Hampden Sydney College - Kaleidoscope Yearbook (Hampden Sydney, VA)
- Class of 1981
Page 1 of 200
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
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Text from Pages 1 - 200 of the 1981 volume:
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' , v-v ' an '50 v a x'-LQ.-uf y- A' 4. In I ' , , , - . . 1 I q,' 4- ' .11 AF: ' ..t,,..s' - N J-xl-ff ' ' ' .I 8 'Q ' ,Z - fr.. ' Q., Y.Q4 ,:,,,., .. . ,. ..' . vv, 1,53 '.. - ' A nk '-.1 '-X . . .J I' 'xf.lj.o'. K 7. 57:1 fl ,A'r 1. lr ffuglg '. . ' 4'. ', -. f .. .I . - .. ' ' f'Vl'u 6.17.1 V I ' 2 ' an .1 :' , . ' .' r . H .ly 9, . v , I Y.: . I-'VZ' 5 1 ' 'J..'s'-. f 4 1 ..,, .0 -- 1 . I I. !.,,f11 . I' . INV- ny 'J' ','-' x sv .'u 'll ,'.1- -A 1, Mm - , .1 . tx c. Ax'.fQL'. I v- t 11.15 ja, N-f , 4 - l . Q , V I, , .- '.,' . 'Y 5 .'- . ' '. A yffyifp fx: ,' 'n 1 N . f, - , on 4 - . , ', ' . . 5 F yr, . I- 'I .' ,,. . , U yu, .', . . - 4 A 1 3FNh, , x'12i2ln: ' ' l. A 1 urs I 'Mr :ni Q 'ttf' .A P. . . li 'p.-W ex ,I ' If ,, ,- u'4,s.f 'af S xl: 'r JH JL, ,N . 'A L I' v ,r v ,L.. HJ, . 4 - .x 1 I ' ' '. uw . f+- 3'i:..1, -, . .R - ... A' ' 4 D I YK.:-,x.f.Ql'L. 'l ' . .1 vu'-' 'I I . wif' V 'fl H2 ' 1 I., 'V W ',, . X , ,-- 'f. . 'A - Y ,ad 'aw .,. . I '71fl .1- ff' ,- , -. . . - .o' - xl ' 19 qi '.. ' z':f'J.A' ' T! Pjj,,,' r s I , Ag. -., n I x .- . fc .LJ , ,. ' ,.. - - ' . .l:...'. t .i ,nq ' ' .' f' 'li' s . '.3. -f -7 .J A '.,n' gt! ... vs . , i..-5.11. r , 1. r.. xg. ln' 'I .' N' : , 4 . 'U 'li' ll. . wg ' . y . . 'I . . - 1 1 W' . 1 .- , - F 1 I . . ' 1 ,, . ,,.,- 1 1 . L 1 l ' . r e ,Q Ol. 'QQ P' if I Y .T -1 OJQ 'I' 'w. g . 1 THE OFFICIALTM PRE PP Kaleidoscope 1981, the Hampden-Sydney Yearbook INTRODUCED BY - Lisa Birnbach WRITERS Phil Beard Rick Harris Sheppard Haw Richard McClintock Overton McGehee Chuck lVIcPhillips Tom Robinson joel Sweet Jil Womack PHOTOGRAPHY Mike Chevalier Chuck Pritchett Ron Stern Hampden-Sydney Photographic Service ILLUSTRATIONS Deborah McClintock 1981 HAMPDEN-SYDNEY COLLEGE THE OFFICIALW PREPPY YEARBOOK IMLEIDOSCOPE 1981 The Yearbook of Hampden-Sydney College Volume LXXXV 1984 by The Hampden-Sydney College Board of Publications Of this book 1000 copies were printed. This is No. U ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Quotations from and allusions to THE OFFICIAIJM PREPPY HANDBOOK, edited by Lisa Birnbach, are used with the gracious permission of The Workman Publishing Company, l West 39th Street, New York, New York 10018. Our special appreciation to Peter Workman for his patience and trust in letting us do thisg to Paul Hanson, whose design of the Handbook inspired usg and to Lisa herself for her approval and introduction. D.D. H-SC L.B. AMICAE SVAE To Sean G9 Mike Without whom this book would not have been possible. AN UN SOLICITED TESTIMONIAL lillilitlfgf C7 37 . ILLCM -Anne, age 4. HAMPDEN-SYDNEY KALEIDOSC IOPE 1981 CONTENTS Introduction . . .... 5 Living COIOI' ill . , . , , Death Valley ............ 38 FH-W1 PAR 1 A-Bt: sPoR'1's, PERRIER CHAAPTER I -w.-x'I'ER. ce s.xI.IsBt 'RI' s'1'EAR. Sports .................. . -10 THE FRATERNAL DISCOVERING HAMPDEN- INSTINCT How Do You Cap aS1'g? CHAPTER III SYDNEY Club: and Organfz to It .... 87 RZTES of PllSSag6 I Frateinities .... l.l.l.l. .IS ..... 101 H ,, lf1fv11Q2lYTJER't11Re1. Is There Anywhere Else? ...... B THE INEYITABLE CHOICE: HAMPDEN-SYDNEY OR THE FOREIGN LEGION. The First Days ......... . . 10 The Virtues of Garnet C99 Grey ............ . . . 12 THE POSSIBILITIES ARE ENDLESS. The Prepmobile ............ 13 YOU ARE WHAT rot' DRIVE. THE HOLY ROLLIN' EMPIRE. Changing Fashions at Hampden-Sydney ......... 15 THE PERENNIAL BUTFONDOWN. A PICTURE PRIMER OF THE HAMPDEN-SYDNEY LOOK. if 1 X I lw jf' I ,ij .Q I : , CHAPTER II THE SPORTING LIFE In Corpore Sano Watching Football with Style ....... . . . 33 36 Homecoming . . . . . This, After All, Is What You Are Here For Into Every Life a Little Brain Must Fall ............. 55 WHERE TO XEROX NOTES. READING LISTS THEN cf NOW. CHAPTER VI Hampden Fellows Gi Other Lecturers .............. 57 A Sense of History . . . .... 63 C99 CHAPTER IV Life In the Amos-Lee Lane YOU HAVE TO RELAX SOMETIME' The Call of the Wild From Boathouse Parties to the Five-County Fair . . . THE GRAND TOUR. Calendar Hopping as a Way of Life ........... . Plays ....................... A Phenomenon Worth Documenting .......... . THE CBC AS voYEUR. Greek Week ................. A Contradiction in Tenns . . . IN WHICH THE PDA IS SHOWN TO BE A THING OF THE PASS. The Domi Room ........... Pets ......................... PREP ON ALL FOURS. Eggleston Library liQlP!E!!'5ydneY COIIGF ... The Faculty Meeting ..... l 17 ALL THAT BLISTERS IS NOT TOLD. Retiring Professors . . . . . 125 Staff ........ . . . 126 SOME OF THEM EVEN SMILE. CHAPTER VII STUDENT PORTRAITS Muffy, do I really have to go? Seniors........... ....... .131 A HISTORY OF TREE CLASS. 7 THR OF1 IC1IAI. ' PREPPY YEARBUOK KIQUIITUIN 1 ........ ....... 1 '16 X 5fJIJ114J111UIL'S .............. 130 1'11it'S11II1t'I1 ................. 156 COMMENCEMENT THE 1981 DE-EMPHASIS Rites of Passage II A Postlude The Last Days ............ 173 CI4IAP'1'ER vm -'OB 51 R1 D Pulling me CORC ..... . . 179 THE OLD BUY CHAPTER XI NETWORK Whom do I know in S Ii Grosse Pointe? -- Patronize our Advertisers Dircc'lory ..... . . 163 Dining with Following in Daddy's DOLl1J1C'1iI11l . . . . . 170 Footsteps ......... . . . . 185 1 HAMPDEN-SYDNEY liAI.liIDOSf1C Jl'E 19241 Hey there, big fellas. I'm only just now beginning to recover from my awesome stay at H-SC. Even though it's long after my visit to your fair school, I still remember it fondly, if I were a guy, I'm sure I'd want to attend Hampden-Sydney. You guys really know how to live. I'll never forget the party I attended at the Maples - with all those girls from Sweet Briar, and the private quarters of jay Condrey upstairs. And, of course, there was the road trip for the junior members of the fratemity - you boys looked quite dashing, bound and gagged. Your study habits did not go unnoticed. Even though it was a few weeks before finals, the library was empty. I respect you. The fact that Farmville is not the most active metropolis on the East Coast does not get you boys down. Nor is it anything to be ashamed of that some of you seem to believe that beer enhances breakfast. And I loved the housekeeping in the dorms. The most important thing I learned is just how much storing clothing on the floor contributes to the authentic- ity of the rumpled-natural- fiber, first-thing-that-came- to-hand look which takes most preppies such long and careful planning to achieve. Do you really need to ask why I call Hampden-Sydney the preppiest college in the FANNING THE FLAME An Introduction 152 Lzsa Birnbarh United States? I have touted it from San Diego to New York. LISA B E: THE H.-KMPDEX-SYDNEY TYPE. IOM ROBINSON Why? Because nobody would believe it. There is still a College that time for- got, still a breeding ground for the right boys, with beautiful surroundings, and southern gentility. Hampden-Sydney is one of the few schools that hasn't bowed to ugly pre- professionalism. There stu- dents can still actually study the liberal arts because they will be able to mooch off their parents for the rest of their lives. Hampden- Sydney boys are part of a very elite group. I was touched, by the way, that there were six boys from above the Mason-Dixon line - they made me feel right at home. So how could I resist writing an introduction to . f this Kaleidoscope, The Official Preppy Yearbook? This yearbook will be your outstanding rnemento Qalong with your old BMW keysj of those intense college years, especially for those of you who have spent more than four of them at Hampden-Sydney. The preppy way to use a yearbook is to go through it page by page in private so that you can see whether you look gross in your class picture before everybody else notices that you look gross. Then you open the year- book to the funniest pages, e.g., the faculty, and you look at those and laugh with your friends. Then you spend the next three days practically sleeping with your yearbook. The impor- tant thing is to become obsessed with your yearbook - spend the entire summer memorizing it. You must make sure to protect it from sand, gin, and suntan lotion. Since I am a girl, it was always proper to have my friends sign my yearbook. J 'l'Hli Ol FICZlAl.'l' PREPPY YPIARBOOK For guys, however, I'm not sure what the preferred eti- quette is. Is it considered bush league for a guy to ask another guy to sign his yearbook? Perhaps we should tum to Tommy Shomo, the man who wrote my Bible, To Manner Born, To Manners Bred, for the answer. Finally, a word about Mummy and Daddy. What yearbook would be complete without patron saints? And what gloriously prep role models you boys have in the Buntings. You've got to admire a man who wears a five-inch-thick gold embroi- dered crest on his blazer and stills drinks his Budweiser from a can. And as for Mrs. Bunting, she's the mummy we all wish we had. Imagine my joy, then, after having been on tour all year, eating in strange hotels and with strange people, at having dinner with the Buntings in Middlecourt. The service was gracious, Middlecourt was quite taste- fully decorated, from the Love, Lisa oriental rugs to the beer cans in the refrigerator. It was just a picture of prep elegance. I made a special effort to wear a skirt that night. Finally, in times of crisis, be it fiscal, domestic, inter- national, or imaginary, Shep Haw and I will try to get Hampden-Sydney Col- lege its rightful national press coverage. Thank you. And sign my book. GENUINE ARISTOCRACY is grounded upon lthesej principles. Its first and most salient character is its interior security, and the chief visible evidence of that security is the freedom that goes with it-not only freedom in act, the divine right of the aristocrat to do what he jolly well pleases, so long as he does not violate the primary guaran- tees and obligations of his class, but also and more importantly freedom in thought, the liberty to try and err, the right to be his own man. It is the instinct of a true aristocracy, DOI to punish eccentricity by expulsion, but to throw a mantle of protection about it-to safeguard it from the suspicions and resentments of the lower orders. Those lower orders are inert, timid, inhospitable to ideas, hostile to changes, faithful to a few maudlin superstitions. All progress goes on on the higher levels. It is there that salient personalities, made secure by artificial immunities, may oscillate most widely from the normal track. It is within that entrenched fold. out of reach of the immemorial certainties of the mob, that extraordinary men of the lower orders may find their city of refuge, and breathe a clear air. This, indeed, is at once the hall-mark and the justification of an aristocracy-that it is beyond responsibility to the general masses of men, and hence superior to both their degraded belongings and their no less degraded aversions. It is nothing if it is not autonomous, curious, venturesome, courageous, and everything if it is. It is the custodian of the qualities that make for change and experimentg it is the class that organizes danger to the service of the race: it pays for its high prerogatives by standing in the forefront of the fray. li H. L. MENCKEN I I v I I 1 I I I I I I I I I I vu . PM n lv- -' ' 51.7mm'I I.mai-1-14:mid-Zn!-:+Z,!l - , , f' lri. 1'-i'vlvI-:IJ L.: Q.: :ln':1m:-.m:J:-:l.'l!1.'N.!lli'iIn.v,'L'.'mYniK'Anl'.'.'.'.-.'.-1-14 -----. . :'Z .lf.-Il-.-P-'-'-'-lwi-'fr- :KHP . '-LVJAEI 11 :- Q r -.11 TA E4 rn. E N, vnu. Ps x 1::.uvnns-.- S 14 ii I 2 I' -I 5 - '. . 15 1'- 2 5 2 uuumumm. , -., ...... ,...., ..... r r., ,, H+ HAMPlJliN-SYDNEY KAl,lCllX7SC1Ul'l1 WMI I THERE ANYWHERE ELSE? Although you always knew that you were going to be a Hampden-Sydney gentleman C for the natural rights of prepdom are naturally knownj you also knew that someday you would officially have to join the Community by going through time-honored Rites of Passage. The Rites of Passage will have begun sometime even before your matriculation. Mummy and Daddy would often rhapsodize on the Rites between hors d'oeuvres and the first course. And Muffy-that older sister of yours-could not help but tell you fnot in a direct revelation over brunch but in an overheard telephone conversationb about her initiation into the Hampden- You do not wake up over- night and find yourself a Hampden-Sydney gentleman. If you were a true Prep, you were born with an alligator birthmark on your chest and a filled-out application to Hampden-Sydney in your mouth. fThat's why you gag on spoons to this very day.l Others, not so lucky, are forced to spend an aimless and frustrated childhood, grasping subconsciously that some- where something like Hampden-Sydney must exist, but unsure how to reach it. Release comes when a benevo- lent neighbor, a gung-ho alumnus, signs you up at age six, steering you away from an otherwise certain perdition in the guise of V PI. So what about those, say in Albuquerque or Nome, who are born without even an ink- ling of Hampden-Sydney? On them, fortunate few, the Col- lege has seen fit to have mercy Every spring, as thirty thou- sand L. L. Bean catalogues arrive at the College, thirty thousand announcements, called the Search Piece, go out to let the uninformed know that Hampden-Sydney exists and Cif they fulfill certain con- ditions, among them blond- ness, all-cottonness, and coolj is willing to give them a second chance on life. The Search Piece, Ham pden-Sydney 's nzessage of nzerqx ,, 1 t THE FIRST DAYS The first day at college. Bit- parents, standing in a line it tersweet, exhilarating, enervat- took almost forty-five minutes ing. Feeling all of a sudden to find, between some over- very grown up and just a little large kid from Dubuque who bush league compared to all talks funny and some stud those RA's with the cool, from West End Richmond assured smile. Glad your Dad who won't talk at all until let you bring the good car he's had his broker check out and, again, just a little uneasy your portfolio. about the way your Mom is You never knew how long fussing over you and isn't four names were until you've quite herself: You,re sure had to print them fifty times. you'll be all right with just the three pairs of pajamas? Moving In Checking In a rite determined some time Literally. You, your pen, and your checkbook. That's what the letter said you needed in order to register. So here you are, fresh from a six-hour the previous summer by the Dean of Students, the man in charge both of your rights and lack of rights, of passage and otherwise. You will hear more of him. You've finally got the key, and figured out what all the letters in VWG-12 stand for, and have found the room Qand your roommate and his aquar- ium and console TVD. Same size guy. You think: two times as many khakis, 1007, cotton shirts. Wow, some luck. Only one problem: he wears double- knit pants. You are faced, in your first hours at school, with one of the biggest de- cisions of your col- legiate career: drive, with a nervous brace of 5 X f K X 3 , R Cf I 10 X f - X v. do you try to convert him to khakis or try to flunk him out so you can get a real roomie next semester? Your Dad opens out the back of the station wagon and there it is-the wall of famil- iar things made unfamiliar by being packed so tightly, rak- ishly together. Subconsciously recognizable ends of things peek out between Chivas Regal boxes full of records and ragg sweaters. Then comes the safari back and forth between the bushes, under the five-foot seven-inch doorway, around the corner through the twilight to your room. You pile everything in the middle or on your bed because your roommate fthe decision gets easier the more you think about ity has taken up the rest of the room with his stuff and claims it's there to stay. Mummy, who had been sit- ting, wringing her gloves, on the bed until it ot too full of X ff! f 31 .. ,,- gy - 1.-g. , :W rf' .. 1,-ti .. - -fp . ., --2 . W1-. 2-f:.'u 1 AWG . '-6 C 49,071 T. -ey :wer 3 ae, ' .V' X' sauna. All she found was a shower, which you get to share with twenty other guys. She is obviously trying hard to be blasee about the living conditions and, undaunted by your assurances that it beats an Army barracks any day, wonders if they will let Aldora come up once a week to clean your room. Saying Goodbye Everything is out of the car. The last hints about catalogue orders have died away. The polyester kid has slunk off. Everyone is suddenly about as conversational as hospital visitors. Well, son, I guess we'll have to run on now. Yes, sir. You will remember to eat ri ht won't ou? S S , Y - boxes, has gone to look for the Yes, ma'am, there's the .. ,nip . Commons. And to write us every week? Yes, ma'am, I have the stamps you gave me. And to mind your manners? Remember about job interviews .... Yes, ma'am, it's all in that little book they gave me. We're going to miss you, son, around the house. Thanks, Dad, I'll miss you too, but there's Parents Week- end in a month. Well, dear, I guess we'll be getting on now. Mom? Yes, dear? Are you going to kiss me goodbye? I would like to. Would you mind doing it up here, where the guys won't see? ll - f- ',,,s-Q -4. r,A ' 'I L in... ii THE OFFICIALT' PREPPY YEARBOOK THE VIRTU ES OF GARN ET C99 GREY The wearing of girnet and grey t gray is N OCDJ is the surest and quickest way to assure group identification within the Hampden-Sydney set. 4 Even St. Christophers School in Richmond, a key source of future Tigers, has borrowed Hampden-Sydney's school colors.7 The official position of garnet and grey dates from 1776, when tutor fy john Blair Smith organized - the students as a regiment to go to the aid of Wash- ington during the ,. cg Revolutionary War. J ', Being fashion- , X conscious even i i then, they chose a x 'Ari 1 TT' X ' . f tc S s- X X XX x XXX XC XXX A X 'X . xl t x X i X N X X xxx xv Q I xxx NIA .S xx ht X VX l is T T it I ay? ' A c X ist li iff I my XX H xxx xx I , fat ,I l I 1 l 1 t l 1 if 1 1 Q 91 ff' if K 41' lk ' color the areas marked l, arnet 'ind the areas marked g , c L 2, grey. Doesn't that look nice? Now borrow your roommate's copy of The Official Preppy Yearbook and color the pic- ture differently. The possibili- ties are endless. fgfgc f wg! Xe T iff lt Q OX I tl 0 .i, mi 4-1X Listed below Cfrom Ashtrays Ashtrays Banners to Zippoj are just some of the wonderful items that carry the garnet and grey motif: Bumperstickers Calendars Baseball Caps Chairs A X Beer Steins 1 elts Blankets Blazer Buttons f P ,V B yi I WU, XX x Yllxxx W natural-fiber uni- . 'y A - form of grey R' ' A. X I g ' 4 1 H mf? flannel trousers P - ' E ! ll and hunting shirts T JDJ- yi, i ' 'f N5 gs X cts dyed with the juice . 5 t ',., -T f -Q5 5 , of the pokeberry ly ' p a-.., , ,3.Q- 1 plant. f T t l 2 -- 2 f wtyrif lf cc I xr X X ll i x ki ,sig y W I i i X. l 1 xx ., ll I f -fl, p lllll I xx - I M X A at V Q, 'lim Url' fl . T f ilk ialf . ff X fi ilii,izi5ii1il'l!lf',i2t 'fo help I .L 2 if 1 f .if A l'lf make sure lx Q Jr V' , li fm. that you .y T Z X ltlplillf . llllli R - l-,ii .xt ll.i understand I i xi I -ttyl the full potential of 17 y M'yiQ-,XXX ll i ,ll lt. this color combination, 'ff fl X ll yll, i lwl we have prepared -1 tw- -2 l i xx il I l a little exercise. You N,j2 Nl W lyllx l ly l ix' will need a garnet 1 lx y All Nl N litlyglg pen and a grey pen. , V W T l it l Q li, l NOW study the fig- 'FS Q- Wil Wil ures carefully and ' if-2, lrumfx ,N it l I2 if . Wx Coasters Cups Decals Envelopes F risbees Glassware Gym shorts Handbags Hats jackets jiggers jump ropes Key chains Letterheads Mugs Needlepoint kits N ightshirts Notebooks Openers Pencil Holders Pennants Pens Playing Cards Prints Quids Rings Rugby Shirts Scarves Shirts Socks Stationery Stickpins Stocking Caps Sweaters Sweatshirts Ties Umbrellas Warmup Suits X-rated Cards Yam Zippg Lighters HAMPDEN-SYDNEY KALEIDOSCOPE 1981 You Are lflflzat You Drive THE PREPMOBILE Automobiles are an important First of all, though, it is of part of life at Hampden-Sydney utmost importance that your -after all, the College is sixty car be equipped with a tape miles from the nearest good player and speakers capable of movie theater, shopping center, reaching decibel levels damag- bar, or girls' school tlsongwood ing to the human ear. You doesn't count any moreb. Half may own the finest Gennan the fun of going to Richmond or Char- lottesville is the drive over, and to make the trip really worthwhile you've got to have the right car. There are a number of different types of vehicles that will do. We will dis- cuss them in a moment. jolzn O. Goddmls flag-nzobile. replete with dead cal lroplzzes on the side, exemplzfzies something, But 1.x zt prep? illorzogrmnnzirzg your prepmobile is key, especially if you have enough inz'tz'als to fill the door. have been known to cany as many as ten partying Hampden-Sydney students to Sweet Briar and back on only twenty gallons of gas. Another car which can be seen cruising the campus is the four-wheel drive sportscar made, but if it doesn't have tunes, it won't l make it. Some cars on campus are implanted with music sys- tems more valuable than the automobile itself. MAKES One of the most popular Hampden-Sydney cars is the family station wagon. These cars are usually passed down from a Hampden-Sydney mother to her son when he goes off to College. One of the most important qualities of this car is the large number of people that can be packed in for a road trip. Some wagons Scout, jeep. Bronco, or Blazer. These gis- guzzling monsters f are very popular with students who live off-campus because they often need four-wheel drive to negotiate the rocky, muddy, unpaved roads where they live. tThis is all well and good except that they rarely attempt to get to class when it snows, telling their professors that they were snowed in.j These vehicles also come in handy during hunting season and for tailgating during football season. High-performance econ- omy sports cars have always been winners at Hampden- Sydney. They used to be the lVIG's, Triumphs, and Austin Healeys. Now BMW's, jettas. and Saabs have taken their place. The look is supposed to be not showy, just sensible, but always says, Daddy really shelled the bucks out for this one! Owners of these cars always manage to total one or two of them during their col- lege career, and invariably show up the week after the accident with a more expen- 13 THE OFFICIIAlf PREPPY YEARBOOK sive model of the late lamented wheels. If you've got a girlfriend at Sweet Briar or Hollins, you don't really have to have a car while you're at Hampden- Sydney, because she will lend you hers. 1 Ever tried to count how many cars with Hollins stickers on the rear window are in the Venable parking lot most of the time?J Usually these girls will have one of those expensive economy cars - maybe a Mercedes diesel with Texas tags. Some Harnpden-Sydney students seem to date girls for car privileges alone. And if you can't figure out where to park it, there's always Morton Hall. Even more fun if it's someone else's car! off-campus party. Rear Package Shelf. Books from English Lit 201. Catalog cans. Glove Compartment. ADORNMEN T from Brooks Brothers. directory. Map to Florida H d H d Lacrosse stick and ball. Ten- Ray-Ban Sunglasses. O0 ' Orse' Og' nis racquet cover. Empty beer Side front doors. Monogram in nautical flags. Red pencil stripe just below window, running the length of the car. Rear Windows. Hampden- Sydney decal. Commonwealth Club sticker. Ducks Unlimited decal. U.VA., U.N.C., or Georgia decal Qnever Va. Techy. Roof. Ski rack or kayak rack, alternating between winter and summer. Front Bumper. Wintergreen or Sea Pines sticker. Rear Bumper. I'd rather be in Hampden-Sydney or I'd rather be Sailing stickers. Hampden-Sydney and Mary Baldwin parking stickers. Trailer hitch for Hobie Cat. Body. Mud from last trip to ll PREPSTER'S UNABRIDGED DICTIONARY THE HOLY ROLLIN, EMPIRE - the area within a 4-hour driv- ing radius of Hampden- Sydney, tributary to it and parks and ski slopesg beyond its shores, rumors to the con- trary, nothing else exists. See map below. characterized by pleasure THE GREAT ashin to . BEYOND gf! ' I I Mount Vemoln ld C-Ville it 0 Mary Washingfon M B 'n Q 0 ' fig a W1 Q 3 il The Slough of Despond Southern Sem. i Mmm .. fg Sweet Briar Q Q X A Hollins Q- Xl- . Va-Beach RMWC f HAMPDEN- , AQ 1 SYDNEY THE 0 San Francisco . OCEAN f5fjfX l O Chapel r-rin H ' B da THE our or mm' .-I TLANT.-l Hampden-Sydney student TCW? HANIl'1JEN-SYDNEY lslA1.1iI1JOSlZUl'li 111111 CHANGING FASHIC AT HAMPDEN-SYDNEY As the neophyte dresser at Hampden-Sydney is quick to discover, key to the sartorial propriety of the place is the button-down shirt, all-cotton, of course, B2 if you're de rigueur, Polo if you're just a little avant-garde. The button-down at Hampden-Sydney is not a recent fad - few things here are, after all - but is in fact one of the longest verifiable fashion trends around Cshort of our predilection for, say, trousers, which doesn't really county. The first known button-down appears around a natty and forward-looking neck in the 1919 Kaleidoscope, which featured, perhaps not incidentally, an advertisement for Brooks Brothers in its nether pages lotherwise Spangled with notices for the Richmond Cedar Works, Mack's Barber Shop, and the Planters Banky. There is, by the way, cause for controversy here: B2 themselves say the style is a later one than that, they didn't sell them before the thirties. The collars of previous years had been, as it were, up- tight: rather a cross lto bear?1 between Little Lord Fauntle- . iu J 'fi . -'JN fi FT , . 0 1 Il t : 1 ,XX l fl W Mi 1 A , xi El 'X I ' xii .1 1 1 X e x 57 105 T 11 l X -X 15 X 'fo A Q, A 1 L . . y I , 'iii . .Y ' -. Qui 1 x:,r,:L,, Tllli I'I'.Rl'..X'.X'I.ll. lil IiTU.X'-IIUIIQX' 1.1 jail, roy's and the Archbishop of Canterbury's, the kind that came in boxes on separate order from the shirts. lWear- ing shirts sans collar was the sign of the irrepressible macho of the era - viz. Billy the Kid and Butch Cassidy - and of the unregenerate worker.1 Let- ting down from these cellu- loid wonders to the new- fangled, not to say dissolutely undisciplined, fly-away collars was no doubt as much a shock to the tightly-channeled psyches of our forebears as flare-leg trousers on pin-stripe suits would be to our own generation: hence, perhaps, the urge, the primum mobile -primtun Ii77lI72Of71.lF, better- of the button-down. Be that as it may, the button-down arrived. to stay, in 1919. Competition was hot and heaw - stubby collars, pins, snap-tabs - but the button-down has weathered them all: collar-pins remain, perhaps, the greatest chal- lenger, but it is a friendly competition. The nattiest dresser on the Hill has, for example, been seen with both devices in use at once, in what psychologists might call an excess of anal retentiveness but which all true preps would instantly recognize and approve as the ultimate defense against the unbut- toned multitude which rages, insensate, just beyond the clipped hedges of our world. Herewith, a few samples from stylish necks through the years. Long may it not wave. A VISUAL PRIMER On the next few pages is a brief guide to telling books by their covers: the looks of prep at Hampden-Sydney. Learn from the masters. 1919 1929 1939 1949 1959 1969 1979 I 1 H. Spessard W. C. Finch T. K. Baldwin B. C. Dameron j. L. Brinkley T. H. Slzomo W. A. Wmburn II V- L ... xy ' N 1 ,-.,. 1 1 fr 'l'HIi Olflflill,-XI. ' PRICPPY YHARBUOR THE THERE-IS-N0-SUCH-THING-AS A-SHORT-SLEEVFL-SHIRT LUCK ll.XNIlfIJIk,N-SYIJNIN K,Xl.l.IIN 551 cDl'I, 1'I,,1 THE JUST-LIKE-MUMMY LUCK 2' ,A a-B -. .J A ' 11' uM f Tl!-I K HE IbwfKf 'rfUTTlfN 0960, A 'l'Hli OI I ICIIAlf PREPPY YI-1.-XRBCXJK nv H+-Q. THE CATERPILLAR-LID LOOK 'UN 1, 9 gi' -3 5 A 'Y Q' v 5' ' . W 15 gf HAMPDIQN-SYDNHY K.-Xl.lfIlJC JSC If WE 1081 THE JUST-BACK-FROM-THE REGATTA LUCK 3 x I 3 -. J :ami Q 5: 5244-.. THE OPI-'IfIlAIf PREPPY YICARBOOK THE PUT-THAT-IN-YQUR-PIPE-AND SMOKE-LT LQQK - - azlnllQ- IipXfNIl'IDIiN-SYIJNILY lx.-xlll-11154msmJl'Ii 1'a:Ll TH E BARNEY G59 SCHULTZ LUCK NY' f 3- sv 1 v I 1' Y ,Q nv, . 1 by zu ax, '4 -:MAJ .I '74 A z,fN , Nga I .'9'7' ,avg . Q -4-, -N 145' THE OFFIC1IAIf PREPPY YIQARBOOK THE P LOOK -1 eg' if. 0 gl 1 5 , wig! .,Y ,VJ ggi' ' 0 E ks 'Nr- HAMl'DEN-SYDNEY KAl.lillX JSC IOPE 1981 Someday, historians will document it as part of a larger conflict-the Prep Revolution Cor, as some would call it the War of Great and Little Warstl Skirrrrishes over the proper attire went on for a long the wardrobe attempted to pull the wool over the Box- ers' eyes, but it was to no avail. The Boxers accepted no compromises, they wanted cotton all-cotton- one hundred percent, and no starch You see the defenders of the Boxers were a dyed-in- the cotton breed. They had decided-and could not be KT 4.7 --fmll T blue jeans Although solids seemed to predominate, stripes checks and a few plaids were soon seen among the ranks Why not just wear the Boxers alone? we asked. The Boxer must be worn terse reply It rs much class- ier to show just the ends of the shorts with a button- down for sure. But aren t they pretty drafty? No one was drafted in the Boxer Rebellion We were all volunteers. You must remember the importance of comfort, one Boxer reminded us You l l w - '- - 1 w ,I 97 A N W0 9 5? ' . , 3, . W . 4 ' ' -1 ' 1 ' ' ' 9 I 'I 'I ' I ' ' . Q X -'X I- V H as 4 X x' . I 1 VI' -Muir it l i- X Vlllll 19553 D U , , time as the warmongers of 'l Wllh SOfYl6Lh1Hg, Came Ihr? , A' 0' 'JQQ1 . tc ' . ki' I X I . , 1157 'E f-??0 Y' mr. A , 'Q I 5. ' ,, f I T CK , 1 W Y il , E! if f t7 ,, ' f X l ,J 1 I X I f 1' 'ft 9' mllflll ill ' 7 ' 9.1 - swayed-that the old elastic- ized, white double polyester underwear with the red, white, and blue stripes on the band was insupportable. The coup d'etat was on. Indeed, it began inno- cently enough. At first only a few did it. And then, for stranger reasons than we can determine, it caught on. All of a sudden Boxers were in vogue. No doubt gaining momentum and inspiration from The Official Preppy Handbook, Chinese long- johns became the latest in collegiate fashion. How did it all start? we asked a likely subject, suita- bly clad in Madras Bermu- das just short enough to expose his ice-blue, all- cotton gentleman's undergarment. Briefly, he replied. It E., 15. was kind of spontaneous, I think, you know, like wear- ing lime green pants with a pink shirt. It just sort of caught on. We wanted to expose ourselves to something dif- ferent, said another Boxer with just enough holes in his jeans to show his Oxford white weaves. The polo shirt and the Boxer - what could be more natural? Appearing shortly before the rites of spring at south- em colleges like UVa, Chapel Hill, and Hampden- Sydney, and a bit later at the Ivies and near-Ivies, the Boxers crept out from under cutoffs, Birdwells, and Ber- mudas, and peered out through holey khakis and can wear Boxers in the dorm, to class, or maybe to a frat party, but never without a Lacoste or button-down shirtf, They are the underwear for upperclassmen, meant to be seen and not hid. What began as a small skirmish became a cutoff crusade - the War of the Loom. Each side jockeyed for position until, finally, the Boxers strode through the breech. These holier- tharr-thou trousers, these Fruit-of-the-Loom bloom- ers, these not-so-brief briefs had hemmed in uni- sex clothes and unseated Ralph, Calvin, and Pierre with a swift flanking motion. We can only wonder now: can Boxerettes be far behind? 23 'IWHIC Ulflflfil.-Xl, ' PRIil'l'Y Yli,-XKBOKJK THE GQOD-CI ,RA -FUN LOCK 1 J- Y ,yu-fr.. H 1 I Ag, Y' I :534-rag, v A V ilu- V , .. S L-ff V 1 ?f!WFw:fq,:.7P-kf57'f HW ,fbi L A I --Q -- -Q ..,.,, 1 ' 1-.- .. , S-K-. .MJ 'S-if CQKQ n 'f - we- f ' , A V 1, ,.,S3ir-- sexi' F5133 , zz-1 - .f- 'bx'-T-B f - dx. EA -E T-. gg :ff Z I N -n . 21 f 3' 4 N-helm L I ltr'--1 'IH' 1 fv A A Q 7-Z .iryixgvl : 'Et-f '. W1 '5' i- ' .f 4 ,, ,,:., ,f 1, .ef a 55.. 'v ,i J .1 . g.. ' 'iv- ,,,57tr, J f-2 15.1. 'FE kg 'Q 'v v U THIC UI'l IlIlAI, PRICPPY Yli.-XRBUUK THE LETS- GET-CASUAL LUCK 1,-' N X .,'kVf, '-,' .i.i 26 'cf W 1. Q I HAMl'DIiN-SYDNIQY K.-Xl,IiIlX PS1 If Jl'li IWHI THE DQWN-HQME-COUNTRY LQOK if 'l'Hli OFI-'ICllAI,'M PREPPY YHARBUUK THE SELF-ASSURED LUCK bf' rfb lm K X N GQ XXX HAMI'DIiNfSYDNIiY KAl,I'1lIJOSCIHI'Ii IWHI THE VIRT E QF PI GREE LUCK Q F 'WWA nf' S 9 5 's 'v I -4 Q M' .1 in 1 ', I J 1. 29 THE OFFICIALT' PREPPY YEARBOOK THE ALUMNI LOCK l ' ni? Eglin . .1-fn-pf--.ik I -rm Qi: 'rfkfvl gun-H 4:-ffl! raisi- ' -I ' . ' U '. .- .5 . - .I ' o, '. . , . I. Q :I :7 Q- I '- . n '. 1 -. m f ,II . . - i, I .g. 2.53 EC: if 535 mg :-: . -I .Q . I. -..I 5.1. N' '. . . '. ' ,II .I . - .I1 . I I .II . . 1, 'I I .' . IH: 1' '- F -Z ' I- .I If .f 1 2: :I ' g. I. .' .- :i , . A v. 3. 5. 1 ' ' I u' I' 1' I: 73 I: 52 gl gi Z' P .' 1' N u . - 4 EI r :5 :- ., V' 2' nl v' - ' gg: 5 . L., g.I,... ' Si Z I 'f . - 1, ' I ' . . . u ' , . ' .I - .' uf F . .- .I .: :Q .V -: 15 . 2: -z 2. 5 g. g. . I' ' ,. . , . , . I. In 1 lt lrll Jnrnzmm-'n.'1 +1 HAMPDEN-SYDNEY KALEIDOSCZOPE 1981 Watching Football with Style DID YGU GUYS KNGW THERE'S A GAME GOING ON GVER THERE? There are many reasons why alumni and friends of Hampden-Sydney College choose to visit the campus on particular fall weekends. Not the least of which would be the opportunity to participate in Tailgatoring at Death Val- ley. A tradition long estab- lished, this activity has evolved from simple spectatoring at football games to its present status as a significant social and recreational happening. In form, it may range from a pre-game, brown-bag and fast- food snacking session, to a full-blown, half-day display of luggage compartments, sta- tion wagons, RV motor homes, tables, chairs, portable bars, groaning boards and music - of a type so referred to by the younger set. The ever-present cooler is an integral part of the scene, sometimes dominating it. Tailgatoring, per se, defies concise definition because of its imprecise parameters. Loosely speaking, it is a mani- festation of community spirit - the kind that fostered barn- raising, county fairs, rodeos, and ribbon-cuttings. A diverse assemblage comes together in a common cause. Tailgator- ing at Death Valley is, per- haps, the ideal showcase for preppies - both student and parental types. With Izod alli- gators lto be replaced by Polo ponies, pleaselj under natural shoulder jackets over designer jeans above penny loafers upon bare feet, the preppies arrive in uniform. For the old timers, it's button-down oxfords under Harris Tweed jackets over gray flannels above tasseled slip-ons. fPer- haps even a pair of Argyles may make the scenely The mode of dress, generally, how ever, just runs the gamut - influenced largely by weather. required ceremonies, and the identity of the Tigers' oppo- nent for the day. It woulc- be virtually impossible and cer- : if vt tm-QI . . l 'x5f'Tr ' ' , ,4,,,-..,g.L 'H Q' 955' '9fa.f.,f1--- .' F 1295 Close attention is the order of the day at Hampden-Sydney football games. 33 tainly counterproductive to attempt a particularization. But, upon conjecturing, what- ever comes to one's mind should not be ruled out. Tail- gttoring may occur at various locations near the gridiron, but always it will be at its best on the hill behind the grand- stand and among the Osage orange trees. The view from vehicles parked there is excel- lent indeedg the flow of traffic between partying groups is nice and easyg the congeniality of the celebrants is contagious and upliftingg even the rap- port between parents and stu- dents is often harmoniousg but the incomprehensible lack of certain basic facilities is always an ignoble affront to civilized attendees, especially those who walk erect. Tail- gatoring at Death Valley - what a splendid way to enjoy the game! Cheers! Sports C99 the Social Life At Hampden-Sydney, the sporting life is second only to the social life. Indeed the sporting life is a large part of Hampden-Sydney's social rit- uals: during football season, there's the crowd on the Hill. During basketball season there are fraternity parties after the game. And during baseball and lacrosse seasons, there's a toned-down version of the on- the-Hill crowd. Other Sports Of course, Hampden- Sydney's sporting life also includes off-campus activities like hunting, skiing, and ACC basketball games. Also impor- tant are surfing, frisbee, and four-wheeling fsee Theta Chip. 3-l HAMPIDEN-SYDNICY KAIJCIIX DSC If Jl'li lflkll FOQTBALL In a year characterized more by the joy of having fought the good fight than by the crass piling up of victory - upon victory, Coach Ful- ton's Tigers strode manfully across fields as far apart as Tennessee and Connecticut, ,-, T, ,,,,,, confronting foes as like 20 Sewanee I 0 and the year after that to look forward to.l Overall, the Tigers were neck and neck with their opponents in every other category except rushing, but led them in the air, both in temis of yardage and com- pleted passes--an achieve- themselves as W8cL's preppy ment of the redoubtable players and as unlike them- 35 Br-itrgqvrm 6 teamwork of Tim Lass and selves as the cadets from the T3 wi qI:'? f i I U fi Roger Glover on the pass- Coast Guard Academy. 7 M 1.1 ing end and Scott Moor- The results of their E2lfflT3?ITf'l1P' head, Bucky Shope, Neil efforts- in Sta' Rzirifliiliiliy-lkliizrin lti Stevensnnd tistical terms, 4 A Billtgones belied the t' on e amount of 'T receiving hustle thely 6 -54 end. put into e SM The 1980 season: they team was came out at co-captained the other end by Paul Emer unbowed ick and jim but with Thompson. only three Awards: wins as john Dick- opposed to inson, Most seven losses. k- if fq Improvedg They did Scott More- everything head, MVP right, said and Out- Fulton, ex- standing cept win all Offenseg the time. H g S john No doubt Schoon- that would -fr - ? jfiii-Q , over, Out- , 4 ..,- . have been ,fs 55- , S, standing monotonous. 'S ' ' A in ' 'A Defenseg QAnyway, and Keith there are the Leach, Cap- year after next lHiI1S'AW2ird. -'gl:f 5 72 5 e b Q-tgp, 9 S Ng, V- ---' - aun1nQ.....-.......t ....................'c,.... A... ' - ...,... ...:... L Ha R955 3 ix ii ' 7 F 'aa THE OFFICIALTM PREPPY YEARBOOK Macon Hay: While the Sun Shines HO ECQMING More preparation than Mummy's wedding. More hype than lVIuffy's deb. Older than Daddy's blazer, the one with the Woodberry Forest buttons on it. More station wagons than Nantucket, more liquor than the Fourth of july Races at Pembroke Marina. Someone cynical once said that Homecoming at Hampden-Sydney was the biggest party south of Charlot- across the lawn, pro- tesville and the biggest fashion show west of Parisf, But Homecoming is more than that. It is a time for renewing friendships and basking in the warmth of memories and broad smiles on the Hill, which is about the only place in the world to Homecoming is for seeing, after five years in the real world, just how great the basement of your fraternity house, the showers in Cushing, even all-nighters and exams, really were. Homecoming is for feel- ing outrageously senti- mental lumps in your throat when you spot your old professors fessors whose classes you couldn't wait to A cut when you were here. is Homecoming is for all the things that make football Homecoming queen Catherine Ann Beale rw which you can go home again. 1 ' -'r 1. ' iff, 1 E infe- 2 36 and her escort Billy Stevenson '81 5 , . 8 .-fg lN1l'l3liN-SYIJNEY KAl.liIlX,DSCZ1Jl'li l'lI'il special at Hampden-Sydney: bands and open houses on the Circle, Stokeley growling on the sideline, the Welcome Alumni sign stretched across the road, lines of women wait- ing to get to the john in the gym, tailgating, Osage oranges, the crackle of shoulder pads softened by the hum of people on the Hill, john Brinkley-jutting at both cigar and corporation- stalking the benches, S1 Bunt- ing in his shirtsleeves yelling at the team, coolers and checkered tablecloths, girls from Hollins and the Briar up at Homecomings for years afterward as wives of Hampden-Sydney menj. It is the flavor of Home- coming that touches you most, especially in memory. months later, at night. The golden air is almost syrupy. warmed by the glow of happy faces and leaves the color of clothes, perfumed by the once- a-year smell of the day: a mild julep of a scent, compounded of sunlight and leaf dust and wool and fried chicken, of leather and grass and exhaust and crushed ice, of cigarettes and chiysanthemums, of mix- finding excuses, over and over ers and new shoes and beer, of again, to walk from one end of the Hill to the other. Polo, ham biscuits, and bran- died exhalations. fThose girls get to be alumnae This year of course it was of a sort themselves, showing even better, since the oldest Southern rivalry brought the Yellow jackets of Randolph- Macon to Death Valley. Morale was indomitable. A car painted with sickly yellow and black stripes was hurled onto the traditional bonfire. True gentlemen, we won the blood drive with 3706 par- ticipation: in their hive just outside Short Pump, the jaundiced jackets squeezed blood from only 1712 of their swarm. They were saving it for the gime, the cads: the Ashlanders managed to squeak by us 16 to 15. But that's not the point of Homecoming anyway. The point of it all, dear cynic, is that it's the biggest fashion show anywhere. How else are the alumni to be reassured that the clothes they bought i 1962 are still in vogue? I1 t THIS OFFICIALT' PREPPY YEARBOOK Living Color in Death Valley PERRIER WATER C99 SALISBURY STEAK It was late Monday after- noon, just before football practice. Coach Stokeley Ful- ton, a week from his 200th game, was just tying the last lace on his coaching shoes when the phone jangled his office. It took a minute for Fulton to believe the official- sounding voice which told him he had three minutes to decide whether Division III Hampden-Sydney would let ABC televise its game that Saturday with Salisbury tMd. of ' wx 3 1 ' 4 .PKOUDA ATIEER national coverageg and Fitzpatrick, a 21-year-old Eng- lish major was trying to balance demands of stu dies and sports Haw and Fitzpat- rick, running on momentum in the last hours be fore the I 30 air time on Saturday watched the build information. They gs and grounds found themselves facing a logistical nightmare. They had to have camera platforms and an announcers' booth built, find a three-phase power generator, take player head- J shots and gather team stats to V DINNERSE TONIEHT v--i -NJ Y'-:fl ' A ll. fs- .A ,- Ma.s.Q-produced banners plastered the flanks of Gammon Gymnaszum. State. It took another two minutes to get official appro- val from the president- releasing the latch on a roller coaster which would carry the College at greased-lightning pace through the week. Gripping the rail in the front car were news officer Shep Haw '78 and neophyte sports information director Tim Fitzpatrick '8l. Haw, after only a year as publicity man, was slightly in awe of 38 be flown to New York, pro- duce a 60-second slide show for half-time broadcast, organ- ize and oversee maintenance work on the football field and stadium, hire round-the-clock security to protect ABC's equipment, and, not least, order refreshments for the cosmopolitan production crew-who specified real New York deli sandwiches, fresh fruit, orange juice, and Perrier water. crew work furiously painting goal posts and gym- nasium gutters overnight. Bushes were trimmed and grass was cut, the stadium received a thorough clean-up, and yard-marker numbers were painted on the field for the first time ever, with sten- cils that arrived, coinciden- tally, the day after ABC's call to Fulton. Students got into the act by organizing a sign- painting contest and having the fire department hang their creations alongside the ABC Sports banner on the gym wall. We were on the phone almost 24 hours a day to New York, remembers Fitzpatrick for whom this was only his II'lz1'te-suited cheerleaders eazforted and drank their way through the game. If tl Q 1 I I L! HAM PDEN-SYDNEY KALEIDOSC IUPE 1981 second game as SID. But it worked. Rental carfuls of producers, technicians, direc- tors, and cameramen began to pull in on Thursday. Lumber- ing production and equip- ment trucks crowded onto the small-scale roads of the cam- pus Friday morning and, to the tune of pounding hammers and whining electric saws, disgorged the miles of cable and racks of electronic intricacy from which 30 tech- nicians would assemble a tele- vision studio among the oaks. A space-age satellite transmit- ting dish was set uncomforta- bly on rolling 18th-century lawns. Cables draped from tree to tree, headsets gaped on every table, and the wires of telephones, monitors, and microphones turned the mod- est pressbox into a first-glance waxworks snakepit. The game came and with it Division III football at its best-perfect autumn weather, crowds on the hill around the field, and, of course, minor crises. A handful of children .Nh ,XX 3 1 P 4 Q D ,wwf . .,Q- ABC cameraman models the latest in Hampden-Sydney garnet and grey. gathered around the field microphones chanting Good evening, ladies and gentle- men over the air, and the scoreboard clock failed to count down halftirneg the frantic producer had to send Haw scurrying to the referees' locker room to find out how much time remained. On top of all that, the Tigers couldn't pull off a win, des- pite their best effortsg the high point of Fulton's 200th game had to remain the pre- game, on-the-air presenta- tion by President Bunting of a gift to Stokeley and a kiss to his wife Virginia Ann. And then, as fast as they had come, the ABC men were gone, taking with them their wire-Spangled gadgets, their equipment- crammed trucks, and their ABC Sports banner. Behind them they left Hampden- Sydney not quite as they had found it: still the home of gentlemen and scholars, still the site of played-for- the-fun-of-it football, but dusted over, once in a life- time, with the glory of big- time sports. Salz'sbury's head coach and ABC sports- caster model the latest in non-prep fashions. Q V , .act li: f - -' -'.' K ,-'fig K ---5 Wg f 4 . , -...t -i as Q '-'J' if mtl ,,,f ' ,.,,s. .v-, ' nw, ff., . .,,- -1 v' . fd'-,. . . -- V11 - I Q... gn . ,. 'sM', ' ini J .ago . ,V j'2x-.aww 435- - ,. , fi. it ,gf 'Si ' if 1- Q- A- 1:3 in .E , 'gf , A, W' 5 ,QT ,Wde,,. - .A trys, ,,-, VV,-0 f l. q .':r'-t-yli' ' E il T i :fir H - - .1-'I' 'n - s.. - ,..xigg'e!frV ',,1,,Q, Z,.l? ,-5 - . - -3-wwf-awikszgffu q - Q 'l'Hli OI l 1CIlAl. ' PREPPY YICARBOOK Since it requires only a ball, soccer has been called the people's sport, compared to paraphernalia-dependent enterprises like tennis, skeet, and football, available as a result of their expense only to the imperialist elite. This image has no doubt sat well with the people's coach, jim Simms CDr. james Y. Simms, associate professor of history, is his elit- ist sobriquetb, who has coached the soccer team for all twelve years of its existence. Simms retires after this year, because he is going on a sabbatical leave from his teaching job. An All- American goalie on the Uni- versity of Mar'yland's three successive untied, undefeated ACC championship teams, Simms arrived at Hampden- SOCCER 3 Wins - 10 Losses -1 Tie Sydney in 1968 and promptly tumed the soccer club into a NCAA-approved program. 5 1 While only his 1976 team has had a winning season, Simms says they have met every chal- lenge of a very demanding schedule. We've been playing ourselves, he says, quoting his idol Bud Wilkinson, long- time football coach of Okla- homa. Our goal is not to win, but to play as well as we can. On that basis every sea- son has been a winning one. Some of his sweetest victo- ries? In 1970, the Hampden- Sydney Booters kept Lynch- burg from going to the state 75 tournament by upsetting them 1-0. Another was a 2-0 defeat of ranking George Mason. Perhaps the most satisfying was the 1-0 defeat of the Division I, top-twenty, In- dians of William Sc Mary: They left and never came back, grins Simms. -10 HAMPIJEN-SYDNEY KAl.liIlX DSC IUPE 11181 WRESTLING 7 Wins - 5 Losses 'X -M603 2' Wrestling, the most Greek of all our sports, sometimes seem to get lost in the shuffle at Hampden-Sydney. CMaybe it's the kinky uniforms that inspire the low profiley But like the tennis team, itself often overlooked when plaud- its are being handed out, the wrestling team is a pretty consistent winner. This is as good a team as Hampden-Sydney has had in a long time, remarked Coach Lou Wacker. Our biggest problem has been keeping all our players healthy for any one match. A team that had a slow start, hampered by injuries and illness, built slowly up through the season. Several new grapplers joined the garnet group late in the sea- son, strengthening the squad even further. By the end of the year, they had put to rest seven sets of 'x'. opponents, including the ' boys in baby blue from Longwood in a match charac- terized, according to Wacker's A diy remark, by an unusual mm amount of restraint. 41 'l'Hl'1 Ol l ICIlAlf PREPPY YHARBOOIQ CROSS CQUNTRY 4 Wins - 5 Losses In one of their best seasons ever, end runners. Pacing the team C kmach T aylor's harriers this year were seniors Bo Syd- adopted a new strat- egy the Swedish - f and whose else?J concept of F artlek, 'speed-play,' the insertion of sprints wt .tm and speed spurts into slow distance prac- tice. This, with a new concept of themselves as a Gary Cooperu team-lean, quiet, and grimly determined- seems to have paid off in winning runs. ' Consistency was the hallmark of the team I AU' xX Ibm, Hx LWEY NN I-v'f:y F1 gklllhtl throughout the season. nor, co-captain Gene Bruner, and co-captain Rick Harris. Hot on their trail were the legendary john Penn Turner, juniors jim Duffy, Fred Friedman, and Denny McCarthy, sophomore Bruce Ross, and promising freshmen Mike Fucella, Tim Thompson, John Hollowell, Bill Barrs, and Eddie McGee. And the MVP for the year? Taylor says he might just pick Stan Gemborys, who with his botany students Outstanding stars were cleared the new Nature less in evidence than Trail. Kind of gives us a good, solid, home-course advantage ,, corne-through-1n- the- quipped Taylor. 423 V S3664 fl, ,. 'Q . --, K - ' T Q i O! -:W sf: rgwmwg ,..,Q s H s . 1' 4 -g 1 pq. .rf 1 v 'V . Q sv 1 0 f ' yi x W in L- ' . 2 . ' wx? XJ g l . ' - M ii E i ' ' 3 xi Pl ' .k . JI ' . x ' v D fl' Q NX Dxflx I . Q g . 'A lik, :g:i,.,f 422532 ? , fl I Ji-4 .1 ' .1 l 3, 54' A uf' -Tm' af., inte U' l , .. - V.- r-Q. , -, . ,,. Gmkxl .tra , I ,A , H. !z'fT.'.:'.g 5 I -4 ll if-AIQYQBQ-G59 V+ n'x-'LN '51 fy 1 N - ' i ,I I , - i . J X '55, 12 Ml'lJliN-SYDNEY KAl,lillJCJStZ1Jl'li will Basketball used to be an ele- gant sport, requiring adroit- ness, speed, dexterity, coordi- nation, and a certain dignity of demeanor and respect for fellow players. What other sport's goals, after all, were so unreachable by sheer exten- sion of the limbs? What other sport put such emphasis on rewarding victims of injury and affront? Now it seems, at large col- leges at least, although the infection seems to have spread, that basketball is the contact BASKETBALL ll Wins - 15 Losses sport of tall men. Strategy consists of blocking and tack- ling, since long arms. extended by selective breeding practices to lengths unavaila- ble in all-cotton shirts, have only to reach up and drop the ball with limp wrists through now indefensible nets. It is to Hampden-Sydney's credit that here basketball retains much of its old flavor. The coach is still nice. He has no bodyguards to prevent you from speaking to him on the reply. The players are allowed to go to class like everybody else, and eat the same food. There is no sixty-page full- color recruiting brochure. And when they play ball, the seats are close enough to the floor that you can smell all that healthy sweat, and hear the squeak of the shoes without using a parabolic reflector, and yell at the players to your heart's content, fully confident that they might be able to hear you. May it long endure. street, and and he will even ti., -13 THIQ Ol'l IfIIAl,l' PREPPY Yli.-'XRBUOR Finishing up the exam period with a still respectable 3-3 record, the basketball team apparently didn't get what they wanted for Christmas and it affected their perfor- mance. Like the rest of the east coast, locked in the grip of a record-breaking winter, the Tiger roundballers tumed frigid in january and dropped five of their next six contests. And so it went. A roller- coaster season wound up with crucial conference wins over Maryville and Emory 8c Henry, raising Tiger hopes for success in the ODAC tourna- ment. The key to their resur- gence, according to a beaming Coach Don Thompson, was the spirited in-the-nick-of-time play by reserves like Matt Dill, gi V 1 ,311 Ma!! Dill goes up for a rebound. Mark Kelly, William Barbour, and Scott Alley. Thompson's ideal script for the end of the season called for grabbing the second seed in the ODAC tournament and fighting all the way to the top. But the second place spot proved elusive. We had a chance to determine our own fate and we didn't do the job, lamented Thompson. Plagued from the start by a fourth-seeded position, the Tigers, fresh and high from an emotional two-point, last- second win over Washington 8c Lee, were knocked out of the running altogether by the Roanoke Maroons, ranked second in Division Three, dropping their record for the season to 11-15. ,,,,..,,,.,....q , x ,, 1 2 ,, .. - -,.....m. KN, . ..,. V.-.-as-naval nf,-.,.,, w-wqg 6' i aff ,.l' 'x ' ff 4:3313 '21 -',1,,J, , 'T' 'ii . ff' W ' J - wp, 7- ' B-'Q-2.,,j,i5.2f-A ,-. -Q, ' In-C31 ? HAM PDEN-SYDN EY KA1.li1DOSCIUl'li 1981 While you're pretending not to see what the other teams are doing, take a good look at the tennis team, because they're winners. After a long, tough, 26- match schedule, the netters ended the season with a 14-8-1 record, breaking W8cL's four- year stronghold by winning the Old Dominion Athletic Conference Tennis Cham- pionships. fNo other H-SC athletic team has won an O.D.A.C. championship since 1977.1 Another achievement: the team was undefeated in Florida while on their spring break, something which has never been done before by an H-SC tennis team. As a result of the O.D.A.C. victory, Scott Goodman, Worth Remick, and Angus Macaulay were selected by a regional committee to partici- pate in the NCAA Division III Championships in Salisbury, Maryland, on May 13-16, TENNIS 14 Wins - 8 Losses - 1 Tie 1981. Goodman played in singles and doubles, Remick in doubles, and Macaulay in singles. Goodman and Remick posted the best singles and doubles records on the team this year. Goodman won 18 matches and lost only 5 in the regular season. Because of a consistent, mentally tough game he defeated some out- standing No. 1 players from schools such as VPI, VMI, james Madison, and The Cit- adel. Remick, who is also noted for his consistent, intel- ligent game, won 17 matches and lost only 5. He won first place in the O.D.A.C. tour- narnent at the number 5 sin- gles position. Especially noted for his outstanding ability as a doubles player, Remick teamed with Goodman to win 19 matches in doubles compe- tition, losing only three. Goodman and Remick were also first place winners for flight 1 doubles competition in the O.D.A.C. tournament. Senior Angus Macaulay posted a fine record against players in the number two singles position and in dou- bles in order to get his berth in the N CAAS. Blitz james and jimmy Cain were also invaluable to the team's success, both win- ning first place in their respec- tive singles' numbers in the tournament. Cain and Macau- lay teamed up in the number two doubles position to win first place in the O.D.A.C. tournament at flight 2. Greatly missed during the second half of the season for both his tennis ability and his character was Charles Bowles. Before his Achilles tendon injury, Bowles had posted an 11-3 record at the No. 6 posi- tion. Fortunately, Bolling Lewis was able to fill in for Bowles. Without Lewis or anyone else in the top six, an ..... .... -..-1.,,, +4--A 1 -1- -:+V-5-.'3fr 4 +...f.... -........-.., .,.,.,.,,. n ,, ,..s,. at . ' ' arf 1 - , BL. 'fl -0 v L , Q 'V 'Av ' Af ,. 1 . , ' ' ' v v . . , ' 1. , . v f . . I ' f . . . . ' 4 v ' , v I lk .+.kis ..,.. ...... Here, the tennis team in working clothes, on the next page, gussied up for their audience with the president. -15 'l'HlQ Ol l lCIlAl. ' l'Rlil'l'Y YICARBOUIQ -- .: 'X - 4 are 2 . LN --L, O.D.A.C. win would have been out of the question. Much to everyone's delight Lewis proved himself in both singles and doubles competi- tion while participating in the tournament. He and james combined to form the No. 3 doubles team, winning third place at that number in the O.D.A.C. tournament. Hard work and talent are not the only ingredients which have gone into making this year's tennis team success- ful. Angus Macaulay explained: When I look back on my days on the tennis team, my first memory will be Coach Bobby G. Saylor. His leadership and influence have paved the road to our accomp- lishments. He was the tennis coach at H-SC for 13 years without an O.D.A.C. title, it took this year's team three years of working with Coach Saylor to reach its goal. Let me tell you: it's not easy to get lb .'ar 'T..,.' 'G 1V 'f.. .' 'Q ......- '1.a o . 'Q- '. , .r...k,-l:,'.' Worth Rfmick goes up for a rebound. Z . six players ready for every match they play, especially in such a mentally-oriented sport as tennis. Without Coach Saylor's technical abilities as a tennis coach, the team would not have been as successful as it has been in the past three years. His unique character and wisdom, said late starter Bolling Lewis, have been the real keys to our growth. I have seen each person on the team mature in many ways as a result of Coach Saylor's example. With his famous 'Cm'on, git up, let's gol' he turned us into a unified group, he has taught us responsibility, respect, motiva- tion, courage, manners, and morals-lessons which have been valuable to us and will continue to be down the road. It is no wonder that he was selected as O.D.A.C. Tennis Coach of the Year for 1981. HAMPDEN-SYDNEY KAl,lilDOSCiOI'E 1981 Golf is not really a sport. It is business. Ask any Prep, once he-'s out of college and in the real world: where else does he hold conferences, meet new contacts and cement old ones, scout out the promising new stocks, ask for the hand of his boss's daughter, but on the golf course or at the nine- teenth hole? True Preps are trained from birth to play golf. They teethe on rattles shaped like wedges, swat up divots with kiddie- GULF 5 Wins - 8 Losses sized clubs as soon as they can walk, and finally go off to school with their own bag, almost as big as they are. Clf Daddy is from the right part of the coun , they might UV even get their own caddy to go with ity So it's really unfair to call golf a sport at a Prep col- lege, since sports should be differentiable from everyday activities. Calling golf a sport has the same intellectual sleaz- iness as letting students who come from bilingual homes write off their language requirement with their non- English native tongue. It's like having N CAA-sanctioned shaving contests. But at least we're good at it. And it's no wonder they put Mike Pace straight from the NCAA Finals into the Annual Fund slot: business, after all, is business. We're pretty good at that, too. X 47 'l'I-IE OFl ICIAl.T' PREPPY YEARBOOK Don't say it too loudly in the Commonwealth Club, but the American Indians are in many ways the Founding Fathers of Prepdom. After all, they per- fected the objectification of the squaw, they first banned the Public Display of Affectiong they invented Weejuns, Top- siders, boxer shorts, initiation paddles, headbands, pipes, bright ceremonial clothes, and duck decoysg and they were the first to play lacrosse. Lacrosse, which takes its name from the crotch of the sapling in which the net is sewn, is no longer the all-day, out-for-real-blood affair it was when the Algonquins and Senecas went at itg but, like rugby, it retains the cachet of LACROSSE 8 Wins - 8 Losses being a genuinely dangerous fray into which the combat- ants plunge almost unprotect- ed from their opponents' quite legal but still savage blows. It also has the advantage that almost no one who isn't a Prep has ever heard of it. Billed as the fastest- growing sport at H-SC, lacrosse under Coach Bill Reid has attracted many native Northemers, whose genes, presumably, are shaped by the same glacial meteorol- ogy which curled the aborigi- nal athletic DNA. And many a Southerner, hardened on prep school survival tech- niques, has joined the team to bring about its succesful sea- son this year. For a mainstay of the 1981 team, which marched with fly- ing colors through a tough Division III schedule, facing nationally-ranked teams with distinction if not always with victory, was a -Southerner, jun- ior john Gibson of Norfolk. An econ major, Gibson started playing lacrosse in the seventh grade and led his Nor- folk Academy team to the State Championship in his senior year. He has done a great job for us, said Reid. He has eamed a name for the lacrosse program and for the whole school as well. Other Tiger standouts were Gibson's co-captain Billy Car- rington, Rob Bonaventura, and George Gluesner. .fl A if nu-rl'-,. -fT'Q,w',. . A . . Q .. -:Q r ' -.,,,,ml, - . fer: Lqf,g.-uP.- f.. . - Q ' ' A 1 I ,- ' '-2 . I ,--N - 'E . . . Fax: ,, v-'Uh' X l-5' N .l' or .-f ' 4-sf ' 34- - ,- 'vgff' T . 'Ti ' ' . . .- .'i'g-':':-gs.1f'ifF'?-' '- ..-.U3--.gi-. . .:- ,.e.-f-.sm ' -c 4-?f ,-- v Q L ,. V I .Nga-i .h s-5,-,fh,,owd-v , S. I -- - V W I ' K V. V. ,gr -. .A-,,.-.7K.90, .Q 3. 7 , . A A - . , V Q I. ' ,l .V , .i ...,-..-fx ' Qvggall -, .. . . p V , Q .- r fr.. X ,Hi Lv. ,ZW N.f'.f3?a-Ya.: .lv-33 fi. 211.1 - f. :MQ - r .. autfg. fjfsi- A ' . . .Q We 1 7: gn.-Q1 5. .. .- v . ,- . - . - W .. W I. -,ly -4 V- Jw . tf-'v :FW ' vie 'f-..'2c5'- 1- '--I - ww 2 -'- V g3w'4StL'-fire-WH-.f3' - - t .:31',g'wl 9 w - A54 Tw ' -' A ' N .. .f- ' R . A Q. ' 'e 1!mffffirf'f,1l,.ngx','f'.'+. 4,3 f. -I -'- ,, ' , ' -., - -f-z--v '. ..-. - ,-1--t ?.----- -4' - 1 + ' - -4 -.1s..,sfs.- ' N . 'A--- 'B A -' 4.4 A -- 'i ' 1 -vfwe s, V --. .- -18 cy:-6 x HAMPD EN-SYDNEY KALEI N rf ' 2-' ff : ,. -Q 415 , .- ,-,,,..n 't Y ,... --Q- DGSCQPE 1981 fs uf 'fa 'N fail Y f uP , MJ' f :'.. lg J 4' J it N.. ' N 5 M ' 1 ffifxv 'g h ' 'T , 4' 'I 1 Q. F' '- Q' V , -I 5 A., Hx- 1-- 5 9 ' 'Y' N f -H LYS' 'fra' 5 Q A in 'S YI il' 1 vv ' ,M Qui 3 -Aliktw . .BS ' 1 m,, --- -5- M. x. VM ' 1 ' ,, . -' WX I , il gnu'-I ,..,, . V :ae , 4 , W LT K.-1, 1 ' r 15 4' -...J 1 v ,' M fu ' .rf - ,,. s. ' , .V ' 7 3 ' 1 - K' ' ' ,-4'-, W x .. f Q 1- . gg W J if -:f?,.- uf 4-P' us' -'J' 35 --,Q .Q 4. 4- 1 4 X. ,AVL xr, P L is I ., -q .ia 'DT 'Ng5,..,. .,,, .I I..--Qmgl, .,V 2-.IP 'xl . -V '-.V .f--,1,.,-1.19m V ,V 'w-...N.f1-..'fa- . X., . ' 'tex X ' 5-wht-.,4'4 Uk-, 11.4. ,,.,, l -vain -. uw ff 1- mm, Nr' f .ewxg ! , .'.s.. ,. -,x 'w f1,,5.oaU Ni, '-xkvwn NYG 2.,,...M.-A, V 1 N- -A-. f 'T I affff- x -d.'3'-JA. H w,..,:. - Q5-My ffl. -1:gb.'.,.'- .gf r QCLQT ' 'Y 4 ,p , . -. ,mv ,K Q Q, , gy- wiki from being away from Tara. And we never got back on the track, bemoaned Fisher All of which must have been a great blow for Coach Fulton, especially if Qas has been rumoredjr he regards baseball as crypto-spring practice for football. , J HAM PDEN-SYDNEY KAULIDOSCOPE 1981 R GBY ,h.Q. Q-n tv P' T., .L . Lf., E E5 if ,p s, , . A . V . , ,, . A ,,: A .L - .' .1 , .g1E5i355i5gQ- .Vi J' 'E -A-..-, .. -or E I - ,' - .. A -s I 19: J , . .,..'-We-r ,. , L-pi ' --r .-. 4.--' ,S,..f., --f ' l When you see your first rugby game, after the awe has settled you no longer wonder why the English footballers tend to regard American football players as suspiciously effemi- nate, all encased in armor like Stormtroopers to protect them from the reality of a contact sport. The crunching and bang- ing of the overweight lines in American football is the voice of equipmentg in real football it is the crack of joints and the thud of opposing skulls. This is authentic gladiatorial com- batg you run authentic risks to play such a sport. The thrill of survival, the tartness of the daring, are therefore the more piquant. And you can't wear bandannas with a regulation grid-iron uniform. You are also-and this is not without power as a motivation-running in fairly select company. Few colleges beneath our notice take the trouble to field a rugby club Cand none without pretension l it -4, ' -Q - Y.. .ta 4-Q' W 4' ,AU ,av-al ' 1 Q 3 ' J' ' -:.ff'5'7'fQ' T' g, L, L has a rugby teamj, and the ones that do have one are OCD: Virginia, Johns Hop- kins, Yale. Perhaps the real attraction of rugby is that it is all like a grand fraternity party, really- you have your date, and a keg, and friends from another school, and a grand riproar- ing fight, without morning- ,after worries about what the house committee is going to say about this. L f' .n' -. 'ti Q ,gag c. .- QL T :J Afeirf' gia- -L.: X' - : s tina-fa gf:-' 2 ' , ' I .kr?r.s.' 7. if xy as gain V' . '- -. 1' 5 ' J.-,,g.,f,-' j.'.r,' ' ' . -- .fewarfawflffwe-grif' - A' , r .. -J .., 'f7,Y.fE!.'f tg- ?-2 11 .QJT -ff sawn .1 5.4 Q 1: A-.az-W : V, eff 4 fp iff ' . , , 1-'A sggx?-1-.ga ,f we .fi 5' 5 .. ffl. - if . F' '-if . ndfi55!:xf3.fi3i .7. ff- -.5 N 5. . -, .,-M-,. 4- rf., 1 - 1 11,4 , ' ff 3, ' .4 ' -- N -f--'47 .. ' ' Q VM A 8q.x..'2'i- .,'vA?f'qvQQ g: . U' AJ Y . ,, 1 I If ., gQr.:gf-yu--f.Q ---'-f..:f,F, Z ,A VAWWJ : '- '-4 f .. ,fig-5 nays, ,rfb V K ., '. F, sf ftf' ' N44 .g- L .,. .VJ f. . -4 is :FQ . --sf'r'aF', , J.. xt ' , 1-it A 'A .,,gf?TN,i:,-fx W 1. 3 0 ra w ' v , E r V is THE OFl IC1IAl.T PREPPY YEARBOOK KEET Skeet, says Larry Martin, is one of the healthiest of sports. For in it you take out your aggres- sions, tone your muscles and reflexes, and kill neither man nor beast while making as much noise as if you were. It is also well suited to the Hampden-Sydney ambience, requiring expensive and com- plicated equipment and energy-intensive, non- recyclable supplies. And it endears you to your neighbors, too, as anyone from the Ranch can attest. WATER PQLO Paul jagasich has coached the WHIGI' polo team as long as there has been one, and there has been a team a great deal longer than there has been a pool at Hampden-Sydney. 1 Don't ask where they did it before there wash Always strong contenders for state honors, Jagasichs water polo team swims on, undaunted by perennial contending, by cold weather, or by the funny trunks and hats they have to wear. Maybe it makes them concentrate on the ball more. ,i 0 Wins - 5 Losses f x - . ' - I' 'll-'t A.r ' Q. - mt i i , YQ ' ' A 5 i ' e 'Q , , gf - , ' ' .+ Q , X is W i it I + ii 4 e , . 'Qi mf- i' ,W wt V . V W 4 i NIA figg., ,, . - g g 1 ' 1 4..z'aa':.'.tz'. .:.z':A'.'.v.-.'. A.'3'.'.x'.Z'.'.2 1 'nw a,.,,,-ff,-.. s va n .,,. , S-I-,-.ai-I-Zi-Ii :i-.-:-.- A . . .-.-.uw-. .,yf:.-fra' .':.'n-f. :J-ga -41:1 H 32 '- v.nuv.4-.uv - 2 .. 1.11,-,-.-J .... - . .... .-,Q-11-7-,1-7-qq-V.,-,.p1H.,.p ,-,-.-.- , , V.... . . . .. . r.5.....,.4s..i- 1:41-1- If.-XMl'lJIiN-SYDNIAQY KAl.liIlX PS4 it WI , WMI Studies I TO EVERY LIFE A LITTLE BRAI MUST FALL One of the many beauties of Hampden-Sydney is that she offers her students many extracurricular activities which can help the student ease the pains of everyday stu- dent life. Whether is be writ- ing for the Tiger or playing intramural football, students are offered a wide range of activities from which to choose. One such activity is growing in popularity as more and more students find that this activity, indeed, compliments student life. Yes, studying is the top-growing extracurricular activity at the college. Studying does not confine the student to a place or time as do many other activities, and this is perhaps one of leading attributes of this activ- ity. One can study at virtually any time of the day or night and can study virtuallly any- place. While most who par- take of this activity choose to pursue it in the library, there is no organization which compels it. Studying, as of now, is an unorganized activ- ity on this campus, but it is a popular one. Anyone inter- ested in picking up this activ- ity is advised to speak to one of the Hampden-Sydney pro- fessors, for they seem to have a good background in this field. All-nighters It has been said that if God were a Hampden-Sydney stu- dent, he would have partied for six days and pulled an all- - - - K, ---vw 7 PREPSTER'S UNABRIDGED DICTIONARY Where to Xerox Notes Library - for those last- minute copies, the Xerox machine in the Library pro- vides an adequate way to copy all of the class notes missed during all the skipped classes. Cost: 55.10 per copy. Cabell House - packed away in the basement of this build- ing is Hampden-Sydney's answer to the problem of how to get the notes from the class which one has skipped all semester. The Xerox machine there is quick and cheap, but be careful - office hours are from 9-4:30. Cost: 35.0-1 per copy. 2nd Floor Bagby - this ma- chine talong with those in the lobby of Gilmer and the office in Mortonl is reserved for official use, but the de- vious student can get in there and copy everything needed - maybe even the upcoming test if you are lucky. Cost: suspension or expulsion. nighter on the sixth to create the universe. Most Hampden- Sydney students find that those long hours spent days before an exam studying are wasted, all can be adequately done the night before. The all- nighter - Hampden-Sydney's answer to putting off today what is past due tomorrow. For those poor unfortunates who are still virgin to the grasp of the all-nighter, two things should be kept in mind. First, there is no truth to the rumor that a Hampden- Sydney man needs ten hours of sleep each day, or that it is not possible to stay awake for more than twelve hours at a time. Human endurance can tolerate much more than this. Which brings us to number two. When human endurance fails, there is always caffeine. The key to pulling the all- nighter comes to Hampden- Sydney directly from Colom- bia - coffee. Pump it ing take it any way possible. Caffeine can do it when all else fails. So, put it off, there is always tomorrow night. Gut Courses A liberal arts diploma is the cer- tification of proficiency in many areas of study. There are students in this day and age who, although the administra- tion seldom admits it, are not naturally Renaissance men. For them, satisfying the profi- ciency requirement is not the joy it was intended to be but 3 5 THE OFFICIALN PREPPY YEARBOOK a massive hit. And readin' and writin for them, this list Shoot, anybody of courses, ideal for could do this. fulfilling distribu- ,K tion requirements I Study Foods without undue Halfway strain on the through an all- consciousness: nighter and Biology 108, you're illegally Environmental. hungry. What do Somebody pol- , you do here for luted the envir- onment. Some- thing must be done. Here's what. Biology 142, Botany. I think that I shall never - '7,'- V 11'fvq- il 5, - - H5 ' ' nr' nf- l bigtime mun- chres? There's no J.-'I .- 1 Haagen-Dazs and the nearest A Hickory Farms is in Richmond. What a bimmer. see a course as So the Hampden- lovely as a tree. Sydney man's Econ 101 , .p answer to the I n troduction. I , Screaming People have A Wasted Mun- money and, if the chies is his usual price is right, they blend of brilliant spend it. innovation and English 431, --,X tired compro- Creative Writing. WW fy mise: In vino veritas: Granola Bars-1 poetry and short ' .,,, to 3 boxes at a stories with the time. winemaster PREPSTERS .,.. Doritos- himself. I UNABRIDGED f although there's Math 1 03, Sta- ' DICTIONARY never enough, tistics. Statistics .-.. , since the smell are like a good BAG IT - put off until draws munchers bikini: what they show is fasci- nating, but what they hide is essential. Physics 108, Meteorology. Maybe a job as weatherman with WWHS awaits. Psychology 201, Intro. We do things not because we want to but because the devil made us do them. Religion 101, Old Testa- ment. There was a God and then there was this courseg and what one has to do with the other, no one knows. Rhetoric 101 -102. Ain't nuthin' much here 'cept maybe 56 tomorrow the work due last week. I've got a paper to write. Oh, bag it. SURE! - an interjection which expresses a sense of ironic disbelief. Do you think Heinemann will end his lecture on time? Sure! Hosian - to be abused, particularly by a professor. Dr, Crawley hosed me on that test. TAKE A HIT -- not to do as well as one expects. I took a hit on that test. like debs to a cotillion. Tuna-effective straight from the can, but you wake up in the moming smelling like a cat. Other People's F ood-the most common alternative. Pepper C heese-most econom- ical, lasting for months. Potato Chips with Bean Dip- longest lasting and least plea- sant side effects. The Hot Sandwich Section at Par-Bi l 's-practical only if you can wake up someone who has gas in his car. Dry Saltines, no Topping-the food of last resort. Clmk Moellm VISITING LECTURERS The Lectures and Programs licized more for being the son of Committee, in its never-ending the man who wrecked the struggle to titillate us, came world's economy than for very close to outdoing itself this being himself, discoursed at year. length about his life-long Michael Kopald taught us all search for an albino zebra. about the rules, philosphy, and Columnist Clark Moellenhoff technique of Chinese painting. told us all about how Ronald Herb Graaf was supposed to Reagan reacts to and with the show us all the dirty linen he press, and about the ethics of had collected from the floors of being a reporter: 'I do it any Hollywood's cutting rooms, way I can. Dr. Emmett Burns, but he didn't make it because of the regional director of the snow. Quentin Keynes, pub- hoff sy 1 . 4,1 24 the NAACP, led us on an anno- tated voyage through black his- tory, warning that unless something changes. all Ameri- cans will be losers. In March Gerhard Weinberg discussed The Ideology of Nazi Foreign Policy and Elliott Lehman investigated the tangled web of Responsibility and Profit. In April George Sher talked about abortion and reverse discrimi- nation, Lisa signed our books. and Tony Hendra looked back at the Eighties. Could you have asked for anything more? Key 7265 1 aa ' v lHll Ol'l'IKZlAl. ' PREPPY YE,-XRBCJUK Alertness to the unforeseen is looked to see what had hap- I . t ie secret ingredient of a great penecl. What had happened, of scientist, according to course, was that the mold had Hampden Fellow Thomas killed the bacteria, and the rest Eisner, who spoke in Sep- is history. Fleming had been tember on the topic of serenclip- open to unexpected results and ity in scientific research. t f ' ' o iguring out uses for them. Eisner, himself an en tomol- ln the same way, while look- ogist, illustrated his point with ing for something else, Eisner Sm, fx. .N W ,, . . . ies o scientific discover y. discovered a cardiotonic drug When joseph Fleming found a in fireflies and a shark bacterial culture that had been contaminated by penicillin mold, he didn't throw out the petrie dishg he I Nl ull N - 1 'I'lion1r1.w lf'-lm repellent in the sea hare, for looking at flowers, he invented an ultra-violet TV camera which has become invaluable in other fields like art history and machining. At the end of October, H arpefs editor Lewis Lapham decried America's ambiguity about spiritual and temporal empire. In 1945 when America could have ruled the world by force, she chose to rule by thought Ours is an attitude sneered at, says Lapham, by a world which misinterprets our altruism as weakness. But whereas the show is almost over if we don't do something soon, Lapham sees a bright future: the imagi- nation of politics will soon catch up with that of science and technology and America can return to center stage. Al lf i i i i - J H A lNll'l7liN-SYDNEY KAl.liIl7USC1tJl'li lfliil SYMPQSIUM ON REPUBLICANISNI f 1? tak 8 A fl.. in ' 5 gf! 'fm'-f if W' fW'Ff2'fJh 4' 1, e -,L 1 it I' 3 7 0 f, T, , I' ii if The syniposzasls IA. Dr. Ta rkozi, B. Dr. Lerner,C.IJr.llI0ore,D.Dr.ilIf'yer.xj,all.m11le.snowIlia!ymlzcelzrtxlrlzmzplled. On April 8 and 9, Hampden- Sydney was infused with plenty of salubrious intellec- tual investigation by four eru- dite, cogent, and distinguished professors of political science, in a breathtaking study of what Dr. Goldberg is fond of cal- ling the American regime. The symposium, entitled The Grigin and Character of Modern Republicanismf' sought to explore the various philosophical influences brought to bear on our founders. In many ways the symposium was a rebuttal to the theses of Garry Wills, who argued in his books Inventing America and Explaining America that jefferson and Madison were less influenced by John Locke's libertarianism than by the common-sense communal benefit philosophy of so- hush enlightenment scriven- ers like Francis Hutcheson and David Hume. In the opening address, Dr. Nathan Tarkov of the Univer- sity of Chicago called Wills' evaluation of Locke rife with April 8-9, 1981 The Origin and Charafter of Modern Republicanism perversionsf' particularly in its attempt to show Locke as hostile to the Scottish Enlightenment. Dr. james Moore of Concordia University asserted that Locke and Hutcheson were not sys- tematically inimical, anywayg Wills, says he, invented an antagonism to fit his paradigm. Professor Marvin Meyers of Brandeis University argued that Wills must have a highly imaginative mind to see in the extant works of Hume the paternity of the F ed- eralist Papers. The grace note of the confer- ence, the closing paper of Dr. Ralph Lerner of the University of Chicago, depicted the pro- found contributions of Alexis de Toqueville to our apprecia- tion of the enduring tension between liberty and equality. 59 THIC OI lfICIIAl. PREPPY YEARBOUK ADIVIIRAL JAME B0 D T he next time someone takes some of our people hostage and your minister says he is going over there, tell him to stay iiome. So advised Admiral fames B. Stockdale in his lec- ture on our misconceptions about what we should do for orisoners of war and hostages. The fonner president of the Citadel and the Naval War Col- iege was the Pratt Distin- guished Visiting Professor of political science during the spring semester. He taught a course on Rulers and the Ruled: Ethics and Public Pol- icy in a Democracy -a course that had even Hampden-Sydney students fighting to get in-and give a standing-room-only lecture on a subject near to his heart, our policy on prisoners of war. Stockdale said that there are five major misconceptions about prisoners of war the regarded the Iranian hostages as just thatj. The first is that any release of your hostages is a good release. Not, said Stockdale, if it involves dis- gracing your country and invalidating the trials your people have been through. He looked with horror upon the suggestion made by the Carter delegation after the attempt to rescue our hostages failed: that the prisoners be photographed beside the wrecked helicopters, proclaiming an Iranian vic- tory, and then released. The second fallacy is that we should send little bit of home to the hostages. Such visits have no diplomatic use- fulness, nor do they boost morale among the prisonersg indeed they often do till far more harm than good. The third misconception is that hostages are brainwashed and go crazy. This, said Stockdale, is simply not true. Prisoners have been condi- tioned by public thought that they are going to go crazy, so they sit around waiting for that magic moment when their mind snaps. It never does. You are so busy fighting your captors, mentally if not physically thwarting their wishes, that you don't have time to go crazy. And that is why the fourth misconception, that prisoners sit around waiting to go home, is Y S .-lr1nziralSIockda le had hard zuordsfor lerrorzsls. TOCKDALE also untrue. Life goes on even after men are taken captive. They form their own societies, make their own laws. They occupy their minds with more than just thoughts of home, they have to. The fifth misconception, according to Stockdale, is also the most vicious: that for the sake of protecting the prisoners' safety, we should refrain from attacking the country which holds them. To the contrary, if we don't, the captors will think they've won and will treat the prisoners worse than ever. Dur- ing Stockdale's captivity in Viet Nam, President Nixon ordered a bombing of North Viet Nam in an attempt to release the pri- soners. The mission failed, but Stockdale noticed no change in his captors' behaviour, unless-and here is the irony- it was for the better. In 1964, during his second combat tour in Viet Nam, Stockdale was shot down while leading an F-4 fighter bomber mission as an air wing com- mander. Captured by the North Vietnamese, he survived seven and a half years of solitary con- finement and torture before his release in 1973. He was then made a Rear Admiral in the Pacific Fleet. Stockdale is the most- decorated officer in the Navy, wearing twenty-five personal combat decorations, including two Distinguished Flying Crosses, ten Air Medals, the Legion of Merit, two Distin- guished Service Medals, four Silver Stars, two Purple Hearts, and the Congressional Medal of Honor. HAMPDEN-SYDNliY KAl,liIDOSt1CJl'li 1081 SEAMUS HEANEY Beauty, confesses poet Sea- mus Heaney, who visited the campus in March, can be debilitating to one's tempera- ment. It is, however, well worth that risk, to run one's fingers in a miserly way through the riches of language. Introduced by poet-in- residence Tom O'G1ady as probably the most celebrated poet of our time, Heaney spoke to a standing-room-only crowd of students and other admirers as he read from his works and commented on their composition-and upon the critics' reaction to them. When he was writing Deal of a Naturalist, Heaney recalled, he aimed at sensual- ousness of language and made the poem as thick and muddy as possible. The result JG' 3 one critic called simply A long, disappointing poem about a frog. It was not really that long, quipped Heaney. His attraction for the Prep contingent-beside his predi- lection for tweed-is perhaps his fascination with preserva- tion, with fixation in time. Especially in his early poems, he reaches out to the past, drawing images into the pres- ent, even projecting them into the future-the very image of the Prep psychology. You're always searching, said Hea- ney, for a way to make the details of your life travel beyond you. For this his sym- bol, in the poem Bogland, was a man preserved in peat, along with his leather jacket, for eight centuries. Talk about keeping the old fashions alive. s W' 1 I Q W , . 61 THE OFFlC3IAI. ' PREPPY YEARBOOK LISA BIRNBACH 'f I4 t Www E' 'Tx 'Uh' The Good Old Boys of Hampden-Sydney met their Preppy match - Lisa Birn- bach. The editor of The Offi- cial Preppy Handbook visited Hampden-Sydney this year to see if the little hamlet in Southside Virginia is indeed the preppy Camelot that it is said to be. From out of the closet came the packed away spring war- drobes and all the Hampden- Sydney preppies that wear them. It is not everyday that the princess of preps comes to campus, so everyone had to be sure to act properly prep. Even Commons got into the The worn covers of The Preppy Handbook were taped together and brought to the Bookstore Monday afternoon to get them autographed by Bimbach, who graciously signed the many books, adding comments, usually about the dress of each stu- dent. These comments, how- ever, kept the students pacified as they waited in the long line waiting for that valuable recognition from their leader. That night, the students filed into Parents and Friends Lounge to hear the words of wisdom that Lisa Bimbach had for them. Eight o'clock act by featuring beach music came, but there was no sign of for Sunday's dinner. 62 Ms. Bimbach. True to the preppy form, she was late. Her talk, however, was worth the wait. Birnbadr kept the audience in stitches, talking about every- thing from preppy majors - English - to the PMOC fPreppiest Man on Campusj - President Bunting. She talked about borrowing f it's really takinguj and summer- ing Cuwhat you do when you're not in school. J Did Hampden-Sydney pass the test? From all indications, it did, but the truth remains to be seen. If Hampden-Sydney makes Bimbach's next book, it will know that Hampden- Sydney is indeed the Camelot of the Prep kingdom. llAlNll'l3liN-SYDNEY K.-'xl4lilIJOSCIUl'E 1981 E OF HISTORY Perhaps it is this grand james Madison have given sense of history that makes birth to a generation that now Hampden-Sydney the Came- follows in the footsteps of Si lot it is in the Preppy king- Bunting and John Brinkley. dom. Preppies have long been history-minded people, emphasizing tradition above all else, and the path of tradi- tion on the Hill has changed little since the Founding. Our ancestors who followed in the Hampden-Sydney is a cob- blestone in this path of life. Many come and fewer go, but the names remain the same. In fact, it would seem as though a prerequisite for admission to the College is some relation to footsteps of Patrick Henry and a College father, for it seems that almost every student is related in some way to an Eggleston, Venable, Cabell, Morton, Cushing, or their ilk If a relation cannot be traced to one of the fathers, most assuredly a relation can be traced back several genera- tions, since a commitment to Hampden-Sydney spans gen- erations and not a mere four years. EIFKIIOII 'QU' Ilze Preszdermrzl Debate' 1111 f 1 YfI17f6'X'll71flJ'l?1U rat! In 11101117 A .LM l The dF!1'1IHfI07l l if X tl1fjol1nBr0ok,g F o X J .J Q l ji? , 5' a 07.acu.t g- Y David Mmm 54,111,551 n L Dy- R,,,,fg,,L,,m,5m L K I g ztlslzozm fflF771f1IfII71FfU llr fzzqzia 'l'Hli OI l ICZlfXIfX' PRIil'PY Yli,-XRBOUK qyNftlf.ll'x' Ml . 1 . , ,wi 1-'fail' XX Y iff! 45:1- 1,-1 3 fiif' .1 , 11,1 s muulvw 1 J , z N . xxv 4 , 1 , , .4 1 , K 1 ' g 4 1 ai I 11ur1,,,,fI wwf- tlzf nzenzfmg f 5 fn 'N ffor Dm ,,0QjfS-Sx- . mf .54,111g5-HI MW s TQ ' - l U ., 'ig 1 ful J 2 E vpn - ua- va- 1, 1,1 x-+' 'ZW .. .wx a ..:4 f HH 1 1 Sa- ' f r v ll.X Nll'lll'.N-SH l7fNl',H lx.'Xl.l:llX D51 ,t Jl'l2 l'I l FROM BOATHOU E PARTIE TQ THE FIVE-CQU FAIR Hlhile Hampden-Sydney is not by any means a slack school, there has neyer been what the Constitution might call a clear and present danger that any large percentage of the studentry would stiffer Vitamin D deficiency because of the lack of sunlight in the library. Yet the Aristote' ian idea, a dim awareness, of this lurking danger seems to inluse the HamtJden-Sydney psyche. It is widely accepted that to ayoid such complications, you have to relax sometime. And relax students do, eyen il it is hard to squeeze all that relaxing into nine months, and eyen though most ol' the men work up quite a sweat relaxing so hard. Home lollxs are neyer satislied.J The next few pages will 4 ut a broad swath through that rich hatyest of relaxation, leaying foreach ol you, no doubt, many gleanings untouchedg for those your own memory, not these sacred pages, must suffice. . usa-.tum-, 4 nhVLuXl 437 fi? CALENDAR HOPPING AS A WAY QF LIFE August 1980 29 Freslinian Orientation 30 liclwanl Clliainberlin, The Du-p Hearts Ckmrc- Mixer: Doug Clark September 1980 3 Recital: Quela Watson, vocalist 13 Football: Sewanee, H 16 Thomas Eisner: Serendip- ity in Scientific Research 17 Recital: Melody Green, piano 20 Football, televised by ABC: Salisbury State, H 27 Football: Guilford, A October 1980 l Recital: Ainos Ire latina- t Graves Tlioinpson, piano 3-8 Fall Break -1 Football: Britlgt-water, .-X 10 Tiger ll lfootballz lNIa1yx'illt', A 12 Wine 'lasting 13 Faculty Foniin: jaines Arieti, Same and Difference 15 Recital: john Boross, guit it 16-17 Play: Blark Comedy 18 2-1 Ro 25 20 30 31 FX 1- 16- October Dante: C Iloc'kworl4 Football: Washington 8: Lee A Fall Convocation bert Samuel l.arzffLSter '29, LL.D. james Mapes, hypnotist Tiger Football: Davidson, H Concert: The Madisonians Lewis Iiiphamz The Lost Illusion of American Empire Parents Weekend Dance: 'I11e Nighthawksu Hiisirs 15 jeff MacNelly Cartoons 31 Bill Coleman: N8cW Watercolors November 1980 l Parents Weekend Football: Iimorw' gf Henry, H 2 ODR Tappping Al Election Day 6 Beat Macon Blood Drive VPLS Meeting 7 Tiger New London Special 8 Football: Coast Guard Academy, A 12 Recital: Hassell Simpson and Bob Benvissuto, two one-act plays 13 Faculty Forum: William Hendley, Economics and the Law 14 Tiger Homecoming ,Dance l5 Homecoming Macon Day Football: Randolph-Macon H Greek Block Show, Alpha Phi Alpha 19 Theater West Virginia: Mossie and the Stripper' 21 Tiger 24 Thanksgiving Dinner at Commons Concert and Inauguration of the new Steinway Concert Grand: Jerome Rose, piano 26-30 Thanksgiving Break December 1980 1 Dean Goodale: Drinking, Hampden-Sydney Style 3 Recital: Rachel and Owen Nonnent, vocalists -1-6 Play: 1776 5 Tiger 7 Christmas Concert: Hampden-Sydney and Mary Baldwin Choirs ll Christmas Benefit Party, CC8cCP 15 Recital: Angus Macaulay, guitar l I '1 , iff I lr V5 H U?-1 .. , ..,' H l5-l9 Exams january 1981 20 Classes Resume 22 Faculty Forum: David Tay- lor reading from his wc mrks 26 Michael Kopald: Chinese Blush Painting February 1981 3 Richmond Sywnphony Brass Quintet 4 Faculty Fomm: Admiral Stockdale, Learning for Life 6-7 Midwinters Herb Graaf: Out Takes 7 Midwinters Dance: Rob- bin Thompson Band 9 Convocation: Admiral Stockdale, Leadership 12 Quentin Keynes: To Spot a Zebra 18 Recital: Neel Beard, Svdo- phone Clark Moellenhoff: Rea- gan and the Press 19-20 Dinner Pageant: A Colonial Evening at Table CWorld Premiereb 21 Mixer: Good Humor Band 2-I Emmett C. Bums: Black Perspectives on Race Relations: 1880-1980 26 Ice Cream Sunclae Social 27 Michael Amman, magician CAC Mixer CAC Talent Concert 28 jongleurs: Two One-act Plays Thomas Wright: An Evening with Gershwin CAC Dance Combo, jazz Band, Deli Spread, and Silent Movies 'liHli Ol'FICIlAlf PREPPY Yli.-XRBOOK 'llre theatrical season at Hampden-Sydney perhaps proved the innate histnonic impulse of Prepdom: no fewer than three separate organiza- tions performed, where there had been only one before. The Fine Arts Department, the jongleurs, and the Not-Ready- for-Liberal-Arts Players each produced plays on the johns stage. These included a play in which dark was light and light was night, two musicals about Colonial America, a quartet of one-acts about the sexes, and Hampden-Sydney's own cele- bration of poor taste, our low- humor, look-back-in-jest revue Parting Shots. Black Comedy, presented by the Fine Arts Department, was the first play of the season. Directed by Cardon Burnham, Peter Shaffer's play, based on complications arising from a blomi fuse, featured classic ...a furzous army of wrinkles... i 1 1 -U PLAYS deception-and-discovery situa- tions in an ironical lighting scheme, where the characters floundered around blindly on a fully-lit set and saw quite well on a darkened one. The cast drew largely on talents of several freshmen: joe Metzger played the pro- tagonist Brinds- ley Miller, a young artist, Chris Nelson played the neighbor whose furniture is stolen, and Nate Pendley played crotchety Colonel Brindsley. They were sup- ported by the husband-and wife team of Skipp and Jil Sudduth. The Sherman Edwards mus- ical I 7 76, presented on a week- end early in December, was made possible by financial encouragement from the administration, which seemed eager to have the spirited musi- cal produced against all odds. To anyone who knows the least thing about Hampden- Sydney, the number 1776 probably evokes a confused montage of founding fathers, original patriots all, and all dif- ficult to distinguish as to which founded the College and which the country. Designed to resolve this identity crisis, 1776 went on, featuring a cast of Hampden- Sydney men as large as some johns audiences. It didn't seem to matter too much that only the leading ladies, Trisha johnson and Mary Breeden, could sing, audiences were charmed by the mere spectacle of it all. Cam Bow- man played john Adams, the man who needs a written de- claration of independence, A Colonial Evenin 132, At Table ,QE 4320 IOPE 1981 722ZQf! QQ, 2. Cl 6 QQZJ LQ4? g BI5 Q I Skipp Sudduth played Tho- mas jefferson, who couldn't get the written declaration ing moments. The musical rightg and Bob Wilson, display- was directed by Dudley Sauve ing a curious array of wrinkles and was presented by the on his head, played Benjamin jongleurs. Franklin, whose wit kept the The first show of the spring Congress buoyant. Phillip semester was a first in itself: the Beard was a memorable Step world premiere of Cardon Hopkins, the wooly old man Bumham's Colonial Evening from Rhode Island who deliv- at Table, a montage of tavern ers the refrain Rum at alarm- talk and authentic colonial X X songs presented in Winston Hall before an audience who were eating and drinking the very same colonial food that the characters in the play were eating. Spring's second offering was Robert Anderson's You Know 73 THE OFFICIAIJ' PREPPY YEARBOOK I Can't Hear You When the Waters Running, a quartet of one-act plays, episodes loosely united by a continuous explo- ration of the dramatic tensions between men and women. 1Vhile the plays are comic, they served as a unit to enforce the thought that, as the young playwright in the first episode says, Life is a tragedy played by comedians. The Parting Shots show for 1981 was the third written and directed by its creator, Skipp Sudduth. Compared to the 1980 Shofs inventive Star Trek and jeopardy off- takes, this show came down to earth with a long, show- unifying skit about life in Venable, complete with an ambitious two-level dorm set. Also featured was Those Amazing Animals, a docu- mentary about the boys at Longwood. Of course the news was delivered by anchormen Sudduth and Joel Sweet, and A J 'fl 1 V 5-fn . L- , ,... I ,g.1.5 fi 4, 5 3 f S .i.,,.. Watefs Running Parting Shots 5. F Colonial Evening at Table H 4' Y N, 4, Yr . 4 ' we We X - ff?- 1 .LLL 7-I commercials filled out the evening. Many people in the audience considered the high point of the evening to have been Sudduth's moving Hampden-Sydney slide show, an audio-visual memory book his farewell to the College. WQRTH DOCUME TI G In the chill Spring, cameras from the chill north turned their chilly eyes on Hampden-Sydney students and asked a chilly question: Is there a morality of war? The news team and camera crew from TV-Ontario were really here to interview President Bunting, who prob- ably knew the answer, having read almost as many books on the subject as he has written. Students got into the spotlight when the Canadian interview- would be interesting to see what the aver- age American youth had to say about war So after holing up with the President and General Sam Wilson all morning. the crews invaded Commons and told everyone to act natur ally. Naturally enough, no one did, which is probably just as well for the sake of the Cana- dians' idea of the average American youth. ers decided that it 1 ,M - 1 an . 'Quai lb i 5 ' 1 .K Sy s 6 ff fs? -1 f - n zo W . n-wg. A-fin. . .. mg' f q,.x.-- Q., V ' 44, . . . .4,.3,,L::ns-fr '--?'rL'16- -H'-M56-N E - ' 1 if 5' ' ' - . ' ' -M 1 - JP- 've'-I- 'flQv'?',1i5.?f'jf52f H mu ' A :-dggdggph V ' i. ., ,. .A. ., , --'H P f.,. V, 5 A 1w-,,.,.- i . , 1 ' .M X, a- ,'-'- . - :-'Q.'yg,3 , A - Q- . -V ,,.,, ,, ' 1 4 - - I I , 3'3 -I tj: M4-. Hs-H-A ',,-!'.a.,.'5'g'Yf,5N.V3':f.j':iv,g1Q2Q3fRQmg? - ,j.:-. ,2'ywx:r. g.'Y- X- Y,-if-,,w Ji, my K . , X . .t , ., . , 1 ' ' - - - V, . '- -- K-' ' - 'f -' 1---lu 'J' V- ., . -.lb-as A f . , 4 4 C 1 March 1981 5 Faculty Forum: Glenn j. Broadheacl Gerhard Weinberg: The Ideology of Nazi Foreign Policy 12 Seamus Heaney: Reading from his works Recital: Gertrude Ortner, piano, and Paul jaga- sich, 'cello 13 Virginia Opera Asociation: The Barber of Sezfzllle 17-19 Anznzal House shown t 18 Recital: joy Burrows, vocalist 19 Elliott Lehman: Respon- sibility and Profit 20-30 Spring Break April 1981 1 George Sher: Govemment Funding of Elective Abortion 2 George Sher: Moral Prin- ciples in Public Policy and Reverse Discrimi- nation 2-4 jongleurs: You Know I Can't Hear You When the Watefs Running 4 GAG Square Dance 6 Lisa Bimbach: Autographs and a Chat 8 Recital: Hassell Simpson and Bob Bemissuto, one- act play 8-9 Symposium: Modem Republicanismn 9-11 Parting Shots 9 Phi Beta Kappa Initiation Phoebe Stanton: Is There an American Architec- ture? lO Tony Hendia: The 80's, A Look Back ll Iongwood Minithon l4 Phi Sigma Iota Initiation 15 Recital: Barbershop Quartet it X3llrgtQP t 16 Senior Dinner 22 Recital: Bob Rogers, har- monica 23 Chi Beta Phi Initiation 24-25 ODAC Tennis Tour- nament, Lexington 24 Senior Class Dinner Dance 25 Fire School 26 Concert: Sweet Briar Col- lege Choir 27 Faculty Forum: David Adams, Is There an Oil Crisis? 29 IFC Banquet 30 Phi Sigma Alpha Initiation IFC Dance May 1981 1-2 Greek Weekend 2 Chariot Race, Tug-of-War Lacrosse: Randolph- Macon, H 6 Recital: Alice Hines and Allen Scott, vocalists B. Franklin Moomaw: Work of the African Foundation in Uganda 7 Faculty Forum: William Shear, Netting Spiders in New Guinea 10 Spring Concert: Hampden- Sydney Choir and the Noteables ll Memorial Service for David Bruce 12 last Day of Classes 14-20 Exams 22 Trustee Meeting Dedication of Fleet Gym- nasium 23 Baccalaureate Service Graduation Hli Ol l lCIlAl, ' PREPPY YliAliBillK 4,23 ,,.. :T f . 'ca -,.v.- : . ,. :....: . -3' 1 - is P is sas. : h-4 hi 5-r 5 .slim , 'Q-'xt :wg . N 1 LJ. I. , we-5 I- g' 1:3 L. E t t iv, X V- ya. , 5 1 ATCLQLQ . ,TJ M24 x '11 ', , fi , ,. . ,-'V 4'. , . in .. ,. X1 in E' gg..-Q: A -4 .Mp-tb If 4 X ' fx XR ,i k ii. l'- HAMPDEN-SYDNEY RALEIDOSC IOPE 1981 GREEK WEEK Lotsa Beer, No Bananas Spirits were high when the tv 4 5. f. glib A gg, classical partiers of Hampden- 'W , ' Sydney elevated their party ,Q 9 1 - , cups to toast the start of Greek ' Week '81, April 29. The annual festivities got fi underway at The Ranch with . 6 I a party co-sponsored by KA and SAE. Into the early morn- ing hours, people moved in time to the tunes of The Good Humor Band as the kegs were sapped of their contents. Followin the coralling S activities provided at the Ranch, these Grecian cowboys stampeded off to various par- ties throughout the week with intentions of lassoing a good time either at scattered frater- nity parties or by pouncing on one of the available dances. Pounceable dances ranged ' A 9. ' . 1, , from Caspar to johnny Sport Coat and the Casualsf' who both appeared Friday night, May- l, to White Wolf who made their appearance Thursday night. Drink, although deemphas- ized, was available at most functions. Once the preliminaries were out of the way, Saturday brought with it the eagerly awaited mud fights, and natu- rally the fiercely competitive Chariot Race, won by PIKA, with hot wheeling KA on their heels. The Chariot Race was not the only reason for the pres- ence of the thronging masses on the Hill. In the true classi- cal fashion, the spectators came to observe the lacrosse game against Randolph- V - ' X Q, 'I'l-IE oFF1cz1A1f PREPPY YEARBooK - N' ' ' Macon. With an abrupt inver- .yr sion of beer cups, in other ' , br 'yg, T't words thumbs down, the ' 3-.g,,-jf A crowd cheered as H-S deli- V- ', W xeq' Qi ' vered a perfect execution of f i Q-a. W the Randolph-Macon A defenses. The fates decreed our I ' 12-5 decision. Q 'Q The last full day 'of partying drew to a close. Vlsiung Bu if np? 1 friendsfrom other schools clunked plastic cups with their hosts to toast the close of Greek Week in the same manner as thev had christened ll. Q X R 'faith V19 Xa! QRASH DEW 80 Xi Ib'2- , ,L O ' . 4 I ' N 4 0' ' . ' I ,. ,L-.5 am. ififeifk -cf: , : Ti 'x.!-.gf , 'Fifi J n i'i'1..t 6 X HAMPDEN-SYDNEY KALEIDOSCOPE 1981 Banning the PDA A CONTRADICTION I No words can describe the Hampden-Sydney Public Dis- play of Affection-assuming, of course, that it even exists. Herewith, a description worth a thousand words. TERMS TH Ii I dn,-M I' U Vs Af E 9 ,Jil 1 JY . .- .f 3 1 it J fX1'b.w 5 J. ', Q44 L J- I ftp I f b R 1 5 4 I gr- , HAMPDEN-SYDNEY KAIJCIDOSCIO PE 1981 11: . vmqrf S, Q 1 11111 x-Oi I! 'Q FWS ,..,,,. AV '53-I - Y 1' f A l , 'Q xx ,qi X v . w a 3 ,.,.. Qfils ggi!! 4 ,O U f X :pf VI 'FJ' . 5? , D. who -nlfi 1' ,.n !. I J THI-1 0Fl lCIlAI- ' PREPPY YE,-XRBOOK Prep Palaces THE DORM RGOM The essential feature of the official Preppy dorm room is that it must be furnished with almost anything but what is appropriate for a donn room. It should be a little bit of West End Richmond or Grosse Pointe carted bodily to school in the back of the station wagon and set up in defiance of what- ever shade of mold green B8cG has picked to paint the walls this year. Hence the insistence on aquaria and hanging plants. Hence the posters from the Bookstore. Hence there- along.j And you pick them care- fully, on the basis of the quality of their oriental rugs, their shirt size, their car, and their ability to take legible notes. No dorm room is com- plete without a Q loft, significant street signs, an illegal hotplate and Mrs. Fear- nought's Bruns- - wick stew, a lid collection, and a decoy or two. 3, Entertaining Mummy fb' Daddy in your Room One of the most important things that a Preppy has to do during his college career is to entertain his production. even without the fittle round table in the corner tthe stereo iias to dol, of Mummy's collection of silver-framed doubleknits and the console TV who claimed to be your roommate on that fateful first day, back in August of your pictures of aunts and uncles in freshman year? Worries like their tuxes, of Trey with his that you don't have any moreg first lacrosse stick or little Buffy you can pick your roommates on her first hunt. fPutting out pictures of people they like is about as close as some Preps get to the Public Display of Affectionl Remember the kid with the 8-1 now. fThe DKK your hall played cards with every night until he flunked out and crawled back to Vipers Branch, West Virginia, where he should have stayed all parents when they visit. Too often, the Preppy feels that he must take his parents out so that they will get the proper impression of the College-5 a better impres- sion, however, can be made by just inviting the parents into his room. One must remember, however, that entertaining mummy and daddy in the room is more than merely bringing them in, seating them on the bed, and HAMI DILNJ SX DNEX lxAl HDOSC Ol P mixing them a drink, certain preparations must be under- taken and certain rules must be followed if the proper impression is to be made. In brief, the Preppy should keep the following in mind: l. Before your parents arrive, hide all of your papers that have received a grade of a 'C' or below. Place those papers with a 'B' or better in a prominent place on your desk so that your parents will be sure to see them. If you have no papers above a 'C', however, fake it. 2. Remove the Penth0u.se's and Playboy 's that have accumulated in your room during the year. tOf course, the perfect Preppy would not have such reading mate- rials in his room in the first place-but who's perfect?l 3. Strategically place several editions of the Wall Street journal, Fortune, and Forbes around the room. If you have to borrow such literature tand let's hope that you do notb be sure to remove the address labels from them. 4. Remove all imported beers and liquor from your room and replace them with domestic Black Label and Aristocrat, respectively. After these preparations have been made, you will be ready for your parents' visit. Bring them ing sit them downg and mix the drinks. Also, you must make sure that all your preparations were not made in vaing be sure that your parents can see that college life is rough and that you cannot make it on the allowance that they are currently giving you. They will understand, beside, what are parents for anyway? No pets may be kept on campus by students living in dormitories, fraternity houses, or Clollege-owned housing. -Code of Student COIIKIIIICT, Section B, Pamgraplz VLC. Since pets are las any number of psychologists would be pleased to testifyj calming influences on unruly minds, the College in its wisdom may be defeating its own purposes by forbidding them. The stu- dents, whether because of their innate desire to be affectionate to something tand neither their fellows nor their girl- friends are eligibley or simply because it is a forbidden plea- sure, have lots of pets. Most of the pets, it must be admitted, are the legitimate kinds-your basic aquarium full of Black Moors or piranha, a boa constrictor duly caged, a gerbil or fthis is living dangerouslyy two, even a parrot. These are the delib- erate pets, brought with great difficulty from home and maintained with equal diffi- lillli Ol l Ifili-Xlfl' PRICPPY Ylf,-XRBCXJK Prep on All Faurs PETS culty and greater expense in a crowded room. Where the natural tif repressedy benignity of the Hampden-Sydney man shines most brightly-and where his ingenuity is most sorely tried-is the accidental pet: the marimba-ribbed hound dog stray with the irresistible Hera boopis eyes, or the tufty little kitten which obviously just escaped some country- man's drowning bag, or even the campus squirrels which, after two centuries of learning to distinguish between student sensibilities and john Brink- ley's back yard, have come to know which side their bread is buttered on. Maybe pets, like Latin and Western Man, should be required as part of the educa- tion of humane and lettered men. Which may if Stl t not do much for Dean Drew or for the ladies at B8cG who bear the brunt of cleaning up after all this sentimentality, but it will probably do a lot for the state of the world, by and by. .v I-5 7,2 1' V, A .' ' ' .J ,.,. . .H Z' .gf .3 . ., . . ,. iii ..,,. . 3? . 'Z 'f ...,. 1.4 ..... . Q ' ' .3 .Q 'f.g1 424 '. ' I h 4 . . , nn z ,,g-- 1' z! :! '- 'S - F ., , ,a .. . .mn H '.1-:-:Q-:.:,:4z.'.'.'.f.-.'--.u.-.'.-u.-..'. .. rra-Lw.'.nwmfrmr.2'.'.u:nx . A 111.1 ,.'7 . - 1.5 ,V .mmlmi :if . . , .., ..- ..- .,, v . -ml 'IPI .. E1L4'.1r'16P.- vw 'ami HAMPDEN-SYDNEY KALEIDOSCOPE 1981 THE FRATERNAL INSTINCT If two heads are better than one, how much more useful fand funj are a whole bunch of good old boys than just one? So much so that for as long as the Prep ideal has existed-which means since about the time of Petronius the Arbiter-Preps have been gathering together to get the job done. Hence oRGAN1zAT1oNs: gatherings ranging from highly prestigious honor fra- ternities like Phi Beta Kappa and Omicron Delta Kappa, which don't actually do any- thing, but recognize what you've already done, to those Ok V ,EARBQ3 VPN X was ovrxcv-15 Organzlzatiom with socially redeeming value like Student Government and Circle K, where you actually have to work your tail off for the cause. Among the organizations at Hampden-Sydney are also the social fraternities, to which slightly over half the students belong. Of fratemities we will P say more later ton page 1019 since they are at the core of much that Hampden-Sydney represents to an admiring world-and for that matter to that part of the world that sees something less than ideal about the place. CThere are such folks. just ask Bob Rog- ers if you don't believe us.J The following pages should prove, even if the rest of this book fails in the task, that there is a lot to do at Hampden-Sydney, and a lot of people doing it. And doing it with Hampden-Sydney style, which is what really matters in life, after all. . n .QBK1 Q n.--. - P1I1'Beta N!'2,g?f-ff' C 'X Am iw-vva San? 13012 Elm Kappa 011116100 i CP,eS'Z?1eJ Eg furks H Bfianlllllmiiifigsleslon uit Kffvshn Ciriiseph HOX swDanQil1ti0Yhi2pim lego'1gf2ifbRL'ffO11i6eS'1f1?ej ' - OSXW S gait 0 Ichar Sed Tim PE?ig,JYQ,0i1lS Gggddye fizgrerg CSzOnLiQ,'1i0Z1- 1 . 6. 117 M 'dffan Keesllng SI61, Wfe ah ef! Dalian Gabon Wlgouii Fr Dai? C'a1ifeVPOf1f?3fy Kenneth Lleed Lawler CY am' Ta dj 01112 ran 1517 U0uglaSe:viT1 Mahpciblss WOT WOOWGSI Rebel' D uglas gin H012 11 Robert Pzweu Ru ll I godilev hh Wes David so 89 QR It-IQIALT' PREPPY X , - F f 'Il-Ht O . 913 xnmc.0Vk'x ment V I XY in B X111 G0vi9Ye5ide'?KrezxslxfeY de v em t S01 V. d H9 ., S-eff xglizimiwpb CWC X KA1.E1ooscoPi: l98I Student Senate J Oe Taylor, Chaimian College Activities Committee Marty Long, Chaimuan Chuck McPhillips, Secrelaiy-Treasurer Alcohol Awareness Committee Preston Fox, Chairm an In ter-Fra temi ty Council jim Weaver, President Slade Screven, Vice-President Bill Freeman, Secretary Tr Residence Hall Council Review Board Resident Ad Visors K Q , ARBOO FICIALW Puppy YE THE OF url an Frank WaLkil1S, Charm HAMPDEN-SYDNEY KALEIDOSCOPE 1981 Un U :V x 5 NSW OSC-OP KALUD Ka1eid0SC0Pe 4 M 5,.J..f. af 5 Q ' . If 50.5 Tfi Llfjbotsf fOPE 1981 The Ti DO gel' Da f' U3 Lawl . Hd WGSI, BuSfggSEd1f0r slklgnager 0 , ffl S-GL , , , L, !:,x1., 'y,l,TA,--K -- If v,,, ,4fQ,f,.if'.a' , , ,I .A sink NN ' X , '? 'u.,5f: --Q, 5 r X . THF O ' PPIC1 AL PREPPX YILAR BQQIX 1 ug aw . W' 5 W bi Sunnis' wily. sn 'uf Yu W- '141 rw, -i K:XLX',XDUSf.OPf. X991 The Garnet Fda Ritsch, Edixor CaIXucci, Business Manager 1 ,Z l ' e I' X 92 J HAM PDEN-SYDNEX KALEIDOSCOPE 1981 THE OFFICIALW PREPPY YEARBOOK Board of Publications Sean Wallace, Chairman Michael Chevalier Photo Service David Huddle Student Government President Doug Lawler Tiger Richard McClintock President's Representative Kevin Norris WWHS-FM Fritz Ritsch Garnet David Taylor Faculty Representative 'I'Hli O1 l'ICIIAI,m PREPPY YHARBUCJK lx.XI,l'IINJSl.0Pl' IHHI Jongleurs 5 i'f3.'n.Fh Z 'I 1 A Z Bob Wilson, Prcfsident Z' HAMPDEN-SYDNEY KALIQIDOSCZC WE V081 'I'Hl-Q OPI-lCIl.X1.W PRIHPPY YHXRBU4 JK Noteables KALEIDOSCOPE 1981 College Choir Warren Quinn, President David Waller, Vice-President THE OFFICIALT' REPPY YEARBOOK , - x' YYARBOOR . ,ymx KJYYXCXMAN x NP YCXXOVVSYHP - h1'iSUan . 1-V afsltv C VCC-PYCS1deut THE lnte eu, N 1 OFF, . Richard Legg C1,1Lf,, PREPP ' C x YEARBOOK P I Fatt C0ok, Da vzjjrcle If We-St , Co-Presldems S , IV - for C P61981 6' . ' Q01 I 019 QW xx vs 09 xv 5 Gia 09 X0 e 1 I eifiif 5:-...W Cf, . YS . 311717620 elvlces KALLIDOSCOPE l98l Union-Philanthropic Literary ...Q 4 96 I Society Sean Wallace, Presldem Q N ' lv 1 1 HAMPDEN S , '-YDN1' x IxAl1'IDOSCC31h 1,81 I David P. Bnrzgd THE OFFICIALW PREPPY YEARBOOK J Prince Edward County Volunteer Rescue Squad I 119 My 45 V13 ' P '. 'W fQ3,L J I THE OFFICIALW PREPPY YEARBOOK I'HPl OFFICIIAUM PREPPY YEARBOOK Math Club 'E YW. ' 'miaf' Ax ', 5 A Ji! 51 ' J R 'O f 6 ' I , .Ng i !f.', W KALEIDOSCOPE l98l Spanish Club 'i 7. 'Ziff Vw -'- A x ? n Hugging Why is mis ma - - -f ... 98 HAMI-'DEN-SYDNLl.liAl,ElDOSCOPE 1981 ,ma oFf1c:1,xm vanvvx' xuxasoou 4 V Y German H O MLiIDOSCUPf5 1981 ' g Ulslderg Club Q .rl A.41.A'1DQSCOPF it Q4 1. -I t u, Q4 i ' - l9?5'l -.-A lx' I '-P new Ymasooxt ' A W Social J, o fvxciAU V N y ' T O e 1,25 - M ...,1 M ,LVN b I N jg J., 5 Cm 1 diy., P lk+l1.L.lbOS .. U 0 P N' ii Y X SI' OP6'196,l N-W. --V., ,f 4 g O 'Q Q 1:5 S' s,fs-f..- .1 Q fc? ' ' Q Q 1 .gr fQ,'.,:- 1 A A .H ook W X U 'inf THE OFFlClAU 'PREPPYYEARiJ xl' S Parachute C111 me fl A 1 .. ffdfffall. 1 .1 'L Y J!!-W.-fa , Y it il .sff?'ef.. galil-M 7575 , , THE OFFICIALW PREPPY YEARBOOK Society for Collegiate Journalists Chi Beta Phi Alpha Psi Omega Eta Sigma Phi Phi Alpha Theta Sigma Xi A Omicron Delta Epsilon Pi Sigma Alpha Psi Chi 99 THE OFFICIALW PREPPY YEARBOOK -A' usa, - I 9 I x 1 1 'Huff 43:3 gr. 'Uh-.5 .,-Z gl!! 5 1 1 Ig 7 as Q4 NG fi .... . -' Y ' . J -.' . 'va ' I' 4' ,.. . - ,, , - -5 , - ' -,V , ,.. ' .-'.. E -t . I . . Q- A - -4 v . 4. Q- . -:x4.'1 J- . . ' '- X. ' 4 ' ' i',..' fly px ' I ' fl- ' ' Y' 4 f -, '. ,, Lf.. . Q. , ' . . - . 'Nr','4 ' ' ' ' -.-, ' ff Q . . v- f -., , - vs. -., . 0 , 3 Q1 .ga f' E '-rw ,Q W ' at . - J- - S. - QV- 9 1, '-1.1-,hgh - ' '--V. - - -' - HUC VENITE IUVENES UT EXEATIS VIRI HAMPDEN-SYDNEY KAI .IQIDOSK it WE N81 F RATERNITIES Every fratemity at Hampden- Sydney is a chapter of a national organization, an instance of monstrous egali- tarianism which every good Greek refuses to recognize. After all, the brothers at other schools are often not of sim- ilar breeding, whereas the Kappa Sigs at Hampden- Sydney are, well, the Kappa Sigs, their brethren at William and Mary actually - and this is a proven fact - admitted a minority into the fraternity several years ago. Similarly, the Theta Chi chapter at U.VA. resembles a Charlottesville extension of AXE, and the Sigma Nus at Virginia are indistinguishable from the Charles Manson family. Indeed, a large portion of the SAE chapter at the University of Richmond hails from above the Mason-Dixon line and have never, God for- bid, shot skeet. The Pikas at U.N.C. think a barbell is something a bartender rings at closing time. Nevertheless, burdened as they are by their ignominious members elsewhere, the frater- nities at Hampden-Sydney have all succeeded in estab- lishing unassailable reputa- tions for insisting that their initiates belong to the correct pedigree. Fraternity men at Hampden-Sydney embody some of the finest qualities of the prep impulse. First, they offer the minimum daily requirement of exclusivity, an exhilarating sensation of being distinct from the com- mon man. Since at Hampden- LQ2 Among the Fyfty-Szbc Percent Sydney it is not a distinguish- ing characteristic to be a Prep, the VIP CVery Important Prepj must resort to joining a key fraternity instead. Now if one were to try to set out a hierarchy among the fratemities, however, the list would inevitably be subjective, the student's choice of frater- nity must depend largely on his personal preference. Of course each fraternity also has certain tastes in selecting whom to pledge, a prerogative C he: Ranch Either of these faux-pas could prove fatal to a fresh- man's chance of getting into the house of his choice. and therefore it is exceedingly important that he scrupu- lously follow etiquette during rush. At Hampden-Sydney, fraternity rush is a pursuit of a happiness bearing no resem- blance to Aristotle's eudaemo- niag it can best be compared to leaping from a cliff: it's abso- lutely insane but once one starts one can hardly stop. Rush culminates with the Formal Rush Party, an orgias- tic, licentious explosion of good feeling during which each fraternity attempts to get invited freshmen drunker than they were the night before at some other house. Bus loads of girls from Meredith or Hol- ins are usually imported for the extravaganza, except by FIJI which prefers to party with Longwood sororities. Fortunately, the faculty has overruled the objections of the I.F.C. by mandating that these celebrations of sloth be held about a week before first semester finals. There are some inviolable rules of comportment for freshmen to obserye when rushing a fraternity, to wit: exercised at the blackball ses- 1. Never srnugly remark sion - a tense meeting at which friends of a candidate prayerfully hope that their favorite freshman did not dmnkenly try to snake a brother's date at a party, or perhaps neglect one day to sit at the fraternity's table in Commons. within earshot of a member of the house you are visiting that the girls were better- looking at another fraterni- ty's party. They may have been, but you should not be so ungenerous as to state the truth. This tactfulness will be especially necessary when 101 pqk 1 wtezf- , ,X 3 1553- xy Va-42 g ?5g' f t it a!fB'v. i9' '25 at the Pika house. Remember where you belong. If you play football, go to Pika or KA. If you are from the West End or went to Woodbeny Forest, then go to Kappa Sigma. If you went to Norfolk Academy or Norfolk Collegiate, then you are expected at Sigma Nu, but if you attended a public high school in Virginia Beach then Theta Chi would be more appropriate. If you come from Georgia and love fat girls in plaid skirts, then SAE is what you want. In short, accept your destiny. If you receive an invitation to a fraternity's Homecom- ing or Parents and Friends party, do not pretend that you are Dean Shomo's apo- theosis of civility by sending a formal reply. just go, get drunk, and fall down. Expend every effort to famil- iarize yourself with the names of the brothers of the fraternity you are rushing. Refrain from greeting one 7 K of them by saying, Hey Bubba or It's a tremend- ous pleasure to see you again, sir. Be friendly but not obse- quious. Therefore never tell a brother you like the way the House looks. Don't offer to clean up after a party - you'll get plenty of oppor- tunity to do that once you become a pledge. Wear a coat and tie to the Fomial Rush party. Do not attend wearing a white dinner jacket, a polyester blue blazer fcertain black- balll, or designer jeans. It's always worth a chuckle if you scribble something cute on your name tag, such as john Livingston, Pleased to Meet Me. Never say Damned glad to meet you. It stopped being funny about a week after Animal House was released. Do not break a fraternity's windows, doors, or furniture until after you have become a pledge. Neyer bring marshmallows to a bonfire. 103 THE OFFICIALTM PREPPY YEARBOOK fri? V 3 22.1. B in 1 '- ' I Y-ui lf U Q f 'rim ff S, .. A2 1 L , 51: r 1 'x l yr 1 ', ,' L I SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON R. C. Parker, President, C lass of 1981: Ferrara, Hayes III, J. B. Lewis, Vice President, jervey, Lewis III, Morgan jr., S. C. Goodman, Treasurer, Parker, Vaughan L. A. Ramos, Recording Secretary. C lass of 1982: Breiner, Carr, Dea- Advisorz Josiah Bunting III ton, Goodman, Liles, Payne III Class of 1983: Billings IV, Holton jordan, Ramos, Roncaglione, Snead, Whitley C lass of 1984: Blanton III, Boyd, Cozart, Garvey Jr., Heaton, Kelly III, Lewis II, Martin, Robertson, Thompson in fx nit B I 2 KI t PHI all :Iii mu H ...iw if if If fl -11 il li Wil 'I' 1 1 I si it 01 L51 53 3 52588514 , lr: snug f 'Q 11. A. : ' ja Y--1 ' I- I 4 ,et ' Q ' 1 , , z, I4 'lift 5' 'Y if 1. erm . I Iv , , I A . r 'f A 1' .' . ,'g,'f'F Y I .v l A, X I 4-F 5 f i, ,,.- s I wsu, s .. i 1 104 HAMPDEN-SYDNEY KALEIDOSCOPE 1981 w w. , se W Klg J' . Ox 'N 9, 4 4 ,Qitf URI CHI PHI R. J. Shepherd, President, P. A. B. Hoblitzell, Vice President, R. L. Ware, Treasurer, D. j. McCarthy, Recording Secretary Advisor: S. R. Gemborys Class of 1981: Bass, Clar Mason, Shepherd, Ware Class of 1982: Beny k, Mack, Class of 1983: Bishop, Bryant, Campbell, McCarthy, Strudwick, Garrett, Cowley, Hoover, Hoblitzell Class of 1984: Boushall III, Cole- man, Harper, Hopper, McCall 105 THE OFFICIALTM PREPPY YEARBOOK .JL 1.. L1 4 ' .f v t V18 'mg ' Q . x ,t-,,S.'f, -. Y, c uf '2' 'A -V' Pltuuururn PHI GAMMA DELTA J. C. Keesling, President, M. R. Cruise, Treasurer, T. M. Fitzpatrick, Recording Secretary, S. D. Farthing, Corresponding Secretary, S. P Dougherty, H istorian. Advisor: L. H. Martin C lass of 1981: Denham, Eggleston III, Farthing, Fitzpatrick, Fletcher, Gunn, Hancock, Keesling, Kyle, Porterfield, Ross, Rummell, Schuessler II, Schumacher Class of 1982: Cruise, Dougherty, Holland, Hollingsworth, Hummel, Kelley, Laughlin, Mills, Morrisett, Reidlin, Rummel, Russell, Sydnor, Ward Class of 1983: Bennett, Craft, Dietz, Gibbs, Gladin, Nottingham, Por- ter, Stratton Class of 1984: Bowling, Clifford, Emond, Hagan, johnson, Mayeske Moles, Moseley, Neubach, Prizzi, Russell, Wieinert, Wilson K Ear-H af' 5 -,,-ul d,,,j 106 HAMPDENVSYDNEY KALICIDOSC IOPE 1981 QW' 5 .-.Q-Q. C ,1 .5 g. ' 4 L lxl .X xx. ,f KAPPA SIGMA C. J. Daly, President, W. S. Driscoll, Vice President, W. A. Karo, Treasurer, J. B. Bullard, Secretary. Advisor: J. L. Brinkley Class of 1981: Bullard, Daly, Dris coll, Good, Karo, Levering, Roberts, Watkins - Class of 1983: Bruni, Clark III, Craighill, Daly, Flint, Geho, Kemper IV, Sublett, Tyler, Willi- ams, Word Class of 1982: Adkins Jr., Cottrell, Crenshaw, Crittenden, Cun- ningham III, Gibson III, Cray, Hunter, Le-Compte, McCann, Newcomb, Piland, Rawles III, Remick Class of198-I: Blanton, Hudgins, Pittman, Smith Jr., Spigner, Wal lace, White i - - . bl, r M il . . , . N .. . -...ag 1... .1 K, , .Q-5 .IQ :.,... J ' 1' xr -'J -v . ...ffl ,. . ..- .,... ...J -- '- A-Q-..-....... S k .-.Q . .....-'. ...mi ' I' -- , -W 4. A N V---gg -, '- - A' ,,w......... . N, M, -v , ,M -ix. ' - W-lunzvx--Y 1 --fb ' - I .fs . .. ' ..,. t gii?'f'.R1' ,. , .M M- M- is ' 8- --wh .... -it . f-X-P,-aw ' A- A-as-'iitr' 'A - .-, . '5fElQ.?Xf1'.f- ':f.-54:1-wx. M . w- .W if-,.,,,, j xg, Q l ,, ..... ' ,. V .,, Af M, -.filggigk ,,Qcf.,x,1' .sim ' 'hh ' 9 v its , it 1: 5- 'L' 1 ' 1 ff- ff' '. ff .- gf? 1 -. at gg. - . Ifm'5fvy,1,:,,.- , ' -- ', .,,,. .v 'f .v .gf ' C-. A - M- f. ' ' ' . '0 e :-fi-- ...Y ' ' 1, -1 e mx .x l X I. . 1, 'Y ...-v J, - . xg..-. .. - ' 8 - lOl THE OFFIC1IAlf ,,l.l ,Huy YEARBOOK . ,ll 5.11, rf. s X tl I MX Y Y M X N. , , gm 1711! f , fly, PI KAPPA KALPHA R. W. Reed, President, Class of 1981: Coleman, Cox III, Class of 1983: Boyce, Greene jr., J. C. Thompson, V ice President, D'Agata, Emerick, Gormley, jervey, Holland, Hunt, Moran, Saunders, M. L. Leach, Treasurer, Leach, Mastropaolo, Shope III, Sil- Wilbourne j. A. Pace, Secretary. vester, Taylor III, Thompson jr., Advisor: j. S. Fulton Varboncoeur, Webb, Wilson Class of 1982: Auchmoody jr., Campbell, Curley, Hodges, Hud- son, Pace, Schuster, Waters Class of 1984: Haines, Haste III, Hoback, McGee, Stevens, Tarry, Thomas ill 111 LE l08 Jil , .X W. HAMPDEN-SYl'isl 4, ' 'IDOSCOPE 1981 8 1, iiiiiilfl Eggs... t '5 ' g' , . MX J E gf A M - 3 '7' t' 1 f it KAPPA ALPHA R. G. jones, President, W. D. jones, Vice Presidentg W. R. Currie, Treasurer, D. A. Huskey, Secretary. Advisor: A. F. Farrell Dar- P t- l- . S35 1 .1 ' F I L.- . es sf 'W .2 fi 4 X Class of 1981: Cunie, Freeman. Heppner, Huddle, Huskey, jones, jones, Knight, Moorhead, Peterson, Schoonover, Snidow, Steibel, Thompson Jr. Class of 1982: Benson, Bowles III, Currie, Edmunds, Fisher, Harris, Hellin, Huffman, Hylton, Kellam, Lass, Morgan, Stevens, Worrell Class of 1983: Cullen jr., Craig, Cook, Dickinson, Glover, Grow Kelly, Knott, Thomas Class of 198-I: Buta, Doggett, DuPuis, Grow, johnson, jones, Ruocco, Stringfield, White i N is ' 41 5. . i 1 5 if if '. f 5 if ' 25 , I v ' ' Q . -, P I X il -' ' I. NMA-3. , '28-'S I QS so ti 5:3 fl 5 El f L ..,:v- g NX 5 ,A 1.-V .. - I Ag , . ,lx is 5 , Q r'b'rC'1.,, ' ' , 1 li t be K 1 . TYR. 1 1 .- ,. g s Xi--5, bf , Q' 'ZW . -1 N . M 1 8' lm- ' as - ,. 1 wtf:-'-.-'K fm . - tw-' f 4 .,,5..'s:S,1 Q., M. 551' ull' ,Q ,G , THE OFFICIALTM PREPPY YEARBOOK i W 'Q tg: qg ya , lily!! Xp, If 'c 1-if 1 ill li? 1 J I.. . THETA CHI W. C. Stephenson IV, President, G. D. Norrington, Vice President, F. T. Wootton III, Treasurer, J. D. Taylor II, Secretary. Advisor: R. A. Burrell Class of 1981: Carney, Caton, Curtis, Doummar, Gammon, Haley, Manger, Noftsinger, Nonington, Patterson III, Rhea, Rogers, Shelley, Sims, Stephenson IV, Stokes, Taylor II, Wilcox, Wootton III Class of 1982: Hubbard, Kelly, Phillips Class of 1983: Ault, Best, C'-llis, Gentry, jackson, Jones, Martin, Mullen, Shands, Standing, Stedfast Willis III Class of 1984: Blow, Boyd, Helm III, Hodges, johnson, Kellam, Wilshire III 'T -,,,, ,,,,, J! 1 Y Y- x I ,-' I x '5 2 0' D 'K .: - -WV h V ,, 1 I 1- ' , .' i f .I Q . J L, ,Af - I A . Q fm, in , 1' R' 4, ,--.-Q I . D 5 A TNQTXQ- . , Y , . ' T l ll0 HAMPDEN-SYDNEY KALEIDOSCOPE 1981 .lvf g y l .. bl 'K i 12, L! : is 7 .5 . v.. 1 1 LAMBDA CHI ALPHA J. A. Williford, Presidentj Class of 1981: Brown, Blackwell, Class of 1983: Baecher, Bussells, K. D. Blackwell, Vice President: Key, Revercomb, Suter III, Vincent, Cameron, Collins, Conte, Culler, D. C. Ansell, Treasurer, Weaver, Willis Dyer, Hill, King jr., Kroll, Sorah F. K. Moore, Secretary. Thatcher Class of 1982: Ansell, Duffey, Advisors: W. J. Seegers, R. L. Manley, Moore, Pedlow, Thatcher, Class of 1984: Ross Heinemman Williford l-..... .. Ill THE OFFICIALT' PREPPY YEARBOOK ,M Ffh i 47, ef- 1 R Q 2 , X K 1, SIGMA NU G. G. Ball, jr., President, T. M. Davis, Vice President, K. E. Staab, Treasurer, R. A. Benvissuto, Secretary. Adzf1'sor: M. A. Espigh Class of 1981: Ball jr., Brown, Capocelli, Davis, Joynes II, Long, Mikell jr., Quinn, Randolph, Rhodes, Screven, Snead C lass of 1982: Benvissuto, Blake, Gerloff, Hobbs Jr., Holloway, jeffs McClung, McClung, McPhillips, Milam, Miller, Robinson, Staab, Stabel, Stackhouse, Thomas, Wiedeman ! Class of 1983: Borden, DeMaio, Farina jr., Flynn jr., jones, Robinson, Sadler, Setzer, Summers, Wallace, Williams, Wilmer C lass of 1984: Arias, Clark III, Gross, Hurt Jr., johnson, Kanelos, Pontius, Thompson I- wi S 1 s'Y,' . X ll2 HAMPIDIZN-SYDNEY KALEIDOSC IOl'E 15181 XXI ffaef? Aft' ff m 1' N ALPHA CHI SIGMA M. C. Smith, Presidentg W. E. Green, jr., Vice Presidentg L. G. Western, Treasurerg S. B. Beny, Recording Secretary. Advisors: H. J. Sipe, jr., W. W. Porterfield Class of 1981: Greer, Pollock, Salsbery, Schein, Smith, Tan Class of 1982: Alpizar, Beny, Breiner, Chevalier, Donovan, Green jr., james, Lee, Leggett, Moore, Salsbery, W estem, Wood Class of 1983 Bitts Campbell III Ferrer, Martin Soltany Class of 1984 Lanham Loh Uhtenwoldt I. .. jnwmmr 'VB giaaffl' ,. ,Q A V , . f .-' .f Q - - - . I ',.' .Y -g,...f-1-Q-'...-u Q I , Q . 'W' t ,. 'l'H1C Ol I ICIlAI.' - 'PY YE,-XRBUOK f -. 3 ill' ,. ff , sf, A .g, .- ALPHA PHI ALPHA W. M. Thompson, President, C lass of 1981: Lawler, Mahoney, W. J. Parker, Vzfe Presidentg Parker, Thompson R. K. Mahoney, Treasurerg W. Barbour, Dean of Pledges. Class of 1982: Lee, Ruffin, Wright Advisor: R. G. Rogers Class of 1983: Barbour, Boafo, Yim i A '2'1sa.kim,g A A ' :ww we ei is ft rf' f 11. I ' 'L'-311S'A' - 7-'L'lY.' 4,.f Annu-A surf. S .wa 5.-.nr--.za .4 .hum :.-A.'.- .,.,.,,-1.-.m.-we M. -l ur 11 ff 2 15 w '.', . Ez 1,4 1 . il 'F- w-.f.f.- .-Z .1 3: r a K ? 2 4 S s D.: 4 ., ,..,., ,v 1- . x 2 1 v, S . -F- t. i s n . Z 5 . '- 53 E i 4 r. R ...a r i Q' 1 Q 2 I Ml'DliN-SYDNEY K,-Xl.lCIDC JSC IC lI'li IWHI Ly? in the Amos-Lee Lane THE FACULTY MEETI G The first Monday of the month: then the Faculty come together to do the business of the College, to oversee the higher things ffriends, remember, of the dayj which go on about us. Precisely at 4:30, throats are cleared, agenda are shuffled, hearts speed up, and indignation and resolve warm to the cause of Learning. Since Hampden-Sydney is, after all, a seat of intellect and reason, faculty meetings are the highest exercise of those virtues. There coolness and disinterestedness take on an almost palpable quality and courtesy flows so thick that it is sometimes difficult to move one's feet. In this corus- Can someone get that dog to stop barking? I'll give you a nickel if you answer this question. Richard Mcllwazne, President 11383 -1 90-I cating atmosphere, continual and happy progress is made until 6 o'clock when Cunless the rule is waived by majority vote, which seldom happensj day officially runs out and higher things are put to bed. On these pages, as an inspi ration to us all, a documen- tary excursion to one of those august congresses. I move we suspend the rules. A ' HA- 1-M.. fb ,y john Brinkley, Classics Daniel Poteet, Dean of the Faculty josiah Bunting III, President llf THE OFFICIAIf PREPPY YEARBOOK I've got on big-boy pants. rm SO excited I Can, t Would you believe I Exactly where is X Stand it was when 11115 JOhI1 Ry12lDd S CCH- ! A V ' meeung started? ICT of QTHVIIYP ff 4.2 X f-x '? ,'ao', . ' Q ' - I I ,, - V- f .. V if Edward M' Kzess' Graves H. Thompson, 'WS Thomas T, W7 William W. Porterfield, Physws Classics Mayo IV, Chemmry . - Guess where I'm PIWSICS . . Classlcal themes m th- k- f . I wonder 1f Poteel IS the Operas of Stfaussg ln 11180 S9133 OU 153111 believe gomg to card me. 3 Held mp lhls YC-313 Sidoesnkhave H S. . socks on again. Omg' 1' If wasn I me! H8 David W. Gibson, William R. Hendley, Stanley R. Gemborys, Tully H. Turney, L. Neel Beard, Efonomics Economics Biology Biology Physics HAMPDEN-SYDNEY KALEIDOSCIOPE 1981 I E11 have a hamhaqg Bringing these You know the one C GSE? on rye, O things to the meet- about statistics and C mayo' ing sure helps pass bikinis? 'Tian' -,A .......-Y Herbert j. Sipe, Chemistry the time, doesn't it? ' jf 'fc 11 .I I - N ...st . 6-YK K., jeanne B. Nailor, Gerald M. Bryce, Mathematics Mathematics I'd better ask joe N I, D I sure wish this were Goldberg' O' B IlE15 I r' UVa. 1 I . 7- is GJ 5 5 Xl' joseph E. Goldberg, Keith W. Fitch, David B. j. Adams, Political Science History Political Science Socks? 119 THE OFFICIALI' PREPPY YEARBOOK Can you believe he Cardon V. Burnham, Sends his Children to Fine Arts the academ p LR Y L... Hey, Ray, I hear you've computerized registration. Yeah, and now Mer rill really has nonhing to do. Why doesn't Wil Chassey really replace Stokeley Ful- ton? Clara, tell Florence I'rn in the computer centerg tell Karen I'm in Lhe officeg tell Dan - I'm in classg tell the students I'm playing raquetballg and tell my wife I won't be home to dinner. Ronald L. Heinemann, History Heh? , .-f 'S Q Alan F. Farrell, French Ray A. Gaskins, b Thomas E. DeWolfe, LU Alernll A' Espigh, Computer Science Psychology Mathematics if Registrar I wonder if he ever found his children 5, HAMPDEN-SYDNEY KAl.liIlJOSt10l'F 1081 . X Can you believe he I ht :pe he ? sends his children to Heh! dcx's1i't1tsk the public schools? 5 H P me to play tennis zigziin this week. 429' n.- 11 Y X'-xxx Q fmsqluq K t 1- ' 2 1 j t , ' 'rf-cf' - -.-33:-,,' fm. -+3 . y ,syn . t .ty f' 'Br'?'i .v Idon'tknow. He A U 7 ii. W. Thomas joyner, Physics Wasn ther? m 81' , ' but then Helther was Vincent A. Iverson, Anne C. Lund, Biology U . this yearbook. Philosophy h Who 1S Lh15 guy? Jorge, mein Freund, I'm going to move over to the West End. What a Ham! t l roi, ' l j' Homer A. Smith, C. Wayne Tucker, Donald R. Ortner, forge A. Silveira, K Chemistry Classics Psychology Spanish 121 ix! William G. Davies, Chemistry .- ' 1 ' Music is the lan- ' - g' guagelspeak best. Q V- 4 ,Q THE OFFICIALTM PREPPY YEARBOOK ,Q 4, Well,godoit. ' 4 Hassellmeally! 2 -.ang- . X b X ? -,IX . . . if-r K N , Let me put ll T.h1S j - ' wayrchemisuy isa A ' X 3 lotlike SouLh Africa. x 5, x o X A 9 l -4' ff mdiscombobulation. -Qi 5 I A '-ull' w Q ,F M VX.. X ' ' v,.', 'XA ws.-2' ' T. Edward Crawley, English 132 PaulA. jagasich, German if Russian 1l-S '14f'.'.Z- ' ggsaiifefe , A Q' 1' :Z ,. . .Q f' L-' '-'1,- I-W' .-75' , ..1- .4- ...xA- ji s.: ' V-7-Q'3 ' :M':g'Y5 '5y ' -' 334- .n -,bmi - .:: i 3 5 james Y. Simms, History I Y9 '5i james A. A rieti, Classics Socks? HAMPDEN-SYDNIEY KAl.l-IIDOSC It WE 15481 , 5, How many people R Ieould find only do you think A , . y 5' il -. three Sexual ilnageg wrote FElulliIl6r'S . in that sentence. Hovels? W. 2 A ' Dinosaurs aren't extinct: N we just call them birds. ,z f 'fi ii i Hassell A. Simpson, English Ohm. -1355 1 H43 L .A-Qfzzla 1 Robert G. Rogers, Religion William A. Shear, If I'd known they were going to take our picture, I'd have worn a different blouse. Biology gh Did you hear about the big train wreck Y-,Y down at Tully's? ,ff Paula W. Sage, Classics Mary M. Saunders, English 41 Alfred M. Dufty, Biology log P l X I've never heard Z1 ff band play the 'Star- spangled Banner' so well. ,' ,:,. , , L ,.I ' t, 'ie 'M . 4 Edward A. Crawford, Biology .,w,. .f-' NOT PRESENT , George F. Bagby, English Robert T. Hubard, jr., Political Science Amos Lee Laine, History David E. Marion, Political Science Lawrence H. Martin, English Owen L. Norment, Religion Nancy Poteet, Rhetoric jack P. Sanders, Mathematics Brian E. Schrag, Philosophy Carl Stern, Economics S Glenn j. Broadhead, Rhetoric Now, dammit, you gotta get that light. How come the admmrstratron has so many secretarles? james A ngresano, Economics Douglas S. Thompson, Chemistry Thomas j. O'Grady, Poet-in-Residence I wonder if Ishould have Hosed? Something written those letters. to do with firemen? 194 David W. Taylor, Rhetoric Kenneth N. Townsend, Economics tu1dF HAMPDEN-SYDNEY KALEIDOSCOPE 1981 RETIRING PRCJFESSORS Five professors announced their retirement after the end of the 1980-81 school year. Among them they taught at Hampden-Sydney for 114 years. Dr. joseph W. Whitted began his career at Hampden- Sydney in 1941 after receiving his bachelor's degree from Davidson College and his doc- torate from the University of North Carolina. He taught Spanish and was chairman of the department of modern Coodhyq Messrs. Clzzlbs from Tufts University and his Ph.D. from Princeton. He was the Squires Professor of History. Mr. Gustav H. Franke, bet- ter known as The Colonel, came to Hampden-Sydney in 1965, after serving in the Arrny for many years. He holds bache1or's degrees in chemis- try and electrical engineering from Auburn University and a master's degree in teaching from Duke University. Franke was an assistant professor of tive vice president fYankee for 'academic dean'j and later as professor of psychology. A graduate of the University of Michigan and SUNY, he holds a doctorate of education from Penn State. Dr. W. Taylor Reveley '39 arrived on the Hill in 1935 as a freshman and returned in 1963 as president. Reveley holds a B.D. from Union Theological Seminary, a Ph.D. from Duke, and an honorary doctorate from Southwestern University at Memphis.He taught religion here after retiring from the languages. mathematics at the College. Dr. Williard F. Bliss came to Dr. Frank J. Simes began his Hampden-Sydney in 1946. He career at Hampden-Sydney in received his bache1or's degree 1967, serving first as administra- presidency. J Preszdmt Emeritus IV. Taylor Rf7'PlPj',fT., relzgvon, and lzzs zuzffnllar 1 lm ll t,t-rr f Z l 1 at 62 ...dw 'l'Hli OFFICIIAl,'M PREPPY YHARBOUK ' STAFF - Athletics 9 riff? ,,.f ' '21, Y 1 Louis Wacker, Wrestling Coach if Asst. Football Coach K 9 Don Tfmmps I A , tot j OW 3ask 1, V Athletif Dnec Stokeley Fulton, Football Coach 06 Lammay, Asst. Basielzdbii GOV Coach Wil Ctifissfe ' Bobby Saylor, Tennis Coach if Director of the Athletic Center Coach Bill Reid, Lacrosse Coach jim Simms, Soccer Coach Paul jagasich, Water Polo Coach David Taylor, Cross Country Coach Bill Glennon, Asst. Football dr Asst. Lacrosse Coach Gil Simms, Trainer Bernie Menapace, Asst. Football Coach Tim F itzpatrick, Sports Information Director jim Reilly, Trainer Admissions Robert H. jones, Dean of Admissions Anita H. Garland, Associate Dean of Admissions james M. Alexander III, Reid A. LaClair, William Meehan, Admissions Counselors l2ti Tm- Y HAMPDEN-SYDNEY KALEIDOSCIQPE 1981 R me 3 Sw Svdrwf' l ' S Chimes he President Lewis H. Drew, Dean of Students Asst. i0 t Development Office john H. Waters, Director Virginia G. Redd, Director of Records dr Research of Alumni' Rglagigm Ronda Simms, Coordinator for Corporate ' if Foundation Support Nathaniel H. Acker, Vice President for Development Qs r' ' sl I 'Z' . 1-Z' g T I A . I. I' I 1' -11: . :ip 4 ' J , 2 X 'S W- , Q - .,, . 4 5' ' -' A-4 , - 1. 1. 45, A 1 , , , L'-M , O ,cr-D -fi T YVZOUZQJ H fisst. D6 - Sflomo, an of Sflg 0' 62215 Richard McClintock, Director of Publications ci., ,-R, iw . 4- ,., 1 .V s X'-14 J T fX has-,f in -al. ' A' 'JC . fs . 171' C33 5 V , . wht.. N , X r' G11 William 1- Sffegfm' Iichagl pam D Director of Capital p10grarYl5 1 j. Sheppard Haw, Writer and News if Information Officer Ofdnn 1 xl zrector ua Gllllng 127 T381 Q 'O Bruce L. Fry, Vice President for Finance Thomas O. Bondurant, Business Manager Warren Kernodle, Superintendent of Buildings ,lr Grounds Merle Wells, Supervisor of Housekeeping Queta Watson, Asst. Supenfisor of Housekeeping Secretaries Sandie Bell, Alumni Shirley Moring, Lucy Brightwell, Debbie Hendrix, Admissions Linda Cothran, Dean of the Faculty's Office I 'irginia Druen, Presidents Office Nancy Saylor, Marge Schrag, jeanette McKay, Development Sally Waters, Financial Aid jane Holland, Morton Hall jean Hudson, Gilmer Hall Linnie Kernodle, Bagby Hall Mary limbrey, Athletics Barbara Fore, Dean of Students' Office Clara johnston, Registrars Office Virginia jolznston, Business Office 128 Sandra W. Heinemann, T T Bookstore Virginia I. Rodes, Manager Erlene Bowman, Head Cashier Kathy Orth, Book Clerk j oyce Queensberry, Bookkeeper i' Cynthia Curry, Acting Director of CCdfCP Assistants: Linda Martin, Infirmary Nurse Roberta Crawley, Infirmary Nurse james Gamble, Programmer-Analyst jim Bell, Chemistry Technician Warren Seay, Biolgy Lab Technician james jennings, Physics Technician Karen Senger, Data Entry Operator Barbara A rmentrout, Posting Clerk Erna Clements, Cashier Doris Cook, Asst. Purchasing Agent Florence Watson, Recorder Gerry Pettus, Switchboard Operator Shirley Mottley, Receipts Clerk Lynn Estes, Mailing Clerk fb' Records Secretary Brenda Garrett, Typesetter H A INll'l7liN-SYDNICY K.-Xl.lCIlX DSC it Jl'li A I-Izstofy qfTru.e Class E IOR : THE CLASS CDF 1981 In his first year at Hampden- Sydney, Si Bunting told the freshmen of the class of '81 that they should maintain a reason- able balance between studying and playing. The academic experience should be taxing, he saidg but youthful high spirits should prevail and you should play hard on the weekends. The very next week Curtis Ingham of Ms. magazine called Hampden-Sydney a cultural ghetto, an unrealistic atmo- sphere you will have to leave behind when you get out into the real world. How did those 207 young advice? It is probably signifi- cant that for seventy-f ive per- cent of us Hampden-Sydney was the first choice ofa college: we knew what we were getting into and, presumably, liked the looks of it. Suffice it to say. we tended taccording to a reliable infonnant close to the source? to follow Si's advice more than Curtis's, and that selectively. During our four years on the Hill, CORC had to be founded Sigma Chi died. The College ran up record deficits. More campus policemen resigned than in the ten previous years. The man who admitted them to college changed jobs. Cra- ham Hall almost collapsed and the first cracks appeared in the athletic center. Hampden Fel- low Thomas Murray assured us that a woman would make a great president of the l'nited States. But our time was not with- out signs of hope: Stokeley Ful- ton's football team made it to the NCHA Semi-finals. George Schun' left. David Huddle was elected president of the student body. More than half of us graduated. And we learned the most important thing of all: Hampden-Sydney is a state of men develop, weaned on such 2 A mind and goes on forever. S THE OFFICIALT' PREPPY YEARBOOK i i 'gg fl Iii, A Q, 1. 'Nu' ilfiz Zire 1 SG 12:4 4, Qafgfa?-,, , is 4 -if hffyl J - ,Hz ,'-Lxi? M141 . JOHN MICHAEL BOROSS SERCIO CAPOCELLI HS. f.'Il6'I71l.Sl7'j' 4 . I sg- GEORGE GILL BALL III B..'l. lic olzmzzlcs BRIAN WILLIAM BOUCHER BA. History Omicron Delta Kappa: Phi Alpha Theta, President: President's Award for Excellence, Social Sciences: Tigerg Circle K WILLIAM DUDLEY BASS i WILLIAM J. JOHN BUNYAN BRADSHAW, IR. BULLARD III B.S. Physics B.S. Management Parachute Club, Economics President c-I 'ii 010 l V WILLIAM ADDISON CARRINGTON B.,-1. Economics and Psychology Kappa Sigma HAMPDEN-SYDNEY K.-Xl.EllX JSCZOPE 1981 JAMES RICHARD CASH Ba-1. Eronomics Gemian Club: Phi Sigma Iota WILLIAM R. CURRIE B.S. Clienzzlstrjy and Philosophy Dean's List: Football: Wrestlingg Student Govemmentg Kappa Alpha NRA-4: 0 Y bs ,VJ PARKE HUNTER COX Ill BA. Hmtorx' 'QD 4u-.rv MICHAEL C. D'AGATA BA. Political Scienfe Dean's List: Pi Sigma Alpha, Presi- dentg Pi Kappa Alpha CHRISTOPHER E. CATON BA. Polztzfal Sfzkrzte Intramural Football. Basketball, Softball: Water Polo: Lift'- guartl: Campus Guide: Theta Chi ZF' THOMAS WEBSTER CURTIS B..S..lIatl1 PlZj'.SIl'S IIZIFTSICIVFVII e as Sf fs THOMAS EDWARD CUMBEY, JR. li.,-l. lit 0110111145 if 1-tr 1 I ,J , L 3 CLARK JEFFREY DALY BA. Economzrs and Polzitiral Science Football: Baseball: IFC: Kappa Sigma 133 THE OFFICIALT' PREPPY YEARBOOK ff . 5. ,, THOMAS MARTIN DAVIS li..'l, liturzonzzfs I Ai 'UVRQ RICHARD HABIB DOUMMAR BA. Iifononms Rugby Club: Theta Club STEPHEN D. FARTHING B..-l. f.'lzLS.s1c11lSt1zc1'1f's Yeuable St holar: Phi Alpha Theta: Epsilon Sigma Phi: lacrosse: Phi Gamma Delta F , i SAM DANIEL EGGLESTON III Hal. Englzslz and l r'er1cl1 .q . W- 2 if gn If 3 Nez' QR A. MICHAEL EDWARDS B.S. Biology Presidents Advisory Council: S.A.L.T. Conference Delegate: Admissions Committee mpgs f, A, . 5, a-36. i l Q A x X: TIMOTHY M. FITZPATRICK Ba-1. English Omicron Delta Kappa: Patrick Hem? Scholar: Who's Who: Phi Alpha T hem: Pi Delta Epsilon: Tiger: Garnet: Athletic Trainer: Sports Infomiation Direc- tor: S.A.L.T. Cbnfer- ence Delegate: Phi Gamma Delta DOUGLAS S. DENHAM Allan Scholar: Ladosse: Phi Gamma Delta PAUL T. EMERICK B.,-1. Psychology Psi Chi Honor Fla- temity: Football: Pi Kappa Alpha, Vice-President HAMPDEN-SYDN EY KA LEI DOSCOP E 1981 DAVID H. FLETCHER BA. Economics Pi Delta Epsilon: Omicron Delta Epsilon: Tiger: Phi Gamma Delta RUSSELL W. GOOD BA. English Football: Finalist, Hollins College Literary Festival: Kappa Alpha WILLIAM L. FREEMAN B.S. Biology Interfraternity Coun- cil Secretary, Treas- urer: Kappa Alpha fi' .-f fly essay' A. ,,-.gap 4 ',. 'u'fl,,': . ilu PRESTON STUART FOX B.S. Biology Dean's List: Phi Beta Kappa: Omicron Delta Kappa: Chi Beta Phi: Baseball: Football: Student Senator: Student Court: Student Advi- sor: C.O.R.C., Chairman: Infinnaiy Student Assistant: Prince Edward Volun- teer Rescue Squad t -X- .Dry - . t' ,fix -vm 1 , . lg-Q TRACY WATKINS GAMMON BA. Pllllllllll St lem f' S r t Y XI MATTHEW E. GORMLY III BA. lllanagement ,f--Q -ev and Economics 'IT an . Omicron Delux Epsilon: Golf, cap- if tain: Pi Kappa Alpha BILLY LOUIS GREER B.S. Biology Allan Scholar: Omi- cron Delta Kappa: Who's Who: Alpha Chi Sigma: Cross Country, Captain: Wrestling, Captain, ODAC Champion, Most Valuable, 3rd Regional, 2nd East Regional if -an ar, ' it 11 MICHAEL L. GUNN B.S. Biology Phi Sigma Iota: Spanish Club: Phi Gamma Delta 5 THE OFFICIALTM PREPPY YEARBOOK f' GREG HALEY WILLIAM J. HAN- if : .. ' 4, BA. History COCK II I -' f Dean's List: Phi B.S. Biology Beta Kappa: Phi WWI-IS: PfiI'1CE' '- ' Alpha Theta: Edward Volunteer p Soccer: Lacrosse: Rescue Squad: Phi ' Aa, ai Tiger: Kaleido- Gamma Delta N N, scope: Theta Chl Ninn' WILLIAM E, . DAVID F. HARRISON 5 ,P In f 1 HUDDLE B.,-1. Psyrlzology and V , A ' B.S. Biology .Spanislz ' f' A Omicron Delta Golf: Sigma Chi ' hligppsi El2ELSigTI'l3 h ' , l P i: tu ent ovem- 6 Q- 5 ment, President: 1 , .' Chainnan, Student ,, , i Senate: Resident b Advisor to Freshmen: ' Who's Who: Circle x , l , K: Board of Publica- l tions: Kappa Alpha X it DANIEL A. CHARLES HUSKEY THOMPSON BA. Eronomifs JERVEY 'za-gg xg YVILLIAM DAVID JONES Bal. liimmniits Dean's List: Omi- cron Delta Epsilon: Kappa Alpha, Secretary 4? 15 Hb JOHN CARL KEESLING B.A. History and English Dean's List: Phi Beta Kappa: Omicron Delta Kappa: Patrick Henry Scholar: Who's Who: Eta Sigma Phi: Phi Alpha Theta: Pi Delta Epsilon: Presi- dent's Award for Excellence, Humani- ties: Tiger: WW HS: Phi Gamma Delta, President B.,-I. Psychology HAMPDEN-SYDNEY KAIJEIDOSCOPE 1981 PHILLIP WIN FRY KEY, JR. B.,-1. Economics and Psychology GARY COOPER LEVERING BA. Psychology 1 4 W . 5 , gifs ETF'-v Q .. 'R SN ' 232,1 54 . Q - N ' iw fi 'si-gfgtwg, ji- A A fifties ,G DOUGLAS R. LAWLER II B.S. Biology and History Dean's Listg Phi Beta Kappag Omicron Delta Kappag Allan Scholarg Cross Counuyg Soccerg Tiger, Editor-in- Chief: H-S Fire Departmentg Circle K: C.O.R.C.g Alpha Phi WILLIAM MAR- TIN LONG II BA. History and English Dean's Listg Moo- maw Leadership Scholarg Who's Who 3 Chairman, College Activities Committee: Alco- holic Awareness Committeeg Basket- ballg Admissions Committeeg Spanish Club: Sigma Nu BENJAMIN F. KNIGHT III BA. Eronomifs Football: Wrestling: Sportsmanship Award in Wrestlingg Baseball: Kappa Alpha in 4'9- JOHN BOLLING LEWIS III B.A. Political Sfienfe Tennis: Assistant to the Director of Annual Givingg Chairman, Student Development Chin- mitleeg C.A.C. Exec- utive Committee: Sigma Alpha Epsilon, V ice-President f. x MICHAEL KEITH LEACH B..-1. History Deans I.istg Football Pi Kappa Alpha. 'I'reasurt'r 'N Ig? i 2: z 5 fi. 5522:--T 'IJZEJSC ,, -wks . . N 'f z , 5 jhfyfgftzazt -- :Irf::':fLQg1 'kt-' uf!!!-'!iff:'l If .f':lSI.-I-Hia! - ,:.'::,s, . . '1::f.'-',-fffyl' ,' EDWARD TINS- LEY MACK B.,-1. Erorzonzizxs THE OFFICIALTM PREPPY YEAR BOOK 6----' JONATHAN D. MASTROPAOLO BA. Historjv Baskt-tball, Captain: Watt-r Polo, Captain: Assistant lNIusc-urn Curator: Pi Kappa Alpha ,aaa 'V' RICHARD CARLYLE PARKER 1i.pl.I'ul1l1mI Sz mm f' ROBERT KEVIN MAHONEY BS. Clzenzlstry Dc-an's List: Phi Beta Kappa: Omicron Delta Kappa, Prcsi- tlcntl Chi Bela Phi: Allan Sc holarg Busc- ball: Chairman, Stu- tlc-nt Finance Unm- niittccg Circ lc' K1 English Speaking Union Scholarship: C.O.R.C.: 'lligcrl Whcfs Who: Alpha Chi Alpha Q 5 5 .1 l ' .0 4 DAVID CLIFTON NOFTSINGER B..-I. Ilzlstory i 415 ...q f . X SCOTT LOGAN MOORHEAD BA. Efonomirs Bascballg Football: Little All-American, First Team All- V irginiag First Team All-Conference, Offensive Small College Player of the Year, Chevrolet Most Valuable Player' ABC-TV Kappa Alpha .ah- if WILBERT JOEL PARKER BA. Government and Efonomics Student Senate: Co- chaimian of Food Committccg VVWHSQ Alpha Phi Alpha, V ice-President WALTER EDWARD MANGER B.S. Clzenzistry M 9,5 I 2 kb W fl , ld Q Q , ' ' 'W' 0 . ':S My sf, f ' X 5 I A A F it ff J A 5 1 1' I - .KN , ' w 1 I GEORGE DYER NORRINGTON BA. Economifs Dean's Listg Rugby Clubg Interfraternity Judicary Oouncilg Theta Chi, V ice-President 1 HAMPDEN-SYDN LOWELL HORACE PATTERSON III B..-1. English WARREN A. QUINN BA. Polz'tz'c'al Sdenfe Pi Sigma Alphag Choir, Noteables, President: Histno- nics - Plays and Musical Production: Little Man' Sun- shine, A Colonial Evening at Table : ANDREW J. POLLOCK B.S. Chenzistry Dean's List: Phi Beta Kappa: Allan Scho- lar: Freshman Cheni- isuy Award: Chi Beta Phi: WWHS: H-S Fire Deparunent n.. jun. DAVID LATIMER PORTERFIELD HS. illullz Compzzlrr Sz lem 1' -9 ll ive- fix Sh-is Sigma Nu E A EVERETT - 14 CARROLL ' ,-fx 'i REVELL, JR. , Q' BA. Economics Math t P b - ., . .. if fl 7 X l ' RANDOLPH LJ u A x RANDOLPH C. REVERCOMB BA. Historjv and Psyflzology Football: IFCQ Lambda Chi Alpha THE OFFICIALW PREPPY YEARBOOK A MICHAEL JOHN R. RHODES ' ANTHONY RHEA BA. English and B..'l. l'itUIlO771IilS A French , Pwr llology Phi Sigma Iota: ' ' 'Y -. Richard C. Garlick - -it - n Award: Glee Club: 1 I E College Activities .i ' . 1:-. Committee: Sigma it x i? U -W Nu 2: WILLIAM JAMES EDWARD SHACKLEFORD ROBERTSON ROBERTS B.S. Biology BA. Et o11onz1'1'.s and Psyrlzology JOHN CHARLES ROGERS BA. P0l1'tz'z'al Sczence and Spamslz Spanish Club: Jon- glenrs: Student Affairs Committee: 'I'het11 Chi THEODORE ANDREW ROBERTSON B.,-1. Economics and Psychology 5-3 H-S Fire Depart- ment: Prince Edward Rescue Squad R. DOUGLAS ROSS B.S. Physics Omicron Delta Kappa: Chi Beta Phi: Union Philanthropic Society: WWHS: H-S Fire Department, Chief Engineer, lst Lieutenant, Chief: Phi Gamma Delta JUDSON HOWARD RODMAN, JR. B.,-1. Economics . 4 , -. --mr HAMPDEN-SYDNEY KAl.EllXJSCOl'li 1981 MARK C. RUMMEL B.S. Chemistry Dean's Listg Chi Beta Phi: Soccerg Choir: H-S Fire Depart- ment, Treasurerg Phi Gamma Delta ln 'Sl WESLEY SCHUESSLER Il B.A. Economics Dean's Listg Lacrosse, Captain: Student Court: Phi Gamma Delta, President 'inf LEE KENT SALSBERY B..-l. Et 0210112171 .s tk DANNIE BRAD- LEY SCHEIN B.S. Clzfnzishjv Allan Scholar: Cross Counu'y: Jongleurs: Not Ready for Liberal Arts Players: Tiger: U.P.L.S.: WWHS: Alpha Chi Sigma w -12 X 'Ig l JOHN SLADE SCREVEN BA. l'ol1't1r'aI Sfzffrztf' ON, 'rf' WILLIAM ALLEN SHELLY BA. Economics and Psyrhology 'S P -. JON R. SCHOONOVER B.S. Clzemishy Deans List: Football Kappa Alpha J- E Si ' ROBERT J. SHEPHERD BA. English WWI-IS: Jongleurs: Parting Shots 3 Gametg Chi Phi, President THE OFFICIALT' PREPPY YEARBOOK E -e-za CHRISTOPHER LEE SIMS BJ. l'ilU7IOIIlIt.S G x 4 f ,Q dlff ',E 1 xr 1, Mig P ,ivfffag ROBERT PALMER STICKLEY III Bal. l'.wc lmlogy EDDIE LEE , K DONALD SHOPE ul , 241. , QF WILHELM BA. Mfzrzzzgerial f -- X SILVESTER El'0f10V71I'l'-S BA. El'UI10771IiC'S Football: Baseball: Pi Kappa Alpha X x L 4 LAWRENCE RUCKER SNEAD III BA. 11011114111 Sl'Il'IIf?' and Frem I1 i 'Qu an I 'fl' MARTIN C. SMITH B.S. Chenzisiry Alpha Chi Epsilon: Chi Bela Phi: Ger- man Club: WWHS, Chief Engineer X fi. W CHRISTOPHER MILES STIEBEL BA. Erorzonzics and Psyrlzology 25. ,r,.o l 449585 WILLIAM COWELL STEPHENSON IV BA. Economics HAMI-'DEN-SYDN EY K.-Xl,EllXDSC1Ul'E 1981 ll., an GORDON ROBERT 1 ' at KAVANAUOH mwnnxtzia 'gf- ' STOKES STl'TTS B.:l. Englzslz BJ. Pnlztzi ul St 11014 r' Q : ' 'lr I' ah A V -4.1-at Q,-1 if HQ 2112? xi. ' '- I if ll' if 4 JAMES K. THOMPSON, JR. B.A. Economifs Football: Baseball, Captain: Student Admissions Council: Kappa Alpha JOSEPH DODSON TAYLOR II BA. Economifs Dean's List: Student Senate, Chairman: Student Government Cabinet Member: Theta Chi FRANCIS G. VARBONCOEUR B.S. Chemistry Football: Baseball: Glee Club: CAC: Admissions Council: Pi Kappa Alpha h..l' v r ' X dv YYARREN MICHAEL THOMPSON BA. liz 071011111 s A 1 .ig 1' rf ' - ' s Aa 4' A JAMES CREEDE TAYLOR III BA. Psyt lmlogv .4 xv' , 0 'VF3' HARRY BEN- JAMIN VINCENT, JR. Bfl. P011-fIfIllSt'IF7ZC'F THE OFFICIALW PREPPY YEARBOOK FRANKLIN P. WATKINS, JR. BA. Ezzglzislz Dean's List: Phi Beta Kappa: Omit ron Delta Kappa: Vena- hle St holar: Who's Who: Chi Beta Phi: Baseball: Tiger: Circle K: Infirmary Assistant: Etietgy Committee: WWI IS: Alpha Phi Alpha STEVEN C. VRANIAN BS. Bzology Deatfs List: Phi Beta Kappa: Altohol Aware-ttess Commit- tee, Chaimian: Food Setwit es Ckimmittee: Student Develop- ment Cbmtnittt-ez I.t-ctttres and Pro- grams Committee: Cirflc' K Q t J jAMES BURGESS WEAVER BA. Iifononzim RICHARD TURNER PRATT WILLIS B..'l. ffllllllllllllh illullz DWIGHT MARVIN WEBB BA. EFOIIOIPII-l'.S -a F. TAYLOR WOOTTON III B.S. Cl1em1'slry Phi Beta Kappa: Chi Beta Phi: Honor Court: Theta Chi RICHARD LEE WARE B.S. Matlzemattfs and Economies Tennis: Chi Phi, Vice-President DAVID JOHN WEST B.S. Biology Dean's List: Phi Beta Kappa: Omicron Delta Kappa: Vena- ble Scholar: Who's Who: Chi Beta Phi: Baseball: Tiger: Cir- cle K: Infirmary Assistant: Energy Committee: WWHSZ Alpha Phi Alpha HAMPDEN-SYDNEY KALEIDOSCOPE 1981 DONALD LELAND APPICH, JR. BA. Economics KEVIN DALE BLACKWELL BA. History EDWARD DALTON BROWN B.A. Psychology EDWARD FARROW BROWN B.S. Biology RICHRAD LEE CARNEY III BA. Economics THOMAS YATES CASH JEAN YVES CHIOTTI BA. Span ish MARK MORGAN CLARK JAMES BRUCE COLEMAN B.S. Math! Computer Science JOHN EDWIN COREY BA. Economics WILLIAM SH EARER DRISKILL BA. Economics MARTIN ELLERBE FERRARA BA. Political Science and Spanish RICHARD BURTON HAYES III BA. Economics and Psychology WILLIAM ALT V ATER JERVEY BA . Psyclzology ROBERT G RADY JONES BA. Economics LOUIS NAPOLEON JOYNES II BA. Economics and Psychology Sorry, M uffy, I bagged it. WILLIAM ANDREW KARO BA. Psychology KENNETH LI'I'I'ON KILGOUR BA. English JOH NATHAN LEE KYLE B.S. Biology WILLIAM KENDALL LEACH, JR. B.S. Economics RICHARD GLENN LEVY BA. English ANGUS PHILIP MACAULAY BA. English ORGAIN EDWARD MCCULLOUGH III WILLIAM GAILLARD MIKELL, JR. BA. History WILLIAM HUNTER MORGAN, JR. BA. History REGINAI .D PHILLIP MORRIS, JR. BA. Political Science JOHNATHAN SOCRATES PANANAS BA. Psychology FOSTER KEVIN QUARLES BA. History FREDERICK FIELD RITSCH III BA. English VINCENT DELFIN SAIAYAR BA. Economics MICHAEL GEORGE SCHUMACHER B.S. Biology FREDERICK FORREST SENTER B.S. Economics ROBERT ENGLISH SNIDOW BA. Economics OWEN EDWARD SUTER III BA. Economics LOON-KAR TAN B.S. Math f' Computer Science JAMES KING THOMPSON, JR. BA. Economics MICHAEL STANFORD WELLS B.S. Chemistry and French THOMAS FLOYD WILCOX B.S. Biology NORWOOD WILLIAMS WILSON III BA. E1 onomzcs THE OFFICIALT' PREPPY YEARBOOK UNIORS: THE CLASS OF 1982 ll Ilmmmy fhlluxlx Ryan :xIlilt'lk5UIl Dm ld .Xllwll M- mm 3 13--r Bl.1krAmlumxxly Clay .'xlllt'lJLiK h klcll Bcny ' liml Blgllw CIl1:u'lrs Buwlcs Duylcl Bfllllglill gg In-or 4 hu QW l 'T' , , 9, f .15 1 -. -Xl I ' y Guy Butler 'arf 13 .Q-fig Sum Clunplx-ll 'A ' . - -'1 'Ikmy Cmaixly 83? 24. L -Q? ,f 'E,- va' 'C'-T' .- 1 .- 9 xlvll Clxrluui Mike flhcy alicl Alex Clgirlw Q- jim Ckvlcl jay' Cl0l1LlI'k'X Plllll Cook wil Q 'T' 1 ,4 S x ,, 'sp 1 Tummy' Cknlrell I .X john fll'cyy's ' 4 Nlurk ClI'lllS1' sa Q Tal Clunnmgham Mm la Demon Dex Douglmrrly , '1 . i - Nrlson Fishcr ' Bill Grvcn A, j.B. Curley I l an - T., ' 45- -af' ' ' Y x 4 J . I fy H ll l ' Q , Gill ll.u11psl111c' lit' 'LI' a-' 'l ' ,fl Dgniml Hvppncl - ' 1 f' l'-llilllx Hcxlgvs llli l za, G Ni X ob 1 45 3 'A HAM PDEN-SYDNEY KALEIDOSCOPE 1981 ,- 5.1111 Hullxngv Xwhllll linlalu' lllxmlke-1 Ruin l'llllJlJ.lIKl Clhx lx Huclw 111 Daw H11111111cl Xv.U1L'lll'll1lll1lt1lll Q Xml I'IXllUl1 .XllXIl,l.illl1t'X G.1x111 ,Ivlls 5.lllllX LI1111l.111 julm Km R11 ln Kc'll.1111 - P.1ul Kvlln-N ,I-llll Klllglll Swv R111 111 Pvlrl' I..1ugl1l111 Bill IrClr111pln' R11l1.11'cl lrggtll 5 Wall xldlllllt' ll-xx' Nlcfllung Tuul lxltcllllllg Bn 11111 N11 G111111 R11 lx N11 G.111w ,I1111 X11 Cu' 1 An 1 ' 3 v ,'.' -5 Pi l 1.9 18 Chufk lNl1'Pl11ll1p5 Y111c's 511111111 hIlIHlHN Nloorc jon' NIOIQHI Robbo Nc'wco111b Shaw Nr-W1111111 CQLITX Noxuoss Kemp Normgm Km in Noms Charlcs Oakvs jon P111 c Dm id Ross THE OFFICIALT' PREPPY YEARBOOK 7 i 5 if '1 . v---7 QI -ag if . ' dl' 1' 1 nv-' 'K ,f ' 'MN .. 5-. in ui iv. I ', sf, 1 cg 5. LV , , 55 - , 4 7 ,., 1- 3 4 N ax ae Y XZ ,,,,. .. A,.,. ,fi f ,QR 5 x : ' Rod Rllfflll R14 L Rummrl Ilmlsgn Ruswll Skip Smxyu Kklll Sc llll5lK'l Bllillllllll Sum Pgnlw 5l11llh Bill Smilhvls Slvw Suu lxllulxsc' Neil Slvwm Bo Svdnm' ,Iclf 'I'hunl.is QQ Rim lx Thorllgis RLIIIKIX' 'I'rc'spuc1 Clifl Ward Glenn W.nu'rs Mark We-hh hun XVCNIKTII li QQ in 4 f1 F f sc ' N . ah' L . .gl 2 +I , ,kj It 'AI B A Q Du L Wulf-m.m ,:' -:-' is ysvi ,A mg.. f 4-3, - 1- .IM ' .QTY - w ' gain--L ,..-A 'Hui 2 .fs-1..V3 '-'. - 1TGr xX i:: Jr f ?5A:6kl -Q13 ffl, :Divx fl I 71 Menzoriam DAVID MORRISON Hfxw Died Marflz IS, 1931 4 , '-2? s- ' 4, Brian Wood Ric lmrd Wright HAMPDEN-SYDN EY KA LEIDOSCOPE 1981 'Y Sorry, Muffy, I bagged it. Sault .Xlli-x Yu fllpiliii W.im'n Bi-doll Tim Bi-mon Bob Bcni issutu john Boiuss jim Blllllllhklllt' Milam' Biciiiri' Miki' Biugzin Diinc Bwrs jiinnn' Chin Kvilh Ciiiiiudx Bill Gm john Clairlx Bill Cliiciislimv Gill Cliiiiciicli-ii Greg Clinic- Bnun David Dun- Doiimxiil Pclci' Dulfcv Brian Dunbiu' Bill lidinunds Scott Forc- Mikc Guiriu Ricluml Gci lull john Gibson Scott Gilbridc john O. Coddin Saou Cicxxhnxin CillI'll5 Gordon Bind CLi.ix Nlilw Gunn Dux id Ciimci Ric lx 11.111 ix Clay Hams Dgiviil H.nv Raiulx Ilvliliii Riinnls Ile-ll.iins Galen lluhhs jelf Hrilldml Ncil lhiihn.in Rcxl Huiitvi Alun jiiiiiu Bliu jaiinvs john jcnlu Todd Kdnipl niucllei Lewis Kcllrx Chip King, Bard KiiLp.ili'ia lx Tim Liiss Billx' Ln' jock Lilcs Drrck Mgiiilvx Gam' Miimii Illichm-l Nh Mul- Inn Saou Miller Toni Milli-r Lenny Mills Mike hIlK'llt'l l'illlIllQ'Il Muon' Ria lx Nluniwll Bam-i Niiiingiiiii jrsw P.u'lx Rm Pnilu Nl.ixwe'll Pgixnc' livin Pmllmv D.n lil Phillips jtllllilll Piland CIh.u lin' Pi lll hell Bvn Riiwlvs R.indx Rm-ul W1 iilh Rclniilx lim Riulhn jvll Rulxwls Finl Rulmiiisuii 0.113 Sgilslxn Kun 5l.l.llD Toni Suiln-l P.ilnie-i Sliiklm Sliiimls llnlui Rub il-K'ITllllK'U Ikiiniiix 'lih.ilni.i Daw ilwlliill hm Hill lliiigliqii Semin Wiillucc' Nhlw Wiillm jgiinc-s Williloial Bull Wilson DA. Woiirll I THE OFFICIAU' PREPPY YEARBOOK SOPHQMORE THE Bun ixllll Ktllll Bulls Dgnmy Bnugh Phillip Bllllll Hvrb Bmlllvlt Chxp Blllings CLASS OF 1983 f we 2 r 117' ' f-.I I ff'-. 'I --, kwnsi Boulo ,Igmm Balm-1 KUIIIIUII Blllklvll Rubvrl BIllllSlUlLl I-Qcidiv Brwmlvn Rilluml Bmulw Slam' Bunting Tummy Blll V lOllgllS Gun Bull P1 csxon Cumplx-Il .-Xndx' Ux pk kluhn Iluvn Mink Dn'lNIg1io Nlallllmv Dill Brian Dyw Mnumlin' Ell1lllllRlS Frmd Flltillllllll Rugcr CQ.mlm-I Flllllli Gvlm Dunum Gibbs W.n'nc' Glddin Huw ll.m1s Gan llullgmcl firing Ilunu'l' N i'r Q O HAMPDEN-SYDNEY KALEIDOSCOPE 1981 f' V Ni M.ii'Ljuhiisoi1 'L 'JL U ,Inn juniiiii 'M M5 . Mm xi-in in ,R fn' X, P W4 - ' mf' L U . Maru I A ' LN A 'N I Suu- Lum X A A 'W PiiillipI.i-xviisuii i 'X jc-il ixlilhdll 5, ll. 5' 1-. Chunk ixlillllll ' -fi' 'lim NIL fi.l1'lT Mike' Mn krl -7 i ' 1- I - fi H li .,,jEif7w,,,?M, ' , Alan Moore 1,g,.54f-:fi W X i 5 Chip Mormon ffl F i Ten Nelscn '. 9 .. ' , - in - ' Sic-vc Nunimii 5 ' ,Iini Nflllillgildill H Kon Piixwn G Q 1 ' 5' - Q- i if 25114245 , Slilrs Pculxxix .-X , Ni ' Biiggs Pcfnx N2-F1 'EQFSV2 vi ' N Bind Piviivl E J N jeff POIIVI -5 f Alvx Rinaldi It Slew Rohiiisrm 1 5 N.. an 11: A , W if I' xf 4 777x A j I ' I ' Q WW Q 2, ' f' PE, 'ZL-1' ' xi. W '. -151' 1 'Q 'Ibninn Robinson Hunk Rugvrs David Sadler joel Swwt Brian Thomas f 1, 3 :,,i,, I 4 I ' 1 Skip Sziiiiiiivis . , , - . jiiiiics Schunbci- ' I 1 Q . 1 gm, K A V , , Y r an Pcny Schrcny I 2 2 R' P .N 9 W i ,Q I X . 3' ii, H. ,, ... W , vs in , -ns. ' T: -'N-1 ' ' A I H Ji X I ' i Wilul Siiinpaon ' ' kk v kc-vin Slailurn QWELS-5'rN , A 5,i,55,f, i- Q ' Cliff som ' i- 'N ,:- 5 ' , Y . ' ' - ' 1 di ' ,, fi H jeff Standing f U 'f i n -,l -. .F Q Nash Suudwick in ' , I , I 'foles Summers ' . Y A W g -'i f ' 4' Q K 'ui--'f' 'Ffh -.M .1 'I ' 'V lv I fl if?-4f'i15 Mike Tonikics THE OFFICIALT' PREPPY YEARBOOK L-g T - RF Bill 'Iiy lei St Oll Yatidvi' Ycn- in Tuintny Vtirnt-i' Chip Yitiwnt Dznid Wullci' Buddy Wun- niriuth S 436. i Nc-lmn Wt-hlxfi Tim We-rtlicinirr john White Sain White Stuart Wilboumv Ben Willim Alvx Wiltncr Martin Wilson Chris Yitn Stew Young l if 1 an 'IR-M wg- ff 'T I-IAMPDEN-SYDNEY KALEIDOSCOPE 1981 'X-, So jimmy Baecher William Barbour Dolph Bell Chuck Best Bill Bishop Robert Bonaven lure Trevor Boyce Ricky Bruni Scott Bussells Bill Cabell Dwayne Callis Eddie Cameron Trey Campbell Glenn Carter Pen Clark jell Clifton Howard Cobb Philip Colclough David Collins Tony Conte Kevin Cowley Claiborne Crad- dock George Craft Hunter Craig Chip Craighill Dave Cullen Baxter Culler Chris Daly Lin Daniel john Dickinson Wallace Dieu james Duffy john Dunbar Chris Enroughty Wayne Enroughty fry, Muffy, I bagged Lou Farina Todd Famtnd Art Ferrer Bill Flint Patil Foro Bill French jim Garrett Bob Gentry Doug Gholson William Gillespie George Gluesner Roger Glover Ward Green Tyree Greene Eric Grow Sport Guthrie Benny Haiyey Beattie Hearst Benjamin Henk- ing Charlie Hill Toby Hoblitzell Duran Holton Rob Hoover jay Howell Watkins Hunt Lance jackson George jenkins Mark jones Mark jones Bert Kemper Dave King jeff Kroll Bill Martin Don Mcfammond Denny McCarthy Ski Miller it. jai Moore Mike Moseley Michael Mullen Paul Nelson joe Nit holson Trip Patterson Tony Ramos jimmy Rontag- lione Ward Seuer Tyler Sliands Mark Shleton Kenny Silyester jell Smith Ben Snead Mark Soltany Phil Stallings jim Standing Bubba Stratton Robert Sublett Mark 'I'hatcher Tee Tol ley Vik Venters Luke H'alker Michael Walker john Wallat e john Wamer Steve Warren Bill Whitley lowland Wil- liams Rich Williams Mark Williamson Sc ott Word jon Zug 5 THE OFFICIAU' PREPPY YEARBOOK FRESHME : THE CLASS OF 1984- I ,A K. Ag In ,K V Q, ak , A gg' A- 3, x, -xv 'lf X , 1- 'N I' 'tr . R iw Walls .xlX'l'lLllhN CIM! lin' Agn' SIQWUII ,'Xlt'X.illdt'l CL:-oxgn' .'XllC1Ii'XV5 Iliw :Kilda 'Ibm .xI1xlIl50Il i:-2 'f Sis X I 2' -Q 4, 3,-g ,- f'X 2 Q Igmw Bnilm 'Ibm Bgnvxuu R.111dx Blkuu hgud jun Bhnsius Chiu liv Blum km' Dgnid Bmchudl F K X 1 A X X: ::' - VT' vgiizf, . 'iv .J fi pig as ,,, .: 9 -f 3.3! li- 'nv Rulwbic Buurnc' john Bouslmll 'Ibm Buwlmg Clam Bmvmun Src-vc Bllyiljldll Hrmurd Bowl ,f' Z -as qi IL 2-W ,gg in ,,. '5- - Q-Cm ,- x s x . f . F R Q' W ' -' ' Q-' i 'f XX ff. 53 X 141114 Q' Boul john Bunrmwx Scott Burton Ewing Bula Bill Clark Dumliv Clgm I'-llllllxlill K Ile-mmm' :xlKllt'N' Clifford Slllglll C Ilcm' Rolxwt Umm:-ll Bill lknmrt Uol111ia'Cll0okx .f - --,Q i Fha X A HAMPDEN SYDNEY KALEIDOSCOPE 1981 Bnbhx Klmm I1 Xldlllllllgclllllkll' slhll R1 ,blur ljllpllli lflllull l'll.lcl1's ln' llmuul Nl.a1sl1.nll l'.lIllll'l 41' 'Q K -pr fy, .il ' lvl X ,lvll Flvlml Cllms l'lNllQ'l lhx ul lfllncln Q' Rn h.ml l llilIt'l Ivll l'lll'lltl ll.1p lun 1' l! Rulxlll fQlNQ'll Nlllxl' flllllt' Nunn Cm-gg ,lvll frlull ,In-In Cams Bolmlrx Cfxuhlms -Q ' S ' Y- 3. :T-53 lt 1-V 'Y ln- lhgm ,Iuhn ll.une's linlnllr H.mx.u L Plul ll.upn'l lum ll.lSll' Dux ld lla-.nu an Yimc- llvmie-null john lllll Klrlx llulllu lx Mills Hmlgvs Rum' Hulxluklwn lxlllll Hulcumh Ed Hoppe Bob Huuslm Tum Humphn-x N Bills Hun B1i.u1 kll'lt'l fllilTt'lI klt'lt'l -. en 6' we r S. . X, if ,- tx THE OFFICIALT' PREPPY YEARBOOK A4 ,nag Y . .- 'vs 1? ., if-v C1l1ipjul1mm1 ,Ion Alllhllvlll Hllllxt' sltlhllvlll l.1wxz-m L- ,llllldlx Danni ,Ioluw Brvun plum-s I Pda' Kullvlus Slove' Kvllum Bob Kamp Ric k Lilllhdlll DW IglM'lQ'Y Drums Im' 9 op...- , 4 x w Hg Q--3 ,gk , .I We! ,X K ,X Vo A V 2 -A ? K 4- ', .fl N 4, A, li' ,,,l. . -it T X K X 4. 'Xl 'Q -li x Y 'WK 44... aug lou- .,- w 9? -3 4, 13 9 ' T' 1 x fllhillts Irwls l.xn I,cwi5 Bill I.1ncic'n Eng Kunn lnh IQUIIIIIIX' Lowlgu 1' Kt'Ill0ll Mac ku Mika' NILll'Oll5t'k juhn Mayvskc' l-lmlnlic Mcfkxll Niall SI1 Ck-1' jcx- NlQ'Ilgt'l' Tom Millvl' i Mike' Molrs David Moon' jon' AIOITiS0ll .Inn NIfl5A'll'Y Nvnl Nichols Alan Nulan Du' Novak Blllv Owens Rgmdx' Pursum Slew Parsons Phil Pnulvtlc' Brian Prnlxxix' 'L e-w ,. r J . fi. Aw-. X -. ,I ih- A. I .W ., '?'d , in 5-a I an ll 1 lg-Sul N it HAMPDEN-SYDNEY KALEIDOSCOPE 1981 iv, iii! Ny, rf' my 1.5.3, I gag, fi CL1rgPl11ll1ps Paul P1c1p.1ul1 Yu- Plllllhlll jon' l'n11l1us Flillllx l'111x'1'll 5.1al1.1 l'mvm'1s lxlllxt' P11111 B11.111 Pllllll fllrg Rulml klllllll R11l1.u1mls Llcll R14 l1.111lx1 111 AIIIUIN Rthltll ,l 3 Q Q0 V ,hs . l eg, L, . 436: l 'V - fl? I TTY ,M ' ' 1 ull, xx x l X., ll xx If II NX ff ' 1.11111-11 R4 1lx'1lx ,Iul1llB.R11lx'lIsull Bc-11 Rtllllllxtbll FD. RllNL'IllX'lj.1t'l Blllll' Rusx Nc'1lRurxu1 'cl ya. of H' 5 be l-. ,- 1? 1? ' 'f A xx ' I . fi. Cs 'NI' A -Cx 'or 4: Fvilll Ruxwll 3.111011 Svggn l-ld Sllvllflll Rcllh sldlllllll M.11L Sldlllilll flllLlllt'S Small Gln-nn Smith Fleet Slllllll Chris Smuacl Arthur Sprnw' Pwscoll Spig11c-1' Wgallnu' 'I'Q111y Trip 'I'l1u111pm11 jot- Tl't'llt'l' john Penn 'I'11111c-1' Carly lc kI'lllT1t'l' lim' l'l11c-11wold1 Davnd vlilflllllll' af' UV! X505 .-5, 'ze w ' A V Heinz?-f 1u.u'- 4 '- i -v l57 THE OFFICIALT' PREPPY YEARBOOK -H. vw- '3- Frm-zlYgu1 Bl: :Hand Mikel Y.n x .add Ad.nn Walclmu Gxcg W.u'd Alsx Xvklli' ll.m'x XV.lI1ll'l' Q Q sw l M M 2'5- fliun Wnm-n Daw Whilc Y ' it E True y Xvhillff Will Wilshire 4 fl-S ' x , , X ., 5 In Memoriam DAVID PAUL BRUCE Died May 9, 1981 1111116 Line 0fDul3' Hzlnzpderz-Sydney FIITF Dfparlment A 'J 4 Q X 9 'ix Q. -sf' fi, x f f i' ,XEii'iqr - L T HAMPDEN-SYDNEY KALEIDOSCOPE 1981 iv, Z, Sorry, M uffy, I bagged it. Nic k Atlrrnrs Chris Aluzer Hamilton Brirrtl Sutton Bzrltlwrn Lash B.rr'kstlrrle Steve Bamrriarr Robert Bates joe Bentivegntr Andi Blanton Ted Blanton Al Blow Dennis Bt nverrrrrrrr Bryrn But hholu john Burge jaclt Crrllgrhzrn Fred Cares jim Cinfotta Bill Coleman joseph Coles Russell Crow Scott Dezell Stex e Dillon Ric k Doggett Lee Dudlex Ken Dunn lance Estes Nato Evans Steve llvarrs Danny Flvnn Tim Ford jim Gamble Alan Garrison Al Garvey Fred Gerloll Greg Green Nils Green Bill Green George Gr'irrrh.rll R.rnch Grinnrrn l'il'lt Crrm' john H.irnlsel Mike llaillrtlm Peter Hzirtlell Rrrnmh Hgrnell Fit-tlerit lx Helm Bill Htxxl 'I'rmmx Howlett Billy Hutlgins Rx le johnson Rithtirtl johnson I'im jones Phil Krrrtlis Dm id Kelli 'Ibm Kennihan Dm e Lawless Dan id Legg Mike Lipscomb Nltrrrtr Llrrnerirs Dax id Nhrclenr Chris Manley Bob Martin Allan Mutenr Rzrnth Mtl-Qlrox Mike Miller 'Ibm Miller Brian Motllin Flip Moerst hell Ric kv Neal Chris Nelson Bill Neuhat h Bill Nnrthen Troy Nottingharn Rob Nor es Mark Ohrstrom Ch tie P.iLlgi'll Phillip P.rnrell Nrrtluumel Perrtllex Stexe Plunlsert Btrrt Potter Wilmer Poxnor Stuart Rex enornli NIru1irrRitlurrclmrr 'Iorrum Ri rhertsf ur .Xu her Ruliirr .Xndx Sadler .flrrclrews Sager P.rlmer Xrsster l'irrteStzrr'hor'orrglr H.rl Stoggins Dux id Sh.rnrron Stuart Siblex Bills Simpson lim Siviter Dux rtl Steher Burke Steele lllirtl Stex ens junrrn' Stringl ieltl Ben Sturgill I-Qrit Supetrarn Stott 'I'hom.is Rui Iilrompson Detrn lhror lt- Illt itll ill Otwrix Wgrlltrte Drew W.rter'brrrw Ritlq Wt-lib Todd Wernt-rt Anclx' White Chris While Chris Wrlsorr Churt h Young 5 The Hampden-Sydney man is a skier. As soon as the first coldsnap hits the Virginia mountains, ski racks begin appearing on cars parked on the Circle, in front of White- house, and behind Hampden House. 1It takes the freshmen in Cushing and Venable a lit- tle longer - they won't have their ski racks until after Christmas break.J The topic of conversation in Commons runs: I hear Wintergreen's got 2 slopes open. That's nothing, I was at Snowshoe last weekend, and they had 8. Any weekday in January, February, or March will offer several cars heading off to Wintergreen, Massanutten, Snowshoe, or Bryce Moun- tain. fNever the Homestead? Part of the fun of skiing is that it's a great excuse to miss class. You don't want to miss class for something as unim- portant as watching the soap operas, so you save up your cuts for several weekday ski trips. Skiing during the week gives instant status. Other stu- dents are awed that you got up at 6 a.m. to drive two and a half hours to ski, shelled out Hill 'l'Hli Ol FlCIlAI.T PREPPY YEARBOCJK THE HAMPDEN-SYDNEY SKI VACATION a small fortune in lift tickets, rentals, and meals, and spent the day gliding down uncrowded weekday slopes. 4You don't tell them that there were 25 busloads of skiers from Richmond, Roanoke, and Norfolk, which backed the lift lines halfway up the mountainjr pr' -fl 1' , 1- ! -, N :K .L rvlm- I u ,f, , if ttf 4 , I ' gnu mt it i fl mlm' X 'IR Mnnuiei A f 5 Ulm E 16 NX X . lllww , I al ll I tm I I I PAX v Q, L, I I ' ' TLT ' t A .. X like tC ,f 3 tkxv , g , f M ' .,'!'f'A W N ff A' 145' . .r . I xl ,nm.i.wSi , .S I 1 Apres-ski is very important to the Hampden-Sydney man. Most of the girls' schools offer evening ski classes during their winter short term, so if you pick the right night, you will have many giggly snow bunnies to share your hot but- tered rum with after you have packed it in for the evening. If you're lucky fand it's hard not to bel, they will suggest that you and all your friends come up for a Boathouse or a Pines party later in the week. For five-day weekends and spring breaks, the Hampden- Sydney skier heads off to the real resorts - not the toy ones that are found in Virginia. High up on the list for East- ern ski weekends: Stratton, Stowe, Mad River Glen, and Sugarloaf. Spring breaks call for Western skiing at Aspen, Vail, Snowbird, and Park City. If you're real lucky, you'll get to go west with Tully Turney and ski on rocks. Clt hardly ever snows when Dr. Turney takes one of his ski- the-West trips. That's okay though, because there are always plenty of apres-ski opportunities. J F . .... ..,. .... . nfs, Q 4,3 We . ,', - N . . C ' ' '.'.v . rf? .-HT f . 2 .-.-.-.-A-.-A-.-.'.-,-.-.-.-.-.-L P .' t I . i 5 2 .. . .'.- 21 Ai -. 11-,4 2 4 'C In ,. I . 'a 4 '- ii ., Z :.,.. ,v I 1.4 ., nhl' -. -I , . n 5. .-i suv. . .wav- avuv Z 'lv ,..f., '..' .... . '. '. lv a ff- Ei' M, -' I - v EL? 5335 QW' s Z' 'E 'Z aaa HAMPDEN-SYDNEY KAl.li11JOSCOl'E 1981 THE Adkins. Thomas Eggleston, jr. 1Tommy1 1713 Gately Drive, Richmond, Va. 23223 Agee, Charles Elkin 111 1Char1ie1 5201 Sylvan Road, Richmond. Va. 2325 Alexander, Steven Thomas 1Steven1 9 South Wilton Road. Richmond, Va. 23226 Alpizar, Victor Ricardo lVicl 4532 N.W. 180th Street, Carol City, Fla. 33055 Anderson, john Ryan, jr. fRyan1 4316 Delray Drive, Virginia Beach, Va. 23455 Andrews, George Finley tGeorge1 1126 Knollwood Place, Martinsville, Va. 24112 Ansell, David Clark 1Davidj 7011 Iakewood Drive, Richmond, Va. 23229 Appich, Donald Leland, jr. 1DonnieJ 103 Raven Rock Road, Richmond, Va, 23227 Arias, David Anthony 1Dave1 1408 Hickman Drive, Virginia Beach. Va. 23452 Atkinson, Thomas Ray fTom1 2252 Echo Trail, NE, Atlanta, Ga. 30345 Auchmoody, Blake Paul, jr. CB1ake1 3030 Scherer Drive, Richmond, Va. 23235 Aulebadi, Richard Clayton fClayJ 9 Nort.hway, Chappaqua, NY 10514 Ault, james Burwell 1Burr1 3388 Spinners Cove, Bartlet, Tn. 38114 Baecher, james Paul ljimmyj 1921 Foxhound Lane, Norfolk, Va. 23518 Bailey, Robert Lawrence, jr. llitrryl 3220 S. 13th Road, Arlington,, Va. 22204 Baird, james Hamilton, jr. tHami1ton1 3022 Forestdale Drive, Burlington, NC 27215 Baldwin, Sutton Pelot 1SuttonJ P.O. Box 496, Sandston, Va. 23150 Ball, George Gill, jr. tGeorge1 2112 Windward Shore Drive, Virginia Beach, Va. 23451 i Barbour, Williarri. jr. 1William1 Route 2, Crozet, Va. 22932 Barksdale, Bruner lash flashj 1731 Westover Avenue, Petersburg, Va. 23803 Baronian, Steven Aram 1Steve1 202 DeSota Drive, Richmond, Va. 23229 Bass, William Dudley fDudleyJ Riverview Dairy Famt, Route 1, Rice, Va. 23966 Bates, Hampton Robert III 1Robenl 641 Mobrey Drive, Richmond, Va. 23235 Baits, Keith Forrester flieithl IIXJ4 Seventh Avenue, Farmville, Va. 23901 Baugh, Emerson Daniel III fDanny1 Box 310, Kenbridge, Va. 23944 Beard, Phillip Leon 1Phillip1 Church Sweet, Farrnville, Va. 23901 Bedell, Warren Runcie 1Warren1 2430 Braemar Court, Midlothian, Va. 23113 Bell, Rudolph Mardre fDolph1 38 Ridgeview Road, Staunton, Va. 23113 Bennett, Herbert Morton tl-lerbp 306 Maple Avenue, Fayetteville, W.Va. 25840 Benson, Timothy Wayne fTim1 Route 1, Box 461, Daleville, Va. 24083 Bentivegna, joseph fjoel 20 Bellewood Avenue. S. Setauket, NY 11720 Benvissuto, Robert Anthony 1BobJ 267 North Street, Bridgewater, Mass. 02324 Best, Charles William III fChud0 1404 Wilton lane, Virginia Beach, Va. 23451 BillingS. Charles Moore IV 1Chipl 1130 Cheddington Drive, Charlotte, N.C. 28211 OLD - BOY ETWORK Bishop, William Paca 1Bi1l1 5 Wollaston Road, Wilmington. Del. 19810 Blackwell, Kevin Dale tKeyin1 Rt. 1. Box 147, Dolphin, Va. 23843 Blake, Edward Elza 1EdJ 2108 jaryis Road, Virginia Beach, Va. 23456 Blanchard, Thomas Randall CRandyJ 27 Whittaker's Mill, Williamsburg, Va. 23185 Blanton, Andrew fAndy1 5025 Long Green Road, Glen Arm, Md. 21057 Blasius, jonathan Paul fjonj 6125 Park Ridge Drive. North Olmstead, Ohio 44070 Blocker, Willoughby Charles. jr. 1Char1ie1 156 Totem Road, Louisville. Ky. 40207 Blow. Allen Cooke 1All Route 1, Box 39-B2, Gloucester, Va. 23061 Boafo, Kwasi N. tliwasil P.O. Box 538. Kumasi, Ghana Bohrer, jason Price fjasonl 7325 Rebecca Drive, Alexandria, Va. 22307 Bonaventura. Robert joseph 1Robert1 22 Winter Lane, Dix Hills, NY 11746 Borchardt, David Charles 1Dayid1 109 Sturbridge Road, Charlottesville. Va. 22901 Borden, Frank Kennon, jr. lliennonl 3829 Regent Road, Durham, N.C. 27707 Boross, john Michael fjohnl 220 Sunset Avenue, Hightstown, N.j. 08520 Boucher. Brian William 1BrianJ 704 Centerville Tumpike S,, Chesapeake, Va. 23320 Boume, Robert Hilton 111 1Robbie7 Shanghai, Va. 23158 Boushall. john Heck III ljohnl 920 Golfview Avenue, Tampa, Fla. 33609 Bowemtan. Dennis Warren fDennis1 3718 London Circle, SW. Roanoke, Va. 24018 Bowles, Charles Phillips 111 1Char1es1 1509 Westbury Drive, Richmond, Va. 23229 Bowling, Thomas Barksdale, jr. 1TomJ 107 East Main Street, Christana, Del. 19702 Bowman, Donald Campbell, jr. 1CamJ 2740 Lynda lane, Columbus. Ga. 31906 Boyajian, Steven Robert 1SteveJ 855 East Rosemary, lake Forest, 111. 60045 Boyce, john Trevor fTrevorJ 4580 McKnight Road, Pittsburgh, Pa. 15273 Boyd, Howard Hailey Rutherford fllowardl 2560 Habersham Road, NW, Atlanta, Ga. 30305 Boyd, Howard Lance 1I.ance1 5929 Hall Street, Springfield, Va. 22151 Bradshaw, William james, jr. 1Bi1lyl P.O. Box 183, Buckingham, Va. 23921 Brailsford, Robert Edward fRobert1 1028 Founnile Branch Road, Spartanburg, S.C. 29302 Braithwaite, james Brock fjiml Box 717, Virginia Beach, Va, 23451 Breeden, Edward Lebbaeus IV 1Eddiel 1307 Willow Wood Drive, Norfolk, Va. 23509 Breiner, Michael joseph fMikeJ 12181 Holly Knoll, Great Falls. Va. 22066 Brittigan, David McClellan 1David1 408 South Main Street, Lexington, Va. 24450 Brogan, Michael Alan 1Mike1 3301 Christian Avenue, Roanoke, Va. 24012 Brown, Edward Dalton fTim1 51 Birch Road, Darien, Conn. 06820 Brown, Edward Farrow 1Ed1 5704 Burr Circle, Mechanicsville, Va. 231 13 Bruce, David Paul 4Dave1-deceased 3627 Valley Tenace, Baltimore, Md. 21207 Bruner. Eugene Rogers 1Genr-I 3306 Glout ester Road, Richmond, Va. 23227 Bruni, Richard Mt Neill 1R1ckyJ 606 Gardiner Road, Richmond, Va. 23229 Blliihlllllll, Bn an james 1Bryan1 5015 Craun lane. NW, Roanoke. Va. 241119 Bullard, john Bunyan Ill tjohnl 4 Partridge Hill, Rl. 2, River Road, Richmond, Va 23233 Bunting, Steven Carlyle 1Steye1 215 Melrose Drive, Danyille, Va. 211541 Burge. john Mt Donald 111 ljohnl 607 Maryhill Lane. Louisville, Ky 40207 Burroughs, Thomas Chalmers 1Tommy1 1305 Kimberley Drive, Raleigh, N.C. 27609 Burrows, john Reynolds tjohnl 916 Bay Cblony Drive, Virginia Beat h, Va. 23451 Burton, Scott Gregory CScottJ 1045 Clearfield Road, SW, Roanoke, Va. 24015 Bussells, Barbour Scott fScott1 109 Granite Avenue, Richmond. Va. 23226 Buta. George Ewing 1EwingJ 663 South Lincoln Avenue, Salem. Ohio 44460 Butler, Corydon Baylor, jr.. 1Cory1 2709 Console Avenue, Norfolk, Va. 23518 Butt, Gary Alan fGaryJ 710 Warren Drive. Annapolis, Md. 21-103 Byers, Archer Dane 1Dane1 Route 2, Box 16C-1, Keswick, Va. 22943 Cabell. William Sheridan 1Bil11 802 Clay Street, Franklin, Va. 23851 Cain, james Edward ljimmyl 311 Greenway Line, Richmond, Va. 23226 Callahan, john Conway fjackl 201 North Dogwood Cburt, Sterling, Va. 22170 Callis, Dwayne Nelsen fDwayneJ Box 57, West Point, Va. 23181 Cameron, Edmund McCullough 111 CEddieJ P.O. Box 1619, Morehead City. N.C, 23512 Campbell, Fred Leland 111 CTrey1 3204 Foxgrove Lane, Chesapeake. Va. 23321 Campbell. Preston Paul 1Prestonl 1209 Littlepage Street. Fredericksburg, Va, 22401 Campbell, William Scott fScott1 4615 Noyes Avenue, SE., Charleston. W.Va. 25304 Gtnnady, William Keith 1Keith1 4014 Thomas jefferson Drive, Virginia Beach, Va. 23452 Canody, Tony Marsella fTonyl 130 Cheryl Drive, Danville. Va. 24541 Capocelli. Sergio 1Sergioj 2305 Bogan Road, Richmond, Va. 23229 Carey, Frederick Riddick CFredJ 4150 Mount Carmel Road, Cincinnati. Ohio 45244 Carlucci jeffrey Van ljeffj 329 Bridgeview Circle, Chesapeake, Va. 23320 Carney, Richard Lee III 1RickJ 1005 Chinquopin Lane, Apt. 201, Virginia Beat h, Va. 23451 Carr,Wil1iam Hopkins fBill1 2416 Sterling Point Drive, Portsmouth, 1 a. 2.1703 . t t Carrington. William Addison tBilly1 3530 Otter View Place, Lynchburg, Va. 24503 Carter, Glenn Spence 4GlennJ 2300 Astoria Drive, Richmond, Va. 23227 Catlett, Thomas Yates 1Tom1 11 Robin Road, Richmond. Va. 23226 Caton, Christopher Edward 1Chrisl 418 Discovery Circle, Virginia Beach. Va. 23451 Chevalier, Michael Robert fhlikel Stonewall Road, RFD N2, Box 161-D. Cbncotd, Va 24538 THE OFFICIALTM PREPPY YEARBOOK Clark, john Edwin ljohnl 12-14 Berkshire Drive, Danville, Va. 24541 Clark, Mark Morgan rMarkJ Ifleets Bay Road, Kilmarnotk, Va, 22482 Clark, Pendleton Stott III lllenj 3510 Otterx iew Place. Lynchburg, Va. 24503 Clark, William Callaway III lBill1 1121 Abingdon Road, Virginia Beach, Va. 23451 Cl.irkt-, Alexander Mallory, jr. fAlexJ 7707 Hollins Road. Richmond. Va. 23229 Clary, Donald Wayne 1DonnieJ -134 Bluegrass Street, Chase City, Va. 23924 Clemmer, Thomas Franklin III flfranklinl 1 Waverley Green, Staunton, Va. 24401 Clifford, Andrew Holbrook fAndrewJ 805 Villa Ridge Road, Falls Church, Va. 22046 Clifton, jeffrey Allen ljeffl 316 Starmont Drive, Danville, Va. 24541 Close. Stuart McClay lStuart1 9204 St. Marks Place, Fairfax, Va. 22031 Ckmbb, Howard Perry III lHoward1 45 Partridge Lane, Putnam Valley, N.Y. 10579 Cbfer, james Singleton Cjiml 5326 Edgewater Drive, Norfolk, Va. 23508 Coleman, james Bruce lBruce1 P.O. Box 130, Dublin, Va. 24084 Coleman, William Seth QBillJ Rotite 1, Box 37, Rockbridge Baths, Va. 24473 Gales, joseph john Route 5, Box 930. Sussex, N.j. 07461 Collins, David Athell lDavidJ 2058 Bayhill Drive, Charleston, S,C. 29407 Condrey, james Alfred Lee ljayl 4237 Country Club Circle, Virginia Beach, Va, 23455 Conte, Anthony Brian fTony1 Route 6, Box 1, Charlottesville, Va. 22901 Cook, Frederick Andrew III lAndy1 17 Radford Village, Radford, Va. 24141 Cbok, Htiestis Pratt III fPratt1 5505 Bewdley Road. Richmond, Va. 23226 Cknrey. john Edwin ljohnl 2301 Windham Road, South Charleston, W.Va, 25303 Cbmell, Robert Carlson 1Robert1 7400 Three Chopt Road, Richmond, Va. 23226 Cottrell, Thomas Swepston lTommyJ 13 Rio Vista Lane, Richmond, Va. 23226 Cowley. Kevin Craig flievinj 8706 Riverview Street, Stuyvesant, N.Y. 12173 Cox, Parke Hunter 111 lParke1 4343 Bruce Road, Chesapeake, Va. 23221 Cozart, William Charles lBillJ 3509 Chaucer Place, Raleigh, N.C, 27609 Craft, George Francis II 1George1 5954 Byron Circle, N,W.. Roanoke, Va, 24019 Craig, Hunter Earle qHunterJ 7 Rivanwood Drive, Charlottesville, Va. 22901 Craighill, Charles Stillwell lChip1 1130 East Club Lane, Atlanta, Ga. 30319 Crenshaw, William Burwell lBill1 5010 Cary Street Road, Richmond, Va. 23226 Crews, john Edward ljohnl 420 Clarkson Drive, Danville, Va. 24541 Crittenden, Gill Thaxton tGilll 800 Arlington Circle, Richmond, Va. 23229 Crooks. Lewis Daniel III qDannie1 3802 Old Gun Road, West, Midlothian, Va. 23113 Crouch, Robert jackson lBobby1 2936 Kenbury Court, Richmond. Va. 23235 Crow, Russell Allen lRusse1l1 -117 Shanks Street. Salem, Va, 24153 Cruise, Mark Robert qMark1 2 Cathy Plate. Succasunna. N.j. 07876 164 Culbertson, Manning Young fManningJ 128 Richbourg Road, Greenville, S.C. 29615 Cullen, David Elliott, jr. fDave1 Route 2, Valley Ridge, Covington, Va. 24426 Culler, Baxter Clyde III lBaxter1 1213 Knollwood Place, Martinsville, Va. 24112 Curnbey, Thomas Edward, jr. fEddieJ Route 3. Farmville, Va. 23901 Cunningham, Hugh Carleton III fTed1 1402 Gilliam Drive, Farmville, Va, 23901 Currie, Gregory Alan lGregJ 4223 Hillbrook Circle, Roanoke, Va. 24018 Currie, William Robert fBi1lJ 4223 Hillbrook Circle, Roanoke, Va. 24018 Curtis, Thomas Webster lTom1 Route 1, Box 524, Waynesboro, Va. 22980 D'Agata, Michael Charles lMikeJ 212 Merritt Street South Boston, Va. 24592 Daly, Christopher Hume lChris1 4 Albemarle Avenue, Richmond, Va. 23226 Daly, Clark jeffrey fjeffl 4 Albemarle Avenue, Richmond, Va, 23226 Daniel, Walter Linwood, jr. lLinJ 730 Honeysuckle Road, Salem, Va. 24153 David. Ronald Bryan lBryan1 4117 W. Franklin, Richmond, Va. 23233 Davis, john Aldeman ljohnj 5900 Patterson Ave., Apt. 25, Richmond, Va. 23221 Davis, Thomas Martin lTom1 7602 Horsepen Road, Richmond, Va. 23229 Davis. Mark Allan lMark7 1240 Lanier Road, Martinsville, Va. 24112 Davis, Mark Robert lMarkJ 5628 Balfor Drive. Virginia Beach, Va. 23462 Denham, Douglas Scott fDoug1 712 Pennsylvania Avenue, Winchester, Va. 22601 Dezell, Scott Alexander lScottJ 1645 Winterthur Close, Atlanta, Ga. 30328 Dickinson, john Curtis Cjohnl Route 12, Box 289, Fredericksburg, Va. 22401 Dietz, Wallace Moncure 1Wal1ace1 9 Albemarle Avenue, Richmond, Va. 23226 Dill, Matthew Thompson lMatthew1 2214 Warrenton Way, jacksonville, N.C. 28540 Dillon, Stephen Knight fSteveJ 9 Gladbrook Road, Pittsford, N.Y. 14534 Doggett, Frederick Elmer, jr. fRick1 1414 Atlee Road, Mechanicsville, Va. 23111 Donovan, David William 1Dave1 53 Claflin Street, Framingham, Mass. 01701 Dougherty, Shawn Patrick lDocJ 213 White Avenue, Linwood, Pa. 19061 Doummar, Richard Habib fRichard1 P.O. Box 901, Virginia Beach, Va. 23451 Driskill, William Shearer lBi111 3741 Woodside Avenue, Lynchburg, Va. 24503 Dudley, Lee Pendleton, jr. qLee1 6 Roslyn Road, Richmond, Va. 23226 Duffey, Peter Sinclair lPeterJ 208 Southampton Road, Franklin, Va. 23851 Duffy, james ljamesl 2824 Sedgewick Drive, Lynchburg, Va. 24503 Dtinbar, Brian Holt lBrian1 3901 Bosworth Drive, Roanoke, Va. 24014 Dunn, Warren Kenneth llienj 8819 Charles Hawkins Way. Annandale, Va, 22003 DuPuis, Robert Thomsen, jr. fRobbie1 360 Withers Road, Wytheville, Va. 24382 Dyer, Brian Stovall lBrian1 8110 Sawmill Road, Richmond, Va. 23229 Edmunds, Meade Castleton lll lMeadie1 Hill Crest, Clifton Forge, Va. 24422 Edmunds, William Mcl1wainelBi1ll Route 2, Box 148-A, McKenney, Va. 23872 Edwards, Anthony Michael lMike1 3221 Grove Avenue, Chester, Va. 23831 Eggleston, Sam Daniel III lSam1 P.O. Box 317, Lovingston, Va. 22949 Eliades, Elliot Thomas 120 Sherwood Drive, Hopewell, Va. 23860 Emerick, Paul Theodore lPaul1 18336 Sharen Road, Triangle, Va. 22172 Emond, Lee Thomas 1Lee1 2508 Country Club Circle, Birmingham, Ala. 35223 Enroughty, Christopher james lChrisj 4607 Maverick Avenue, Richmond, Va. 23231 Enroughty, William Wayne lWayneJ 205 Carlstone Drive, Highland Springs, Va. 23075 Estes, Lance O'Ferrell flsancel 508 Summers Court, Alexandria, Va. 22301 Evans, Nathanael Cameron 4Nato1 7910 Bolling Drive, Alexandria, Va. 22308 Evans, Stephen Edwin fSteve1 7910 Bolling Drive, Alexandria, Va. 22308 Farina, Louis Donald, jr. lLou1 Miller School P.O., Miller School, Va. 22901 Farmer, Marshall Orr fMarshallJ 1208 Briarwood, Anderson, S.C. 29612 Farrand, Todd Steevens lTodd1 918 Graydon Avenue, Norfolk, Va. 23507 Farthing, Stephen Daniel lSteve1 237 N. Raleigh Court, Danville, Va. 24545 Ferrara, Martin Ellerbe fMartin1 13 Legare Street, Charleston, S.C. 29401 Ferrer, Arturo Ballada 1Art1 3900 Yorkshire Place, Hopewell, Va. 23860 Field, jeffrey Gamett ljeffl 1632 Oakwood Street, Bedford, Va. 24523 Fisher, Christopher Palmer lChris1 111 Record Street, Frederick, Md. 21701 Fisher, Nelson Howard lNe1sonJ P.O. Box 135, Wilsons, Va. 23894 Fitzpatrick, Timothy Martin fTim or Fitzj 7 Colony Blvd. Apt. 208, Wilmington, Del. 19802 Fletcher, David Harry 4David1 214 High Street, St. Albans, W.Va. 25177 Flint, William Kiley lBil11 4329 Montgomery Road, Lynchburg, Va. 24503 Florence, William David lDavidj Route 1, Box 288, Weyers Cave, Va. 24486 Flynn, Daniel Vincent, jr. lDannyJ Route 1, Box 238, Earlysville, Va. 22936 Ford, Timothy Lucas 1Tim1 66 Lenwood Boulevard, Charleston, S.C. 29401 Fore, Scott William fScottJ Route 1, Box 48-D, Wytheville, Va. 24382 Fox, Preston Stuart fPreston1 Route 5, Holly Hollow, Charlottesville, Va. 22901 Fozo, Paul Robert, jr. fPaul1 4949 Cherbourg Road, Virginia Beach, Va. 23455 Frazier, john Richard, jr. lRichard1 5140 Remington Road, Roanoke, Va. 24014 Freeman, William Long fBi1lJ 29 Georgetown Green, Charlottesville, Va. 22901 French, William McLean fBillJ 1510 Monk Road, Gladwyne, Pa. 19035 Friedman, Charles Frederick III lFredJ 516 South Main Street, Lexington, Va. 24450 Friend, jeffrey Neville fjeffj 608 Fairfax Road, Mobile, Ala. 36608 Furr, john Happer, jr. fHap1 1216 West Princess Anne Road, Norfolk, Va. 23507 Gamble, james Graham, jr. ljimj 707 4th Avenue Ext., Farmville, Va. 23901 Gammon, Tracy Watkins fTracyJ 1222 Fillman Drive, Reidsville, N.C. 27320 Garcia, Michael john fMikeJ 926 Fairway Drive, Vienna, Va. 22180 HAMPDEN-SYDNEY KAl.E1DOSCOllE 1981 Garrett, james Edward tjiml Box 829, Gloucester, Va. 23061 Garrison, Alan Fletcher fAlan1 741 Opie Street, Staunton, Va. 24401 Garvey, Alfred Hamilton, jr. lA11 500 Kimberly Drive, Greensboro, N.C. 27408 Geho, Franklin Young tFrank1 6406 Roselawn Road, Richmond, Va. 23226 Gentry. Robert Ctabill 4Bob1 1412 North Bay Shore Drive, Virginia Beach, Va, 23451 Gerloff, Frederick David fFred1 1010 Bevridge Road, Richmond, Va. 23452 Gholson, Paul Douglas, jr. tDougj Route 4, Box 573, Petersburg, Va. 23803 Gibbs, Wallace Duncan Ill tDuncan1 1547 Queens Road, West, Charlotte, N.C. 28207 Gibson, john Livingston 111 ljohnj 6219 Powhatan Avenue, Norfolk, Va. 23508 Gilbride, Scott Stephen lScott1 h 10615 Huntingshire Lane, Fairfax Station, Va. 22039 Given, Robert Wilkins tRobertJ 960 jamestown Crescent, Norfolk, Va. 23508 Gladin, Wayne Roger 1WayneJ 3425 King's Lake Drive, Virginia Beach, Va. 23452 Gleusner, George Francis tGeorge1 One Musket Place, East Setauket, N.Y. 11733 Glover, Roger Arthur Ill 1RogerJ Crestview Drive, Abingdon, Va. 24210 Goddin, john Oliver tjohn 0.1 5949 Wilton Road, Alexandria, Va. 22310 Good, Russell Warden 4Ward1 3741 Darby Drive, Midlothian, Va. 23113 Goodman, Scott Campbell tScottJ 2827 Ramsgate. N.W,, Atlanta, Ga. 30305 Gordon, Curtis Dudley 1Curtisj 12306 Church Road, Richmond, Va. 23233 Gonnly, Matthew Edward lll fMatt1 4654 White Oak Ave., Encino, Cal. 91316 Grace, Michael joseph fMike1 3719 Peakwood Drive, SW, Roanoke, Va. 24014 Gray, Frank Bradley, jr. 1Brad1 912 Marye Street, Fredericksburg, Va. 22401 Green, Edward jackson, jr. lWard1 2351 Venetia Road, Mobile, Ala. 36605 Green, Gregory Burrus 1GregJ 6408 65th St., Ocean Front, Virginia Beach, Va. 23451 Green, Walter Nils III CNi1sJ 54 Tumin Lane, Mobile, Ala. 36608 Green, William Callison lBill1 4420 Sleaford Road. Annandale, Va. 22003 Green, William Eugene, jr. lBill1 Route 1, Box 66-A, Phenix, Va. 23959 Greene, Robert Tyree, jr. 1Tyree1 1100 Mountain Road, Halifax, Va. 24558 Greer, Billy Louis tBi11y1 604 Sirine Avenue, Virginia Beach, Va. 23462 Gregg, Sean David lSean1 231 East Main Street, Orange, Va. 22960 Grimball, George Elliott Ill fGeorgeJ 129 South Battery, Charleston. S.C. 29401 Grinnan, Randolph Bryan IV lRandyJ 1905 Claremont Avenue, Norfolk, Va, 23507 Groh, Alan jefferson fjeffl 1321 North Bayshore Drive, Virginia Beach, Va. 23451 Gross, Gerhard Peter fjerryj C!La Portado 190-B, Villaviciosa, Madrid, Spain Grow, Eric Anthony lEricJ 10224 Pepperhill Lane, Richmond, Va. 23233 Gmbbs, Robert William, jr. lBobby1 Route 1, Box 18, Mineral, Va. 23117 Gunn, Michael Lee tMikeJ 628 Delaware Avenue, Virginia Beach, Va. 23451 Gunter, David Edgar tDavid1 1503 Gordon Avenue, Charlottesville, Va. 22903 Gurley, james Benjamin lj.B,j 3547 Penarth Road. S.W., Roanoke, Va. 24014 Guthrie, Timothy Bemard CSport1 P,O. Box 68, Scottsburg, Va, 24589 Hagan, Forrest Lee III tLee1 Box 346, Delia Drive, Commerce, Ga. 30529 Haines, john Kellogg ljohnl 277 Windover Avenue, Vienna, Va. 22180 Hainkel, john joseph 111 ljohnj 5921 Coliseum Street, New Orleans, La, 70115 Haley, Gregory joseph tGreg1 2002 Holcombe Blvd. Quarters B, Houston. Tx. 77211 Hampshire, Gifford Ray tGiff1 6301 Newman Road, Fairfax, Va. 22030 Hancock, William joseph lBi1l1 311 S. Washington Street, Winchester, Va. 22601 Hardell, Peter Andrew 1Peter1 200 East Hemlock Drive, Blacksburg, Va. 24060 Harnack, Edwin Louis 111 1Eddie1 Route 1, Box 10-A, Bent Mountain. Va. 24059 Harper, Philip Edwards 1Phil1 354 George Street. Winchester. Va. 22601 Harrell, Randolph Curtis tRandy1 529 lngleside Avenue, Emporia. Va. 23847 Harris, Dwight Richard ll lRick1 67 South Parkview Avenue, Columbus, Ohio 43209 Harris, Henry Hiter Ill CHiter1 72 Westham Green, 300 Ridge Road. Richmond, Va. 23229 Harris, William Claibome1ClayJ 210 Gravely Drive, Rocky Mount, N.C. 27801 Harrison, William Edward lBilly1 120 Ecullid Avenue, Binningham, Ala. 35213 Harvey, Benjamin Robert, jr. 1BennyJ P.O. Box 621, Appomattox, Va. 24522 Haste, Thomas Erie lll 1TomJ 200 West Grubb Street, Hertford, N.C. 27944 Haw, David Morrison-deceased 505 Ridge Top Road, Richmond, Va. 23229 Hayes, Richard Burton Ill lRichard1 3217 W. Wimbledon Drive, Augusta. Ga. 30909 Hearst, William Beattie tBeattieJ 612 Garden Lane, Bristol. Va. 24201 Heaton, David Neal 1David1 225 King Charles Road, Columbia, S.C. 29209 Heflin, Wiliam Randolph tRandyJ 112 Greenway Street, Fredericksburg, Va. 22401 Helm, DeWitt Frederick Ill 1Frederick1 2503 Kensington Avenue, Richmond, Va. 23230 Henking, Benjamin Kenneth Anyang tBenjaminj P.O. Box 791, Sekondi, Ghana Henry, Ronald Malcolm, jr. 1RonnieJ 2533 Scarsborough Drive, Richmond, Va. 23235 Heppner, David Alexander Spotswood fDavid1 617 Bon Air Circle, Lynchburg, Va. 24503 Hill, Charles Blake 4Charlie1J 2802 Rosalind Avenue, S.W., Roanoke, Va. 24014 Hill, john joseph ljohnl 143 Lincoln Avenue, Little Falls, N,j. 07424 Hoback, Kirk Stratton fkirkl 2 Wiley Court, Salem, Va. 24153 Hobbs, William Galen, jr. tGalen1 28 Barclay Road, Newport News. Va. 23606 Hoblitzell, Peter Arrell Browne III lToby1 222 Hopkins Lane, Owings Mills, Md. 21117 Hodges, Frank Terry tFrank1 340 West Point Street, Roanoke, Ala. 36274 Hodges, Michael David fMike1 4263 Houtte Drive, Norfolk, Va. 23518 Hofslo kken, Rune joar tRuneJ 320 Ramapo Road, Virginia Beath, Ya. 23-162 Holcombe, Mathew Harrison rlvlattp 7855 Whitworth Road, Rit hrnond, Ya. 23235 Holland, Carv Franklin 1Gary1 2709 River Oaks Drive, Midlothian, Va. 23113 Holland, jeffrey Sterling tjefll 1726 Concord Drive, Cliarlottest ille. Va. 22901 Hollingsworth, David Samuel, jr. lhaml 3414 Exeter Street, SW. Roanoke, Ya. 24014 Holton, Duran Pardue 1DuranJ 4169 Clinard Road, Clemmons, N.C. 27012 Hood, William Corghan fB1l11 4320 Old Dominion Drive, Arlington, Va. 22207 Hooker, Edmond Anderson fflddiel 2956 Hathaway Road, Apt, 906, Richmond. Va. 23225 Hoover, Robert Ardley, jr, 1Rob1 Route 1, Yellow Springs Road, Chester Springs, Pa 19425 Hopper, Edmund john 1Ed1 P.O. Box 5106, Amman, jordan Houska, Robert Bradford 1BobJ 2301 Springhollow Lane, NW, Blacksburg. Ya. 24060 Howlett, Timothy Mark 1'I'immy1 233 East 40th Street, Norfolk, Va. 23504 Hubbard, Kevin Loren lKevin1 5149 Like Shore Road. Virginia Beach, Va. 23455 Huddle, David Franklin tDavid1 814 Cresthill Road, Fredericksburg, Va. 22401 Hudgins. William Alexander 1Bi1lvJ 7634 North Shore Road, Norfolk, Va. 23505 Hudson, Forrest Christopher 1Chris1 10302 Collinwood Drive, Richmond, Va, 23233 Huffman, Neil Dairen1Nei11 230 Riverview Drive, Covington. Va. 24426 Hummel, David Paul fDave1 19 Edgewood Road, Fayetteville, N.Y. 13066 Humphreys, William Milton, jr. 1Tony1 327 East Oak Street, Cbvington, Va. 24226 Hunicutt, Thomas Wanen f1rvZiIT6'l11 1616 Chesapeake Ave., Hampton, Va. 23661 Hunt, Francis Watkins, jr. fWatkinsJ Box 774, South Boston, Va. 24592 Hunter, Roszell Dulany IV 1Rod1 610 North Broad Street. Suffolk. Va. 23434 Hurt, William Travis, jr. 1Bil1yJ 1312 Creamer Road, Norfolk. Va. 23503 Huskey, Daniel Alan tDannyJ 502 Putney Street, Famiville, Va. 23901 Hylton, james Neal lNealJ 677 Cardinal Drive, Pulaski, Va. 24301 jackson, lance Arlington 1LanceJ 4463 Nantucket Cove, Stone Mountain, Ga. 30083 james. Alan Paul 1Alan1 Route 1, Box 579, Clifton Forge, Va. 24422 janney, Allyn Gardner, jr. lAl1yn1 4616 Kensington Avenue, Richmond, Va. 23226 jeffs. Gavin David 1Gavin1 3209 Cromwell Road, Durhatn, N.C. 27705 jenkins, George William tGeorge1 1423 Nottingham Road, Charleston. W.Va. 25314 jenks, john Mater ljohnl 3015 Stratford Road. Richmond, Va. 23225 jervey, Charles Thompson lTom1 1304 Madison Street, Radford. Va. 24141 jervey, William Altvater 1Bill1 901 North High Street, Franklin, Va. 23851 jeter. Brian Preston 1Brian1 2830 East Brigstock Road, Midlothian, Va. 231 13 jeter. Garrett Chapman Maple Hill Fann, Rt. 2 Box 96, Ronceverte, W.Va. 24970 165 THE OFFICIALT' PREPPY YEARBOOK johnson, I-QtigerteC1iarles, jr. tChtp9 1135 Ou-rbrook Drive, Orlando, Fla. 32804 johnson, jonathan Stott tjoni 26 Dublin Dru e. Lutherville. Md. 21093 johnson. Kyle McWhorter tKvlel 712 Dickerson Lane, Blacksburg, Va. 24060 jolirison. Rtthard Burke. jr. tBurke1 Route 1, Box 94-A, West Point. Va, 23181 johnson, Ric hard Lake tRir hard! 10 Plantation Road. Newport News. Va. 23602 jonak, lawrence Overton tlawrentel 938 Westover Avenue. Norfolk, Va. 23507 jones, David Fitzgerald 1David1 Box 117, Townsend. Va. 23443 jones. Mark Turner 1Markl 2213 Windward Shore Drive, Virginia Beach. Va. 23451 jones. Mark Waring tMarkJ 3501 Lvnnwood Drive, Virginia Beach, Va. 23452 jones. Robert Grady 1GradyJ P.O. Box -16. Concord, Va. 24538 jones, Timothy Nolan tTiml 1302 Oak Avenue. Buena Vista, Va. 24416 jones. William Bryan tBryanJ 5872 Brierglen, Memphis. Tennessee 38138 jones. William David 1Bi1lJ 217 john Ratcliffe, Williamsburg. Va. 23185 jordan. Alexander Ranlett tSandyl 3151 Darnley Drive, Richmond, Va. 23235 jordan, james Mclauren, jr. tjiml 2309 Maplewood Avenue, Winston-Salem, N.C. 27103 jovnes. Louis Napoleon ll lMikeJ 1320 Penguin Circle. Virginia Beach, Va. 23451 Kanelos. Peter Geprge 1Pete1 113 Crownpoint Road, Williamsburg. Va. 23185 Kardis. Phillip john II lPhil1 107 Richmond Road, Front Royal. Va. 22630 Karo, William Ardrew 1DrewJ 1403 Libbie Avenue, Richmond, Va. 23226 john Franklin III ljohnl 4 South Wilton Road, Richmond, Va, Keesling. john Carl ljohnp 127 Hickory Road. Sterling, Va. 22170 Kellam. Richard Edgar 1Rickyl Box 144. Belle Haven. Va. 23306 Kellam, Steven Wilson tSteve1 2413 jimmy Winters Road. Richmond, Va. 23235 Kelley. Lewis Dwight, jr. 1Lewis1 730 Courthouse Road, Richmond, Va. 23235 Kelley. Paul Thomasson lPau17 428 8th Street, West Point. Va. 23181 Kelly. Christopher Mark tMark1 3900 Cogbill Road, Richmond, Va. 23234 Kelly. David Lee III tDavidt 350 Buckingham Road, Winston-Salem, N.C. 27104 Kemp, Robert Pickren 1BobJ 241 Bellaire Drive. New Orleans, La. 70124 Kemper, Albert Strayer IV tBert1 1304 Crenshaw Court. Lynchburg, Va. 2-1503 Kennihan, Thotnas Roy, jr. tTom1 4508 Sterling Place, Raleigh, N.C. 27612 Key, Phillip Winfrey tPhillip1 117 Virginia Avenue, Danville, Va. 24541 Kilgour, Kenneth Litton tKertJ Route 4. Box 401. Leesburg, Va. 22075 King, Clark. jr. tChip1 907 Sunset Drive, Lexington. Va. 24450 King, David Francis. jr. 1Dave1 1 105 Prinre Edward St., Fredericksburg. Va. 22401 Kirkpatric k, Bard Gould lBartl1 1976 Defense Road. Petersburg, Va. 23803 Knight, Benjamin Franklin Ill tBennieJ 2221 Lark Plate. Lynchburg, Va. 24503 166 Knight, Timothy Benton 1TimJ Bena. Va. 23018 Knott. Steven Walper tSteve1 P.O. Box 713, West Point, Va. 23181 Kroll, jeffrey Allen ljeffl 7338 Millbrook Road, Norfolk, Va. 23505 Kyle. jonathan Lee tjohnl Box 95. Stuarts Draft. Va. 24477 Lanham. Richard Allen. jr. tRick1 12803 Manor Road, Glen Arm. Md. 21057 Iarus. Steven Reed tStevej 2830 Queenswood Road, Midlothian, Va. 23113 Lass, Timothy john tTim1 1413 Sunset Drive, Norfolk. Va. 23503 Laughlin. Peter Scott tPeterJ 1401 Riversedge Road, Newport News, Va. 23606 lawler, Douglas Reed, jr. tDougJ 3000 NW 113th Avenue. Sunrise, Fla. 33323 Lawless, David Irving lDavel 1529 Longfellow Court. McLean. Va. 22101 Iiiwlev. William Davis, jr. lDeel One Brandywood. Pepper Pike. Ohio 44124 Leach, Michael Keith lKeith1 Box 359, Glasgow, Va. 24555 Leach, William Kendall. jr. 1Ken1 Box 359, Glasgow. Va. 24555 LeCompte, William Harvey 1Bil11 9 Berkshire Road. Richmond, Va. 23221 Lee, Dennis William CDennisj 45 Wellsley Lane. Coram, N.Y. 11727 Lee, William Ralphael fBillyl 916 Shore Drive. Newport News, Va. 23607 Legg. David Bramley 1DavidJ 10 Milford Road. Newport News, Va. 23601 Leggett. Richard Preston 1Richard7 Route 1. Box 69-B, Brookneal, Va. 24528 Levenson, Phillip AndrewlPhillip1 402 Forest Road. Oxford, N.C. 27565 Levering, Cary Cooper tCary1 332 Lexington Road, Richmond. Va. 23226 Lewis, Charles Melville II fCharlesl 2309 Banbury Street, Charlottesville, Va. 22901 Lewis, john Bolling III tBo1ling1 7709 Sweetbriar Road, Richmond, Va. 23229 Lewis, Lynwood Wayne lLynJ Maxwell Street, Parksley. Va. 23421 Liles, George Welch, jr. tjockj 691 Williamsburg Drive, Concord, N.C. 28025 Linden, William Edgar III 1BillJ 2716 Fox Mill Road, Hemdon, Va. 22070 Lipscomb. Michael Edwin lMike1 902 Gordon School Court, Richmond, Va. 23235 Llaneras. Mario Rene tMarioj 9329 Glenbrook Road, Fairfax, Va. 22031 Loh, Eng Kuan tEng Kuanl 20 Gerbang Edgecumbe, Penang, Malaysia Long. William Martin lMartyj 216 Country Club Road, Newport News, Va. 23606 Lovelace, Charles Thomas tTommyJ 2701 North Main Street, South Boston, Va. 24592 Macaulay. Angus Philip tAngus1 2018 Hessian Road, Charlottesville, Va. 22903 Mack, Edward Tinsley tEdj Route 3. Box 235, Orange, Va. 22960 Mackey, Kenton Lee tKentonl Route 2, Box 461, Waynesboro, Va. 22980 Madera, A. David lDavidl 320 Park Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10022 Mahoney, Robert Kevin tKevin1 525 Warhawks Road, Chesapeake, Va. 23220 Malone, Walter joseph, jr, tWaltl 2513 Hood Drive, Virginia Beach, Va. 23454 Manger, Walter E. 1Walt1 5906 Dewey Drive. Alexandria, Va. 22310 Manley. Christopher William tChrisj 7330 Samuel Lord Drive, Chagrin Falls. Ohio 44022 Manley, james Derek lDerekj Route 6, Box 7, Powhatan. Va. 23139 Marousek, Michael james lMikel 2500 Londonderry Road. Alexandria. Va. 22308 Martin, Charles Franklin 1ChuckJ 668 South Greenbrier Street, Arlington. Va. 22204 Martin, Robert Preston lBobl 825 King james Street. Roanoke. Va. 24014 Martin, William joseph lBil11 Route 1, Box 364-A, Green Haven Lane, Prospect, Ky. 40059 Mason, Gary D. 1Garyl 2345 Paddock Lane. Reston. Va. 22091 Mastropaolo, jonathan D. tjonj 3409 Surrey Lane, Falls Church, Va. 22042 Matem, Robert Allan tAllanJ Amesbury Lane. Little Compton, R.I. 02837 Mayeske, john Mark tjohnl 12524 Knowledge Lane, Bowie, Md. 20715 McCall. Marshall Edwin, jr. 1Eddiej 609 Ross Road, Lexington. Va. 24450 McCammond, Donald Barr, jr. tDonj 5 Virginia Avenue, Richmond, Va. 23226 McCarthy, Denis joseph tDennyj 1014-A Brixton Court, Sterling, Va. 22170 McClung, Lewis Burwell tbewl Route 4. Box 61, Salem, Va. 24153 McClung, Thomas Graves 1TomJ Route 4, Box 61, Salem, Va. 24153 McCullough, Orgain Edward III tMacJ 412 Lighthouse Drive, North Palm Beach, Fla. 33408 McElroy, Randolph Williams, jr. tRandyJ Belleville, Manakin-Sabot, Va. 23103 McGann. Bryant Clark tBryant7 834 Raleigh Avenue, Norfolk, Va. 23507 McGany, Richard Lawrence CRickj 3945 Meadowlark Road, SW, Roanoke, Va. 24018 McGarry, Timothy Gerard tTiml 3945 Meadowlark Road, SW, Roanoke, Va. 24018 McGee, james Lloyd. jr. tjiml 1861 Runnymede Road. Winston-Salem, N.C. 27104 McGee, Robert Matthew tMatt1 Route 2, Box 396, Richmond, Va. 23233 McKenney, Malcolm Stuart, jr. tStuartl 4716 Pocahontas Avenue, Richmond. Va. 23226 McPhillips. Charles Vincent tChuck1 1349 Brunswick Avenue, Norfolk, Va. 23508 Metlger, joseph Henry III ljoel 4601 Monument Avenue. Richmond. Va. 23230 Mickel, Thomas Tofic, jr. lMikeJ 9422 Iredell Road. Richmond, Va. 23235 Mikell, William Gaillard, jr. 1Gigl 117 Somerset Road, Wilmington, Del. 19803 Milam, Bruce Vincent Wincej 434 South Main Street, Emporia Va. 23847 Miller, john Maurice tSkil 4410 Forest Hill Avenue. Richmond, Va. 23225 Miller. Michael Douglas lMike1 2161 Heatherly Road. Kingsport, Tenn. 37660 Miller, Michael james tMikel 1358 Emory Place, Norfolk, Va. 23509 Miller. Scott Frederick tScott1 207 Naman Road, Richmond, Va. 23229 Miller, Thomas Charles lTomJ 1202 Corn Tassel Trail. Martinsville, Va. 24112 Miller, Thomas Harlan lT0mJ Route 4, Box 246-D, Harrisonburg, Va. 22801 Mills, Leonard Orion tLennyJ 2915 Ascott Lane, Olney, Md. 20832 Modlin. Brian Davis tBrianJ 906 Talbot Drive, Smithfield. Va. 23430 HAMPDEN-SYDNEY KA1.1i1DOSCUl'E 1981 Moeller, Michael Weilage1Mike1 4802 Warrior Drive, Salem, Va, 24153 Moerschell. Philip George 1Flip1 609 Meadows Drive, Virginia Beach, Va. 23462 Moles, Michael Landon 1Mike1 258 South Winchester Avenue, Waynesboro, Va. 22980 Moore, Alan Tingley 1Alan1 1825 Hollingsworth Drive, Richmond, Va. 23235 Moore, David Kelley 1David1 1307 Milton Street, Norfolk, Va. 23505 Moore, Emmett Kyle flimmettp 1206 Graydon Avenue, Norfolk, Va. 23507 Moore, james Godwin, jr. ljail 119 Little john Road, Williamsburg, Va. 23185 Moore, james Harvey ljimmyl Route 1, Box 122, Drakes Branch, Va. 23937 Moorhead, Scott Logan 1Scott1 200 Paxton Street. Lexington. Va. 24450 Morgan, joseph Knight ljoei P.O. Box 306, Gloucester. Va. 23061 Morgan, William Hunter. jr. 1Bi111 P.O. Box 176, Sunbury, N.C. 27979 Morris, Reginald Philip tReggie1 11612 Boyd Road, Chester, Va. 23831 Morrisett, Richard Anthony 3911 Falstone Road, Richmond, Va. 23234 Morrison, joseph Scott III fjoej Route 2, Sutton Road, Lebanon, N.j. 08833 Morton, Claibome Barksdale III 1Chip1 933 Wobom Court, Mcluean, Va. 22102 Moseley, james Francis, jr. ljiml 7780 Holly Ridge Road, jacksonville, Fla. 32216 Moseley, Ralph Carmichael III 1Mike1 3048 Cambridge Road, Birmingham, Ala. 35223 Mullen, Michael Patrick 1321 Crestline Drive, Sanur Barbara, Cal. 93105 Neal, Richard King III 1RickyJ North Shore Point, Norfolk, Va. 23505 Nelsen, Louis Edward Ill 1Len1 11718 lvywood Road, Chester, Va. 23831 Nelson, Paul Redfield lll 1Paul1 78 High Street, Newburyport, Mass. 01950 Nelson, Robert Christopher 1Chr-isy 725 Tildin Place, Virginia Beach, Va. 23454 Neubach, William Gerry 1Bil11 414 Wake Drive, Winston-Salem, N.C. 27106 Newcomb, Robert Thomas 1RobboJ 326 West Drewry Lane, Raleigh, N.C. 27609 Newman, William Crenshaw IV 1Shaw1 8714 Old Spring Road, Richmond, Va. 23235 Nichols, Neal Anthony 1Nea1J 1103 Swissvale Place, Richmond, Va. 23229 Nicholson, joseph Albert, jr. ljoej 3111 West Grace Street, Richmond, Va. 23221 Noftsinger, Dabo Clifton 1Dabo1 707 Mockingbird Court, West Point, Va. 23181 Nolan. Alexander Alan 1Alan1 3050 Carolina Avenue, Roanoke, Va. 24014 Norcross, Gary Wayne 1Gary1 Route 4, Box 15, Waynesboro, V a, 22980 Norman, Stephen Maurice 1Steve1 6302 S. Mayfield Lane. Mechanicsville, Va. 23111 Nonnann, Frank Barrel lBarret1 430 Woodvine Avenue, Metairie, Ui, 70005 Norrington, George Dyer 1George1 601 Kingston Drive, Virginia Beach, Va. 23452 Norris, Kevin Anthony 1Kevin1 Route 5, Box 95, Moscow, Pa. 184-H Northen, William Morton ll 1Bi1l1 13 Old Oaks Lane, Crozier, Va. 23039 Nottingham. james Maurice fjiml 6304 Three Chopt Road, Richmond, Va. 23226 Nottingham, Troy Walker 1Troy1 Rural Delivery. Cape Charles, Va, 23310 Novak, Robert Dee, jr. 1Dee1 368 Pine Avenue, Waynesboro, Va. 22980 Noyes. Robert Lewis, jr. 1RobJ 315 -19th Street, Virginia Beach. Va. 23451 Oakes, Charles Gordon 1Charlie1 2941 First Street, Winchester, Va. 22601 Ohrstrom, Mark junot 1Mark1 P,O. Box 325. Middleburg. Va. 22117 Owens, William Alfred, jr. 1Billy1 2311 jefferson Street, Bluefield, W.Va. 24701 Pace, jon Andrew Ljonl 106 Lewis Avenue, Salem, Va. 24153 Padgett, Clyde Thomas, jr. 1Clyde1 9811 Spring Run Road, Chesterfield, Va. 23832 Pananas. jonathan Socrates ljonl Route 3, Box 566, Orange. Va. 22960 Park, jesse Kitai ljessel P.O. Box North East, Md. 21901 Parker, Richard Carlyle 1RichardJ 1880 Garraux Road, Atlanta, Ga. 30327 Parker, Wilbert joel 491 Crosland Avenue, Danville, Va. 24541 Parks, Raymond Douglas 1RayJ 533 Valley Creed Road, Mableton, Ga, 30059 Parnell, Phillip Sewell 1Phillip1 3801 Knollwood Lane, Bimiingham, Ala. 35243 Parsons, Randolph Lewis fRandy1 5912 Glenhaven Crescent, Norfolk, Va. 23508 Parsons, Stephen Frederick 1Steve1 3916 Thomdale Drive, Winston-Salem, N.C. 27106 Patterson, Lowell Horace Ill 1Buddy1 105 Branston Drive, Hampton, Va. 23666 Patterson, William Warren 111 1TripJ 1733 Kelling Road, Virginia Beach, Va, 23455 Paulette, Philip Edward 1Phi11 Route 1, Box 514, Appomattox, Va. 24522 Paxton, Kenneth Allen 1Kenp Route 3, Box 88, Covington, Va. 24426 Payne, Maxwell Carr III 1Maxwel11 3035 Farmington Drive, NW. Atlanta, Ga. 30339 Peabody, Brian Walter 1Brian1 1108 Lochmoore Boulevard, Grosse Pointe. Mich. 48236 Peabody. Edward Stiles lll 1Stiles1 1496 Wakefield Drive, Virginia Beach, Va. 23455 Pedlow, Thomas Hunter 1Tom1 11720 Rexmoor Drive, Richmond, Va. 23235 Peery, Robert Briggs 1Briggs1 5920 Bennett's Creek Lane, Suffolk. Va. 23434 Pendley, Nathanael Kevin 1801 South Main Street. Madisonville, Ky. 42431 Peterson, Mitchell Paul 1Mitch1 151 Glen Oban Drive, Amold. Md, 21012 Pfeifer, Bradford Sage 1Brad1 1333 Beech Street, Manchester, N.H. 03104 Phillips, David Roger 1David1 2610 Salisbury Road, Midlothian, Va. 23113 Phillips, james Gregory 1Greg1 13613 Creekside Drive. Silver Spring, Md. 20904 Pierpaoli, Paul George 1Pau11 3130 Archdale Road, Richmond, Va. 23235 Piland, Mills jordan tjordanl Box 427, Bowling Green, Va. 22427 Pittman, Virginius Sebrell II 1Vee1 157 Totem Road, Louisville, Ky. 40207 Pollock, Andrew jesse 1Andy1 4210 Newport Avenue, Norfolk, Va. 23508 Pontius, joseph Gilmore ljoel 2621 Old Orchard Road, Lancaster, Pa. 17601 Porter, jeffrey William ljeffj l92,9,gI6ewts Mountain Road, Charlottesville, Va. -- 3 Porterfield, Dai id Latirriet tD.ne1 342 1-'ox Drii e, Winthester, Va. 22601 Potter, Barton Carl 1Bart1 2 Bendt rest Plate, Charleston, W.1'.t. 23314 Powell. Frank Stanton tlfrankl 2 Woodland Drive, Newnan, Ca 30263 Powers, Alexander Odell lSasha1 Box 745, Holsbers Road, Truro, Mass 02666 Povnor, Wilmer Smith 11' l3Vlll11t'lil 4161 Kennesaw Drive. Birmingham, Ala, 33213 Pritchett, Charles lidward 1Charlre1 304 Fintastle Road, Bluefield, Va. 24605 Prizzr, 1Nlichael Arnedeo 1Mrke1 5 Ascot Ckqurt, Baldwin, Md. 21013 Pruitt, Brian William tBrran1 731 North Sterling Boulei ard, Sterling, Ya. 22170 Quarles, Foster Kei in fKevin1 26 Woodbury Forest Drive Hampton Va 23' 'ti - , . , . -. no Quinn, Warren Arthur l3V2ifTC111 7820 Chapman Road. Kingsville, Md, 21087 Ramos, Luis Antonio 1Tony1 2017 N. Sedgwick, Chicago, Ill. 60614 Randolph, Philip Ruffin 1Randyj Box 546, Mechanicsville, Va. 23111 Rawles, Benjamin Watkins 1Ben1 5001 Cary Street Road, Richmond, Va. 23226 Redd, Gregg Linton 1GregJ P.O. Box 245, Windsor, Va. 23487 Remitk, Robert Worthington 1WorthJ 6162 Westwood Terrace, Norfolk, Va. 23-130 Revell, Everett Carroll, jr. lliverettl P.O. Box 157. Onlev, Va. 23418 Revercornb, Randolph Chapman 1Randy1 3528 Penarth Road, Roanoke, Va. 2401-1 Revercomb, Stuart Hughes 1Stuart1 3528 Penarth Road, Roanoke, Va. 24014 Rhea, Michael Anthony 1MikeJ Route 4, Box 485A, Famiville, Va. 23901 Rhodes, john Richard ljohnl 17 Dudley Street. Presque lsle, Maine 14769 Richards. Thomas Stephen 1Tom1 4612 Locksview Road, Lynchburg. Va. 24503 Richardson, Edward Martin 1Martin1 302 South Broad Street, Suffolk, Va, 23434 Richardson, jeffrey Reese tjeffl 1213 Cedar Point Drive, Virginia Beach, Va. 23451 Riedlin, john Eric 1Eric1 6804 Stonewood Terrace, Rockwood, Md. 20852 Rinaldi, Alexander Martin 1Alex1 1101 Womiley Creek Drive, Yorktown, Va. 23690 Ritsch, Frederick Field I11 1Frit11 663 Otis Boulevard, Spartanburg, S.C. 29302 Roach, George Amory lA1T1OD'1 136 Canterbury Road, Danville, Va. 24541 Roberts, Lucien Wood III 1Lucien1 2525 Halifax Road. South Boston. Va. 24592 Roberts. William jeffrey fjeffi 114 East Maryland Avenue, Crewe, Va. 23930 Roberts, William Shackelford 1RobinJ 4 Kingsway Court, Richmond, Va. 23226 Robertson, james Edward ljamesl Route 1, Burkeville, Va. 23922 Robertson, john Battle II tjohn B1 2533 York Road. Raleigh, N.C, 27608 Robertson, Theodore Andrew 1Ted1 1611 Wilmington Avenue, Richmond, Va. 23227 Robertson, Thomas jackson, jr. 1Tommx 1 1427 Holland Road, Suffolk, Va. 23434 Robinson, Albert Lynn 1Bert1 1903 Brookhaven Road, Wilmington. N.C. 28403 Robinson, Frederick McArthur 1Fred1 8308 Whistler Road, Richmond, Va. 23227 Robinson, Stephen Leslie 1Steve1 8308 Whistler Road. Richmond, Va. 23227 16 THE OFFICIALTM PREPPY YEARBOOK Robinson, Thomas Alexander l'1'onrnryJ 1120 Pine Valley Road. Griffin, Ga. 30223 Rodman, judson Howard, jr. tHoward7 4705 Thornwootl Street, Portsmouth, Va. 23703 Rogers, Henry Moore 111 fHarikJ 1475 Harmott Aventie, Norfolk, Va. 23509 Rogers, john Charles qjohnyl 1536 Little Horseshoe Drive, Virginia Beach, Va. 23451 Rontaglione, Girl james, jr. fjimmyp 610 Bendview Drive, Charleston, W.Va. 25314 Rosenberger, Francis Dennis Il fFDl 5205 Queensberry Avenue, Springfield, Va. 22151 Ross, Bruce Campbell lBrucel 3701 Mud Lick Road, Roanoke, Va. 24018 Ross, David Edward fDavidJ 3631 River Road, Hopewell, Va. 23860 Ross, Robert Douglas 1Dougl 845 Cottonwood Drive, Severna Park, Md. 21146 Ruffin, Archer Harrison, jr. lArcherl Evelvnton Plantation, Route Box 19, Charles city. vii. 22030 Ruffin, Rodney Powell fRodl 4311 Loch Raven Blvd., Baltimore, Md. 21218 Ruinmel, Mark Christopher lMarkl P.O. Box 125, Tomahawk, Wis. 5-1487 Rummel, Richard Matthew tRickJ P.O. Box 125, Tomahawk, Wis. 54487 Ruocco, Neil Thomas tNeilj 284 Rambler Drive, Danville, Va. 24541 Russell, Daniel Lindsay tLindsayJ 1201 Matoaka, Norfolk, Va. 23507 Russell, Theophilus Feild fFeildl 1201 Matoaka, Norfolk, Va. 23507 Sadler, john Anderson lAndyJ 814 Lindsay Court, Richmond, Va. 23229 Sadler, john David, jr. lDavidl 109 Albacore Drive, Yorktown, Va. 23692 Sager, Andrew Roberts CAndrewJ 150 Virginia Avenue, Danville, Va. 24541 Salazar. Vincent Delfin tVinceJ 3703 Millbank Court, Fairfax, Va. 22031 Salsbery, Gary Stuart tGaryJ 7801 Elba Road. Alexandria, Va. 22306 Salsbery, Lee Kent lLeeJ 7801 Elba Road, Alexandria, Va. 22306 Sasscer, Palmer Saint Clair 1Palmer1 324 Sunset Road, Salem, Va. 24153 Saunders, Lewis Syester. jr. fSkipJ 11407 Lindenshire Lane, Richmond, Va. 23233 Sawyer, Leslie, jr. tSkipl 516 Forest Road, Chesapeake. Va. 23220 Scarborough, Vincent Roddy lVinceJ 6308 Martins Lane, Lanham, Md. 20801 Schein, Daniel Bradley lDannyJ 2735 E. Little Creek Road, Norfolk. Va. 23518 St hoonover. jon Robert ljonj 2681 Garfield, Abilene, Tx. 79601 Schuessler, Wesley fWesl 266 Guy Street, Roanoke, Ala. 36274 Sc humacher, Michael George tMike1 861 Carroll Road, Charleston, W.Va. 25314 Schuster, Kent Edward fKentJ 5105 New Kent Road, Richmond, Va. 2325 Scoggins, Harold Bremer 111 lHa1l 4317 Starr jordan Drive, Annandale, Va. 22003 Stott, Brandon Dillard 1Brandonl Route 2. Box 144, Gladys, Va. 24554 Screx en, john Slade tSlade1 3568 River Bend Road, Birmingham, Ala. 35243 Sehteny. Perry A. tPerTyl 8200 Mount Vernon Highway, Alexandria, Va, 22309 Segar, Samuel Barroti III lBarronJ 6032 Westwood Terrat e, Norfolk, Va. 23508 1 68 Senter, Forrest Frederick lForrestl 511 Marlowe Road, Raleigh, N.C. 27609 Setzer, Ward Delaney lWardl 36 Laurel Ridge Road, Hickory, N.C. 28601 Shands, William Tyler CTy1erJ 3811 Darby Drive, Midlothian, Va. 23113 Shannon, David Gray, jr. 1Davidl 100 North Mooreland Road, Richmond, Va. 23229 Shelly. William Allen 1Bil1J 134 Lake One Drive, Hampton, Va. 23666 Shelton, Edwin Lee, jr. tEdJ 999 Aqua Circle, Naples, Fla. 33940 Shelton, Mark joel tMarkJ P.O. Box 155, Gretna, Va. 24557 Shepherd, Robert jackson tBobl 2620 Comwallis Avenue, Roanoke, Va. 24014 Shope, Eddie Lee III fBuckyl Route 6, Box 109, Mechanicsville, Va. 23111 Sibley, Stuart Cameron fStuartl 2242 Mount Vemon Road, SW, Roanoke, Va. 24015 Silvester, Donald Wilhelm lDonl 3250 Faragut Court, Falls Church, Va. 22044 Silvester. Kenneth Turner Ckennyl 3250 Faragut Court, Falls Church, Va. 22044 Simpson, William DeForest lWil1l 280 Halcyon Avenue, Winston4Salem, N.C. 27104 Simpson, William Pride fBillyl 2906 Buckingham Road, Durham, N.C. 27707 Sims, Christopher Lee fChrisl 4110 Clagett Road, Hyattsville, Md. 20782 Siviter, Timothy David lTiml 1108 Delhaven Court, Virginia Beach, Va. 23455 Slattum, Keith Brian fKeithl 1120 Ditchley Road, Virginia Beach, Va. 23451 Slattum, Kevin Lee tKevinJ 1120 Ditchley Road, Virginia Beach, Va. 23451 Slaydon, Robert Mark lMarkl 3641 Brymoor Road, SW, Roanoke, Va. 24018 Small, Charles Edward fCharlesJ 656 North Cameron Street, Winchester, Va. 22601 Smith, Glenn Daniel fG1ennl 7 Nerewood Drive, Randolph, N .j. 07869 Smith, jeffrey Powell fjeffl 204 Old Oak Road, Richmond, Va. 23229 Smith, Lawrence Norfleet, jr. fFleetJ 826 Riverview Drive, Suffolk, Va. 23434 Smith, Martin Clyde lMartyl 131 Brook Circle, Danville, Va. 24541 Smith, Parke Burwell lParkel 213 Ross Road, Richmond, Va. 23229 Smithers, William Sinclair III fBillJ 6510 Westham Station Rd., Richmond, Va. 23229 Snead, Benjamin Tillman tBenJ 1960 Queens Road, West, Charlotte, N.C. 28207 Snead, Christopher Forrest tChrisl 6123 Westover Drive, Richmond, Va. 23225 Snead, Lawrence Rucker III lRuckerJ 1011 Galax Street, Bedford, Va. 24523 Snidow, Robert English tBobbyJ 3845 Peakland Place, Lynchburg, Va. 24503 Soltany, Mark fMarkl 8360 Greensboro Drive, Apt. 34818, McLean, Va. 22130 Sorah, Charles Clifton lC1iffl 3630 Williamsburg Road, Richmond, Va. 23231 Arthur Harrison 1Arthurl 952 Baldwin Road, Woodbridge, Conn. 06525 Spigner, Prescott Bush III lPrescottl 2101 Sparre Drive, Kinston, N.C. 28501 Staab, Kenneth Edward tKenl 605 Churchill Drive, Chapel Hill, N.C. 27514 Stabel, Thomas john fToml 4512 McGregor Drive, Virginia Beach, Va. 23462 Stackhouse, Stephen Morton tStevel 413 Sinclair Street, Norfolk, Va. 23505 Stallings. Phillip Woodward lPhi1l 109 Harbour Drive, Yorktown, Va. 23692 Standing, james Ashmore tjimj 504 Susan Constant Drive, Virginia Beach, Va. 23451 Steber, David Wayne 1DavidJ 329 Meadow Street, Vinton, Va. 24179 Stedfast, jeffrey Manss fjeffl 1460 Hamiott Avenue, Norfolk, Va. 23509 Steele, Richard Floyd Burke III lBurkel 1854 Westover Avenue, Petersburg, Va. 23803 Stephenson, William Cowell IV tBil1j P.O. Box 1600, Roanoke, Va. 24007 Stevens, jack O'Neil, jr. lNei1J 8319 Woody Drive, Norfolk, Va. 23518 Stevens, Ward William III lWardl 2744 South jefferson Street, Roanoke, Va. 24014 Stickley, Robert Palmer III tPalme-rj 3708 Sherwood Place, Lynchburg, Va. 24503 Stiebel, Christopher Miles tChrisJ 2908 Irisdale Avenue, Richmond, Va. 23228 Stokes, Gordon Kavanaugh 1Gordyl 5334 Edgewater Drive, Norfolk, Va. 23508 Stratton, Dwayne Everette lBubbaJ 602 Tuckahoe Boulevard, Richmond, Va. 23226 Stringfield, james Albert, jr. tjimmyj 411 Adams Mill Road. Mauldin, S.C. 29662 Strudwick, Frederick Nash lNash1 1200 Poplar Hill Road, Baltimore, Md. 21210 Sturgill, Benjamin Caleb II lBenJ 1604 Kenwood lane, Charlottesville. Va. 22901 Stutts, Robert Lawrence tLawrencel 728 Hunterdale Road, Franklin, Va. 23851 Sublett, Robert Langhorne lRobertl 707 Chinook Place, Lynchburg, Va. 24502 Summers, Ezra Toles tTolesl 6619 Azalea Garden Road, Norfolk, Va. 23518 Supetran, Eric S. lEricl 111 Oakwood Drive, Hopewell, Va. 23860 Suter, Owen Edward III tOwenj 14 Chamwood Road, Richmond, Va. 23229 Sweet, joel Eric Cjoell 1095 Kiousville Road, West jefferson, Ohio 43162 Sydnor, Thomas Emmett QBOJ 1446 Grove Road, Charlottesville, Va. 22901 Tan, Loon-Kar lLoon-Karl 101 Campbell Street, Penang, Malaysia Tarry, Wallace Clements 128 Pine Cone Drive, Oxford, N.C. 27565 Taylor, Hubert Shands III fShandsl 6422 Three Chopt Road, Richmond, Va. 23226 Taylor, james Creede III tTay1 Box 906, Radford, Va. 24141 Taylor, joseph Dodson ljoel 1105 Rose Lane, Virginia Beach, Va. 23451 Terraneo, lMason 1 Robert Phillip fBobj 2000 S. Ocean Boulevard, 4108, Delray Beach, Fla. 33444 Thalman, Thomas David fTommyl 25 Sellers Avenue, Lexington, Va. 24450 Thatcher, David john 1DaveJ 10709 Lunswood Road, Chester, Va. 23831 Thatcher, Mark Edward fMark1 10709 Lunswood Road, Chester, Va, 23831 Thomas, Brian Sutherland 4Brianl 4642 Kensington Avenue, Richmond, Va. 23226 Thomas, jeffrey Alan fjeffl 200 Susan Drive, Collinsville. Va. 24078 Thomas, john Richard fRickJ 10947 Flowerstone Street Oakton, Va. 22124 Thomas, john Scott tScottJ Route 3, Box 392, Clarks Summit, Pa. 18411 Thompson, james Christian, jr. fjiml 1504 jonquill Road, Richmond, Va. 23233 HAM1'Dl'1N-SYDNEY KA1.1i11XJSt it WE 1981 Thompson, james King, jr, tjayl 6414 Studley Road, Mechanicsville, Va. 23111 Thompson, Raymon Hudgins tRayl 8703 Prudence Drive, Annandale, Va. 22003 Thompson, Triplett Knight 1Tripl 315 Somerset Avenue, Richmond, Va. 23226 Thompson, Warren Michael tWarren1 Route 3, Box 171-C, Windsor, Va. 23487 Throckmorton, Marshall Dean tDean1 P.O. Box 27, Scottsburg, Va, 24589 Tolley, Eugene Thomas III 1Tee1 109 Wildhurst Lane, Danville, Va. 24541 Tomkies, Michael Clyde tMike1 840 Thirteenth Avenue, Huntington, W.Va. 25701 Trespacz, Randall Louis 1Randyj 29 Fenelon Road, Framingham, Mass. 01701 Tretler, joseph john, jr. tjoel 6 jackson Drive, Setauket, N.Y. 11733 Turner, john Penn tjohn Pennl 8966 Bellefonte Road, Richmond, Va. 23229 Tumer, William Carlyle tCarly1e1 Box 179-A, Newburg, Md. 20664 Uhtenwoldt, Eric William tEricJ 109 Steven Nicks Drive, Dickson, Tenn. 37055 Valentine, David Lynn tDavid1 2200 Trant Lake Drive, Virginia Beach, Va. 23454 Van Blokland, Frederik Beelaerts tFred1 Royal Netherlands Embassy, Kuwait Vander Vennet, Scott Alan tScott1 200 Parkway Drive, Newport News, I'a. 23606 Varboncoeur, Francis Gary tFranJ P.O. Box 248, West Point, Va. 23181 Vamer, Geroge Thomas, jr. tTommy1 3379 Aztec Drive, Atlanta. Ga. 30340 Vaughan, Henry Stewart tHa11 The Reserve Plantation, Prince Frederick, Md. 20678 Vayvada, Michael joseph tMikeJ 2406 Smithfield Road, Charlottesville, V Venters, Wayne Victor III tVikJ 2302 Gillette Drive, Wilmington, N.C. 28403 Vincent, Branch Washington III tChip1 307 Miles Circle, Emporia, Va. 23847 Vincent, Harry Benjamin, jr. tBenny1 307 Oak Hill Drive, Emporia, Va. 23847 Vranian, Steven Craig tCraigJ 11820 North Glen Drive, Richmond, Va. 23233 Waldron, Adam Alexander tAdam1 Route 1, Hillendale Road, Chadds Ford, Pa. 19317 Walker, john Luke tLuke1 323 Maryland Avenue NE, Washington, D.C. 2000 Wallace, john Meredith tjohnl 1309 North Bay Shore Drive, Virginia Beach, Va. 23451 Wallace, Otway Byrd tOtwayj 10 Iris Lane, Richmond, Va. 23226 a. 22901 Wallace, Sean Daniel tSeanj 12014 Long Ridge Lane, Bowie, Md. 20715 Waller, David Franklin tDavid1 306 Blair Street, Suffolk, Va. 23434 Waller, Michael Wade tMike1 264 Twin Oaks. Pulaski, Va. 24301 Ward, Gregory Dale tGreg1 2828 Meadow Green Court, Chesapeake, Va. 23221 Ward, Heman Clifford fC1iff1 11305 Familand Drive, Rockville Md. 20852 Ware Alexander Hopper tA1exJ 9408 Rhonda Drive, Richmond, Va. 23229 Warner, Harry Hathaway, jr. tHarry1 450 Institute Hill, Lexington, Va 24450 Wamer, john Francis, jr. tjohnl 9 L 1932 W. Twin Cove Road, Virginia Beach, Va. 23454 Wanen, Steven Harris tSteveJ 1520C Split Oak Lane, Richmond, Va. 24426 Warren, Thomas Underwood tTomJ 2253 Dtibroca Street, Mobile, Ala. 36607 Waters, Glenn Davenport tClenn1 3710 Kenmore Road, Ric hrnond, I'a. 23225 Watkins, Franklin Parker, jr. tl-'rankp 8904 Bellefonte Road. Richmond, I'a. 23229 Weannouth, William Harvey I1 tBuddy1 Route 2, Box 141-E, Franklin. Va. 23851 Weaver. james Burgess tjirnj 909 Indian Trail, Martinsville, Va. 24112 Webb, Dwight Marvin tDwightJ 5201 Monument Avenue, Apt. 3, Richmond, Va. 23226 Webb, Mark Maynard jackson tMark1 Marshoaks. St. Simons Island, Ga. 31522 Webb, Ricky Dale tRicky1 Route 1, Box 397, Crewe, Va. 23930 Webber. Walter Nelson III 1Ne1son1 4425 Clenoak Lane. Lynchburg, Va. 24503 Weinert. Todd Arthur tToddJ 933 North 27th Street, Allentown. Pa. 18104 PREPSTER S UNABRIDGED DICTIONARY MINK a rat in fancy dress A term generally attached to those unfortunates, once denied acceptance to Hampden Sydney, who later enroll at Washington and Lee AsHBURG a suburb of King s Dominion No available evidence supports the claim of the locals that GEEK one who misses the bouquet of Hampden Sydney by studying too much to the exclusion of other pleasures Synonyms Eraserhead Fish Palace dweller Nerd Blooze Unit Brown noser Physics Major Wimp Grind Bookworm Lizard Freshman ! there is a college there. Wells, Micliael Stanford t1Il1ke1 205 Andover Plat e, Danville, Ili. 21541 Wertheirner, Edgar Benjamin II' 1 linnl 215 Keith Road, Newport News, I'a. 23606 II'c-st, David john tDavid1 560 Broc kenbratrgh Road. Cliesapeake, I'.i. 23220 Western, Larry Cc-ne tI.ar'rx1 Rotite 2, Dogwood lane, I'tnton. I'a, 24179 White, Charles Andrew t.-Indy 1 265 Thornrose Avenue, Staunton, Ili. 21191 White. Christopher Branch tChris1 6823 Edrnonstone Road, Richmond, I'.r. 23226 White. David Hampton. jr. 1DaveJ 1203 Cambridge Place, Lynchburg, I'.r. 2-1502 White, john Stuart tjohnj 710 Ckillege Avenue, Blac kstone, I'a. 23824 White, Samuel Bruce 1Sarn1 710Cki11ege Avenue, Blackstone, I'a. 23824 Whitley, Tracy Lee 1Tracy1 512 Caleb Drive, Chesapeake, I'a. 23220 Whitley, William Ckrnnon tBi1lJ 3109 Chesapeake Avenue, Hampton, I'a. 23661 Wredernan, Dirk Arthur tDirkJ 309 Riverside Drive, Ashland, I'a. 23005 Wilbotrrne, Stuart Preston 1Stuart1 1 1403 Creekside Drive, Richmond, I'a. 23233 Wilc ox, Thomas Floyd 1TornJ 1802 Rolling Hills Circle, Charleston, W.I'.r. 253 Williams, lsharn Rowland Ill tRow1and1 -1 Roads End Lane, Ric hrnond, I'a. 23233 Williams, Richard Thurston tRichJ 106 Walnut Avenue. Middleburg, I'a. 22117 Williams, Roy Edgar, jr. 1RoyJ 1427 jackson Street, Covington, Va. 24426 Williamson. Mark McNeil tMark1 1433 Arrnistead Bridge Road, Norfolk, Va. 23507 Williford, james Archie tjimmyj 1904 Falconbridge Court, Richmond. Va. 23233 Willis, Benjamin johnson III tBen1 5403 Studeley Avenue, Norfolk, Va, 23508 Willis, Richard Turner Pratt tRichardJ 1106 Princess Anne St., Fredericksburg, Va. 22401 Wilmer. Alexander Peter tA1ex1 14 Georg-Glock Str., 4000 Dusseldorf, Gennany Wilshire, William Murray III tWi111 416 Cavalier Drive, Virginia Beach. Va. 23451 Wilson, Christopher Scott tChris1 4 Steward Avenue, Annapolis, Md. 21401 Wilson, Norwood William III tTrippJ Coggins Point Fann. Hopewell, Va. 23860 Wilson, Robert jay tBobJ Route 2. Box 229-A. Lewistown, Pennsylvania 17044 Wood. Brian Edwin 1Brian1 8310 Hood Drive, Richmond, Va. 23227 Woodward, Anthony james 1Tony1 805 Yorkwarwick Drive, Yorktown, Va, 23692 Wootton, Frank Taylor tTaylor1 1468 Wakefield Drive, Virginia Beach, Va, 23455 Word. Thomas Scott III tScottJ 20 Lower Tuckahoe Road. West, Richmond. I'a. 23233 Worrell, David Ammen I1 tD.A.J 1000 Third 8: Preston Streets. Radford, Va. 24141 Wright, Richard A. 1RichardJ 19201 NW 23rd Avenue, Miami. Fla. 33056 Yim, Christopher Aaron tChris1 4823 Chanticleer Avenue, Annandale, Va. 22003 Young, Arrnistead Churchill IV 1Church9 5312 Tuckalioe Avenue, Richmond, Va. 23226 Young. Stephen Scott CSteve1 4822 Old Dominion Drive, Lynchburg, Va. 24503 Zug, jon Robert tjonj 644 North Harrison Street, Arlington, Va, 22205 14 'l'Hli Olflflfil,-Xl.l l'RIil'l'Y Yli.-XRBOC JK Dining with Doubleknit G ESS VVI-ICTS COMMO While the perfect cucumber sandwich may be NIlW LIII3'S equivalent for old Dean Tommy and Diana and others too mentioned to be mnner- ous, the rest of us-our kind, you know-search for suste- nance a little more, well...sus- taining. Alcohol, sex, and Mary Baldwin aren't every- thing, after all. The Hampden-Sydney man devel- ops an elaborate system of satisfying his caloric need that may be puzzling to an out- sider, but once you know the rules of the feast, it's really quite alimentary. Rule number one, the rule that engenders all the Toast- masters and Walker's trips, is simple: eat in Commons as little as possible. One or two Saturday breakfasts with your football-weekend date should be sufficient. Qwhen you take these breakfasts, by the way, is crucial. If you arrive before I I 11:30, you're both in jeans or running shorts and sweat- shirts, she looks terrific with her hair pulled back and no makeup, and you seem to be saying, Hey, world, were for real. After 11:30, you may have showered, but you've got on the same khakis, blazer, and tie you wore the night before, your date has already donned five pounds of jewelry and hairbands and a green dress the precise color of your hang- over, and you're telling the world Yes, I know, but she's my roommatels girlfriends roommate, and he said she'd give me a good timeb Actually, you could do worse things than eat in Commons - self-flagellation and waking up at Longwood are two. But IValker's Diner is the preppy alternative. I mean, it's so earthymthose green barstools are positively tacky, but the food is good and cheap, and you can talk with local geezers in various states of petrifaction about T0 DINNER? finishin school...yep, that's what Ild do if I could do it over again. It's great for all- nighter breakfasters and post- Crawford, pre-Heinemann lunches, but you never know how long it'll take. The crowds are unpredictable, and as big as Walker's isn't, ten people is a crowd. But what about really spe- cial places to eat, places yould want to take a date or your parents? There aren't any. In food as in sex, the Hampden-Sydney man is often on his own. Thank Hamilton-Beach for popcorn poppers, toaster ovens, and other illegal-but-ubiquitous cooking appliances. The rule for hotplate cuisine is that you never eat the kind of food you'd have at home. Canned chili, pickled sausage and spaghetti-o's are high on the list. If you have a no-stick skillet, pancakes frolled up ff. with jelly, for anything but breakfastj are de rigueur. , 'L Gywxfqi tkk! T 'AJP E s E . r . Q 2 . 2' -u-.i'LvL'rd -I '. '. HAMIJDEN-SYDNEY KAl,l'1IDOSC10l'E 1981 You Can? G0 Home Again THE LAST DAYS: COMMENCEMENT 1981 Four years come and go very most memorable of all the quickly for the Hampden- days you've spent at Sydney student. Almost before Hampden-Sydney. First you you realize it, freshman orien- are struggling to finish the tation has become the gradua- one class you really need to tion ceremony. graduate lyes, at the last pos- Those last few days before sible moment the Registrars graduation are perhaps the office discovered that you still are three hours short on your proficiency requirementsbg it would have to be statistics. Then' there are the parties: it seems even the people who never said a word to you for the last four years want to entertain you. The Senior l l A fter Sam has rung the last bell: the Real World. 173 'l'Hli OFFICZIAl. PREPPY YHARBOUK Class Dinner Dance will be them at this point. Further- really feel like going to the your last date with Missy more, until exams are out of beachg you want to go back in. Annistead before you the way you c11n't go to the But the sight of Trey and Skip graduate. beach. and Chipster around your And you have to gear up for When you walk out of Mor- BMW with their Birdwells on exams, because it all rides on ton for the last time, you don't restores your spirits-it would A Senior Dinner, Aprzl 16 3 lr- u f, , f V9 1.44 E' Nfl NX 171 HAMl'IJIiN-SYDNEY KAI ,ICIIX 7562 Ul'Ii 1? l gig V ' -..-4 WK f -Q Senior Class Dinner Dance, April 2-I Ch J THE OFFICIAL PREPPY YHARBOOK never do for a true Prep to be sentimental. At the beach you drink away the last few days of freedom, toasting fond memories of times at Hampden-Sydney and fond hopes of times to come. Commencement. It really is a beginning, not an end. Your diploma makes it all trueg the hard partying, the all-nighters, everything is all in the past. But at least it's a past you wouldn't trade for the world because you lived it the way life should be lived, and you lived it at Hampden-Sydney. 4' jp, ' N 1 1nv n'-vo? A'- ef he Rel' het L te SPN Barcalawea l7Pi - -of end Cfalg Biddle 111 2 'E xi T 6 -xi, vP .4 I V 'Qs' F A I ,E Jb QA':'S3Q:nz,-ggQ3i'li'- nie: Commenfemenl Speaker ,-1 lexander Heard i E i...... Kevin M09 , 'A I., 0 C: 1 131 Brza 72 Sffnag 4 . 11.1025 bfff Tea ZUQ7-al 'AWSH1 1 v .y ' jf 1 Viff13 ? ! L..,f1,m ,gf -s ' ' I Sag' 15 1' 'F EG .,,,.,.-,,,, , N 177 ,,- ',I!',,,,,. 4 'b W4 fd rrurmr 5 x-521 t:.v:.n':.' 1 ' 'w',:gkg,. .nv.v. -.-.-.4.-.-.w .-.'.-:.-.-.'.- '2'.:I. . ' ' J. 5552 ' J- .Fw La, -: mm U r-'Q ,. ,E 3 - I' . 2 . I5 .- Q' 1: s-. 5! 3 -I I: ' 'Z Z S e 7: ? nf.'3'rJ'9'i-.-vs-A-ul. F-z' '-: . 'p '4 '. it . - S S2 P 1 1? P -,Ann Ml'DliN-SYDNEY lxAl.lilDOSC1t Jllli THE DE-EMPHASIS QF DRINKING One of the big moves by the administration during the summer of 1980 was to decide that during the coming year they were going to de-emphasize drinking on the campus, by debunking the idea that it was tacitly approved by the College and, even worse, the image that it was fun. To that end a mandate was issued, first to the people in charge of publications- both the Tiger and the College's own publications-that no pictures of students drinking should be published if they could help it, and certainly none of students drinking from primary containers. Then the students got the word: the IFC was to crack l . down, john Thompson was to crack down, CORC was to pull out all the stoppers. Part of the educational pro cess involved on-the-job train- ing of the students by the administrators. They held a wine-tasting in October to teach us how to pick just-so accompani- ments to our elephant scabs, and to be conti- nent about it. They invited us to cocktail par- ties at Middle- court, to leam by example. At mixers they filled every last cup with their own hands and stern looks. There can be no doubt both as to the value of their cam- paign and of its smashing suc- cess this yearg it carries great promise for years to come. As if the re- straint of this book were not witness enough to that, the pictorial essay on the next few pages should prove conclu- sively how much better this year's attitude toward drink- ing was than that of previous classes. Prosit igitur. IH! I'Hli OFFICIIAIF' PREPPY YHARBOOK gp S. . V f 'Bn if y if l'Hli OFI ICIIAI. ' PREPPY YHARBOOK ' 'ix 5 N to LN ' ,. v 'W xg ,K x Af , - . ,fl X ' ! 9- Q X. , --.N , ...., I Lluwr W' PWELQQ ffl . X W. . X ti f f -'J N., Q 5 .. ,. Xu g A X. .. Kg, . 3 f 2 ,Q . Q , t :af ' 5 K is .5 X s . K .N -gawk X x iii -- S3 N . h - ' 1 Xxx - ,. 2 'sk' X Ga I : X . H vig f W if-V . j1g:.:,:,4-uv I ' QQ. . 'q ' U-5-15 '.'fX , ' Lwggftg fm . F Q.. 'f-'S' ' N: , Q p H 2' X X N I E K x S r 4 X.-'7 X. I. .a'.'.'. .-.-.-.v..'.'.'.-. .-.- .....-.G . .3 . .-..,.-vb...-. A '. '- E , 'i -. g, . EPA: ' .. '11 ,4 Lmvn ' +.,, ,: 1' .' ,. . . 1- :-: .-, HAMPDEN-SYDNliY liAl.lil DOSCXC WE 1981 BUSINESS ADMINISTRATIGN Ask a six-year-old what he wants to be when he grows up. The less fortunate, in their ever- dreaming state of mind, will answer fireman or policeman -ambitious little kids aren't they? The Preppy, however, will hold his head erect and will answer I want to be just like Daddy. This gtoral leads. the Preppy on ough life. Though both you and daddy know that the business is going to be yours one day, 4. there are certain steps that you must take before you can be prepared for the acquisition. You must graduate from college. If you find that Hampden-Sydney is too much for you now, wait a while and reapply laterg this seems a popular course of action. You must spend a year in Europe. This will prepare you for cocktail conversa- tion and business bungles. You must become a member of several civic organizations and an officer in at least one. You must convince your father that you are ready to take over. If your daddy is skeptical about retirement and not sure what he is going to do with all his spare time, talk him intc joining a civic organization -use your connections if you have to- or talk him into touring Europe-you have been there and you can tell him exactly where to go. After you have done all of this, you will need a rest, and behind the desk at your office will be just the rest that you need. Relax now, but watch out-it will not be too long before your son graduates from Hampden-Sydney. if... '54 wi X 187 FOURTH STREET J. ll. WVIIIT FIELD 1' 0. MOTOR CO., INC. , , , , , Feed Seed Farm Supplles F0re'Sn 8X Domesuc 1V00dst0ve 8: Aeeessories Auto Repair Gordon llavis 39213557 llwner 303 North Mann Street Farmville. Va. 392-3896 Famiville, Wrginia CEnlraIFidEIi1U Banli 127 N. Main Street Farmville, Virginia Helping You Grow... Helping Us Grow... F armville Creamery DELI IX E YOll7'.fIOf716lOUJ71 Dairy 1 D1SU1bUICfS of ' Monticello Dairy Products 310 E395 Thild Street, F3-I'1T1Vi11C Fzumville, V 21. 392-4025 I HAMl'DENASYDNliY KAIIIDOSC If WE IW?-Sl ESTABLISHED Ill! Mix ' A B 'V iEfg?'1El'l3Q6553 it 1 'iii ' , FIA V .in L mr - gg Y ',.A,.,. A I . ' ' . t 1-,J V '- Qwtlrmma 3111-111241111123 501105. mf Er uunson Avenue con. ronvv-rouatn smear bl ri it U it U ' -, ,'lQJQ3q new volut 1:1-3-gtlit at u I 4 Lf V ' Jw ' B Elri F, 1 . A S Qi? gtitiif. ,, i:1Qrf?,.?,'. lliif ' ' t. A 4' up ,.,,.... 7 Le an ' Telephone Murray Hill M600 Clothing for every requirement of Men and Boys Ready-made and to Measure. 51153 Suits and Overcoats for Business, Dress or Sport 9 English and Domestic Hats and Shoes, Shirts, Cravats, Collars. Pajamas, Underwear Hosiery and Gloves. Dressing Gowns. Travelers' Requisites, Leather Goods, Waistcoats, Caps Sweaters 8: Mufflers of Shetland or Angora Wool Imported Pipes. Tobacco Pouches. Cigarette Cases D BROOKS BROTHERS' etc. Livenes for all Menservants New Building convenient to Smd-for lllunrared Catalogue Grand Central' Subwayv and Complete Clothing Outfits for Oflicers continuing in the to many of the leading Hotels Service as well as for those preparing to and Clubs resume clvlllan life. BOSTON SALES-OFFICES NEWPORT SALES-OFFICES Tnzlon1'con.Bon.s'rou S'rm:l:'r 220 B:Lt.f:vut AVUIUI FROM THE 1919 KALEIDOSCOPE Yes, you college men df executives who share a common enthusiasm MARTIN for fine quality, tailoring, and fit THE JEVVELER SHOP Farmville, Virginia 3924904 Watihesl Gifts ewe vy Your Favorite Department Store That Has Everything 18 9 IHI L ICI I PRP II X lx The First National Bank Farmville, Virginia Your Locally w 0 ned Independent Bank Member Federal Referve Syftem posit Infnrance Corporation Member Federal De Six Convenient Branches Located In Southside Virginia Farmville Pamplin Dillwyn Arvonia Shanaberger 8, Sons Moore's Distributing Company Route 460 East Richard H. Bfoone, Owner Fannville, Wrginia Bfxhdofgalidie, .bgfg:fffge, 392-4690 Paper Cups and Other Goods Homelite and Stihl Chainsaws 209 S- Main sf- P11003 ROSS BiCYcles Farmville, Va. 392-3222 Q 7 ' Pau'et's VVEIIKSI' S Dlflel' Your S vain Goods Open 5.'OO AM to 4.'OO PM nea'2q..a.2 im Homestyle Meals Farmville, Virginia SPECIALS DAILY lVlain Street, Farmville HAMPDICN-SYDNIW hll J PRINTING Olftterheads . 'Pro mms We wire flowers through FTD gpugicatians 7 Rochette S ,i Q wo ' ' 392-4154 F armville, Virginia Farmville, Va. One noun IIIIIHGH ORU'I'E'S One Hour 'Martinizing' the Most in Dry Cleaning PSEg p?1lfECEqilqg?I1ift 110 South Street 599 Supplies Farmville, Virginia Open 7 AM-Close 5:30 PM Featuring the Sale 65' Service of Saturday Open 7 AM' Hoya-1 Typewrirers and Close 2 PM Victor Calculators . One Hour Dry Cleaning Farmvme 3 Hour Shirt Service C OFFlCiIAl, PRHPPY YEARBUOK it john Blair Smith, at the age of 23 the second president of Hampden- Sydney, was making a speech in support of American independence, Hfashionably dressed in knee breeches, a silk stock, wig, and silverbuckled shoes. One of the men in the audience was moved to exclaim, ina voice so loud that Smith heard it, Ufounds, son, he isa day aper youngster! limflxlz flii' X llfxl ffr' y of Ilzlzrzpffmz-Nvrlnm If 1 I j c ll .ww 1nf',u1w'9, qu Why are you anxious about clothing? Consider the lilies of the field, how they grow: they neither toil nor spin, yet I tell you, Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these. MATTHEXV 6:28 Archibald Alexander, president of the College from 1797 to 1806, is credited with saving Hampden-Sydney from dying of attrition. 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