherrod Dr. McClintock Dr. Gilmer Dr. Holbrook Omicron Delta Epsilon is an honorary economics fraternity dedicated to the advancement of the study of economics and honoring those students of economics who show particular interest in the discipline. Philip Davis Thomas Godfrey, Jr. Joseph Heldreth, III J. Christian Kohler James Litton Harland Miller. III J. Adair Moore. Jr. Wilson Newell, Jr. Barrye Wall F. Marcus Fariss Frank Pegram Robert Ross Prof. Robert Harris Dr. William Hendley Dr. Moses Musoke Dr. Francis Spreng 106 Chi Beta Phi is a national honorary scientific fratemity existing to recognize excellence in scientific endeavors and to encourage participation in scientific fields. Bob Agee Phil Bayliss Paul Brown Jim Chou Richard Curtis Amauri Gonzalez Sam Groseclose Robert Livingston Mike Nerney Wayne Old Barry Riddle Dolph Rustin Steve Smith Hank Stoneburner Scott Twentyman John Walke Tom Wall Pete Watson Ed Wolanski Eta Sigma Phi is the national honorary classical fraternity. Its membership includes those individuals who have demonstrated high proficiency in the study of the classics. Orran Brown Robert Whitt Jay White Robert Wilson Bradley Parsons Paul Smith Barry Cutright Ted O'Hanlan Barry Riddle William Redd Jeff James Joe Leming Tom Douglas Randy Stokes William Plunkett William Leach Scott Berglund Lewis Bell Bob Agee Bob Livingston David Haugh Greg Feldman Tim Keena Bait Floyd Jim Adams Dr. Graves Thompson Dr. C. Wayne Tucker Mr. John Brinkley Dr. Donald Ortner Dr. Lewis Drew Dr. Richard McClintock Mr. Thomas Shomo Elsa Harvey Mrs. Graves Thompson Teresa Wood Rhonda Simms Pi Sigma Alpha is the National Political Science Honor Society. lt recognizesjuniors and seniors who have attained high standards of scholarship and academic distinction both in political science and in the sum total of their academic work. Steven McChristian William Redd Franklin J. 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Gunn A.J. Pollock L.K. Salsbery 4 ..4-.QW fm M my wx 1 ffl. g -. o .., 0 ii t .AD-v w I F X , . A Hlliwli x f ' if 1 I 4, ,.,.,x.u.:N Ulm usd- ' -quam .'?F 'S 'X '?' U 'i JN' X' ' 4 i 1, .-4, vf is X. A ' 4 -ex ' ' N ' X awk' mil .V T,-71, .N 9 + 1- -' - Q1 -, , Y Mgt-'fa' -vw .,. lap. big R 1 I A j:, ,,m.. ' -V ,' N ,Wx Q J- i F A gs '-wigs ,, X QA ,. ' .1 Qw.a-- 1 Wan . . . , -' Xie... ' -' . 3' H' , 41: '-'f I -Q sf' -- f N ' 54910 MAD v .- . ,psf QZW'-5-5 5 .FIV n. u -.4 -,- .. u , .r , 'Q V... I. 'HQ . , 1--A-.. I' i. 1. L 4-QA .. 1 .Q ' . r 4, . -s,,t.q L.. -Q-A ... 4 01 AY 'Q w ps , 5 A 1 V ' ' , 3 N . gkix. As. 2 t, ryfqp 'ft P 'Q' rv, e1'YA y aff? 1 'lf , 1 W ' 9 Q. 4 ' f 1 -. R' ' s ' . l ' f f .' . , In V v u -,. A I , 4:4-.Qin 5:5- 533 Vw v x....w 135 X , . 1 , .I . , 1 . , f - Q ' I Z , .. ,. I ' I S H f f gl Q Q ight A . . I SEQ, 3 12' u . ' MA' 4 f Q! wg faux' ,J if'IQsEg1 f'f q iaf'fU 5' g Q? l- 1 5.8Df :1 -11 Mf'3 462499, BZ Mi i ' ff fit' gf ' .SFF 4 If Q L, S4 g , : f V3 QQ, Bl iw. ss ,rs1' wwf 'UM uf J ' 'F' I J' A Q -' . H . ' ' ,V 'A , V-'llxfygv - ,Q x -K 'Q l ,. , 1- V ' S , , E , ' ' 0 - za, , , .l ,, . .. f , . . - .. .X . - . .. ,g w Honors Richmond Touchdown Club Jimmy Ferguson - Small College Offensive Player ofthe Year Stokeley Fulton - Small College Football Coach of the Year N.C.A.A. Jimmy Ferguson - Ranked second in Division Ill in rushing per C game 1139.5 yardsj and scoring 110.7 pointsl. Kodak Division Ill All-American Bob Wilson - First Team. offensive lineman Football Lettermen M. Adkins D. Davis E. Bondurant G. DeFrancisco B. Calcote J. Eagan R. Cash R. English J. Cordes J. Ferguson R. Curtis R. Fralin F. Francis F. Fulton T. Garner T. Gray M. Harcum D. Harris J. Heldreth K. Howard B. Junes F. Lawrance R. Leach K. Lewis K. Love D. Marks T. Maxa B. Merrell B. Moore W. Moore S. Moorhead B. Newell T. Patterson W. Redd S. Sawyer O. Schrum N. Slone T. Smith C. Steibel S. Sudduth C. Talley J. Thompson D. Unger B. Wilson L. Woodward Cheerleaders Top Row: Colleen McGary Sharon Janovichi middle row Connie Turner. Trisha Williams bottom row: Cynthia Miller Regina Mason, Peggy Bryant Pat Carnes W Y' Q 9 , 0' , If ' it 'E xi V ' fviz' .31 f .,,. A , 4' F Q u. '11, Q 'ff I , Mv- 140 V 'AP' 1? 4 --Q n JU if x .Q ? K1 .1- 1 - , .Q 1 ' , ' , . . . l- lp' ' .' '1, --Q-..o- .,,x.-,, 'I A .,,. '- In F' Y Y I, N, 1 o f-,. V N' - ,. .f Ag., 5 g3.l,,.v,-wa., ,. M Ll' ?dfn:fR?'1-QQQ.-,,. If u- ' ..-. X ' U - .,- Q ' - '. ,L-' Lf--L -,M In ' I V -' .. .'-Vu I 'Af:5:'w.i ' 7': . u'.1 'M' X... 144-Q. , ' 'M ' ' 1, .4-' -xg'-T.-1 Q f .: '-'4,,,...,,.,,... ' wf f-21.-:Af -- 'X , -- if . 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'f'w4-1 Jw.,-'Q' 1 L E R H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC Virginia Military Institute Radford Lynchburg Liberty Baptist College University of Virginia N.C. Wesleyan University of Richmond Pfeiffer Washington and Lee Roanoke Christopher Newport Eastern Mennonite Randolph-Macon College Longwood College f- F w I7 Y- dai' First Row: Tom Crowder. Harland Miller. Tom Osgood. Daxid Holt. .lay Hundley. Pal Devine. Eric Zedaker. Davis Wildman. Jim Adams. Mirtin Ferrara. Second Ron: Mark Rummell. Will Willman. Lunsford Johnson. Frank Watkins, Bill Freeman, Sergio Capocelli. David Clough, Bill Richmond Fred Harr. Randy Randolph. George Ball. Mike Mcliinnon. Ed Bron n. Mike Hoke. Coach Simms ..- I .I i If r . :by WN-.Ac .-SP 0 Irv: Q- X -, ax Q B ' 'lr K Q. I ,iv-.. 9 ir .,..- 'w U' 1 -1 sg: , px 'sf- aji ' 1. .. , A N- G x K Hi v ,. N ' I A f 1 'x N ,. QW P K . ' . -:NI- A , - ' x- V -V' ' ' Q . Lg X' -Q, - 1 S . ' , - ix X ' 'W vg : ,. X. Ly-xv, x N M XFNSNJ K .J + A ' A - , - . ' ' x -g .,' ' - fX,,.3wx .- ' N .X r' ,. ' S ' i f: ' x 1 K.-1-wgzx N 01 X s i N . ,S N .V ,.x:y?! V ,. V,-9 ,fx 'V' VW. -J 1 -,Q , 6 -1 'V nik- ' 'ivrfnf 1 dv 1 ' Y' --2 ina SL 1 , J... A Nh Q ' :ss S ,..r '-'HWY Wi .gb X I - ' u EW - ,jg 5.9 SDI 4.54 - 5 l' hi f -4 1' ! k , 4, i -Q x-.4 ,A En A YM! , -'W Q Y 1 -I HN- A P .Q 'lg - 1 .I . A.. ,. ,- .,.g4...-x ., .. .,... , , , s Q I 149 I . i ,ggifff Nfe -rf-' I 1 Q1 'Ivf.7 ' fm.. - s , 1 xl QQ, 3 9 xv H A... 'HFPL' ' 'C . ..'l' lk 1. .. 5 fiifxf' -A rf - . Y. if ' 1,19 'Q bl, . 1 sl 1 :lk 'Io l 'r il la' 16 I-I-SC H-SC H-SC I-I-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC tl-103 Virginia Military Institute Liberty Baptist College Davidson Lynchburg James Madison University Lynchburg Roanoke Radford Eastern Mennonite James Madison University Washington and Lee Team Rostel Jim Alexander John Canter Jim Chou Billy Greer Wade Kirby Bruce Phillips 93 fx! Z' I 9 y ,ff -H' 1 .db X v 'af .3 ' La D' lf ,si ft-1 f'-'f 'P-l- A Y 1 .A 4 , f 3 153 wp- 1 Gna- di- . QQ V 'I' Lettermen R. Burrell D. Corrigan L. Elliott T. Jackson F. Godbold B. Howlett E. Owens J. Masterpaolo A. Payne B. Shelly R. Tindall R. Tucker H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC 84 80 88 69 L17-85 York Clinch Valley Washington and Lee Guilford 75 65 89 99 H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC Anderson-Broaddus Liberty Baptist College N.C. Wesleyan Eastern Mennonite Emory and Henry Bluefield College Elon Bridgewater Liberty Baptist College Virginia Wesleyan Lynchburg College Washington and Lee Randolph-Macon College Bridgewater Shenandoah College QZOTJ Eastern Mennonite CZOTJ Randolph-Macon College N.C. Wesleyan QOTJ Lynchburg College Emory and Henry QODAC Tournamentj Lynchburg College J Jw- , N 4 -df Nm, .U - y- n. E., 1-R ,E X, ,Gyn T...- 'K F. in L,- S55 :MN Q K , .. . I m: J- X 1, w K ' A 9 X, ie. Q.: . 1, if 'V- 1,1353 2' 1 4: ' . .- . -SKF-'Q x N xxx, A in X , , x X K X M X ,gals X ew f'g,x X' I . ' EEKQ l K' fx iw xi -S ,.. rw-11 . jrgrr. Isl'-v , x 5 .X-x U N ' N 'Ke' x ,JN . .2 4 .W A is - Q? L., 1 'X , A aka. w ,Q .'e3'w '- f, .',.i .f: ,tx .3 1 Q, , .-4 5. X A 45 N 'S I' ' X X. 1 ..+ ' - r . N? , .-...,,. 'fa N a -xX H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC fl-65 Eastern Mennonite Lynchburg Eastern Mennonite Liberty Baptist College Catawba Washington and Lee Davidson O.D.A.C. - 4th place Lettermen Billy Abbott Chuck Dietz John Eagan Demetri Economos Billy Greer David I-Iepner Wade Kirby John Martin Dave Portertield Stephen Shaw IWC A3 Zfk 11. N Q' .4'iA'.'-3.7 3' ,' 'IIUCQ--as UL , X . , , 1 , ix 4. ' A ' H ff. wf' 2 I . . - --'N ,a L11 1 ' ' Y ' V . G . I HELL, f:,L1gLrf14Q ' . ' - Q --.: -L fm in 4- x -...W 1 i .X Q X X N, ,X Q . .XX X l X - .X -. ,. X ' X ,M 3 -. 2' , X . X- XX e. jx X X- X. . -1 Xr: an X 'X X - F: -: - f N -fi ' 0 X .X - X -X NX X. . U x A -if ' 5 . X' . 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X. , X y Q X , x N. -' A X Q ' AQ X X '55 ' X 5. f 3Q'1..X .X ffl. .X-':X'X'7f- CXw:i3'...f 'T .-SX - 1 .X -' fi 1 NX, X i XSMY-X.,..j I-QQ:- 5 XXQX uSXf':if2f4 : ilx Q ,M N. .1 X. K , . .X . N . ' XXMQXXH'-. Xf H 'Ve .fr X ,Z-,N , . 111. . S3351 mf.-,..QL??1!!!?2Xi.j j ......., , , ...,., V -.P-.,, X . .JMX 1 'Q .X , 2 YQYW'-f-- ' 'ffif Qf J f 5'Y.:- ESC-9 ' X- -11 ff-- zz mfg-1 A .,,Xa.'yX-f,,3.j' ' x , N Xw . X,,:'- ,Q ,f X., ry- 5 X 'A XXWN. ,Xx QXXW.. H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC 4 9-9 6 7-7 2- 12 7-1 7 5- 14 7 0 26 7-9 12 2 1 5-9 10-4 6 C14-123 Virginia Commonwealth Washington and Lee Eastern Connecticut Emory and Henry Guilford N.C. Wesleyan Liberty Baptist College Ferrum Guilford Lynchburg Longwood College Virginia Wesleyan Randolph-Macon College Liberty Baptist College Lynchburg Eastern Mennonite Bridgewater Bridgewater O.D.A.C. - second place 3 5-3 15 3-3 5-4 3-3 9 7-8 1 4 1 3-1 1 9 9 2 2-6 9-16 16 Lettermen M. Adkins M. Bohannon D. Benner R. Epperson J. Ferguson P. Fox F. Fulton T. Maxa S. Moorhead Ben Newell Bill Newell B. Niedermayer S. Sawyer J. Thompson J. White M. Yates 35,34 52 jg' - I' 4 f+-A x4 4-gf -Q .53 il' . X + 11' T, 'fir ,vw AQ V it 'X'-X1-.L - -- A ., .-.f 1-Q. , Q ' 2 -. .Vfkff 2, .6 - IQ. . 4'f'1,' L, g -N wxffl , ','v-.'j- ..',.f ' . 'I .'.g:Svi'f'-'FM- A . wx.-Q2-V -'.f-'f'-iff - - N-f . - fi f'-'Q - -W91'a- '--'J 4-.Q -?.l H' 'T v-- gxy.-'-'5X,.,--..,A Q. gwwx -:':,,'x ss- 5... W H ,. -4 IN. .yr ,f ., , Hi? f -.'xC Q.'x'---1 K: ' . v 4-,-7.1 ' h..9Sgif?1.?- .Y-Q'....sr A-.P .via--vgQxii. 14 . . , C i I 1- -,if Q1 '24 'UA' QQ- 53:55 ,il-gt.,-,-, f 5 ff' f , N5 V . N - . , , , ,qi-.1 ,yP.f2Y'.Nvg .-9 -gf,-M kc-S-,yt-5.2, W. ,.-Lltg,-.w -QQ- H , 3 Q- -3,,.,g,.- 1,!,,,fs.f1a xg 913, ,'y1a.'b,.xY3V-gg1,.,. avi. M39 . php-1 ,,. . I - H ' . ,-wg. .gf - s- A-,. ' ' -1R..1zff vii 'N Q-.Q 09- 'iff' -638 21' X- ,N . '. 1 -. ', ' nJ'1,'-g-- 4. 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Q ' - 0-'..,c. :. 55 3 4 ,-s 'iff 'I 7' l .1 5 f.. ,Q NA: as ' E 414. WV w , ' V sg. r. X. U , 4 . .3 ix. ge-'nil ,Pl .Z , 168 Urqxl fl,-ex,si:i?fP di, 5 .-.1-3.-. - 1414... W Lettermen B. Cart G, F ld B.eDllll.lli H-sc B. Lewis I-LSC J. M J. Enjailes I-LSC V. Thomas H-SC R. Tucker H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC C3-Sl James Madison University University of Richmond George Mason University Christopher Newport Lynchburg College Virginia Military Inst. Emory and Henry College Virginia Polytechnic Inst. Old Dominion University Randolph-Macon College Washington and Lee O.D.A.C. - 3rd place I 11 .I ,xv Q - ha . g,,4,.- a-4.n.f4,a.. QQ, 'wry f v Irv lf'ly v --vw v 1- A1111 ....ffu,v. ' -v ...Aus 1 1 ,, ,.,,,, ,,,,,...... ,....,,,,,,. ', ruff.: 1- m.-1,11 1 ., . -111. ..... . ,, -f.,f , 1 1111 .V yu Q 'N ' ' - h- R'if -4 -.Z .., -.na-lv ,, -fs., -'P . Q- . v, ' .-0 . -. 5 4 ...J ,. .N .An W- - . U 1 L - --YF '- x -fi F .-.1-.' .':q:,. N F-'5',,.:f1,-'vs x N . ..z,,', ' if' w- . - . MJ, -, ....':5.. A W5 - - - '. I if'-...LYS M 1 ' Y.-, ' . A .f fy , ,, an 1 .A J :- 4 .. -24 Qs fx. 3. ' 'Z.f'Q.t-..fifw.e'f, -.,, I - -I .,j.-s',,f-Q41 - 'ff-'Sz'--f -'Q Q- -.1 A ' sl.. ,,-ir ,fl ,, ,SFA . n - I -V ' ri .-- 0' -I 1. 1.15,-.AA 'L ,J '-- 'ef ' 'yy-f W-qi 1, -i , , iv' f, I ,1 -.' 22334-rr: il - , ,Lt nl -I H, .f rn -.-M., 45-ygy' ,r .1 lu' ',g?,f. T3,..J'a5 nik wwf A- -.--W . 5 . 4. ,.g,Eif'ai5g'vyJ'CfvP'9v-39 , ,514 -7534 32- 'QE -,. v-- --'ss r H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC C9-5-lj Atlantic Christian Campbell N.C. Wesleyan Methodist Old Dominion Randolph-Macon College Lynchburg Greensboro University of Richmond Bridgewater Ferrum Averett College Longwood College Roanoke College Lynchburg James Madison Tournament - 6th Place Camp LeJuene Tournament - llth Place Va. Intercollegiate Tournament - 2nd Place CS C J O.D.A.C. Toumament - 2nd Place it , li, L-Fw 8 ., , la .Q'l'wg1M Bob Agee -4-34 , Ir. WarmgTr1ble M Q ig -j Taylor Boyd '11 4 , Wallace Mahfmes .:-' ,.f Dr Martm L A C R O S S E Y TIIJ H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC I-I-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC H-SC 110-35 Lynchburg William and Mary Guilford Lynchburg Virginia Military Institute VPI St. Mary's Virginia Military Institute Georgetown Randolph4Macon College Guilford Elon Randolph-Macon College .ill Q , '9 . Sddiqaffiiffiifd Lettermen R. Bagby R. Byrd B. Calcote B. Carrington D. Corrigan B. Coleman R. Curtis D. Denham J. Farraro F. Francis D. Freeman T. Gray T. Garner T. Horkan K. Howard M. Johnson J. Jones M. Joynes Love Patton Peterson Peterson 3 Redd Smith Unger Wilson Winslow Woodward s 9? ,. N ' N .I Q 5 pw H k-G4 . K' A Qs . ,, M 3 ' .. 3g,Sg!- ' x 4 ' ' ' . A . , , mx . if A , E , ww ' 1 ' g ,Y,, X...,..e:gw.m,TmN.. .-I - -4- - ,,.,,.,:,,1:. ..,Y if--W I R N MLMW-W-A E f 4, ' ' L A- W--Ll-m-m-nm-ewfvvmnam A ky' gg- W, w,, 44 K Q, , . .', ' ' V .N ,... ........ 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A .,-...,+., ,,. .W--. -..- -. .0 ,,,,. -.,-. . m wan ,.f 6 Y. 12 il Au A' ' , 'I fMg. f I Q l , 'f 1 ,Fifi 'A - r '- '-'Q '75 x - - fx gi, 2 S 1 fy l I ' x Y ' '-Q M 1. ' . -444: .. -lm ... ggx lt 0' , - ...fu ,A -x Z' Q - i i i bw so-un . n-v .vu-'Q -.- . W., .. ,, ' : 'nn9f -8 sv, ,- un 4 4 . 4 4 J. I a ,., -1 iv. .. 1, ,Alu- -ui f , o .,- ff' L 4 .r N of C L x l. f I S X I A 'v 1 rs-1. I 4' . L , 4 x :- qv, 5.5-4' ' .n. , Q ., ,,. . .,. 3. A W-' ' '11, ' . .4 ' .i . 1 u 'A Ju'- ,af 4' ff 1 ' 5' x if ,E 'A S 1 vi W T 4' , ,K ,. U, ,, A - N-ww XA Q w N cfkuplf w X Q ww My a ' 'fa V X Af YM Y AN mv.f5Q'v'M. M N E4 if -'B , B I.- 'MPV cm-12m-1Zmcn-+-1':1r1-14032 K s i 3 -- ' lg, ergon chairsm . Herman Miller i . , f .5 1 2 . f 11 I 5 : J I if IIE . , i i . ,I-.ii gga , -ai 2, 3 Becausejou Never Sit Still 1 .' ,.v. --..,- - . . , . - , .' u . ,i - ' ' ' n ' I I Because You Can't -. H- '. . ..'5 '. ' Work Well If YOU D0l1't 133. 1 Sit Well. Q,,2y'f.,l.. . , 5 J The Ergon Chair has been 1 'Q Q H designed to the principles of . .5 1 Ergonomics, the science 1 . 22 j. which studies man's 1 -, relationshipto the physical I n , ' g I -I 3 5 environment: The Ergonw 3 '- 1 5 - I 5 Chair permits freedom of ' I 5 .- -. ' ' movement in all types of work Q V f .. 'gh situations. lt quickly and 5 - ' - easily adjusts to fit a full rangeofbodyshapesand v- I .Z ' , sizes. And to combat 'L 3 ' ' , potential health problems ' 3 ' caused by sitting, the Ergon 3 ' Chair provides exceptional 3 h spinal support while also I1 1 '- allowing blood circulation to ' ' -- ' ..... . flow without restriction. I. 1 a .Q -I 1 L . ?:s. '. i' 1 ' ' - 'aka' . I. J-D .1 '., , eXC 'S'Ve'Y by IFITEHSCEPES Interior design and furnishings o 300 West Freemason Street o Norfolk, Virginia 23510 o 804-622-5295 BARKER - ,IEN OCORPORATION l 'M' 2 M 0 ies -. 0 is -C -' PO. Box 11289 1300 Campbell Circle Lynchburg, VA 24506 Lynchburg, Virginia F IDELITY AMERICAN BANKNA 127 N. Main Street Farmville, Va Helping You Grow . . Helps Us Grow . . FARMVILLE CREAMERY Compliments of Your Hometown Dairy Distributors of .7 MONTICELLO DAIRY PRODUCTS The Voice of Hampden-Sydney Farmville, Virginia 14- Contracts 5252530 Drycleaning and Laundry 5502560 Drycleaning and Laundry One Hour ' ' Martinizing' ' The most in Drycleaning 110 South Street Farmville, Va Across from Farmville Shopping Center Open 7:30 AM - Close 5:30 PM Saturday 7:30 to 2:00 One-Hour Drycleaning 3 Hour Shirt Service Compliments of Walker's Diner Open 5:00 AM to 4:00 PM Homestyle Meals SPECIALS DAILY Next door to the Red Lyon h-. iff. s ' l . .K 'u- We wire flowers through FTD Compliments of Rochette' s Florist 119 North Main Street Farmville, VA Phone 392-4154 The First National Bank Farmville, VA Your Locally Owned Independent Bank Member Federal Reserve System Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Branches Farmville Shopping Center Route 15 and 460 West College Plaza Shopping Center Pamplin City, VA Always Patronize KALEIDOSCGPE Adv ers Compliments of Crutes School and Office Supplies Compliments of Photographic Equipment and Supplies The Tiger The College Newspaper Published 22 times yearly by the students of H-SC Featuring the Sale and Service of Royal Typewriters and Victor Calculators Q OM E GA C, worId's most wanted watch X A Martin X gg in The Jeweler H- Farmville. VA 392-4904 I 5-fe If ' VIRGINIA NATIONAL INSUFIANCE CORPOPAYION I A STATEWIDE BANKING ORGANIZATION WITH OFFICES ACROSS THE VIRGINIA COMMONWEALTH Yes, you college men, executives who share a common enthusiasm PRINTING ink ffl -'N for fine quality, tailoring and fit LCiiCI'hC3dS gr an t-2' Programs 'F -im Publications - 4. S. -J, ff' fl'7-a'vVf'- ---f 6 E THE FARMVILLE HERALD Farmville, Virginia Your Favorite Department Store That Has Everything 'GT e 7 ashiun must Compliments of I ' 9 Traditional Clothes for Men and Women P S 120 Fourth Street Farmville, Virginia 23901 R. W. Carter B.S.-'59 Your Sporting Goods Headquarters Farmville, Virginia Moore's Distributing Company Richard H. Moore, Owner Wholesale Distributers of Bread-Candies-Cigarettes-Paper Cups and other goods 209 S. Main Street Telephone Farmville, VA 392-3222 Compliments of CARTER'S FLOWER SHOP Farmville, Virginia 392-3151 Maffled StudCI'ltS Association The Most Ngggggicfflfyilllgapresented Respesfed Title ino1l1e Nation Igdwyers ,Qnr poration A RICHMOND CURPORATION CUMPA Y F -.fm .M at , 4 R 'ea 'X K K. Irs, ff- -rv, , T2 ef ' ' Y B 532717 S9-PM W E F - 7 3: 'S-1'-fJ , . P-- 'f-fn ,' -. '-, ,v.-5: ,.- -W' mx? I - P 1:-fl. . :.s,,..,.gg: 2.1: 'E ia'frW' 4. 5 A Q Q' - fa . 4' 1 L '7' , ' , ,fm rf '! 3 'Ill' t O H95 'aff-A -'fr u 'Ol .ff I ' 'iv . V , V4 V , I ' f, 1 - ' ' , A - '- . N ' Q ' 'fig ' I-'I' -J If .::' VW? Bti,-x i , , ' 4- 'W' L1 1 ' i ' ' ,N '1flFAg' if R:1,..L:' V. .. . - ,' ,..-x. '.. .- ' Aan ': ' ' 4. ff 'T4 '. '--ffif . 'F :G ,YQ'13Kl.fQ?HY'1i. ff. 4. 5g '53??' -?h'1A'ffZ 1?5l'T1'?E.lf - ' jg f-i1f-zi...5g, 13 . '1if .1qf,-La 1' e4?i x'. : ' I, Q4 5 -.' gt- I ' . ,, . ' 5 x.Q,f AIS -g..' . j Jxfff' V 1.146 il ' , V 1135-kviun .7-1 Q '-:S . .?l1,' , A , ' 'A -A 5. '-T y,3- Y-y. 3'v I'b i V .-4 ,V !.A.g, Nw - , :,,, , V . - .' Nh, :.1!.A Arr' 9, 'A -.ivgff r' .,.T, - . e' -. 1.2 1-' .9 ' .. 1'- ,.,: -r- Y qv . 1 1, 3133-iii :Q , he far- fi, 3 -Mix j 4 - H :f- .x,. iqvf, v C 15 J' 1' if ,, -. 'T H Y 3 tx fi ,.,-. .- -.-::L4! S! J ' 1' 'i:iH5i?F'Ju: I . ,,. ' - ' .. 5 '. . '-' --.' 'H ,, Q lr Q 'S' N C 73' .1 '- 'VV K . .A A' 1 4 , . N . ' . f.1aE'- ' ' .. ' u TA' rs. T M -1,. V1 ig, n f ,f w, , 114.. T- 1 1 A, , . H n.: -'L 'L ' R vp-gfniii H ' 5!:fi'f5g4.:1 .- 3 :fr -333.133 Z' :,n:. arf 1- - if f. -vigvggq :2f::-1-1 ,aigbnf ' 2' 'ff -1:31-f.e:faf3i1 ' , fi- 'P-:'f Z' 'iF '1fj:zgefr',7'.! 5. ' '2.r:Lzi:, ag 'ri'j1Bs'f g , 'fizefgff-2,1 A ' 1:13 -a- -- .g '5-ii!-QQF-6 ,Q , - f' nga.. 1 .Q 'iii J, A 1- 5H'Ft?!'- ' Kil t - J 5 . Q. fmgyg:-.b . fi, 53151 tx 3 E fi' ffm ' 1 . f- I1 'Q' lf.-ern ' 'Viv ' -U -. 1 '5.z'3'f' fit-.,. 1 ' M ' h- - I Lliag H x .flssf . .. A lfr7 Pol7-Y: '- f n 'iigiv , I' x . r A I u I N- an ,fA iss L- wf' 4' t , lieu WM T4 x vw ,u x W1 f . if..-Q wmv- Q, , ', I gupofis I uh 'v 'ibn A ' x H' ' 1 -ur, N , I . lu. J' - .I - .un 1' x .',. .. ','1n, : 7 ,A-2, n ,rf-.' .J lvafrgr i,4 1. th- ' a - ,' Xof. n o nr A an Q- .tb J fit V .vi - 0 . I ' X' ' Qu I 1 'gn' . ' 4 t s. .. ' as ,. ,pf vp. Qi- -,I ', gQ3'a! f. ' . J 'f' 5 C u', ' tw. Wa. iff. U yr J . Hg NUMB' U 56 , . .fr sl, 'a I 'O 4 7' .Y ,Q 'ew' L4 1 In -. -, fl W ! i .4 v ' ws , K 'ff' ' Q ' x ,T Jak-I, R - ,J lff!? l:Ef14 is-V, Xe' l ' I , X' A2514 ,Zu ,-I :Va Y Q L: Q . V, ' I I I , Q i g if x I I P xxx 1 I' I 1 V 'yn . X I I E 1 x HQ- '-F1 N--A X .a-.. ..1--x .m .S Az- kr!- Q pr ,N A 196 -nun--K---f Q fl I l'5 k'Yj L , lwgg .qu-'f ,,,,-A N. 41,-,W N , mx. ... H , , f'D41,.94-lsbzffosdb-f X ,, Y 4 SS5,'MJwfggj,15,5:1 f'4 wc' ww-- ' ws 1 jk 1 ,N www U sw, N Www: wfefff' -Sf 4.1 1 4 1 . . .mv W., X A N 1 wr N u Si, Af' 'M?'5 ' 415551 .U ,-, , MSN ummm wks: , ' 1' 'sw-.':-.' Em-upz...--df -vx L ! E9 E A K E R S Hampden Fellows The Hampden Fellows Program, conceived as a stimulating supple- ment to the liberal education at Hampden-Sydney College. is de- signed to bring together distin- guished practioners from the world of affairs with members of the aca- demic world for mutual discourse and exchange. Unlike the normal speaker, who must come and go too quickly for much exchange with the audience, each Hampden Fellow spent two or more days in residence, during which time he or she took an active part in the educational pro- gram of the College, both formally and informally. The campus visits were opened with an opening convocation in which the Fellow presented a formal lecture. After this. the format varied with the wishes of the individual Fel- low and included visits to classes, small group seminars, and informal discussions. Every opportunity was encouraged to allow the Fellow to mingle informally with the students and faculty, allowing and encourag- ing members of the College commu- nity to meet personally and ex- change ideas with distinguished pro- fessionals, whom they will probably never come close to knowing. 200 All are professionals whose experi- ence and intellect enable them to trans- cend the limits of a single discipline and to address knowledgeably the questions fundamental to a life rich in meaning and direction, amid the complexity and con- fusion of society. Curtis Ingham came to magazine from Skidmore College and its Univer- sity Without Walls Program in February, 1973. Working at first as a volunteer in the editorial department of the magazine, she was hired in June of 1973. Since then she has edited the 5 Letters col- umn, co-edited the Found Women column. and edited special features. She has lectured at Yale University on Amer- ican foreign policy in the Eastern Mediterranean, on the womenls move- ment for two consecutive years at the Hotchkiss Schoolg and on womenls writ- ing, as a special guest lecturer, at New York University. She is a frequent guest on radio and television programs. as an outspoken proponent and apologist for the women's movement. Interaction Players, a chamber music group committed to new ways of sharing their total professional and personal ex- perience in music, aims to free both the artist and his audience from the conven- tional limitations of a formal concert presentation. In a workshop atmo- sphere, through informal lecture- demonstrations, inter-disciplinary semi- nars, open rehearsals. and free discus- sions, along with convential concerts of old and new music. Interaction works to illuminate the process of making music and to integrate it with life experiences of the student. Paul Posnak, pianog David Sella. cello: and Ethan Sloane, clarinet, graduates of Yale University and the Jul- liard School, are all award-winning solo performers who still retain the capacity to blend their virtuoso talents into out- standing ensemble performances. Their imaginative interpretation and the great sensitivity they display toward each other and toward their music makes each performance a rare and captivating event. Thomas W. Murray, who practices obstetrics and gynecology in Fishkill, N.Y.. has for most of his career been a leader in studies of sterilization techniques, hormonal reactions, and population growth. An English and Clas- sics major at Georgetown University, he earned his M.D. from the College of Doctors and Surgeons, Columbia Uni- versity. in 1965. Since then his interest has centered on gynecology. He served in the Army as a gynecologist, and is cur- rently an attending obstetrician- gynecologist at Vassar Brothers Hospital in Poughkeepsie, N.Y., where he also serves as the assistant director of obstet- rical nurses' education. For the last ten years he has been a lecturer on popula- tion problems at Fordham university in New York. Hugh S. Sidey, correspondent and Bureau Chief for magazine, has been intimately acquainted with the news and newsmaker of two decades. An Iowa native, Sidey worked for the Omaha World-Herald and Life magazine before joining the stai of in 1958. His current column in Time, The Presi- dency , has earned him wide acclaim and respect as a close observer of that otlice and its occupants. Among his pub- lished works are the books John F. Ken- nedy, President tl963J and A Veg Per- sonal Presidencyg Lyndon Johnson in the White House 119683. Admiral Stanstield Turner, former Rhodes Scholar, now director of-the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency, began his education at Amherst College, but transferred to the Naval Academy, where he graduated with the class of 1946. In his distinguished naval career he has commanded the U.S.S. Horne, a carrier task group in the Sixth Fleet, and the U.S. Second Fleet. He has served as President of the Naval War College and as commander-in-chief of Allied Forces in Southern Europe iNATOJ. li Hampden-Sydney is a cultural ghetto. e A ghetto in that you're isolated here away from what they call the real world : and I wonder what will become of you when you get out there. 11 ,J 'A L -ly!!- THE HAMPDEN FELLGWS PROGRAM f77'8.S'37Zl.S' IN TERACTIGN PLAYER P lPosno!e, plonog Ethan Sloane. CldYl7Z9If,' Davin' Selle, cello N07 wg. 5. F' ir: 262' Seminar: Nl-low to Listen to Music September 20-22, 1977 3 Consecutive Sessions in Parents, 81 Friends, Tues. 9 am, Wed. 9:30 am, Thurs. 9 am il 2 : T FP M E ', jd f d he wen3ht QQ1fli1aReheafSalS Dally lflickgiazetgingsofffrllnms entere upon lt. on t 6 Ot er. 07 V 1 u' Xl fb my ' 'aw :iii In Concert Thursday, September 22 2 8:00 pm, College Church I' new . The really su rising thing about ' for the enjoyment of all: not ' ' Hampden-Sydney is its committment h handfull w -. T- ave ha the ' ' e al on one hand d lt THE F ELLOWS HAMPDEN PROGRAM DR. Q Can a Wornan Be Presia'ent of the Unitea' States P Convocation, 10: 30 a.m., November 10 - Johns Auditorium Th tr1ns1c differences between men and men that feminists refuse to accept. es rences are no ne s I' . , .' The Liberal Arts ana' M ea'zea! udedinhelis mus e c o 'cr ' ' ' ' t tb Sydnee! Admissions Policies ' ' Lecture-Discussion, 4:30 p.m., November 10 Parents 81 Friends r. :07 QQ' XF V 50 N29-:gf Population Problems ' ' Lecture, 3:00 p.m., November 11 Parents 81 Friends i . Q ex ii eg T , Qui 1 - i b -g ist ,. Q .fix 1:4 ' y 'rx sr r . If there is an aristocracy in this country, Kennedy was a part of it. Thus his presence in the White House was distinctive in one more way than most students of politics realize. Kennedy was the tirst aristocrat in the White House since Roosevelt. a 204 fn . Q55 FQ '15, 1' Vi 3 Wifi Politics is a good bit more honest than it used to be. .. jgn A new model of intelligence is being formed today and openness is a part of this No intelligence agency can be totally open. On balance, openness pays off. -r -4 wa ' N i 3-4 Y' .Q If .n ,th l 4 ,Nw ' 'AX xl. , x.,uX if Ciamatila E Raiata Dataata There are many issues on which the people should vote by referendum. These issues are those of high emotional content, and should not be left to the state legislature to decide. There is no necessity that fthe gover- nor and lt.-governorb be of the same party. The lt.-governor can be a help to the governor if the governor so desires. If not, the lt.-governor can find other means of executive involvement. 'The Graduates' by Campus Comics Z9 0 v'6g9d' 0 fb 94 4' 2' AQZG e f 2469 Z4 Q0 0, 2 3224 2' 4 0 9 9729! '1- J- fr 2 3226 2 0 ox- 3 Q324 '95- 432- 0 61 f1Q'?ff 0 95 'Q-Q 29 2 0 Q, wtf, aria Q Q! owzaga 9 2 Q4 622 43 '99 '55 9493'- A 1 f 9 JA facie 6' ea 0 A o 'VA f 'Q' 'Sz QQ, Q93 el Z. A 0 J' 6290, 'I as Q6 ,220 -v 9? 9 QMAQ Z, 4' 4: 'Zn 9 'B 49 Q, Q v a 00,52 'ff 2 29 I fa '30 Ab '3' Q, 0 4, 4 +3 wie QS? AQ! Q74 Ze,-P 2 Q19 176 444 'fa-430 'fa- ? b '31 o o 204' 2? 'fa-'Q 4? 006 952 642' Q 'B Q Qc' pe. Q 0 0 Q A Zag? Q 222, Q94 AQ? J' 6992 fr gs 2548-3 33-Q' 6' 7 fr,-3,69 Q. AQ '2'2 222 pq, 30 '23 -5 zaifffb f, 45 6. I- 2 'fs-, ga -J-:ar 1 , A ix F' 5 nv, , H . I, T J! , J' L 7 L,s,..J lc. ww TH ,Q-L, ,-- , K, f' fl 2 ln l 5 .f ga : F3 X . Q.Ju,.,.2- -. lL u, , ,. l KA., ,,,,,,-,UY. Q :Y...r 9lllg3,u:, 15, lcllifl A Fifi- fur: W' lilo '1- rv-a-rx-a a' 9 gt-:L.7lL,g :L I.. 4 L: .- '73 5:7 : f F :N F 1, r, V It-L. L 3 ... .A ffhedwgiter has a custgdial duty to u pollge language mis-use in all areas. l gWh6n languageig mis-used,fit a good sign that the thought behind the 7-'-rl statement'6Taa'CtToRnaiSasUmaewhat lacking. V-x R '-'V' K' V Y W' K 5 V W Y V V Y Jeff MacNelly Pulitzer Prize Winning Political Cartoonist Author of Shoe' April 24, 1978 'N .r- .1 ,T I 5-lllr Q5 akx R f P fa r gyW!t!l'. N Abbott, William Lewis tBillyl 607 Horsepen Road. Richmond. Va. 23229 Ackermann, Michael Friedrich lMikel Konigsbacher Strasse 6, 67 Ludwigshafen!Rh W. Germany 0621-554337 Adams. James Edward tJiml P.O. Box 161, Brookneal. Va. 24528 Adams, James Ervin, 111 tJiml 1951 Live Oak, Bergstrom AFB, Texas 78743 Adamson. Brian David tBrianl 30 Eastwood Lane, Washington. Pa. 15301 Adkins. Eddie Michael tMikel 152 Blair Place. Danville. Va. 24541 Adsit. Samuel Denison. III tSaml 1512 Meads Road. Norfolk. Va. 23505 Agee. Robert Lee, IV tBobl Route 1. Box 58. Farmville, Va. 23901 Akers. Thomas Madagan tToml 93 Lake Shore Terrace. Hardy. Va. Alexander. James Moffatt, III Uiml 3113 Savory Drive. Fairfax, Va. 22030 Allen. John William. Jr. tJohnnyl 103 Powhatan Circle, Charlottesville, Va. 22901 Alloway. Jeffrey Alexander tJefO 11914 Elkwood Drive, Cincinnatti. Ohio 45240 Allport, Thomas Page tTomJ 404 Meadow Lane. Franklin. Va. 23851 Anderson. John Walton. Jr. Uohnnyl St. George Avenue. Crozet. Va. 22932 Anderson. Phillip Verne tPhillipl Route 3. Box 245, Chatham. Va. 24531 Apperson. Charles Black tCharliel 3368 Richards Boulevard. S.W.. Roanoke. Va. 24018 Appich, Donald Leland. Jr. tDonnieJ 8223 Chamberlayne Avenue, Richmond. Va. 23227 Appleton, Randall Eugene tRandyl 2809 Meadow Wood Drive, E.. Chesapeake, Va. 23321 Archer, Thomas Bolling tTadJ 10500 Duryea Drive. Richmond, Va. 23235 Armstrong. Peter Eaton tPeterl 1802 Hanover Avenue, Richmond, Va. 23220 Aron. Alvan Macauley. Jr. tMacauleyl 120 Manchester Avenue. Danville. Va. 24541 Aron. Scott Simpson CScottl 120 Manchester Avenue, Danville, Va. 24541 Atha. Alan Paul tAlanJ 2302 W. 69th Terrace. Mission Hills. Kansas 66208 212 Student Directory Atkinson, Jonathan Garland Uonathanj 8330 Audley Lane, Richmond, Va. 23227 Atwill. Edward Bennett tBennettl 5 Ampthill Road, Richmond, Va. 23226 Auerbach, Barry William tBarryl 5237 Sweetbriar Circle, Portsmouth. Va. 23703 Avison. Terry Anne tTerryl P.O. Box 637, Hampden-Sydney. Va. 23943 Babashak. James Vincent tBab0l 2830 Linden Lane, Falls Church. Va. 22042 Baber, Bruce Allenby. Jr. tBrucel 96 Settlers Road. Newport News, Va. 23606 Bagby. Richard Alan tRickJ 524 Caroline Avenue, Charlottesville, Va. 22901 Bailey, Wayne Alan tWaynel 323 Burnwich Road. Richmond. Va. 23227 Baker, Philip Bruce tPhilipl 121 Oakwood Drive, Franklin. Va. 23851 Ball, David McDowell tDavidJ 39 W. Cornwall Street, Leesburg. Va. 22075 Ball, George Gill. Jr. tGeorgeJ 2112 Windward Shore Drive. Virginia Beach, Va. 23451 Barnhart, Steven David tSteveJ 924 Boulevard. Salem, Va. 24153 Barnhill. Ray Cunis tRayl 140 Hampton Roads Avenue. Hampton, Va. 23661 Barrs, David Ernest tDavidl Burcher Road, Newport News, Va. 23606 Bashaw. John Allison Uohnl 4416 Rockcrest Drive, Fairfax, Va. 22030 Bass. William Dudley tDudleyl Riverview Dairy Farm. Route 1. Rice. Va. 23966 Bateman, Herbert Harvell. Jr. tHerbJ 223 Shoe Lane, Newport News, Va. 23606 Batliner, Ronald. Jr. fRonl 2908 Adam Keeling Road. Virginia Beach, Va. 23454 Bayliss, Philip Martin tPhill 16 Burritts Landing, Westport, Conn. 06880 Beale. Kevin L. tKevin7 1111 Wadnea Drive, Chesapeake, Va. 23320 Bean, Joseph Sanborn, Jr. tSandyJ 4017 Old Leeds Ridge, Birmingham, Ala. 35213 Beasley, David Terry tDavidJ Box 1904, Athens, Ga. 30603 Beck, Gary James tGaryJ Route 1, Box 300C, Midlothian, Va. 23113 Beck, Steven Edward tSteveJ 2232 Loch Lomond Drive, Vienna, Va. 22312 Beecroft, Morris Bryan, III tBryanJ 22 Spottswood Lane, Newport News, Va. 23606 Bell. Alexander Herbert. II tAlexl 1460 Woodhouse Road. Virginia Beach, Va. 23454 Bell, Lewis William tLewisJ 1584 Vance Avenue, Memphis, Tenn. 38104 Benner. Donald Ray tDonl 400 Alexandria Pike, Warrington, Va. 22186 Bennett. Michael Thomas tMikel 3220 W. Grove Avenue. Chester. Va. 23831 Berg, Patrick Wayne tPatl 30 Jonas Drive. Virginia Beach, Va. 23462 Berglund, Scott Wesley tScottl 5119 Elk Hill Drive, Roanoke, Va. 24014 Bernard, Thomas Rutherford 901 Overbrook Road, Wilmington, Del. 19807 Best, Marcellus James. Jr. Uayl 1504 E. Walnut Street, Goldsboro. N.C. 27530 Birdsong, Warren Lee tWarrenD 1127 Azalea Lane, Stephenville, Texas Bishop, Michael Eugene CMikeJ R.D. 3, Pennington Drive, Duncansville, Pa. 16635 Blackford. William DesChamps tBillyl 135 Shoreham Road, Spartanburg, S.C. 29302 Blackwell, Kevin Dale lKevinJ Route 1, Box 147, Dolphin, Va. 23843 Blank. Richard Herrod tRickJ 3409 Beach Drive, Tampa, Fla. 33609 Blanton, Peter Dillard CPeterl 20 Rio Vista Lane, Richmond. Va. 23226 Boatwright, Donald Jeffrey tJefD 3363 Crittenden Avenue, Roanoke, Va. 24102 Bohannon, Martin Ray tMartyJ 1003 Kenmore Drive, Mechanicsville, Va. 23111 Boinest, Jane Pemberton QPemJ 8910 Tresco Road, Richmond, Va. 23229 Bond, Stewart Michael tStewanJ 1506 Wellington Dnve. Bedford, Va. 24523 Bondurant, Benjamin Elliott CElliottJ Box 26, Rice, Va. 23966 Boross, John Michael Uohnl 220 Sunset Ave., Hightstown, N.J. 08520 Boucher, Brian William tBrianl 704 Centerville Turnpike S., Chesapeake, Va. 23320 Bottles. Phillip Cameron tPhill 1203 Lee Drive. Farrnville. Va. 23901 Boyd. Richard Alexander tDick1 1531 Monmouth Drive. Richmond. Va. 23233 Boyd. Taylor Fair tTaylor1 20 Possum Run. Columbia. S.C. 29206 Boze. Blair Manson tManson1 209 Locke Lane. Richmond. Va. 23221 Boze. Edward Scott, III tScott1 209 Locke Lane. Richmond. Va. 23221 Bradner. Joseph Pendleton 1Joe1 2911 Vista Point Rd.. Midlothian. Va. 23113 Bradshaw. Christopher Leroy tChris1 8803 River Rd.. Richmond. Va. 23229 Bradshaw. William James. Jr. tBi1ly1 P.O. Box 183. Buckingham. Va. 23921 Brierre, Roland Theodore. I11 tChip1 7529 Rockfalls Dr.. Richmond. Va. 23225 Brilliant. Patrick David tPatl 4705 Rutledge Rd.. Chesapeake. Va. 23320 Brooks. Paul Harrington tPaull Linden St.. Courtland. Va. 23837 Brown. Bennie Griffin tBen1 P.O. Box 117. Windsor, Va. 23487 Brown. David Milton tDave1 310 Carrsbrook Dr.. Charlottesville. Va. 22901 Brown. Edward Dalton t'I'im1 51 Birch Rd.. Darien. Conn. 06820 Brown. Edward Farrow tEdJ 5704 Burr Circle. Mechanicsville. Va. 23113 Brown. Gordon Bradley 1Brad1 605 Heathiield Rd. Richmond. Va. 23229 Brown. Orran Lee tOrran1 Route 1, Forest. Va. 24551 Brown. Paul Garland tPau1J 5731 Princess Anne Drive. Mechanicsville. Va. 23111 Brown. William Dennis, IV CDennisJ 2212 Pargoud Boulevard, Monroe. La. 71201 Bryant. Dennis Dickins tDennisJ Route 1. Box 205A. Capron. Va. 23829 Buchanan. George Conway tGeorgeJ 108 Knollwood Rd., Bristol, Tenn. 37620 Bullard, John Bunyan, III Uohnj 4 Partridge Hill, Rt. 2, Richmond. Va. 23233 Bumgardner. George Keller tGeorgeJ 311 Spring Lake Rd., Columbia, S.C. 29206 Burbank, John Morris Uohnj 210 Melwood Lane. Richmond, Va. 23229 Burdell, Joel Barton Uoelj 1542 Young's Point Place, Hemdon, Va. 22070 Burgess, David William tDax'idl 124 I-lunterdale Rd., Franklin, Va. 23851 Burke. John Duke 1Jack1 900 Blanton Ave.. Richmond. Va. 23221 Burke, Landon Mason 1Landon1 6005 Beechtree Dr.. Alexandria. Va. 22310 Burks. Gordon Elmo tGordon1 S509 lronington Ct.. Richmond. Va. 23227 Burnctte. Gregory Fisher 1Greg1 10313 Waltham Dr.. Richmond. Va. 23233 Burrell. Robert Alton 1Robert1 Route 1. Box 238, Lanexa. Va. 23089 Butler. James Chester tJimmyl 2958 Hemlock Lane. S.W.. Roanoke. Va. 24014 Byrd. Irving Ray. Jr. tRayl 226 Lewis Ave.. Salem. Va. 24153 Cabell. Henry Landon. IV tBunkyJ Garrison Forest Rd.. Garrison. Md. 21117 Cabell. Mark Harriss tMarkl Oakland Farm, Columbia. Va. 23038 Calcote. Robert Dudley tBobJ 673 North Shore Dr.. Charleston. S.C. 29412 Caldwell. Stokeley Gray. Jr. tStoke1 1632 Center Hill Dr.. Roanoke. Va. 24015 Camden. Dorman Sherman 1Corkyl 507 Haverline Hill. Collincville. Va. 24078 Cann. Brian Mitchell tBrianJ 5507 Kingsbury Rd.. Richmond. Va. 23226 Canter. John Walter Fitchett tJohn1 7809 Cateret Rd.. Bethesda. Md. 20034 Cantlay. Donald Davison tDavid1 Av. Jean Van Horenbeeck. 143 1160 Bruxelles. Belgium Capocelli. Sergio fSergio1 2305 Bogan Rd.. Richmond. Va. 23229 Carcelen. Francisco tFranciscoJ Carlucci. Jeffery Van tJeff3 329 Bridgeview Circle. Chesapeake. Va. 23321 Carney. Richard Lee 1Rick1 337 S. French Ct.. Virginia Beach. Va. 23454 Carothers, William Douglas M.. III tDoug7 Route 2, Box 322, Farmville, Va. 23901 Carpenter. John Townsend tJohn1 6501 Sherwood Road. Baltimore. Md. 21239 Carrington. William Addison tBi1lyJ 3530 Otter View Place. Lynchburg. Va. 24503 Cart. Ben Montgomery. Jr. CBen1 Box 100, Cedar Mountain, N.C. 28718 Carter, Thomas Fleming tTomJ Box 8, Fort Defiance. Va. 24437 Cash, Richard Everett fRicky1 7147 Meadowbrook Rd., Lynchburg. Va. 24502 Caton. Christopher Edward tChris1 418 Discorery Circle, Virginia Beach. Va. Chadwick. Robert Gerold 1Bob1 Jockey Hollow Rd.. Morristown. N.J. 07960 Challenor. Michael Stanley tMike1 9513 Fairlake Lane. Richmond. Va. 23229 Chiotti. Jean Yves tjohnl 299 Rue de Grignan 13300. Salon. France Chou, James T.M.1.lim1 64 Wan Shou Rd.. Mucha, Taipei. Rep. of China Christian. Stuart Grattan. lll 1Stuart1 17 Greenway Lane, Richmond. Va, 23226 Chtt, Stephen John 1Stevel 458 Highfield Rd.. Salem. Va. 24153 Ciucci. Joseph Vincent, III tJayl 3515 Warner Rd.. Richmond. Va. 23225 Clark. Charles Irwin tCharIie1 Box 257. Kilmarnock. Va. 22482 Clary. Robert Clinton. Jr. 1Clint1 General Delivery, Valentines. Va. 23887 Claybrook. Dewey Wayne 1Wayne1 Route 2. Brookneal, Va. 24528 Clough. David McKay tDave1 Route 2. River Rd., Richmond. Va. 23233 Coffield. Steven Joseph tStevel 319 Oak Lane. Richmond. Va. 23226 Coleman. Gilbert Addison tGilbertJ Route 2. Box 293-B. Woodford, Va. 22580 Coleman. James Bruce 1Bruce1 Box 130. Dublin, Va. 24084 Colon. Felix tFelix1 2440 E. 29th Street. Apt. 7H. Brooklyn. N.Y. 11235 Cordes. Jeffrey O. tJefD Saulterview Rd.. Birmingham. Ala. 35209 Corey. John Edwin tJohn1 2301 Windham Rd., South Charleston, W.Va. 25303 Corrigan. David Patrick tDavid1 311 Gloucester Rd.. Charlottesville, Va. 22901 Cox. Parke Hunter. III 1Parke1 4343 Bruce Rd.. Chesapeake, Va. 23521 Cox. Robert Young tRob1 1407 Friend Ave.. South Boston. Va. 24592 Coyle. Thomas Claiborne Green. Jr. tTomJ Box 253. Route 3, Kearneysville, W.Va. 25430 Cozad. Thomas Michael. Jr. tMichael1 16 Oak Park Drive, Bettendorf. Iowa 52722 Craddock. John Wimbish Uohnl 1994 Link Road, Lynchburg. Va. 24503 Craighill. Edward Carrington tEdJ 1400 Northwood Circle, Lynchburg, Va. 24503 213 g E I ij 'Qin' ! v.-4:-.' 4. hge X Craighill. Joseph Laird tLairdJ 10120 Duryea Drive, Richmond. Va. 23235 Crenshaw, Edgar Hatcher. III tHatcherl 5010 Cary Street Road, Richmond, Va. 23226 Crenshaw, Gordon Lee. II tLeeJ 111 Windsor Way. Richmond. Va. 23221 Crook. Charles William tChuckl 1017 Belvedere Dr., Albemarle. N.C. 28001 Crouch. Donald Ray tDonaldl Route l. Box 368. Bedford. Va. 24523 Crowder, Thomas Mason tTom1 1730 Monticello Ave., Petersburg, Va. 23801 Culbertson. Tracy T. tTraceJ 9706 Greenview Lane, Manassas, Va. 02360 Cumbey. Thomas Edward tEddieJ Route 3. Farmville. Va. 23901 Cunningham, Hugh Careton. III tTed1 1402 Gilliam Dr.. Farmville. Va. 23901 Currie, .William Robert tBillJ 4223 Hillbrook Circle, Roanoke. Va. 24018 Curtis. Richard Earl, Jr. tRick1 Qtrs. F. Naval Base, Charleston. S.C. 29408 Curtis, Thomas Webster tTom1 gg3gOLong Pine Drive, N. Springfield, Va. Cutiight. Barry Kim tBarryl P.O. Box 8. N. Garden. Va. 22959 214 D'Agata. Michael Charles tMikel 212 Merritt St., South Boston. Va. 24592 Daly. Clark Jeffrey CJef0 8111 Rosehill Rd., Richmond, Va. 23229 Daly. Jon Michael Uonb 108 Primrose Place. Danville. Va. 24541 Daniel. Dabney Maury 1DabneyJ Box X, Sweet Briar Col.. Sweet Briar. Va. 24595 Darden. David Burton tDaveJ Vistarama Lane. Bedford. Va. 24523 Darden. William Dunlap tBillJ 3998 Brockbank Way. Salt Lake City, Utah 84117 Davis. Mark McHale 1MarkJ 10 The By Way. Bronsville. N.Y. 10708 Davis. Phillip Gilmore. II tNappyb 811 Indian Trail, Martinsville. Va. 24112 Davis. Richard Andrew tDrewJ Route 4, Rocky Mount, Va. 24151 Davis. Thomas Martin tTomJ 7602 Horsepen Rd.. Richmond, Va. 23229 Dawson. Robert Richard tBobJ 3940 Darby Dr.. Midlothian. Va. 23113 Day. Hanry Fenton tFenton1 134 Sutherlin Ave., Danville. Va. 24541 DeFrancesco. Gregory Louis tGregD 8433 Kavanagh Rd.. Baltimore. Md. 21222 Denham. Douglas Scott CDougJ 712 Pennsylvania Ave., Winchester, Va. 22601 Denitto. Robert Fred tBobl 6 Westwood Dr., Fredericksburg, Va. 22401 Devine. Patrick Campbell tPat1 2038 Hunter's Trail, Norfolk, Va. 23518 Dewey, Frederick Lyman, III CRickJ 902 Stuart Rd.. Wilmington. Del. 19807 Dickinson. William Andrew. III 1BillJ E. Bay Shore Dr., Virginia Beach, Va. .. l Dietrich, King Hastings tKingJ 2013 Addey Court. Falls Church, Va. 22043 Dietz, Charles Miller, Jr. tChuckJ 9 Albemarle Ave.. Richmond. Va. 23226 Dillard. Lester Layne. III tLes1 1403 Friend Ave., South Boston. Va. 24592 DiMunno. James Agostiac tAugieJ ' 2836 Ashwood Dr., Chesapeake, Va. 23321 Dodd. Ralph Wesley tRalphJ 6 Tazewell Ave.. Cape Charles, Va. 23310 Doherty. Daniel Keith 1DanJ 923 Wilton Circle, Arbutus. Md. 21227 Dombalis, Nicholas Constantine tNick5 304 Sandalwood Dr.. Richmond. Va. 23229 Donaldson, Douglas Bayard tDougJ 288 Oakwood Circle. Danville. Va. 24541 Dorey. Donald Richard tDonJ 7333 Ruthven Rd., Norfolk, Va. 23505 Doudlass, Thomas Griffin tTomJ 3625 Alamance Dr.. Raleigh, N.C. 27601 Doummar. Richard Habib tRichardJ P.O. Box 901. 313 22nd St.. Virginia Beach, Va. 23451 Driskill. Buford Lee, III tBufordJ 3741 Woodside Ave.. Lynchburg, Va. 24503 Driskill. William Shearer tBilD 3741 Woodside Ave.. Lynchburg, Va. 24503 A Dudley. Oliver Witcher, IV tWitcherJ 4300 Dover Rd.. Richmond. Va. 23221 V Duffer. Randolph Lee, III tLee5 Box 253. Keysville. Va. 23947 Dunaway, John Clopton Uohnl Route 4. Box 220. Seaford. Del. 19973 Durham. Lucian Archambault, III tBuckyJ 3130 West Ridge Rd., S.W., Roanoke. Va. 24014 Eagan, John Gardner, Jr. tJohnJ 5440 Poplar Hill Dr.. Norfolk. Va. 23502 Earhart. Joe Boyd Uayb East. Jack Andrew tAndyJ 1645 Yates Dr., Merritt Island. Fla. 32952 Economos, Demetri tDemetriJ 214 Georgetown Rd., Charlottesville, Va. 22901 Edwards. Anthony Michael tlylikel 3221 Grove Ax e.. Chester. Va. 23831 Edwards, William Henry. Jr. lWill1 P.O. Box 92. Rectory Rd.. Montross. Va. 22520 Egleston. Sam Daniel tSaml P.O. Box 317. Lovingston. Va. 22949 Eidson. Arlen Glenn. Jr. lGlennl 5545 Princess Anne Rd.. Virginia Beach, Va. 23462 Elliott. Lewis Frazier 1L.F.l 1311 Bernarn St.. South Boston, Va. 24592 Emerick. Paul Theodore lPaul1 18336 Shavon Rd.. Triangle. Va. 22172 English. Richard Edd. lRickl 8211 Whistler Rd.. Richmond. Va. 23227 Epperson. Richard Presley. II lRichardl 1000 7th Ave.. Farmville. Va. 23901 Emouf. Roderic Edward tRod1 202 Second Ave.. Farmville. Va. 23901 Evans. Gilbert Russell lRus1 1300 Templar Boulevard. Norfolk. Va. 23518 Face. James Michael lJimmyl 9522 Ridgefield Rd.. Richmond. Va. 23229 Fararo. John Joseph. Jr. lJackl 21 Edward Dr.. Hightstown. N.J. 08520 Fariss. Frank Marcus lMarcusl Route 4. Box 231. Bedford. Va. 24523 Farmar. Richard Aubrey. III lRickl P.O. Box 396. Warsaw. Va. 22572 Farmer. Neil Page lNeil1 210 N. Mooreland Rd.. Richmond. Va. 23229 Farthing. Stephen Daniel LStevel 237 N. Raleigh Court. Danville. Va. 24541 Fauth. Gerald William lGeraldl 8209 Burning Tree Rd.. Bethesda. Md. 20034 Fay. Richard Michael tMikel Wannamaker Ct.. Spartanburg. S.C. 20302 Feinman. Michael Stuart lMike1 1621 Beltield Place. Lynchburg. Va. 24503 Feld. Alan David. Jr. tDavid1 4235 Bordeaux. Dallas. Tx. 75205 Fitzpatrick, Timothy Martin 1Timl 7 Colony Boulevard. Apt. 208. Wilmington. Del. 19802 Fletcher, David Harry tDavidl 214 High St.. St. Albans. W.Va. 25177 Floyd. Barton Lee lBartl 11424 Rolling Brook Rd.. Chester. Va. 23831 Follo. Craig .Anderson lCraig1 1207 Country Club Dr.. Greensboro. N.C. 27408 Foster. Robert Dixon tDixon1 Box 385. Irvington. Va. 22480 S Fout. Paul Douglas 1DougJ Box 346. Middleburg. Va. 22117 Fox. Preston Stuart 1PrestonI Route 5. Holly Hollow . Charlottesville. Va. 22901 Fox. William Trent tTrent1 Foxhill. Capron. Va. 23829 Fralin, Charles Randolph fRandyJ 10601 Cherokee Rd.. Richmond. Va. 23235 Francis. Joseph Thomas. Jr. CTomJ Route 1. Box 69, Dry Fork, Va. 24549 Francis. Robert Ford QFordJ 1543 Clark Rd.. Charleston. W.Va. 25314 Freeman, Douglas Sykes fDougJ Route 1. Box 87, New Hope. Pa. 18938 Freeman. William Long lBi11J Route 1. Box 87. New Hope, Pa. 18939 Fuller. Drew Robinson. Jr. tDrew5 274 Wt. Wesley Rd.. Atlanta. Ga. 30305 Fulton. Christian Langdon 1ChrisJ 323 Wister Rd.. Wynnewood. Pa. 19096 Fulton. Frank I-Iundley. Jr. lFrank1 503 Holbrook Ave., Danville. Va. 24541 Feldmann. Gregory West 1GregJ 2102 Wycliffe Ave.. Roanoke. Va. 24014 Ferguson. James Deari tlimmyl 1089 Timberlake Dr.. Lynchburg. Va. 24502 Ferrara. Clifford G. 1Clifford1 13 Legare St.. Charleston. S.C. 29401 Ferrara. Martin Ellerbe tMartinJ 13 Legare St., Charleston. S.C. 29401 Ficklen. Fitz-Hugh Conway tFitzJ Route 3. Box 327C. Wilmington, N.C. 28401 Fidler. John Edwin Uohnj Bx. 146. 5 Starbuck Rd.. Summersville, W. Va. Fine. Henry Stuart QHenryD 1202 Loch Lomond Court. Richmond. Va. 23221 Finney. Mark Spencer fPockets1 5607 Wesley Ave.. Baltimore, Md. 21207 Fisher, Roland Luis. Jr. 1Ron7 11421 Rolling Brook Rd.. Chester, Va. 23831 Gammon. Tracy Watkins fTracy1 1222 Fillman Drive, Reidsville. N.C. 27320 Garner. Thomas Arthur fTomD Route 5. Box 470. Lynchburg, Va. 24501 Gary. Stuart Thomas CStuartJ 4 2680 West Park Drive, Baltimore, Md. 21207 Gates. David Heath 1DavidJ 4701 Bruce Road. Chester. Va. 23831 215 5 v Gielow. Harold Richard 1Haroldl P.O. Box 275. Greenwich Road. Westfield Center. Ohio 44251 Glisson. John Wesley lJohnI 8514 Chippenham Road. Richmond. Va. 23235 Godbold. Frank Blackwell. lll tFrank1 1312 Willingham Street. South Boston. Va. 24592 Godfrey. Rustin Burt tRustyl 505 Buffer Court. Virginia Beach. Va. 23462 Godfrey. Thomas Walter. Jr. tTomJ 3122 Bray Road. Virginia Beach. Va. 23462 Godfrey. Thomas Walter. Jr. tTom1 3122 Bray Road. Virginia Beach. Va. 23452 Goldstein. Gary Brien tGaryl 138 Bennington Road. Charlottesville. Va. 22901 Gonzalez. Amauri G. tAmauriJ 4740 NW 196 Terrace. Miami. Fla. 33055 Good. Russell Warden tWardJ 3741 Darby Drive. Midlothian. Va. 23113 Goode. Thomas Emory tThomasJ 5430 Dorchester Road. Richmond. Va. 23225 Graham. David Gillen tDavel 222 Oakdale Road. Baltimore. Md. 21210 Graham. John Robert tJohn7 1808 Wakefield Road. S.W.. Roanoke. Va. 240 Gray. Thomas Paul tToml 7829 Aiken Avenue. Baltimore. Md. 21234 Green. Steve Goodman lStevel Route 2. Box 319-D. South Boston. Va. 24592 Green. Thomas Watkins tToml Route 2. Clarksville. Va. 23927 Greer. Billy Louis tBillyl 604 Sirine Ave.. Virginia Beach. Va. 23462 Groseclose. Robert Daniel tDanl 1565 Stewart Street. Welch. W. Va. 24801 Groseclose. Samuel Lee tSam1 1565 Stewan Street. Welch. W. Va. 24801 Grover. Robert Ellis tBob1 2406 N. Augusta Street. Staunton. Va. 24401 Gunn. Robert Bruce tBrucel 972 Kenleigh Circle. Winston-Salem. N.C. 27015 Haar. Frederick Hubbard. Jr. tFredJ The Quarters . Old Garth Road. Charlottes- ville. Va. 22901 Haga. David Shotwell tDavidl 2104 Link Road. Lynchburg, Va. 24503 Hale. Thaddeus Henry tHenryJ 401 Patton Ave.. N.W.. Roanoke. Va. 24016 Haley. Gregory Joseph tGreg7 3727 Peakwood Drive. S.W.. Roanoke. Va. 24014 216 15 Hamer. Frederick Charles. 111 tChuck1 203 Devon Road. Charlottesville. Va. 22901 Hamnett. Lawrence Dean tLarryl 13 Farmer Drive. Allentown. N.J. 08501 Hancock. William Joseph tBilll 311 S. Washington Street. Winchester. Va. 22601 Harcum. Michael Stephen tMikel 7511 Woodley Road. Richmond. Va. 23229 Hardy. William Edward 8811 Wishart Road. Richmond. Va. 23229 Hare. Ransom Bryant. IV tBryantJ 3425 Gorman Drive. Lynchburg. Va. 24503 Harrington. David Merle tDavid1 P.O, Box 131. Patterson St.. Ext.. China Grove. N.C. 28023 Harris. David Wayne tBubbal 3021 Lakewood Road. Glen Allen. Va. 23050 Harris. James Selden. Jr. tSel1 500 Brunswick Ave.. Blackstone. Va. 23824 Harris. Richard Dean tDickJ 461 Sherwood Forest Road. Winston-Salem. N.C. 27104 Harris. Robert Charles Powell tRobbiel 1719 Haskins Street. South Boston. Va. 24592 Harrison. William Edward tBillyl 4021 Old Leeds Ridge. Birmingham. Ala. 35213 Hatcher. Robert Vance. III tTreyJ 1 Ampthill Road. Richmond. Va. 23226 Haugh. David Roberts tDavidJ P.O. Box 1216. Charlottesville. Va. 22902 Haw. David Morrison tDavid1 505 Ridge Top Road. Richmond. Va. 23229 Haw.-John Sheppard. III tShepJ 505 Ridge Top Road. Richmond. Va. 23229 Hayes. Richard Burton. III tRichardJ 914 Milledge Road. Augusta. Ga. 30904 Heery. Thomas Moss tRustyl 2815 Jefferson Road. Athens. Ga. 30601 Heldreth. Joseph Brown. III tJoeJ 1012 Jefferson Circle. Martinsville. Va. 241 12 Helms. Crampton Harris. Jr. tTruckyJ 1741 Momingside. Morristown. Tenn. 37814 Henley. Richard Alan tRickyJ 11604 Brendonridge Lane. Richmond. Va. 23233 Henry. Robert Randolph. IV tRanl 930 Heatherwood. Bluefield. W. VA. 24701 Henry. Timothy Ira tTimJ 1317 Harrison Street. Lynchburg. Va. 24504 Heppner. David Alexander Spotswood tDavidJ 617 Bon Air Circle. Lynchburg. Va. 24503 Hicks. Horace Rowe. Jr, tH.R.7 Route 4. Box 310-A. Glen Allen. Va. 23060 Hinkle. Henry Newsom tHenryJ 2857 Merry Acres Lane. Winston-Salem. N.C. 27106 Hobbs. Gelon Sylvester tTripJ 603 N. Broad Street. Suffolk. Va. 23434 Hofler. John Gatling. Jr. tJohnl 215 Drummond Drive. Raleigh. N.C. 27609 Hogg. Charles Mathew. Jr. tMatJ Route 2, Pohatan. Va. 23139 Hoke. James Michael tMichaelJ 10250 Cherokee Rd.. Richmond. Va. 23235 1 . . 'T 1 . . Xt , ...... A W1 L ' -Q ii .lIf'viiwf':x7i lei X Holcombe. Wayne Calvin 1Waynel 2143 Cunningham Drive. Apt. 103. Hampton. Va. 23666 Holder. David Wayne tDave1 207 E. Charlotte St.. Sterling. Va. 22170 Holgate. Louis Howard 1Louist 35 Phillips Dr.. Leesburg. Va. 22075 Holston. Walter Brown. 111 1Chip1 3738 Woodside Ave.. Lynchburg. Va. 24503 Holt. David Powell 1Davidl 1141 N. Hampton Rd.. Petersburg. Va. 23803 Holz. Jack Anderson lJack1 Ten Pilgrim Rd.. Darien. Conn. 06820 Horkan. George Anthony. III tTony1 Cleremont Farm. Upperville. Va. 22117 Hotchkiss. Carter Walker tCarterl 7602 Foxhall Lane. Richmond. Va. 23228 Howard. Kevin Michael 1Kevin1 192 Greenview Dr.. Dolver. Del. 19901 Howlett. Bobby Lewis. Jr. 1Bobby1 233 E. 40th St.. Norfolk. Va. 23504 Huddle. David Franklin 1David1 814 Cresthill Rd.. Fredericksburg. Va. 22401 Huff. Leigh Preston. Jr. lLeigh1 615 Camilla Ave.. Roanoke. Va. 24014 Hughes. Samuel Louis 1Sam1 1010 Randolph Lane. Lynchburg. Va. 24502 Hughes. William Carrington. Ill 1Billl P.O. Box 33. Gordonsville. Va. 22942 Hughey. Stephen Loyce 1Stevel 10301 Cherokee Rd.. Richmond. Va. 23235 Hull. William Vance CVancel 1102 Magnolia Ave.. Norfolk. Va. 23508 Hundley. James Jay Uayl 1750 Edwin St.. Winter Park. Fla. 32789 Hunt. Albert Monroe. Jr. 1All 8110 Lake Pleasant Dr.. Springfield. Va. 22153 Hunter. Edward Sidney. III lSidl 4920 Virginia Beach Blvd.. Virginia Beach. Va. 23455 Huntley. Louis Ward fWardJ 1632 Plainfield Ave.. Orange Park. Fla. 32073 Huskey. Daniel Alan QDannyl 502 Putney St.. Farmville, Va. 23901 Huskey. Robert Blain, Jr. QBobbyJ 411 Buffalo St., Farmville, Va. 23901 Irby, John Pindexter, IV fBuckyl 3611 Alamance Dr., Raleigh, N.C. 27609 Ireland, Scott Brown fScottj 3328 Hemtitage Rd., Birmingham. Ala. 35223 Irving, Frederick French CFredJ 4618 Apache Ave.. Jacksonville, Fla. 33210 ..a 'A' 1' 'i . .tg-. 0 1 J 'I M' 'go-il, f- M ny- .' I ' 'Ni -- .f .. 1 ' V .XM , lg- '- A' ' ' ' . f . ' ' v Jn V ,, .47 ill l '- 0 'Y 1. '. -' . ' 1 . 0 'iv ' . . n , ' ' N' Y . LI' ' ..r 1 . -. 'km' I-1' ' 4 ' u A' 3' , i : 0 - . . . 1 Jacksonville. Thomas Micajah. Jr. 1Toml Route 1. Box 83. Austinville. Va. 24312 James. Franklin Jefferson Ueffl 245 Florida Ave.. Portsmouth. Va. 23707 Jervey. James Drewry lJiml 901 North High St.. Franklin. Va. 23851 Jervey. William Altvater lBilll 901 High St.. Franklin. Va. 23851 John. James Edward lEdwardJ White Gate Farm. Route 2. Charlottesville. Va. 22901 Johnson. Allen Easley. Jr. lEas1eyl 3219 White Oak Rd.. S.W.. Roanoke. Va. 24014 Johnson. Charles Lunsford 1Lunsfordl 1641 Varina Ave.. Petersburg. Va. 23803 Johnson. Richard Mark tMarkl 1416 Woodhouse Rd.. Virginia Beach. Va. 23454 Johnson. Robert Bay 1BobJ Rockcastle Ave.. Crewe, Va. 23930 Johnson. Todd Carrington 1ToddD 1603 Hearthglow Lane. Richmond. Va. 23233 Johnston. David King fDavidl 209 Hale SI.. PC3.l'lSbUl'g. Va. 24134 Johnston. Kenneth Moffet 1KenJ 118 Ware Rd., Williamsburg, Va. 23185 Jones, Benjamin Edward QBen1 128 Gatewood Ave.. Crewe, Va. 23930 Jones, Bemard Ogbum CBemieD Church St., Alberta, Va. 23821 Jones. Jack Spessard QJackJ Box 57, Arvonia. Va. 23004 Jones. James Monroe, III Uimj HJ 128 Gatewood Ave., Crewe. Va. 23930 Jones. William David 1Bill1 585 River Rd.. Hinckley. Ohio 44233 Jordan. Daymon Roy 1Dayl 195 Pioneer Ct.. Athens. Ga. 30601 Joynes. Louis Napoleon. ll lMikel 1320 Penguin Circle. Virginia Beach. Va. 23451 Junes. Bobby John lBobbyl 1509 Hearthglow Lane. Richmond. Va. 23229 Karo. William Andrew 1Drew1 1403 Libbie Ave.. Richmond. Va. 23226 Kasun. John Matthew 1Mattl 9003 Colesbury Place. Fairfax. Va. 22030 Kavit. Gary Stuart 1Gary1 5001 Monument Ave.. Richmond. Va. 23230 Keane. David Alfred lDanl 203 Ralston Rd.. Richmond. Va. 23229 Keffer. Robert Franklin 1BobJ 1014 Oakmont Circle, Lynchburg. Va. 24502 Keeley. Thomas Patnck 1Toml 510 28th St.. S.W.. Roanoke. Va. 24014 Kenna, Timothy Erich 1Tim1 9350 Lakeside Dr.. Vienna. Va. 22180 Keeslirig. John Carl Uohnl 127 Hickory Rd.. Sterling. Va. 22170 Keller. Scott Green tScott1 2 Stuyvesant Rd.. Asheville. N.C. 28803 Kelley. Jeffery Glenn Ueffl 8354 W. Weyburn Rd., Richmond. Va. 23235 Kelley, Joseph Crockett. Jr. Uoel Route 2. Box 271, Wytheville, Va. 24382 Kelly. James Warren Uiml 4629 Fort Ave.. Lynchburg. Va. 24502 Kelsey. Philander iPhilJ Box 337 H-SC. Hampden-Sydney. Va. 23943 Kent. Anthony Wayne 1TonyD 408 Loudoun Ave.. Waynesboro. Va. 22980 Kerns. Trent Sydnor fTrentJ 408 September Dr.. Richmond. Va. 23229 Key. Phillip Winfry lPhillipl 117 Virginia Ave., Danville. Va. 24541 Kiely, Craig Procter 1CraigJ Oakes Road Kg Ivins Place. Rumson, N.J. 07760 Kilgour, Kenneth Litton fKenJ Route 4, Box 161-C. Leesburg, Va. 22075 Killgore. John Kendall 1KendallJ P.O. Box 176, Killen. Ala. 25645 Kim. Taeho Cfaehoj Blue Ridge Sanatorium, Charlottesville. Va. 22901 217 Kirby. Wade Howard Osborne tWadel Box 334. Claremont Manor. Claremont. Va, 23899 Kiser. Marshall Kent lKent1 2929 Oak Grove. Bluefield. W.Va. 24701 Kelin. David Alan tDavid1 1724 Wilbur Rd.. S.W.. Roanoke. Va. 24015 Kohler. James Christian tChristianl Berliner Weg 6. 6308 Butzbach 11. W. Germany Koroneos. Erik Andreas tErik1 3613 Traylor Drive, Richmond. Va. 23235 Kyle. Jonathan Lee tJohnl 322 Duncan Street. Ashland. Va. 23005 Koyle. Gideon Musoke tGideonl Box 6002. Kampala. Uganda Lacy. William White. Jr. tBil11 835 Curtiswood Lane. Nashville, Tenn. 37204 Lamond. Craig Garvin tCraig1 Star Route B. Box 8. Staunton. Va. 24401 LaMotte. David Hyde. Jr. tDavid1 4509 Hunter's Circle. Portsmouth. Va. 23703 Landreth. William Ross tBill1 455 Andergren Drive. Harrisonburg. Va. 22801 Lapp. Richard Lester tRickJ 541 Dommerich Drive. Maitland. Fla. 32751 Laughlin. Carl Daniel tDanJ 1401 Riversedge Road, Newport News. Va. 23606 Laughlin. Peter Scott tPeterl 1401 Riversedge Road. Newport News. Va. 23606 Laumann. Gerald Edward tJerryl 837 Mt. Pleasant Road. Chesapeake. Va. 23320 Laux, Jerome Eugene tJermoel 1743 Kingsway Road. Norfolk. Va. 23518 Lawler. Douglas Reed. Jr. tDoug1 3000 NW 113th Ave.. Sunrise. Fla. 33323 Lawrence. Frank Bernard tFrankiel 84 St. Anne Circle. Ormond Beach. Fla. 32074 Lea, Richard Hunter tDickl 1746 Lafayette Circle. Rocky Mount. N.C. 27801 Leach, Edwin Randolph tRandy1 109 Trailwood Drive, Forest City. N.C. 28043 Leach. Michael Keith tKeithl 109 Trailwood Drive. Forest City. N.C. 28043 Leach, William Chalmers tBilll P.O. Box 780. Leesburg. Va. 22075 Leach. William Kendall. Jr. tKenl 109 Trailwood Drive. Forest City. N.C. 28043 Leake. Armond Buck, Jr. tA.B.1 5628 Darlington Road, Richmond. Va. 23234 Leary. John Wesley tWesl 411 49th St.. Virginia Beach, Va. 23451 218 Lee. Gordon Condon tGordyl 712 Cassell Lane. Roanoke. Va. 24014 Leming. Joseph Atkins tJoel 3516 Linden St.. Bethlehem. Pa. 18017 Levering. Cary Cooper tCaryl 332 Lexington Road. Richmond. Va. 23226 Levy. Richard Glenn tRichJ 44 Palmer Green. Baltimore. Md. 21210 Lewis. John Bolling. III tBollingl 7709 Sweetbriar Road. Richmond. Va. 23229 Lewis. Keith Wayne tKeithl 508 S. Woodberry Ave.. Danville. Va. 24541 Light. Philip Nelson CPhilipl 1209 Brandon Ave.. Norfolk. Va. 23507 Linares. Francisco Jose tFrank1 1990 W. 57th St.. Apt. 1206, Miami. Fla.33012 Little. Clark Walworth tClarkl 6 Holly Drive. Newport News. Va. 23601 Litton. James Bowen tJimmyl Route 2. Wytheville. Va. 24382 Livingston, Robert Elford. Jr. tBobl 1248 Glenn St.. West Columbia, S.C. 29169 Long. Christopher Shepherd tChrisl 831 Arlington Circle. Richmond. Va. 23229 Long. William Martin tMarty1 216 Country Club Road, Newport News. Va. 23606 Longerbeam. Mark Bryant tMarkl RFD 1. Box 14-A. Berryville. Va. 22611 Love. Charles Keith tKeithJ P.O. Box 62 V. Route 3. Chase City. Va. 23942 Love. Gregory Goode tGregJ 2715 Meriwether Drive. Charlottesville. Va. 22901 Lucey. David James tDavidJ 6830 Woodridge Drive. Norfolk. Va. 23518 Lumpkin. William Benedick, III tBil1yJ 8332 Chelmford Road. Richmond, Va. 23235 Mack. Edward Tinsley tEdl Route 3. Box 235. Orange. Va. 22960 Maclin, Henry Wilson. 111 tHenryl Spring Hill. Farmington. Charlottesville, Va. 22901 Mahanes. Wallace Shipley tWal1aceJ 1211 Mowbray Place. Charlottesville, Va. 22901 Mahoney. Robert Kevin tKevinl 525 Warhawks Road. Chesapeake. Va. 23320 Malone. Walter Joseph. Jr. tWa1terl 2513 Hood Drive. Virginia Beach, Va. 23454 Manger, Walter E. tWaltl 5906 Dewey Drive. Alexandria, Va. 22310 Mansfield. John Earl, II tJohnJ 1650 Riverside Drive, Gainesville. Ga. 30501 Marchetti. Joseph Peter. Jr. tJoeJ 4185 Traylor Drive. Richmond. Va. 23235 Markham, Patrick Graham. III tPatl Box 9999 Ras Tanura, Saudi Arabia Marks. Dale Talmadge tDaleJ Route 1 Box 169. Capron. Va. 23829 Marks, Daniel Camp tCampl Route 1. Box 169. Capron. Va. 23829 Martin. Frank Conrad tFrankl 3015 Avenham Ave., S.W.. Roanoke, Va. 24014 Martin, John Albert Uohnl 914 Oakwood Drive. Roanoke, Va. 24015 Mason. Carroll Allen, Jr. tAllenl 12611 Easthampton Drive. Midlothian. Va. 23113 Mason. Gary David 1Garyl 2345 Paddock Lane, Reston. Va. 22091 Mastropaolo. Jonathan D. Uonl 3409 Surrey Lane, Falls Church, Va. 22042 K. .1 1, 4 . , . rx' .. Maxa, Timothy Scott tTimJ . 2417 Commonwealth Drive, Charlottesville, Va. 22901 McAbee, Ernest Andrew tEmiel Route 1, Box 200. Farmville, Va. 23901 MaCahey, Michael Scott tMikeJ 3815 N. Albemarle St., Arlington, Va. 22207 McChristian, Steven Craig tStevel P.O. Box 321, Farmville. Va. 23901 McCulloch. Scott Hedrick tMayorl 536 Woodlawn Ave., Beckley, W. Va. 25801 McCulloch, Orgain Edward, III tMaCl 412 Lighthouse Drive, North Palm Beach, Fla. 33408 McDonald, Timothy Patrick tTiml 4402 Holly Road, Virginia Beach, Va. 23451 McElwee, Douglas Carleton tDougl 1418 Sweetbrier Road, Charleston. W. Va. 25314 McEwen. James Charles. II tJiml 1641 Wilton Rd.. Petersburg. Va. 23803 McGehee. William Overton tOvertonl Box 132. Palmyra. Va. 22963 Mclienney. Charles Russell tRussl 5000 Fox Ridge Rd.. Roanoke. Va. 24014 McKenney. Malcolm Stuart. Jr. tStuartl 4716 Pocahontas Ave.. Richmond. Va. 23226 McKinnon. Michael Leigh tMikel 715 Camp Perrin Rd.. Lawrenceville. Ga. 30245 McMahon. James Moore tMoorel 3210 Kensington Ave.. Richmond. Va. 23221 McManaway. Clayton Lee tLeet 2766 Thomdale Ave.. Roanoke. Va. 24015 Mell. John Aldous Uohnl 412 D. Moncastle Rd.. Greensboro. N.C. 28748 Mellen. Seth Baldwin. III tSethb 151 Peachtree Bettle Av.. N.W.. Atlanta. Ga. 30305 Menendez. Joseph Vincent tJoel 507 Laurel St.. Empiria. Va. 23847 Merrell. Robert Baxter tBobl Route 1. Box 92H. West Point. Va. 23181 Mikell. William Gaillard. Jr. tGigl 117 Somerset Rd.. Wilmington. Del. 19803 . ,Q r- ff- - ' - - uf: 1'39 'A' i 1. -F - A 353aic'W ' 1' ' W .,. . qv. ' .,. hip, . -. . ' U'-r A ,.. -- 3, We .V 4. Miles. Randolph Parker tRandyl Box 502. Mathews. Va. 23109 Miles. William Scherer tWilliaml 2215 Wedgewood Ave.. Richmond. Va. 23228 Miller. Harland Lamar. III tHall Channel Club Towers PH 1. Monmouth Beach. N.J. 07750 Miller. William Sheppard. III tShepl 6100 Eastwood Terrace. Norfolk. Va. 23508 Modlin. Robert Christian tRobl 906 Talbot Dr.. Smithfield. Va. 23430 Moles. Jeffrey William tJefD Route 3. Box 121. Vinton. Va. 24179 Molster. John Sanford tJohnl 302 Greenvxay Lane. Richmond. Va. 23226 Moore. Charles Ferrell. III lChipl 1206 Graydon Ave.. Norfolk. Va. 23507 Moore. John Augustus. Jr. Uohnl 503 Evergreen Rd.. Rocky Mount. N.C. 27801 Moore. Julian Adair. Jr. tJayl P.O. Box 391. Front Royal. Va. 22630 Moore. Wallace Warren tWallyt 115 Mulberry Rd.. Danville. Va. 24541 Moore. William Spurr tBilll 1831 East Boulevard. Petersburg. Va. 23803 af. 1. ' sri--9 5- 'ff-5: -- N ... . '-'A 'T' E1.G YN' '1 Y 'vlev be U' 'W any -A P4 I Brit' Moorhead. Scott Logan tScottl 200 Paxton St.. Lexington. Va. 24450 Morehead. Ralph Connor. IV lChip1 1603 Tredegar Ave.. Catonsville. Md. 21228 Morgan. William Hunter. Jr. tBilll P.O. Box 176. Sunbury. N.C. 27979 Morris. Mark John tMarkl 203 Tamarack Rd.. Richmond, Va. 23229 Morris. Reginald Philip tReggiel 11612 Boyd Rd.. Chester. Va. 23831 Munden. Gordon Ward. Jr. tGordonl 2649 Sandpiper Rd.. Sandbridge. Va. 23456 Murphy. Andrew Philip. III tDrewl 1815 Edgehill Dr.. Alexandria. Va. 22307 Murphy. Wyatt Rorer. Jr. tRoryl 4715 Old Dominion Dr.. Lynchburg. Va. 24503 Myers. Averette Perry. Jr. tPerryl Box 96. Alberta. Va. 23821 Nerney. Michael Edward tMikel 15 Marina Rd.. Hampton. Va. 23669 Newcomer. David Jackson tDavidl 8804 Three Chopt Rd.. Apt. 102. Richmond. Va. 23229 Newell. William Willard 1Billl 201 Starmont Dr.. Danville. Va. 24541 Newell. Wilson Bennett. Jr. tBenl 201 Starmont Dr.. Danville. Va. 24541 Newman. William Crenshaw. IV tShawl 8714 Old Spring Rd.. Richmond. Va. 23235 Newton. David Emory tDavidl 1811 LeSuer Rd.. Richmond. Va. 23229 Nexsen. Walter Randolph tRandyl 948 Rothowood Rd.. Lynchburg. Va. 24503 Nichols. Jerome Smith. III Uerryl Route 3. Box 539. Troutville. Va. 24175 Niedermayer. Herbert William. III tBilll 9211 Donora Dr.. Richmond. Va. 23229 Noftsinger. Dabo Clifton fDabol Box 488. West Point. Va. 23181 Norrington. George Dyer tGeorgel 601 Kingston Dr.. Virginia Beach, Va. 23452 Ogle. David Godon tDavidl ' 127 Londonberry Rd., Forest, Va. 24551 O'Han1an, Edward Vincent tTedl 854 Shawnee Rd., Waynesboro, Va. 22980 Old. Wayne David tWayneJ St. Brides Rural Station. Chesapeake. Va. 23322 Oldfield. Robert Wise tBobJ 5316 Rolfe Ave., Norfolk, Va. 23508 Oliver. Mark Hunter fMarkl 5703 Littlehorn Dr.. Roanoke. Va. 24018 219 Orlandi, Joseph Orazio Uoel 4109 Kanawha Ave.. S.E., Charleston, S.C. 25304 Osgood, Thomas Wentworth tTomJ 1023 Northampton Rd., Petersburg, Va. 23803 Outten. Joseph Fendall. Jr. tJeffJ 130 Rockingham Rd., Greensville. S.C. 29601 Overton, John Gregory tJohnJ 8915 Sierra Rd.. Richmond, Va. 23229 Owens, Andrew Dow, Jr. tAndy1 740 Prospect Ave., Pulaski. Va. 24301 Owens, Edward tEd1 2222 Jeffress Buvd.. South Boston. Va. 24592 Pace. Gerald Michael. Jr. tMikeJ 106 Lewis Ave., Salem, Va. 24153 Pananas. Jonathan Socrates tJonJ Route 3. Box 556, Orange, Va. 22960 Pandaleon, Alec Andrew, III tAlec1 Six Sargent Rd., Scarsdale. N.Y. 10583 Pantele, William James tBillJ 8956 Tarrytown Dr., Richmond, Va. 23229 Pappas. John Stephen tJohnJ 387 Woodbridge Ave.. Buffalo. N.Y. 14214 Parker. Richard Carlyle tRichard1 1880 Garraux Rd.. Atlanta. Ga. 30327 Parker. Wilbert Joel tManieJ 222 Haraway Rd., Danville, Va. 24541 Parsons, Bradley Jay tBrad1 27 Appomatax, Dr.. Brentwood, Tenn. 37027 Patterson, Joseph Rody. Jr. Uoel Route 1, Box 8, McKenney, Va. 23872 Patterson. Mark Whitehead tMarkJ 1303 Langhorne Rd., Lynchburg, Va. 24503 Patterson, Paul Tulane tTulane1 1303 Langhorne Rd., Lynchburg, Va. 24503 Patterson, Vernon William, III tVernonJ 105 Partiidge Ct.. Spartanburg. S.C. 29302 Patton, James Doddridge. IV Uayl 2400 Walhala Dr., Richmond, Va. 23235 Paul, Ray Mercer. Jr. tRayJ 4818 Stuart Ave., Richmond. Va. 23226 Paulette, Bennett Wayne tBennettJ Route 1, Appomattax. Va. 24522 Payne, Andrew Allemong, III tDrewJ 1420 Louden Heights Rd.. Charleston, W. Va. 25314 Pearson, Robert Knight, Jr. tRobbieJ 4313 Montgomery Rd.. Lynchburg, Va. 24503 Peebles, James Fain tFain1 110 East 5th Ave.. Lawrenceville, Va. 23868 Pegram, Frank LeCraft tFrank1 1014 Johnson Ave.. Petersburg, Va. 23803 220 Penick. Joseph Bernard Uoel Box 7508, Richmond, Va. 23231 Peters, Paul Dillard 1PaulJ 1805 Country Club Rd.. Connersville. Ind. 47331 Peterson. Mitchell Paul tMitch1 151 Glen Oban Dr., Arnold, Md. 21012 Peterson. Scott Richard tScott1 151 Glen Oban Dr., Arnold, Md. 21012 Phillips, Bruce Collier tRockyl 409 September Dr.. Richmond, Va. 23229 Pitzer, Charles Lewis, III tChuck1 2609 Stanley Ave., Roanoke, Va. 24014 Plunkett, William Gordon tBillJ 4301 Alfriends Trail, Virginia Beach. Va. 23455 Poehler, Dennis Christopher tDennyJ 4822 Coleman Rd., Richmond, Va. 23230 Pollock, Andrew Jesse tAndyJ 4210 Newport Ave.. Norfolk. Va. 23508 Porter. Chester David. III tChester1 3130 Darnley Dr., Richmond, Va. 23235 Portertield, David Latimer tDaveJ 342 Fox Dr.. Winchester, Va. 22601 Power. John Maynard tJohnJ 1141 Larchmont Crescent, Norfolk, Va. 23508 Preas. George Robert. II tGeepJ 4937 Hunting Hills Dr., Roanoke, Va. 24014 Preston, Thomas Lewis tTommyJ 46 Canterbury Rd.. Charlottesville. Va. 22901 Price. Douglas Sumpter. Jr. tDougJ P.O. Box 174. Gretna. Va. 24557 Quarles, Foster Kevin tKevinl 25 Woodbury Forest Dr., Hampton, Va. 23666 Quarles, John Morton. Jr. tJohnnyJ Box 344, Anchorage Lane, Yorktown, Va. 23490 Quinn, Warren Arthur tWarren7 7820 Chapman Rd.. Kingsville. Md. 21087 Ramsey, Stuart Craig tCraig1 32 Audubon Pond Rd.. Hilton Head Island, S.C. 29928 Randolph, Philip Ruffin tRandyJ Route 1. Box 295. Mechanicsville, Va. 23111 Rawles. Georgina Offley tGigiJ 5001 Cary Street Rd., Richmond, Va. 23226 Redd, William DeHart tRedJ Box 92D. Route 1, West Point, Va. 23181 Reed, Randy Wayne tRandyJ 9322 Huron Ave., Richmond. Va. 23229 Reinhart, Robert Steven tSteve1 3415 Summerville St., Lynchburg, Va. 24503 Rennolds, David Winston tDavidJ 6410 Three Chopt Rd., Richmond, Va. 23226 Revell, Everett Carroll. Jr. tEverett1 P.O. Box 157, Onley, Va. 23418 Revercomb, Randolph Champman tRandyJ 3528 Penarth Rd., Roanoke, Va. 24014 Rhea, Michael Anthony tMikeD Route 4. Box 485A. Farmville, Va. 23901 Rhodes. John Richard Uohnl 17 Dudley Street, Presque Isle, Me. 04769 Richards. James Ronald tJimJ 4612 Locksview Rd., Lynchburg, Va. 24503 Richards, Mark Irvin tMarkJ 140 Trinkle Av., N.E., Roanoke. Va. 24012 Richardson, Joseph Cumming tPancho1 211 Mountain View, Bluefield, W. Va. 24701 Richmond, William Dickenson fBil1J 11 Hickory Ridge, Martinsville, Va. 24112 Riddle. Barry Lynn tBarryJ Route 1, Box 50, Gladys, Va. 24554 Ritch. Frederick Field, III tFritzJ 663 Otis Boulevard, Spartanburg, S.C. 29302 Roberts, William Shackelford tRobin1 4 Kingsway Court.. Richmond, Va. 23226 Robertson. James Edward tJamesJ Route 1, Burkeville, Va. 23922 Robertson, Theodore Andrew tTed1 1611 Wilmington Ave.. Richmond, Va. 23227 Rodman, Judson Howard, Jr. tHowardJ 4705 Thornwood St., Portsmouth, Va. 23703 Rogers, John Charles CJohnJ 1536 Little Horseshoe Dr.. Virginia Beach, Va. 23451 Rose, Robert John tRobertJ 1437 Fentress Rd., Chesapeake. Va. 23320 Rosebro. Robert Rutherford tRobJ 8005 Carriage Lane, Richmond. Va. 23229 Rosen. Allen Wayne fAllen7 Rosenberger. William. II tBilD Box 417, Waynesboro. Va. 22980 Ross, Robert Douglas tDougJ 845 Cottonwood, Dr., Severna Park, Md. 21146 Ross, Robert Tayloe tRober1J 3517 Tilden St., N.W., Washington, D.C. 20008 Ross, Scot Andrew tScotJ V 11781 Bollongbrook Dr., Richmond, Va. 23235 Rowe, Andrew Carlton, Jr. tAndyJ 6011 Wanda Dr.. Mechanicsville, Va. 23111 Rummel, Mark Christopher tMark1 P.O. Box 125, Tomahawk, Wis. 54487 Ruoff, Peter Edward tPeteQ 3726 Dalebrrok Dr., Dunfnes, Va. 22026 Rusher. William DeWill. Jr. 1Billl 8 Westham Parkway. Richmond. Va. 23229 Rustin. Raiford Herrin 1Raifordl 136 Broad St.. Charleston. S.C. 29401 Rutledge. Dennis Joseph tDennisl 193 Forest Lawn Dr.. Danville. Va. 24541 Sadighian. Jim John 1Jiml 147 Buena Vista Circle. South Hill. Va. 23970 Sager. William Laird. Jr. 1Lairdl 150 Virginia Ave.. Danville. Va. 24541 Salsbety. Lee Kent 1Leel 7801 Elba Rd.. Alexandria. Va. 22306 Sargeant. Charles Preston 1Prestonl Saunders. Amos Charles. Jr. 1Amosl 115 Winifred Dr.. Totowa Boro. N.J. 07512 Sawyer. Leslie R.. Jr. LSkipl 516 Forest Rd.. Chesapeake. Va. 23320 Schein. Daniel Bradley tDannyl 2735 E. Little Creek Rd.. Norfolk. Va. 23518 Schoenhut. Scott Edison tScottl P.O. Box 1517. Henderson. N.C. 37536 Schoonover. Jon Robert tJonl 5206 Moseley Rd.. Moseley. Va. 23120 Schrum. Owen Lester. 11l1O.L.l Route 1. Box 80-D. Providence. N.C. 27315 Schuessler. Wesley tWesl 266 Guy St.. Roanoke. Ala. 36274 Schumacher, Michael George tMikel 861 Carroll Rd.. Charleston. W. Va. 25314 Screven. John Slade 1Sladel 3568 River Bend Rd., Birmingham. Ala. 35243 Seay. Kevin Payne tKevinl P.O. Box 79. Dillwyn. Va. 23936 Seay. Paul Delano. Jr.'lPaull P.O. Box 79. Dillwyn. Va. 23926 Senter. Frederick Forrest tForrestl 511 Marlowe Rd.. Raleigh. N.C. 27609 Seymour. William Francis. IV tWilll 2015 Conte Dr.. Midlothian, Va. 23223 Shaner. Michell Dahl tMitche1ll Route 5. Lexington. Va. 24450 Shaw, Charles Stephen. Jr. tStevenJ 1111 Arcturus Lane, Alexandria. Va. 22308 Shelly. William Allen tBilll 676 Willow Oaks Boulevard, Hampton, Va. 23669 Shelnut, Willie Robert, II CWilliel 1231 Westridge Circle. Lynchburg, Va. 24502 Shelton. Michael Murrell CMikel Route 1. Forest. Va. 24551 Shelton, William Rhea CRheaJ 4633 Bruce Rd.. Chester. Va. 23831 Shepherd. Robert Jackson 1Bobl 2621 Cornwallis Ave.. Roanoke. Va. 24014 Sherrod. David Burton 1Davidl Route 10. Box 10. Sanford. N.C. 27330 Sherrod. Stanley Marc 1Marcl Route 10. Box 10. Sanford. N.C. 27330 Shipp. Andrew Rucker 1Andyl 918 Lake Drive. Bedford. Va. 24523 Sigler. Stewart Marshall 1Stewartl 1503 Fairway Place. Lynchburg. Va. 24503 Silvester. Donald Wilhelm tDonl 3250 Faragut Ct.. Falls Church. Va. 22044 Silvestri. Vincent Louis tVincentl 14014 S. Carriage Rd.. Midlothian. Va. 23113 Sims. Christopher Lee 1Chiisl 4110 Clagett Rd.. Hyattsville. Md.. 20782 Sketchley. Rothwell Garset. III tGarsedl 3219 Kensington Ave.. Richmond. Va. 23226 Slack. Daniel Martin tDaniell 1079 14 Avenue Dr.. Hickory. N.C. 28601 Slone. Noel Blaine tNoell 617 llth St.. Radford. Va. 24141 Smith. Paul English tPaull Box 250. West Point. Va. 23181 Smith. Samuel Edward. Jr. tSaml 1005 N. Quintana St.. Arlington. Va. 22205 Smith. Stephen Clark tStevel 125 Prince George Dr.. Hampton. Va. 23669 Smith. Timothy Andrew lTimJ 1924 Belleville Rd.. S.W.. Roanoke. Va. 24015 Smith. Walter Powell. III tWalterJ 209 Antioch Dr.. Sandston. Va. 23150 Snead. Lawrence Rucker. III tRuckerJ 2314 South Lander Lane. Charleston, S.C. 29407 Snidow. Robert English 1BobbyJ 3895 Peakland Place. Lynchburg. Va. 24503 Snyder. Edward Philip tEdl 1272 Pickwick Lane. Salem. Va. 24153 Sommers. John Edward, Ill Uohnl 11830 Chapelwood Lane, Houston, Tex. 77024 Sparrow. James Callen tCallenl 2524 Heathermoor Rd., Birmingham. Ala 35223 Springer, Joseph Resse 1Joel Route 1, Box 187, Warrenton. Va. 22186 Spurgin, Gerald Brenna 1GeraldJ 311 S. Alabama Ave., Deland, Fla. 32720 Squire, Peter Weaver. Jr. fWeaverJ 428 Laurel St., Emporia, Va. 24007 Stephenson. William Cowell, IV CBi1ll P.O. Box 1600, Roanoke, Va. 24007 Stiebel. Christopher Miles 1Chrisl 2908 lrisdale Ave.. Richmond. Va. 23228 Stokes. Gordon Kavanaugh tGordyJ 5334 Edgewater Dr.. Norfolk. Va. 23508 Stokes. John Randolph tRandyl 5334 Edgewater Dr.. Norfolk, Va. 23508 Stokes. Thomas Lane. Jr. 1Toml 5334 Edgewater Dr.. Norfolk. Va. 23508 Stoneburner. Frank Dew. Jr. QHankl 301 Ralston Rd.. Richmond. Va. 23229 Stonnell. William Patrick tPatl Route 4. Box 461. Farmville. Va. 23901 Slough. John Arthford. Jr. tJohnl 609 Maryhill Lane. Louisville. Ky. 40207 Sudduth. Roben Lee. IV lSkippl 449-A Hermitage Dr.. Danville, Va. 24541 Suter. Owen Edward. III 1Owenl 14 Charnwood Rd.. Richmond. Va. 23229 Sutton. Richard Sidney tRickl Box 13. Boydton. Va. 23917 Talley. Cecil Trent. Jr. QC.T.7 Route 1. Box 461. South Boston. Va. 24592 Talley. Gerald Spencer, Jr. tSpenceJ 1517 Jonquill Dr., Richmond. Va. 23233 Taylor. James Creede, III tTayJ 715 South Vie.w Terr., Christiansburg. Va. 24073 Taylor. James Roger Uiml 1409 Dawn Dr.. Bedford. Va. 24523 Taylor. Joseph Dodson CJoeJ 1105 Rose Lane. Virginia Beach, Va. 23451 Taylor, Phillip Aaron QPhill 4623 Hanover Ave.. Richmond, Va. 23226 Taylor, Robert Baird. Jr. tRobJ 3610 Manton Dr.. Lynchburg, Va. 24503 Taylor. William Mills. Jr. fBil1J 919 Wellington. Winston-Salem, N.C. 27106 Tazewell, Edmund Bradford. III 1BradJ 1335 N. Bayshore Dr., Virginia Beach, Va. 23451 Tedesco. Steven Kent CSteveJ 1735 S. Sycamore St., Petersburg, Va. 23801 Terry, David Russell fDavidJ 6814 Providence Rd.. Matthews, N.C. 28105 Thomas, Vincent Graves fVincej 7321 Barberry Lane. Norfolk, Va. 23505 Thompson, Bruce Everett fBruceJ 5123 Holden St., Fairfax, Va. 22030 Thompson. Fred Douglas. Jr. QFredJ Route 3, Box 171-C. Windsor, Va. 23487 Thompson. James Christian, Jr. Uiml 1504 Jonquill Rd., Richmond, Va. 23233 Thompson, James King, Jr. tJayl 6414 Studley Rd., Mechanicsville, Va. 23111 221 Thompson. Mark Wootton 1Markl 3438 Rilman Rd.. N.W.. Atlanta. Ga. 30327 Thompson. Robert Bruce. Jr. tBobl 113 Commonwealth Circle. Charlottesville. Va. 22901 Thompson. Warren Michael lWarrenl Route 3. Box 171-C. Windsor. Va. 23487 Thornhill. Clarence Edward 1Petel 1016 Federal St.. Lynchburg. Va. Thornton. Joseph Dailey 1Joel 1806 Mt. Vernon Rd.. S.W.. Roanoke. Va. 24015 Thornton. Michael Alexander lMikel Route 1. Box 209. Forest. Va. 24551 Thornton. William Cary 1Bi11l Route 1. Box 209. Forest. Va. 24551 Thurston. Brian Milbank lB1ianl Tiernan. Edward Lawrence 1Edl 8619 Greeley Blvd.. Springfield. Va. 22152 Tignor. Keith Randall LKeithl 3202 Abelia Rd.. Richmond. Va. 23228 Tindall. Russell Glen tRustyl 9101 Willowbrook Dr.. Richmond. Va. 23228 Tipton. Charles S.M. LCharleyl 2504 Brighton Ct.. Vienna. Va. 22180 Traynham. Randolph Edmunds lRandyl 309 Tennessee Ave.. Crewe. Va. 23930 Trible. Waring. Jr. lWaringl Johnsvi11e . Dunnsville. Va. 22454 222 Tucker. Royster Milton. III 1Roysterl 1223 Devonshire Ave.. High Point. N.C. 27260 Tucker. Stanley Holland 1Stanl 11 Tapoan Rd.. Richmond. Va. 23226 Turner. Harold Ratcliffe 1Haroldl 311 Sandlewood Dr.. Richmond. Va. 23229 Turner. James Michael 1Mike1 2600 Ellerbee Rd.. Richmond. Va. 23228 Twentyman. Scott Shelton 1Scottl 3643 N. Harrison St.. Arlington. Va. 22207 Tyler. John Alan Uohnl 1000 Forest Ave.. Richmond. Va. 23229 Underwood. John Mason. ll Uohnl 303 Pendleton Lane. Palm Beach. Fla. 33480 Unger. Daniel Vernon 1Danl 5010 Falcon Ridge. Roanoke. Va. 24010 Utt. James Warren. Jr. 1WarrenJ 5542 Valley Dr.. Roanoke. Va. 24018 Van Ness. Douglas 1-lart 1Dougl 8505 Hanford. Dr.. Richmond. Va. 23229 Varboncoeur. Francis Gary tFrancisl P.O. Box 248. West Point, Va. 23181 Vincent. Han'y Benjamin. Jr. fBennyl 307 Oak l-Iill Dr.. Emporia. Va. 23847 Waddell. Thomas Carter tCarterl 16 N. Win St.. Leesburg. Va. 22075 Wadsworth. Joseph Allison Cannon. Ill Uoel 1532 Pinecrest Rd.. Durham. N.C. 27705 Waldrop. George Stephens iGeorgel 2825 Avenham Ave.. Roanoke. Va. 24014 Walke. John Wistar Uohnl 1036 Oakwood. Dr.. Roanoke. Va. 24015 Wall. Barrye Langhorne lBarryel Route 3. Box 568. Farmville. Va. 23901 Wall. Steven Edward lStevel 507 First Ave.. Farmville. Va. 23901 Wall. Thomas Craven lBobJ 410 Country Club Dr.. Lexington. N.C. 27292 Wallace. James Weldon Uamesl 1017 Ridgemont Dr.. Staunton. Va. 24401 Ward. David Bruce CDavid1 8803 Badger Dr.. Alexandria. Va. 22309 Ware. Richard Lee 1Richardl 9303 Ledbury Rd.. Richmond. Va. 23229 Warinner. Edwin Douglas. Jr. tDoug1 8211 Shannon Hill Rd.. Richmond. Va. 23229 Watkins. Franklin Parker, Jr. lFrankJ 8904 Bellefonte Rd.. Richmond. Va. 23229 Watkins. William Norman 1Wi1lJ P.O. Box 81. Farmville. Va. 23901 Watson. David Paul lDavidl Route 6. Box 75X. Farmville. Va. 23901 Watson. Douglas Charles 1Doug1 Route 3. Box 39. Farmville. Va. 23901 Watson. Peter Robins QPetel 107 Forest Rd.. Oxford. N.C. 27565 Watson. Robert Jacob. Jr. tRobbie1 702 Lakeside Dr.. Emporia. Va. 23847 Wayt. James Txvyman 1Jiml 815 N. Island Dr.. Atlanta. Ga. 30327 Weaver. James Burgess tJim1 909 Indian Trail. Martinsville. Va. 24112 Webb. Bruce .Allen lBruce1 2833 Cleave Dr.. Fall Church. Va. 22042 Webb. Charles Houston lChuckl 5233 Alleman Dr.. Orlando. Fla. 32809 Webb. Dwight Marvin tDwightl 600 Windomere Ave.. Richmond. Va. 23228 Wells. Michael Stanford tMikel 205 Andover Place. Danville. Va. 24541 West. David John tDavidl 560 Brokenbaugh Rd.. Chesapeake. Va. 23220 Westem. Clinton Frederick. Jr. tClinton1 Route 2. Dogwood Lane. Vinton. Va. 24179 Whealton. Edward Gordon. Jr. tEddie1 1005 Trestman Ave.. Virginia Beach. Va. 23462 White. Charles Mayfield. IV 1Chuck1 416 S. Main St.. Warrenton. N.C. 27589 White. David Ellington 1Davidl Route 2. Box 63A. Charles City. Va. 23030 White. James Wheeler Uayl Hillcrest Dr.. Madison Heights. Va. 24572 White. Robert Graham. III 1Graham1 113 Church St.. Edenton. N.C. 27932 Whitehead. James Arthur. Jr. tlamesl 2217 Parker Ave.. Portsmouth. Va. 23704 Whitehouse. Robert Putnam 1Robl 4418 Williams Rd.. Lynchburg. Va. 24503 Whitt. Robert Holt. Jr. lBob1 417 S. Woodben'y Ave.. Danville. Va. 24541 Whyte. Orrin Oliver tOrrin7 Avalon Ridge Rd.. Accokeek. Md. 20607 Wilcox. Thomas Floyd 1Tom1 1802 Rolling Hills Circle. Charleston. W. Va. 25314 Wildman. Walter Davis tDavisJ 12 Hillcrest Dr.. Newport News. Va. 23606 Wilkerson. Paul Gregory tGregl 5604 Ashfield Rd.. Alexandria. Va. 22310 Williams. Joel Emmett Uoell Route 1. Box 221. Sutherland. Va. 23885 Williams. Roy Edgar, Jr. QRoy1 1427 Jackson St.. Covington. Va. 24426 Willis. Larry David tLarryl 143 Riverpoint Cresent. Portsmouth. Va. 23707 Willis. Richard Tumer Pratt tRichard1 1106 Princess Anne St., Fredericksburg, Va. 22401 Willman. Gerald Frederic. Jr. tWill1 203 Colonial Ct.. Lynchburg. Va. 24503 Wilson. Norwood Williams. Ill 1Tripp1 Coggins Pt. Farm. Hopewell. Va. 23860 Wilson. Robert Major lBobl 5950 Telegraph Rd.. Alexandria. Va. 22310 Winburn. William Alfred. IV QBillyl 2601 Atlantic Ave.. Savannah. Ga. 31405 Wingfield. William Carter 1Bill1 Route 5. Box 527. Bedford. Va. 24523 Winks. George Franklin. III 1Frankl 10252 Iron Mill Rd.. Richmond. Va. 23229 Winslow. Leonard Francis. III tLeonard1 Route 3. Box 27. Charlottesville. Va. 22901 Wirth. Gordon Wolfgang tGordonl 6184 Steeplechase Dr.. Salem. Va. 24153 Witt. Brian Kendall 1Brianl 724 Hayes Dr.. Lynchburg. Va. 24502 Wolanski. Edward Theodore 1Ed1 Route 2. Box 475. Staunton. Va. 24401 Woodley. James Kendrick. III tKenl 101 Grattan Rd.. Richmond. Va. 23229 Woodward. Lawrence Hunter. Jr. tLarryJ Walters. Va. 23481 Wootton. Frank Taylor. III tTaylorJ 1468 Wakefield Dr.. Virginia Beach. Va. 23455 Wrenn. Robert Cochran. Jr. 1Bobl 304 Church St.. Emporia. Va. 23847 Wright. George. IV tGeorge1 321 Lexington Rd.. Richmond. Va. 23226 Wyatt. Dale Ricky CRick1 507 N. Armistead. Apt. 301, Alexandria. Va. 22313 Wyeth, Peter Lydon tPete1 6711 Wimbleton Est. Dr.. Spring. Texas 77373 Yates, Mark Edwin tMarkJ Route 4, Box 391. Nathalie, Va. 24577 Zedaker. Samuel Eric tEricl Box 278. Melfa. Va 23410 Ziglar. Joseph Maxton. Jr. tJoel 110 Beach Rd.. Hampton. Va. 23664 Students entering second semester. Blackwell. Carl Fleming lCarll 6124 St. Andrews Lane. Richmond. Va. 23226 Burge. Frank Tucker tTuckerl 4113 Old Leeds Lane. Birmingham. Ala. 35213 Clark. Mark Morgan tMarkl Fleets Bay Rd., Kilmarnock, Va. 22482 Granger. William Woodard. III 1Billyl 155 North Harbor Dr.. Chicago. Ill. 60601 Gunn. Michael Lee lMikel 628 Delaware Ave.. Virginia Beach. Va. 23451 Harris. John Thadieu. III 1Thadl P.O. Box 86. North. Va. 23128 Hylton. Douglas Gray tDoug1 P.O. Box 352. Ronceverte. W. Va. 24970 Jeanes. John Kohler tJohnJ Walnut Hills. Orange. Va. 22960 Lester. James Cary. Jr. tCaryJ 3021 Rosalind. Ave.. S.W.. Roanoke. Va. 24014 Moore. David Edwin tDavid1 2208 Woodcrests Est.. Wheelersburg. Ohio 45694 Nexsen. Walter Randolph tRandyl 948 Rothowood Rd.. Lynchburg. Va. 24503 Pananas. Jonathan Socrates Uonl Route 3. Box 556. Orange. Va. 22960 Patterson. Joseph Rody. Jr. tJoel Route 1. Box 8. McKenney, Va. 23872 Rustin. Rudolph Byrd. III tDolphl P.O. Box 83. Wilson's Mills. N.C. 27593 Salazar. Vincent Delfin tVincel 3422 White Oak Ct.. Fairfar. Va. 22030 Tan. Loon-Kar tisoon-Karj 101 Campbell St.. Penang. Malaysia Terraneo. Robert Phillip tBobJ 43 Birchwood Rd.. Old Tappan. N.J. 07675 Terry. John Carr tJohnJ P.O. Box 218, Peterstown. W. Va. 24963 Vranian. Steven Craig tCraig7 6000 W. Club Lane. Richmond. Va. 23225 Wolcott. James Mounts. III Uimj 7310 Barberry Lane. Norfolk. Va. 23505 Students on the exchange program. Lucey. D.J. Seymour. W.F. Goodin. Mark 223 W si .Q-iii S! , it ,,-. ,sh ...L L, M.--gpf14..',' ' ,,,, Q M-'J-, .--, 5 , ' 1 ,IQ 5 -,RJ .ad grid? PG.. -, r X4 - A X M, 2 M: 5 - v- r v J 1 ' J1'adf'i5' ' nf MA., -1 -5, , th A -1' ,NK vy'U:h'-xp 't Ayr , Q Gyn MT KW- ' ., Asmn h , ,ggi A W ,Lv gg- ,Q .. 'x ,Sf 4, r , ,:,A. , X ,-v -Q 1 . mv 'A 'Q 9 , n kilt? fr 'Q . we 1 ' X X, ,A ' A ' . T , W. ' ! Y .f lun' I .5 4 -gg-' 1. 6 Y ' ' M ,f. 1. - ' D -ki - Y If- '.Q. 5 ' ' X - I W - 'fiifilla--fw-f' , as-,,,',,,-' ' F , . I 1, , .,,,.,,, l' fs'. wx-fl -- il .VAQ -JjdZW6J .-,QZZWM1-37 9526 Wana! Let me preface my following remarks by saying that Hampden-Sydney College has inspired in me a love oflearning and an appreciation for beauty and the arts. I have benefitted not only from the indi- vidual attention and challenges of the classroom. but also from the opportunity to participate in sports and become in- volved in student government. In other words, I would not trade my four years on the Hill for anything: Hampden- Sydney has given me a pride and purpose in life and for that I am very thankful and indebted to the College. In the twilight of my college career it is perhaps appropriate then to ponder over and reflect upon my education here at Hampden-Sydney College. What have been the rewards, benefits. and disap- pointments? What are the strengths and weaknesses in our institution? For it is only in this balancing of the good and the bad that we can come to appreciate the real value and essence of the Hampden- Sydney experience. The past four years have seen this col- lege implement a more demanding aca- demic curriculum and a tougher grading policy. A serious student concerned about obtaining a top-flight, and broad- gauged education has that unique oppor- tunity here at Hampden-Sydney. Most professors here not only maintain and demand high academic standards and performance, but are also keenly con- cerned with the welfare of each indi- vidual student. There seems to be every reason for op- timism. The college has come under new and capable leadership: the fraternity system is beginning to come to grips with its responsibilities to the community which stem ultimately from the extensive rights and privileges it enjoys, ground has been broken for a beautiful, com- prehensive and sorely needed athletic complex: Graham Hall as a student center is near completion: and the whole campus seems charged with electricity in anticipation of more and more progres- sive change. For these reasons the Hampden-Sydney man, whether he be a student, professor, or administrator. should be above all else a gentleman - proud. competitive, scholarly. and wil- 226 ling to defend the traditions and venerate the heritage of his institution. However, this condition of things is often hampered by a general problem the symptoms of which permeate the whole campus com- munity - the lack of a total commitment and dedication to the purpose of this in- stitution, that is the education of honor- able men. These symptoms are evi- denced at times by our indifferences to human weaknesses, cutthroat classroom tactics. self-interest, and a lack of regard for the property and personal rights of others. The fabric of the close-knit community about which we often boast and give hypocritical lip-service has been damaged and we must make an united ef- fort to mend this imperfection in order to keep alive our professed ideals of honor and brotherhood. Without brotherhood or an attitude of camraderie the concept of gentlemen of honor cannot persist or endure. Be- cause Hampden-Sydney has always been a small school, a prevailing spirit of friendliness has given rise to this con- cept of espirit de corp or brotherhood. And it is only through this sense of brotherhood that honor can be ascer- tained and realized. This ideal of honor, however, is an intangible and therefore it requires a faith and dedication by all to make it work. Dr. T.E. Crawley sum- marizes the point by stating. No painful effort - no honor - no brotherhood. Ideally, the notion of honor here at Hampden-Sydney should become sec- ond nature to her sons and offer them a way of life. However, we have failed to wholeheartedly pursue this ultimate goal and as a result our tradition can some- times be seen floundering in a sea of hypocrisy and mockery. When I speak of honor and brother- hood and community friendliness, I am not simply speaking of breaches of the Honor Code such as cheating and steal- ing: but rather I am also referring to the wanton destruction of school property. the lack of respect for ladies, the ad- ministrative undermining of the educa- tional process, the pandering to wealth and influence which compromises our in- tegrity. and the lack of loyality to Hampden-Sydney and its noble pur- poses. It is only with a total commitment by the College community that our Honor System and all that it stands for can become more than just words but it can become the trancending spirit or ideal to which we all aspire. How do we fail to meet the challenge of creating men of honor? It is a simple and very obvious fact that many of the students that come to Hampden-Sydney come merely to have fun and put off the real world for four more years. When I was a senior in high school, a student at Hampden-Sydney told me that if I came to the Hill, I wouldn't get that much studying done, but I would have a good time. It has often been said that Hampden-Sydney College is just a country club where you have to make some grades Qduesl to stay in. This kind of reputation and student attitudes are devastating and have prob- ably done more damage than we will ever know. Because Hampden-Sydney is a private institution, it accepts a large population of men who are extremely well off and some of them, to put it bluntly, are spoiled rotten, having no re- spect for the rights and property of others. These attitudes not only under- mine any concept of brotherhood and separate the student body into various factions who hold each other in con- tempt, but also, they give the people on the outside a very poor impression of our institution. But perhaps the most serious perversion of the brotherhood and honor within the student body occurs when fraternal loyality is used as an excuse to shelter and protect dishonorable deeds by a few members within a fraternity. This is a 'fflawed Fellowship and it destroys every shred of respect for each participating member as well as for the whole fraternity. Honor is indis- pensible to any true brotherhood- The most shocking failure on the part of the faculty is the total lack of respect and loyalty a few members have for Hampden-Sydney and her ideals. It seems that certain professors consider their employment and teaching here only as a means to collect a salary - their re- lationship to the College is incidental. Arbitary and unfair grading techniques, indifference to individual student needs and weaknesses, and egotistical self- interest plague and demean the heroic dedication to Hampden-Sydney exhi- bited by most of our faculty. All these negative things serve to effectually pre- clude the realization of community friendliness, thus undermining any sense of brotherhood. The faculty and adminis- tration are the men and women who must set the high examples of excellence for the men who come to Hampden-Sydney in order that they may become Humane and lettered men. The very purpose of our administra- tion is to facilitate the educational ex- periences and this can only be ac- complished by office policies that pro- mote good-will, cooperation, and direc- tion. However, it is all too often the case that certain officers of our administration evidence ideals quite the opposite of these, and serve to undermine the very purposes and preachings of this College. Frequently, students and faculty are given the impression that these few ad- ministrative officers are doing them some enormous favor by simply doing the required duties of the position. And although it is necessary for a private in- stitution to tap various financial re- sources, I think it is very important for our administration not to compromise our principles and succumb to the temp- tations and promises of affluent suppor- ters who at times try to exert their influ- ence on every phase of college life from admissions to the punishment of a Honor Code violation. I am extremely proud of my associa- tions with Hampden-Sydney College and I am passionately dedicated to the firm foundation and sound principles upon which she rests and from which she draws strength. These ideals are sacred and undisputed, but our methods and in- tensity of our efforts toward the pursuit of these high aspirations will always bear examination. President Josiah Bunting summarizes this notion best when he writes that Great men have lived and worked here, allied in great purposes, dedicated to noble things, and there- fore, we must always strive to make our- selves worthy of this heritage and this place. William DeHart Redd '78, was President of the Student Body during 1977-78, a member of the football team, and co-captain of the lacrosse team. M119 LJZCWYHX What do we mean when we say that Hampden-Sydney aims to produce well-rounded men? The phrase is hackneyed now, isn't it? It's been used to death, bled white of its meaning. It's not only hackneyed and used to death, it's been bastardized. Bastardized by the hundreds of colleges and universities that use the ideal of the well-rounded man, the Renaissance man. as a loop-hole. You've heard it all be- fore: No. we don't have core requirements here. or No, we don't require a foreign language here, or No, we're not that single-minded about academics here, our mission is to produce 'well-rounded individuals'. Hampden-Sydney could be Land if it's not. then it should bei one of the last bastions of well-roundedness, where the ideal is not bastardized, where it's kept in the proper perspec- tive, where, as one professor recently put it, The social and athletic development of students is important, but neverthe- less secondary. Secondary to what? Secondary to the intellectual cultiva- tion of our students. That's what college is all about, right? Hampden-Sydney's purpose, historically, has been to edu- cate good men and good citizens in an atmosphere of sound learning - a purpose to which Hampden-Sydney has re- mained steadfast. There is. however, perhaps no better time than this new year of reaffirmation and renewal to reaffirm and renew our dedication to Hampden-Sydney as an institu- tion of the most serious intellectual intentions. an institution where academics are the sine qua non -- a real hotbed of ideas . For if worst came to worst, Hampden-Sydney could survive without fraternities or football, without the Tiger or the Glee Club. But we could not long survive without books and chalk and sharp-minded professors and dusty old class- rooms with desks bolted to the floor. Let Hampden-Sydney always nurture men who play hard - in fraternity houses as well as on athletic fields - but, vastly more important, let this College always nurture men who study even harder than they play. Martin M. Sherrod, '76, is the Director of Communications for Hampden-Sydney College. He is the Editor of the Record, the publication from which this article was taken. I thank him, as editor, for allowing this reprint. 227 ,. J in S' r ' Lf' ' X F ,I i 5-A X lv-U-..q...,,' ax X ' fl? J Xa 44 'R K ','ff, ffp , ' fm I , L' 4-'Q-f 1 l KH.. Ip 'I 'v 1 .A . , ', M- ,f 943-,w5,f. ' f' ' u- r -w 1 1 PM-5 I v I' ' T, xl' , 1 N, J., I V . L 3 if FY ' .fi X ...S if . . .. Q- ,,4..,!.. sv ' ' .' -' v 'aw ' J aff, ff -4 I .4-. -. .. 'KK .. 1 - W, Q -rm ., .v'.'g f'T -f-'if . - 1-at , Q. - ,Q ,., xx? J . -5- ', -,. ,., ' A 'Wig'-zffi .i43,gf'f: .f'3'Y:-2 . 'fs' 3 VN f,If i.f-Qfif - N- ,qi A ,. ,r N- -yr .is 1. gd. Q . A -U Qtr, -2 - t-:'.::,,4 M Sf- -F Ti ,F f-'W' wff ff Qw5zSfJ':.ff :4 4 '5gfs5Ff? f,a ww-f'- 1. -': ' Ai . 5144 : 1, , i -- -ir f 4' .... f- 'ff -Y: Lwfgiqlftvvyiw wh ,i ,I -365, ,I .f4- '.1,,,.- .... I L ':'-1. ,' ,Lv 1' H'-1' ,I FP -Q-,e1.f'ef'-givlfzh' 'k3iS'f4gW u E115-T' Q- ' BY- 1 fi vw 4? aw. W 4 -My ., ., live., ' ' xg-Q' - , -SA 'f'?,4-1.1 x.' if-fha-'5'2:1N Y '. 1 -4 f .Eli yn -Q:i2,.w- 1.1 158' F5 1i f -Fx:-4 --gl 1F7'.F'.i.L .fps . - K- I iv' MQW'-'ffk W ' K .if 5f!f'..- 'ef -ft' 4 ' '--fi-':.:t 1 wr. -, fir- . .L,g,. ' 'f 2' 43' wr' 2. f:.'f,'i1. 35... N: A ,aug -2- .,:Y-Q ' gg- ij:, '5 2iN'r1.- ' L' QA .. .H -Ju: X '+.'..f.4'-' ,-.- . ' s auf' -'sn , 1' .wh TA' - 1 Iv-rv W: ' 4 X :HFJAQ Qi x1. , , -Q t 4 mf-HL f 'i ,As Q .V 'v 'qv 'msn -,L ,-1+--:: ,f-. -.1 -- - Q. , 5, A -uplsi pk. rygybfii if Lx. 'v '9' J:-.1' , .L.- ,..4..L1 .1. 1 LAK-5. .4 Rm T.. 4 J Alf' ' . 445 .,.. 5,4- K It-uv 01 V' if rj . . I , fl va K -x 4.1. f. if ' A' H ffm -Q .-1:-I .. Y as 03.- DOES IT TAKE A SPECIAL KIND OF STUDENT TO BE HAPPY AT HAMPDEN-SYDNEY? That's the way the question was asked to me, and I think there can be but one true answer: yes. It takes a person who is willing to go the distance, able to run not against others but in competition with himself, and eager to stretch his legs. Which is to say, it is, maybe, the same to be happy at Hampden-Sydney as it is to be happy at Oxford or at Southside Vir- ginia Community College. Happiness is not a finish line but a matter of placing one foot in front of the other, knowing that the best one is not always forward. Most folks, said Abraham Lincoln, are about as happy as they make up their minds to be. Lincoln's wisdom easily ex- tends across more than a century and many miles of mountains and prairie, since human nature anytime and any- where is the same. We have folks here, not preppies or jocks or heads, and they are governed during their term on this lonely and cloud-patched globe by the ir- refutable natural laws of which Hampden-Sydney has nothing to do and yet has everything to do. For a select group of men for four youthful years this place is home. And so the freshman is awed, a rootless young man on the edge of an abyss for which he has no filler, no bridge, and no vision to see the other side. He knows only that he 230 db My may must find substance to fill the mammouth emptiness before him, and that the best way out is through. The Hampden- Sydney freshman is armed only with the flimsy tools he brought from home with which he must build himself a world to fill the aching void which stares at him in a chipped Venable bathroom mirror. He has his catalogue and he has new text- books and the blessings of his parents in whose care he drove through fraternity circle on a bright homecoming day when he was in high school. And he has things to do, but he finds time to be sad. On the fourth or fifth day he rests, and his new friends make him happy. He retums a sophomore, a wise fool who knows everything about his college and little about himself. He knows that certain aspects of the educational pro- cess are to be respected and others ig- nored, he knows that to be a fraternity man is awesome and he knows he will sometimes have to be alone. He knows where Morton Hall is and occasionally stares at a freshman with a strange look containing both contempt and empathy. He is happy when he drives past the Hampden-Sydney sign and he is joyous when he sees his friends. On his second night back he drives to the Red Lyon and eats later at the Truck Stop. The days weave together in a multi- scopic tapestry of alarm clocks and foot- ball and two tests in a row and a knock on the door. There is an awesome party Friday night and bloody Marys be- fore the game and sometimes when a lit- tle drunk there is a sad moment in the bathroom when the empty void retums, there is a moment cramming for the chemistry mid-term when a supreme commitment settles about the room and cheerfully rustles the pages of a well- wom notebook. He is too busy studying to notice, but he is happy. There is no revelation-filled instan- taneous flash when the bricks and green lawns become home but there it is, and he is here. And they've borrowed his soap again two doors down, but he is happy- Does it take a special kind of student to be happy at Hampden-Sydney? Yes, I believe it takes a junior with a 3.15 GPA who likes Boz Scaggs and drives a Fer- rari. I believe it takes a senior pre-med major with parents in Charlottesville and a girlfriend at Hollins. I believe it takes a freshman in Cushing who is friends with the janitor. And as the daily events and non- events blur by, interrupted by nothing very good or very bad, the substance of which our lives become, the junior- tumed-senior looks back on his college self and sees a man who was close to a great many people. Perhaps he still doesn't like Bill Deal and the Rhondellsg perhaps he never will make an A in Rus- sian history. even if he interviews every Czar: perhaps his money went for beer and was not given to the poor. But as a freshman he still knew where Morton Hall was. and he knew the joy of seeing his friends again. But what must he really think. the man who gave four of his most important years to a small group of brick buildings scattered widely apart on some 500 acres in the middle of a rural county in South- side Virginia? Was he truly happy. sitting around a keg with his fellows three stories up in Cushing. many miles from even a movie theater? Perhaps it does take a special kind of student to be happy here . . . Actually it takes two. The student who tailored his choice of colleges to suit his tastes. and the student who has tailored his tastes to suit his choice of colleges. Chameleons that we are. we can make ourselves a home here if it were not that way when we arrived. Some Hampden- Sydney men. I believe, were Hampden- Sydney men upon their arrival and parked their BMWs beside a new place which was already old and familiar. Others have re-shaped themselves. squeezed a bit here and there. to fit in but they too found a home. And without any real difficulty it is as Hampden-Sydney men that we all shall leave. treading new paths but always carrying with us a chunk of what was homejust as surely as if the Watkins Bell Tower were imbed- ded on our foreheads. And we'll always know we got off easy. because many college students who graduate must carry with them an almalmagation of steel buildings and steely stares and steel impersonel filing cabinets. acres and acres of steel. and the load is too much. They can never carry such a large school with them and so they select a floor of a building. or a remembered face or two. to bring with them the remainder of their lives. We are fortunate here. to have so little to take away and yet so much. Without trying to speak for every indi- vidual student. l think that we must be happy here. We must be content. to enjoy living so far away from women and civilization. Simplify, simplify. simplify! said Thoreau. and without going as far as Walden Pond. I think we have achieved that goal. Take away women and civilization and you have smoothed out your life: placing those elements at arm's length. where they can be recalled at your convenience and not at theirs. is a good way to spend four years of a life easier than you will ever find again. Before we are done. we will surely have our share of women and civilization. But today we have our books and we have our friends. Sometimes we have to forsake one for the other tso be it, neither is going anywherel. Sometimes we feel lost with one or the other tand so men everywhere cannot always be cer- tain of their pathl. It is the rare student. though. who does not regain his bearings and it is the rarer student still who gets lost between his dorm and Eggleston lib- rary. And if ever we do find him. lying in state in newmown grass after wearing in it endless circles, I am sure he will still have a smile on his face. For he did not die of women. and he did not die of civilization. Ran Henry. class of 1979, was a Ralph McGill Fellow for 1977-78 and editor of the award-winning student newspaper. The Tiger. -I4 4 , 1. Hr.. F . 4...- v' ' rf' H g-.fi A , . ' '51 ' ' -. 1' .-,- ie- V If-A--A, 9 44 .5-E. as- ' 231 ' -L.. - 'J i I S A 'llkh Al. :n - , , . 'Ag 5? 55 rc. 0 .mf ' x-1, t.L.:. ' 'f . fir , JE Ak ,SU '- E g , ,,,.A..u T T' I . aw, X I I ' r ' . v !'f ff: ,Q- 1 A ,I '. fn .FI: 1 'N F. - Y K lr c ji ze' Q I Q f I ,-. f I h . . AX NX: :f' .2'-G -L+- ' li f 1 'z' . ' Vi! ' I ' xx .. X ' . ui.-.If 1 ' k' 1 1 'I '15, xxx'-x u , P' 'V 1 ' ' ' rd 'I - t W ' fi 'L' .l - A-. .- ' ' If . 4 Q 'v f r H , X455 'X L' l s - ' . Pip, A i , A ,.. .. ,. A f 3.! 1 fm -' gd, In I' E X C, h , 1,1 1 . Q.: J 'qw 144 1 I i'f,,, .' V W V3 . , A r 1 I. .J 'sq' f t i 1 S -V , J 1 A . A ,, 1, . , A , , 5,2 ' , 1 .4 'L-1' 1 ' ff K' 'I' X-:--.2 :wg '43 -vs--4 - 1 f' . X 4, , V . J Q- 1sf'1f'!ga5.' 'wx I v'T I ' Qu Q A . 44. V UL, ' - Q 1' rf-1 f 1 .,,., 4 5. - N- V v, , , is Q v' F., . X Q 1 T ' . I ,, 7 ' I . I -4 . - 1 .. .X 1 . In , , -- -4... -1 Q7 Q A, :'?', 1-L ' -- - 7' , .5 1, . A ' 1 Q5 A' f , z' H . ' z 1: '1- 5 1, Q , M- . 1, s V - ' -1-1 ' A f 5 :H .I 2. , i. 3' Li V- . . Q,', ' 'Q . ' ' - ' v ff? ' if ' 'f 1 x J' f f f r... .ar , n -S-iq-,W '95 :..,:1n. Y ' - H -, 3 ,neun .figfu H -WY - Y' Aaokwaafa We Q12 97112126 fray Hampden-Sydney is a traditional all-male, liberal arts college which st- rives for excellence. Any institution which fits this description would cer- tainly be a heaven on earth to all those persons who want to be associated with it. My interest is neither with what Hampden-Sydney was nor is but rather with what it will become in the future. With a perspective of only four years' residence at the college, I can address the following remarks with the insight of an understanding functionary but an emotional outsider. My question is whether the description given above will be reasonable ten years from now. There is a measurable probability that it will not. Indeed, based on the average rate of change in social institutions, it is practi- cally certain that no institution will be able to remain unchanged over a period of a decade. The risk of resisting change. or worse yet, of making the wrong changes is that in ten years the most ac- curate description of Hampden-Sydney College might well read as follows: Hampden-Sydney is an old fashioned, sexist college which has an anachronistic and mediocre academic program. Which direction Hampden-Sydney will take is an open issue. It depends on decisions which must still be made, strategies still to be formed, messages still to be communicated, and programs still to be developed. In short, the future of the college, like the future of every in- stitution, depends on its strategic plan- ning and the quality of the implementa- tion of those plans. Strategic planning involves setting ob- jectives in various areas and determining what must be done now to achieve those objectives at some specified time in the future. Prior to identifying specific be- havioral objectives, it is necessary to an- swer the following questions: 1. What is the college now? 2. What should the college be? 3. What, in a general way, must be done to close the gap between what Hampden-Sydney is and what it should be? Closing the gap involves more than few well written speeches and glib remarks. Upon my arrival at Hampden-Sydney four years ago the most frequent topic of casual conversation was the lack of lead- 234 ership at the college. The same topic continues to have a wide currency today. My own interpretation is that this per- ceived lack of leadership stems from a lack of vision in establishing and com- municating a strategic planning process for the college. Against this background it is evident that the first priority should be a serious effort to reach a consensus in the community as to the long range goals and plans for the college. What is The College Now? Reflecting the first sentence of this essay the college can be described in four ways: lj traditional, 21 all-male, 37 liberal arts, 43 excellent. What does it mean to have tradition or to be traditional? Is a traditional educa- tional program simply a program which was appropriate in an earlier age, and if so, is it now relevant or useful to any- one? Does tradition mean a blind adher- ence to past practice or does tradition imply a bedrock foundation upon which to build? Perhaps having a tradition is a mixed blessing. Tradition might con- strain and obscure future courses of action. Hampden-Sydney is an all-male in- stitution. What does that mean? There are at least seventy-five women con- nected with the college including em- ployees' and students' wives, secretaries. nurses, faculty members, middle manag- ers, exchange students, Longwood stu- dents, and other special students. The college is not now and probably never was an all-male institution. It is true that almost all regular students are men. Why should this be so? Is there some ad- vantage to single-sex education, and, if so, is that the reason for being all male? There are disadvantages to remaining a primarily male institution. Since one's perception of women is developed in part by the quality and quantity of contact, perhaps Greek Weekend, nights in the dorm, and weekends at Sweet Briar are less useful for the average student than would be daily breakfast, competition in a greek or accounting course, or mem- bership on committees, What of the young men who will be required to work as subordinates to womeng will a view of women as sex objects or menials serve them well? The only well articulated rea- son for remaining all-male is that there appears to be a market for single-sex ed- ucation. VVhether the maintenance of a unique market strategy is sufficient reason to exclude women as regular students is a question that must be left to others. It is enough to point out that there are very real educational costs to that stretegy. Liberal arts seems to mean whatever we want it to mean. While there is the appearance of broad-ranging agreement on the meaning of liberal arts, this appa- rent agreement collapses on most spe- cific questions. Between students and faculty there is practically no discussion on this subject. Among the faculty the range of difference is so great that a common ground is virtually impossible to find. I believe that the confusion about the liberal arts arises from a fundamental misconception. At Hampden-Sydney, education - and consequently the lib- eral arts - is defined in terms of curricu- lum, courses, and professors rather than in terms of values, ideals, and analytical skills. Eventually, those values, ideals, and analytical skills which constitute the substance of an education must be identified. But as long as the discussion centers on who can teach English com- positon and whether sociology, business, anthropology, or the performing arts are proper,' subjects, no progress can be made. The final characteristic of Hampden- Sydney is that it strives for excellence. To be excellent means to be first class, superior, or eminently good. In what way is Hampden-Sydney striving to be first class? Perhaps excellence would be achieved with intellectual distinction, good citizenship, affability, is some combination of these. Should you maximize or optimize? Are the faculty and students willing to live the hard life of serious intellectual activity? Should they be willing? Are the faculty striving for excellence in teaching or research? What should students and faculty to do to become excellent? No one seems to know. So, in what sense is Hampden- Sydney striving for excellence? Perhaps the sum is greater than the parts. If so, there must be some observable outcome which can be described as excellent. To date, no one has been able to tell me what to look for to see either excellence or a striving for excellence. So where is the college? At present there is a healthy tradition but the college probably is not and should not be tradi- tional. The all-male designation is more a public relations scheme than a reality. Whether the liberal arts exist at Hampden-Sydney is more of a defini- tional than substantive question. Cer- tainly there is no agreement here on what the liberal arts are. Finally, excellence is at best an elusive notion. Do not be discouraged by this assess- ment. There is nothing sacred about being traditional, inherently healthy about being all-male. superior about lib- eral arts, or inevitable about being excel- lent. What Should the College Be? Over the time span I have in mind fi.e.. about a decade! the college can become almost anything it chooses. Almost any- thing excludes however certain things. The college probably cannot be all-male even if it maintains the present minimal involvement of women. The college probably cannot become excellent, but great improvements in student. faculty. and administrative performance are pos- sible. What the college can do is continue to build, modernize, and develop within the best of the traditional ideals of Hampden-Sydney. This is not going to be an easy task. To work with the best traditions requires that the inferior or outmoded ones be discarded. Someone must decide which are useful and which are useless. Who will perform this task? If the direction of the college is to be goal-oriented and well-directed in the fu- ture, then objectives must be established in a whole range of areas. Consider these aspects of college activity: - Faculty development - Expected student performance - Alumni relations - Physical facilities - Business affairs -- Fund-raising - Community cultural development - Fraternity activities - Academic program - Athletics - Student recruiting Each of these activities - and probably many more - must be thought through clearly. Who is to perform this gargan- tuan task? When will it be done? How can the community be involved? A ra- tional attempt to understand each of these areas is absolutely essential. The time to do it is now, not later. Do not be concemed that all these things must be done. The leadership in every institution should be addressing is- sues like these on a continuing basis. What ought to be a concern is that at Hampden-Sydney no one seems to ac- cept responsibility in many of these areas. As a suggestion of the type of analysis required, consider the following observa- tions on the liberal arts as a basis for further development of the academic program. The following comments do not necessarily form either the correct or the only plausible assessment possible. What is intended is an outline of one of several plausible assessments of the lib- eral arts: The Liberal Arts Liberal means free, and the objective of liberal education ought to be to free outselves from our narrow experiences. Such a study ought to have as its major objective an understanding of the en- vironmental forces in the world. This understanding facilitates our efforts to maximize our own well-being and that of the community as a whole. The en- vironmental forces which constantly in- fluence mankind seem to be of five types: biological, psychological, material culture. non-material culture, and natu- ral resources. These five forces encircle the individual and at the same time direct and constrain his activity. The direction and constraint are not completely limit- ing, because the individual has the capac- ity to change the very stmcture of the environment. My own view is that a liberal arts edu- cation should include the study of these five environmental forces within a histor- ical context. Structuring a program of study is largely a matter of fixing the re- lative emphasis on the five environmen- tal forces. The natural sciences emphasis biological and natural resources while the humanities are almost entirely li- mited to the non-material culture. A serious study of the material culture could include architecture,-engineering, sculpture, and computer technology. Business administration tends to be most interested in, but not limited to, the psychological and material culture. It should be apparent that the critical matter in understanding the liberal arts is not the name of the subject so much as the approach. As long as the objective is understanding the world, the mechanism is relatively unimportant. So a wide range of approaches should be consistent with truly liberal education. Hampden- Sydney has tended to encourage studies in the natural sciences and humanities to the denigration of the social sciences. This is of course acceptable as long as it is realized that this strategy leaves gaps in a proper liberal,' understanding of the world. The Summing Up This essay began with the ideal public relations statement about Hampden- Sydney. It was observed that, in fact, this statement is not a realistic view of the present status of the college. A reasonable future can be con- structed on the best of past tradition and oriented toward rational, attainable go- als. Such a future is plausible in an envi- ronment of limited resources only if leadership is provided in the strategic planning process. Strategic planning de- pends on knowing where you are, where you want to go, and how you intend to get there. To know these three things in a functional way is a time-consuming and difficult task. The final questions are whether the re- quisite leadership is available and whether the effort will be forthcoming? The answer to both of these questions is yes, but . . . Yes, the leadership is available in an abstract sense. However, even the best potential leader needs fol- lowers. Whatever lack there has been in leadership in the recent past has been exceeded by a lack of good followership. Followership requires that people be wil- ling to serve loyally and supportively by contributing constructive rather than obstructive criticism. Being a follower presupposes that there will be a leader to follow. I believe that the necessary lead- ers and followers are in place at Hampden-Sydney. IfI am correct, then all that is needed is performance from both groups. Recognition of the need for perfor- mance will lead to stragic planning fol- lowed by implementation. Then Hampden-Sydney will become whatever is wanted. A lack of performance will lead to the inevitable result: Hampden-Sydney will become an old fashioned, sexist college with an anac- hronistic and mediocre academic educa- tion. u The choice is yours but the options are clear. Dr. Francis J. Spreng was an Assistant Professor of Economics and Management at Hampden-Sydney College during the 1977-78 school year. 235 's ,590 .-ggef 53 s,?1,'.,. Wuwfg . 'AW' -E , 1: I I N Am fs- r 1 'U 1 'Z mr ll Pi' mf 'SW x Q Lk M I . :D ' 5 z-. W- X0 C Q i Q.. ya , -- SM K, X V. if fra -,c!3-f:51f':.- --Ex il., , , .. 'fEf.'Ggv.: ' A-A. val. w .fi ' wi , 1 in I , Q . I ,DN-5 714 1-fs. 91-my .Mx , gr' 5-., N f- YQ 'fr f A at ,,, .- '. x ,f in-.. A 4 .rx-uv--1v ' hn ,A-mls , - -V Y K . ' .'-1 '41 ' , , , KK! 1 -., -,I Q+Mww 4'w34 x'lk wwf .4 -A -I r-,A va ' -1--Frm f T5 ,.1 fl . v 'Nh' V 3 Wh , ., , ' , H--fr. ,. ,ffgql-,-ga QM. ,. sk '1' --+'v-- ':,u'gk' k ' ' 1' X Arfxk- , Q 1 Wx- ... , F' wr., ', U.,- ,xfif Y ., '4 'I .VPU 4' ri-.'r 'Q x f -fu-. .51 'QEEEEE5 grip zz zz-.vi fumsusguf !li!'En5'f ..,-ffff 'n l pw!nm'fe'6 fl - -Q gl ' . .V 1.3: ' 13129 - V ' 1 4 M W ,. '-grqi' - ' j A .7mam 764226 f7Z077ZQ'45Tf Jg0f7Z0 Too much is made of the supposed unreality', of the academic community. Historically, the uni- versity - like the church - has been protected from the control and intrusions of the civil au- thorities. This protection for centuries has allowed the free exchange of ideas and unrestricted de- velopment ofthe human intellect. The greater the isolation from the real world, the greater the op- portunity for uninterrupted pursuit of learning for its own sake. It was in the isolated monasteries of the middle ages that survived the basis of the prac- tical knowledge ofthe Renaissance. Because students will not enthusiastically accept the life of scholarly monks, they have forced col- leges and universities to set aside social isolation and become involved',. Students want to be taught to solve social dilemna, to understand politi- cal systems, to rear children, to invest their portfolio, and to play a good game of tennis. The demand is not only for academic credit for the ac- quisition of practical knowledge but for concurrent experimental learning. What is usually overlooked by most students is that if one is possessed of a well-developed intellect - the goal of the liberal arts - a knowledge of the particulars is unimpor- tant, and most experimental learning is just so much make believe. It is for this reason that the lib- eral - the liberating - arts shall always be impor- tant in a free society. The degree of importance is directly related to the value the society places upon individuality, truth, and beauty. If a liberal arts ed- ucation is not marketable today, that is a sad commentary on our society. The College does not strive to teach men to muddle through but at- tempts to educate innovators and progressive think- ers who will refuse to accept mediocrity and pro- vide the impetus for positive change. Hampden-Sydney has attempted to retain much of the isolation of a traditional academic communi- ty, and I do not believe that to be detremental to the educational program. The location of the col- lege is ideal for the student - although it can be 238 hard at times on those of us who live here year round. It is true that students at urban universities have access to museums, gallerys, and theatres, but those students who take advantage of such at- tractions are few. It is true that larger and more heavily endowed colleges have better facilities than Hampden-Sydneyg this may be inconvenient to students but not a handicap. There is more than enough at this college to learn and to experience than most of our students can absorb in four years. The great tragedy is that too many students spend a significant portion of their four years at Hampden-Sydney somewhere else in pursuit of women, beer, and amusement. When it is all over, much of the opportunity for a unique experience is lost. And this is a unique experience - here is beauty, honesty, friendship, tranquility - time to think, to reflect, to consider. Because it is unique, comparison with other colleges and universities is pointless. There is much we can learn from others, but others can learn from us: there are innovations and improvements to be made, but the basic ex- perience here is singularly ours and must be pro- tected from others and occasionally from ourse- lves. The typical Hampden-Sydney student does not really understand what he has here. He usually en- joys the experience - some, too few, appreciate the opportunity - but it is not until you arrive in the real world that you understand. The young men who are really happy at Hampden-Sydney are those who do appreciate and take in all that this en- vironment and educational experience have to of- fer. They are intelligent, thoughtful, and honest with themselves and others. The rest are amused, not happy. Without complacence and with a constant desire to improve, we can nevertheless take a certain pride in what we are. Seniors will remember their years here with pride and affection. Under- classmen should savor these days: they will not come again. Mr. Thomas H. Shomo was the acting Dean of Students and the Director of Financial Aid at Hampden-Sydney College during the 1977-78 academic year. Mr. Shomo is an alumnus of the college, graduating in the class of 1969. Wear .glam tic KOJIHX6 Qgtlflflfy, .YQV I want to tell you that nothing in my life has made me as proud as the opportunity to serve this grand old college. To return to Virginia to live and work in a small college is a dream I have cherished for many years. I seek your support. I ask for your patience - for I have much to learn - I solicit your criticism. knowing that it will be excited by your abiding love of Hampden-Sydney and your fierce loyalty to the Col- lege - and I shall hope to earn your friendship. We are going to have a great year together. and I hope you will forgive my quoting a famous and controversial southern gentleman, an American president. in saying You can depend on it. We are going to work hard. we are going to play hard . . . we are going to squeeze our lives here like a sponge. . . . I want to talk for a little while about two things: vision and tolerance. There is a text in the Old Testament which is fitting to our purpose: Behold, here cometh the dreamer ! Let us slay him! We will see what happens to his dream. I hope each of you has a dream - a vision - and I hope every one of you understands that this College lives to help you begin the long process toward the realization of that vision. Moreover, Hampden-Sydney exists to assure that in the pur- suit of that dream each of you shall be granted the nurture. the understanding. and the active tolerance of the rest of us as you prepare yourselves for your lives after you leave us. Let the dreamer work out his vision for himself. let the rest of us work to assure he can do this, and let him live to see his dream fulfilled. A small college is a community of learners and teachers. and a community is simply a unit of society in which the ac- tions of each somehow touch and influence those of all. We do not work in isolation from each other. The dreamer must guard his private vision but he must understand that the most reclusive scholar on this campus is a member of the college: his contributions to the tone oflife at Hampden-Sydney are as vital to our enterprise as those of its most involved members. Yet I urge all of you to listen to your own drummers. to re- sist the pressure of habit, fashion, custom - when those pressures combine las they often do in small communitiesl to steal you from your private dreams, and to thwart them. I ask you always to work to distinguish what is fundamental to your fulfillment as scholars and men from what is superficial, and eccentric to that fulfillment. At the same time. I remind you that education is part of life, not preparation for life: that life, as someone said, is too often something that happens while you are making plans: and that, finally, as the poet Bion said, when small boys throw rocks at frogs they do so in sport: but when the frogs die, it is in earnest. Let your lives here be full and rich and happy: do not let the muderous, and usually self-imposed. pressures of ambition thwart your de- sires for solitude, regeneration, and calm. Above all. cherish and learn to admire him whose instincts and interests are al- together different from your own. You may feel some unbid- den impulse to make 'sport of him, but when the thin flame of his dream goes out, it goes out in earnest. You are in college for two reasons. To learn to think better, and to leam to live productively in a community. Should you succeed in both, and I believe you will, you will be prepared for your professional lives - as doctors and ministers and business men. diplomats and attorneys, artists. architects, and scholars. These will be the lives of service to other com- munities: Lives in which you welcome and discharge your re- sponsibilities as gentlemen. lives which are happy and ful- filled. To say that you are in college to learn to think better is perhaps a tart. bitten-off way of expressing a fundamental purpose of education. It is the presumption of those who work to educate others that those they guide are capable of learning. It is the presumption of those who teach in a college dedicated to the pursuit of excellence in liberal studies that those studies have a time-worn and proved fitness for prepar- ing their students to think better: by this we mean nothing more than that you learn to assemble evidence patiently and thoroughly before you make decisions and judgements: that you learn courageously to uphold those decisions and judge- ments: that you be prepared to argue them eloquently: that your minds be free of prejudice: that you learn to appreciate arguments and points-of-view opposed to your own, for in them is often more truth than in your own: and that you will esteem both the lifelong cultivation of mind and the gift of that mind. and the character that sustains it, and the willing- ness to place these at the service of others. as your highest calling: finally that the heart has its reasons which the mind cannot comprehend. . . . I want you to be as proud of this College as it is possi- ble to be proud of anything. and I want your pride to be a liv- ing force which informs your work and your leisure when you are here and when you are home. Quite incidentally, it is this as much as anything which is going to bring to our campus succeeding generations of Hampden-Sydney students. Charac- ter will continue to be a principle criterion of selection and admission to the College - a criterion, in my view - worth all the College Board tests ever prepared or administered by some crackpot in Princeton: and character will continue to be a principle criterion of success for those admitted as students. Your experience here should be bracing, but it should not be icy. It is a truism that education largely fulfills its purposes by indirection: that the nights you spend together talking, your experience at parties, your participation in sport -that from these things you will often learn things as valuable as those you learn in the classroom and indeed out of books. Books, said Emerson, hare for the scholar's idle hours. Do not take Emerson too seriously, and certainly do not wrench his sentence utterly out of context, but think about that. . . . . Finally, let us affirm . . . our pride in the College, our pleasure in this reassembly of our scattered members, and our determination to make the new year - our two-hundreth and second - a year whose enterprise and success will be worthy of vision, the unthwarted dream, of those who lived and worked here in the College's first year. We are strong, we are bound together in a common purpose, guided by princi- ples we hold in common. Josiah Bunting, III is the thirtieth President of Hampden-Sydney College. He will be inaugurated as such in the Fall of 1978. The above article is a reprint of excerpts of his Opening Convocation speech. 239 T' ' ef-. - , f - - --4 Y ... ' , I, H. ' K- fxf1,+qHf jg ,- V5p4 - Flip, -'L'fgQ i ff' qp 4 V uk ,M , V 141.5 5 V , ,Q M3 ,gm Mi, ,A ti: . ,Q ' - ' -., . xi .:' 1 +3 1 18' -. ' W: ' s d . ir ' - 1 'Q 5 ' Q 7-' '.g - , . qf ,f T 'I wgff-f ,. I 3-N-.-,.,-P, ., '- ',, H -'.. 'hae -iy, - V u nl I, - f 5AQ :e 1 , ,. yu, . ,- ,ge-Cgswl' 1: . '73 Af, N V' ..., A ' , V? Q' A, i 'ik - I! 1 A S . 1 J.-1 I. J' A. . fe 1 15,-f.qV.-f..a in - , A- ,,b, ,A. ,jf 51. 4' p.q.,,. 'U' ' 1 - ' Ab: ' - - '5fk' -.,-f -4 U . ' 9 ' ' y , ' I . Q X ' x,l,'Af4 1' - 'gg L 'S Q. 5' 5 Q 1 f 0 f v J 4 5 ...Q ., ,. Aviv NJ gs.: ,,,,.,-ty N. 5 . -Ek ,V 5 ,, I ....,r., ' 4 sn A ., i C 1: 1. L.-,ti . 1 A X, 6 1 :Iii J A e4. 4 .J A Y .Q f ' I xp,'a A . A -' O ' ' r' L '5 J .. ' , ,Q , Q .,-., --,--., A y ., W MOM-M, . Wy- ri? , Vg, f , A ,gi ,f+r,,,.y' . ,gy 1 n Mfr 5 wp ' rf- - ' 'V ' 4 4' ' I 4, - . , .,1f --- ff'-1gj! ! 'Y .ff is . ' 4 . '- . ' 'V 5: B A7 ' . fjigfggfif- P ? ' i . ,,,,:,,m..-.V.:f2f ' , 'Y-'WH' I ,,,. ,KH f-'- .b iii., A WA A I .318 ,,, .. F . v r , x n I W, l 3 'r I ,-- 'Y . X SAF! Ar: if ' ? qv 8 , x, 40 T 1 . - , ,gr 1Q!.i,-4.ll pa Q K Il IQ '....'-..,!l nap fi! .... '1' -,.v Z vi if 3 -.,-D x. Qmjfdwafgdzcaabm J-f-ff f-ww ,. .,--1'-1 - ti If The governing principle of un- dergraduate education must be distinguished from the governing principle of graduate education. Graduate education aims at pro- viding excellence through specialization. That specialization is dependent upon a proper educa- tional foundation. This prepara- tory course of study. undergradu- ate education, will have hopefully provided guidance for what is truly important and Worthy ad- vanced study. Yet undergraduate education is more than simply a preparation for further profes- sional or graduate study, it is a 3 ,J liberal education in itself. Liberal education originally meant the education of free men and was intended to distinguish the free man from the enslaved man. The latter is unable to make proper choices since decisions are either impaired by birth or by lack of proper cultivation. Ultimately a liberal education is a preparation for assuming one's respon- sibilities as a man and as a citizen. One is personally responsible for guiding himself while publicly, as a citizen, he must rule and be ruled in turn. The fulfillment of personal and public duties re- quires the making of proper choices. and this is dependent in turn upon the development of man's moral and intellectual faculties which are involved in de- liberation. When deliberating on future courses of action. whether private or public. men must con- front accepted opinions and judge their merits. In such deliberations the liberally educated man does not slavishly follow popular opin- ion, but attempts to determine the true course. The goal is to replace opinion with truth. Yet such knowledge probably is inaccessi- ble. A more sober expectation is to anticipate an ascent from opin- ion to perfected but still imperfect understanding. The practical need for a liberal education is as applicable today as for earlier generations. Democ- racy rests on the principle that all men have an equal opportunity to express their preferences on can- didates or policies as reflected in the principle of one man - one vote . The workings of democ- racy then reflect the wisdom or lack of wisdom of such prefer- ences. Poor leadership and the choice of poor policy results in de- fective government while en- lightened leadership and wise pol- icy results in proper government. A democracy, consequently, is dependent for its well-being upon the ability of its citizens to choose wisely, and this is dependent upon education. Benefits to the individual from a liberal education are far greater than the potential economic and material rewards accompanying a degree. Even these benefits must be managed and directed toward a higher end. Confronted with the choice of many objectives in life. an individual must have some ap- preciation of the worthwhileness of each so that he can be dis- criminating in the exercise of his energy and resources. What is re- quired is a standard or a means by which one can measure the impor- tance of events. people. objec- tives. and desires. Most people entering a univer- sity have not been exposed to a variety of claims of religion. phi- losophy. and the city. Among serious men of previous genera- tions, the most compelling ques- tion was to resolve or at least un- derstand the competing claims as to the proper way of life. The pur- pose of liberal education is not to settle the issue nor to indoctrinate the student. but to identify the dif- ferent perspectives on these ques- tions. In the twentieth century, the task is further complicated by the modern contention that all ways of life are equal: or that if they are not equal, the task of dis- tinguishing the higher from the lower is impossible as this in- volves a question of value and not of fact . Relativism and his- toricism of the twentieth century must also be given its proper hear- ing. ' To charactierize liberal educa- tion as the presentation and eluci- dation of the fundamental princi- ples of man and the universe is to remind us that such principles and their pursuit trancend any specific discipline within a university. The departmentalization of the academy is a reflection of specialization or the concentra- tion on a part of what is to be studied. Yet each of the discip- lines through the assumptions which define and guide it makes a statement as to the proper in- terpretation of responsibility of the university or college to examine the adequacy of these as- sumptions. A curriculum must be designed to emphasize the unity of know- ledge, in contrast to the increased specialization and division char- acteristic of most undergraduate programs. Through careful study of the highest statements concern- ing the first principles of things in the proper life for man, the stu- dent is exposed to the assump- tions and substance of their argu- ments. The writings of Plato, Aristotle, the Bible, Bacon, Machiavelli, Hobbes, Locke, Adam Smith, Rousseau, Newton, Hegel. Nietzsche, Freud, and Marx, to mention only a few, con- tain profound reflections on the permanent questions. Moreover, the authors of these Great Books are also the founders of the mod- ern disciplines. An undergraduate program emphasizing the impor- tance of permanent questions common to all disciplines can utilize the specialized training of its faculty. Dr. Joseph E. Goldberg is an Assistant Professor of Govemment and Foreign Aiiajrs at Hampden-Sydney: He is the 1978 recipient of The Cabell Award for outstanding teaching. 243 YR 4 A -Y Qt. ,Q Q .,.V 1 UT, ,,,4,. ,- +I A Q QQ 3.41 ,.,Qy.5iQ .,.. Q- wx.. . un F U I-:Q-Q,iQA Q..- Q-fi - T'Y' 'X 5 , .. Q QQ,. Q Q .. .f Q. A - - - . , , - :.,, ,, Q Q , . -1-, Q- V, I Z . 'n-,JQQ-J .. .---f --,'-if ,. . 1' lt. ,:w1x.4....ae 4 'J ffl-i.f L., fi- - V, .4 . . Q wk gg Jr. L. A,,-.-Q 4-If . Q- QQ, Q 4 - ':..:..'- 'ff13,- ,A , f . if '-' ' Q i5t'i - ', :':.',, '5'44'7lAi: '4 '.. f Q my ..,q'.QQpgf,Sw f jf 1 -- 1- v-- - x,-1 - 41.90 , , 4L. ' ll- -x fx S-,, J9aQ.1 . Q I , S , 1- :E A - Q, K 1' gl' -, s ' .Q 1 , 4.3 4. f--Q Q D . f.--:Alf . i Q nr- sg Q '4,-2 -' Q - l QA .M s i 4 Vi ....'1 y L.- .x. Q . -u an r F 531-'-J ,fl N A -1 , V91 NW X ' ' i----'V F -' - 5 A .'Xr .,. 3 -1' Q, . ,, ., 5 Q :Q-P M --Q - -W' 1 F' 'Pix 5 IA 33' -FW' 5 - ' ,.f,,- in IV. mi. if 1 P F ff.v 4 ' 1 A ' ' 1 A' , 7 f ' M ',.l I-1 fyfaycmkltefm dllwdflllbfaj Q04 .QEIZIZKIL On May 14 you graduate from Hampden-Sydney. For many of you this is a time of reminiscence and nostalgia falready you're thinking like an alum- nuslb. For many it is a time of anticipa- tion and challenge as you look forward to desired career or graduate school goals. For others in your class. May 14 signals an anxious period in your life as you re- luctantly confront the unknown. and even unwelcome future. For all of you in the Class of 1978. however, graduation marks a transition. Yet May 14, 1978 is not a date that sepa- rates your life into two distinct worlds of college and work. What you have ex- perienced at Hampden-Sydney will be forever connected to your future careers and lives. I would like to share with you some thoughts about life X career plan- ning and why I feel that your Hampden- Sydney experience will serve you well. Many of you land your parentsj are concerned about your futures. Among the comments I hear from students and parents: I've hear liberal arts graduates can't get good jobsf' We've spent 525.000 putting you through college. We're counting on you to show us this money wasn't wasted. You need to find one good career field and stay with it. We don't want you job-hopping. I went to a liberal arts college for four years - what do I have to offer an em- ployer'? In short, how can a member of the Class of 1978 effectively connect these two separate worlds - Hampden- Sydney College and the world of work? First, let me offer statistics to dispell a few misconceptions. If you are typical of most American 21-year-olds, you will taccording to the U.S. Department of Laborj change jobs 8-12 times during your working lifetime. You will also change career fields 3-5 times. In addi- tion, there currently exist in this country 246 close to 30.000 differentjob titles. These figures suggest that you are living.in a world in which change is a constant tonly a liberal arts graduate could write that sentencej. Are you as a liberal arts graduate equipped to meet this world of change? Yes, I feel you are uniquely prepared. and this opinion is shared by alumni, employers, and leaders. Last year's H-SC seniors represent a good example of how these two sepa- rate worlds can be connected. Fifty- one percent 61617 of the 128 respondents to our survey are in graduate school. preparing for various vocations. In- cluded in this group are students in med- ical, dental. and pharmacy school 4163: law school 1153: business school CSJQ and graduate psychology programs 185. Also many students in last year's senior class landed jobs in business, including insur- ance 163. sales 161, banking 151, manage- ment trainees 131. and real estate 121. Five are teaching. Among the job titles claimed by the class of 1977 are appraiser. hospital ad- ministrative intern. legal assistant, sales manager, stock broker, math teacher. mental health worker. insurance agent. bank trainee, and instructor for retarded adults. Over the years. Hampden-Sydney graduates have enjoyed similar career success in the fileds of law. medicine. business, and education. Furthermore. many of these alumni link their occupa- tional success to Hampden-Sydney's lib- eral ans education. Following are repre- sentative comments from a recent alumni survey asking How has you experience at H-SC helped prepare you for your work? I leamed how to get along with all types of people Uames S. Shelton '63, Economics X Govemment and Foreign Affairs, Business Managerl. By leaming how to discipline myself and set goals tJohn Middleton '76, His- tory, Life Insurancej. The broad-based academic and cultural-philosophical background was a good foundation for MCV', C.I.C. Buston '58, Biology ! Chemistry, Physicianl. The atmosphere and living condi- tions at Hampden-Sydney make you flexible CJ.P. McGuire Boyd '64, Math, Municipal Bond Traderl. Ability to handle the English lan- guage and think logically CRichard Manson '65, History!Government and Foreign Affairs, Attorneyj. Hampden-Sydney instills in a person a code of conduct that he carries into the business world CR. Stedman Oakley, Jr. '66, President, home furnishings compa- nyj. The liberal arts education and envi- ronment at Hampden-Sydney laid a foundation for me to become a business leader. In my experiences I have seen a number of very capable and bright peo- ple with specialized educational backgrounds fail in leadership roles. Hampden-Sydney's tradition of excel- lence certainly has its impact on me CNorwood H. Davis, Jr. '63, Executive Vice President, Blue Cross of Virginial. The positive link between an under- graduate liberal arts experience and the world of work is further articulated by leading U.S. executives. When these leaders were asked to list qualities they seek in a business executive, narrow vo- cational skills were conspicuously absent from their responses: ' Honesty. candor. good judgement, intelligence, imagination, and the ability to write clear. concise memos. 'I also want team players tHenry Ford, Chairman, Ford Motor Companyl. A conceptual person, one who seeks to bring new approaches to problem- solving. as opposed to a consensus indi- vidual who goes to more traditional sources for answers CJ. Paul Stricht, President, R.J. Reynolds Industriesj. I look for an individual with broad in- - lil I .Ji if terests. Great changes are taking place around us and a broad, emcompassing overview is more pertinent today than narrow specialization LC. Peter McColough, Chairman, Xerox Corpora- tionj. The skills and qualities cited above certainly cannot be guaranteed by a H-SC liberal arts education. What can be guaranteed is exposure to these qualities through four years of life in an environ- ment that promotes and supports these broad-based transferable skills. Leaming nu:-11159. . 1 sites for these skills might include the philosophy classroom tproblem-solving skillsl, the Tiger twriting skillsl. the la- crosse field tteam workb. the fire de- partment tworking under pressurel, the fraternity ttolerance for the views of othersb. or the science laboratory tinves- tigative skillsj. In a sense. then. each of you has ex- perienced at Hampden-Sydney every- thing you will do. You have analyzed. led, planned and organized. concep- tualized, listened. communicated, writ- ten. persuaded. worked independently and as part of a team. worked under pressure of deadlines, created, combined ideas with manipulative skills, reasoned numerically, developed and im- plemented goals. served others, iden- tified and acted out moral issues, and made decisions. You have performed these skills through your academic program, extra- curricular activities, summer jobs, vol- unteer experiences. and hobbies. Those activities you enjoyed and in which you performed well may in fact be leading you down a particular career path. Knowing which of the liberal arts skills you have acquired and which you enjoy is an important first step in implementing an effective career choice. All this is fine. you may say, but how do you find that first job? Isn't being a liberal arts graduate a handicap? Yes, to a certain extent this is true. You may have more problems landing your first job than your counterpart with more specialized training te.g. the accountant. engineer. or computer expertb. You will. to be sure, have to sell yourself and your skills to the employer. and the burden will be on you to demonstrate how your liberal arts background will match the employer's needs. Despite this initial dif- ficulty. most national studies indicate that the liberal arts graduates wind up being better satisfied with their lives and often better paid. Over the long run tthrough 8-l2job changesl. you will ben- efit greatly from your four years at Hampden-Sydney College. So savor the moment of your gradua- tion. Reflect fondly on your four years at Hampden-Sydney. Remember the fun. the hard work. the many challenges. And, as you face difficult career choices and job searches. remember the bridge that connects the promising world of your future with your Hampden-Sydney liberal arts education. Richard S, Benner is the Director of the Center for Counseling and Career Planning. His undergraduate studies were at Amherst College, a small liberal arts college in Amherst, Mass. 247 3: g l vxq., if f72'. 1M e..'-4 4' .ar ' 4. :ff f VWU' ' H-. V V -fy-vi' ' ' K Q .. . ' M, .Q-'K A -4. Ll -. ,xx .. - -.L.....-.,.. - ' Q b, 4. r -an-:2:...nf uP.:.n:. .eg ,-. ., - 4 4- 4v M..-3 ' .TV , --.4--twat.. , .. ni.. .-.... Nunn- --..,. . 4 4 A Q- , -,-- 1 1' n , N ' ., 4. ' - 'vi - fu. . 1 'T ' ..s,,-' . nfl, 1 , 1 ' 'Z , 'eq'-7 fl' . -.1 - ' ...-.,'- pg, -. j. '- v . A D np- -. ws., '-1- ,.,:,,,:,:,5,V vt-gg ' 4 ' 5-WFQA' '-.fa -. Q ul, - .- Vg., . , .. V - - , SN, , N , 1 ,f.k.l , . ,IHA fm , ' - - , ,Q--.. - . ' 1 -.. A, an -I -. fn bra. V f.-Y' ,fgfff PTE: p . -Q - g.:f- Y W V , 13- -,,f.f::1.,...f. ,Q P- Q' -Q mg L as W ' '-f 'iw..-55354- v ' - -A ..g- W Hn, . ' W Wg- L 75-- f J: .2-fini.: 454- . A -..... -.' .y- .r, o '..P.' r ,- d V-...ng r, . osx! .- -Q. 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