Mississippi State University - Reveille Yearbook (Starkville, MS) - Class of 1937 Page 1 of 262
Cover
Pages 6 - 7 Pages 10 - 11 Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9 Pages 12 - 13 Pages 16 - 17
Show Hide text for 1937 volume (OCR )
Text from Pages 1 - 262 of the 1937 volume: “
tutu V % . $ tt VHtSS AN AG E Bj V A V V TH fi r K -y ■in C o f , When flames, now burning so brightly, soften to a mellow glow, and glamorous dreams of student life come crowding into memory ' s twi- light; when friendships and acguaintances gently call for readmittance from the haze of college days— If then, through these pages, you can recapture the perhaps forgotten joys of life at Mississippi State, our mission will be accomplished, our fondest hopes fulfilled. ■v ; v fa m ■irrV- ' : - -1 i j : d : 4n3 —■| .1 i|LI ?i. teymm ?   « ' T3W«; T H Y. M C A THE DORMITORY In acknowledgment of the wis- dom and affection with which they have so nobly influenced us and our school, we humbly, yet proudly dedicate this volume to the Mothers and Fathers of Mississippi State College Students CONTENTS Academic Classes Militaru Features Athletics ♦ Fraternities Organizations ♦ Finale F By your uncanny insight into student nature and sympathetic treatment thereof ... By your in- tensely human qualities . . . You have inspired respect and true affection in all who know you. Dr. G. D. Humphrey • President B. F. HILBUN MITCHELL ROBINSON I. D. SESSUMS OFFICERS AND DEANS W. F. HAND. Vice-President Dean of Science School By the untiring work of this group of gentlemen, Mississippi State has been advanced to higher levels. Through the past several decades these loyal supporters of State have toiled to make this a bigger and better institution of higher learning. By their able guidance Mississippi State has received national recognition. Dr. William Flower Hand, Vice-President of Mis- sissippi State and Dean of the School of Science, has been connected with this college since 1903, and has been head of the Science School since it was established in 1911. He is a graduate of this institution and re- ceived his doctorate from Columbia University. Dr. Hand is an outstanding figure of the campus, and is nationally known in the field of science. Mr. B. F. Hilbun, Registrar, Dean of Men, Head of the Service Bureau, and Chairman of the Publica- tion Board. Although his services are divided into many fields of work, he has proved more than capable of bearing these responsibilities. His personal popu- larity among the students is evidence of his success. Mr. Mitchell Robinson, Secretary and Business Man- ager of the College, through untiring work and determi- nation, has helped build this institution in numerous ways, including athletics and enrollment. Upright, patient, and tireless in his service to the college, is Mr. Robinson, who is largely responsible for all that is finest at State. Major Irvin D. Sessums heads the Department of Discipline, and has performed his duties in a most creditable manner. He has proven himself to be a very BOWEN PATTERSON HAND HATHORNE RICKS OF THE COLLEGE   capable and efficient leader. He is one of the most popular administrative officers of the College, and is a believer in the old policy of the iron hand in the silken glove, and by seeking voluntary co-operation of the student body before resorting to disciplinary measures, he retains the respect and friendship of the students, and at the same time maintains a high standard of personal conduct among them. James Vance Bowen, Dean of the School of Busi- ness and Industry, has achieved his life ' s ambition — that of placing his department on a parity with that of any institution of similar type. Due to his able di- rection, this school has developed faster than any other school in this institution. Having behind him a wide experience in the practical affairs of life, Dean Bowen has acquired a broad human sympathy which makes him respected and beloved by all the students under him. Lucius Lamar Patterson, Dean of the School of En- gineering, has been a member of the faculty since 1910. Affectionately known as Dean Pat, he is always glad to offer his time for the betterment of students ' welfare at State. He has proved to be a hard worker and an excellent teacher. He has the utmost respect of the fact that he keeps their noses to the grindstone; for they know he is hard but fair, and that he works even harder himself than he would have them work. Dr. W. F. Hand, Dean of the Science School, and Vice-President of the College. Under his most efficient management the school has grown to a ranking posi- tion. As Chemistry is fundamental to Agriculture, En- gineering, and other technical courses, this school does the basic work in Chemistry for all schools of the in- stitution. S. B. Hathorne, Dean of the School of Education, and is a new member in the rank of deans of this in- stitution. He is also Director of Instruction, and Di- rector of Summer School. Although this is his first year of service on the faculty of State, he has made definite progress in the field of education at this in- stitution. James Robert Ricks, Dean of the School of Agricul- ture, and Director of the Mississippi Experiment Sta- tion, has played a leading part in elevating his branch of the college to its present enviable rating. The School of Agriculture was organized in 1892 and has as its function training in all branches of agriculture from the farmer to the specialist and the scientist. Under the direction of Dean Ricks, this school has helped State acquire its present high rating. R. S. CALDWELL, President The Student Association ' 93 - ' 937 Officers R. S. Caldwell President C. A. Culpepper Vice-President H. E. Tillman Secretary-Treasurer T he Senior Members P. R. Davis C. W. Hawken R. W. Thames Mary Virginia Weems Junior Members D. S. Butler C. F. Haynes, Jr. E. J. Hosch, Jr. Sophomore Members H. M. Brumfield O. L. Garmon Freshman Member Dick Stratton btudent Association The Student Association, that name given to the entire student body assembled, is composed of the officers of the Student Association, which make up the Student Executive Council, and the entire roster of enrolled students. The Student Executive Council is the governing body of the Student Association of Mississippi State College. Its membership is composed of the President, Vice- President, and Secretary-Treasurer of the Student Association, four members of the Senior Class, three Juniors, two Sophomores, and one Freshman. The Executive Council is to the Student Association what the Congress of the United States is to the United States. The officers are elected by the vote of the entire student body from an unlimited number of candidates for each office. The representatives of the classes are elected from their respective classes by popular vote. The work of the Council consists in the running of student affairs and govern- ment, and in the taking of such action as they may deem best for the welfare of the students. One of the outstanding jobs promoted by the Council this year was taking action on revising the old and out-of-date constitution. The Council has also been very active in sending representatives to Student Government Conventions to represent Mississippi State. Its purpose is to bring to the student body from year to year the fullest possible good, well-balanced student life. Not only is this responsibility necessary in helping bring about more forcibly the realization of the responsibilities of the high places in life which we trust every State man will hold as a graduate student of this institu- tion. By assuming some of the responsibilities of governing its own affairs and help- ing in directing student activities, the student body does not mean to supplant the college authority, but to cooperate with them in making the various student activities a success. STUDENT EXECUTIVE COUNCIL I he Kellector The Reflector, in its efforts to recount the achievements and daily events of the students of State, has for many years been recognized as one of the leading journals of the collegiate press. It has always been the policy of the paper to express the general opinions of the student body and, through its editors and contributors, to afford interesting topics of all kinds in order that the monotony of college life might be somewhat abated by its pages. This year Editor E. N. Ras Ross, Jr., and Business Man- ager H. N. Monk Moore and their staffs more than had their hands full in keeping the student body posted as to the accomplishments of State students, not only on the campus, but over the entire country as well. Through its columns come the news of football victories, debate championships, boxing knockouts, and other accounts of student meetings and affairs in which the stellar sons of State have represented themselves and their school so well. EDITORIAL STAFF E. N-. Ross, Jr. Editor-in-Chief R. L. Wilson Associate Editor L. H. Davis Associate Editor Sherrill Nash Associate Editor J. G. Sherard Associate Editor Ed Chick Hosch Managing Editor R. E. Price News Editor J. H. Ross Exchange Editor Graham Wells Alumni Editor Bud Wallace Assistant Alumni Editor Houston Cox, Jr. Sports Editor Other Members of the Editorial Staff Mary Alston A. S. Alston J. A. Alford F. J. Bertucci R. E. Bowlus H. A. Cannada Dickie Carlisle Fred Donald Al Evans Frances S. Green Mary Hearon Richard Hammer Anne L. Lucas Alex McKeigney A. N. Morgan II. S. Montague W. J. Majure, Jr. V. G. Martin- Carlisle Moore J. A. Maschek W. D. Maxey R. A. McCarley Francis Norwood j. robertshaw S. L. Ragland Allen Spann Edgar Thaxton Jack Tillman Bernie Ward Zeno Yeates BUSINESS STAf-F H. N. Moore Business Manager H. E. White Associate Business Manager J. B. Small Associate Business Manager S. M. Webb Associate Business Manager F. F. Hill Associate Business Manager W. H. Bobb Assistant Business Manager R. P. French Assistant Business Manager Other Members of the Business Staff II. R. Andrews H. M. Brumfield R. M. Butler L. S. Crumbley R. G. Caperton E. H. Currie P. H. Decker C. E. Estess C. P. Haynes D. D. Hulsey David Holloman G. M. Harris J. A. Long W. B. Lee J. K. LlNDSEY D. B. Moore, Jr. W. D. McCreary Arthur Moore W. B. Oliver W. F. Rea James Stevens F. R. Thompson H. W. Wilder F. M. Watson The Reflector is the weekly publication of the Student Association of Mississippi State, and is managed by the Editor and the Business Manager and their respective staffs. E. N. ROSS, JR. Editor H. N. MOORE Business Manager r R. DENTON Editor B. T. ELLIS Business Manager Ihina rl ng i lappening Yearly Ihe Reveille. THE EXECUTIVE STAFF J. R. Denton Editor-in-Chief B. T. Ellis Business Manager EDITORIAL STAFF A. W. Holland Associate Editor W. C. Downing Associate Editor T. G. Wells Assistant Editor T. C. Henderson Assistant Editor J. L. Tillman Assistant Editor E. M. Graham Assistant Editor W. C. Washburn Assistant Editor H. W. Longino, Jr Assistant Editor R. E. Price Assistant Editor O. K. Stampley, Jr. . . . . Assistant Editor E. J. Hosch Sports and Feature Editor G. W. Melchior Art Editor BUSINESS STAFF C. W. Hawken Assistant Business Manager L. O. Rucker Assistant Business Manager D. G. Frank Assistant Business Manager W. F. Cannon Advertising Manager Other Members of the Staff C. A. Barrett G. E. Clark P. A. Decker C. R. Googe G. H. Holladay D. J. HOLLOMAN B. B. Hosch C. J. Ingraham D. B. Moore, Jr. D. G. Phelps D. PlTTMAN H. L. Spell G. Stuart J. A. Thompson H. E. Tillman Office Assistants C. A. Wallace L. H. Davis J. C. Goodrum H. Cox, Jr. A. K. Lovett M. P. Myers W. A. DePrater Albert Evans S. B. Wise D. L. James W. J. Lutz Bill Cameron W. E. Jobron Bob West J. A. Martin Hillard Canada M. C. Welch The publication of the 1937 Reveille makes the thirty-third year for the Mississippi State ' s year book. From the first issue, each staff has strived to make its book better than the one of the preceding year. And since the first Reveille there has been a definite progress made. The book now includes many more campus activities, organizations, and individuals. An attempt has been made to produce an annual of in- terest to every student. For the first time the book has been put on a fee system, and increased in size. It has no stated theme, and its goal is that of producing a valuable record of Mississippi State during the year 1937. If this thirty- third volume of the Reveille adds definite improve- ments and is viewed as a publication which has made progress in the field of annuals, the staff will feel that its time and effort has been well spent, that it has successfully attained its purpose. MRS. W. W. DENTON S ponsor MRS. M. H. ELLIS Spontor Who ' s Who at State   £Miss £Mary Virginia Weems £Miss (jrosie Heath Saunders obby ' Davis Miss Mississippi State Most Beautiful Most Versatile Bob Caldwell Friendliest Tee Wee oArmstrong Best Athlete Qhick Hosch Most Original Louie Spencer Bes t Dressed Student W. T. Wood Most Handsome Joe ' -Bill Henry Most Typical Freshman SHOTS OF CAMPUS LIFE AT MISSISSIPPI STATE Grand finale of M Club Medicine Show . . . Some protec- tion, I ' d say ... An- nouncer at Med. show . . . Thames turns fern. . . . Play- ing African game on ' Y porch Moak must have a tan . . . What a con- trast . . . Shoot a buck. SHOTS OF CAMPUS LIFE Broke again . . . Read - ' em - and - weep . . . Preparing for inspection . . . Just a dormitory picture show . . . A stude in- vention . . . Com- mon scene in the dorm. . . . Interior view of Cafeteria . . . Nancy does some cramming. AT MISSISSIPPI STATE SHOTS OF CAMPUS LIFE AT MISSISSIPPI STATE . . f u SHOTS OF CAMPUS LIFE Pruitt and Reddoch exchange head dress . . . Enjoying early spring . . . The col- lege pool . . . Look- ing through the arches . . . A college journalist . . • Slip stick contest . . . At the pool . . . Joy poses for staff pho- tographer. AT MISSISSIPPI STATE LEE HALL We Pay Tri oute to Mr. Mitchell Robinson, Secretary and Business Manager of the college, recently ten- dered his resignation to President G. D. Humphrey, after five years of faithful service in this position. Mr. Robinson, known to students of State and friends as Mitch, has been constantly active in college affairs, as well as taking a large part in civic work in Stark- ville and Oktibbeha County. While here he played a major role in helping State boost its enrollment to an all- time record, and was also instrumental in helping the Maroons attain national recognition in football and in other forms of athletics within recent years. Besides being an asset im- possible to replace to the college, Mr. Robinson has been the Good Samaritan to a host of State men. It is possible to compliment Mr. Robinson in many ways, but it is impossible to say enough good things to do him justice. His name will go down in the history of this insti- tution as being one of its greatest and most loyal officers of administration and friend. An excerpt from the Reflector reads as follows: Mississippi State College is a better school because he was here. This school is going to miss such a fine character and will- ing worker. He has been instrumental in developing this into one of the greatest and best known schools in the nation. A quotation from the 1936 Reveille is as follows: To Mitchell Robinson, Secre- tary of the college, goes infinite credit for State ' s rapid rise in the past few years. Only at great personal sacrifice of time, money and effort to an extent known only to a few has he been able to meet those thousands of obligations and favors which he so cooperatingly and cheerfully takes upon himself. SENIOR (LASS OFFICERS Orville P. Stone President Ulric L. Day Vice-President George Reynolds Secretary and Treasurer H. W. Seefeld Life Secretary BS Members Jack Abbott, Jr., K A., Agriculture Helena, Ark. A. S. A. E.. 3, 4; D. and C. S. A.. 1, 2, 3, 4. James Monroe Alford, Jr., Engineering .... Tylertown Tail Beta Pi; A. I. E. E., 3. 4; Berean Class. 2, 3, 4. Jack S. Amacker, Agriculture Ed Poplarville F. F. A. (Future Farmers America). Edna Elizabeth Ames, X Q, Business .... Holly Springs Elton E. Anderson, Education Philadelphia James Vardeman Anderson, Agriculture Collins Co-Lin Jr. College, 1. 2; President Hair and Hide Club. 3; B. S. U. Council. 3. 4; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet- 3. 4; Dramatic Club, 3; Baptist Quartet. 3, 4; Glee Club, 1; Vice-President Hair and Hide Club, 4; Live Stock Judging Team, 3. 4; Berean Class, 3, 4; President B. Y. P. U.. 3, 4; Chairman Horse Show Committee. Robert Lamar Anderson, Business Forest Charles Horatio Armstrong, K 2, Education . . . Jackson Student Executive Council. 1, 2; Football, Basketball, Baseball, 1, 2, 3, 4 — three letters in each; Co-Captain Football Team, 4; Inter-Fraternity Council, 3; M Club. Richard Baker Austin, Jr., Science Forest Beta Beta Beta, 4; Pre-Med Club. Robert Kendall Bailey, 2 A E, Agriculture . . . Hernando James Curtis Ball, Agriculture Ed Woodland Transfer from D. S. T. C. James William Barnett, Agriculture Union Ag. Club. 36 SENIOR % ■Members Benjamin Franklin Barrentine, Science .... Lexington Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, 3, 4; Gamma Theta Epsilon, .3. 4. Davis Monroe Batson, B K, Agricultun Ellisville Agronomy Club, 3, 4; Reporter. 4; Agriculture Club, 3, 4, Vice- President, 4; Reflector Staff, 3, 4; Omicron Theta, 3, 4; 1492 Club. 3. 4; M Band, 3; Hair and Hide Club, 3; Alpha Zeta, 4; Boxing, 4. Oliver King Batte, B K., Business Jackson Scabbard and Blade, 3, 4, Captain. 4; Inter-Fraternity Council, 4; Blue Key. 4; Chi Lambda Rho. Ferrill D. Battlev, Business Ridgeland Alexander Alford Batton, K A, Business . . Crystal Springs Chi Lambda Rho, 3, 4; President, 4; International Relations Club, 2, 3, 4, Vice-President, 4. Walton Avery Biggs, K A, Business . . . Crystal Springs International Relations Club. 3, 4; Inter-Fraternity Council, 4. James Ulysses Blanchard, Jr., K A, Ci-vil Engineering . Shelby Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, 1, 2, 3. 4; Berean Class, 1, 2. 3 4; Scabbard and Blade, 3, 4; Blue Key, 4; First Lieutenant Battery K. 4; A. S. C. E., 3, 4. Robert Tankersley Bonney, 2 A E, Science . . Enterprise Beta Beta Beta, 4; Scabbard and Blade, 4; Gamma Theta Epsilon, 3, 4; Omicron Theta. 3. 4; Reflector Staff, 1, 2, 3; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, 2. 3, 4; Debate Club. 3; 1492 Club. 1. 2, 3. 4; International Relations Club, 2, 3, 4; Pre-Med. Club, 4; Captain, 4. Jeffie Tyrone Bozeman, Agriculture Prentiss Co-Lin, 1, 2; President Jeff Davis County Club 2; Ag. Club, 3. L. W. Bracey, Agriculture McComb % Thomas Tucker Brackin, Jr., Science Beta Beta Beta. State College CLASS Thomas Walter Brand, Jr., B K, Business Decatur 37 Members Robert Granville Brasfield, Agriculture . . . Agronomy Club, 3, 4; Ag. Club, 3. 4. Lorman Lester Bridges, Education .......... Braxton B. S. U. Council. 1, 2, 3, President, 4; Maroon Band, 1. 2, 3, First Lieutenant, J; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, 2, 3, Treasurer, 4; Alpha Zeta, 3, Chronicler, 4; F. F. A., 3, 4. Robert Earl Briggs, Electrical Engineering McComb Kinch Exum Brister, Jr., II K A, Business . . Yazoo City Kappa Kappa Psi ; Dramatic Club, 1; Maroon Band, 1. 2, 3, 4; 1492 Club, 1, 2. 3, 4. Walter Hollis Brock, Mechanical Engineering . . McComb A. S. M. E., 3, 4; Scabbard and Blade, 3, 4; T. M. C. A. Cabinet, 2. 3, 4; First Lieutenant Battery L; Berean Class, 1. 2, 3, 4. S. N. Brown, Jr., Education . . ■. Beta Beta Beta. Vance Charles Clark Bryan, Electrical Engineering . . Woodville A. I. E. E., 2. 3, 4; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, 2. 3, 4; Scabbard and Blade, 4; First Lieutenant Battery K, 4. James Oliver Buchanan, Jr., Agri. Education . Sandersville Hair and Hide Club, 3, 4; F. F. A.. 3, 4; Ag. Club, 3, 4; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, 4; Glee Club, 4. Howard Bernard Buckingham, B K, Elcc. and Mech. En- gineering . ■Jackson A. S. M. E., 3, 4; A. I. E. E., 3, 4; Asst. Student Mgr. Cafeteria, 3, 4. J. A. Burris, Agriculture Smithdale Moss Merseles Butler, K 2, Civil Engineering . . Jonestown Advisory Committee, 3; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, 4; Dance Committee, 4; Football Banquet Committee, 4. Marvin Julius Byrd, Education Richton Comrades Class; F. F. A.; Ag. Club; Basketball, ' 32; Track, ' 32; Asst. Cheer Leader, 3. 38 SENIOR m ■m Eb Members William James Byrne, Agriculture Prentiss Miss. College, 1; Ag. Club. 3; Jeff Davis County Club. Robert Stewart Caldwell, 2 A E, Business Columbus President Freshman Class, 1; President Junior Class, 3; M Club. 2, 3, 4; Football. 1, 2, 3, 4; Baseball, 1, 2. 3, 4; Chi Lambda Rho, 2, 3, 4; Blue Key, 3. 4; Colonel Club, 4; President Student Asso- ciation, 4; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, 4; Who ' s Who in American Colleges and Universities. Henry B. Caperton, Jr., 15 K, Business Joe Edwin Carraway, Business . . Co-Lin, ' 33- ' 34. Noxapater Bassfield Preston Dewitt Carter, Jr., Agriculture .... Van Vleet Ag. Club, 2, 3, 4; Boxing, 3, 4. Harrison Randolph Chilton, K A., Elec. Eng. . . Columbus Collegians, 1, 2, 3, 4; A. I. E. E., 3, 4. Lewis Edmond Claiborne, Jr., II K A, Engineering Indianola A. S. C. E. David Victor Cochran, Jr., B K, Agri. Eng. . . Gulfport A. S. A. E. ; D. and C. S. A.. 1, 2, 3, 4. Joe K. Cochran, Agricultural Engineering Mcl.ain Berean Class, 1. 2, 3, 4; Y. M. C. A., 1. 2; Secretary Perry-Greene Club, 1, 2; Secretary Agricultural Engineering Club, 4; Ag. Club, 4. Charles Governour Coker, Civil Engineering . Yazoo City Engineering Club. 3; A. S. C. E., 4. Delos Lamar Cole, Agriculture Bogue Chitto Berean Class, 3, 4, Agronomy Club, 3, 4; Ag. Club, 4. aw ' BPfr CLASS John Doyle Commer, Agricultural Education .... Pope F. F. A., 3, 4; Ag. Club, 3, 4; Character Builders Class. 39 p f vJSy : ■-WtA- J i .;- . m vfffc £Memb ers L. A. Conerlv, Engineering Tylertown Joseph Clyde Conger, G. R., Science ..... Yazoo City Gamma Theta Epsilon, 3. 4. Homer Vernon Cooper, K A., Aero. Engineering Vicksburg Freshman Football, 1; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, 2, 3, 4; A. S. M. E., 2, 3. 4, Chairman, 4; President Glee Club, 4. Wilbur Olliver Courtney, Mccli. Engineering . . Belzoni A. S. M. E., 4; Second Lieutenant Battery K. Howard E. Covington, Agriculturi Louisville Vice-President Y, M. C. A., 3; President Y. M. C. A., 4; Vice- President Mississippi Y. M. C. A. Associations; Blue Ridge Schol- arship; B. S. U. Treasurer, 3; Berean Class Secretary and Treasurer, 2; President Ag. Club; President B. S. U. Council; Battalion Staff Officer. Harry Oliver Crane, Mech. Engineering . . . Chicago, III. Freshman Football; Boxing; A. S. M. E. Freddie Bryan Cravens, Engineering .... Bogue Chitto Joseph Leon Crawford, Jr., Agri. Education Tillatoba Live Stock Judging Team, 4; Ag. Club- 3. 4; Hair and Hide Club, 3, 4; F. F. A., 3, 4; Berean Class, 3, 4. John Crocker, Agri. Education F. F. A. Walnut Grove Servetus Perkins Crockett, Agriculture Barr Y . M. C. A. Cabinet, 1, 2. 3, 4; Secretary Ag. Club, 2, 3; Secretary Hair and Hide Club, 2 3; President Hair and Hide Club, 2, 3; President Character Builders S. S. Class, 3; President Sunday School Class. 4; Vice-President State Methodist Student Council. 2. John James Crosby, Agri. Engineering Kosciusko Alpha Zeta Freshman Scholarship Medal, 1; Alpha Zeta, 3, 4, Scribe 3, Chancellor, 4; Phi Eta Sigma, 3, 4; Inter-College Crops Judging. 2, 3; Danforth Fellowship, 4; Student Branch A. S. A. E., 3, 4. President, 4; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, 3. 4; Blue Key. 4; Major First Battalion. Ruben Ellis Crowe, Engineering Noxapater SENIOR 40 Members Claude Anthony Culpepper, K A, Agriculture Poplarville Vice-President Student Association. 4; Chairman Dance Committee, 4; Blue Key, 4: Colonel Club, 4; Ag. Club. 1, 2, 3. 4; Hair and Hide Club, 4; Football. 1; Dad ' s Day Committee, 2; Gridiron Banquet Committee. 4. Leland B. Curtis, Business Jackson William Brown Darnell, Agriculture DeKalb Dale Dexter Davidson, Agriculture Montpelier F. F. A., Ag-. Club; Glee Club, 4. Lonie Herman Davis, II K A, Business Moss Co-Editor and Founder Mis-A-Sip, 4; Reveille, 2, 3 4 ; Pi Kappa Delta Secretary, 3, President, 4; Reflector, 1, 2, 3. 4; Varsity Debate Team, 2, 3, 4; Debate Club. 1, 2, 3, 4; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet. 2. 3, 4; Omicroii Theta. 2, 3. 4; Blue Key, 4. Paul Robert Davis, Civil Engineering Meridian Who ' s Who in American Colleges and Universities, 4; Blue Key President, 4; Tau Beta Pi. 4; Scabbard and Blade. 4; Phi Eta Sigma, Founder Mississippi State Chapter, 3; Head Cheer Leader, 4; Business and Co- Founder of Mis-A-Sip. 4; Reveille Staff, 2, 3; Af.st. Business Mgr. and Asst. Editor, 3; Student Executive Council, 3, 4; A. S. C. E., 4; Dance Committee, 3; Dad ' s Day Committee, 3; Y ' . M. C. A. Cabinet. 3, 4; Captain R. O. T. C, 4; Colonel Club, 4. Ulric Lee Day, K r, Business Brookhaven Student Manager Football and Basketball, 3. 4; Y . M. C. A. Cabinet, 1, 2, 3, 4; M Club 3, 4; Secretary and Treasurer Sophomore Class; Vice-President Senior Class; First Lieutenant Company A. Dexter C. Dean, Elec. Engineering . Belmont B. S. U. Council. 3, 4; A. I. E. E.. 3; Y . M. C. A. Cabinet, 4; Treasurer Berean Class, 4. Willie Carson Dees, Education ...... Philadelphia F. F. A., 3. 4; Neshoba County Club. 3 4. Joseph Roland Denton, K A, Business Shelby Reveille. 1, 2, 3, 4 Editor-in-Chief. 4; Scabbard and Blade. 3, 4; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, 2, 3, 4; Chairman Social Committee 3; Who ' s W r ho in American Colleges and Universities ; First Lieutenant Com- pany B; Berean Class, 1, 2, 3. 4; Publication Board; Extra-Cur- ricular Activities Committee. W- Bennie Parchman Dilworth, Education Ag. Club; F. F. A. Secretary. Amory CLASS James Ola Dorsf.tt, Business Starkville EG? 4i m HSS Members William Clayton Downing, K A, Business Jackson Boxing. 2. 4; M Club, 2, 3, 5; Secretary and Treasurer Student Body, 3; Inter-Fraternity Council, 3; Scabbard and Blade, 3, 4; Dance Committee, 4; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, 4. Gallie Walton Drane, Science Durant Mary Emily Dudley, Science Moorhead Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, 4; Methodist Student Council, 4. Wallace William Duncan, Science .... Aliceville, Ala. Edward Columbus Elliott, Agriculture Purvis Freshman Baseball; Presid ent Agronomy Club, 3, 4; Ag. Club; B. S. U. Council, 2, 3, 4; Berean Class, 1, 2, 3, 4. Benjamin Tecumseh Ellis, G. R., Business . . . Clarksdale Reveille Staff. 1, 2, 3, 4. Business Manager, 4; Band, 1, 2; Blue Key. 2, 3, 4; Dad ' s Day Committee, 3; Inter-Fraternity Council. 3. 4; International Relationship Club, 3, 4; Dramatic Club, 1; First Lieutenant. Georce Washington Estes, Education Marietta Alpha Zeta; Ag. Club; Hair and Hide Club; Collegiate F. F. A. Character Builders Sunday School Class. Ansel Estes, Education Tylertown B. S. U. Council, 1. 2, 3, 4 ; Berean Class, 1. 2, 3, 4; Band. 1. 2, 3, 4; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, 1, 2, 3, 4; F. F. A., 3, 4. Charles Everitt, Science .-.-..... Pelahatehee Tri-Beta. Jewel Winn Ewing, Civil Engineering Gloster Scabbard and Blade; A. S. C. E. Eddis Fa ncher, Business . West Point Bernard Fiering, Business .-.-.... New York City Tennis Team, 3. 42 SENIOR © ' ■W ' • . c5Vfemfcer5 Frank Earl Ford, K A, Business ..... Crystal Springs Victor Everett Fortinberry, Agriculture ..... Osyka Alpha Zeta; Agronomy Club. 3, 4; Ag. Club. 4; Berean Class; Hair and Hide Club. Erwyn Earl Freeman, Agriculture ....... Artesia Alpha Zeta; Agronomy Club, 3. 4. Alfred Bernard Friend, Jr., 2 II, Aero Engineering . Sardis A. S. M. E.. 2 3, 4, tntra-Mural Boxing, 3. William Belton Gary, Agri. Education Embry F. F. A.; Ag. Club; Animal Husbandry Club. John Lesley Gates, Agri. Engineering Tchula Charles Thomas Gelatka, Civil Engineering . Chicago, 111. Tau Beta Pi; A. S. C. E. ; Football, 1. 2, 3, 4; Basketball, 2, 3; Track, 2, 3, 4; M Club, 1. 2, 3, 4; Treasurer M Club, 3, 4. Ernest Paul Gieger, Agriculture . • Carriere F. F. A. William Grecc Gill, Civil Engineering Sidon a. s. c. E., 4. John Hollis Gilmer, Education Sulligent, Ala. Ag. Club, 1. 2, 3. 4; F. F. A., 2, 3; Agronomy Club, 3. 4. Joseph Charles Glorioso, Business Isola Chi Lambda Rho. K¥. : . 6 CLASS Cammie Norman Godbold, Jr., Education . . McCall Creek- Methodist Student Council, 3; Secretary and Treasurer, 4; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, 4; F. F. A., 4; Ag. Club, 3, 4; Hair and Hide Club, 3, 4. 43 fl, Members Fred Goldenberc, 2 A M, Business .... New York City Football. 1. 2; Track and Field, 2. 3; Inter-Fraternity Council, 3, 4. Albert Sidney Gooch, II K A, Science Columbus Maroon Band, 1, 2, 3, 4; Dramatic Club, 2; 1492 Club; Kappa Kappa Psi. 3; Pre-Med Club. 4; Glee Club. 4. Helen M. Goodell, Business State College Grover Salter Goodwin, Education Paulette John Martin Goodwin, Science . Henry Charles Gotcher, Agri. Engineering Phi Eta Sigma. Malcolm Gibbons Gray, K r, Business Abbe ille Sherard Lexington M Club, 2 3, 4; Chi Lambda Rho, 3, 4; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, 3, 4; Scabbard and Blade, 4; Football, 1, 2, 3. 4; Baseball, 1; Basket- ball, 1; Track, 2. John Percy Green, Business Petal Charles Julius Grohoski, Engineering Jackson A. S. M. E.; Baseball, 3, 4. William Morgan Gulledge, Business Lexington Chi Lambda Rho, 3. 4. Edwin Dewitt Guy, Agriculture McComb Track, 1, 2; Basketball, 1. James Roland Hamilton, Education Hazlehurst Ag. Club. 2, 3; Hair and Hide Club, 2; F. F. A., 3. 4; B. S. U. Council, 3, 4; Berean Class, 3. 4; Music Director, 4. -14 SENIOR Members Victor George Hansen, K r, Agriculture Gulfport •Reflector Staff 2, 3; Gulf Coast Club, 1, 2, 3, 4; Dairy Club, 2, 3; First Lieutenant. 4; Second Lieutenant O. R. ' . Fenton Chandler Harbour, K A, Business International Relations Club, 2, 3, 4. Meridian William Weston Harris, Agriculture William Morris Harrison, K 2, Business Decatur Ashland Chi Lambda Rho 3. 4; Dad ' s Hay ' ..iniiiil t. ■-, -I; Mi-mnrial r - mittee, 4; First Lieutenant. Cheshire W. Hawken, 2 A E, Business Batesville W • « ' ■Edward Johnson Harned, K A,, Civil Eng. . Washington, D. C. Tennis. 2, 3, 4; Captain, 3; K. M. E.. 2. 3, 4; Tail Beta Pi 3. 4- A. S. C. E., 4. ' ■' Woourow Wilson Hare, Education DeKalb Beta Beta Beta; Kemper County Club. G. W. Harrincton, Business Gloster Humphrey Brown Harris, Business ...... Shannon James Harvey Harris, K F, Agriculture . . Decatur James Randolph Harris, Engineering . Carv A. S. C. E., 3 4; President. 3. 4. Scabbard and Blade. 3 4; Student Council, 4; M Club, 2. 3, 4; Baseball, 2, 3. 4; First Lieutenant Company D; Associate Business Manager Reveille, 4. CLASS Jefferson Clement Herring, Education Quitman F. F. A. Club, 4; Ag. Club, 3. 4; Hair and Hide Club, 3. 4. 45 K£ Jf. Members James Maxwell Higdon, Agri. Engineering Boxing. 3; Glee Club, 4. Oxford Fred Thompson Hight, K 2, Business Kosciusko Baseball. 2, 3. 4; Football 2, 3, 4; Track. 3; Chi Lambda Rho; M Club. Calvin Lovell Hill, Science Laurel Frank Felder Hill, K A., Com. Aviation . St. Matthews, S. C. Y. M. C. A. Cabinet. 2, 3. 4; Asst. Mgr.. 1, 2. 3; Reflector Staff. 2, 3. 4, Associate Business Mgr., 4. Vard Hillman, Agriculture .-.-..•.. Leakesville James Aven Hitt, Agriculture Columbia Animal Husbandry Club, 2. 3. 4; F. F. A., 3, 4; Ag. Club, 2, 3, 4. Albert Willard Holland, Iv A, Civil Engineering . Meridian Reflector 1. 2, 3; Omicron Theta, 2, 3. 4; Reveille, 1, 2. 3. 4; Scabbard and Blade. 3, 4; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet. 4; Tau Beta Pi, 4; Blue Key, 4; A. S. C. B.. 4; Major Artillery. Henry Harris Holland, Agri. Education Morgan City Hair and Hide Club; Alpha Zeta; Ag. Club; F. F. A.; Live Stock Judging Team, 4; First Lieutenant R. O. T. C. Robert Edwin Honnell, Jr., Agriculture . Ag. Club; Agronomy Club. Corinth Charles Durvvard Hood, Agriculture Belzoni Second Lieutenant Battery L; Berean Class. 2. 3, 4; Ag. Club, 4; Agronomy Club, 4. Harvey William Hovvze, K 2, Agriculture Sledge Walter Edwin Hubbard, K 2, Agriculture Shuqualak SENIOR 4 e CLASS Members Henry Comfort Hudson, K A., Science Durant Band, 1. 2, 3. 1; Secretary-Treasurer, 3; Vice-President, 4; Kappa Psi Vice-President, 4; Beta Beta Beta; Statesmen, 2; Collegians, 4; Pre-Med. Club. Eugene Barry Hughes, Engineering Oakland A. S. M. E., 3, 4; Berean Class 1, 2, 3, 4; Second Lieutenant Bat- tery I. Nace H. Hull, Civil Engineering . ■DeKalb A. S. C. E., 4. Sheldy Arnold Hutchinson, Science Sturgis Carl Porter Inman, Education Somerville, Term. Boxing Team 3; Conference Title. Charles Edward Ishee, Agriculture Louin Ag. Club, 4; Agronomy Club, 4; Hair and Hide Club, 4. William Edward Jobron, E F, Business . . . Silver Creek Co-Lin, 1; Boxing, 2; Y M. C. A. Cabinet, 3, 4; ■■Reveille Staff, 4; Sales Mgr. Mis-A-Sip. 4; Gridiron Banquet Committee, 4; Berean Class, 2. J. P. Johnson, Graduate School Chalybeate Phil Desax Johnson, Agriculture Oxford Ag. Club, 1. 2, 3. 4; Agronomy Club, 4; Glee Club, 4; Comrades Class, 1. 3, 4. Rufus Ulmer Johnson, Agri. Education Mize Eugene Gray Jones, Agri. Engineering .... Moorhead Agricultural Engineering Club. Thomas Lemuille Jones, Agriculture ...... Lambert 47 J. -•-■; ■m Members Woodrow Eugene Jones, Agriculture Decatur Edward Anthony Kaczka, Science . . . Little Rock, Ark. Gamma Theta Epsilon; Dramatic Club. Alfred Katzenberg, Engineering Oxford A. S. M. E.. 3, 4. Robert John Keen an, Business Chicago, 111. Football, 1. 2, 3. 4, Co-captain, 4. Walter House Knox, Jr., Science Memphis, Tenn. Gamma Theta Epsilon, 3, 4; Reporter for Reflector, 4; Second Lieutenant, 4. William Franklin Lacrone, Agriculture . . Memphis, Tenn. Phi Eta Sigma; Debating Club; Agricultural Club. Jesse Chandler Land, Agriculture DeKalb Ag. Club; Kemper County Club. Robert Homer Lane, Agriculture Philadelphia F. F. A., 3. 4; Bible Study Class, 3, 4; Hair and Hide Club, 3, 4. Norman Elmo Leach, Agri. Engineering Center Ag. Engineering Club, 3. 4. Elbert Leon Leake, Engineering Maud A. S. M. E., 3, 4. J. E. Lee, Agriculture . Lumberton F. F. A. Robert Summers Leopold, Science Tampa, Fla. L. S. U., 1, 2; Kappa Mu Epsilon, 3, 4; Gamma Theta Epsilon, 4; Beta Beta Beta, 4; Tennis, 4; Vice-President Pre-Med. Club, 4. 48 SENIOR m v-.! ■' ' .■SVlembers CLASS William David Lester, B K, Mecli. Engineering . Inverness A. S. M. E., 3. 4; D. and C. S. A., 1, 2, 3, 4. Harold Rollins Littleton, Business ...... Ashland Houston Walker Longino, Jr., K r, Com. Aviat ' n . Silver Creek Reveille Staff, 3. 4; Flying Club. 3. 4; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, 4; Glee Club. 4; Berean Sunday School Class, 3, 4. Harry Holt Lott, Business ........ Carrollton Band, 3, 4. Stephens Alexander Lott, Business ....... Jackson Football, 2, 3, 4; M Club. Norman Wesley Lovitt, Agri. Education Moselle Y. M. C. A. Cabinet. 3, 4; Character Builders. 3, 4 ; F. F. A., 4. John Murrah Lovorn, Agriculture Louisville Agriculture Club; Agronomy Club. Robert Alva Luter, Jr., Education Carriere Ag. Club, 4 ; F. F. A., 4; Hair and Hide Club, 4; Character Builders Sunday School Class, 4. Sebye Mancum, Business .......... Starkville Rowena Marion, Science Mooreville Character Builders Sunday School Class, 2. 3, 4; Methodist Student Council, 4; Y. W. C. A., 4. Hiriam Horton Martin, Education Pittsboro Faucette Howard Massey, Agriculture Carthage Ag. Club; Ag. Engineering Club; First Lieutenant Company D. 49 .■r J Members Edward Alexander May, Jr., K V, Chem. Engineering . Jackson Gamma Theta Epsilon. 4 ; A. S. M. E., 4. Walter Loveless Maxev, Jr., K r, Com. Aviation . Brandon Captain Company D; Basketball, 2, 3; Rankin-Scott Club, 2, 3; Dad ' s Day Committee. 4. Preston C. McBride, Agriculture F. F. A. Kenneth Elbert McCoy, Education Columbia Morton Alpha Zeta; Hair and Hide Club; F. F. A.; Comrade Sunday School Class. James Bartley McGehee, Education McCall Creek 4-H Club, 2, 3; Animal Husbandry Club, 1, 2. 3, 4; Ag, Club, 1, 2, 3. 4; Character Builders Sunday School Class, 1, 2, 3. 4; F. F. A.. 3, 4. Vice-President, 4; Y. M. C. A. Council. 3. 4; Cadet Lieutenant- Colonel, 4. Pressley Clinton McInnis, Agri. Education . . Leakesville F. F. A. Harold S. McKeown, Agriculture ........ Leland Alpha Zeta; Agronomy Club. William Fisher McLeod, G. R., Science .... Moss Point President George Rifles, 4; Inter-Fraternity Council, 3, 4; Blue Key, 4. Mathew Earl McRae, II K A, Science Laurel Kappa Kappa Psi, 3, 4; 1492 Club, 2, 3. 4; Band, 2. 3. 4. Joseph Carl Middleton, Agri, Education Clinton f. F. A. A. N. Mitchell, Agriculture Picayune Georce Richard Mitchell, Civil Engineering . . Booneville A. S. C. E. ; Scabbard and Blade, 2, 3. 4; D. and C. S. A., 2, 3, 4; Fiist Lieutenant, 4. 50 SENIOR wu V ■... Members John Benjamine Moak, Agriculture State College Loys Abribat Mollere, K 1, Mech. Eng. Ponchatoula, La. M Club. 2, 3, 4; Football. 1, 2. 3, 4; A. S. M. E.. 3, 4; Outstanding Platoon Commander, 4. Henry Hudson Montgomery, Agri. Engineering Bay Springs F. F. A.; Ag. Club; President Jasper County Club; Dance Committee. Henry Neville Moore, IT K A, Business Winona Reflector, 1, 2, 3, 4, Business Manager. 4; Chi Lambda Rho, 3. 4; Blue Key, 3, 4; Dad ' s Day Dance Committee. 4; Second Lieutenant Company C. J. K. Morcan, Jr., Business Starkville William Benjamin Mosely, Agri. Education . . . Starkville Ag. Club, 3. 4; Character Builders Class, 1, 2, 3, 4. Malcolm Younc Mullen, K A, Civil Eng. . Dallas, Texas Kappa Mu Epsilon, 2, 3, 4 ; Treasurer. 3; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, 3. 4; Scabbard and Blade, 3. 4; First Lieutenant. 4; Tau Beta Pi. 3, 4; Secretary, 4 ; A. S. C. E., 3, 4; Blue Key, 4; Captain Battery K. Leland Clartis Murphree, Agriculture Lambert Agronomy Club, 3. 4; Hair and Hide Club, 4; Live Stock Judging Team, 4. J. M. Myers, Science Raleigh Carl Wheeler Nagle, Elec. Engineering . . . Tishomingo Kappa Mu Epsilon. 2, 3. 4. James Sherrill Nash, Business Starkville Reflector. 1, 2. 3. 4; Associate Editor. 4; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, 4; Associate Editor Student Handbook; Editor and Co-founder of Mis-A-Sip ; Character Builders Class, 1, 2. 3, 4; Freshman M Book. CLASS James Paul Newman, Agriculture Liberty Hair and Hide Club, 2, 3, 4: Berean Sunday School Class, 2, 3, 4; Editor of The Husbandmen, 3, 4; Ag. Club; Y . M. C. A. Cabinet. 3, 4. Si gig ■$ Members John Rollvn Nutt, Education .......... Lena Robert Bethany Owens, £7 t. Engineering ..... Amory Rupert Arnold Parham, Agri. Education .... Smithville Ag. Club; Hair and Hide Club; F. F. A.; Berean Sunday School Class. Edwin McDonald Patterson, Elec. Engineering A. I. E. E.. 3, 4. Cnmo Wilburn Buckner Pearson, Engineering Macon Earl Baskin Perry, Agri. Engineering Rolling Fork Walter Benjamin Perry, K A, Business . . . Hattiesburg Inter-Fraternity Council. Ike Barton Pickle, B K, Business . . Football, 1. 2, 3. 4. Memphis, Tenn. Belon Sanders Pierce, Agricultural Engineering . . Fulton Ag. Engineering Club, 3, 4; Character Builders Sunday School, 3, 4. Doy Collier Picott, Agriculture ....... Tylertown Ag. Club, 3, 4. John Oscar Pittman, K 2, Business Coffeeville Chi Lambda Bho, 3, 4; ' ■Reveille Staff, 2, 3. Charles Hansford Powers, G. R., Science Cary Dramatic Club, 3; President, 3; Glee Club, 4. 52 SENIOR fe C L S S Members James Hatcher Prestidge, 2 n, Agr ' u Eco. Boxing, 3. Tyronza, Ark. Malcolm Gill Prestidge, Engineering . . . Bogue Chitto K. M. E.; Tau Beta Pi. Warren Elston Racland, K r, Business Brandon Scabbard and Blade, 3. 4; Scott-Rankin Club, 1, 2, 3; Dad ' s Day Committee, 4; First Lieutenant Company C. ■Ivan Carl Reach, Business Memphis, Tenn. Football, 1, 2. 3. 4; Track, 1, 2, 3, 4; Vice-President M Club, 4. Newman Lafayette Reese, Education Fulton F. F. A., 2, 3; B. S, U. Council, 3, 4; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet; Ag. Club. Howard F. Reeves, Jr., Science Summit Gamma Theta Epsilon. Alton Beedye Reid, Agriculture Waterford George Marshall Reynolds, K V, Science . . . Centreville Berean Sunday School Class; Pre-Med. Club, 4; Beta Beta Beta. 3, 4; Inter-Fraternity Council. 4; Secretary-Treasurer Junior Class; Secretary-Treasurer Senior Class. Seab Reynolds, Jr., K F, Civil Engineering . . . Centerville Berean Sunday School Class; Scabbard and Blade. 3, 4; A. S. C. E., 3, 4; Y. M. C. A., 3, 4; First Lieutenant, 4. Joe Byron Richardson, Agri. Engineering Union Hair and Hide Club, 2, 3. 4; Ag. Engineering, 4. J. D. Richardson, Science .-.■..•■■Philadelphia Ray Donald Roberts, K 2, Science Vicksburg 53 J, ssa Members William Milton Roberts, Agri. Engineering McAdams Winner Danforth Fellowship 3; Ag. Club. 2, 3. 4; Ag. Engineering Club, 2, 3, 4. James Robertshaw, 2 A E, Business Greenville Scabbard and Blade, 4; Chi Lambda Rho, 3 4; Omicron Theta, 3, 4; Reflector. 1, 2, 3, 4; Sports Editor, 3; Columnist, 4; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, 2, 3, 4; Executive Council. 3; Business Manager Student Directory, 2, 3; Bus. Mgr. Freshman M Book; International Rela- tions Club, 3, 4; Mis-A-Sip, 4, Contest Editor. 4, Sports Editor, 4; First Lieutenant Battery K; Dramatic Club. Wiley Carey Robertson, Education Erastus Newton Ross, Jr., B K, Agriculture Ellisville Pelahatchee Reflector Staff, 1. 2, 3, 4, Editor, 4; Blue Key, 3. 4; Scabbard and Blade 3. 4; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, 2, 3, 4; Chairman of Publicity Committee 3; Vice-President B. S. U. Council, 2, 3; Omicron Theta, 2, 3, 4; President, 4; Extra-Curricular Activities Committee. 4; Publication Committee. 4; President Debate Club, 2, 3; Scott- Rankin County Club. 1, 2, 3, 4; Berean Sunday School Class. 1, 2, 3 4; Ag. Club, 1. 2, 3 4; Second Lieutenant Company B: Who ' s Who in American Colleges and Universities ; Agronomy Club. 3, 4. Thomas Harrison Rousseau, Jr., K r, Science . . . Jackson Tennis, 2, 3. 4; Captain Tennis Team 4. C arm el Joseph Saia, Business Greenville Football, 1, 3, 4; Boxing, 2; M Club; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet; Scabbard and Blade, 4. Leo Wilson Salter, Education Philadelphia F. F. A., 3 4; Hair and Hide Club, 3, 4; Bible Class, 3 4; Berean Sunday School Class, 3, 4. Harold Aubrey Sanders, K 2, Business Clarksdale Football, 2 3, 4; Boxing, 2, 3; M Club; Chi Lambda Rho, 3, 4; Vice-President Chi Lambda Rho, 4; Inter-Fraternity Council, 3, 4; President, 4; Student Manager Cafeteria 4; Who ' s Who in Amer- ican Colleges and Universities 4. V ' ernie Lamar Saxon, Business Meadville Herman William Seefeld, Jr., Business Laurel Chi Lambda Rho, 2, 3; Phi Eta Sigma 1, 2; Secretary and Treas- urer Chi Lambda Rho, 4; Life Secretary Senior Class. Edward Bernard Senter, Elec. Engineering .... Macon Tau Beta Pi; A. I. E. E.; Secretary, 3; Vice-Chairman, 4. Edgar Lyle Sessums, Education . . F. F. A. 54 Moorhead SENIOR 3Vlemb ers Cyrus Martin Shipp, K Y, Elcc. Engineering . . Dupn, 111. Kappa Kappa Psi; 1492 Club; A. I. E. E., 3, 1; Band, 1. 2, 3, 4; President, 4; Collegians, 2. 3, 4. William Harrison Short, Mech. Engineering . . Crenshaw A. S. M. E., 3, 4. Shelby Seaborn Shows, Agriculture Ellisville Hair and Hide Club. 3, 4; Ag. Club. 3, 4; Agronomy Club, 3, 4; 4-11 Club, 3, 4; Glee Club. 4; Dance Committee, 4. Mary Evelyn Shropshire, Business . . . Birmingham, Ala. Hugh Shuttleworth, Business Teh ti la James Bailey Small, II K A, Business Jackson Secretary-Treasurer Freshman Class; Band, 1, 2, 3 4; First Sergeant. 3; Captain, 4; Drum Major, 1. 2, 3. 4; Chi Lambda Rho, 3, 4; Student Dance Committee, 3; Kappa Kappa Psi 3, 4; President. 4; Blue Key, 4; Associate Business Manager Reflector, 4. Charles Lee Sm alley, Agriculture . Purvis Service Medal (Junior College), ' 34; Hair and Hide Club 4; Ag. Club, 3, 4. Howard Burgess Smith, Horticulture Boxing. 2; President Horticulture Club, 4. Laurel James Randolph Smith, Jr., K A, Elcc. Eng. . . Hattiesburg A. I. E. E.. 4. Lessie Fred Smith, Education William Lawrence Solomon, Jr., Business . Nnrfield Belzoni Football, 1, 2, 3; Baseball Manager, 3, 4; Colonel Club. 4; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, 1. 2; M Club. CLASS Oswald Spence, Cliem. Engineering Hattiesburg Gamma Theta Epsilon, 3. 4; Secretary-Treasurer, 4; A. S. M. E.. 4. 55 mm® Members Louie Clyde Spencer, 2 A E, Business McCarley ■■Reflector Business Staff, 1, 2; Inter-Fraternity Council, 3, 4; Vice-President Inter-Fraternity Council, 4; President S. A. E., 3; Blue Key; Chi Lambda Rho; Best Dressed. 3. William Edward Spencler, Business ...... Pickens Charles William Steadman, Agri. Engineering West Point Football, 3, 4; A. E. S. A., Treasurer M Club. Martin Stegenca, Business Hubert Lee Stephens, Agriculture . ■. ■Agronomy Club, 4; Ag. Club, 4. Pass Christian Purvis John Ed Stevens, Seienee Gamma Theta Epsilon, 4. Itta Beria Orville Patton Stone, K 2, Science Jackson Vice-President. 1, 2. 3; President Senior Class; President M Club, 4; Reveille. 3, 4; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet. 4; Blue Key, 4; Phi Eta Sigma; Basketball, 2, 3, 4; Inter-Relations Club, 3, 4. William Hurshell Strahan, Agriculture Glee Club, 4. Lumberton William Gaines Stubblefield, Civil Engineering . Columbia A. S. C. E., 3, 4. A. B. Stubbs, G. R., Busi . . Philipp Football, 1, 2, 3. 4; Boxing, 3; Baseball 3, 4; Track, 3; Inter- polations Club, 4; M Club, 4. Archie Fredric Stubbs, G. R., Education Phili Scabbard and Blade, 4; Y. M. C. A. Council, 2, 3, 4; Baseball, 1, Football, 2. PP Robert Welma Thames, K T, Education Jackson Football, 3, 4; Basketball, 3; Student Executive Council, 3; M Club, 3, 4; Colonel Club, 4. Albert Luther Tidwell, Education . F. F. A., 2, 3. . Lexington SENIOR 56 H: CLASS Members Thomas King Trigg, 2 A E, Elec. Engineering . Greenville I Tau Beta Pi. 4; Scabbard and Blade, 3, 4; Kappa Mu Kpsilon, 2, 3, 4; First Lieutenant R. O. T. C, 4; A. I. E. E.. 3, 4. Rolf Tullos, Agricultural Education Deemer Beauford Ethel Turner, Education Philadelphia F. F. A., 4; B. Y. P. U., 1, 2, 3, 4; Berean Class. 2, 3, 4; Bible Class, 4; Hair and Hide Club. 3. Eric Larkin Turner, Business . . . 1 .Si i Football, ' 34. McCool Quitman Stewart Vail, Agri. Education . . . Montpelier Alpha Zeta, 3, 4; Chronicler, 3, Sensor 4; Ag Club. 1, 2, 3, 4. President. 3. Vice-President, 4; Dairy Products Judging Team, 3, 4; Co-President Clay County Club, 3; Berean Class, 1, 2, 3, 4. Hubert T. Vardaman, Agri. Education Hermanville Walter Hall Waddell, Education Brandon Winans Pearsol Wall, Education Scooba James Fred Walters, JJ K A, Education Laurel Blue Key; Football, 1, 2, 3. 4; Basketball. 2, 3, 4; Baseball, 1, 2, 3, 4; Best Athlete, 3; President Class. 2; M Club. Robert Allen Ward, Dairy Manufacturing . . . Kosciusko Alpha Zeta, 3; President Dairy Club, 4; Dairy Products Judging Team. 4. Robert Bernard Ward, Science Pelahatchee C. Scott Ware, Agriculture Sidon Leo Perry Warnick, Elec. Engineering McComb Band. 2, 3; Kappa Kappa Psi. 57 Ur 8 ■.m m ■m 3 demb ers Woodrow W. Watkins, Agri. Education Dixon F. F. A., 3, 4: Neshoba County Club, 3. 4. C. D. Watts, Business Starkville Thomas Owen Weatherly. Business Kosciusko Sheldon Magruder Webb, K V, Business Florence Assistant Sales Manager Mis-A-Sip, 4; Associate Business Man- ager Reflector, 4; Scott-Rankin Club, 1. 2, 3; Dad ' s Day Dance Committee, 4. Harold Warren Webster, Civil Engineering . . Vicksburg A. S. C. E., 4; Y. M. C. A Cabinet, 2. 3, 4; Kappa Mu Bpsilon, 2, 3. 4; Secretary, 4; Captain Battery I 4; Phi Eta Sigma, 3. Mrs. Jesse Michael Weeks, Busin -ss George Stephenson Weems, IT K A, Science Starkville Shubuta Rifle Team, 4; Band, 2, 3; 1492 Club, 1. 2, 3, 4; Gamma Theta Ep- silon, 3, 4; President, 4; Boxing, 3; A. S. M. E., 4; Debate Club, 3, 4; Character Builders Sunday School Class, 1 2, 3, 4. Mary Virginia Weems, X Q, Science Shubuta Student Executive Council 4; Colonel Club, 4; Who ' s Who in Amer- ican Universities and Colleges. 4; Dramatic Club, 3. William Strong Weissinger, K 2, Business Ca ry James Walker Wheeler, 2 A E, Elec. Engineering . Cleveland Reflector Staff. 1. 2; K. M. E.. 2 3, 4 ; Tau Beta Pi. 3. 4; Vice- President, 4; Blue Key 3, 4; A. I. E. E., 3. 4; Chairman, 4; Radio Club 3, 4; Vice-President, 4. James William Whelan, Engineering Carthage Harry Edward White, K 2, Business Florence Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, 2. 3, 4; Associate Business Manager Reflector, 4; Baptist Student Union Council, 1. 2; Scott-Rankin Club, 1, 2, 3; Dad ' s Day Dance Committee, 4; Second Lieutenant Company B; Associate Editor Student Handbook, 4. W. W. Whitten, Agri. Education Blue Springs SENIOR 58 :-i- y CLASS ( Members Stanley Francis Wielgosz, Business .... Chicago III. Chi Lambda Rho: M Club; Freshman Football; Football, 2, 3. 4; Track, 2, 3; Tri-State Heavyweight Wrestling- Champion, 1. 2, 3, 4. Charles Leslie Wilkinson, Jr., n K A, Chem. Eng. . Yazoo City Phi Eta Sigma; Kappa Mu Epsilon. 2, 3, 4; Gamma Theta Bpsilon, 3, 4; Vice-President, 4; A. S. M. E., 4. Humphrey Williams, Agriculture Ackermar W. E. Williams, Agri. Education State College James Freeman Williamson, Engineering . . Pleasant Grove A. S. M. E., 3, Secretary and Treasurer, 1. Ralph Lee Wilson, B K, Engineering Jackson ' ■Reflector, 2 3, 4, Feature Editor, 3, Associate Editor 4; Kappa Mu Epsilon, 2, 3, 4; President, 4; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, 3; Omicron Theta, 2, 3. 4; Vice-President, 4; Phi Eta Sigma, 3, 4; Tau Beta Pi, 3. 4; A. I. E. E.. 4. Thomas Woodrou Wilson, K r, Business .... Prentiss Charles Joe Woodruff, Education Moorhead Dorris Durelle Wood, K 2, Agriculture Shaw Baseball. 2. 3, 4; Boxing, 2, 3. Glenn Bryant Worley, Science Education .... Marks Winner Sorosis Scholarship; Beta Beta Beta, 4; Character Builders 3, 4; Quitman County Club, 3, 4; Education Club, 4- Pi Gamma Mu. 4. Frank Bragg Wylie, II K A, Civil Engineering . . Duncan Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, 1, 2, 3, 4; President T Council 1- Kappa Mu Epsilon. 2 3, 4 ; Vice-President 3; ' ■Reflector, 2, 3; Omicron Theta. 2, 3, 4; Blue Key, 2, 3, 4; Vice-President. 4; Phi Eta Sigma. 3, 4; A. S. C. E. 3, 4; Scabbard and Blade, 3, 4; Inter-Fraternity Council, 3, 4; Tau Beta Pi 3, 4; President. 4; Cadet Colonel, 4. James Lanier Yeates, Business ........ Siarkville Zeno Lanier Yeates, K A, Civil Engineering . Starkville Society Editor Reflector, 2, 3, 4; Omicron Theta; Phi Eta Sigma; Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, 3. 4; Chairman Social Committee, 4; A. S. C. E., 4. Maxie Charles Zachariah, 2 A M, Civil Eng. . Indianola Engineers Club, 3; A. S. C. E., 4. 59 mm y mm fc - ' S p- ' « , ' Here are a few of the Unpleasantest words that ever blotted paper. Shakespeare — Merchant of Venice. w J U H I I (LASS OFFICERS Dick Bradley President Walton T. Woods Vice-President Stanley Walker Secretary and Treasurer JUNIOR CLASS ?Members J. E. Adams Boyle Science J. V. Adams ' Amory Science F. S. Agnew Bethany Engineering J. T. Alexander West Science W. H. Allen, K 2 Olive Branch Engineering E. F. Anderson Gulfport Business J. W. Austin Forest Science M. D. Baine, Jr Durant Business G. E. Baird, ZAE Inverness Agriculture J. B. Baird, 2 A E Inverness Agriculture Sue Mildred Baird X Q Inverness Business A. B. Baker Cruger Business P. L. Banks, K 2 Indianola Engine ring C. A. Barnett Union Agriculture T. W. Barnett, K r Magee Engineering W. T. Barnett, Jr., 2 A E Booneville A grit ulture C. A. Barrett, Z II Vicksburg Business Frances Jeanette Bartran Laurel Business S. T. Batton Raleigh Agriculture D. M. Beadel Lobdell Agriculture O. E. Beaslev State College Agriculture S. L. Bell Water Valley Engineering H. G. Betts Caledonia Agriculture J. A. Blanchard, Jr., K A Gunnison Agriculture Dan Bland Millington, Tenn. A grit ulture W. D. Blizzard New Albany Agriculture- T. M. Blythe Hickory Flat Agriculture 62 JUNIOR Members W. H. Bobb, 2 A E Cleveland Engineering M. W. Bond Lauderdale Engineering E. W. Bond Hattiesburg Engineering T. W. Bonner Jackson Agriculture J. E. Boone Byram Science C. R. Boone, Jr Fayette Engineering A. A. Bounds DeKalb Engineering R. Boutwell Pachuta Business H. L. Bowling Meadville Science R. L. Bradley, Jr., 2 A E Columbus Agriculture L. O. Bradshavv Morton Education F. M. Brewer, K 2 Byhalia Engineering W. H. Brister Yazoo City Business A. E. Brut Indianola Engineering B. L. Broome Prentiss Engineering J. H. Brown Newton Business D. W. Brown Jackson Business C. E. Browning Mayhew Engineering W. M. Bruce Ackerman Engineering J. L. Bryan, Jr Amory Science Harry Buckley Cleveland Agriculture D. S. Butler, K S . . . Jonestown Engineering W. B. Calhoun Meridian Com. Aviation T. F. Cameron, Jr., K A Hattiesburg Business Hillard Cannada, K A Edwards Business F. M. Canon, K A Tunica Business S. W. Cantrell Oxford Engineering CLASS Spy T l:- §£ ' ■■' B JUNIOR CLASS Members M. P. Carter Philadelphia ■Education R. T. Carlisle Hattiesburg Science J. B. Carpenter Grenada Engineering Douglas Carr, Jr Marks Engineering M. B. Carroll Rolling Fork Business U. J. Carruth McComb Engineering James Cartwright Indianola Engineering C. T. Cash Millport, Ala. Education Ennis Catledge Louisville Education R. T. Causey Marks Business C. W. Chandler West Point Engineering J. M. Chandler Vicksburg Engineering Curtis Chisholm Baldwyn Agriculture E. B. Christian State College Education Collie Christian State College Education J. E. Christian Berry, Ala. Education C. A. Christian Dorsey Science D. A. Christian Amory Agriculture E. V. Clack Mendenhall Education II. L. Clark Louisville Agr ' u ulture J. K. Clark Lake Engineering W. A. Clarke Louisville Engineering M. B. Cobb Carthage Agriculture J. A. Collier, U. K A Leland Agriculture T. M. Collins Carrollton, Ala. Education R. B. Connally Canton Agriculture Harmon Connell Greenwood Science 6+ JUNIOR Members J. T. Conner, Jr Ripley Agriculture Bodie Cooley Lucedale Agriculture C. E. Corbitt Jackson Business J. C. Craig New Albany Engineering W. J. Crecink, Jr Meadville Engineering Walter Crook, Jr., 17. K A Bolton Science D. C. Crosby Kosciusko Education J. W. Cullen, B K Jackson Science D. E. Davidson, G. R Atlanta, Ga. Science N. W. Davis Jackson Engineering R. E. Davisson, n K A Ruleville Engineering H. B. Day Tallulah, La. Engineering P. B. Dennis, K F Greenwood Education W. A. DePrater, K A Jackson Engineering H. C. DlLWORTH Rienzi Education W. V. Dixon Ripley Science Floyd Dobbs Starkville Science C. E. Dollfus, FT K A Ellisville Business F. L. Donald, II K A Goodman Agriculture K. L. Doucal Van Wert, Ohio Agriculture C. E. Douglas McComb Engineering Frances Elizabeth Drake Starkville Science G. L. Draper Greenville Engineering W. G. Duke State College Education J. W. Dukeminier West Point Business W. N. Dulin Aberdeen Engineering J. R. Eakens Laurel Engineering 65 CLASS fy w - JUNIOR CLASS Members J. C. Ebersole Columbus Engineering B. M. Edwards Bogue Chitto Education J. R. Ellis Meridian Business J. R. Ely Clinton Education Jack Embrv, G. R Duck Hill Business M. T. Evans, K A Meridian Business A. V. Faloon Leland Science C. C. Fancher Nettleton Agriculture O. E. Fancher West Point Science Sylvia Frances Feldman Newton Business N. A. Feltenstein, 2AM Meridian Business T. M. Ferrill Lucedale Engineering A. H. Fitzgerald Summit Business F. W. Flanagan, 2 A E Leland Business B. J. Flynt Laurel Agriculture T. B. Foard Eupora Science W. M. Fondren, K 2 Cleveland Agriculture A. C. Ford Petal Education Adelaide Foster, X Q . . Hudson Falls, N. Y. Business Harry Fovvlkes Amorv Agriculture D. G. Frank, 2 A E Columbus Business R. H. French, II K A Indianola Business R. P. French, II K A Natchez Business Paul Gaither Fulton Agriculture G. W. Garrison Ripley Agriculture J. S. Gibson Crystal Springs Engineering Mary Grey Gieger Starkville Science 66 $£ JUNIOR Members Bill Gilliland Fulton Business C. A. Glover, 2 A E Lexington Aero. Engineering G. C. Golden, Jr., G. R Florence Agriculture C. R. Googe, 2 II Corinth Business N. D. Graham Rose Hill Agriculture E. M. Graham, K 2 Jackson Engineering L. H. Graves Jackson Agriculture B. W. Gregg Taylorsville Agriculture P. W. Griffin Houlka Agriculture P. II. Grissom Summerland Science Bernard Grochal New York City, N. Y. Engineering O. T. Guice Hamburg Education J. W. Gunn, K r Starkville Business L. W. Guv Magnolia Civil Engineering P. O. Guvton New Albany Engineering M B. C. Haltom, B K Batesville Science W. E. Hamilton State College Agriculture L. M. Hamilton Crystal Springs Engineering Frank Hammons, B K Holcomb Agriculture Ben Hardee, 2 A E Cleveland Agriculture J. W. Harding, B K Jackson Engineering R. C. Hardison Kosciusko Education J. R. Hardy, K A McComb Agriculture M. J. Harper, K A Vicksburg Engineering W. S. Harper, Jr., 2 A E Laurel Business T. F. Harper Macon Business K. D. Harris, 2 II Purvis Business 67 CLASS fy J. i fc (iv WSt JUNIOR CLASS Members J. R. Harris, 2 A E . Meridian Business T. V. Harris, G. R Houlka Engineering W. C. Harris Plantersville Agriculture H. H. Harry Sledge Engineering D. E. Havard Shipman Education John Havens Meridian A griculture H. L. Hawkins Calhoun City Business C. F. Havnes, K 2 Corinth Business Mary Evelyn Hearon, X 9. Starkville Business T. C. Henderson, K A Memphis, Tenn. Engineering I. D. Henderson Daleville Agriculture E. S. Herrington Meridian Education G. W. Hester Winona Engineering S. F. Hightovver Sardis Engineering J. 1. Hinton Summerland Science Elizabeth Hogan, X !2 Starkville Science A. A. Hogan, K A Starkville Science T. L. Hogan Columbus Business C. E. Holaday, IT K A . Louise Science Earl Holland Vossburg Agriculture David Holloman, ZAE Parchman Science O. M. Hood Greenville Engineering C. W. Hoover, K 2 Wilson, Ark. Business W. M. Horn, B K Edinburg Business E. J. Hosch Gulfport Business R. M. Hough Mize Agriculture W. H. Howell Carthage Science 68 JUNIOR Members J. S. Howle Neshoba Agriculture S. C. Huff, Jr Summerland Agriculture J. W. Hughes Greenwood Agriculture A. C. Hulett, K A Hattiesburg Business J. G. Humphries Estes Education P. T. Hunter Stratton Agriculture A. H. Hutchinson, Jr Scooba O. G. Idom La ke Agriculture Eng. J- N - J ACK S Grenada Ag. Education A. M. Jacob Jackson Business E. W. James Richton Ag. Education R. G. James Sumner Engineering J. H. Jarrell Walnut Grove Agriculture R. S. Johnson Fayette, Ala. Education R. B. Johnson Amorv Science D - E - J° NE S Inverness Agriculture L. B. Jones, Jr Ruleville Education W. W. Jones Taylorsville Agriculture Mary E. Josev Starkville Education John Jumper Ripley Agriculture Eva Louise Katz Starkville Science J. C. Kean Starkville Business W. I. Kearv . Tougaloo Science F. T. Keenan State College Science C. D. Kirbv, B K . Lula Agriculture W. M. Kirk, 2 A E Fern Springs Science Ralph Kulerman Webb Science 69 CLASS m £ ■mi- J tm m k m£ JUNIOR CLASS Members L. Q. Lambert Belmont .Agriculture B. L. Landrum Ovett Agriculture V. C. Langston, Jr Cockrum Agriculture N. B. Lawhon Verona Education B. E. Leach Center Agriculture J. W. Lever Macnn Science B - F - Lewis Pachuta Agriculture J. M. Lewis, Jr Wiggins Agriculture J. R. Long Starkville Business H - J- LoTT Seminary Agriculture W. W. Lovell Columbus Science A. K. Lovett, K A Hattiesburg Electrical Eng. Seth Lowe Dossville Agriculture Ed. J. H. Lummus Tupelo G. R. Lumsden Mendenhall J- S - L U TE R Carriere Agriculture C. L. Lyle, K A Newton Business O. A. Malley Saucier Agr. Education L. R. Mann, G. R Wilson, Ark. Education J. D. Mann Madison Agriculture M. B. Mapp Forest Science J. A. Martin, n K A Clarksdale Science J. W. Martin, G. R Grenada Agriculture W. N. Marx, K 2 Charleston Science H. L. Mason Newton Business C. M. Mathews, K 2 Greenwood Engineering J. D. Maudlin, G. R Morgan City Education 70 JUNIOR CLASS fi:: R5- .- • Members J. B. Maury, G. R Paulette Agriculture T. H. Maxwell Wesson Agriculture E. A. Maxwell, K T Greenwood Engineering S. W. Mays Prairie Engineering Gus McAlister Jackson Engineering J. D. McAlpine Mize Agriculture E. D. McCall McCall Creek Engineering R. A. McCarley, IT K A Guntown Engineering A. C. McCarty . . Hattiesburg Agriculture W. O. McIlwain Starkville Business Besie A. McIngvale, X fi Starkville Business D. W. McInnis Meridian Ag. Engineering W. I. McLain Leakesville Business A. H. McLauRine, 2 A E McComb Engineering A. E. McMillian, K 2 Edinburg Business C. W. McPherson, K S Pickins Business J. F. McRee Holcomb Business R. M. McWhorter Plantersville Business Ralph Meigs Alexander City, Ala. Business J. P. Melvin, G. R Jackson Science L. J. B. Mestier, G. R Ocean Springs Science J. C. Milton, B K Baldwyn Engineering J. S. Montacue, Jr., B K Starkville Business T. M. Montgomery, K A Starkville Agriculture B. S. Montgomery State College Engineering Melville Moore Collinsville Agriculture Susie Moore, XO State College Business 7i JUNIOR CLASS Members J. S. Moore, 2 A E Meridian Science Gladys Morgan Starkville Business W. H. Morrow, 2 A E Winona Science V. T. Mullen Hazlehurst Agriculture E. P. Mullen Holcomb Agriculture Sarah M. Mullendore State College Education H. M. Mullins Dlo Agriculture L. E. Munchausen Starkville Business F. B. Murray, B K Jackson Business J. E. Murphy, 2 II West Point Business W. N. Murphy Vancleave Science W. B. Musselwhite, K 2 Jackson Engineering R. T. Nagle Tishomingo Engineering P. B. Nations Hazlehurst Education B. L. Neal, G. R . Webb Ag. Engineering S. D. Newell, B K Inverness Agriculture H. L. Noel Hillsboro Engineering J. R. Norman Dyersburg, Tenn. Engineering W. G. O ' Leary Shaw Agriculture K. R. O ' Neal Saucier Science S. C. Oronowski Decatur Business J. S. Overstreet DeKalb Business J. R. Owen Kosciusko Business L. C. Paden Iuka Engineering J. L. Page, 2 A E McComb Engineering J. B. Parker Bonita Engineering V. M. Patterson, K A State College Business 72 JUNIOR Members L. Q. Patton Oakland Agriculture C. T. Pearce Brooklyn Agriculture W. J. Pernell New Albany Agriculture G. R. Pierce Fulton Science R. L. Pigford Meridian Science B. G. Pigott Tylertown Agriculture J. B. Pitner Tiplersville Agriculture O. A. Peek Bassfield Agriculture W. A. Posey Philadelphia Science J. K. Powell, G. R Jackson Science T. C. Prather, K r Grenada Engineering Hollis Prestage Fulton Agriculture D. B. Price, K r Covington, Tenn. Agriculture R. E. Price, K A Crystal Springs Business T. R. Pritchard, n K A Oxford Agriculture II. W. Pruitt Collinsville Science R. L. Pugh Louisville Engineering F. W. Purvis Pelahatchee Agriculture R. J. Puryear Senatobia Agriculture Morris Putnam Harperville Agriculture W. C. Quinn Sturgis Agriculture Vertis Ramsay Vancleave Business R. E. Rankin Hubb Engineering L. A. Rather, Jr., 2 A E Holly Springs Engineering M. F. Ray Farmhaven Agriculture F. A. Rhinehart Leakesville Ag. Engineering L. T. Rhodes State College Agriculture 73 CLASS w ■. m JUNIOR CLASS Members II. J. Rhodes, Jr Vicksburg Engineering J. C. Rice Braden, Tenn. Agriculture R. G. Robinson Mendenhall Agriculture II. R. Rogers Plantersville Science V. J. Rogers Hushpuckena Engineering A. A. Rogowski, 3 II Camden, N. J. Business C. L. Ross Graysport Business Isidor Rossoff, SAM Starkville Business O. C. Roweli Ovett Agriculture R. R. Rowland Bude Business L. O. Rucker, Jr., K 2 Jackson Business W. W. Russell Benton Agriculture J. S. Russeli Rose Hill Agriculture O. H. Run. edge, Jr., G. R Shannon Education J. G. Sauls Monticello Agriculture Grossie Heath Saunders, X Q Starkville Business D. C. Scott Morgan City Agriculture J. F. Sessums Lena Agriculture J. F. Shepherd Ripley Engineering J. G. Sherard Vicksburg Engineering J. T. Simpson Starkville Education W. A. Stevens Gulfport Engineering H. F. Stevenson Lumberton Engineering Chas. Stewart Poplarville Agru ultiire W. G. Stewart, Jr., G. R Moss Point Engineering E. M. Stiles Natchez Engineering J. F. Stokes Forest Agriculture 74 JUNIOR Members Hoke Stone Lambert Science W. Q. Stroud, Jr Lake Agriculture R. P. Sugg, K 2 Eupora Business J. H. Summers Marietta Engineering L. H. Shinault Byhalia Engineering J. B. Smith De catur Agriculture C. O. Smith Gulfport Engineering J. D. Smith, K r Poplarville Agriculture J. C. Sneed, G. R Pontotoc Engineering D. W. Snyder Cumberland Agriculture G. E. Sones Carriere Agriculture J. A. Spraberrv Calhoun City Agriculture C. E. Spraberry Calhoun City Ag. Education O. K. Stampley, Jr., K P Murphy Engineering J. C. Stanton Vicksburg Engineering W. D. Swain, n K A Leland Agriculture R. R. Tally Pineville Agriculture R. S. Taylor Ellisville Electrical Eng. T. H. Taylor, Jr., 2 A E Friars Point Agriculture F. J. Taylor Utica Ag. Education M. M. Temple Nettleton Science W. C. Templeton, Jr Starkville Agriculture A. T. Terry, Jr Bay St. Louis Science E. G. Thomason, II K A Grenada Engineering R. L. Thompson Hickory Flat Agriculture T. A. Tigrett Dumas Education 75 CLASS ,• % m m JUNIOR CLASS Members H. E. Tillman, B K Durant Engineering J. L. Tillman, 2 II McComb Business G. K. Todd Van Wert, Ohio Business E. F. Todd West Point, Miss. Education J. B. Travlor Pachuta Business J. C. Treloar, Jr Big Creek Education M. M. Turner, Jr Water Valley Engineering L. H. Tyson, K A Hattiesburg Business Littleton Upshur, Jr., 2 n Greenwood Science L. B. Vance Big Creek Agriculture J. D. Vance Conehatta Agriculture R. P. Vance Lake Business J. R. Wadsworth, II K A Forest Engineering V. K. Wagner, Jr., II K A Vicksburg Engineering A. S. Walker, K 2 Starkville Agriculture C. A. Wallace Oakland Ag. Engineering W. C. Warner Grenada Science W. C. Washburn, K A . . Meridian Business R. M. Watkins, 2 A E Aberdeen Ag. Engineering H. C. Watson Greenville Civil Engineering V. B. Watson, G. R. . . Strongs Agriculture J. L. Watts Columbia Agriculture E. E. Webb Dixon Agriculture Margaret H. Weems, X 9. Meridian Business J. H. Weems Meridian Electrical Eng. R. A. Weir, Jr Newton Business 76 •..:;:■j ®£ IE JUNIOR Members P. W. Welch, B K Stanton, Tenn. Engineering W. W. Welch Mendenhall Education T. G. Wells, K A Oakland Engineering J. E. Wesson, K r Guntovvn Science J. C. Wheeler Goodman Science J. R. Whitaker St. Joseph Science Mary Alice White Starkville Education J. C. White Brooksville Agriculture G. D. Whiting Chicago, 111. Engineering C. A. Whittington, 2 II Liberty Science S. W. Wilburn, 2 A E Artesia Business E. M. Williams, Jr State College Agriculture E. W. Wilson McComb Education B. M. Windham Homewood Education J. E. Windham Neshoba Science J. W. Wood, n K A Indianola Business W. T. Woods, Jr., 2 A E Olive Branch Engineering G. P. Woodward, K 2 Louisville Science E. J. Woods Mathisville Agriculture O. B. Wooten, K 2 Coldwater Agriculture H. F. Worley Goshen Springs Agriculture R. Y. Wright, Jr Cruger A ijriculture H. S. Yeates Starkville Science P. A. Yelverton, Jr Magee ' Agriculture W. W. Zenfell Vicksburg Science H. R. Zinober New York, N. Y. Education 77 CLASS Wt- %y? ■f. Speak for me, pity me, open the door; A beggar begs that never begged before. Shakespeare — Richard II. SOPHOmOliE (LASS OFFICERS David Pittman President E. W. Scott, Jr. Vice-President John Goodrum Secretary and Treasurer SOPHOMORE CLASS tMemb ers J. W. ABERNETHY Woodland Engineering R. C. Adams xV-a Agriculture G. C. Allen, K r i u ka Agriculture S. L. Allen, 2 A E Indianola Engineering Mary Virginia Alston Tupelo Science C. W. Anderson Gulfport Business D. P. Anderson Tupelo Engineering G. H. Armstrong, Jr., B K Jackson Business C. L. Aycock Woodland Agriculture F. B. Ayhvard Pace Agriculture Mary Elizabeth Bardvvell Starkville Business A. A. Barthes Biloxi Engineering C. D. Barton Pittsboro Agriculture J. H. Bennett, K T Kosciusko Engineering W. G. Bernhardt Guntown Engineering D. L. Bernreuter Kosciusko Businesss W. D. Billingsley Jackson Engineering C. H. Birdsong Meridian Science W. H. Birdsong, G. R Mayersville Business E. C. Black Marks Agriculture W. H. Boone Fayette Engineering W. C. Bounds Bailey Science J. E. Bovvden Independence Agriculture K. H. Bowen Byhalia Agriculture II. L. Boyd McComb Engineering C. W. Brackin State College Science J. L. Bradley Moorhead Science 80 IK SOPHOMORE Members W. J. BRENNAN Saratoga Springs Business J. A. Brewer Drew Business R. M. Bridgforth, 2 A E Pickens Science W. F. Brock Montpelier Science N. D. Brookshire, Jr., 2 A E Meridian Business A. L. Brothers, Jr Meridian Engineering B. H. Brown, 2AM Vicksburg Engineering W. II. Brown, SAM Vicksburg Engineering L. W. Browning Ecru Engineering H. M. Brumfield, K 2 Sallis Business W. T. Buckingham Booneville Engineering Elise Margot Buford, X 9. Clarksdale Business J. N. Burch Fulton Agricultural Education J. W. Burress Baldwyn Engineering J- W. Burt Kosciusko Science F. H. Butler, Jr Muldon Engineering M. B. Butts Waterproof, La. Engineering G - L Carl Jackson Business L. W. Carmichael, K T lukz Business J. R. Carpenter, K A Marks Engineering T. M. Catching Jackson Science Annie Katherine Chadwick, X 9. Starkville Science L. G. Chadwick, G. R Starkville Engineering B. P. Christensen Jackson Engineering G. E. Clark, n K A . Yazoo City Business G - l - Clark Madison Engineering Tucker Clark, n K A Morgan City Agriculture 8i CLASS w ■SOPHOMORE CLASS Members T. B. Cleveland . . . . Tvlertowii Engineering J. H. Cochran Eupora Agriculture J. P. Colbert, G. R Jackson Agriculture S. R. Connor Winona Business J. D. Cook Starkville Business H. Cox, Jr., 2 A E Columbus Science R. R. Craft, K 1 ' Belzoni Business M. H. Crawford, 2 A E Greenville Business Celeste Crawley, X Q Starkville Business H. T. Critz, K A Starkville Business M. E. Critz, G. R Starkville A griculture Mozellf. Sarah Critz, X fi Clarksdale Business D. L. Crowson Pittsboro Agriculture C. E. Cunningham Newton Engineering G. C. Cunningham Okolona A grit ulture E. A. Cutrer Osyka Science T. H. Dalehite, K A Memphis, Tenn. Engineering G. A. Darden, G. R Blanton Agriculture J. T. Davis, Jr Meridian Engineering R. W. Davis Jackson Engineering D. L. Dean, K V Shaw Engineering P. H. Decker, K A Laurel Engineering E. J. Derden Yazoo City Business E. M. Deupree Meridian Engineering P. S. Dicherson Tutwiler A griculture K. W. Drake Jackson Engineering R. B. Drane Durant Business 82 SOPHOMORE CLASS 1 zMembers S. L. Ducker Hamburg Agriculture J. P. Duke, Jr Amory Engineering E. B. Dukeminier, 2 II Aberdeen Agriculture E. W. Edwards Cruger Agriculture J. P. Edwards, II K A Yazoo City Engineering E. K. Elliott Okolona Business E. G. Ellis Port Gibson Engineering J. E. Embrv Indianola Science R. W. English, K A Aberdeen Agriculture H. W. Ervin Long Beach Science C. E. Estess Tylertown Education J. T, Evans, Jr., 2 A E Aberdeen Agriculture W. H. Ewart, II K A Yazoo City Engineering A. E. Facan, Jr., G. R Jackson Science E. C. Fedric, 2 A E Glendora Agriculture L. I. Feldman, 2 A M Newton Business R. P. Fields Columbus Engineering C. B. Fisackerly Blaine Agriculture G. B. Flagg, Jr Gulfport Science J. S. Flora Gholson Agriculture J. T. Ford, Jr Taylorsville Business P. L. Foster, K A Hudson Falls, N. Y. Business Jessie Frazier Crawford Science C. H. Freeman Artesia Business J. C. Fulton Louisville Agriculture O. L. Garmon, Jr., K 2 Marks Agriculture J. W. Gary Eupora Business 83 W- WS JF. SOPHOMORE CLASS £Memb ers J. C. Geiselbreth Terry Agriculture Martha Louise Gibson Starkville Science C. II. Gilbert Waynesboro Agriculture H. D. Gilliland Tremont A griculture J. F. Gilliland Coldwater Business W. K. Gillmore Crystal Springs Engineering D. M. Glenn Centerville Agriculture C. W. Gober Canton Engineering G. F. Gober Iuka Agriculture J. C. Goodrum, K A Vicksburg Engineering F. V. Gordon Belzoni Engineering W. D. Gordon Morton A griculture R. N. Goshorn Gl en Allen Agriculture J. S. Graddy Ecru Agriculture G. M. Grafton, G. R. . . Clarksdale Business Frances Stone Greene, X Q Starkville Business S. G. Green, K T Isola Engineering C. C. Guenther, IT K A Morgan City Business Sarah Dicie Guyton, X Q Kosciusko Business W. B. Halliday West Point Engineering O. T. Hammett Fayette Education M. L. Hanna Vicksburg Engineering T. W. Hardy, ME Artesia Engineering Helen Louise Harper Starkville Business G. B. Harrell, IT K A Yazoo City Engineering C. K. Harris, Z A E Meridian Engineering G. M. Harris, 2AE Winona Agriculture 84 ' ■' ?-55 SOPHOMORE Members J. C. Hathorne Richton Engineering C. H. Hearon Starkville Business M. M. Hegwood Raleigh Agriculture J. A. Henry Greenwood Science C. F. Hicks, K r Natchez Agriculture W. E. Hoi.comb Holcomb Business G. H. Holladay, II K A Laurel Science R. M. Holder, B K Jackson Engineering J. F. Hollincer, Jr Meadville Agriculture P. C. Hollowell Leland Engineering B. B. Hosch Mississippi City Agriculture U. P. Hudson Louisville Agriculture J. T. Huey, Jr Pontotoc Agriculture D. D. Hulsey, 2 A E Tupelo Science J. D. Humphrey Dumas Agriculture O. E. Hunt Sturgis Agriculture Shirley Huskison New Albany Education M. W. Ijams, n K A Jackson Science C. J. Ingraham, Jr., K A Jackson Engineering J. H. Jackson, K 2 Rosedale Engineering L- L Jaco Booneville Engineering N. M. Jacob, II K A Jackson Engineering T. G. James, G. R Greenwood Engineering C. C. Jeffrie s, K A Helena, Ark. Engineering J. C. Jeffries, Jr., K A Helena, Ark. Engineering R. H. Jenkins, K 2 Clarksdale Agriculture A. L. Johnson Richton Education 85 CLASS ML-VJ W-  ? Wm JF. SOPHOMORE CLASS ZMemb ers G. Johnson, Jr Vicksburg Business W. R. Johnson Lambert Education C. W. Jones Johns Agriculture E. C. Jones Richton Agriculture H. B. Jones Woodville Engineering J. P. Jones, Jr. Shelbv Agriculture J. W. Jones Saltillo Business T. F. Jones Grenada Engineering Eedra Gail Josey Starkville Science R. M. Kaiser Natchez Engineering J. R. Kellum, K 2 Shaw Agriculture C. A. Kennedy Cohay Science O. F, Kent Columbia Agriculture W. W. Kidd Winborn Education J. R. King Shannon Agriculture A. J. Kisner, II K A Natchez Science C. W. Kitchens New Albany Engineering J. R. Knight, K A Memphis, Tenn. Engineering R. A. Koenig Jackson Engineering J. F. Lacy, 2 A E Columbus Engineering E. L. Lancaster McComb Engineering G. H. Lanier Starkville Business W. B. Latham New Albany Education H. W. Latimer Philadelphia Agriculture E. G. Laughlin, Jr Yazoo City Engineering E. C. Lea Osyka Engineering E. L. Lea Byhalia Agriculture Ik 86 • ■■' )j£%fc. w;- SOPHOMORE Members Jayn G. Legg Electric Mills Business J. K. Lixdsey, B K Ruleville Science C. O. Little Meehan Engineering J. W. Logan Inverness Engineering J. A. Long Sallis Business O. A. Lowe, Jr., K A Newton Engineering Anne Louise Lucas, X 9. State Colleg; Education J. Luke, B K Union Business T. D. Lynch Plattsburg, N. Y. Business S. Mabry, Jr Derma Agriculture YV. H. Mabry Derma Agriculture R. E. Magee Brookhaven Engineering W. Mature, Jr Walnut Grove Agriculture M. J. Marble Lucedale Engineering R. E. Marks Hollandale Engineering J. W. Marshall Booneville Coin. Aviation E. E. Martin New Augusta Agriculture E. D. Martiniere, K T Shubuta Business W. C. Massey Bay Springs Agriculture E. P. Mathews Starkville Engineering F. M. Mauldin Matherville Agriculture J. K. McCown Noxapater Science P. H. McDonald Tupelo Agriculture J. H . McInnis Vicksburg Engineering D. M. McIntosh, K 2 Gulfport Engineering A. McKeigney Eupora Business W. H. McKenzie Jackson Engineering CLASS t ' . B? Jf. SOPHOMORE CLASS Members J. E. McLauchlin . . Jackson Business M. G. McLemore Cedar Bluff Agriculture J. T. McMullan Lake Agriculture F. K. McNeel, K 2 Laurel Engineering M. E. McPherson Memphis, Tenn. Engineering W. J. McRov Meridian Engineering E. A. McVey, Jr., G. R Lambert Science R. N. McWilliams, K 2 Clarksdale Business G. W. Melchior, 2 A E Jackson Science A. F. Merritt Biloxi Engineering C. B. Mitchell, Jr., K A Starkville Science G. R. Mitchell, 2 A E Booneville Education J. R. Mitchell, 2AE Booneville Business J. W. Mitchell, K 2 Clarksdale Business W. W. Moncrief Okolona Education E. F. Monk Belzoni Business H. B. Montgomery, K 2 Jackson Engineering D. B. Moore, FT K A Winona Business F. A. Moore Pelahatchee Agriculture G. B. Moore, G. R Pontotoc Science T. W. Moore, 2 A E . . Meridian Science E. G. Moorehead Winborn Education H. C. Moorehead Winborn Engineering A. N. Morgan, 2 II . . Okolona Business J. M. Morgan Plantersville Agriculture T. D. Morrow Vardaman Agriculture Hal Munson Tunica Agriculture ' -VcTi «£ SOPHOMORE Members Bill Murphy Kahoka, Mo. Engineering A. S. Myrick Kosciusko Engineering T. R. Nelson McComb Engineering D. C. Nickles, n K A Columbus Engineering V. D. Nixon, G. R Pontotoc Engineering B - B. Nye Amory Engineering K. C. O ' Kelley . Dumas Education R. F. Oliver Leland Engineering S. E. Paine, K A Meridian Agriculture D. W. Parvin Ri enz i Agriculture C. E. Patton Water Valley Science Carl Payne Pelahatchee Education P - E - Peal e Natchez Agriculture C. R. Pearson Laurel Business C. E. Penni.baker, K A Vicksburg Agriculture J. W. Pepper . Yazoo City Engineering G. H. Peresich Biloxi Business R. C. Perkins DeKalb Agriculture W. R. Perkins Vicksburg Engineering M. B. Perry . . Philadelphia Business D. G. Phelps, K A Jackson Engineering Joe Phillips Starkville Business D. M. Potman, K 2 Coffeeville Business J. N. Pittman Tylertown Agriculture I. I. Pogue, K 2 Scott Agriculture E. S. Pounds •. . . Booneville Education J- T - PuGH Louisville Engineering 89 CLASS sk- % ■' ■■$ ' $ J. m W l j. S  wM V «F £H ' .v-r-va • « iy Bni i SsaSbHri SOPHOMORE CLASS m ZMemb ers T. M. Purvis, B K . . Guntown Vera Margaret Raines Starkville Business Maggie Katherine Ramsey Starkville Business L. M. Randle Blue Mountain Education J. D. Ray, 2 A E Starkville Science H. C. Reber Hattiesburg Science W. R. Rector, II K A Vicksburg Engineering Eva Louise Reed Starkville Business W. F. Reeves Meridian Engineering C. F. Reynolds Malvina Agriculture W. T. Rhodes Louisville Agriculture R. H. Richards Mashulaville Engineering B. J. Roberson Greenwood Agriculture A. W. Roberts Hattiesburg Engineering G. M. Robertson Ellisville Business N. M. Rogers Sanatorium Engineering J. H. Ross, B K Pelahatchee Business M. Rouse Hattiesburg Engineering G. M. Rowland State College Engineering B. G. Rush Hermanville Engineering R. E. Save Purvis Business Boyd Scarbrough Bellefontaine Agriculture E. W. Scott, Jr., 2 A E Hollandale Education J. W. Senter Fulton Science H. L. Sewall Coahoma Engineering B. I. Shankles Blue Mountain Education W. S. Shaw Holly Springs Education 90 %, iiSr ' fctV- ■■■' . ■■SOPHOMORE Members J. D. Shell Houston Engineering S. M. Short Crenshaw Agriculture R. C. Shows Soso Science David Siegal Staten Island, N. Y. Business A. Simmons, Jr Columbia Agriculture D. W. Simmons Starkville Engineering J. L. Slaughter, K 2 Jonestown Agriculture A. L. Smith, 2 A E Brookhaven Engineering Frank Smith Waynesboro Business J. M. Smith Weir Agriculture H. G. Smith, K r Greenwood Engineering M. D. Smith, K A Starkville Engineering W. W. Smith Richton Education T. M. Smylie, K A Jackson Science A. C. Solomon Jackson Business J. M. Speed Collins Agriculture J. P. Stafford, Jr Cary Agriculture M. B. Steinriede, Jr., II K A Yazoo City Science N. E. Stoddard Lambert Education Roy Stott, Jr., 2 II Greenwood Engineering J. B. Strickland Belmont Engineering W. E. Stuckey Star Education R. H. Sullivan Mendenhall Education E. T. Swindle, BE Shaw Engineering W. R. Switzer Artesia Engineering W. G. Tabb, n K A Greenwood Engineering A. R. Taylor, K 2 Clarksdale Business 9 ' CLASS £■' •• w -■' ?; , mro SOPHOMORE CLASS Members Egypt E. J. Taylor Vicksburg Engineering E. R. Taylor Utica Agriculture G. A. Teunisson, K T Pinola Engineering P. L. Thigpen Lake Como Agriculture J. K. Thomas, K 2 Senatobia Agriculture II. S. Thompson Engineering J. A. Thompson, K A Hattiesburg Business W. D. Thompson Saltillo Engineering L. I. Timmerman Hattiesburg Science H. C. Tipton Horn Lake Agriculture F. S. Toomer Fulton Engineering Nancy Merkel Trigg, X 9. Greenville Education R. L. Tumberlinson Starkville Business J. II. Turner, Jr., G. R Sturgis Engineering W. W. Turner, 2 A E Greenwood Agriculture M. G. Turner Leakesville Agriculture M. C. Tyer Etta Agriculture W. B. Vanderford Maben Agriculture M. F. Vaughn . Collins Agriculture F. B. Walker, B K Taylorsville Business II. H. Walker Wisner, La. Engineering N. E. Walker Ashland Business W. H. Walker Meridian Science B. F. Wallace Carthage Agriculture W. H. Ward Tupelo Engineering L. G. Warden New Albany Science J. O. Watson Newton Engineering R. E. Watts DeKalb Engineering 92 SOPHOMORE F. P. Weaver, K 2 Corinth Business Oscar Weed Ruleville Education J. C. Welborn Raleigh Science M. C. Welch, K A Toomsuba Science P. L. Wells, G. R Macon Science E. B. Werkeiser Philadelphia Science J. H. West Hazlehurst Business F. J. WHITACRE Moorhead Engineering K. R. Whitesides Hickory Flat Agriculture N. M. Whitten, 2 A E New Albany Engineering Wm. L. Whittington, 2 n Brookhaven Science C. N. Wiggins, n K A Decatur, Ala. Engineering J. P. Wilkerson Winterville Agriculture J. M. Wilson Leland Engineering Woodrow Wilson Hamilton Agriculture N. E. Woodall . Meridian Business S. B. Wise, K 2 Jonestown Agriculture K. O. Wise, K 2 Jonestown Agriculture H. E. Wood, G. R Pontotoc Agriculture C. T. Woodruff Batesville Agriculture F. E. Woods Byhalia Agriculture W. T. Woods Gulfport Agriculture L. S. Woody Byhalia Engineering Jov Yarbrough, X Q Guntersville Business Cecil Yates Philadelphia Engineering Kenneth Yates Philadelphia Business P. T. Young Nettleton A griculture W. H. Young, 2 A E Aberdeen Engineering 93 CLASS m B?; m. Ki— l ro God made him and therefore Let him pass for a man. Shakespeare — Merchant of Venice. f I! E S W M A N (LASS OFFICERS W. H. Banks President R. L. Buckley Vice-President Bill Yeates Secretary and Treasurer B LlQi Wk jJEBf n: f Jr FRESHMAN CLASS First Row C. W. Addy, Agriculture .-.-.... Stratton J. A. Alford, Science Port Gibson C. K. Algood, Science ........ Philadelphia H. L. Algood, 2 II Louisville T. Allison, Engineering • . Grenada A. S. Alston, G. R., Science Starkville R. M. Alston, Agriculture Starkville R. S. Ammons, Engineering Charleston H. C. Anderson, Agriculture ...... Hernando O. K. Anderson, Engineering Forest Second Row H. R. Andress, II K A, Engineering .... Vicksburg V. Arguello, Agriculture Managua A. Aust, Engineering Schlater O. L. Austin, Agriculture Harperville J. C. Avens, Engineering ......... Wyatte R. P. Avlward, Science Pace J. H. Bailey, K 2, Business ....... Batesville W. R. Bailey, LT K A, Agriculture Tunica R. H. Baine, Agriculture Houston G. H. Baker, Engineering Grenada Third Row W. M. Baker, Engineering ........ Jackson W. T. Baker, Business Oakland W. W. Baker, Engineering .... Fcrrest City, Ark. Judson Ball, Engineering Vicksburg W. H. Banks, K 2, Engineering .... Helena, Ark. Walter Barbee, K 2, Engineering Lula G. V. Barnes, Engineering Purvis L. A. Barnes, Engineerin g Lake Ccmorant J. B. Barnett, Agriculture Holly Springs T. M. Barrett, Business ... Jackson Fourth Row J. C. BATSON, Science .......... Wiggins J. C. Beard, Jr., II K A, Science .... Heathman Jean Bechaud, Agriculture . ■Corinth J. L. Bedford, 2 n, Engineering .... West Point M. C. Berry, Agriculture New Hebron P. L. Berryhill, Agriculture ........ Dublin F. J. Bertucci, Science Gulfport J. H. Biddy, Engineering Grenada Leon Bielecki, Business ...... Camden, N. J. J. F. Bigger, Science Memphis, Tenn. 96 FRESHMAN CLASS First Row M. D. Bigcers, Agriculture Kilmichael F. A. Birdsong, G. Ft., Engineering . . . Mayersville J. T. Bhhop, Agriculture . • ■Oxford G. K. Blackwood, Engineering ....... Drew R. A. Blanton, Science Laurel A. T. Bocen, B K, Science ........ Ja ckson F. G. Boggan, Engineering . ■Tupelo E. E. Bolls, IT K A, Engineering ..... Indianola I. V. Boone, Agriculture Chunky R. L. Bourne, 2 A E, Business ...... Guthrie Third Row Lavory Brock, Engineering . Houlka E. W. Broome, Education ....... Batesville VV. E. BROPHY, K A, Engineering .... Hattiesburg C. R. Brown, Agriculture . Pinola G. T. Buck, Engineering . . Tchula R. E. Buckley, II K A, Business Newton R. L. Buckley, B K, Engineering (C iem.) . . Jackson S. Z. Burk, 2) A M, Engineering ..... Corinth W. T. Burroughs, K 2, Agriculture . . . Clarksdale J. N. Butler, K 2, Science ...... Greenwood Second Row C. S. Bourne, Business ......... Columbia R. E. Bowlus, K 2, Science ...... Brookhaven Theo Brabbham, Agriculture ■. Liberty D. H. Bradford, Jr., Science Walls L. P. Bradford, Engineering Sanatorium C. A. Bragg, Engineering ....... Vicksburg M. E. Branigin, Education ........ Canton R. O. Brassfield, Business ........ Lorman L. R. Bridges, Education . ■Braxton H. C. Briggs, Agriculture ...... Hickory Flat Fourth Row J. W. Butler, Engineering . . Robert Butler, II K A, Engineering T. J. Callahan, Business . ■. G. W. Carter, Business . ■. ■. P. F. Carter, Agriculture ■. . S. E. Carter, Engineering .... W. M. Cameron, K A, Business . R. G. Caperton, 15 K, Business . . . H. CARROWAY, Engineering . . . J. R. Chappell, K T, Education ■Tupelo . Yazoo City Meridian • Memphis, Tenn. • - . . Sarepta . Thaxton Meridian • . . Noxapater . • . . Wiggins . . Hot Springs 97 : i B0 FRESHMAN CLASS First Row W. A. Chesledon, II K A, Science .... Starkville r . R. Chesteen, Agriculture Kilmichael Charles Childress, Engineering Flora T. E. Childs, K 2, Business • . - Eupora H. E. Clark, Education ....... Collinsville T. M. Clark, Engineering . Tupelo W. H. Clark, Engineering ....... Aberdeen Willett Clark, Agriculture • . . Macon I. B. Cochran, Jr., Science ........ Jackson T. J. Cohern, Engineering . ■Starksville Second Row W. B. Coley, Science .......... Tupelo C. A. Commander, Engineering ..... Ackerman Jewel Copeland, Business ........ Morton Bert Cordill, II K A, Engineering . . Memphis, Tenn. G. A. Covincton, Business Brookhaven W. N. Craig, Engineering ...... New Albany L. H. Crippen, II K A, Business ...... Jackson S. H. Crosby, II K A, Engineering .... Greenwood J. D. Crowder, Agriculture ...-.-.. Chester L. S. Crumbley, II K A, Business ...... Laurel Third Row M. J. Curren, II K A, Science ..... Yazoo City E. H. Currie, II K A, Engineering Iuka W. E. Curtis, Business . French Camp E. R. Dandridce Looxahoma G. W. Darnell Glen Allen J. A. Darnell, Business ....... Glen Allen J. B. Davis, Jr., K T, Engineering .... Itta Bena Guy Davis, Business . ■Belzoni J. E. Davis, 2 A E, Pre-Medical Tupelo M. M. DeJean, Engineering Pascagoula Fourth Row W. T. Dices, Engineering Winona Ward Dille, Engineering ........ Natchez G. L. Disharoon, Jr., 2 A E, Agriculture . Port Gibson D. M. Dockery, B K, Business Jackson G. M. Donald, Agriculture ....... Carriere C. P. Downer Jackson H. DuRocher, Business . Biloxi V. R. Easley, II K A, Science ...... Natchez H. C. Eastland, Engineering Doddsville V. V. Eason. Tr., Engineering Marks 98 8k % nnnn %■. FRESHMAN CLASS First Row R. L. Ebberman, Engineering ....... Biloxi C. H. Edwards, Engineering Columbus L. L. Edwards, Engineering ..... Panther Burn I. C. Ellis, G. R., Agriculture Clarksdale I. L. Ellis, 3 n, Engineering Corinth J. C. Ellis, Engineering ......... Rosedale J. E. Elliot, Engineering Biloxi J. W. Emmons, Engineering Meridian Hampton England, Engineering . . . Crystal Springs Albert Evans, K A, Business ...... Meridian Third Row T. W. Funderburk, Engineering J. M. FURR, II K A, Business . ■J. W. Gallaspy, Engineering . . ■Harold Garner, K A, Business T. V. Garrawav, Business . J. F. Gates, Agriculture . . H. Gatewood, JR., Agriculture Ralph Gelburd, Science . ■L. L. Gober, Engineering ... . Canton Arthur Gordon, 2 A M, Business .... Starkville . Houston • • • . . Laurel . New Augusta Winston-Salem, N. C. . . . . Bassfield Philipp Holly Springs . . New York City % : Second Row W. T. Ewing, B K, Agr. Engineering . . . Anguilla R. B. Ewing, B K, Agriculture ..... Anguilla George A. Fencer, Agriculture Oxford T. A. Fields, 2 A E, Engineering Tupelo H. G. Fisher, II K A, Agriculture .... Indianola R. L. Flvnn, Agriculture ........ Dundee S. D. Finlay, 2 A E, Engineering .... Greenville C. W. Freeman, Engineering ....... Complete R. G. Freeman, Engineering ...... Columbia R. O. Freeman, Science . ■Tyro 99 Fourth Row N. S. Gordon, 2 A M, Business ..... Charleston J. L. Gossett, Agriculture Ripley C. B. Gray, Business . ■Waynesboro S. T. Gray, Agriculture New Augusta K. A. Green, Agriculture Itta Bena F. R. Green, 2 A M, Business Meridian E. H. Greer, K A, Engineering Meridian G. P. Grieshaber, Engineering .... Union, N. J. D. C. Griffith, Jr., Science ..... Bay St. Louis S. C. Guion, Business Benton m. FRESHMAN CLASS First Row J. D. Gwin, 2 A E, Agriculture Lexington F. G. Haley, Engineering ......... Flora B. J. Hall, Business . ■. New York R. R. Hamilton, B K, Engineering .... Gulfport J. W. HAMILTON, Engineering ....... Maud W. W. Hamilton, B K, Engineering . . . Gulfport C. E. Hamilton, Business ........ Newton C. W. Hamilton, Engineering Maben George Hammer, Agriculture ...... Waveland R. A. Hammer, Science ........ Waveland Second Row William Hardin, Business Duncan R. M. Harmon, K 2, Education ..... Batesville B. L. Harper, IT K A, Engineering .... Natchez M. B. Harthcock, n K A, Science .... Clarksdale Mary Elizabeth Hartness, Science .... Starkville H. T. Harwell, Agriculture . Pachuta Joseph Harz, Engineering Vicksburg J. D. Hayden, Engineering ....... Crawford C. S. Hayes, Agriculture ....... Farmhaven C. P. Haynes, 2 A E, Engineering Pickens Third Row F. G. Haynes, Agriculture ........ Ingomar C. G. Hays, Business ........ Philadelphia Jack Hayes, K 2, Agriculture ..-.-.. Dublin M. J. Hemby, Engineering . Vicksburg W. J. Henry, 2 A E, Business Meridian Geo. W. Henson, Agriculture . ■Ripley H. L. Hentington, Engineering .... Hattiesburg E. L. Herring, Business ........ Lexington W. H. Hester, Engineering ...... Mathiston G R. Higginbotham, Engineering .... West Point Fourth Row Meta Perkins Hightower, Science .... Starkville A. J. Hill, 2 II, Engineering Hazlehurst J. C. Hill, Engineering Laurel J. G. Hii.lis, Science . ■Bay St. Louis Bob Hines, II K A, Business Carter Sedge Hinson, Engineering Tylertown G. A. Hm, G. R., Business ....... Tutwiler P. G. Hogan, Engineering Columbus E. H. Holder, Business Jackson Frank Hollandsworth, Engineering Rienzi A . J . F J VV ' FRESHMAN CLASS First Row C. K. Hoi.lis, Agriculture ...-.-.. Caledonia H. L. Hopper, Science .-.■.■■■. Meridian H. D. Horn, Engineering ........ Grenada W. D. Howard, Engineering Mt. Pleasant J. W. Hudson, Engineering .■■■.-. Grenada M. B. Hummel, Science ....-.-. Greenville G. B. Hunt, Engineering ....... Vicksburg H. W. Irbv, Engineering ........ Meridian V. C. Irby, K F, Engineering Meridian D. L. James, K A, Engineering Meridian Second Row D. C. Jarvis, Engineering ........ Jackson Norland Jefcoat, Agriculture . ■Soso R. M. Johnson, Engineering ..... Water Valley C. B. Jones, Agriculture Tupelo E. E. Jones, K A, Science Starkville J. O. Jones, Agriculture Baldwyn O. H. Jones, Jr., II K A, Agriculture .... Leland Allien Jordan, Engineering .-.-... Pattison E. D. Jordan, K V, Science Louisville J. B. Kelley, Agriculture . ■. ■Lake Third Row W. W. Kennedy, Agriculture Magee G. H. Kent, Business Columbia Edna Earl Kimbell, Business Starkville Albert King, 2 A E, Agriculture Schlater J. A. King, Business ........... Dixon J. J. King, Jr., II K A, Engineering . . . Swan Lake Franklin LaHatte, K 2, Engineering . . . Vicksburg R. J. Laird, Agriculture Bassfield Conrov Lambert, Agriculture . ■Belmont Archie Lancaster, Jr., Engineering . . . Greenville Fourth Row M. L. Landrum, Business Tchula T. W. Landrum, Science Pickens L. J. Lane, Agriculture • . . Macon T. H. Lang, Agriculture Nitta Yuma M. G. Langford, Agriculture ...... Conehatta J. P. Langston, Agriculture ...... New Hebron R. G. Larrieu, Agriculture Woodsville William Lea, B K, Engineering .... Holly Springs F. T. Leavf.ll, Agriculture Blue Springs S. Lebovitz, Business ....... New York City ge Tk. ' -A- ' . ' . EM DH U OQ FRESHMAN CLASS First Row B. A. Ledbetter, Engineering ...... Corinth W. B. Lee, Engineering ........ Kosciusko F. M. Leigh, K A, Engineering ..... Meridian J. W. Leigh, K T, Engineering West Point W. E. Leigh, Engineering ....... Hernando Sarah Eloise Lemmons, Business Starkville J. L. Lewis, Engineering ......... Union Luellen Lewis, Business Starkville M. P. Lewis, Engineering Starkville R. L. Livingston, Engineering Tupelo Second Row E. R. Lloyd, Business ......... Starkville G. L. Long, Science ........... Canton V. W. Loveless, Agriculture ...... Tishomingo J. R. Lowe, Agriculture Pontotoc R. C. Lowe, Agriculture Pontotoc W. H. Lowery Gulfport Jane Owen Lucas, X 0., Business .... Kosciusko T. H. Luke, Agriculture ........ Preston Audie Lundy, Agriculture ...... Philadelphia W. J. Lurz, K A, Engineering Canton Third Row J. W. Macon, Agriculture Slate Springs J. E. Maddox, Business ........ Starkville J. W. Marshall, Agriculture Philadelphia Annie Elizabeth Martin, Business .... Starkville J. H. Martin, Engineering ........ Shubuta J. A. Maschek, Engineering Long Beach H. O. Massey, Engineering ........ Jackson C. F. Matthews, K 2, Engineering .... Charleston W. C. Mattox, Business Tupelo W. D. Maxey, K F, Engineering Brandon Fourth Row Mary Katherine May, Business Ruleville R. B. May, B K, Engineering Greenwood C. H. Mayo, Engineering ........ Quitman L. M. McCalla, Agriculture ....... Corinth W. C. McCarley, K 2, Education .... Batesville J. H. McCreight, Agriculture Starkville G. A. McGarah, Engineering ........ Drew W. D. McGeary, Corn. Aviation ...... Winona R. W. McKay, Agriculture Kosciusko J. T. McLemore, Business Tomnolen m 1 FRESHMAN CLASS First Row J. B. McMullan, Business ......... Lake J. L. McRae, Engineering ........ Cruger M. S. McWhirter, Education ...... Randolph Orval Meredith, Agriculture Crosett, Ark. D. M. Miller, Engineering ■. Huntington, W. Va. M. D. Mims, Agriculture Starkville C. A. Mlxon, B K, Engineering Jackson D. R. Monroe, Business ......... Newton Richard Montgomery, 2 LT, Business . . . West Point W. L. Montgomery, Engineering . . . State College Second Row Arthur Moore, IT K A, Engineering . . . Vicksburg Carlisle Moore, K 2, Agriculture . . . Holly Springs E. L. Moore, Agriculture Perkinston Fay Randle Moore, Business Tupelo R. E. Moore, Engineering . Crosby Gibson Morgan, Agriculture Holly Springs W. O. Morgan, Agriculture Starkville David Morris, Engineering Jackson Leroy Morris, Engineering ...... Hattiesburg J. S. Mosby, Engineering ........ Meridian Third Row Dorothy Murphy, Science ....... Starkville R. E. Murphy, Agriculture . ■Starkville S. Mushinck, Business ........ New York L. S. Musselwhite, K 2, Engineering .... Jackson F. C. Myers, Engineering Raleigh M. P. Myers, Jr., K A, Agriculture Dundee D. Naugher, Agriculture Pontotoc R. R. Neusom, Business ......... Columbia W, W. Nicholson, Engineering Elliott Gordon Nix, Science ......... Opp, Ala. Fourth Row J. C. Nix, Agriculture ....... West Enterprise F. W. Norwood, Agriculture Greenville Carl Oakes, Engineering • . Gunnison Dorothy Frances Oakes, Business . . . State College W. B. Oliver, II K A, Engineering Laurel R. W. Orr, K 2, Agriculture Helena, Ark. J. W. Overstreet, Jr., K A, Science . . . Starkville F. B. Owen, Engineering Louisville H. E. Owen, Engineering New Albany J. V. Pace, Jr., II K A, Agriculture .... Starkville 103 i$K$ FRESHMAN CLASS First Row O. B. Palmer, Education . ■. ■Preston E. E. Parker, Science ......... Greenwood O. S. Parker, Education ......... Pachuta R. H. Parker, II K A, Agriculture Natchez R. Parish, Engineering Amory E. B. Parmelee, K A, Engineering . . . Helena, Ark. J. P. Patterson, Science ........ Monticello N. D. Patterson, Engineering Elaine, Ark. T. V. Paxton, Agriculture Bovina W. H. PeAle, IT K A, Science Natchez Second Row E. A. Peek, Jr., Agriculture Hazlehurst L. S. Peek, Agriculture Hazlehurst Leonard Pepper, Engineering ..-.-.. Vaughn H. L. Phillips, Business . ■Swifton W. P. Phillips, Business ........ Starkville Denson Pickering, Agriculture Collins S. R. Pitts, Business • . Pontotoc Troy Pins, Jr., Agriculture Ecru C. H. Poindexter, Engineering Livingston, Tenn. C. C. Pope, Agriculture ......... Columbia Third Row William Prater, Business ...... Millport, Ala. A. N. Prestage, Agriculture Golden E. R. Price, Engineering DeKalb H. F. Price, Business . ■. ■Jackson R. C. Prvor, K A, Engineering ..... Starkville C. O. Rabbv, Business ......... Gulfport S. L. Ragland, K T, Engineering Brandon G. H. Rainwater, Agriculture Waynesboro Marjorie Juanita Ramsey, Business . . . Starkville C. T. Ramzy, Agriculture Oxford Fourth Row J, S. Raper, 2 A E, Business Columbus J. H. Ray, Agriculture ........ Starkville W. R. Ray, Business .......... Myrtle W. F. Rea, II K A, Engineering Vicksburg Polly Reed, Business ■. Starkville C. J. RENICK, Engineering Ashland Frances E. Rich, K A, Science Gulfport J. C. Rich, K A, Engineering Gulfport L. W. Richardson Union R. P. Richmond, Engineering Rolling Fork 104 iXZffl ttil : «. ■' •: FRESHMAN CLASS First Row J. L. Ricks, Engineering . ....... Woodville T. A. Rives, Business Pelahatchee R. E. Roberts, Science McComb W. N. Roberts, Agriculture ........ Amory W. L. Robertson, Agriculture ...... State Line E. D. Robinson, II K A, Engineering . . . Clarksdale W. C. Robinson, Engineering ...... Meridian B. R. Rocers, Agriculture ........ Collins W. M. Rogers, Engineering ........ Canton W. H. Rotstein, 2 A M, Engineering . . . Vicksburg Third Row Leon Segal, 2 A M, Science Clarksdale S. R. Segrest, Agriculture ■. Port Gibson W. S. Sellers, G. R., Business ....... Canton R. V. SENTER, Agriculture Fulton P. W. Shaw, Engineering . Gulfport J. C. Sheffield, K A, Engineering . . . Helena, Ark. J. T. Shows, Agriculture Soso Ben Simmons, Jr., Engineering Long Beach T. S. Simpson, Science Winona W. B. Simpson, Education ........ Dundee Second Row E. P. Rubenstein, Engineering ....... Shaw F. S. D. L. Sadler, Science Booneville E. G. R. E. Sadler, Z A E, Engineering Tupelo J. B. J. Z. Sanford, Education ....... New Albany Jane Jack Sanford, Ag. Engineering . . . Pleasant Grove M. R. Howard Scarborough, Engineering Laurel O. G. H. W. Scott, Agriculture Aberdeen T. F. L. A. Scott, Agriculture ...... Memphis, Tenn. J. A. M. W. Seaborn, K A, Engineering . . . Helena, Ark. G C. W. L. Seaco, Engineering Corinth H. E. 105 Fourth Row Skinner, Agriculture ....... Burnsville Smith, Business Waynesboro Smith, Agriculture . Brookhaven Smith, Business ......... Starkville Smith, n K A, Science ...... Clarksdale Smith, Agriculture ...... Pleasant Grove Sorrell, Business ......... Eupora Spann, Business Eupora Speed, Engineering ......... Collins Spell, IT K A, Business ...... Yazoo City rJ ■• i; 1 •■• ' ' fc,j. V ' ' ■v« ' %-■FRESHMAN CLASS First Row G. W. Spraberrv, Agriculture ...... Grenada W. P. Spraberrv, Agriculture ....... Grenada C. K. Stafford, Engineering ..... Florence, Ala. Sidney Stallings, K T, Business Greenville J. H. Stennis, Business . ■DeKalb M. D. Stephens, Business Water Valley J. F. Stern, Engineering Biloxi C. E. Stevens, II K A, Science ....... Laurel J. F. Stevens, II K A, Agriculture ..... Forest M. R. Stevens, Engineering . ■Byhalia Second Row A. O. Stewart, 2 n, Engineering ..... Jonestown R. E. Stratton, III, K 2, Science .... Clarksdale C. P. Stroble, Jr., K 2, Engineering . . . Meridian G. T. Stuart, G. R., Engineering Jackson H. T. Stubbs, G. R., Education Philipp Ray Sturgis, Agriculture Crystal Springs H. L. Suber, Engineering L ouisville C. M. Sudduth, Business Tupelo F. P. Sullivan, Agriculture Winona Louise Renee Tallichet, X Q, Business . . Starkville Third Row G. C. Tatum, Jr., Agriculture Waynesboro Jack Taylor, Agriculture Duck Hill J. C. Taylor, 2 A E, Agriculture .... Friars Point R. E. Taylor, Agriculture Calhoun City W. B. Taylor, Jr., B K, Engineering . . . Jackson James Temple, Business ........ Nettleton W. E. Thaxton, Engineering . . . Washington, D .C. J. S. Therrell, Engineering ..... Prairie Point K. A. Thicpen, Engineering . Shaw Fourth Row A. E. Thomas, Engineering ...... Philadelphia R. F. Thompson, II K A, Business .... Yazoo City Eva Alice Thrasher, Business Starkville W. B. Tiley, 2 A E, Engineering Schlater J. S. Topp, Jr., G. R., Business Clarksdale G. R. Townsend, Engineering Brookhaven M. N. Townsend, Engineering Morton T. A. Trotter, Engineering McLauren Toxie Tullos, Agriculture Columbia 106 !££  FRESHMAN CLASS First Row R. C. Turner, K A, Business ..... Hattiesburg J. A. Tyson, K A, Science Macon Frances Upchurch, Education ...... Starkville P. P. Vail, Jr., Engineering Hammond Hugh Varnado, 2 A E, Engineering .... Pickens F. M. Waddell, Agriculture Dennis M. M. Wadlington, Agriculture Sledge Lev Wailes, Engineering Pattison J. C. Walker, 2 A E, Science Stoneville Bennie Ward, Business Hoicomb Second Row W. J. Watkins, Agriculture Gholson M. E. Watson, Business ........ Carrollton G. W. Webb, Business Satartia W. H. Weeks, Engineering Doddsville W. E. Weems, LI K A, Engineering .... Shubuta Charles Werner, Agriculture Long Beach B. M. West, K A, Engineering Gulfport J. K. West, 2 A E, Business McComb Paul Whitaker, Agriculture Bentonia F. F. White, K T, Engineering Aberdeen Third Row R. P. White, Jr., Agriculture Lcng Beach J. T. Whiteside, Engineering Tupelo Merle Wilbourn, Engineering ...... Carthage H. W. Wilder, II K A, Business Laurel J. II. Wilkerson, Business . Roxie C. D. Williams, IT K A, Agriculture . . . Clarksdale G. W. Williamson, Business ...... Monticello A. C. Wilson, Education . Preston Hartwell Wilson, K 2, Business . . . Helena, Ark. Fourth Row Robert Wilson, Agriculture Leland Leo Wincate, Jr., Engineering ..... Kilmichael H. B. Wolcott, Engineering ...... Ridgeland N. H. Wood, K 2, Science Cleveland T. L. Wood, Agriculture ........ Pontotoc R. L. Woods, Agriculture ........ Byhalia J. D. Woodward, K r Kosciusko Bill Yeates, K 2, Agriculture Canton J. S. Young, Business . Nettleton 107 Wife THE COLORS T he R eserve o fficers MAJOR R. I. SASSE Professor of Military Science and Tactics U. S. ARMY OFFICERS Major R. I. Sasse, U. S. Cavalry P.M.S. and T. Major A. C. Chesledon C.A.C. Major A. R. MacKechnie Infantry Captain John H. Stokes Infantry Captain John Harry C.A.C. Captain William K. Stennis C.A.C. Sergeant W. Combs C.A.C. Sergeant C. H. Palmer C.A.C. Sergeant F. H. Lewis Infantry Sergeant C. A. Welsh C.A.C. : 1 raini c ng orps CADET REGIMENTAL STAFF F. B. WYLIE, JR. The Cadet Regimental Staff is chosen from the Senior cadet officers according to ability and scholastic standing. The Staff this year has been in charge of more than one thou- sand cadets, both infantry and artillery. F. B. Wylie, Jr., Senior in the School of Engineering, who was awarded the highest military honor available at this institution in being selected to serve as Cadet Colonel for the 1936-37 session. Wylie is also a member of Scabbard and Blade Honor- ary Military Organization. Williamson, Stubbs, Wylie, McGehee, Bonney, Goodwin J. ■■;■- i ■?:-..■■3 k .-J.l , T :.sO| Battalion Officers and First Battalion J. J. Crosbv Major Miss Leslie Bailey Sponsor H. E. Covington First Lieutenant Company A M. G. Gray Captain Miss Jane Owen Lucas Sponsor J. V. Newman First Lieutenant S. P. Crockett First Lieutenant U. L. Day First Lieutenant W. II. Waddei.l First Lieutenant Company B F. T. Hight Captain Miss Hazel McClellan Sponsor E. N. Ross First Lieutenant H. H. Holland First Lieutenant J. N. Reddoch First Lieutenant Some of Their Sponsors J. R. Denton First Lieutenant H. E. While Second Lieutenant Company C E. C. Elliott Captain Miss Melle Ward Sponsor A. F. Stubbs First Lieutenant W. E. Ragland First Lieutenant C. J. Saia First Lieutenant B. T. Ellis First Lieutenant H. N. Moore Second Lieutenant Company D W. L. Maxey Captain Miss Esther Freeman Sponsor C. W. Hawken First Lieutenant E. E. Freeman First Lieutenant F. H. Massey First Lieutenant W. M. Harrison First Lieutenant Third Battalion A. W. Holland Major Miss Grosie Heath Saunders Sponsor R. E. Briggs Captain W. C. Downing First Lieutenant J. C. Conger First Lieutenant J. W. Whelan First Lieutenant Battery I H. W. Webster Captain Miss Patty Cocherham Sponsor L. A. Conerly First Lieutenant J. R. Smith First Lieutenant H. V. Cooper First Lieutenant T. K. Trigg First Lieutenant L. E. Claiborne Second Lieutenant W. W. Duncan Second Lieutenant E. B. Hughes Second Lieutenant W. H. Knok Second Lieutenant Battery K M. Y. Mullen Captain Miss Miriam Whitten Sponsor C. C. Bryan First Lieutenant J. O. Dorsett First Lieutenant J. U. Blanchard First Lieutenant J. Robertshaw First Lieutenant W. O. Courtney Second Lieutenant C. J. Grohoske Second Lieutenant E. M. Patterson Second Lieutenant W. B. Musselwhite Second Lieutenant Battery L P. R. Davis Captain Miss Frances Schlater Sponsor J. C. Milton First Lieutenant O. K. Batte First Lieutenant S. Reynolds First Lieutenant J. W. Ewing ... First Lieutenant W. H. Brock Second Lieutenant H. O. Crane Second Lieutenant C. D. Hood Second Lieutenant W. B. Pearson Second Lieutenant J. M. Alford Second Lieutenant M£ _ mm ■it® Downing, Whelan, Briggs, Holland, Crosby, Covington, Conger Battalion Staff THE R. O. T. C. When the Land Grant Colleges were founded in the United States, one of the stipulations of the contract was that each school founded on this plan should be given certain courses in Military Science and Tactics. Therefore, for the first two years at Mississippi State each student who is physically fit is required to take a course in military. However, the second two years are elective, so the student himself decides whether or not he will continue his course in the subject. If military is taken by the student for four years, he may receive a com- mission in the Organized Reserve as a Second Lieutenant. Mississippi State has one of the best military organizations in the South. It ranks with the highest and tribute has often been paid to it by the ranking officers of the Fourth Corps area. 114 c o M P A N Y m OFFICERS IN COMMAND M. G. Gray Captain S. P. Crockett First Lieutenant A. T. Tkrrv First Lieutenant W. H. Waddell First Lieutenant J. V. Newman First Lieutenant H. E. White Second Lieutenant SERGEANTS H. C. Dilworth T. F. Harper D. B Price J. W. Gunn R. S. Johnson- L. O. Ruckf.r E. c. Hardison L. Q. Lambert J- G. Sauls J- E. Murph 1 c 0. G . Idom ROSTER W. L. Addington J. E. Maddox R. A. Sturgis J. T. Huey W. D. Baker E. J. Marz F. Sullivan 0. E. Hunt J. B. Barnett 0. K. Meredith J. C. Taylor T. D. Lynch R. C. Baxter W. 0. Morgan J. K. Thomas E. D. Martiniere M. D. BlGGERS F. W. Norwood J. S. Topp J. F. McRee J. R. Bolton 0. S. Parker M. M. Waddlincton R. M. McWhorter R. L. Bourne T. V. Paxton J. W. Watkins A. F. Merritt C. R. Brown B. W. Pevey S. L. Wedgworth J. R. Mitchell B. Caffey P. W. Phillips C. Werner W. H. Morrow G. W. Carter C. D. Pickering P. Whitaker J. S. Overstreet J. R. Chappell S. R. Pitts H. P. Wilt B. G. Piggott J. M. Dyle H. L. Phillips E. M. Williams D. M. PlTTMAN R. B. Ewing C. C. Pope C. D. Barton I. I. POGUE H. G. Fisher A. N. Prestage L. W. Browning B. J. Roberson J. M. FURQUEREN H. F. Price J. P. Colbert J. II. Ross K. A. Green J. W. Purtle J. D. Cook A. Simmons R. J. Hall C. O. Rabby R. R. Craft J. L. Slaughter H. T. Harwell W. L. Robertson G. C. Cunningham J. M. Smith J. T. Hayes B. R. Rogers E. J. Derden K. V. Stecker G. A. Hut W. S. Sellers J. S. Flora A. R. Taylor W. S. Hunt J. V. Sikes P. L. Foster H. C. Tipton A. J. W. Jackson F. E. Smith J. C. Geiselbreth F. P. Weaver G. E. James G. W. Sprayberry C. H. Gilbert C. N. Wiggins J. B. Kelley W. P. Sprayberry ' W. C. Grissom F. E. Woods A. L. Lundy S. F. Stallings C. F. Hicks J. W. Macon J. F. Stevens W. E. Holcomb a .2!«$ J. mm ;f 3t 1 v i i :• v, ' ? I w c o M P A N Y B F. T. Might J. R. Denton J. N. Reddoch OFFICERS IN COMMAND . . . Captain E. N. Ross First Lieutenant first Lieutenant II. H. Holland First Lieutenant First Lieutenant V . L. Day Second Lieutenant SERGEANTS ■jm A. B. Baker F. W. Cannon W C. Harris j§ C. A. Barrett E. B. Christian L. E. Munchausen • ; H R. L. Bradley H. L. Clark B. L. Neal •H W . M . Fondren ■1 A. C. Ford 1 ROSTER 1 H. L. Algood J. C. Anderson J. A. King R. J. Laird C. M. Sudduth A. E. Thomas J. P. Jones J. W. Jones M V. Arguelle W. R. Bailey C. R. Lambert F. T. Leavell J. L. Turner M. F. Waddell W. B. Latham L. R. Mann ' H J. C. Batson F. M. Leigh G. W. Webb A. E. McMillan ' $w P. H. Berryhii.l V. W. Lovelless H. W. Welder R. N. McWilliams lH M. E. Branigan H. T. Luske R. A. Wilson E. F. Monk : 8 L. R. Bridges W. C. Mattox R. C. Adams J. M. Morgan H E. W. Broom r J. H. McCreight G. C. Allen H. Munson •$ C. J. Childress M. S. McWhirter G. E. Baird J. N. PlTTMAN ' •vffi R. G. Caperton F. R. Moore E. C. Black W. H. Pope ; T. E. Childs L. L. Nicholson W. H. Boone C. F. Reynolds ' ■■M G. A. Covington H. E. Owen M. H. Crawford W. T. Rhodes )M L. S. Crumby C. Payne R. B. Drane R. R. Robinson ■M H. C. Dandridge E. A. Peek E. K. Elliott H. N. Seales ' M G. L. DlSHAROON L. S. Peek J. R. Ely B. I. Shankles -■-M G. M. Donald W. Prater E. C. Fedric S. M. Short : ;M S. L. Ducker V. G. Ramsay B. R. Fiering N. E. Stoddard ■W C. B. Gray C. T. Ramzey U. P. Hudson R. P. Sugg M F. R. Greene T. A. Rives S. A. Huskison E. R. Taylor ' : «1 O. T. Guice G. H. Russell A. L. Johnson M. F. Vaughan ■: S. C. Guion J. Z. Sanford G. Johnson N. E. Walker ' fj C. G. Hays W. B. Simpson W. R. Johnson 0. Wood m A. R. King E. G. Smith C. W. Jones J. H. West N. E. Woodall M 116 '  .. c o M P A N Y C OFFICERS IN COMMAND E. C. Elliott A. F. Stubbs C. J. Saia . . . Captain First Lieutenant First Lieutenant B. T. Ellis . . W. E. Ragland H. N. Moore . First Lieutenant . First Lieutenant Second Lieutenant T. W. Bonner M. B. Carroll C. T. Cash SERGEANTS I). A. Christian J. W. Martin W. O. McIlwain H. M. Mullins R. E. Price L. T. Rhodes E. F. Todd J. A. Collier ROSTER G. V. Barnes W. D. Bland R. F. Brunitt J. N. Burch W. M. Cameron H. E. Clark J. K. Davis H. C. Eastland A. T. Evans L. E Feldman G. A. Finger T. V. Garrawav J. F. Gilliland N. S. Gordon J. L. Gossett W. F. Hardin C. S. Hayes M. M. Hedcwood R. D. Hines V. G. Howard W. W. Kennedy L. J. Lane M. G. Lancford R. G. Larrieu J. R. Lowe R. C. Lowe J. S. Luke R. Mathes J. W. Marshall J. B. McMullan R. W. More G. Morgan J. C. Nix J. P. Overstreet O. B. Palmer T. Pitts E. S. Pounds G. H. Rainwater J. S. Raper J. H. Ray W. R. Ray W. M. Rogers R. W. Senter O. G. Smith J. A. Spann J. M. Speed H. E. Spell M. D. Stephens H. T. Stubbs G. C. Tatum J. Taylor J. L. Temple J. II. Wilkinson C. D. Williams T. L. Wood R. L. Woods J. S. Young C. W. Anderson G. H. Armstrong J. E. Bowden G. I. Carl J. E. Carraway G. E. Clark E. W. Edwards H. T. Fowlkes G. F. Gober 0. T. Ham met A. C. Hulett J. 1). Humphrey .1. R. King II. W. Latimer J. D. Mann P. H. McDonald J. W. Mitchell E. G. Moorhead T. D. Morrow C. E. Pennebaker J. W. Senter W. S. Shaw J. D. Smith W. W. Smith R. II. Sullivan R. L. Tumberlinson W. W. Turner B. F. Wallace F. B. Walker W. S. Weissinger W. Wilson S. B. Wise C. T. Woodruff W0 [h « 7 «P ¥ ' -SiSS •- ' HH C O M A N Y D OFFICERS IN COMMAND W. L. Maxev Captain E. E. Freeman .... W. M. Harrison First Lieutenant C. W. Hawken .... F. H. Massey First Lieutenant First Lieutenant First Lieutenant S. T. Batton J. A. Blanchard D. C. Crosby SERGEANTS W. G. Duke J. R. Ellis J. W. Harding E. S. Herrington R. M. Hough J. R. Owen A. A. Rogowski ROSTER R. M. Alston R. H. Baine T. M. Barrett L. R. Boutwell W. J. Brennan R. E. Buckley T. J. Callahan T. F. Cameron L. W. Carmichal P. F. Carter V. R. Chesteen D. J. Crowder W. E. Curtis R. R. Cycon P. S. Diekerson D. M. Dochery R. W. English W. T. Evving R. L. Flynn G. M. Furr H. Gatewood W. G. Gray J. Havens F. G. Haynes W. J. Henry E. H. Holder C. K. Hollis J. N. Jeffcoat J. O. Jones J. Jumper J. R. Kellum G. H. Kent S. D. Lebovitz H. R. Littleton K. A. McDougal L. M. McCalla W. D. McGeary M. D. Mims L. E. Moore M. P. Myers D. Nauger W. R. Orr R. H. Parker G. H. Pereskh H. E. Poole W. J. Prichard T. M. Purvis L. W. Richardson J. V. Sanford H. W. Scott L. A. Scon J. T. Shows E. T. Swindle F. R. Thompson J. B. Tram, or M. G. Turner R. C. Turner E. M. Watson R. P. White W. C. Wescott J. D. Woodward K. Yates H. T. Wilson F. B. Aylward D. L. Bernreuter W. H. Birdsong K. H. Bowen H. M. Brumfield T. Clark G. A. Darden E. B. Dukeminier C. E. Estes C. H. Freeman O. L. Garmon H. D. Gilliland J. S. Graddy E. C. Jones J. K. Lindsey J. A. Long H. W. Longino S. Mabry W. H. Mabry W. C. Massey A. E. May M. G. McLemore J. T. McMullan W. W. MONCRIEF F. A. Moore H. C. Pittman L. M. Randle G. M. Robertson B. Scabrough E. W. Scott W. E. Stucky H. E. Wood 118 B A T T R Y OFFICERS IN COMMAND H. W. Webster L. A. Conerly J. R. Smith . . H. V. Cooper . T. K. Trigg . . . . . Captain First Lieutenant First Lieutenant First Lieutenant First Lieutenant L. E. Claiborn . W. W. Duncan E. B. Hughes . W. H. Knox . . H. E. Tillman Second Lieutenant Second Lieutenant Second Lieutenant Second Lieutenant . First Sergeant J. R. Carpenter U. J. Carruth W. N. Dublin J. R. Eakens SERGEANTS R. P. French P. O. Guyton C. E. Holaday E. A. Maxwell I. Rossoff O. K. Stampley V. K. Wagner T. G. Wells ROSTER A. S. Alston B. J. Anderson O. K. Anderson W. W. Baker W. H. Banks F. J. Bertucci J. H. Biddy F. A. Birdsong J. N. Butler R. M. Butler W. B. Coley A. A. CORDILL E. R. Dandridge J. E. Davis R. E. Davisson M. M. Dejean W. L. Donald V. P. Easley R. L. Ebberman J. C. Ellis T. A. Fields S. D. Findlay T. Funderburk L. L. Gober J. E. Goolsby G. P. Grieshaber F. G. Haley R. R. Hamilton P. G. Hogan D. L. James D. C. Jarvis R. M. Johnson T. F. Jones E. D. Jordan J. J. King W. F. La Hatte J. IE Martin V. G. Martin J. Maschek C. F. Matthews W. D. Maxey R. B. May G. A. Mixen W. L. Montgomery R. E. Moore N. D. Patterson R. P. Richmond B. Rush R. E. Sadler M. W. Seabern L. Segal L. C. Wailes J. C. Welburn R. J. Whitacre J. T. Whiteside M. WlLBOURN N. H. Wood C. Yeates A. A. Barthes W. G. Bernhardt W. C. Bounds J. R. Carpenter H. T. Critz E. A. CUTRER P. II. Decker L. D. Edwards E. G. Ellis S. G. Green B. (iROCHAL C. H. Hearon R. M. Holder J. C. Jefferies R. M. Kaiser C. W. Kitchens C. O. Little D. A. Lowe M. J. Marble A. H. McJaurine F. K. McNeel B. B. Nye J. L. Page W. R. Perkins J. T. Pugh J. D. Ray W. R. Rector N. M. Rogers M. Rouse H. G. Smith T. M. Smylie W. G. Stewart P. L. Thigpen W. D. Thompson J. M. Wilson R. G. Freeman II. D. Stepp C. H. Poindexter 1 t KW y, PIPS B A T T R Y K OFFICERS IN COMMAND M. Y. Mullen Captain J. U. Blanchard First Lieutenant C. C. Bryan First Lieutenant J. 0. Dorsett First Lieutenant J. Robertshaw First Lieutenant W. O. Courtney First Lieutenant C. J. Grohoski First Lieutenant E. M. Patterson Second Lieutenant W. B. Musselwhite Second Lieutenant T. W. Barnett First Sergeant W. H. Bobb M. W. Bond B. L. Breeme W. A. Clarke SERGEANTS W. J. Crecink W. H. Howell R. G. James A. K. Lovett H. T. Nagle V. J. Rogers H. Stone T. Allison O. L. Austin R. P. Aylward L. Brock R. L. Buckley J. W. Butler W. A. Chesledon T. J. COHERN C. A. Commander W. N. Craig A. F. Donns V. V. Eason C. H. Edwards H. C. England J. S. Ferretti W. C. Freeman G. L. Harper J. G. HlLLIS II. L. Hennington W. H. Hester S. V. Hinson C. H. Hopkins E. E. Jones ROSTER A. Jordan W. Lea B. A. Ledbetter R. M. Lamason J. L. Lewis W. J. Lutz II. O. Massey A. Moore J. W. Moorehead L. Morris F. C. Myers W. W. Nicholson C. L. Cakes E. E. Parker W. H. Peale R. C. Pryor W. F. Rea F. E. Rich J. C. Rich J. L. Ricks E. D. Robinson E. P. Rubenstein T. H. Scarborough L. S. Woody W. L. Seage P. W. Shaw F. S. Skinner G. C. Speed C. E. Stevens G. R. Townsend K. A. Thigpen B. M. West E. J. Sterden G. M. Darnell J. C. Hill D. P. Anderson P. L. Banks A. L. Brothers M. B. Butts R. T. Carlisle G. I. Clark T. B. Cleveland J. W. Cullen R. W. Davis D. L. Dean J. P. Duke W. H. Ewart R. V. Gordon T. W. Hardy M. H. Harper D. D. Hulsey T. G. James H. B. Jones E. G. Laughlin E. P. Mathews R. A. McCarley M. E. McPherson W. J. McRoy T. R. Nelson V. D. Nixon J. W. Pepper J. Phillips R. Stott W. II. Ward R. E. Watts M. C. Welch P. L. Wells E. B. Werkheiser N. M. Whitten W. W. Zenfell -. ' i ?£? , SEr ' .- B A T T R Y L OFFICERS IN COMMAND P. R. Davis Captain J. C. Mii.ton First Lieutenant O. K. Batte First Lieutenant S. Reynolds First Lieutenant J. W. Ewing First Lieutenant E. M. Stii.es W. H. Brock Second Lieutenant H. O. Crane Second Lieutenant C. D. Hood Second Lieutenant W. B. Pearson Second Lieutenant J. M. Ai.ford Second Lieutenant First Sergeant SERGEANTS C. R. Boone C. E. Browning N. W. Davis H. B. Day J. C. Ebbersoi.e J. S. Gibson E. M. Graham L. W. Guy T. C. Henderson R. B. Johnson W. I. Keary J. E. Windham C. A. Glover p. - ROSTER J. A. Alford H. R. Andress W. A. Aust J. Ball L. H. Barnett A. T. Bogen E. E. Bolls C. A. Bracg J. W. Burress H. Caraway W. H. Clarke E. M. Deupree H. W. Dille C. P. Downer K. W. Drake L. L. Edwards J. E. Elliott J. W. Emmons J. L. Fullingame J. W. Gallaspy E. H. Greer R. S. Hall W. W. Hamilton R. A. Hammer J. D. Hayden M. J. Hemby L. G. High J. W. Hudson V. C. Irby W. E. Leicii W. C. ElNDLEY H. C. Maye J. L. McRae W. B. Oliver L. A. Pepper S. L. Ragland M. O. Teeves C. K. Stafford J. F. Sterns M. R. Stevens H. L. Suber E. Taylor W. B. Taylor F. M. Teachout W. E. Thaxton Y. B. Tiley M. N. Townsend T. A. Trotter J. A. Tyson P. P. Vail W. IF Weeds W. E. Weems F. Wingate J. R. Yerger D. F. Sadler J. C. Walker J. P. Patterson C. W. Hamilton W. A. Horne J. W. Abernathy W. H. Boone W. F. Brock W. H. Brown S. F. Comings J. P. Edwards W. K. Gillmore J. R. Harris G. O. Harrell J. C. Hathorne G. IF Holladay P. C. HOLLOWELL C. C. Jeffuies E. C. Lea J. W. Logan E. D. McCai.l J. K. McCown L. J. B. Mestier T. W. Moore B. C. Nickles R. E. Rankin W. F. Reeves G. M. Rowland A. F. Smith C. O. Smith R. A. Tate G. A. Teunison H. S. Thompson F. S. Toomer J. H. Turner J. 0. Watson R. P. Field J. C. Goofrum LT 1 1 1 — 99QHK ™? THE REGIMENTAL ROSTER J. H. Bailey G. H. Baker W. E. Barbee J. H. Bennett F. G. Boggan R. Bowlus C. Brackin J. L. Bradley L. Bridges K. E. Brister W. H. Brister N. D. Brookshire G. T. Buck I. B. Cochrane S. R. Conner L. H. Crippen S. H. Crosby E. C. Cunningham M. J. Curran E. H. Currie J. B. Davis P. B. Dennis C. E. Dollfus I. L. Ellis H. E. Ervin A. Estess M. T. Evans N. A. Feltenstein G. B. Flagg F. W. Flanagan A. S. Gooch J. C. GOODRUM G. M. Grafton W. B. Halliday B. C. Haltom C. E. Hamilton J. Hannan J. R. Hardy M. B. Harthcock C. P. Haynes H. C. Hudson A. M. Jacob N. M. Jacob W. C. Joyner J. F. Lacy E. L. Lancaster J. Locke H. H. Lott R. M. Magee L. T. Mallette J. W. Marshall J. A. Martin D. M. McIntosh M. E. McRae M. D. Miller D. B. Moore J. S. Moore S. Myrick J. V. Pace E. B. Parmallee M. B. Perry R. L. PlGFORD A. W. Roberts C. M. Shipp B. Simmons J. B. Small M. D. Smith A. C. SOLOMAN C. P. Stroble W. G. Tabb J. R. Thompson L. Tyson W. C. Warner C. B. Williams ■?? ■, OFFICERS IN COMMAND J. B. Small Captain K. E. Brister First Lieutenant L. Bridges First Lieutenant J. A. Martin First Sergeant SERGEANTS B. C. Haltoai R. L. Pigford SPONSOR Miss Annie Louise Griffin DRUM MAJORS J. B. Small Head Drum Major D. B. Moore Assistant J. C. Goodrum Assistant S. H. Crosby Assistant J. Hannan Assistant H. E. WAMSLEY Director CADET BAND   The Regimental Cadet Band, commonly known as the Maroon Band, not only ranks as one of the best in the South, but it also ranks high on the list of the best in the nation. We are proud of our band, and highest credit should be given that untiring group of musicians who have so successfully carried high the standards of our school. The band is always on hand for the varsity games and helps keep the Old Mississippi State Spirit at the boiling point. No pep meeting or parade would be complete without the assistance of the band. H. E. Wamsley has been director of the band for a number of years, and is to be congratulated for his wonderful work. J. B. Small, Annie Louise Griffin (Sponsor), K. E. Brister, L. Bridges, J. A. Martin 123 ■■fii r ' ■■■- , fa mm THE CADETS CAMP... TWIN TOWERS Miss Lillian Abbott Miss Christine Smith Miss Evelyn Slaughter Miss Frances Schlater Miss Mary Capers Wilson Favorites Miss Marion oAderholdt Miss Hester Wolfe Miss Julia Prentice Miss oArahia Wooten Miss %uth Howorth Miss Jeanette Selman Miss oAlma Qarf enter Miss Florence euford Miss %elia % Kelly iss c R ose Helen Walker Miss £ a mile Summers Miss Lauton Marshall Miss Qrosie Heath Saunders Miss Susie Moore Miss ancy Trigg Miss Jane Owen Lucas Beauty as SELECTED BY PETTY boq COYLE AVENUE CHICAGO December 8th, 1936. Mr. J. R. Denton, Editor 1937 Hevellle, Mississippi State College, State College, Miss. Dear Mr. Denton: Herewith is our selection of the beauties in order, and we are putting it mildly when we say it was a tough job. Regarding a sketch for your beauty page, please accept this note as authorization to use any Esquire gag illustration that you see fit. Your engraver can reproduce this from the printed Esquire page. Hoping our choice is not at too great odds with local opinion,! beg to remain Yours sincere GBP J P.S. George B. Petty. Would appreciate receiving one of the books. as£ YEA! STATE Hulsey, Hogan, Gieger, Davis, Washburn Enthusiasm, born of victorious teams and concentrated efforts, burned deep in the breasts of the loyal student body this year, and with Head Cheerleader Bobby Davis leading his assistants in a variety of scenic acro- batics, the pep flowed to new levels. The colorful Major Sasse and his charging warriors beat a wide swath through the conference competition this season and the cheering sections reverberated with the assent of untold numbers. Vim, vigor, and vitality, proteges of the mighty Apaches, marched shoul- der to shoulder with the State student body as our teams met the foe. Spirit this year undoubtedly inscribed a new arch in the annals of sports history, and with this reborn attitude still manifest in a majority of undergraduates, even new heights are in sight for future years. To the students pictured above, we extend heartiest congratulations and profound appreciation for a task well done. Stone, Reagh, Hight, Steadman, Armstrong, Caldwell, Day Downing, Gelatka. Gray, Hawken, Inman, Keenan, Lott Moak, Mollere, Pickle, Saia, Sanders, Soloman, Walters Ward, Wielgosz, Wood, D. D., Hardison, Meigs, Price, Thames Mullins, Bonner, Murray, Mauldin, Dixon, Stubbs, Woods AN HONORARY ATHLETIC CLUB COMPOSED OF MEMBERS WHO HAVE EARNED THE COVETED VARSITY M IN ONE OR MORE MAJOR SPORTS AND HAVE MAINTAINED ALL NECESSARY SCHOLASTIC STANDARDS Members SENIOR MEMBERS C. H. ARMSTRONG R. S CALDWELL U. L. DAY W. C. DOWNING W. L. FURLOW C. T. GELATKA M. G. GRAY C. W. HAWKEN F. T. HIGHT C. P. INMAN J. R. KEENAN S. A. LOTT J. B. MOAK L. A. MOLLERE I. B. PICKLE 0. W. PITTMAN J. N. REDDOCH 1. C. REAGH C. J. SAIA H. A. SANDERS M L B £M embers C. W. STEADMAN O. P. STONE W. L. SOLOMAN J. F. WALTERS R. B. WARD S. F. WIELGOSZ D. D. WOOD JUNIOR MEMBERS R. C. HARDISON R. MEIGS D. B. PRICE R. W. THAMES H. M. MULLINS T. W. BONNER F. B. MURRAY N. W. MULLER J. D. MAULDIN W. V. DIXON A. B. STUBBS W. T. WOOD Officers 0. P. Stone President 1. C. Reagh Vice-President F. T. Hight Secretary C. W. Steadman Treasurer GRADUATE MEMBERS E. S. TOWLES, JR. G. W. FATHERREE INITIATION IN THE M CLUB IS ONE OF THE MEMORABLE EVENTS OF THE YEAR BEING WITNESSED BY AN APPRECIATIVE AUDIENCE OF FACULTY MEMBERS AND STUDENTS ALIKE !■■■■■ZrSmM T he awt y ai -e i Maroons Attain National Recognition Mississippi State blazed another trail last football season to rise from near hundredth in the national football list to nineteenth as ranked by the stiff Dunkel and Williamson system. Glory is due to courageous playing of the football men, as well as the personal brilliance of Coach Sasse and his talented staff. All of State College played a part in this phenomenal rise. State ' s sudden success was not entirely unheralded, for during the season of 1935 the Maroon Bulldogs had tumbled two of the nation ' s mightiest in surprise upsets — Alabama and Army. This year, however, the Maroons added general excellence to their flashiness, in losing only two games in a ten-game schedule, winning seven and tieing one, for the best record since 1917. So impressive was the record of the Mississippi State gridders that the Orange Bowl game com- mittee selected them to represent this section of the South in the annual intersectional battle against Duquesne, the team that licked the invincible Pitt. Although the Maroons dropped the Orange Bowl tilt by a single point, their standing was not lowered in the light of Mississippians ' eyes, and homage is still being paid to the greatest football team produced by this state in decades. Nor is it thought that the 1936 record is a flash in the pan ; but rather that the Maroon standard will be carried to even farther heights by the future men of State College. old en E gg   A snarling Bulldog bested Ole Man Jinx in the Ole Miss game last fall, but was all smiles when he claimed the coveted Golden Egg. State now holds undisputed possession for the first time in the history of the trophy. The Golden Egg, purchased by Ole Miss and State in 1926 to further good will, rested here on only one other occasion, for half a year, based on the 7-7 tie of 1929. Following its alarming and mysterious disappearance this year, a diligent search revealed that Chick Hosch had only put it away after the annual football banquet for safekeeping. Now that State has the flighty and slippery egg, it intends to hang onto it. SASSE CALDWELL BUTTS JOHNSON HLIMPHREY : i «f :: i - « A •A c btate ' s oaching Staff Having been presented in 1936 with the best season since 1917, by perhaps the best athletic leaders State has ever known, the powers that be are wisely retaining every member of the coach- ing staff for the 1937 season: Major Ralph Sasse, head coach; Major Ross MacKechnie, backs; Frank Carideo, kickers; D. W. Aiken, ends; and Captain John Stokes, line. FATHERREE SASSE STOKES AIKEN CARIDEO I .nd the Varsity Oquad Here is a fine group of football players that responded to the call of the pigskin early last fall. With many Seniors as a nucleus, this squad produced one of State ' s most powerful and versatile teams. Sheer brilliance in every department of the game — brilliance radiating from a group of individual stars willing to sacrifice personal glory for the success of the unit — gave State one of its greatest seasons in football history. A large number of these players are Seniors, and have played their last game of collegiate football. Our hats are off to these men for their brilliant work, which has helped put State high in the ranks of the football world. Some of these men played on the undefeated and unscored-on Freshman team of 1933. Since that time these players have given their very best in order to carry State to victory. The remainder of this squad, plus the 1936 Freshmen, and Freshmen to come, will be responsible for not only holding our present record, but also for carrying State on to further glory next year and years to come. m m DAY (Manager) ARMSTRONG (Co-Captain) DR. WENDLER (Team Physician) KEENAN (Co-Captain) CANNON (Manager) The remnants of the un- defeated frosh squad of 1933 comprised the nucleus of the squad this season, and in passing through the halls of graduation leave in their wake the best record compiled by a Maroon team in two decades. Following the most successful season since 1917, the men of Sasse topped it off with a superb performance in the famed Orange Bowl classic, only to be nosed AN ACCOUNT OF THE GAMES out in the fading moments when Duquesne scored on a desperate pass. The final score was State 12, Duquesne 13. Next year State plays Duquesne on the regular schedule. STATE 20— MILLSAPS A light and stubborn Millsaps eleven supplied the opposition in the opening game of the season, but the Maroons took the fighting Majors in tow with a 20-0 victory that saw practically every man on the squad take the field. Freddie Hight, fast stepping halfback, was the spear- head of the running attack and scored the first touch- down of the season on a short pass. Chuck Gelatka brought the score to 13-0 at half time with a dazzling run of forty-five yards after taking in a pass from Ike Pickle. The third and final score came with a majority of the regulars sitting on the bench, and resulted through a pass from Armstrong to Edwards, a sophomore end. STATE 35— HOWARD The 1936 grid machine was given another test run, and performed as expected in turning back the scrap- ping Howard eleven. Dennis Cross, sophomore sensa- tion, turned in the longest run of the season in dashing 98 yards to a touchdown with the third period kick-off. Placement by Pickle moved the score to 14-0, Chuck Gelatka having sped 37 yards with a pass to open the scoring. Howard elected to receive and after an exchange of punts, State took the oval on the Hilltopper 35-yard line. Pickle and Hight hit the line for 15 yards before Gelatka picked up 10 more with another pass. Hight ■■).,«••- -  BURCH BUTLER CALDWELL CROSS DIXON AN ACCOUNT OF THE GAMES drove to the 10-yard stripe, and after two attempts Cross went over for the third touchdown. Second and third stringers turned in another score during the third period after taking a fumble on the 35-yard marker. Bernie Ward and Bobby Thames drove to the six-yard line, a penalty placed the ball on the one, and from here Thames drove through the line. Dixon converted. The final score came in the fourth period with Dixon going over for the score. The Maroons chalked up 20 first downs to Howard ' s 5, and never allowed the visitors to get within the 25-yard stripe. STATE 0— ALABAMA 7 One perfect play on the part of the Alabama offense sent their ace back, Joe Kilgrow, spinning down the sidelines for 83 yards and the lone score of this thrill- packed game. The revenge was sweet for the Crimson Tide, State having completely humbled them the pre- vious year by taking a 20-7 victory. Other than this brilliant play offensive movements favored the Maroons, as Alabama gained but 62 yards on the combined efforts of passing and running plays during the rest of the tilt. The State eleven turned in a total of 156 yards gained during the afternoon. State hammered away at the Crimson goal line all afternoon, but lacked that final spark. On three oc- casions the Tide intercepted passes over their goal line to put an end to a concentrated drive in each instance. Though the entire team played inspired football, the work of Alex Lott, David Price, Dennis Cross, Johnny Moak and Bob Hardison stood out. STATE 32— LOYOLA Before a capacity crowd which poured into Meridian ' s new stadium for the inaugural game, the Maroons ran through the Loyola Wolfpack and won handily by a 32-0 score. Only once did the Loyola team have pos- session of the ball in State territory and that came with only four or five minutes to play. This incident ended on the State 46-yard line when the Wolves were forced to punt. Victor Dixon proved the sensation of the game, scor- ing one touchdown and tossing two scoring passes. After Steadman crashed the line for the lone first pe- riod score, State came to life and the fireworks started. Dixon flipped a pass of 32 yards to Pickle who went over standing up, and in a few minutes fired one to EDWARDS GELATKA GRAY HARDISON HIGHT AN ACCOUNT OF THE GAMES Cross for a similar distance and another score. Pickle kicked both extra points. Pickle romped 21 yards for another score shortly after the half opened, and the score stood at 26-0. Sasse sent in another team at this point and though the Maroons kept threatening the Loyola goal, only one other score was made. Dixon tallied on an end sweep late in the final quarter. Christian University to a scoreless deadlock in a sea of mud. The Staters were favored to win and probably would have done so had the heavily soaked field not kept the fleet-footed backs of Sasse from performing up to par. A steady rain held the crowd to a minimum number but the five hundred or more students who made the long trek to Dallas braved the elements and sat cheering throughout the affair. The work of A. B. Stubbs at the safety post, and the sensational kicking of Bobby Hardison were the highlights of the game. STATE 0— T. C. U. As the feature of Mississippi Day at the Texas Cen- tennial the Maroons battled the Horned Frogs of Texas STATE 68— SEWANEE Probably before the team left the showers on that wild Saturday afternon in Jackson, the statisticians were diving back through the records to learn just how much of a record the Maroons did set in swamping the Se- wanee Tigers by a 68-0 score. The Maroons scored at will, running over four touch- downs in the opening half and six in the final semester. Of the ten attempts at extra point conversions, eight were successful. Bernie Ward was the offensive threat of the afternoon, accounting for three of the scores and figuring prominently in several others. Bob Hardison scored the first touchdown ere the game was many min- utes old, and shortly thereafter Charlie Armstrong ran around end for another. In the second period after Armstrong had a gain scored, a triple pass, Caldwell to Dixon to Ward, was good for 60 yards and a score. As the third period opened Armstrong passed to Stubbs for a score, making it 34-0, and in a few minutes Ward whipped into a hole at tackle, cut back and romped 60 yards to go over standing up. Shortly after the kick-off Ward again dashed over for a score, his second in five minutes. During the fourth quarter Fred Wal- ters took in two passes for touchdowns and Bobby Thames dashed over for the tenth and final score. STATE 0— L S. U. 12 The rugged power of the L. S. U. Tigers proved too much for the Maroons for the second straight year, and LATHRAM m0? LYNCH AN ACCOUNT OF THE GAMES the final score favored the Bayou Bengals, 12-0. The first touchdown came on a freak play. Tinsley took a pass from Coffee which Price diverted into his arms, and ran over from the five-yard line. A tough break disheartened the Staters and robbed them of a score. Ward took in a twenty-one-yard heave from Armstrong, but the officials ruled that he went out on the one-yard line as he made the catch. Stubbs, too eager for the score, fumbled on the next play and L. S. U. recovered. Rhom, sensational sophomore of L. S. U., dashed 45 yards through a hole at left tackle to score the sec- ond touchdown of the game. The Maroons came back fighting from the next kick-off when A. B. Stubbs took the oval on his own 10-yard stripe and dashed up the field behind perfect interference. Reed, safety man for the Tigers and the last man between Stubbs and the goal, barely ran him out of bounds on the Tiger 41- yard mark. After two attempts at the line had failed, State continued the march with a successful aerial thrust only to bog down on the Tiger 25. Both teams were playing superb ball, with fumbles, due to terrific tackling, coming frequently. For State the work of Chuck Gelatka, Alex Lott, A. B. Stubbs, and Armstrong was outstanding, though it might well be said that the entire team played inspired and com- mendable football. STATE 26— OLE MISS 6 The supposedly impregnable citadel of Ole Miss ' football regime over State crumbled that memorable Saturday afternoon before the furious charges of Major Sasse ' s colorful eleven, carrying with it the demolish- ment of the classic ' s most celebrated winning streak — ten straight. An estimated crowd of 21,000 looked on as the Ma- roons fought their way to a glorious 26-6 victory, and in so doing gained undisputed possession of The Golden Egg, grid trophy for which the Rebels and State battle each year. This is the first time in the history of the cup that State has held undisputed possession, and on only one occasion for six months, following the 7-7 tie in 1929, has State placed the trophy in the local col- lection. Striking ere the game was three minutes old, the Maroons rushed Bill Steadman through a hole at tackle for the opening touchdown. A strong wind and the kicking of Ike Pickle set the stage for the score. After three kicking attempts, the ball rested inside the Ole MOLLERE PICKLE PITTMAN PRICE REDDOCH AN ACCOUNT OF THE GAMES Miss 5-yard line. Peters managed a kick into the wind that settled on the Rebel 24, and from here the Ma- roons went to town. Fred Hight whipped a pass to Chuck Gelatka that netted 14 yards. Hight then plowed through the line for seven yards, and came right back for two more. With the oval resting on the one- yard mark, Steadman went over and the crowd went wild. Pickle converted. Ole Miss pushed over a touchdown in the third pe- riod and for a time it looked like a traditional Ole Miss-State score. However, in the fourth quarter the Maroon stock market hit a new high and before the crowd actually realized what happened the Maroons were out front by an even 20 points. Chuck Gelatka captured a loose ball on the Ole Miss 20-yard mark and after three passes had failed Ike Pickle took in a heave on the Ole Miss 8-yard stripe and fought his way over. Again Pickle kicked the extra point. State picked up steam a short time later on the Ole Miss 47, and after charging to the 6, saw a pass inter- cepted. However, on the next play Ole Miss fumbled and Bob Keenan recovered for the Maroons. In two plays Bob Hardison punched over a score but the point was missed. The crowd rose as one person when Charlie Arm- strong went in late in the game. Armstrong was suf- fering from a torn shoulder, received in the L. S. U. game, and for a time it was feared his grid days were over. Purely for sentimental reasons, perhaps, Sasse let the Maroon co-captain enter the game. Armstrong cov- ered himself with glory, however, for after a thrust at the line by Hardison, he faded back and whipped a bullet pass some 34 yards to Dennis Cross who ran through three of the opposition for a touchdown. At this point Sasse removed Armstrong and the crowd ac- claimed him. A short time later the game ended, dropping the curtain on the first State victory over Ole Miss since the 6-0 affair in Jackson in 1925. STATE 32— MERCER Playing the final home game of the season before a crowd of some 4,000, the Maroons ran over the Mercer Bears by a 32-0 score. A large crowd of high school students from all sections of the state was in attendance, enjoying the first High School Day, scheduled from now on as an annual event. After being held scoreless during the first quarter, the Maroons came to life and tallied twice in the second period. The scoring opened as Hardison went over from the six-inch line, climaxing a 64-yard drive. Pickle SCOTT SEALES STEADMAN STUBBS THAMES AN ACCOUNT OF THE GAMES took in a pass on the previous play and went out of bounds just short of a goal. Hardison also scored the second touchdown from the 3-yard stripe where Ward had carried it from deep up-field. Just after the third period got underway, Ward broke through and romped 65 yards to a score, his second long scoring-thrust of the season. One minute later, Fred Walters produced a touchdown single-handed on a spectacular play. He rushed in, blocked an attempted punt and caught the ball in mid-air. He went over without being touched and the score stood 26-0. The final touchdown came in the fourth period with the third and fourth stringers playing. But five plays were used in driving 60 yards, with Bob Caldwell going over for the score. Bobby Thames barely missed a score in the closing minutes by streaking 55 yards to the Mercer 32-yard stripe where he was chased out of bounds. Two plays later the game ended with the Maroons in possession of the ball on the Mercer 27-yard line. STATE 7— FLORIDA The Maroons cinched fifth position in the South- eastern Conference race by pounding out a 7-0 victory over the University of Florida in the final game of the year. The game was but a few minutes old when State struck for the only score of the contest. Dave Price, veteran center and a bulwark in the State line all year, dropped on a fumble about midheld. On the first play Bernie Ward faded back and whipped a pass to Ike Pickle who took the oval on the 10-yard mark while in full stride. Ike went over without being touched and came back to kick the extra point. Sasse sent in a full team shortly after this and left them to finish the half. The Maroons seemed content to hold their lead and played methodical and orthodox football. In the third period the Florida eleven threat- ened to tie the score when a pass from Ward was in- tercepted on the Florida 30-yard line. A series of short passes and end runs placed the ball in scoring distance but Ward batted down a pass on the 1-yard line and on the next play intercepted another heave. The statistics again favored the Maroons, showing 10 first downs to 5, and ran up 245 yards gained to 78 for the Gators. The fast charging line of the State team nullified the celebrated passing attack of the Flor- ida team, giving State an advantage in this department also. Thus the season ended with the Maroons sporting 7 wins, 2 losses, and a tie, for the best record made by a Maroon eleven in nineteen years. THOMPSON WALTERS WARD WEED WEILGOSZ FRANK CARIDEO Coach STONE BASKETBALL Although the basketball team this year was rated as one of the strongest in the conference and one of the most versatile in the history of the sport at State, the squad faltered in the home-stretch and fin- ished with a mediocre record. The team opened up with ten victories in the first eleven games, split the next six, and then dropped four straight to climax the sched- ule. The schedule this year was so arranged that the cagers played fifteen games in twenty days, with three of these days being Sundays. In conference play, the Maroons won six and dropped seven, after leading the circuit for the first three weeks of competition. The record against the traditional rival, Ole Miss squad, was the poorest in sev- eral seasons. After winning the first meeting, played on the local court, the Maroons went down the next night, and in a two-game return series played at Oxford the Rebels measured the State five in two close games. The Maroons opened the season against Mississippi College in a home game played before the Christmas holiday session and won out by a 36-25 score. Later in this same week the Millsaps Majors fell before the local five by a score of 32-16. Following the holidays the cagers took a ten-day trip that started in Florida and saw them swing up the Atlantic seaboard as far as Philadelphia. On the way home they stopped off at Washington to take the Catholic University team in tow by a 41-28 score. The long jaunt opened at Gainesville, with the Maroons downing the University of Florida crew in a two-game meeting. The first tilt ended 27-25, with a Frank Merriwell finish being added by Charlie Armstrong. In the waning seconds of the game the ace Maroon guard dropped in two long heaves that tied the score and put State in the lead as the whistle blew. In the second meeting, the Maroons experi- enced little difficulty in winning, 33-17. Traveling all day Sunday, the State team stopped at Durham, North Carolina, long enough to snap a seven-game winning streak off the Duke Blue Devils on the next night, 33-29. From Durham the locals rode some five hundred miles the next day to Philadelphia, where they dropped the first game of the season to the St. Joseph Col- lege cagers, 36-28. The trip home, including the Catholic University game, required three days, due to motor trouble with one of the cars. Consequently, the Maroons arrived home too late to meet the Louis- iana Tigers in a tentative game. However, the squad was sufficiently rested the next night to meet the Tigers in the regularly scheduled affair and dropped the strong bengal five on the short end of a 53-36 count. At the halfway period of the final half the score stood at 28 all. In the final five minutes the Maroons broke a 36-36 tie and dropped in seventeen points. Fred Walters and Crawford Grissom led the closing rally with six and eight points, respectively. Paced by the brilliant play of Charlie Armstrong, the Maroons ran over the Loyola Wolves in the opening game of a two-ply match by a 59-43 score. Armstrong tossed in 23 points, while his running mate in three sports for four years, Fred Walters, carried off the runner-up honors with a total of 17 points. The second game also found the Maroons winning, this time largely through the efforts of Walters and Grissom. The final score was 36-25. McMAHON WARD CATLEDGE The following night the locals dropped down to Jackson to meet the Millsaps Majors in a return match and won out, 49-27. The game was nip-and- tuck the first half, with the Maroons enjoying only a five-point lead, 23-18. However, during the second half the State five came to life and started hitting the wicker. Honey Stone led the scoring with eight- een points. The Ole Miss Rebels invaded the campus for the first of the annual four games and dropped the locals on the first night by piling up a lead in the last few minutes which a desperate rally by the Maro ons couldn ' t quite overcome. The score ended 40-37. Though Stone and Armstrong led the scorers for the night with 13 and 11 points, the whole Rebel team turned in fairly high scores and then won out. In the second game, the Maroons reversed the order and tripped up the Red and Blue team with a 43-34 victory. Walters carried off scoring honors in this match with 15 points. Poole was best for the visitors and scored 14 points. The State five led all the way, enjoying a 26-16 lead at the halfway mark. The next games were played with Tulane furnish- ing the opposition, and saw the locals get an even break. State won out in the first game by a 10- point margin, 39-29, with Orville Stone dropping in 16 points. On the next night the Green Wave re- versed the order and won out, 41-29. This was the first time a Tulane team has won over a State five in three seasons. PITTMAN BONNER ARMSTRONG WALTERS From New Orleans the Maroons moved to Baton Rouge, where they met the L. S. U. Tigers in a return series. The Bengals won the opening game with a last- minute spurt, 42-41. Bryan, Tiger ace, dropped in a field goal with but twenty seconds to play. The second game was just as much a thriller, with Fred Walters in the hero role. With L. S. U. leading, 38-37, Walters was fouled. Calmly he stood on the free pitch line and dropped in two free pitches that moved the Maroons into the lead by a single point. On the way home from the Louisiana invasion, the State squad stopped off in Jackson long enough to measure the Mississippi College five in an exciting game. The score ended 46-42, with Charlie Armstrong and Fred Walters leading the scoring. The Mexico City Y. M. C. A. team was next encountered on the local court, and fell before the Maroon second team in a colorful affair by a 41-16 score. The game was much better than the score indicates. The Alabama Crimson Tide opened the annual series with the locals and won out, 32-20. On the next night the State team journeyed to Tuscaloosa and went down again, Alabama winning by a 37-28 score. To close the schedule the Maroons met the Ole Miss squad and were dropped on successive nights. The first game favored the Red and Blue by 36-34, while the second game ended 42-50. In the conference play-off, State met the undefeated Georgia Tech five and were eliminated, 43-30. GRISSOM BOXING AT STATE The season ' s record of the Maroon square-ringers for this year was disappointing, and did not measure up to the usual high stand- ards of State boxing teams, due largely to the number of inexperi- enced men on the squad. However, the name of our school was carried to national heights as Harry Moon Mullins, heavyweight fighter, won out in the annual conference tournament and then went on to California to annex the national collegiate heavyweight crown. The team improved as the year progressed, but by the time Coach Hugh Whitaker had taught his men the primary fundamentals of the game, the squad had dropped five bouts. They wound up the schedule, however, by winning the last three matches on the card, and in doing so avenged two earlier season defeats. In all, State met five conference teams, but encountered only two of them in re- turn matches. In each instance the Maroons scored a victory and evened matters for the year. Two bouts with the strong Louisiana Tigers were cancelled, one because of the severe pounding several INMAN RAND LAMBERT t MOON MULLINS National Intercollegiate Champion, Heavyweight MURRAY CARROLL TAYLOR BOXING AT S TAT E of the local squad took in losing to Tulane the night before, and which would have pre- vented the Maroons from presenting full strength. The meet with the Bengals scheduled for the campus was called off because of conflicting tournament dates. State opened the season with the Florida punchers and went down 5-3. Mullins drew the only adverse decision he has received in collegiate fighting, losing on a foul. Next the Maroons opposed Tennessee and went down 6-2. In this match Mullins and Ruffing were victorious, Ruffing scori ng a knockout. On the way home from Tennessee, and after an all night drive, the Maroons stopped off at Tuscaloosa to meet the Crimson Tide. The Alabama squad pounded out a 6-2 win also, with Mullins and Tom Rand earning victories. State then met the strong Tulane Greenies and were defeated by a 7-1 margin. Mul- lins was the lone fighter to score a victory, defeating Jaubert. In previous bouts Jaubert had beaten Hapes of Ole Miss and the same Florida heavyweight Mullins lost on a foul. Ole Miss took the measure of the Maroons at Oxford with a 5 1-2 — 2 1-2 score, gaining several decisions which were doubtful even in the minds of the Ole Miss fans, as booing accompanied two of the decisions. Even had State been awarded a draw in these bouts the score would still have favored the Red and Blue. However, in the return go, State scored an exact reverse decision with one of our triumphs getting the cat calls. At Oxford, Mullins got a draw with Big Hapes, their ace fighter, as did Lambert and Ruffin. The other point was scored as Brent Murray won on a forfeit. On the local cam- pus, Murray, Rand, Mullins, and Ruffin won out and Taylor won on a foul. Carl Inman held Steve Wilkerson to a draw to score th? other point. The Centenary Gents were met and defeated in Jackson by a 5-3 margin, though State got off to a bad start in losing the first two rounds. Rand won on a default, and Alton Taylor scored a clean win to even matters. Thayer Lynch then put the State team in the lead with a triumph, and Carl Inman knocked his man out. Red Ruffin lost on a technical knockout, but Moon Mullins was given his bout on a default to bring the final score to a 5-3 standing. Alton Taylor, a sophomore, proved the find of the year and showed improvement with each bout. In his first year of fighting Taylor went to the finals of the conference tourney and lost out by the barest of margins. RUFFIN HENDERSON LAUGHLIN The Irack s eason Despite the fact that the Maroon track team did not win either of the two dual meets on the schedule, considerable improvement was mani- fest in the 1936 team and State ' s march down the comeback-trail passed another milestone. The initial meet of the year was held on the campus with the Ole Miss Rebels furnishing the opposition. State lost a close decision, being nosed out in the final event by a single point. Going into the relay with the Maroon thin-clads out front by four points, the Red and Blue put on steam to win the four-man event and the meet. The score for the match was 59-58. In the other match, held at Tuscaloosa against the University of Alabama, State went down before the fast stepping Crimsons by a 72-40 count. Of the fourteen events, the Maroons landed but four men in first place, while they halved the second division honors with the Tide at seven spots. Nat Muller turned in a perfect record for the day in carrying off first place laurels in the pole vault and the high jump. Only one other contestant equalled this record for the day. Godfrey of the Tide won out in the 440 and the 220-yard dashes. R. P. Ellis, who took first in the mile and two-mile against the Rebel team earlier in the year, led the pack in the one-mile event and turned in the fine time of 4:25. Bay Stringer accounted for the fourth first-place honor won by State in taking the running broad jump with a leap of 21.7. Ike Pickle, sensational halfback, donned track togs and added an- other varsity sport letter to his collection. In the Alabama meet he accounted for two of the seven second places, scoring in the dashes. He finished behind the speedy Joe Riley in the 100-yard event, and came second to Godfrey in a close finish in the 220-yard dash. Against MULLER TOWLES REAGH MAULDIN Ole Miss, Ike took first place honors in the 220-yard dash and the running broad jump. His time in the dash was 22.7, while in the jump- ing event he registered 21 feet, 9 inches. Fifteen events were run off in the meeting with Ole Miss, held on Scott Field, with the Maroons taking eight first places and six second places. The Rebels won seven first places and came second eight times. At the time the relay was run, State held a slight advantage in having won eight events while the Rebels were winning six. With the score 58-54, Ole Miss won the mile relay and moved the score to 59-58. No second place is awarded in relays between two teams. State took the lead as Ellis romped home in the two-mile race, but Ole Miss came back with a double winner in the 220 low hurdles. The Maroons then captured first place in the quarter-mile and mile as Maul- din and Ellis won out. The Rebels gathered both second places and came back to carry off both places in the next event, the century dash. Ole Miss then won the 120 high hurdles, but Towles was second for State. Muller won the pole vault and Gelatka got second in the 880- yard dash to keep the score close. The same was true as Pickle won the 220-yard dash and Ole Miss won the high jump. State brought the score to 46-42, in favor of Ole Miss, as Henson and Pike captured both spots in the shot-put. The Rebels moved out front by two more points in winning the javelin, State getting second place. Pickle and Stringer then won first and second in the running broad jump to put the score at 53-51, with State in the lead. Carl Reagh heaved the discus 141 feet to increase the margin by two points, setting the stage for the mile relay and the thrilling climax. Prospects this year are even better, State having engaged W. O. Spencer, former Maroon star and twice a member of the U. S. Olympic team, as a full time track coach. Spencer coached the famed Slats Hardin while the latter was a member of the Greenwood high school squad. HENSON ELLIS WOOD HARDING o n the D lamond BASEBALL RESUME 1936 For the third straight year the Maroons tied up with the Alabama Crimsons for the conference pennant, only to have the Tide again get the best of the series and the championship. In fourteen games the Maroons turned in eight victories, were defeated five times and registered a 5-5 deadlock with the Alabama nine. A reversal of one of the Crimson defeats would have given State the flag for 1936. The Minnesota Gophers moved into the campus amid thunder showers to open the schedule. Wet grounds resulted in calling off the initial engagement, but the following day the teams met. The invaders from the North took the measure of the Maroons in a pitchers ' battle by a 3-0 score. Fred Walters accounted for two of the six hits the Maroons got. Armstrong and Ward handled the twirling for the State nine, with Armstrong getting credit for the loss. Ward pitched two innings without allowing a hit or a run. Another Big Ten team, Purdue, faced the Maroons in the next games and went down by scores of 14-1 and 4-3. In the first game State scored four runs in the opening inning and rang up five more in the eighth. Ward handled the pitching duties for the Maroons and gave only six hits in as many innings. Caldwell hurled no-hit, no-run ball in the three frames he worked, taking over the assignment with one out and the bases loaded. He forced the Purdue batter to hit into a double play to end the inning. In the second game, State pushed over a run in the first frame and held the lead until Purdue came through in the sixth with three scores. The runs came as the result of two walks, a sacrifice hit, and two errors. Though Walters actually hit a home run in the seventh, he was not even credited with a hit, being called out for missing first base. The act cost State two runs and a chance to take the lead. One run counted prior to this and left the locals behind by a single score. In the eighth, the State nine cinched the game with two runs as Carroll went safe on an error and Woods hit to left, scoring Carroll as the Purdue fielder erred on the play. Pillow singled Woods home with the winning run. The Maroons gathered nine hits, while Armstrong gave up but three. State opened the conference schedule at Baton Rouge and were defeated, 6-0, in a single contest, the second game being rained out. Brown, ace Tiger hurler, held the State team to three hits, while the Bengals pounded Armstrong for twelve. On the local field, State evened matters with the Tigers in the first return game, winning by a 4-3 score as Ward held the visitors to six hits. He was removed in the last frame, however, as the Bengals loaded the sacks on two walks and a scratch hit. Walters had a perfect day at bat, cracking out two triples in as many times up. State pushed over the winning run in the eighth after L. S. U. had tied the score at 3 all in their half. The second game of the campus series went to L. S. U. after Grohoski and Lockbaum hooked up in a twirling duel. L. S. U. opened the game with two runs but State evened matters in the second and the game stayed thus until the seventh, when the Tigers scored the winning marker. For the second straight year the Maroons made a clean sweep of the four games with Ole Miss. The victories at Ole Miss made it thirteen times straight that the Maroons have dropped the Rebels in their own back yard. The first meeting of the year, played at Oxford, saw the State nine dumping the Rebels by scores of 13-4 and 10-5. Armstrong gave up seven bingles in the first tilt while the Maroons had a field day in gathering nineteen blows. Armstrong led the team with a perfect day, 5 for 5. Caldwell was next with 4 for 6, and Walters pounded out 3 for 5. The Maroons scored 4 runs in the third frame and came back with 4 more in the fifth. In the second contest, Ward limited the Rebels to eight hits while the Maroons rang up an even dozen. Two runs in the first inning, 2 more in the fourth, and 4 in the sixth iced the game. The Alabama nine made a clean sweep of the Tuscaloosa series, winning by scores of 13-5 and 13-3. Armstrong was off form and gave up 18 hits in the first game. The Tide moved into the lead in the third inning with three runs and were never headed. In the second game, Ward and Grohoski bore the Tide assault. HAWKEN STEWART SPARKMAN STEADMAN FONDREN WARD Returning to the campus for the final Crimson series, the pitching of Armstrong was practically perfect as he gave up but two hits, both going to Boozer, Tide outfielder. Alabama scored first when Boozer singled, stole second, went to third on an error and came in on a long fly to center. State evened matters in the second and moved out front for the remainder of the game by scoring two runs in the fifth. The winning runs came as Victor Dixon crashed out a line drive to left with three men on base, Hawken and Pillow counting. The Maroons drove out nine hits. In the second Alabama game, State staged a ninth-inning rally that netted two runs and tied the score at 5-5. Two innings later the game was called on account of darkness with scoring still deadlocked. Alabama moved into an early lead by pushing over three runs in the second frame, and though State scored a run in their half and another in the fifth, the Tide added a run in the sixth and seventh and led by 5-2 going into the last half of the eighth. The Maroons scored one in the eighth and two in the final frame to tie the score. Ward and Grohojki hurled for the Maroons. Walters opened the ninth with a triple and Woods followed with a single. Stubbs singled Woods to second and Hight scored him with a double to right. Walters drove out three hits while Hight got four. In the final games of the schedule, played on the local field, the Red and Blue nine from Ole Miss went down again by scores of 13-10 and 5-2. State staged two big rallies in the first game, one in the third that wiped out a three-run deficit and netted six scores, and another in the seventh that brought in seven runs. At the time the seven- run barrage was laid down, Ole Miss was again in the lead with a 9-6 margin. Odd features of the game were manifest in that the Rebels outhit the Maroons by 7-6, and State erred nine times during the afternoon. Stubbs rapped out a home run and Fondren hit a double for the only extra base hits of the game. In the final game of the year, the Maroons marched through the Rebels for the ninth straight time, winning 5-2. An eighth-inning rally netted three runs and broke a 2-2 deadlock, after Ole Miss had pushed over a run in their half to tie the game. State opened up with two runs and held the lead until this point. Woods opened the eighth with a blast to left that went for three sacks. Stubbs scored him with a single, and Hight settled the affair with a home run to deep right field. Armstrong again turned in a stellar mound performance, giving up but three hits to the opposition. Woods led the hitters for the day with two hits in three attempts. With the bases loaded in the ninth inning, State executed a fast double play to end the game. C. R. DUDY NOBLE Baseball Coach The T ennis Iiacquet Cold weather and rain kept training periods to a minimum, and as a result the Maroon racquet wielders missed many hours of practice, a vital necessity in this sport, and finished the season with a record of four wins and six losses. The first two matches of the year, with Mississippi College and Millsaps, were rained out, leaving only ten meets on the roster. The season got underway with Furman furnishing the opposition and resulted in a victory for the visitors. The score ended 5-2. Oddly enough, the Furman netters won all the single meet- ings and the State team took both the double matches. Woodrow Bonner and G. W. Drane teamed up to score the first victory, and Eddie Harned and Oliver Smith turned the trick in the final setto. State lost both the conference matches on the sched- ule, bowing to Sewanee by a 7-1 score and to L. S. U. by a 7-0 margin. John St. Clair was the lone Maroon to score a conference victory, defeating his man in the Sewanee engagement. At L. S. U. a strong gale ruled the courts, with tennis playing practically impossible. State next encountered the Minnesota state cham- pions of 1935, Gustavus Adolphus College, and dropped the champions in an exciting match by a 4-2 score. Drane, St. Clair, and Harned won out in the singles competition, and Bonner and Drane teamed up to score a victory in the doubles. Birmingham-Southern next fell before the racquets of the locals in a 4-3 triumph, with State taking two singles matches and both the doubles. Bonner and Anderson won out in the individual playing, while Bonner teamed with Drane to win the initial double meet, and Anderson sided with Smith to take the other match. Louisiana Normal was victorious over the Maroon squad in a home-and-home meeting, winning on the local campus by a 4-2 score and on their own courts turned the trick with a 4-3 decision. In the match played here, Bonner and Harned turned in victories for the Maroons, while at Louisiana Normal, Bonner and St. Clair won singles play, and Bonner teamed with Drane for a doubles win. In the only match played with Millsaps, the Ma- roons won out by a 4-3 decision, with Drane, Harned, and St. Clair turning in triumphs in the singles divi- sions. In the double playing, Bonner and Drane teamed up for a win. Southwestern of Memphis took the local netters for a 5-1 victory on the local court, sweeping the singles competition and losing only to Bonner and Drane in the lone double match of the day. A match with Delta State Teachers was called off due to conflicting calendars of the two schools. Fiering, St. Clair, Drane, Harned, Smith, Bonner ■ry y -rr-ry , §S? W ft ' - ' - Ak.. J. I A CAMPUS VIEW $22 Wagner, Wylie, Perry, Biggs, Milton Batte, Spencer, Frank, Ellis, McLeod, Maxwell Reynolds, Sanders, ' Rucker, Feltenstem, Goldenberg INTERFRATERNITY COUNCIL Officers H. Sanders President Louis Spencer Vice-President Ed Maxwell Secretary-Treasurer Members Victor Wagner Yl K A . Walter Perry K A . . James Milton B K . . Louis Spencer 2 A E . Ben Ellis G. R. Ed Maxwell A T Q . Harold Sanders Ned Feltenstein Frank Wylie Walton Biggs O. K. Batte Dan Frank W. M. McLeod George Reynolds . K 2 L. O. Rucker, Jr. 2AM Fred Goldenberg 177 F R fl T R N T E Brister, K. E., Claiborne, Davis, L. H., Gooch, McRae, Moore, H. N., Small, Walrers Wadsworth, Weems, J. S., Wilkinson, Wood, ]. W., Wylie, Collier, Crook, Dollfus, French, R. H. French, R. P., Holladay, C. E., Martin, J, A., McCarley, Pritchard, Swain, W. B., Thompson, E. G., Wagner, B. K., Jr., Clark, G. E. Clark, Tucker, Davisson, R. E., Donald, F. L., Edwards, J. P., Ewart, W. H., Guenther, C. C, Carroll, G. B., Holladay, G. H., Ijams Jacob, Kisner, Moore, D. B., Nickles, Rector, Steinriede, Tabb, Wiggins, Andress Bailey, Beard, Bolls, Buckley, Butler, Robert. Chesledon, Crippen, Crosby, S. H.. Crumbley Cordill, Curran, Currie, Easley, Furr, Fisher, Harthcock, Hines, Bob, Harper Jones, O. H., King, Moore. Arthur, Oliver, Pace, Parker, R. H., Peale, Rea, Robinson Smith, M.. Spell, Stevens, C. E., Stevens, J. S., Thompson, F. R., Weems, W. E., Wilder, Williams, C. D. I 7 8 F R A T R N T E S GAMMA THETA CHAPTER Established September 17, 1927 PI KAPPA ALPHA Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity was founded at the University of Virginia on March I. 1868. Its colors are garnet and old gold; its Rower, the lily of the valley. F ' ratres in Facultate Maj. A. C. Cheslf.don H. L. Cole E. L. Lucas R. C. Weems Fratres and Promissi in Collegio K. E. Brister L. E. Claiborne, Jr. L. H. Davis A. S. Gooch Class of igjy M. E. McRae J. B. Small H. N. Moore J. F. Walters J. V. Newman J. R. Wadsworth J. N. Reddoch G. S. Weems, Jr. C. L. Wilkinson, Jr. J. W. Wood F. B. Wylie J. A. Collier Walter Crook C. E. Dollfus Hugh French R. P. French C. E. Holadav Class of 1938 J. A. Martin R. A. McCarley T. R. Prii chard W. D. Swain E. G. Thomason V. K. Wagner G. E. Clark Tucker Clark R. E. Davtsson F. L. Donald J. P. Edwards L. D. Edwards W. H. Ewari C. C. Guenther G. B. Harrell G. H. HOLLADAY Class of igjg M. W. IjAMS N. M. Jacob A. J. Kisner D. B. Moore D. C. NlCKLES W. R. Rector M. B. Steinriede W. G. Tabb C. N. Wiggins H. R. Andress W. R. Bailey J. C. Beard E. E. Bolls R. E. Buckley R. M. Butler Wayne Chesledon L. H. Crippen S. H. Crosby Class of 1940 L. S. Crumbley Bartlett Harper A. A. Cordill O. H. Jones M. J. Curran J. J. King E. H. Currie Arthur Moore V. R. Easley W. B. Oliver J. M. Furr J. V. Pace H. G. Fisher R. H. Parker M. B. Harthcock W. H. Peale R. D. Hines W. F. Rea C. D. Williams E. D. Robinson M. R. Smith H. E. Spell K. V. Stecker C. E. Stevens J. F. Stevens F. R. Thompson W. E. Weems H. W. Wilder •79 F R A T R N T S QD Q S Q Ahhott, Blanchard, J. U., Batton, Biggs, Chilton, Cooper, Culpepper, Denton Downing, Ford, Harbour, Harned, Hill, Holland, Hudson, Mullen, Perry Sherard, Smith, Yeates, Blanchard, J. A., Cameron, T. F., Cannon, Cannada, DePrater, Evans, M. T. Henderson, Hogan. Hulett. Hardy, Lovett, Lyle, Montgomery, Patterson, Price Tyson, L. H., Washburn, Wells, Carpenter, Critz, Dalehite, Decker, English, Foster Goodrum, Harper, Ingraham, Jeffries, J. C Jeffries, C. C, Knight, Lowe, Mitchell, Phelps Pennebaker, Paine, Smith, M. D., Smylie, Thompson, Welch, Brophy, Cameron, W. M., Evans, A. T. Garner, Greer, James, Jones, E. E., Leigh, Lutz, Myers, Parmelee, Pryor Overstreet, Rich, J. C, Rich, F. E., Seaborn, Sheffield, Tyson, J. A., Turner, West I 80 F R fl T E R N T E BETA TAU CHAPTER Established December 3, 1927 KAPPA ALPHA Kappa Alpha fraternity was founded at Washington and Lee University in 1865. Its colors are crimson and old gold ; its flower, the magnolia and the red rose. Fratres in Facultate W. J. Evans E. C. Henley J. F. Locke Mitchell Robinson Fratres and Proaiissi in Collegio Class of 1937 Jack Abbott J. U. Blanch ard A. A. Batton W. A. Biggs H. R. Chilton H. V. Cooper C A. Culpepper J. R. Denton W. C Downing F. E. Ford F. C. Harbour E. J. Harned F. F. Hill A. W. Holland H. C. Hudson M. Y. Mullen W. B. Perry J. G. Sherard J. R. Smith Z. L. Yeates J. A. Blanchard, Jr. T. F. Cameron, Jr. F. W. Canon H. Canada Class of 1938 W. A. DePrater M. T. Evans T. C. Henderson A. A. Hogan A. C. Hulett J. R. Hardy A. K. Lovett C. L. Lyle T. M. Montgomery V. M. Patterson R. E. Price L. H. Tyson W. C. Washburn T. G. Wells J. Carpenter H. T. Critz T. H. Dalehite P. H. Decker R. W. English Class of 1939 P. L. Foster J. Goodrum M. J. Harper C. J. Ingraham J. C. Jeffries C. C. Jeffries J. Knight O. A. Lowe C. B. Mitchell, D. Phelps Jr. C. E. Pennebaker S. E. Paine M. D. Smith T. M. Smylie J. A. Thompson M. C. Welch Class of 1940 W. E. Brophy W. M. Cameron A. T. Evans H. H. Garner E. H. Greer D. L. James E. E. Jones F. M. Leigh W. J. Lutz M. P. Myers E. B. Parmalee R. C. Pryor J. W. OVERSTREET J. C. Rich F. E. Rich M. W. Seaborn J. C. Sheffield J. A. Tyson R. C. Turner R. M. West F R ft T R N Batson, Batte, Brand, Buckingham, Caperton, H. B. , Cochran Lester, Pickle, Ross, Wilson, Cullen, Hammons, Hardin Horn, Kirhy, Milton, Murray, Swindle, Tillman, Walker Welch, Armstrong, Holder, Lindsay, Newell, Purvis, Ross 3ogen, Buckley, Caperton, R. G., Dockery, Ewing, R. B., Ewing, W. T., Hamilton, R. Hamilton, W. W., Lea, Luke, May, Mixon, Taylor 182 F R A T E R N T S ALPHA DELTA CHAPTER Established April 25, 1928 BETA KAPPA Beta Kappa fraternity was founded at H aniline University in October, 1901. colors are purple and gold ; its flower, the templar rose. Its R. P. COLMER H. D. Gunning Fratres in Facultate N. M. Hamlin L. S. Lundy H. P. Neal I. D. Sessums D. M. Batson O. K. Batte T. W. Brand H. B. Buckingham Fratres and Promissi in Collegio Class of 1937 M. R. Callahan H. B. Caperton D. V. Cochran W. D. Lester I. B. Pickle E. N. Ross R. L. Wilson J. W. Cullen F. Hammons J. W. Harding B. C. Haltoai W. M. Horn Class of 1938 C. D. KlRISY J. C. Milton H. S. Montague B. Murray A. B. Smith E. T. Swindle H. E. Tillman F. B. Walker P. W. Welch G. H. Armstrong J. W. Guress R. M. Holder Class of 1939 J. K. LlNDSEY S. D. Newell T. M. Purvis J. H. Ross C. B. Williams A. T. Bogen R. L. Buckley R. G. Caperton D. M. Dockery Class of 1940 R. B. Ewing W. T. Ewing R. R. Hamilton W. W. Hamilton Wm. Lea J. S. Luke R. B. May C. Mixon W. B. Taylor Graduate V. L. HOGGOTT 183 F R A T E R N E S Bailey, Bonney, Caldwell, Hawken, Robertshaw, Spencer, Trigg, Wheeler, Baird, G. E. Baird, J. B., Barnett, Bobb, Bradley, Flanagan, Frank, Glover, Hardee Harper, Harris, J. R., Kirk, McLaurine, Moore, J. S., Morrow, Page. Rather, Taylor, T. H., Jr. Wilburn, Woods, Allen, Bridgforth, Brookshire, Cox, Crawford, Evans Fedric, Hardy, Harris, G. M., Harris, C. K.. Holloman, Hulsey, Lacy, Melchior Mitchell, G. R., Mitchell, J. R., Moore, T. W., Ray, Scott, Smith, A. L., Turner, W. W.. Watkins, Whitten, M. Young, Bourne, Davis, Disharoon, Fields, Finlay, Gwin, Haynes Henry, King, Raper, Sadler, Taylor, J. C, Tiley, Varnado, Walker, West 184 F R ft T R N T MISSISSIPPI THETA CHAPTER Established March, 1887 Re-established in 1932 SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity was founded at the L niversity of Alabama in March, 1856. Its colors are purple and old gold; its flower, the violet. Fratres in Facultate H. P. Cooper A. S. Easley S. J. Few S. P. Garner W. F. Hand B. F. Hilbun W. H. KlNKAID D. M. McCain N. M. McCorkle Guy Nason W. R. Perkins Fratres and Promissi in Collegio R. K. Bailey R. T. Bonney R. S. Caldwell C. W. Hawken Class of 1937 J. Robertshaw L. C. Spencer, Jr. T. K. Trigg, III J. W. Wheeler Class of 1938 G. E. Baird, Jr. J. B. Baird W. T. Barneti Jr. W. H. Bobb, Jr. R. L. Bradley, Jr. F. W. Flanagan D. G. Frank W. L. Furlow C. A. Glover B. H. Hardee W W. S. Harper, Jr. J. R. Harris W. M. Kirk A. H. McLaurine J. S. Moore Woods, Jr. VV. H. Morrow J. L. Page L. A. Rather, Jr. T. H. Taylor, III S. W. WlLBURN Class of 1939 L. S. Allen R. M. Bridgforth, Jr. N. D. Brookshire Houston Cox, Jr. M. H. Crawford J. T. Evans E. C. Fedric T. W. Hardy G. M. Harris C. K. Harris J. D. Holloman D. D. Hulsey J. F. Lacy M. W. Lath ram G. W. Melchior G. R. Mitchell J. R. Mitchell T. W. Moore W. J. Prichard T. C. Rand J. D. Ray, Jr. W. J. ROBERSON E. W. Scott, Jr. A. L. Smith W. W. Turner R. M. Watkins J. P. WlLKERSON N. M. Whitten W. H. Young R. L. Bourne J. E. Davis G. L. Disharoon T. A. Fields Class of 1940 S. D. Finlay, Jr. J. D. Gwin C. P. Haynes W. J. Henry, Jr. A. K. King J. S. Raper R. E. Sadler J. C. Taylor W. B. Tiley H. R. Varnado J. C. Walker J. K. West 185 F R A T R N T Conger, Ellis, B. T., Gotcher, McLeod, Powers, Stubbs, A. B. Stubbs, A. F., Davidson, Embry, Golden, Mann, Martin, J. W,, Mauldin Maury, Melvin, Mesrier , Neal, Powell, Rutledge Sneed, Stewart, Watson, Birdsong, W. H., Chadwick, Colbert, Critz Darden, Fagan, Grafton, Harris, James, Moore McVey, Nixon, Turner, Wells, Wood, Alston, Birdsong, F. A. Ellis, I. C, Hitt, Sellers, Stuart, G. T., Stubbs, H, T., Topp 186 F R A T E R N T E GEORGE RIFLES George Rifles fraternity was founded at Mississippi State College in 1904. Its colors are red and blue ; its flower, the rose. H. H. Harned Fratres in Facultate C. R. Noble W. K. Stennis Mitchell Robinson H. E. Wamsley J. C. Conger B. T. Ellis Fratres and Promissi in Collegio Class of 1937 H. C. Gotcher C. H. Powers W. F. McLeod A. B. Stubbs A. F. Stubbs D. E. Davidson Jack Embry G. C. Golden, Jr. L. R. Mann Class of 1938 J. W. Martin L. J. B. Mestier J. D. Mauldin B. L. Neal J. B. Maury, Jr. J. K. Powell J. P. Melyin, Jr. Holcomb Rutledge J. C. Sneed W. G. Stewart, Jr. W. B. Watson W. H. BlRDSONG Lindsay Chadwick J. P. Colbert M. E. Critz Class of 1939 G. A. Darden T. G. James, Jr. J. H. Turner A. E. Fagan, Jr. G. B. Moore P. L. Wells G. M. Grafton Eric McVey H. E. Woods T. V. Harris Vaughn Nixon A. S. Alston F. A. BlRDSONG Class of 1940 Irby C. Ellis Jack Scales G. A. Hitt W. S. Sellers B. W. Pevey G. T. Stuart H. T. Stubbs Jack S. Topp, Jr. 187 F R A T E R N T Day, Gray, Hansen, Harris, J. R., Jobron, Longino May, Maxey, W. L., Ragland. W. E., Reynolds. G. M., Reynolds, S., Rousseau, Shipp Thames, Webb, Wilson, Barnett, Dennis, Gunn, Mathews Maxwell, Prather, Price. Smith, Stampley, Wesson, Allen Bennett, Carmichael, Craft, Dean, Green, Hicks, Martiniere Smith, H. G, Teunisson, Addington, Chappell, Davis, Dyle, Irby Jordan, Maxey, W. D., Ragland, S. L., Stallings, White, Woodward R ft T R N T ALPHA TAU OMEGA Founded at Richmond, Virginia, September II, 1865 Mississippi Epsilon Epsilon Chapter Established April 17, IQ3J Colors: Sky blue and old gold. Flower: White tea rose. L. L. Patterson Fratres in Facultate H. C. Simrall L. H. Fox K. WlTHINGTON U. L. Day M. G. Gray V. G. Hansen J. R. Harris Fratres and Promissi in Collegio Class of 1937 W. E. JOBRON H. W. Longino, Jr. E. A. May, Jr. W. L. Maxey W. E. Ragland G. M. Reynolds S. Reynolds T. H. Rousseau C. M. Shipp R. W. Thames S. M. Webb T. W. Wilson T. W. Barnett P. B. Dennis Class of 1938 J. W. GUNN C. M. Mathews E. A. Maxwell T. C. Prather D. B. Price J. D. Smith, Jr. O. K. Stampley, Jr. J. E. Wesson G. C. Allen J. H. Bennett Class of 1939 L. W. Carmichael R. R. Craft D. L. Dean S. G. Green C. F. Hicks E. D. Martiniere H. G. Smith G. A. Teunisson Class of 1940 W. L. Addington J. R. Chappell J. B. Davis H. M. Dyle V. C. Irby E. D. Jordan J. W. Leigh W. D. Maxey S. L. Ragland W. O. Reeves S. F. Stallings F. F. White J. D. Woodward 189 F R A T R N T E S Armstrong, Charles, Butler, M. M., Harrison, Hight, Howze, Mollere, Pittman, J. O., Roberts Sanders, Stone, Weissinger, White, Woods, Allen, Banks, P. L., Brewer, Butler, B. S. Fondren, Graham, Haynes, Hoover, Jenkins, McPherson, Rucker, Sugg Walker, Hubbard, McMillan, Wooten, Brumfield, Garmon, Jackson, Kellum Mcintosh, McNeal, McWilliams, Mitchel, Montgomery, Pittman, D. M., Pogue, Slaughter Taylor. Thomas, Weaver, Wise, K. O., Wise, S. B., Woodward, Bailey, Banks, W. H. Barbee, Bowlus. Burroughs, Butler, J. N., Childs. Harmon, Hays, LaHatte. Matthews McCarley, Moore, C, Musselwhite, Orr, Stratton, Stroble, Wilson, Wood, N. H., Yeates 190 R A T R N T S DELTA CHI CHAPTER Established March, 1936 KAPPA SIGMA Kappa Sigma was founded at the University of Virginia in 1869. Its colors are scarlet, white, and emerald; its flower, the lily of the valley. C. H. Armstrong M. M. Butler W. M. Harrison Fratres in Facultate Dr. G. D. Humphrey A. W. Garner W. H. Hubbard Dr. C. Q. Sheely E. J. Yelveton Fratres and Promissi in Collegio Class of 1937 F. T. Might H. W. Howze L. A. MOLLERE J. O. Pittman R. D. Roberts H. A. Sanders D. D. Wood O. P. Stone W. S. Weissinger H. E. White W. H. Allen P. L. Banks F. M. Brewer D. S. Butler Class of 1938 W. M. Fondren E. M. Graham, Jr. C. F. Haynes, Jr. C. W. Hoover, Jr. R. H. Jenkins C. W. McPherson L. O. Ruckf.r R. P. Sugg A. S. Walker W. E. Hubbard A. E. McMillan O. B. Wooten H. M. Brumfiei.d Bent Caffey O. L. Garmon J. H. Jackson J. R. Kellum Class of 1939 R. R. Lowe D. M. McIntosh F. K. McNeel R. N. McWilliams, III J. W. Mitch el, Jr. H. B. Montgomery D. M. Pittman I. I. POCUE J. L. Slaughter A. R. Taylor J. K. Thomas F. P. Weaver K. O. Wise S. B. Wise G. P. Woodward Class of 194.O J. H. Bailey W. H. Banks W. E. Barbee R. E. Bowlus W. T. Burroughs J. N. Butler T. E. Guilds Henry Batewood, Jr. R. M. Harmon Jack Hays W, W. F. LaHatte C. F. Mathews W. C. McCarley C. C. Moore L. S. Musselwhite E. Yeates R. W. Orr R. E. Stratton, III. C. P. Stroble, Jr. H. T. Wilson N. H. Wood i 9 i F R A T R N T S Goldenberg, Zachariah, Feltenstein, Rossoff Brown, B. H., Brown, W. H., Feldman, Burk Gordon, Arthur, Gordon, N. S. Green, R. Frank, Rothstein, Segal, L. 192 F R ft T R N T S SIGMA ALPHA MU Sigma Alpha Mu was founded at the College of the City of New York on November 26, 1909. It was pledged at Mississippi State College, October 12, 1935. Its colors are purple and white; its Mower, the purple aster. SIGMA PSI CHAPTER Pledged October 12, IQ35 Faculty Advisor Henry H. Leveck. Chapter Advisor Henry Meyers Fratres and Promissi in Collegio Class of 1937 Fred Goldenberg Max C. Zachariah Class of 1938 Ned A. Feltenstein Isidore Rossoff Bert H. Brown Class of 1939 William H. Brown Leon Feldman Simon Burk Arthur Gordon Class of 1940 Norman S. Gordon Frank R. Green Wilfred Rotstein Leon Segal 193 FRATERNITIES Friend , Prestidge , Barrett, Googe , Harris Murphy, Rogowski, Tillman, Upshur, Dukemimer Morgan, Scott, Whittington, C. A., Whittington, W. L., Algood Bedford, Ellis, Hill, Montgomery, Stewart 19+ R .V fl T R N I T SIGMA PI Sigma Pi fraternity was founded at Vincennes University in 1897. Its colors are laven- der, white, and gold as auxiliary; its flowers, lavender orchid with lilac, and white rose as auxiliary. MISSISSIPPI STATE COLONY Establislu-d March 14, jqj6 Dr. H. M. Trent Fratres in Facultate Dr. H. W. Ricke y Prof. F. E. Ekfelt Fratres and Promissi in Collegio Class of 1937 A. B. Friend, Jr. J. H. Prestidge, Jr. Class of 1938 C. A. Barrett J. E. Murphy C. R. Googe A. A. Rogowski K. D. Harris J. L. Tillman L. Upshur, Jr. Class of 1939 E. B. Dukeminier R. Stott, Jr. A. N. Morgan C. A. Whittington, Jr. W. L. Whittington H. L. Algood J. L. Bedford I. L. Ellis Class of 1940 A. J. Hill R. Montgomery A. O. Stewart 195 F R A T R N I T I S Weems, M. V., Hearon, Hogan, Moore, Saunders, Weems, M. H., Buford Chadwick, Critz, Green, Guyton, Lucas, A. L., Ames, Baird Crawley, Foster, Lucas, J. O. , Mclngvale, Tallichet, Trigg, Yarbrough CHI OMEGA Chi Omega fraternity was founded at the University of Arkansas in 1895. Its colors are cardinal and straw; its flower, the white carnation. PHI DELTA CHAPTER Established April j, Qj6 SORORES IN CoLLEGIO Class of 1937 Mary Virginia Weems Mary Hearon Elizabeth Hogan Class of 1938 Susie Moore Grossie Heath Saunders Margaret Weems Elise Buford Katherine Chadwick Class of 1939 Mozelle Critz Frances Stone Green Sarah Guyton Anne Louise Lucas Elizabeth Ames Sue Mildred Baird Celeste Crawley Pledges Adelaide Foster Jane Owen Lucas Bessie A. McIngvale Louise Tallichet Nancy Tricg Joy Yarbrough 196 F R H T R N T S dSSS MISSISSIPPI STATE COLLEGE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION STATE COLLEGE, MISS. Officers Dr. J. E. Adams, ' 04, President Boyle D. M. Yelverton, ' 30, J ' ice-President Jackson H. E. Allen, ' 35, } ' ice-President Jackson Wirt Carpenter, ' 93, Treasurer Starkville Executive Committee R. E. Aldrich, ' 15 Michigan City J. C. Stennis, ' 23 DeKalb R. B. Schlater, ' 05 Greenwood S. R. Evans, 26 Leland The Alumni Office Guy Nason, ' 05 Secretary Chas. H. Armstrong, ' 37 Assistant Miss Mary Hearon, ' 38 Assistant Miss Grosie Heath Saunders, ' 38 ... . Assistant Miss Lolise Tallichet, ' 40 Assistant Richard Buckley, ' ± Assistant ' Binding the Past with the Present for the Future of Mississippi State 199 O R G A N I Z A T I O N S Davis, Schlater, Wylie, Hosch, Batte Blanchard, Caldwell, Crosby, Culpepper, Davis Denton, Ellis, Frank, Holland, McLeod, Moore Mullen, Price, Ross, Small, Spencer Stone, Tillman, Walters, Wagner, Wheeler ORGANIZATIONS BLUE KEY Officers P. R. Davis President Miss Frances Sch later Sponsor Frank B. Wylie, Jr fife-President E. J. HOSCH, Jr Secretary-Treasurer Honorary Members T. B. Fatherree G. D. Humphrey J. C. Herbert Mitchell Robinson Ben F. Hilbun Dr. H. L. Scales I. D. Sessums Faculty Members T. T. Brackin John Caldwell Harvey Gunning Oscar Hendrix E. L. Lucas D. M. McCain N. M. McCorkle J. C. McKee H. C. SlMRALL O. K. Batte J. U. Blanchard R. S. Caldwell J. J. Crosby C. A. Culpepper L. H. Davis J. R. Denton Student Members B. T. Ellis D. G. Frank A. W. Holland W. F. McLeod H. N. Moore M. Y. Mullen R. E. Price E. N. Ross, Jr. J. B. Small L. C. Spencer O. P. Stone H. E. Tillman J. F. Walters V. K. Wagner, Jr. J. W. Wheeler ORGANIZATIONS Batte, Mullen, Holland, Downing, Brock Bonney, Blanchard, Bryan, Davis Denton, Ewing, Goodwin, Gray, Hawken Ragland, Reynolds, Robertshaw, Ross Saia, Stubbs, Trigg, Wylie, White O R G A N I Z A T I O N S SCABBARD AND BLADE B COMPANY, SEVENTH REGIMENT Officers O. K. Batte Captain M. Y. Mullen First Lieutenant A. W. Holland Second Lieutenant W. C. Downing First Sergeant Associate Members Colonel I. D. Sessums Major E. L. Lucas Major A. C. Chesledon Captain L. H. Fox Major A. R. MacKechnie Lieut. H. D. Gunning Captain John Harry Faculty Advisor Honorary Members Gov. Hugh L. White Pres. G. D. Humphreys W. H. Brock R. T. Bonney J. U. Blanchard C. C. Bryan P. R. Davis J. R. Denton J. W. Ewing Company Roster J. M. Goodwin M. G.Gray C. W. Hawken G. R. Mitchell, Jr. J. V. Newman W. E. Ragland J. N. Reddoch Seab Reynolds James Robertshaw E. N. Ross C. J. Saia A. F. Stubbs T. K. Trigg F. B. Wylie H. E. White 203 ORGANIZATIO N ©©000Q© Covington, Butler, D. S., Rucker, Bridges, Barrentine, Brock, Brumfield, Crockett, Crosby Dougal, Downing, Godbold, Hosch, Lovitt, Yeates, Agnew, Anderson, Black Blanchard, Bobb, Bonney, Brackin, Cox, Bradley, Bryan, Buchanan, Butler Caldwell, Carruth, Collins, Cooper, Davis, L. H., Davis, P. R., Dean, Denton, Duncan Elliott, Estess, Faloon, Fowlkes, French, Gray, Harrell, Hogan Holladay, Holland, Hough, Jobron. Longino, Mann, Mapp, McDonald, McGehee McPherson, Mitchell, Mullen, Nash, Newman, Nye, O ' Neal, Price, Reese Reynolds, Rhodes, Robertshaw, Robertson, Ross, E. N., Ross, J. H., Sherard, Stone, Stubbs Taylor, Temple, Tipton, Wagner, Wallace, Webster, Wells, White, Wylie 204 O RGANIZATIO N Y. M. C. A. CABINET H. E. Covington President D. S. Butler Vice-President L. O. RuCKER Secretary L. Bridges Treasurer Board of Directors Dr. C. B. Mitchell, Chairman Dr. C. D. Smith, Treasurer Dr. J. C. McKee Mr. A. W. Garner Mr. J. N. Lipscomb Mr. C. R. Stark Mr. Ben Hilbun H. E. Covington L. O. Rucker L. Bridges H. E. Covington D. S. Butler L. O. Rucker L. Bridges Executive Council B. F. Barrentine W. H. Brock H. M. Brumfiei.d S. P. Crockett J. J. Crosby K. L. Dougal Clayton Downing C. N. Godboi.d E. J. Hosch N. W. Lovitt Zeno Yeates Faculty Members Mr. T. T. Brackin Mr. C. E. Cain Dr. Paul Dunn Mr. S. B. Hathorn F. S. Agnew J. V. Anderson E. C. Black J. U. Blanchard W. H. Bobb R. T. Bonney T. T. Brackin, Jr. Houston Cox, Jr. R. L. Bradley, Jr. C. C. Bryan J. O. Buchanan, Jr. M. M. Butler R. S. Caldwell U. J. Carruth T. M. Collins H. V. Cooper Mr. B EN Hi LB UN Mr. S. B. Murray Dr. G. D . Humphrey (Hon.) Mr. 1. D. Sessums Mr. L. S. Lundy Dr. C. Q. Sheely Mr. Clay Lyle Dr. II. M. Trent Student Members L. H. Davis W. E. JOBRON L. T. Rhodes P. R. Davis II. W. L.ONGINO James Robertshaw Dexter Dean Ray Mann G. M. Robertson J. R. Denton M. B. Mapp E. N. Ross W. W. Duncan P. H. McDonald J. II . Ross E. C. Elliott J. B. McGehee J. G. Sherard Ansel Estes C. W. McPherson O. P. Stone A. V. Faloon C. B. Mitchell, Jr. A. F. Si ' ubbs H. T. Fowlkes M. Y. Mullen T. H. Taylor, III. R. P. French J. S. Nash M. M. Temple M. G. Gray J. P. Newman II. C. Tipton G. B. Harrell B. B. Nye V. K. Wagner A. A. Hogan K. R. O ' Neal C. A. Wallace G. II. HOLLADAY R. E. Price H. W. Webster A. W. Holland N. L. Reese T. G. Wells, Jr. R. M. Hough Seab Reynolds H. E. White F. B. Vv ' yi.ie, Jr. Employed Staff T. B. FATHERREE General Secretary O. R. HENDRIX Assistant Secretary Mrs. O. R. Hendrix Office Assistant 205 O R G A N I Z A T I O N Bailey, Baker, Barbee, Bennett, Boggan, Bowlus, Brackin, Bridges, Brister, K. E. Brister, W. H., Broolcshire, Buck, Cochran, Connor, Crippen, Crosby, Curran Currie, Davis, J. B., Dennis, Dollfus, Ellis, I. L., Ervin, Estess, Ansel, Evans Feltenstein, Flagg, Flanagan, Gooch, Goodrum, Grafton, Halliday , Haltom, B. C. Hamilton, C. E., Hardy, Harthcock, Haynes, Hudson, Jacob, A. M., Jacob, N. M., Lacy Lancaster, Lott, Magee, Marshall, Martin, J. A., Mcintosh, McRea, Miller Moore, D. B., Moore, J. S., Myrick, Pace, Parmelee, Perry, Pickford, Roberts Shipp, Simmons, Small, Smith, M. D., Soloman, Stroble, Tabb, Tyson, Warner 206 ORGANIZATIONS MAROON CONCERT BAND Officers C. M. Shipp President H. C. Hudson Vice-President R. L. PlGFORD Secretary J. B. Small Captain J. A. Martin First Sergeant J. H. Bailey G. H. Baker W. E. Barbee J. H. Bennett F. G. BOGGAN R. Bowlus C. Brackin L. Bridges K. E. Brlster W. H. Brister N. D. Brookshire G. T. Buck I. B. Cochrane S. R. Connor L. H. Crippen S. H. Crosby M. J. Curran E. H. Currie J. B. Davis P. B. Dennis C. E. Dollfus I. L. Ellis Members H. W. Ervin A. Estess M. T. Evans N. A. Feltenstein G. B. Flagg F. W. Flanagan A. S. Gooch J. C. Goodrum G. M. Grafton W. B. Halliday B. C. H ALTO A I C. E. Hamilton J. Hannan J. R. Hardy M. B. Harthcock C. P. Haynes H. C. Hudson A. M. Jacob N. M. Jacob W. C. Joyner J. F. Lacy E. L. Lancaster J. Locke H. H. Lott R. E. Magee L. T. Mallette J. W. Marshall J. A. Martin D. M. McIntosh M. E. McRae O. M. Miller D. B. Moore J. S. Moore S. Myrick J. V. Pace E. B. Parmalee M. B. Perry R. L. Pigford A. W. Roberts C. xM. Shipp B. Simmons J. B. SiMALL M. D. Smith A. C. Solomon C. P. Stroble W. G. Tabb J. R. Thompson L. Tyson W. C. Warner C. B. Williams 207 OR GANIZATIONS Banks, Blanchard, Bobb, Brewer, Broome, Bruce, Browning, Butler, D. S. Butler, M. M., Carpenter, Carr, Cartwright, Chandler, Clark, Clarke, Claiborne Coker, Conerly, Crecink, C. Davis, N. W., Davis, P. R. Day, Draper, Dulin Ewing, Gelatka, Gibson, Gill, Guy, Harned, Harper, Harris, Holland Hood, Hull, Maxwell, McCall, Mclnnis, Mitchell, Mullen, Prestridge Reynolds, Sherard, Smith, Stevenson, Stiles, Stubblefield, Tillman, Turner Wagner, Webster, Wylie, Eakens, Parker, Watson, Yeates, Zachariah 208 O RGANIZATIONS f • O . V- . C . Founded 1852 Publication: Civil Engineering ' MISSISSIPPI STATE STUDENT CHAPTER Reinstated October, 1936 Officers J. R. Harris President E. J. Harned Senior I ' ice-President P. L. Banks Junior J ' ice-President E. A. Maxwell Secretary-Treasurer D. M. McCain Faculty Members T. C. Bridger H. D. Gunning P. L. Banks J. U. Blanchard W. H. Bobb, Jr. F. M. Brewer B. L. Broome W. M. Bruce C. E. Browning D. S. Butler M. M. Butler J. B. Carpenter D. Carr, Jr. J. Cartwright J. M. Chandler J. K. Clark W. A. Clarke L. E. Claiborne, Jr. C. G. Coker L. A. Conerly W. J. Crecink Student Members N. W. Davis P. R. Davis H. B. Day G. L. Draper W. N. Dulin J. W. EwiNG C. T. Gelatka J. S. Gibson W. G. Gill L. W. Guy E. J. Harned M. J. Harper J. R. Harris A. W. Holland O. M. Hood N. H. Hull G. H. Laughlin E. A. Maxwell E. D. McCall J. H. McInnis G. R. Mitchell, Jr. M. Y. Mullen M. G. Prestridge S. Reynolds B. L. Rivers J. G. Sherard C. O. Smith H. F. Stevenson E. Stiles W. G. Stubblefield H. E. Tillman M. M. Turner V. K. Wagner, Jr. H. W. Webster F. B. Wylie, Jr. J. R. Eakens J. B. Parker H. C. Watson Z. L. Yeates M. C. Zachariah 209 O R G A N I Z A T I O N Barnett, Boyd, Bradley, Brackin, Brewer, Bridgforth Brothers, Brown, Brumfield, Carpenter, Cox, Crosby, Embry Fancher, Frank, Gibson, Gillmore, Gotcher, Hollinger, Keenan Lagrone, Martin, McPherson, McRoy, Morgan, O ' Neal, Pearson Pigford, Prather, Price, Ross, Stafford, Seefeld, Smith Smylie, Solomon, Stiles, Stone, Stott, Tillman, Turner Upshur, Wagner, Webster, Wilkinson, Wilson, Wylie O R G A N I Z A T I O N S PHI ETA SIGMA (Honorary Freshman Fraternity) Founded at the University of Illinois, March, 1923 Established at Mississippi State in May, 1935 Colors: Gold and Black Publication : Forum Officers W. J. McRoy President C. R. Pearson Vice-President J. H. Ross Secretary-Treasurer Honorary Members G. D. Humphrey I. D. Sessums T. W. Barnett H. L. Boyd, Jr. R. L. Bradley C. W. Brackin F. M. Brewer R. M. Bridgforth A. L. Brothers B. H. Brown H. M. Brumfield B. K. Buder J. J. BUNTIN J. B. Carpenter H. E. Cox, Jr. J. J. Crosby L. D. Edwards James Embry O. E. Fancher W. E. Fly Student Members D. G. Frank J. S. Gibson W. K. Gillmore H. C. GOTCHER J. F. Hollinger T. H. Jones F. T. Keenan W. F. Lagrone G. H. Laughlin J. A. Martin M. E. McPherson W. J. McRoy M. M. Mitchell B. S. Montgomery A. N. Morgan K. R. O ' Neal C. R. Pearson R. L. Pigford T. C. Prather R. E. Price J. H. Ross J. P. Stafford H. W. Seefeld H. G. Smith T. M. Smylie A. C. S0LO1MON E. M. Stiles O. P. Stone R. J. Stott P. R. Taylor J. W. Thompson J. R. Tiberts H. E. Tillman M. M. Turner L. Upshur V. K. Wagner 1 1. W. Webster C. L. Wilkinson R. L. Wilson F. B. Wylie ORGANIZATIO N S Anderson, Amacker, Bracey, Bridges, Buchanan, Byrd, Christian, Commer Crocker, Darnell, Dees, Davidson, Dilworth, Estess, A., Estess, G. W. Gary, Gieger, Godbold, Hamilton, Herring, Hitt, Holland, Johnson, J. P. Johnson, R. U., Jones, Lane, Lee, Lovitt, Luter, Martin McBride, McCoy, Mclnnis, McGehee, Middleton, Mitchell, Montgomery, Mosley Nutt, Parham, Reese, Salter, Sessums, Ti dwell, Tullos Turner, Vail, Vardaman, Watkins, Watts, Whitten, Williams, Woodruff O RGANIZATIONS FUTURE FARMERS OF AMERICA (Honorary Agricultural Society) Organized 1934 Colors: Gold and National Blue Officers Q. S. Vail President J. B. McGehee Vice-President A. Estess Secretary B. P. DiLWORTH Treasurer Faculty Members O. L. Snowden N. E. Wilson E. E. Anderson J. S. Amacker L. W. Bracey L. Bridges J. O. Buchanan M. J. Byrd E. B. Christian J. D. Commer John Crocker W. B. Darnell W. C. Dees D. D. Davidson B. P. Dilworth A. Estess G. W. Estess B. Gary E. P. Gieger Student Members C. N. GODBOLD J. R. Hamilton J. C. Herring J. A. Hitt H. H. Holland J. P. Johnson R. U. Johnson T. L. Jones R. H. Lane J. E. Lee N. W. Lovitt R. A. Luter H. H. Martin P. C. McBride K. E. McCoy P. C. McInnis J. B. McGehee J. C. MlDDLETON A. N. Mitchell H. H. Montgomery W. B. Mosley J. R. Nutt R. A. Parham N. L. Reese L. W. Salter E. L. Sessums A. L. Tidwell R. Tullos B. E. Turner Q. S. Vail T. H. Vardaman W. W. Watkins J. L. Watts W. W. Whitten W. E. Williams C. J. Woodruff 213 O R G A N I Z A T I O N S THE MIS-A-SIP STAFF Founded September, 1936, by Sherrill Nash, L. H. Davis, and P. R. Davis L. H. Davis Co-Editor Sherrill Nash Co-Editor P. R. Davis Business Manager A. N. Morgan Managing Editor T. W. Moore . . Robert Price Feature Editor Tom Collins . . . George Melchoir Art Editor Billy Brown Art Editor Harris Yeates Photographer Advertising Manager Circulation Manager Editorial Staff James Robertshavv G. W. Drane Business Staff Chick Hosch Houston Cox Hal Fox, Jr. Dickie Carlisle F. M. Brewer Duke Towles Helen Maie Goodell Vivienne Harrell Tames Leigh Ed Welty O. L. Garmon R. N. McWilliams, III Lynn Timmerman E. D. Martiniere John McMullen L. S. Crumbley S. M. Webb Carl Hicks George Holiday Wilson Wilder Edward Stevens C. A. Barrett Edwin Jordan Jim Davis 214 ORGANIZATIONS Batson, Bonney, Carlisle, Cox, Davis, Frank, Green Hosch , Lucas , Lyle , Morgan , Nash , Price , Robertshaw Ross, Sherard, Tillman, Wallace, Wells, Wylie, Yeates OM1CRON THETA Flower: Red Carnation Officers E. N. Ross, Jr President R. L. Wilson Vice-President Mary Hearon Secretary A. W. Holland Treasurer Ben Hilbun Faculty H. C. Simrall Guy Nason L. H. Fox Graduate Members Duke Towles A. S. Easley Members D. M. Batson R. T. Bonney M. R. Callahan Dickie Carlisle Houston Cox, Jr. L. H. Davis Dan Frank Frances Stone Green Ed Chick Hosch Anne Louise Lucas Charles Lyle A. N. Morgan Sherrili. Nash Robert E. Price James Robertshaw J. H. Ross James Sherard Jack Til lman C. A. Wallace Graham Wells Frank Wylie Zeno Yeates 215 O R G A N I Z A T I O N S Colors: Mode and Sky Blue Baird, G. E., Baird, J. B., Batson, Bradley, Cole, Dilworth, Estess, Fortinberry Freeman, Harris, Holland, Lambert, Lee, McCoy, McKeown, Newman Parham, Rhinehart, Sessums, Smith, Tidwell, Todd, Ward ALPHA ZETA (Honorary Agricultural Fraternity) Founded at Ohio State University in November, 1879 Flower: Pink Carnation MISSISSIPPI CHAPTER Established in 1928 Dr. A. D. Suttle Faculty Members Dr. Clarence Dorman F. E. Edwards G. E. Baird, Jr. J. B. Baird D. M. Batson R. L. Bradley D. L. Cole B. P. Dilworth G. W. Estess V. E. Fortinberry Student Members H. T. Fowlkes E. E. Freeman J. H. Harris H. H. Holland L. Q. Lambert J. E. Lee K. E. McCoy H. S. McKeown J. P. Newman R. A. Parham F. A. Rhinehart E. L. Sessums J. D. Smith, Jr. A. L. Tidwell E. F. Todd R. A. Ward S. H. Williams 216 O R G A N I Z A T I O N S OT00©O9O PiQftQ© QfiS0ElI5 Hendrix, LaHatte, Ward, Biddy, Davis, Alford, Andress, Arguello, Avens, Banks, Baker, Bowlus Brabham, Branigin, Bridges, Cameron, Chappell, Childs, Dandridge, Evans, Flynn, Freeman, Gallaspy, Gates Hamilton, J., Hamilton, W., Hinson, Henington, Hill, Hines, Jones, Jones, Livingston, Long, Lowe, R. C, Lowe, J. R. Lutz, Mayo, Moore, Martin, Myers, M. P., Myers, F. C, Nicholson, Oakes, Owen, Orr, Paxton, Pickering Rogers, Rea, Seaborn, Sheffield, Simpson, Spann, Therrell, Townsend, Walker, Wilson, C. A., Wilson, R. FRESHMAN Y COUNCIL O. R. Hendrix, Faculty Advisor Officers Franklin LaHatte President Bennie Ward Secretary P. W. Shaw Vice-President Harold Biddy Treasurer Jim Davis Reporter Members John A. Alford Harry Andrews Victorino Arguello, Jr. Jack Avens W. H. Banks Travis Baker Robert Bowlus Theo Brabham Edward Branigin Reece Bridges Bill Cameron J. R. Chappell T. E. Childs E. R. Dandridge A. T. Evans Robert Flynn Robert Freeman J. W. Gallaspy James Gates James Hamilton Winfred Hamilton S. V. Hinson Henry L. Henington Joe Hill Bob Hines James O. Jones O. H. Jones R. M. Lemasson Robert L. Livingston George L. Long R. C. Lowe J. R. Lowe Wilson Lutz Hays Mayo Arthur Moore J. H. Martin M. P. Myers Fred Myers W. W. Nicholson Carl Oakes Harris Owen W. R. Orr T. V. Paxton, Jr. Denson Pickering Walter Rogers William F. Rea M. W. Seaborn John C Sheffield Wilton Simpson J. A. Spann J. S. Therrell, Jr. George R. Townsend Jimmie Walker C. A. Wilson R. A. Wilson 317 o R G A N I Z A T I O N S Barren tine, Bonney, Conger, Duncan, Fancher, Johnson, Knox Kaczka, Leopold, Martin, May, Moore, Montgomery O ' Neal, Pigford, Spence, Stevens, Upshur, Weems, Wilkinson GAMMA THETA EPSILON (Honorary Chemical Fraternity) Founded at Mississippi State College, November 10, 1932 Colors: White and Green Officers G. S. Weems .-...- •.-.... President C. L. Wilkinson Vice-President O. Spence .......-.•...■Secretary-Treasurer W. H. Knox Reporter G. W. Carroll W. F. Hand Faculty Members E. W. Pementor E. C. Hendley C. Q. Sheelv B. F. Barrentine R. T. Bonnev J. C. Conger W. W. Duncan O. E. Fancher R. B. Johnson W. H. Knox Student Members E. A. Kaczka H. T- Levenstein R. S. Leopold T. A. Martin E. A. May T. S. Moore T. M. Montgomery N. W. Muller K. R. O ' Neal R. L. Pigford W. F. Reeves O. Spence T. E. Stevens L. Upshur G. S. Weems C. L. Wilkinson 218 ORGANIZATIONS Batton, Sanders, Seefeld, Batte, Caldwell, Davis, Day, Frank, Glorioso Gulledge. Googe, Gray, Hardison, Harrison, Hight, Hoover, Hosch, Keenan Moore, Price, Pickle, Pittman, Robertshaw, Rucker, Small, Spencer, Wielgosz CHI LAMBDA RHO (Honorary Business Fraternity) Founded at Mississippi College in 1929 Officers A. A. Batton President H. A. Sanders rice-President H. W. Seefeld Secretary-Treasurer D. W. Aiken J. V. Bowen Faculty Members S. P. Garner E. S. Wallace G. E. Wallace W. H. Washburn R. L. Weems O. K. Batte R. S. Caldwell L. H. Davis U. L. Day A. S. Easley D. G. Frank J. C. Glorioso W. M. Gulledge Student Members C. R. Googe M. G. Gray R. C. Hardison W. M. Harrison F. T. Hight C. W. Hoover E. J. Hosch R. J. Keenan H. N. Moore R. E. Price F B. Pickle J. O. Pittman James Robertshaw F. O. Rucker J. B. Small L. C. Spencer S. F. Wialgosz 219 ORGANIZATIONS Crosby, Smith, Williams, Cochran, Abbott, Bailey, Baird, Beadel, Bland, Bradley, Cochran Collier, Cravens, Crow, Gates, Gordon, Gotcher, Goodwin, Higdon, Hughes, Idom, Jones, D. E. Jones, E. G., Lambert, Langston, Leach, Lumsden, Martin, Massey, Moak, Neal, Newell, Noel Perry, Pierce, Rhinehart, Richardson, Roberts, Steadman, Stokes, Wallace, Watkins, Worley A. S. A. E. Mississippi State Branch Established 1935 Officers J. J. Crosby President J. D. Smith, Jr Vice-President H. Williams Second Vice-President J. K. Cochran Secretary and Treasurer Faculty Advisors W. C. Howell F. E. Edwards Student Members J. Abbott J. M. Goodwin B. L. Neal R. K. Bailey J. M. Higdon S. D. Newell G. E. Baird J. W. Hughes H. L. Noel D. M. Beadel O. G. Idom E. B. Perry W. D. Bland D. E. Jones B. S. Pierce R. L. Bradley E. G. Jones F. A. Rhinehart D. V. Cochran L. Q. Lambert J. B. Richardson J. A. Collier V. C. Langston W. M. Roberts F. B. Craven N. E. Leach C. W. Steadman R. E. Crow G. R. Lumsden J. F. Stokes J. L. Gates J. W. Martin C. A. Wallace W. D. Gordon F. H. Massey R. M. Watkins H. C. Gotcher J. B. Moak H. F. Worley o R G A N I Z A T I O N S 0®0©w Agnew, Alford, Allen, Boone, Briggs, Bryan, Buckingham, Chandler Chilton , Craig, Dean , Ferrill , Guy ton , Henderson , James , Lovett Mathews, McLaurine, Page, Patterson, Senter, Shinault, Shipp, Smith Trigg, Warnack, Weems, Wells, Wheeler, Wilson, Woods A. I. E. E. Mississippi State Branch Officers J. W. Wheeler Chairman E. B. Senter Vice-Chairman J. H. Weems, Jr Secretary-Treasurer L. H. Fox Faculty Members L. L. Patterson R. F. Hays H. C. SlMRALL F. S. Agnew J. M. Alford W. H. Allen C. R. Boone R. E. Briggs C. C. Bryan H. B. Buckingham C. W. Chandler H. R. Chilton J. C. Craig Student Members D. C. Dean T. M. Ferrill P. O. Guyton T. C. Henderson R. G. James A. K. Lovett C. M. Mathews A. H. McLaurine J. L. Page E. M. Patterson E. B. Senter L. H. Shinault C. M. Shipp J. R. Smith T. K. Trigg L. P. Warnack J. H. Weems, Jr. T. G. Wells J. W. Wheeler R. L. Wilson W. T. Woods, Jr. ORGANIZATIONS Alford, Davis, Gelatka, Harned, Holland Mullen, Prather, Prestridge, Senter, Stiles, Trigg Wagner, Wheeler, Whelan. Wilson, Wylie TAU BETA PI Founded at Lehigh University, June, 1S85 Colors: Seal Brown and White Publication: The Bent ALPHA CHAPTER OF MISSISSIPPI Established December, 1028 Officers F. B. Wylie, Jr • ■President J. W. Wheeler Vice-President M. Y. Mullen Recording Secretary R. L. Wilson Corresponding Secretary E. L. Lucas, Jr Treasurer Faculty Members R. C. Carpenter E. L. Lucas, Jr. L. L. Patterson L. H. Fox D. M. McCain H. C. Simrall II. D. Gunning N. M. McCorkle K. Withington H. P. Neal J. M. Alford P. R. Davis C T. Gelatka E. J. Harned A. W. Holland Student Members M. Y. Mullen T. C. Prather M. G. Prestridge E. B. Senter E. M. Stiles T. K. Tricg, III V. K. Wagner J. W. Wheeler J. W. Whelan R. L. Wilson F. B. Wylie, Jr. ORGANIZATIONS MISSISSIPPI STATE COLLEGIANS Elise Buford Vocalist Mitt Evans Director Saxes Billy Brister Henry Hudson James Moore John West Bass Lynt Tyson Bruce Parmalee Crick Haltom Granville Tabb James Bennett Rhythm Jack Chilton Cy Shipp Jack Locke Charles Dollfus 223 OR GANIZATIONS ©0Q©©© Wilson, Wylie, Mullen, Webster, Allen, Barnett, Bell, Boone, Brewer Bryan, Carpenter, Chandler, Ebersole, Fancher, Feltenstein, Gibson, Guyton, Harned Leopold, Mathews, Montgomery, Nagle, Pigford, Prather, Prestridge, Parker, Stiles Tillman, Thomason, Trigg, Turner, Wagner, Wheeler, Wilkinson, Woods KAPPA MU EPSILON (National Honorary Mathematical Fraternity) Charter granted at Mississippi State College in 1930 Officers R. L. Wilson President F. B. Wylie Vice-President M. Y. Mullen Treasurer H. W. Webster Secretary Faculty Members W. E. Cox S. B. Murray C. D. Smith H. Fox A. Oliver R. A. Smith L. S. Lundy C. R. Stark Student Members W. H. Allen J. C. Ebersole C. W. Nacle J. S. Therrill T. W. Barnett O. E. Fancher R. L. Pigford M. J. Thomas S. L. Bell N. A. Feltenstein T. C. Prather E. G. Thomason C. R. Boone J. S. Gibson M. G. Prestridge T. K. Trigg F. M. Brewer P. O. Guyton J. B. Parker M. M. Turner J. L. Bryan Iva Hamblin R. C. Rhaley V. K. Wagner J. B. Carpenter E. J. Harned L. H. Shinault J. W. Wheeler C. W. Chandler M. T. Hill H. B. Stevenson C. L. Wilkinson H. G. Crockett R. S. Leopold E. M. Stiles W. T. Woods C. M. Mathews H. E. Tillman B. S. Montgomery 224 O R G A N I Z A T I O N S £BS8 3Mr mm CHARACTER BUILDERS SUNDAY SCHOOL CLASS Officers S. P. Crockett President K. R. O ' Neal Vice-President C. N. GODBOLD Secretary and Treasurer 225 OR GANIZATION Howard E. Covington, Faloon, Estess, Elizabeth Josey, Simpson, Nye Elliott, McDonald, Hamilton, Dean, Hough Reese, Anderson, Eva Reed, Hill, Bridges, Lewis B. S. U. COUNCIL Howard E. Covincton President Albert V. Faloon First Vice-President Ansel Estess Second Vice-President Elizabeth Josey Y. IV. C. A. Representative J. T. Simpson Local Representative B. B. Nye Publicity Edward C. Elliott .-...- Third Vice-President P. H. McDonald Baptist Student Representative James Roland Hamilton • Secretary Dexter Dean Treasurer R. M. Hough B. T. U. Representative Newman Reese Sunday School Representative J. V. Anderson Reporter Eva Reed Local Representative Joe Hill Freshman Representative Lester Bridges Y. M. C. A. Representative Levillen Lewis Freshman Representative Dr. J. D. Ray Pastor Baptist Church Prof. I. E. Miles Faculty Advisor 2Z( ORGANIZATIONS — LJi i ,. ■:- -J ' % ■1 3 §R .: -•■- r ' «$! 1 ,; • : ■WVi iftT SE - •««•• IOr ?iF R r y £ -£ $•  . 1 -3 • .  , A ' • — ' - m BBBSbmSIHI y ' ■. ■' ■• ' • ' r : — agt J| « BEREAN SUNDAY SCHOOL CLASS (The Berean Sunday School Class is an organization of the Baptist Church of Starkville) OFFICERS Newman Reese President Tom Collins Vice-President Dexter Dean Treasurer Walter Brock Secretary Mr. Ben Hilbun Teacher L. S. LuNDY Sunday School Superintendent Dr. J. D. Ray p astor 227 ORGANIZATIONS Culpepper, Butler, Downing, Evans Hosch, Montgomery, Moore, Shows DANCE COMMITTEE C. A. Culpepper M. M. Butler W. C. Downing M. T. Evans Chairman E. H. Hosch H. H. Montgomery Susie Moore S. S. Shows 228 ORGANIZATION ©©©©0Q©(3© Brock, Buckingham, Carruth, Courtney, Crane, Cooper, Friend, Grochal, Grohoski Halliday, Hughes, Katzenberg, Keary, Keenan, Leake, Lester, Marx, May Mays, Mollere, Montgomery, Mussel white, Norman, Pearson, Rogers, Short, Spence Stampley, Stevens, Wadsworth, Welch, Weems, Whelan, Whiting, Wilkinson, Williamson A. S. M. E. Mississippi State Branch Officers H. V. Cooper Presidt W. H. Brock Vice-President J. F. Williamson Secretary-Treasurer W. D. Lester . . . Chairman Entertainment Committee nt R. C. Carpenter Faculty Members . Honorary Chairman O. D. M. Varnado Member W. H. Brock H. B. Buckingham U. J. Carruth W. O. Courtney H. O. Crane H. V. Cooper A. B. Friend B. Grochal C. J. Grohoski W. B. H0LLIDAY E. B. Hughes A. Katzenberg Student Members WlLLARD KEARY F. T. Keenan E. L. Leake W. D. Lester W. N. Marx E. A. May S. W. Mays L. A. Mollere B. S. Montgomery W. B. Musselwhite J. R. Norman W. B. Pearson V. J. Rogers W. H. Short 0. Spence O. K. Stampley W. A. Stevens 1. R. Wadsworth P. W. Welch G. S. Weems J. W. Whelan G. D. Whiting C. L. Wilkinson J. R. Williams J. F. Williamson 229 o RGANIZATION S Cooper, Pigford, Sherard, Car ruth, Adams, Anderson, Bertucci, Biddy, Blanchard Bounds, Brumfield, Clarke, Colbert, Collins, Cox, Davidson, Dukeminier, Duncan, English Ewart, Finlay, Gooch, Harper, Hicks, Higdon, Johnson, Kaiser, Kelly Long, G. L., Long. J. A., Longino, Majure, Martiniere, Mitchell, Milton, Mullen, Murphy, R. E., O ' Neal Parker, Peale, Powers, Purvis, Simpson, Strahan, Walker, Webb, Wingate GLEE CLUB Officers H. V. Cooper President R. L. Pigford Vice-President J. G. Sherard Secretary U. J. Carruth Treasurer Mr. T. B. Fatheree . . Business Manager Mrs. Mayo McKay Directress Members J. E. Adams, Jr. W. W. Duncan, Jr. E. P. Mullen E. F. Anderson R. W. English R. E. Murphy F. J. Bertucci W. H. Ewart W. 0. Murphy J. H. Biddy S. D. FlNDLAY K. R. O ' Neal J. A. Blanchard A. S. Gooch H. Parker W. C. Bounds M. J. Harper, Jr. W. Peale H. M. Brumfield C. F. Hicks R. L. Picford J. C. Buckanan, Jr. J. M. Higdon R. M. Porter T. G . Burch P. D. Johnson C. H. Powers M. R. Callahan R. M. Kaiser F. W. Purvis U. J. Carruth J. B. Kelly J. E. Ruffin H. E. Clarke G. L. Long J. G. Sherard J. P. Colbert J. A. Long W. P. Simpson T. M. Collins II. W. Longino, Jr. F. Smith H. V. Cooper, Jr. W. J. Majure W. H. Strahan H. Cox E. D. Martiniere F. B. Walker D. D. Davidson C. B. Mitchell, Jr. E. E. Webb E. B. Dukeminier J. C. Milton L. Wingate, Jr. 230 o RGANIZATIONS Anderson, E. E. , Anderson, J. V. , Batson, Batton, Betts, Black, Bowden, Burris, Crawford Crockett, Crosby, Duke, Dougal, Evans, Flora, Gary, Gilbert, Gilmer, Godbold Grochal, Hamilton, Herring, Holland, Hoi linger, Hood, Howie, Johnson, Jones Lane, Lee, Luter, Moorehead, McDonald, McGehee, Newman, Parham, Rice, Salter Scarbrough, Shows, Smalley, Taylor, Tipton, Watson, Williams, Wilson, Woods HAIR AND HIDE CLUB Officers S. P. Crockett President J. V. Anderson Vice-President K. L. Dougal Secretary ami Treasurer E. E. Anderson J. V. Anderson D. M. Batson S. F. Batton II. G. Betts E. C. Black J. E. Bowden J. A. Burris J. L. Crawford S. P. Crockett D. C. Crosby W. G. Duke K. L. Dougal J. T. Evans R. C. Flanagan J. S. Flora Members W. B. Gary C. H. Gilbert J. H. Gilmer C. N. Godbold, Jr. B. Grochal J. R. Hamilton J. C. Herring H. H. Holland J. F. Hollincer C. D. Hood J. S. Howle P. D. Johnson N. S. Johnson C. W. Jones R. H. Lane J. E. Lee R. A. Luter, Jr. E. G. Moorhead P. H. McDonald J. B. McGehee J. P. Newman R. H. Parham J. C. Rice I.. W. Salter B. Scarborough S. S. Shows C. L. Smalley F. J. Taylor H. C. Tipton W. B. Watson E. M. Williams W. Wilson F. E. Woods 231 o R G A N I Z A T I O N S QfKKKl Burris, Freeman, Hubbard, Betts, Conner, Price, Templeton, Walker, Batson, Brasfield Cole, Covington , Eliot , Fortinberry , Gilmer , Hood , Ishee , Johnson , Lovorn McKeown, Murphree, Reid, Ross, Shows, Stephens, Blanchard, J. A., Buckley, Clark Flynt, Hardee, Honnoll, Fondren, Mann, Murphy, Perkins, Pitner, Rhodes, Spraberry THE AGRONOMY CLUB E. C. Elliott . L. C. Murphree J. A. Burris Officers . . . . President D. M. Batson . . Secretary-Treasurer Dr. C. D. Dorman Dr. A. D. Suttle . . . Faculty Advisor Seniors in Crops E. E. Freeman . . . Reporter Faculty Advisor H. G. Betts J. T. Conner D. M. Batson R. G. Brasfield D. L. Cole H. E. Covington E. C. Elliott J. A. Blanchard H. Buckley H. L. Clark B. J. Flynt Juniors in Crops D. B. Price Seniors in Soils V. E. Fortinberry II. S. McKeown L. C. Murphree A. B. Reid P. D. Johnson J. M. Lovorn J. H. Gilmer Juniors in Soils B. Hardee J. D. Mann R. E. Honnoll W. J. Murphree W. M. Fondren W. N. Murphy W. E. Hubbard V. C Templeton A. S. Walker C. D. Hood C. E. Ishee E. N. Ross S. S. Shows H. L. Stephens R. C. Perkins J. B. Pitner L. T. Rhodes J. A. Spraberry 23: o RGANIZATIONS GQ00 Covington, Batson, Reid, Harris, Lindsley, Addy, Barnett, J. W., Barnett, W. T., Batton, Black, Bozman Brasfield, Buchanan, Burris, Byrne, Cochran, J. K. , Cochran, J. H. , Clark, Cole, Crockett, Crosby, D. C. , Crosby, J. J. Dandridge, Dougal, Fortenberry, Fulton, Gilliland, Gilmer, Harris, Hollinger, Hosch, Howie, Howze Hubbard, Humphries, Ishee, Johnson, P. D., Johnson, R. U., Majure, Mitchell, Newman, Prestage, Reese, Reynolds Rhodes, Ross, Shows, Spraberry, Stucky, Tipton, Todd, Wood, D. D., Woods, F. E., Woods, R. L. THE AGRICULTURAL CLUB Officers Howard E. Covington • President D. M. Batson Pice-President A. B. Reid Secretary G. M. Harris Reporter Jack Lindsley Reporter Dean J. R. Ricks Faculty Advisor Members C. W. Addy II. L. Clark B. B. Hosch N. L. Reese J. W. Barnett D. L. Cole J. S. HOWLE C. F. Reynolds W. T. Barnett S. P. Crockett H. W. Howze L. T. Rhodes S. T. Batton D. C. Crosby W. E. Hubbard E. N. Ross C. E. Black J. J. Crosby J. G. Humphries S. S. Shows J. T. Bozman H. C. Dandridge C. E. Ishee J. A. Spraberry R. G. Brasfield K. L. Dougal P. D. Johnson W . E. Stucky J. 0. Buchanan V. E. FORTINBERRY R. U. Johnson II C. Tipton J. A. Burris J. C. Fulton J. W. Land E. F. Todd J. W. Byrne H. D. Gilliland W. J. Majure D. D. Wood J. H. Cochran J. H. Gilmer A. N. Mitch el E. E. Woods J. K. Cochran W. W. Harris J. F. HOLI.INCER J. P. Newman Mollis Prestage R. L. Woods 233 o R G A N I Z A T I O N S QAnAO Austin, Bonny, Brown, Brackin, Dodds, Duncan, Eckles Everitc, Hare, Leopold, O ' Neal, Reynolds, Therrell Wesson, Worley, Adams, Covington, Cutrer, Davidson, Gooch Hudson, Lovell, Melvin, McCown, Patton, Warner BETA BETA BETA (National Honorary Biological Fraternity) Officers T. T. Brackin President W. W. Duncan Vice-President K. R. O ' Neal Secretary G. M. Reynolds Historian Professor Clay Lyle Chapter Counselor Student Members Rus B. Austin T. T. Brackin W. W. Hare G. M. Reynolds R. T. Bonney R. F. Dodds Eva Love J. E. Wesson S. N. Brown W. W. Duncan R. S. Leopold G. B. Worley C. Everitt K. R. O ' Neal Mabry Clark Mary L. Eckles J. E. Adams H. E. Covington E. A. Cutrer D. E. Davidson Graduate Members Uree May Associate Members A. S. Gooch H. C. Hudson W. W. Lovell 3+ Dorothy Ray J. S. Therrell J. P. Melvin J. K. McCown C. E. Patton W. C. Warner ORGANIZATIONS Dr. Toxey Hall, Dr. R. E. Hutchins, Melchior, Leopold, O ' Neal, Austin, J. W., Austin, R. B., Bonney, Bradley Cutrer, Duncan, Gooch, Hudson, Kennedy, Kirk, Lovell, Melvin, McCown Mitchell, Patton, Reynolds, Stone, Warner, Welburn, Werkheiser, Wesson, Woodward PRE-MEDICAL SOCIETY MISSISSIPPI STATE COLLEGE Officers George Melchior President R. S. Leopold Vice-President K. R. O ' Neal Secretary and Treasurer Sponsor Dr. C. B. Mitchell Dr. Toxie Hall Faculty Advisor Dr. R. E. Hutchins J. W. Austin R. B. Austin R. T. Bonney J. L. Bradley E. A. Cutrer W. W. Duncan A. S. Gooch Student Members H. C. Hudson C. A. Kennedy W. M. Kirk W. W. Lovell J. P. Melvin J. K. McCown C. B. Mitchell, Jr. C. E. Patton G. M. Reynolds O. P. Stone W. C. Warner J. C. Welburn E. B. Werkheiser J. E. Wesson G. P. Woodward 235 ORGANIZATIONS The Mississippi State College Mississippi ' s Largest Institution of Higher Learning Offers a well-balanced program for the improvement and devel- opment of young men and women of earnest purpose who are interested in AGRICULTURE, BUSINESS, EDUCATION, ENGINEERING, OR SCIENCE THE CHIEF OPPORTUNITIES ARE: A physical plant, including lands, buildings, and equipment, valued at $7,500,000.00. An excellent faculty of highly trained instructors. A wholesome, democratic atmosphere and a simple scale of living. A well-balanced program in intercollegiate athletics, intra-mural sports, and other student activities. Four-year courses of instruction in the R. O. T. C. branches of Infantry and Artillery, rated Excellent by the War Department. The South ' s finest cafeteria, where good meals are served at reasonable prices. Thorough trainin g in the five undergraduate schools designed to prepare students for the responsibilities of society. A Graduate School which enable the ambitious students to earn a Master ' s Degree in the five undergraduate schools; namely, Agriculture, Business, Education, Engineering, and Science. A Summer School of Two Five Week Terms in 1937 Regular Session of 1937-38 Begins September 14, 1937 For a Catalog of Summer or Regular Session Write to BEN F. HILBUN, REGISTRAR STATE COLLEGE, MISS. G. D. HUMPHREY President W. F. HAND Vice-President MITCHELL ROBINSON Secretary and Business Manager 236 Robert £. Lee Hotel The High Spot of Southern Hospitality ' Jackson, Miss. The most mod- ern hotel in the state is daily becoming the most popu- lar with a dis- criminating cli- entele. SXJiWAKX (iAMMILL, Manager 300 Rooms, All Outside Expos- ures . . . with every Comfort and Conveni- ence. No great- er value giving can be found anywhere. STEWART GAMMILL, Jr., Asst. Mgr. The Economy, Cleanliness and Ease of Control of NATURAL GAS Which is used for the Boilers, Water Heaters, Space Heaters and Stoves at MISSISSIPPI STATE COLLEGE ARE DEMONSTRATING DAILY THAT IT IS THE IDEAL FUEL MISSISSIPPI PUBLIC SERVICE CORPORATION SOUTHERN NATURAL GAS CORPORATION 237 COLLEGE t II I I I III 1 THE SOUTH ' S LARGEST ONE OF THE WORLD ' S FINEST ' Feeding over 1,500 students daily, the Cafeteria strives to give the very best food and service at the lowest possible cost. MRS. EMMA HALL, MANAGER 238 1=1. INCREASE THE Mississippi State Scholarship Fund Through the LAMAR LIFE For information ask any Agent or one of the following Lamar Life men who are former students or alumni of Mississippi State : D. B. Aycock, ' 15 Jonesboro, Ark. Claude N. Hughes, ' 35 Greenwood, Miss. W. W. Brunson, ' 28 Tupelo, Miss. W. S. Hunt, ex ' 23 Sturgis, Miss. Eugene B. Chadwick, ' 28 Greenwood, Miss. M. E. (Cotton) Klindworth, ' 22 Earle, Ark. W. G. Coleman, ex ' 27 West Point, Miss. R. Z. Pepper, ' 27 Yazoo City, Miss. T. H. Cutrer, ' 16 Baton Rouge, La. Ran B. Schlater, ' 05 Greenwood, Miss. J. P. DUREN Helena, Ark. C. N. Seale Bude, Miss. eLAMAfc LIFaiiilllANCE COMPANY £damhe3 906 JACKSONaMUMSIPPI LAMAR LIFETOWEC P. K. LuTKEN, ' 10 President B 239 SERVICE WITH A SMILE Shack: Cash a check? Certainly. How much? Ten Dollars? Why we ' ll be glad to. What? You don ' t think we ought to charge five dollars for this book? How much? Two dollars? Well, okeh, give it here. But we can ' t keep cutting these prices like this. Laundry: Come right in. You say we lost six of your shirts, two suits of clothes and an overcoat? Just make out a bill, son, we ' ll be glad to pay it. Next! Step right up, son. Now what ' s this? Looks like a bunch of rags. Your shirt! Why, I ' ll have to get on the help about this. Not a button on it? Teh! Teh! Just fill out this blank, and be sure to put your collar size down. We ' ll have you some new ones in just a few days. Holdus Reamus: Collitch boys our meat. Ten dollars for that? Why we ' re losing money at fifteen. You can ' t buy gin-u-whine jewelry like that for less than twenty-five dollars! We get that exclusive, direct from the factory. That ' s why we sell so cheap. Candy? Why step over here in the candy department. Lot of it? Yes sir! I ' ll say we have. Two tons of it. (We cash checks with a smile, no ques- tions.) Cash your check? Why, er, brummph. Mmmm. Two dollars! You go to school out here? What ' s your name? What school you in? Ever do business with us before? How you classed? What ' s your laundry number? Where do you live? Okeh! Why certainly (Continued on page 242) HELLO STATE!!! THE LAMAR HOTEL MERIDIAN, MISSISSIPPI IS ALWAYS READY TO SERVE YOU We Ajyjyreciate Your Patronage Good. Coffee Shop Reasonable Prices BILL MOBLEY, Manager 240 Peoples Savings Bank LTER PAGE J. L. MARTIN President Vice-President F. COOPER A. H. AMES Cashier Asst. Cashier STARKVILLE, MISSISSIPPI ORGANIZED NOVEMBER 20, 1889 WE HAVE STOOD THE ACID TEST 2+1 SERVICE WITH A SMILE (Continued from page 240) we think it ' s a good check. Never thought for a minute it was phoney! Prof: Your paper isn ' t graded right? Hand it here. Hmmm! Why, here ' s five extra points on this first page. That grader must be getting blind. Third question? Let ' s see. You ' re right son. Ten more points. Second page okeh? No! Wait a minute, what ' s this! Give you two points on that. Why even I can see that ' s worth fifteen. Let ' s add this up now. 60-68-76-89-93-108. How ' s that for grading? Taxie driver: Change for a ten? Why, I ' ll be delighted. Just one minute. Other side of town? Why, I ' ll be glad to drive you over there. Extra charge? Why, of course not! THE A. H. PU6H PRINTING COMPANY CINCINNATI Established 1830 COMMERCIAL AND TICKET PRINTING TO SPEED THE WHEELS of Industry, Commerce, Transportation FIGHT FRICTION with STANDARD OIL LUBRICANTS SCIENTIFIC ECONOMICAL LEADERS FOR GENERATIONS Standard Oil Co. INCORPORATED IN KENTUCKY 242 L. G. Balfour Company ATTLEBORO, MASSACHUSETTS Manufacturers of — Class Rings Cups, Medals, Trophies Commencement Announcements Diplomas Special Insignia Maker of Alumni ring and commencement announcements for graduating class of 1937 WALTHALL HOTEL Jackson, Mississippi 200 ROOMS 200 BATHS Rates from $2.00 up EDWARD W. FREEMAN Manager 243 SECURITY STATE BANK STARKVILLE, MISSISSIPPI Serving Oktibbeha County and State College for more than a third of a century continuously Places AH of its Facilities at Your Disposal • When Your Business Is Banking — Call on Us HCTEL GILMER IN CCLLMCLS, HISS, J. C. SLAUGHTER, V.P .-MGC. IF I WERE RICH It wasn ' t enough for you to marry one of the home town belles, you had to settle down in the old home village. Everyone you ever knew, and some you wish you had never met, comes around to help you inwst that money your rich uncle left you. Joe drops around rather nonchalantly and offers to sell you half interest in a frog farm, but your wife can ' t stand the sound of just one frog, so you pass up that opportunity. Two months later Joe goes driving by in one of those imported jobs, and honks at you, said honk sounding very much like the old and well- known raspberry. Now Jerry has a proposition that is really a proposition. He wants to go into the poultry business. He comes around to see you and starts pointing out the possibilities of just one setting hen and a dozen eggs. Inside of ten minutes he has the air full of feathers and eggs and has used up all the bridge-score pads in the house figuring out how many hens you will have in 1940. Your wife ' s brother has the best proposition of them all, he wants to open up a chain of hamburger stands, and gives you that old line about twenty nickels making one dollar. You don ' t eat hamburgers, you tell him, and fur- thermore, you already knew that twenty nickels make a dollar. You might be wrong but you are of the opinion that your present insurance policies are large enough, but your wife insists that you take out more insurance. She even gets a few of the glib-tongued boys to call on you. One of them remarks that Columbus took a chance, (Continued on paye 24$) 244 IF I WERE RICH (Continued from page 244) but adds that that was back in 1492. You surprise him and yourself too by saying: Well, anything that was good enough for Columbus, is good enough for me, so I ' ll just take a chance. The next day you see a robin and decide right off that spring has arrived. A week later you go fishing but almost freeze to death, and make up your mind that you didn ' t see a robin, it was a mocking bird with high blood pres- sure. An old-fashioned farmer took pen in hand and knocked off a rather indignant letter to a large concern which made a specialty of selling plumbing supplies by the mail order routine. I have got a kick to make, the farmer painfully scratched across the paper in uneven lines. Early last spring your agent called on me and talked me into ordering one of them new-fangled patent porcelain bathing tubs of yourn. A lot of the neighbors in these here parts also bought a tub of your man, and they got theirs right off. Mine didn ' t come when the others did. April passed, and May too, but still no sign of your tub. You remember when I first wrote you tell- ing you the tub hadn ' t arrived. That was back in the early part of June. Well, June, July and August went by, and still no tub, or no answer either. And now here, in the middle of September, with the bathing season just about over, you have got the nerve to try to make me take that dern tub. TO THE ALUMNI The College Store Maintains a Mail Order Service For You Use this service for JEWELRY, PENNANTS, BOOKS, SUPPLIES, ETC. THE COLLEGE STORI .S. — This store is operated as a concession to the Athletic and Y. M. C. A. Departments ADDKISON HARDWARE COMPANY Incorporated JACKSON, MISSISSIPPI Specializing in Cafeteria and Athletic Supplies CABELL ELECTRIC CO. (Wholesale) ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES PHILCO RADIOS EMERSON FANS JACKSON, MISS. MERIDIAN, MISS. 245 STATE MEN STOP AT THE EDWARDS HOTEL WHEN IN JACKSON Because when things are happening in the Capital City they happen in the Lobby of The Edwards EDWARDS HOUSE COMPANY, Proprietor J. D. BUCHANAN, President THIS MODERN AGE How fortunate we are. By this I mean, our generation. Think of the modern conveniences we have. Some were predicted many years ago, and some were never thought of. Let ' s take one of them for example. The automobile, one of the outstanding conveniences. It has a combination of speed, power, durability, and comfort. It takes lives by the thousands every year. It leaves many cripples, who soon become a burden upon society as a whole. Other things about it to bz considered, are the poverty- striken families, who continue to purchase and operate them instead of buying food and clothing. Is this a convenience or a curse? That is to be determined by the owner or operator. Just think of the pleasures you can enjoy by owning an automobile. Take a nice Sunday evening ride in the country with your best girl on a nice cool summer evening when it is 110° in the moonlight, and you have on your best linen suit. You are riding along enjoying life, and all at once you hear a loud Bang, and the car starts swaying from one side of the road to the other before you can bring it to a halt. (Believe it or not, but you probably have a blow-out.) You dismount the vehicle to discover only a blow-out. Cursing under your breath and at the same time trying to explain to the fern, that it will be no trouble at all to fix. After struggling under the back (Continued on page 2 8) For Exclusive Wallpaper Interior Decorations, Paints, Enamels, etc. CONSULT US FARRELLCALHOUN CO., Incorporated Our service at your disposal without obligation 22-24 S. Second Phone 8-2211 MEMPHIS, TENNESSEE FOR PRINTING OF THE BETTER KIND The GOWer Printer Meridian, Mississippi 246 Travel Tri-State Coaches AT 1-3 THE COST OF Driving Your Own Car FREQUENT, DEPENDABLE SCHEDULES HOW ' S FOR A WEEK-END? Get the gang! Put a few gallons of gas on the cuff and head for New Orleans, where you will thoroughly enjoy yourself at THE ST. CHARLES HOTEL Close to everything, excellent service, reasonable rates. Simmons beds and Beautyrest mattresses All campus and no New Orleans makes Reveille Readers dull boys J. J. (MIKE) O ' LEARY Vice-President and Manager A Dinkier Hotel COMPLIMENTS OF STANDARD DRUG CO. wholesale Druggists Manufacturers Importers MERIDIAN, MISSISSIPPI Compliments of L B. DIVELBISS Office Outfitter and Stationer SALES AND SERVICE COLUMBUS, MISS. Dealers in L. C. Smith and Corona Typewriters LITHOGRAPHING Manufacturing Stationers Office Outfitters DEMENT PRINTING CO. MERIDIAN, MISS. JOE WALLACE North Mississippi Representative TUPELO, MISS. Since 1906 MISSISSIPPI STATE HEADQUARTERS • BELL CAFE COLUMBUS, MISSISSIPPI COMFORT AND GOOD SERVICE RATES 1.50 TO 2.50 SINGLE The Great Southern Hotel has a reputation for Comfort, Safety, Service, and Hospitality Let Us Serve You THE GREAT SOUTHERN HOTEL MERIDIAN, MISSISSIPPI Where Your Rest Begins NAT I. WASHBURN, Manager 2+7 THIS MODERN AGE (Continued seat for several minutes trying to find the in- struments with which to disengage the tire, you finally come to the conclusion that your little brother (the little devil) was playing with the jack in the sand pile when you left home. After sitting there in the nice cool moon- light for an hour or so waiting for some one to come along that could loan you a jack for the operation, you see a famous old T model Ford come bumping down the road. You flag the car and borrow a 1910 model, stream- from page 246) lined jack. After great effort, you are able to raise the deflated ring of scrap rubber from terra firma. Then you move to the rear of your streamlined tin horse only to discover that the spare was left with the fooling station in town for repairs. What now little Man? You catch the next passer-by going to town, so you can get the spare. You obtain the tire and get back to your one hundred horses in a streamlined can, only to find it off the jack, and the beautiful (Continued on page 2jq) We are boosters of MISSISSIPPI STATE COLLEGE • INTERSTATE PRINTERS, Incorporated Operating a Complete and Modern Printing Plant at MERIDIAN, MISSISSIPPI WE FEAR NO COMPETITION IF QUALITY IS CONSIDERED CITY SHOE SHOP E. S. TOWLES, Proprietor, Class ' 36 Always the Pause That Refreshes DRINK (Defa IN BOTTLES THE COLLEGE BARBER SHOP The Shop ' for Students ' Y. M. C. A. BUILDING 248 THIS MODERN AGE (Continued from page 248) little skirt standing in the middle of the road frightened half to death from the fall. The service station truck returns to town for another jack, taking the spare tire with him by mistake, and fails to return. You then walk to a near-by farm house and borrow the farmer ' s fine-gaited mare, and his good old rubber-tired buggy. You then help the fair- haired lassie mount the beautiful chariot, and climb in beside her. At your command the gallant steed moves off with graceful strides. It is late now and the night air has become slightly chilled. You nudge closer to the squaw, in order to keep HER warm. As you come upon a break in the trees, you see a beautiful full moon just over the tree tops. You don ' t put on the brake, throw it out of gear, cut off the ignition and lights; but just say Woa. The gallant steed comes to a halt resting on three legs. Then you admire the moon while looking at, and putting your arms around the pretty winch. (TIME FLIES.) Suddenly you realize that it is almost day (Continued on page 250) Compliments of the STATE AND REX THEATRES STARKVILLE, MISS. Best in Talking Pictures In business for your pleasure Owned by two alumni R. J. Goodman, ' 06 A. L. Goodman, ' 08 NEW HOTEL MONTELEONE NEW ORLEANS, LA. The Homelike Hotel 600 ROOMS 500 BATHS Moderate Rates, Free Radios in Rooms, Air-cooled Lobby, Coffee Shop, Grill, Dining Room, Mezzanine, Bar, Convention Hall, and some Guest Rooms GARAGE IN CONNECTION ALSO PARKING GROUNDS F. J. MONTELEONE Managing Director. A. F. SPATAFORA General Manager SHOES AND CLOTHING FOR THE FAMILY IN THE Largest Department Store in the world — under nearly 1,500 roofs J. C. PENN EY CO. Starkville, Miss. The Busy Store REED AND LEWIS FANCY GROCERIES J. S. LEWIS, Proprietor Phone 250, 252, 253 Starkville, Miss. 249 THIS MODERN AGE (Continued from page 24.9) break. You straighten your hair and adjust beautiful female finally reach her father ' s your tie, then command the plug to get mov- mansion only to find a musket pointed at you. ing. The old nag suddenly decides to balk. So you marry the girl. After several minutes of struggle you decide Speaking of conveniences, that is a con- that it is walk or else. venient way to persuade your dream girl ' s Ole Feet sore, and half starved, you and the once Man to let you marry his daughter. MtOH the ! )IPC OPEN SMCe , TO T« frB-tAT DR. WIRT A. HINES DENTIST X-RAY DIAGNOSIS Starkville, Mississippi Residence Phone 44 Office Phone 6 COMPLIMENTS OF T. H. BENNERS AND COMPANY BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA • Who furnish the College with High-grade Red Ash Coal from Blocton, Alabama MISSISSIPPI STATE STUDENTS You are always welcome at the BELL CAFE Where the Finest Foods Cost Less STARKVILLE, MISS. Supporting the College Since Its Foundation QUALITY GOODS Fair Prices W.W. SCALES CO. STARKVILLE, MISSISSIPPI SHOES IN THE NEWS GENTLEMEN, ARE We have the patterns you ' ll like in the correct size for your perfect fit KLEBAN ' S SHOE STORE STARKVILLE, MISS. 250 THIS BOOK IS BOUND IN A inaikta%t avet MANUFACTURED BY THE KINGSPORT PRESS, Incorporated KINGSPORT, TENNESSEE 251 • • COME WHAT MAY. CONFIDENCE is the heritage of youth .... it is also a fundamental requirement of business .... attained by long study, training and experience We have enjoyed the confidence of yearbook Staffs throughout the country for over thirty years .... an accomplishment for which we are truly grateful and justly proud .... • • - -■COLLEGE ANNUAL DIVISION ALABAMA ENQRAVING COMPANY B I Rjvvi N G HAM. jjL, o H s- V i (Q A U •a T THIS BOOK D E S I C n E D A n D P R I II T E D BY LZx5e4tsun p r i n t i n g c o m p a n y n a s h v i ll e o 3 a.
”
1934
1935
1936
1938
1939
1940
Find and Search Yearbooks Online Today!
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES
GENEALOGY ARCHIVE
REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.