St Christophers School - Raps and Taps Yearbook (Richmond, VA)

 - Class of 1947

Page 1 of 148

 

St Christophers School - Raps and Taps Yearbook (Richmond, VA) online collection, 1947 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 148 of the 1947 volume:

1 1 :mv ,f, 1 . ,A, 'ir ? 1. f . . H! . my Mb,- 4 'v 1 I L 1 -1, fc fp- ga. 1 , ,.Z., 4' W .r , M fffm .-tp, ,A f ,,'1 A , X -Q ,I , r. 1 . 4 'H 1' , ,Wg . Y , K .', -, YQ , ,7ls.,:f 15, ' - 1 3M M- , , ,v f., w .,1, 1. x X A 1, 'A Q i A V I vi' 34. J 4 ' r---1 , 1, W 1 'w : H X ,Nm Aifinku' .AQ V' 1 .V Mika .72 ,4,.a V' 'M Qu .4 . ww, , X K . Q.. ', ' .ff f fi , H as-1 N, , n 5 v f 1 x x J a Y ff wi .,,f:. ,.., F 1 1 , HA-4 x E, Y :Q ,-J :fi-Z yy- , ,,: 1-'35, , .' ,' W': sk fy, fu' .'sf', A31 if 9 4 x ' ,- 1 1 1 ', g ,f , L ,li XJ 4. -w , 1 , 1 .xv 1 1 ,lv Q ,sw -x v-V 1 T ,, 'ai 1 X 3 ' , X 1 K , f ,, 1 1 4 V ' . I., .. .,f I dj: W. as..-- 1, ,Ls -H w v ,vw ': ' JV 1 pyy. ' 6 , , 449 ,f, x Q. W' ,KV A , v - -,m .x. L I -. 14. ,ITM 4. n f J -. .. ' 32.1 We '1 EX LIBRIS . K 4 Iv R sl '43 0 aa X f4 Q 14, X 'LQK AO f 'fix K LGA. Q- , 1 Uv 9 x 1 I u w ,Q Q Q 1' 1 ff ' O xg A l o EDITORS-IN-CHIEF! REUBEN I-I. BROADDUS AND EDINIUND H, RUCKER ' RAPS S3 TAP 19 +49Wf0fvf X mp A ' S E E gl. ' Hma ?1,v Q14 X 3 Q JW N S MMR' W 1 'Vi A ' I I- N0 .,, . . K J' Q xg: 1 Q - wq . LH L?-N gl Q5 - N r w f 1, 1, ' I ,rf -A ngx Ll 1 mx , IQ' ' m g QMW A ,.., V... , A 4-. A N ' O H., - Am Lf- Ls- EW X :W 1 'A if U - 'Ii' ., 4- f f',. ' , J .. 'Q 5,-1-D P4 , L 1 :' .' 5 T 2515 X nf 'vnu 1' F' I., 'ur XXXN : I L H 'M mf Lf pw- I M E ma E Xi? ' z ,fi W 1 f 0, Q 1' 2.-i,f,3fu:'f l , by 6' ,y 9 Q2-S V W 0 X- VOLUNIE TWENTY-TWO PUBLISHED BY THE SENIOR CLASS OF ST. CHRISTOPHER'S SCHOOL - R1c:HMOND,VA. Kam, W file N 1 17? O I O O 49? I Q? Q, f , I I -J W 2 W 14 I 1 XC-:af-'P' Tabla ni Uuntznts FOREWORD . DEDICATION. FACULTY. . CALENDAR . SENIORS . FORMS . . ORGANIZATIONS . ATHLETICS . . MIDDLE SCHOOL . LOWER SCHOOL . ACKNOWLEDGMENTS . ADVERTISEMENTS . ,-., urzmurdg . . OMR who see school annuals may say they are all alike. Year after year, they say, there is repetition of the same kind of section devoted to the Seniors, the same loyal accounts of school activities, the same snapshots of familiar figures, the same pleasant pictures of the sponsors. VVe who are part of the life portrayed, however, know that each year b-ook is different. Pictures and the writing are but the outer surface. Those who read through this book with knowledge will have their memories stirred and their minds led off to enjoy again those personal, truly human, experiences which made the session 194-6-47. The hard work, careful planning and skill which have gone into this book insure your satisfaction. As you lose yourself in the pages that follow, may you recall with pleasure those things which filled your life at St. Christo- pher's-successes and failures, likes and dislikes, friends and enemies, classes, games, dances, society meetings, bull sessions, demerits, romances, escapades, fights, examinations, the minor things which seemed important and the major things which seemed unimportant. In some areas 1946-47 has not been a year of great victories, but it has been a year marked by hard work and steady service to the School. The-Senior Class whose book this is have quit themselves like men and shown themselves worthy of the highest ideals of St. Christopher's. faerie, 1 A O XS .Cf f v-2 lr , I UT 2 . 9 ff sglggil XC, 49 f Qpfx uv :LI Xl 1 I: 61' X BSXJ- ,AO udifatinn. . . WENTY-FOUR YEARS AGO THIS ESTIMABLE YOUNG MAN LET HIS COLLEGE CAMPUS AT HAMPDEN-SYDNEY FOR ST. CHRISTOPHEPQS. THUS BEGAN THE QUARTER OF A CENTURY OF LOYAL SERVICE, UNSWERVING DEVOTIONQ TIRELESS APPLI- CATION IN BEHALF OF THE INSTITUTION WHICH ATHLETICALLY WAS THEN WRAPPED IN ITS SWAD- DLING CLOTHES. FLEDGLINGS THEMSELVES THE SAINTS HAD TO BR CONTENT WITH MEETING OTHER NEOPHYTES, EOR THE DAY WAS YET DISTANT WHEN OUR PRESENT OPPONENTS COULD BE MET ON EQUAL TERMS. TWENTY-FOUR YEARS AGO THE QUESTION WAS, LLQUO VADIS, SONS OF ST. CHRISTOPHERW' QUIETLY, METHODICALLY, IMPLACABLY HE BEGAN TO BUILD. SLIGHTLY CONSERVATIVE7 EXTREMELY AFFABLE, INTOLERANT EVER OF INDIFFERENCE AND CARE- LESSNESS, GAINING GOOD-WILL ON ALL SIDES, HE HAS SEEN HIS HANDIWORK COME T0 FULL STATURE. STERN YET KINDLY, ALWAYS ZEALOUS OF THE WEL- FARE OF HIS BOYS, WEARING HIS MANY HONORS LIGHTLY, IT IS WITH GENUINE AEEECTION THAT WE DEDICATE THIS RAPS AND TAPS TO COACH HUGH BRENAMAN. ' V 'ff MR. HUGH C. BRENAMAN iii' f .fs , ,f . ? 'vf?, UV' FACULTY THE REVEREND JOHN PAGE WILLIAMS, H6dLZl7l2dJf81' B.A., University of Virginia, B.A., Christchurch, Oxford, Virginia Theological Seminary MR. ROBERT W. BUGG, Senior Maurer B.A., D.Sc., Hampden-Sydney College MR. HUGH C. BRENAMAN, Director of Athleticr and Bzzrinerr Mdl'ZdgE7' Hampden-Sydney College MR. BENJAMIN S. MORGAN, JR. B.A., Hampden-Sydney Collegeg M.A., Syracuse University, L.I..B. University of West Virginia. MR. JOHN BRANCH GREEN B.A., College of Willizlin and Mary. MR. JOHN R. BRINSER B.A., Hampden-Sydnev Collegeg T. C. Williams School of Law. MR. JAMES B. ISBELL B.A., University of Arkansas, M.A., University of Illinoisg Grgtduate Wtmr'k, University of Virginia. MR. ALBERT L. JACOBS B.A., University of Richmondg Gracluarte Work, University of Richmond. MR JOHN C. BECKWITH B.A., Hampden-Sydney College. MR. WILBUR D. BAILEY B.A., College of William and Mary, Graduate Work, University of Virginia. MR. DEAN N. GROVE B.A., Catawba Collegeg M.A,, University of North Carolina. MR, MELVIN E. CRUSER B.A., Washington and Lee University, MR. DANIEL L. RE-DDIACK B.A., Lebanon Valley College, Graduate Work, University of Virginia, University of Maryland, John Hopkins University. MR. ROBERT D. WARD B.S., The Citadelg A.M., Cornell University, Belitz School of Languageg Graduate Work, University of North -Carolinag Graduate, The Infantry School. MR. JAMES G. HANES, JR. B.A., Hampden-Sydney College. MR. EDWIN L. VER-GASON B.S., Bowdoin College, Yale Drama School. MR. GEORGE A. ATKINS B.A., University of the South fSe-waneej. STAFF THE RIGHT REVEREND FREDERICK D. GOODWYN, D,D. Preridenf of the Board of Trustees MR. RANDOLPH TUCKER Cbfzirmmz of Loral Board MISS JEAN D. BURKHARDT ACIOIIKIIJII! MISS MARTHA IG. GORDON Dietilhfzn MRS. HATTIE R. 'GRUBBS Arrirfqml Dietitian MISS ISABELLE W, HARRISON Sefrefary MRS. EDWIN L. VERGASON Lilwafian MRS. MAY B. MALMO Malfon MISS ELLEN W. GOSS Rerident Nufre ISI FACULTY SW U? Q,.'4J! 9 AQ K f J Jfcf frj . x ,Q 2 A cg X5S1. f0, 039 40? so tx if f mini U ,yy gl W' I A if of I X Q-1:42 1946 - CALENDAR ' 1947 Sept, 5-Beach combers from Buckroe to Wakigi rounded up by Coach Brenaman Sept. 11-School opensg boys look for new teachers-new teachers look for exits. Nov. 2-Woodberry Forest Game-the win we love to clutch-slips through grasp again. However, Bake's nose stops Dean cold. Nov. 15-Li'l Ed plays mud pies with Big jim--Plastic surgeon plays pattycake with Liil Ed's face. Nov. 15-Macbeth show substitutes for English composition-Uncle jakels substitutes for Macbeth. Nov. 23-Saints 26, V. E, S. 0-Corley's barn floats away. Intoxicated hog and Pot-ts Dec. 6- roam Westhampton singing Saint marching song. 'Monogram Dance-Boarder sees woman. Dec. 13-Sauer's Banquet-Boarder sees food. Dec. 17- Nocturnal street construction crew paves way through Chamberlayne Hall, but fails to get through Beckwith's front yard, Mr. Ward still in dark as to construction methods. Dec. 2OEDeb season opens+Physics class closes, an immersed body is buoyed up by ia force equal to ,the w-eight of the fluid which it displaces. Jan. 22-Murphy passes American History Exam. Feb. 20-DesPortes outclasses Newton, Law Of Universal Gravitation of Spitballs for Prof, Beckwith's Cranium is accepted by Nobel Committee. Mar. 1-Annual goes to press. Mat. 2-Mr. Williams bails RAPS AND TAPS staff from city jail-jailed for celebration ending in monstrous drunken brawl. Mar. 20-Dramatic's Club and The Hasty Heart-runs one night factors still runningj. Mar. 21-Senior Class charters bus for Charlottesville-parents spend Spring holidays springing offspring from jails-U. Va. bans Saint Class of '47 from Fresh- man Class. April 1-Ternperature rises .to 33 Degrees F.-clothing stores exhaust ten years' supply of T-Shirts . April 6-Easter-Boarders feed Mitss Gt:-rden's chickens all of Sauer's ipastel colors. April 28- john seen in front of Booker-T with a bottle of milk, May 97Hill and Wolfe publish Pine Needle which causes no race riots, floods, earthquakes, miner's strikes, or lynchings. May 26w7 QM day holidays plus 1 movie each nightj equals to IOOW, Faculty Formula for exams. june 5-Senior Danceg whim of Class of '47 fulfilled-Reception Line machine- gunned in cold blood. june 6-Saints with glistening eyes gather around piano for final hymndflasks bulge from hip pockets. f 10 3 b 5 W ifzfw , t , mznnmm u :Nl 'lj ffl Y, JJ, . mf XI'M X.h- fag' ' I-X Y A X W I I HN LI? 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T:'H,l,1',VZ 2 I IIIIIWW , 5 .7 3 The Raleigh Tavern SE IORS -,X I , -2-. , v--X., .-f. wr fy.. iii Y V sk 4 , 1 x , X Qu J Afx' f- w i xf x,..1 . . . ra ' L pf L 4 Ni .gf ga ,1 ,1 , , A 511- 9-Q lxfv SJ fy, 5 4 K ,4 A-. , 1 1 . ' V ' Q . ,.,, -5.6 fx- , ,- L 4 7 L ,L ,XJ v 5 ,. , 1 lf .4 ,f mn !. J, .- -4,', 3,1 m 5 ,Iii , . fl ,v '1?'fP -Q , W-. f , , , 7+ 5 L 1-fx 5,1 , fx ' . .A - X . ,, ,f 2 ,' J ' ' ,hh ' ar F ' - ,- rf, , W. 1 , -uv.. Y Ma. . 4 1 .w l ,T QM, ,fi X ,L ., ' ax - ,.. ' K, ,, .wh X , f 'kk Q vi' 'fx ' , ,E . ,., - --X X, -- -JT ' Q-,. .-xx ' 'I J 'iv A - 1. 5 A t A ' . A L -K 'L Lg. .-:bi 3, , ' vf' 1. rf. XJ v .3 IFA , I ' I .s L Y -' , f ts , , f R i 4 ' L ' . , we j - I 4 X- fx , X 1 - ,Q 5 ff , X qi S X , X5-f -. sg I f ' 'QR ALFRED ASHTON ADKINS, III Richmond, Virginia 4 Years Member of jackson Society, Member of Missionary Society, Member -of Monogram Club. 1945-44-Bulldog Football, junior Basketball, B-Team Baseball. 1944-45-Chairman of Form Committee, B-Team Foot- ball, B-Team Basketball, B-Team Baseball, 1945-46-Varsity Football Squad, B-Team Basketball, Varsity Baseball Squad. 1946-47AAssistant Subscription Manager of RAPS AND TAPS, Varsity Football Team, B-Team Basketball. JAMES BRYANT BOURNE, JR. Sandston, Virginia 5 Years Member of jackson Society, Member of Missionary Society, Member of Dramatic Club. 1942-43-Bulldog Football, Midget Basketball, junior Baseball. 1943-44-Member of Technical Staff for The Tavern, junior Football. 1944-45-Prop Manager for The Birlyap Mirbelauzfer, Junior Football, Track. 1945-46-Prop Manager for Ramflaackle Inn. B-Team Football, Track. 1946-47-Stage Manager for The Harry Henri, Monitor in Boarding Department. fx X i l: il ,QQ fcip' 5 Q2 U U1 wma:- N o 5 it to t .f6'p GN '53 ga A I 0 XQ,ffDf REUBEN HANCOCK BROADDUS, JR. Bowling Green, Virginia 6 Years Member of jackson Society, Member of Missionary Society. 1941-42-Midget Football, Intramural Baseball. 1942-43-Bulldog Football, Midget Basketball, junior Baseball. 1945-44-junior Football, Junior Basketball, junior Baseball. 1944-45-Pmxime Afcerriz of Form, junior Football, junior Basketball, junior Baseball. 1945-46-Proxime Arcerrit of Forrn, Pine- Needle Staff, Assistant Sports Editor of RAPs AND TAPS, Director of Missionary Society, junior Football, B-Team Basketball, B-Team Baseball. 19116-47-Co-editor of RAPS AND TAPS, Vice-President of jackson Society, Member of Student Council, Member of Library Committee, Director -of Mission- ary Society, Sports Editor of Pine Needle, B-Team Football. CHARLES ALEXANDER CHILTON Ashland, Virginia 4- Years Member of jackson soroir-ry, Member of Missionary Society, Member of Monogram Club. 1943-44-Junior Basketball, 1944-45-junior Football, junior Basketball. 1945-46-Junior Football, Tumbling. 1946-47-Monitor in Boarding Department, President of Stamp Club, Manager of Varsity Football Squad. 2 44 if , ,r I 1 3 . r I UT xo,X ,fs A LEVVIS PRESTON COLLINS, III Zllarion, Virginia 1 Year Member of Lee Society, Member of Missionary Society. Member -of Monogram Club. 1946-47-Varsity Football Team, Varsity Basketball Squad. EDMUND BAKER DAVENPGRT Richmond, Virginia 7 Years Member of Lee Society, Member of Missionary Society, Member of Monogram Club. 1940-41-Midget Football, Intramural Baseball, 1941-42-Bulldog Football, Midget Basketball, junior Baseball. 1942-45-junior Football, junior Basketball. 1943-44-B-Team Football, junior Basketball. 1944-45-Varsity Football Squad. 1945-46- y ball Team, B-Team Basketball. 1946-47-President of Lee Society, Vice-President of Missionary Society, President of Monogram Club, Co-Captain of Varsity Football Team. Director of Missionar Society, Varsity Foot- SN -AJ Qff4Qf f13l f t Q- v. ft If f ft if . AO 173,517 Q4 Q f a 3-W 1 W UT L O Q . X tl 3' X' I , WILLIAM ERVIN DESPORTES Richmond, Virginia 12 Years Member of jackson Society, Member of Missionary Society, Member of Monogram Club. 1937-318-L-ower School Varsity Football, 1938-39-Lower Sch-ool Varsity Football. 1959-40-Member of Lower School Honor Committee, President of Lower School Missionary Society, Lower School Varsity Football. 1940-41-Flea Football, Intramural Baseball. 1941-42-Vice-President of Middle School jackson So- ciety, Midget Football, Intramural Baseball. 1942-43-Bulldog Football, Midge-t Basketball, B-Team Baseball. 1943-44-B-Team Football, Varsity Baseball Squad. 1944-45-Member of Form Committee, Varsity Football Squad, Varsity Baseball Team. 1945-46-Member of Student Council, Member of Form Committee, Director of Missionary Society, Varsity Football Team, Varsity Baseball Team. 1946-47-Member of Student Council, President of jackson Society, Secretary-Treasurer of Missionary Society, Secretary-Treasurer of Monogram Club, Chairman of Form Committee, Subscription Manager of RAPS AND TAPS, Varsity Football Team, Captain of Varsity Baseball Team. GEORGE LEIGH HALL Reidsville, North Carolina 3 Years Member of jackson Society, Member of Missionary Society, Member of Dramatic Club. 1944-45-Casit of The Biflmp Mitbelauzfet. 1945-46-Cast of Ramrbarkle Inn, 1946-47-President of Dramatic Club, Vice-President of Stamp Club, Football Cheer Leader. 141 EDWARD GOVAN HILL, III Richmond, Virginia 7 Years Member of Lee Society, Member of Missionary Society, Member of Dramatic Club. 1940.-41-Intramural Basketball, Intramural Baseball. 1941-42-Pfoxime Accerrerunl of Form, Flea and Midget Football, Intramural Basketball, Intramural Baseball. 1942-43-Co-prizeman of Form, Bulldog Football, Intra- mural Basketball, junior Baseball. 1943-44-Prizeman of Form, junior Basketball, junior Baseball. 1944-45-wPrizeman of Form, -Pine Needle Staff, junior Football. 1945-46-Prizeman of Form, Pine Needle Staff, RAPS AND TAPS Staff, B-Team Baseball. 1946-47-Co-editor of Pine Needle, Member of Student Council, Vice-President of Lee Society, Business Manager of RAPs AND TAPs, Cast of The Harry Heart. WVIRT PEEBLES MARKS, III Richmond, Virginia 12 Years Member of jackson Society, Member of Missionary Society, Member of Dramatic Club. 1940-41-Flea Football, Intramural Basketball, Intra- mural Baseball. 1941-42-Bulldog Football, Intramural Basketball, Intra- mural Baseball. 1942-45-Bulldog Football, Midget Basketball, junior Baseball. 1943-44-junior Football, junior Basketball, junior Baseball. 1944-45-B-Team Football, Junior Basketball. 1945-46-Pine Needle Staff, Varsity Football Squad, Track. 1946-47-Circulation Manager of Pine Needle, Cas-t of The Hasty Heart. Member of Library Committee, Varsity Football Squad. f15 KKQEI F X 1 lui N9 AO Q,JfDf 3 ,Q fe. 'i mg s J .5355 Z9 ff X ul O F0 g E 4 O cas a-A AQ WARREN JEFFERSON MARLOWE Richmond, Virginia 3 Years Member of Lee Society, Member of Missionary Societ Member of Dramatic Club. 1944-45-Bulldog Football. 194546-Cast of Ramrlmckle Imz. 1946-47-Cast of The Hurry Heart. VIRGIL PATRICK RANDOLPH, III Richmond, Virginia 12 Years Member of Lee Society, Member of Missionary Society. 1939-40-Secretary -of Lower School Lee Society, Lower School Football. 1940-41-Proxime Accenerulzr of Form, Flea Football. 1941-42-Flea Football. 1942-43-Bulldog Football. 1945-44-Bulldog Football. 1945-46-Secretary of Lee Society, Assisrant Literary Editor of Pine Needle, Member of Literary Com- mittee. 1946-47-Feature Editor of Pine Needle, Assistant Ad- vertising Manager of RAPS AND TAPS. E163 Y, Q l l l . l , .--13 3,0 l EDMUND HARRISON RUCKER, JR. Richmond, Virginia 5 Years Member of jackson Society, Mem-ber of Missionary Society, Member of Dramatic Club, Member of Monogram Club. 1942-43-Bulldog Football, Midget Basketball. 1943-44-President of junior jackson Society, junior Football, junior Basketball. 1944-45-Member of Form Committee, B-Team Football, junior Basketball, Track. 1945-46-Winner of School Reading Contest, Member of Form Com-mittee, Director of Missionary Society, Cast of Rtimflmrkle Inn, Pine Needle Staff, RAPS AND TAPS Staff, Varsity 'Football SquadZ,B-Team Basketball, Track. 1946-47-Co-editor of RAPS AND TAPS, Member of Stu- dent Council, Member of Form Committee, Presi- dent of Missionary Society, Assistant Editor of Pine Needle, Cast of The Hapfzy Heart, Varsity Football Team. HERBERT GLADSTONE SENN Exmore, Virginia 2 Years Member of Lee Society, Member of Missionary Society. 1946-47-Technical Staff of The Harry Heart. f 17 il ,g55'SkQ !! u v , my OHOS. r-'NT CHE Q Ag? w 30 QL? M..J 49? ni' 452 cf 4 JJ lil ,f' 4. l O sw 1. AO RICHARD HINSDALE SHERMAN Ithaca, New Ibrk 4 Years Member of jackson Society, Member of Missionary Society. 1943-44-junior Football, junior Baseball, 1944-45ijunior Football, junior Baseball. 1945-46-B-Team Football, B-Team Basketball, B-Team Baseball. 1946-47-Member of Library Committee, B-Team Basker- ball. THOMAS COE SHOEMAKER Norfolk, Virginia 4 Years Member of Lee Society, Member of Missionary Society, Member of Monogram Club. 1943-44-Midget Basketball, junior Baseball. My 1944-45-junior Football, junior Basketball, B-Team Baseball. 1945-46-B-Team Football, Varsity Basketball Squad, B-Team Baseball. 1946-47-Member of Library Committee, Assistant Sub- scription Manager of RAPS AND TAPS, Varsity Foot- ball Team, Varsity Basketball Team. l18l WILLIAM LATANE STIFF Oak Grove, Virginia 2 Years Member of jackson Society, Member of Missionary Society. 1945-46-junior Football, Varsity Basketball Snuad, B-Team Baseball, 1946-47-Member of Student Council, Member of Library Committee, B-Team Football, Varsity Bas- ketball Squad? CHARLES BURVVELL VVALDEN, JR. Richmond, Virginia 12 Years Member of Lee Society, Member of Missionary Society, Member of Dramatic Club. 1940-41-Flea Football, Intramural Basketball, Intra- mural Baseball. 1941-42-Flea Football, Initramural Basketball, Intra- mural Baseball. 1942-43-Bulldog Football, Midget Basketball, junior Baseball. 1943-44-junior Football, junior Basketball, junior Baseball. 1944-45-Junior Football. 1945-46kPine Needle Staff. 1946-47-Business Manager of Pine Needle, Advertising Manager of RAPs AND TAPs, Cast of The Harry Henri. f19 ,Gilt Xi xx 1 1 O L,ff3f Zi '19 AIG N gf ff' i m, 'iii 'L ' , Xutlll it if l' I I7 E If O wi. .X Q, K? WILLIAM ROSS WALKER, JR. Member of Lee Society, Member of Missionary Richmond, Virginia 3 ,Years 1944-45-junior Football, junior Basketball. 1945-46-B-Team Football, B-Team Basketball. 1946-47-B-Team Basketball. ALEXANDER VVELLFORD Richmond, Virginia 10 Years Member of jackson Society, Member of Missionary Society, Mem-ber of Monogram Club. 1940-41+Flea Foo-tball, Intramural Basketball, Intra mural Basebaill. 1941-42hMidget Foot-ball, Intramural Basketball, Intra mural Baseball. 1942-43 1945-44 1944-45 11945-46 -Bulldog Football, junior Baseball. -junior Football, Tumbling Team, Track. B-Team Football, Track. Pine Needle Staff, Director of Missionary So ciety, Varsity Football Squad? Track. 1946-47-Subscription Manager of Pine Needle, Director of Missionary Society, Varsity Football Team. IQOI Society THOMAS KENNERLY WOLFE, JR. Richmond, Virginia 6 Years Member of jackson Society, Member of Missionary 1 Society. I 1941-42-Flea Football, Intramural Baseball. l 1942-43-Bulldog Football, Midget Basketball, Junior V Baseball. 1943-44-Bulldog Football f'CaptainJ, junior Basketball, junior Baseball. g E i 1944-45-junior Football, B-Team Basketball, B-Team ' Baseball. i i 1945-46+Member of Student Council, Secretary of - jackson Society, Member of Form Committee, 2 Director of Missionary Society, Sports Editor of Pine Needle S orts Editor of RAPS AND TAPS , 7 P 9 Junior Football, Varsity Basketball Squad, B-Team l Baseball. 1946-47-Chairman of Student Council, Co-editor -of L Pine Needle, Director of Missionary Society, Mem- , ber of Form Committee. i i21l XX giopfelck gf lgwx 459 lf if Q ff' 2 5 .KLLS KXQ gf I -ixw. .ff f,2.?lgg A also hge A? l l i li SEVENTH FORM Left to righrafront row: Marlowe, Broaddus, Davenport, De-sPortes, Wellfcbrd, Wcr'fe, Randolph. Second row: Marks, Hill, Senn, Wrilker, Chilton, Bourne. Third row: Adkins, A. A, Hnllrnd, C. A., Collins, Sherman, Walden. Back row: Hall, Shoemaker, Sprairley, Stiff, Rucker. SEVENTH FORM BALLOT Most popular. . . . . .DesPortes I-Iandsomest . . . . .Davenport . . .DesPortes Best athlete .. Smartest ........... .... B roaddus Most ambitious ....... .... R ucker Most likely to succeed ........ Rucker Laziest .........,........ Wellford Makes most boners. . . .... Bourne First to marry .........,.... Adkins Likeliest bachelor ......... Broaddus Most in need of a shave ...... Collins I 22 Most in need of a haircut ...... Senn Most in need of a comb .... Broaddus Biggest buller. Best singer. . . Best dressed . , Wittiest ........ .... Most confident Most carefree . . . . . . Most drag . . . Likeliest faeult . . .Adkins . ..... Chilton Davenport Davenport . . . Rucker .Wel1ford . . .Wolfe y member ..... Bourne Most hog wild ........ .... R ucker l ADKINS: Head of huge furniture trust and brains of bootleg mob found to be same person. Exhibit A: wood chip fupon which U. Va. boy choked! stamped Ad- kin's Furniture. BOURNE: Sandston citizen jerked from dull life of business man to perform a task for benefit of all mankind- posing for remodeling of Rodirrs The Thinker, which was completely de- molished in Third Xworld War. BROADDUS: Colonel Broaddus still holding out in hills of Tennessee. Crack Oregon Hill Regiment playing havoc on countryside a- round Chattanooga, refus- ing to give in to 'the Damyankees. Adept at guerrilla warfare, Rough and Ready Rube retreated there shortly after an un- expected and savage raid, which leht Washington in smoking ruins. Cl-HLTON: Unshaven singer, enter- taining Dock St. bar-flies with his Full Moon and Empty Pockets, is recog- nized as tenor who was bred for astounding Metro- politan audience during performance of Aida wi-th Tanked-up version of Filipino Baby. fK'OfQX cg FAT llc xx 5 ' x 0 i241 COLLINS: Country Collins rushes madlyfromsecludedMarion farm ffor first time in 23 yearsj to take out patent on his discovery -the wagons move faster if you round off fthe square roll- ersg he plans to call it Z1 Wheel. DAVENPORT: Corner-stone of new Richmond TraH:1c Viola- tions Bureau laid by promi- nent insurance man- Why notg I paid for it? Leav- ing ceremonies, he speeds through red light on left side of street, hits fire hydrant, backs away over Mayor's wife, and fails to prevent Lexie from maim- ing protesting police ser- geant. DESPORTES: Naturalists dismayed as Huntsman DesPortes kills lastt living speciman of dove familyg finishing a lifetime career of single- handedly making dove ex- tinct. HALL: Federal customs official disguised as old woman rounds up Marijuana band secretly raising acres of produce deep in tobacco country-Reedsville, N. C. Officer and Exhibit A. Ctruck load of ripened plantsj disappear inito hills in search 'of a match. HILL: Led away by several white-coated men from the scene of the killing, head of huge newspaper syndi- cate babbles insanely: I finally got himg I finally got him! Sports editor lies crushed beneath huge presses. MARKS: Honest Witt, criminal lawyer, wins another case. Accused of the ax murder of invalid grandmother, lawyer's client goes free on Writ of Habeas Corpus. Cement for side of law- yer's new fish pond un- cannily lumpy. fQuote: Termites Unquotej MARLOWE: Marlowe's K i d d i e s Hour celebrates the 75th anniversary of radio with the usual type of ptogramg a two-months-old baby is torn to bits by a pack of snarling wolves before the mike. RANDOLPH: Ambassador to South American republic arrested for getting dictator ginned up, winning his Buick, ranch, and three chamber- inaids from him in a Black jack game and, upon his refusal to pay, starting a peon insurrection, offering rebels shorter working day -16 hours. La bfi, 'f.v ,I WV. ' E253 fl 4751575- XWASN cf 'll l' ull '-tri W g k X2 5 O X69 -:...O AO X Qfyfcbf I Us jimi tl WA, 'Ofixsx ff Nga' ,V 49 ,ff l5 Of l26l RUCKER: Expert at plastic surgery and father of the Rejuve- nation Theory creates per- fect woman and elopes swiftly to secluded South Sea islandg tropical tem- perature climbs to new high. SENN: Famous hair oil concern revises recipe slightly and changes to shoe polish con- cern. Star Salesman Senn cuts hair fformer advertis- ingj to reveal polished shoes fnew advertisingj. SHERMAN: Sherman in 50th year of foodless, sleepless, and motionless rtrance. His chess opponent bottled his king up. SHOEMAKER: Admiral Shoemaker wins brilliant battle in Pacific, destroying 56 enemy cruis- ersg attributes success to education at Ol' St. C.- The Sinker Method. SPRATLEY: Scientist receives civic award for greatest city improvement-discovery of a method of de-odorizing a whole community. Scien- tist hoclcs silver cup and buys fuel for convertible and throat and hits open road, STIFF: V. P. I. class holds re- union at country estate of classmate. Tenant farmer Stiff, shoeless and shave- less, spits terbaccy 'through hole in roof, rises from only chair for miles around Northern Neck, and wel- comes classmates to run down farm with ol' fasihun corn off the cob. WALDEN: Head of Pranksters Inc., huge advertising agency, celebrates 50ith year of be- ing 'Grand Jester by erect- ing signs in every city ad- vertising customer's brand of rowboat, shortly after blowing up every bridge on 'the 'East Coast. WALKER: Walker receives cup at St. C. commencement ser- vice in commemoration of his 50th year as head math teacher without being late or absent once. l27l N A. GNN! L, J x K X X Q-51,43 OPX X , f Cr-1 .ZFX 1 XS, X E x I I . 'Q I v fa m .0o,,3S,5f?- WELLFORD: Wellford succeeds Hoagy C. and takes lead roll in Lost Decade. Playing opposite a shapely beer keg, Sandy takes nation by storm with his musical rendition of Gunga Din and I'm A Jolly Rebel. WOLFE: Wresitling promoter and chief bookie of West Coast accused of hxing Rose Biowl game. Crowd sus- pected fraud when safety man groaned and bled twenty seconds before be- ing tackled. TIIE RIcHiiibMiiiEioiiiiiPLEAD1:R Io97'rI-I YEAR RICHMOND, VIRGINIA, SATURDAY, JUNE I, 2947. IO CENTS ANCIENT CIVILIZATION DISCOVERED DARK AGE RELICS UNCOVERED RICHMOND, jun, I.-Coleman C. Moleman, operating a weasel ray drill, unearthed an ancient town while digging in the uranium Helds of western Richmond-a group of buildings surrounded by a white fence, obviously fortified village of' some extinct tribe. A perfectly preserved body was found still peering from behind the fence, In the corpse's hand was still- clutched a small sheet of paper reading: Close bounds- 20 demeritsf Tribe had been made extinct by Inner quarrels and wars. All build- ings had huge holes in walls and Hoor. caused by terrific explosions. Authorities suspect objects similar to one found near door marked Headmaster -a small conelilre object labeled Liberty Bell, labora ones are for such Authorities claim the buried tribe practiced human sacrifice- some sort of open-air theater con- taining a 100-yard field ma-rked off by white stripes and surrounded by bleachers was unearthed near vil- lage. Samples taken from earth of theater showed human blood-evi- dence that the place was the location for some sort of barbarous human sacrificial rites. Apparently the use-of water for drinking purposes had not been discovered. Everywhere among the buildings were littered empty bot- tles previously containing some sort of liquid similar nitric acid. Many amazing relics were un- covered in the buildings dotting the village-further -proof of -bar- barous cults. Books, full of ancient literature, were found marked be- yond recognition. Fantastic and gruesome pictures covered the covers, pages, and type of the books -babies being pushed from -cliffs, crippled men crushed under huge Weights and trucks hitting blind men were some of the milder types of tribal art. A different type of art was found on the walls and closet doors of the Living quarters of the tribes- men. Several drawings were i281 on window shades. f A Garden in Williamsburg F O R M S +2 .1 , h-f f X .5 . 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A, , X -- w '1 -.f ' X . f ' . ' --in L.. ' I -xii . K ku -fm ., x. ,.. ' f 5 v 3 f , -. H Ti Q 'BX 7 -4 ,K XXVA , f . -' ,XX ' , ' - '-179, -.1 .1 I 5-It V-X -- 'xfI,Q-f1,' . y ' 1 ' . . . ,X f N X- I f , . . , X 1 -1., 1 ' 1 Xf., X ., - .'f':'57',: -z :r-Q' fn. ,,, .P . .A .- T' x H Q., g 7 g V , - SIXTH FORM Left to right-front row: Shands, Corley, Ward, Mr. lsbell ffaculty adviseri, White, W. B., Massey, Mauck, Parsons. Second row: Parker, Ruffin, Dietz, Lightbourn, Hobson, james, Miller, A. W., Jeffreys. Third row: Kelly, XX'eeks, Moore, Taylor, N. C., Woodroo-f, Johnson, W. T. Fourth row: Pierce, Miller, R. C., Haley, Proffitt, Rilee, Lee, Sauer. Back row: Boney, Liebert, Sydnor, Geoghegan, Cooper, Newell, Johnston, M. C., Mac Conochie. Absent: Potts. SIXTH FORM BALLOT Most popular . . . ...... Ward I-Landsomest . . . .... Kelly Best athlete .... . . .Weeks Smartest ....... . . .Pierce Most ambitious .............. Kelly Most likely to succeed .... Lightbourn Laziest .................... Ward Makes most boners ..... MacConochie First to marry ...... . . .Lightbourn Likeliest bachelor ............ Boney M-ost in need of a shave ...... Weeks I29 Most in need of a comb. . Most in need of a haircut ..... Biggest buller . Best singer .... Best dressed. . . Wittiest ...... Most confident Most carefree. . Most drag .... Likeliest faculty Most 'lhog wild l .Sauer .Sauer .............White Proffitt . . . Potts Mauck Mauck .. ...White .Sauer .Pierce member ..... . . .Potts Kfjplifges. Q 0 rr x A O St e XQZKDX A9 . a . r at Q n U-il E 2 6? i, - K V ' ceo fa? 1? 4425, U if , X 'Sf , I ol Qfl l .IFKL I . V, Sit Lffiiif FIFTH FORM Le5t to right-front row: Williams-on, Lecky, Waller, joseph, Witt, W. L., McElroy, J. L., Rumble, Cox,. Second row: Brown, W. H., Outland, Warfield, Dormire, Moody, Lafferrty, Goddard Hodges, Davis. Third row: Carter, Anderson, J. R., Funsten, Richardson, H. M., LeCompte Moulton, Gills, Underhill. Back row: Sutton, L. E., Sinclair, johnson, W. R., Brown, M. Q. Clarke, Mr. Jacobs ffaculty adviserj, Baldwin, Straughan, Edmunds. Absent: Arnold, Horseley Norton, Shepard, Woods, W. S. D. v x 1 x FIFTH FORM BALLOT Most popular .... . . .Horsley Handsomest . . . . . .Sinclair Best athlete .... .... W oods Smartest ............ .... A rnold Most ambitious ........ . . .Horsley Most likely to succeed ....... Horsley Laziest .............. . . .Miller Makes most boners . . . . . .Miller First to marry ......... . . .Hodges Likeliest bachelor ........... Norton Most in need of .a shave ....... Davis lf 30 Most in need of a comb ..... LaPrade Most in need of a haircut .... LaPrade Biggest bullet' ............ Underhill Best singer . . . . . .Shepard Best dressed. . . . . .Leckie Wittiest ....... . . .Witt Most confident . . . .... Moody Most carefree . . . . . . .LaPrade Most drag ............. . . .joseph Likeliest faculty member ...... Leckie il ,TM i 9 f pm., V 'ff ,A,V -V H FOURTH FORM Left to right-front row: Talman, Smith, H. H., Ossman, Harp, O'Brien, Wesccrtt, Duffy, Page. Second row: Von Schilling, Mantin, Harrison, Oppenheimer, Scrivenor, Butterfield, Whiite, B. B., Duval. Third row: LaPrade, Mewhinney, Terry, Doubles, Taylor, R. L., Ware, I-I. H., Northern. Back row: Mayo, 'Cog-bill, Mr. Brinser lfaculty adviserj, Garcia, Griswold. Absent: Cabell, Creecy, Daniel, D. S., Leach, J. A. FOURTH FORM BALLOT Most popular . . . ..... Doubles Handsomest .. .... Mewhinney Best athlete . . . ..... Garcia Smartest ...... . . .Daniel Most ambitious ....... .... O 'Brien Most likely to succeed. . . . . .Daniel Laziest .............. .... T Garcia Makes most boners ........ Scrivenor First to marry .......... Mewhinney Likeliest bachelor ......... Griswold Most in need of a shave ...... Cogbill I 31 Most in need of a com-b .... Scrivenor Most in need of a haircut. . .Griswold Biggest bullet ............ Scrivenor Best singer .... ..... C ogbill Best dressed. . . . . .Mewhinney Wittiest ......... .... O ppenhimer Most confident .... ....... T aylor Most carefree. . . . .... Cogbill Most drag ............... Griswold Likeliest faculty member ...... Taylor l 64 12795 XQIKJ X N ff - . .57 lg II -l l k3lFBl . ' 3, THIRD FORNI Left to right-front row: Robertson, Grymes, Marion, Brooke, joel, Warneke, Darsr, Denny, Bagley. Second row: Henley, W., Dudley, Cary, M., Vrooman, Holland, B. P., Anderson, S. A., Br-own, 'H. B., Wcnod. Third row: Luck, Cardwell, Warner, jones, Henley, R., Klostermeyer, Smith, -G. T., Bickel. Back row: Simpson, Archer, Neal, E., Mr. Green ffaculty adviserj, Reed, Green, Tabb. Absent: Scott, Leach, H., Augustine, J. THIRD FORM BALLOT Most popular. . . . . .Tabb and Cary Handsomest . . . .......... Scott Best athlete .... .......... D udley Smartest ........... Anderson, S. A. Most ambitious ............. Dudley Most likely to succeed, Anderson, S. A. Laziest ..................... Tabb Makes most boners. . . .... Neal First to marry .............. Bagley Likeliest bachelor ......... Leach, H. Most in need of a shave ........ Neal Most in need of a comb ........ Cary Most in need of a haircut ...... Scott Biggest buller ............... Tabb Best singer .... . . .Holland, B. P. Best dressed. . . ..... Robertson Wittiest ....... .... S impson Most confident .... . . .Dudley Most carefree .... . . . ..... Tabb Most drag .................. Tabb Likeliest faculty member. . .Warnecke 41235, 5 32 3 L.. UT o A 1 l 0 'I gl 1 li 4' sf .5 fa ,f XS W y -4 .1 , 1 I if uf X Ls. u X- I 's 'P C D ,if W vv ?v',.J- 1 'E ,. xi E' if Q ,rx - Ei.. K 5 'si- ,T 1, 1:1 n ., h .31 X 1 'iii K. -. .Th . , ,.'1L'5?'1.' 1 aff ,.l. fr. 1- 1-11 . ' ' W . 'fu q , LW11. 1 ' 1 ' xg ' 1' 1- 'V' , , 1 M A x N1 mr. - 1--,xy 3 - .1' R' I 4- 'Y , 'V-fi W -.rfe A T,: l t .,5Mr.--H -: - ,F , K ln. j. 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N R Q , K -1. -L' ,xv jf: 1 M15 ' .. ' . 1 r'W-'V 'F' .Q 1 K -f '-Y3'.'fX' '5 1 ff? , ,., 5, 1 .,1 I , 1 'A X wytfm. :EA 3 W 1 4 27 V --, ' A , wifi' Zh. KF -11111 Eff. ,' 1 'f ,,1,s.1.. :- ' , ' M 111' N 11:b,, -A' , ' Y ,111f. -- ' ' , ' '- fc' 17' 1 .. w'Ufr't':'.r k Q,.- N ' J .Liu ,J.,1. 1 A . V ,...? H., .r I 11, . 1 ,jx 1 1 , ,, 1,lx.., .111-1 .xx . g 1' 1. fum 1 ,JF - UK,-I Ax A PA V 1 1 , 1. . ' ., . f 1 1 1 ' 1 ' cg .1 N L- t 1 'J E V 1' 7 ' 1 - 4. 1 1 1, - , . 1 . . 1 . . I ff . ' ' 1 a . f A - -1 .11 , 1 K if: P - Q.-Q 1 Y7 41.3 ,1'1 - , 3 3 1 , . 1 -T R f ,VA .-. 1.1 ...sq Left to right-front row: Profhtt, Rucker, Wolfe, DesPorites, Boney. Back row: Broaddus, Stiff, Woodroof, Mr, Grove ffaculty adviserj, Lightbourne, Mauck, Hill. THE STUDENT COUNCIL DURING ,this session the Student Council has steadily increased in importance to the life of the school. Having operated during the ,past few years chiefly to lead in the activities of student organization, it has shown itself capable of discharging an increasing number of responsibilities. This year, combining the responsibilities of the Honor Com- mit-tee with its own previous duties, the Student Council completed the hnal step of intrenchment in the realm of school life. Membership on the Student Council is the highest honor a istudent is able to achieve at St. Christopher's. Only students of the highest two forms are eligible for member- ship. Chosen by a vote of the student body and of the school faculty, and with the approval of the headmaster, each member pledges himself ,to be a ip-ower for good in the school. Serving as a council representing the student body, as investigator of infractions of the Honor Sys-tem, and as a major influence in preserving in St. Christopher's the ideals of honor, courtesy, loyalty, and sportsmanship so painstakingly instilled by Dr. Chamber- layne, this year's Student Council has done an admirable task. Upon graduation, this body of councilors may easily rest assured that their influence will remain with the graduating classes of the future-their efforts and high criteria of integrity firmly implanted in the minds of the younger boys. f33l Oi:-X 4 ,Q x 7 A. . , NQv4D 'PL-i :asf WLT ' C ,tgf J-,Gyn cf ffl, M7 4 J PNP' WDW NW? N N42583-N'S3!qQi1TQ,'TajRfH? U-fu.M4AT..fhxl.fmu ED. RUCKER, Presideni' DAVENPORT -X Q P f'YW 'Q 3'NX'nimIf9:'1i W 55 DE5PORTE.5 1, . MR BECKWITH XXXYYT Faculiy Advisor THE MISSIONARY SOCIETY PRESIDENT. . . ..... E. H. RUCKER, JR. VICE-PRESIDENT. . . . . .. SECRETARY ....,........ W. E. DESPORTES Directors FORM SEVEN A. WELLFORD, R. H. RROADDUS, JR., T. K. FORM STX WOLFE, JR. F. N. BONEY, G. E. LIGHTBOURN, W. R. MAUCK, 1. J. POTTS, D. C. WEEKS, W. E. WOODROOF I 344 1 . 7 N L L. f rw ww MW J , .1 . E. B. DAVENPORT 1 fb X ffmx X yspG'ffEf51ArDjQf7 f' M ii1L,LhQ!,9iQJ'X:,U f' ' fwwvrP Qacllujuib i I 'x?Wi9 N X W6 Liu Lia? AV 9 x I A' .. X Xb 0 -- RQ? 9 QV s 5 la ,de 1 0RfffSPffV DROOF s ei 0 ,pus V eP R YI' X. K , -.Q jeff' X X 'xNq lsgpc1f't:: 1 NTsxouRN,2lgf' . LEE SGCIETY JACKSGN SOCIETY DAVENPORT ...,......,,...., ....., P RESIDENT ............ ,........ . . . DESPORTES HILL ........., .,.... V ICE-PRESIDENT .... BROADDUS WOODROO-F ...., ..... S ECRETARY . .,.... LIGHTBOURN f 35 3 Kim - L' s o Q,.f M9 GEN , Ti A01 I I XX I4 'Q-E? N 0 149 ' 435 If I I U I 2 P if .x I EA o 'Q .4 X X 1, Y , , ,,,,,,,,, . ffiaw . P fffggfls S555 fe-C P Q V 1. J In! A ' . 'A F , i fa f 1 I 5 . 45 1 ., rx ' ' -' ' Volunuc XXXII ST. CIIlRlS'I'UPIlTiR':i SCHOUI., TUCIIVIUNU. VIKUINIKI FRIDAY, FEl'SRlf.'Xl'lY 14. X947 Nb, 6 SAI Annual Su NTS ucv Banquet is Huge SIICPESS Ex PI NUI' IIIKIYN lffzn,-. lwwmrw Ig, um 1. mx ,.,..f,.x W.. mf amm.-! 'mvlmli hu N mm ai Iwi mmf .uf If .r 'H W. Mm I n- mv-:II .I um- r'-I Llrwml, I vm JI, J .-fm U n...,, mf. M, .mc m,f-:wi 1 ar' 1, M- ,I .f,.m,, .,. vs IK.: my at w wb f mx- I- lm-. .- ,I '. ,U-mf Xmw1'I KIf4 1- :I- . . -',,.:m.1'1,:f ff:..nx1-I! :IK Ulm: 541-N 'swan ' mlxlry uf '-In In we I :I-r I' D' ri Wm. I 1.- Im 1. their wx 'md .g nun m wwf x ,zffwff In .I f.,-I-1.1 my I I' Ii Uv' H I .I I .vm -V 1 M1 PROMISE Won and Lost Li Record Poor ,' f Mauck Scores 70 By '11 s.wo1.1f1a, Ju. 'mf ' I vu dm: mon- nnd-Ime ro bv am rim Im: rhc api-fd uf SI, im fha jun muse:- fnr 1 f pmry bnmts Mud 'l'nnx.v 31.8 31, only ..af.f, mghlv Publi 1 Imul cnnxhim-4 W :sw dm IL ww, qw... gmw V, I-:M M ,,a.f,.erf, ,I s 1 , 'wc on rw 'W X l mx f i361 InIrf f ,nf K. . 10-Ah, M rl xrwx W 'I 'nw Q, M, mm- Ik, :mm 1.1.1 U. Im, .1,.-fmx. 'mghr cm,-I up wf ww um, ,. ,mf In my :MV tu- uvl ,Lf--fz'v, mime .mmm aim. dw mmf wi:-::1,mIm, In Pug: gg fnmw. .s fu .I ff IU I V' L21-LIL? I T03 X X If? I, I li S' ,Ze I , ff, N s,I.I3f:I WfEVSVIj'I!'? F3 ULN. LBLJILILEI P' A . or ,I .- .J ,, . . AIIRE m,JQzfIR545EcEseR ANNIE F,-Aw, f3EsI.soR THE PINE NEEDLE STAFF Co-Editors GOVAN HILL T. K, WOLFE Assistant Editor EDMUND RUCKER Sports Editor Assistant Sports Editor REUBEN BROADDUS MILES CARY JOHNSTON F eatare Editor VIROIL RANDOLPH Literary S tajjf NASH BONEY BILL MAUCK BOBBY O'BRIEN BILL WOODROOF WALLER HOIRSELY Business Manager Subscription Manager CHARLIE WALDEN SANDY WELLFORD A Kfo PEINTX 9 'fxxw f 37 I gf I I A K 0 s f E s f o 1 U F5 X- 4 f-JY X X97 QW! N' ' JJ fu X, Pf ox lx , AS f ' X i , f381 W A gg ,mm XL ---7lf NV,Lb,g I- V U res' A .xg X 1:9 -9 A . . Q'-'J CGAIRE BIROADDUS,Sp6nsort I A RAPS AND TAPS STAFF Co-Editors Advertising Manager REUBEN BROADDUS EDMUN-D RUCKER CHARLIE WALDEN Business Manager Assistant Advertising Manager GOVAN HILL VIRGIL RANDOLPH Subscription Manager Photographic Assistant BILL DESPORTES NASH BONEY Asst. Subscription Manager Asst. Subscription Manager PUGGY ADKINS TOM SHOEMAKER E393 ' S ' 1 li JC Q IEX I O!! fs. A .AO X 9223 1 I f,56FFT THE MONOGRAM CLUB QLEFT TO RIGHT, FRONT ROW Kelly, Wellford, DesPortes, Davenport, Miller, A. W., White, W. B., Woodroof QLEFT TO RIGHT, SECOND Row Johnson, W. T. Weeks, Holland, C. A., Adkins, A, A., Corley, Ruffm, E. S., Rucker CLEFT TO RIGHT, BACK Row Miller, R. C., Boney, Cooper, Shoemaker, Chilton, Mauck, Collins X39 fxx w I1 il N L' lie 9 Xe Il ,J THE Mo oGRAM LUB it LEXIE , spam-me Name Azmfdf ADKINS, A. A. ...... .,... F ootball '46 ANDREWS, W. P. .... ,........... F ootball '46 BONEY, F. N. ..... . ...,........ Football '42 CHILTON, C. A.. . . ..... Manager of Football '46 COLLINS, L. P. . .............. Football '46 COOPER, H. B. .... ............,.... F ootball '46 CORLEY, A. M. ...... .... ........................ F o otball '46 DAVENPORT, E. B. .... ................. F ootball '45, '46 fCo-Captainj DESPORTES, W. E.. . . ..... Baseball '45, '46 fCaptainj g Football '45, '46 HOLLAND, B. P. ..... .....,.......... F ootball '46, Basketball '47 JOHNSON, W. T. .... ............ ............... F o otball '46 KELLY, D. A.. .. MAUCK, W. R.. . . MILLER, A. W. .. POTTS, J. J.. . ., RUCKER, E. H. .... . RUFFIN, E. s. ........ ......,., . .............................Football' 46 Basketball '46, '47 QCO-Captainj 3 'Baseball '46 . . . . .Football '45, ' Football '43, '46 46 QCO-Captainj Football '45, '46 . . . .Football '46 SHOEMAKER, T. C. ................,............... Football '46, Basketball '47 WEEKS, D. C. ........... Fo:-tball '46, Baseball '46, Basketball '46, 47 QCO-Captainj WELLFORD, A. ....... ....................,.,.,............ F ootball '45, '46 WOODROOF, W. E... . .... Football '46 WOODS, W. S. D. .... .... F ootball '46 WHITE, W. B. ...,... .... B aseball '46 UNDERHILL, T. A. ,.., ........ .... B a sketball '47 411 x ft Nfl fl 'T'C ,ffl 7.2 L . x? X ,boo H O5 -. A nf: A :SFR ,gp .1713 'Avg1N,4:'A.g.11., Ui' l?'lxZ.f--.Xu v' ulfo U L1 xv -TSP UNE? Xp Lf:1QJ 1522 X5 M fmy ,ffyf YN X Reb-eg i MARTHA Dau.ARo Svunoajvousow. D t Left to right-front row: Smith, I-I. H,, Rucker. Second row: Marlowe, Bourne, MacConochie, O'Brien, Hall, Scrivenor. Back row: Johnston, M, C. M., Hodges. Mr. Green, Mr. Vergason, Mr, M-organ, Sauer. f4121 TECHNICAL STAFF Affictant Director .... GEORGE HALL Stage Manager ...... JAMES BOURNE Stage Tech.. . .FRANK MACCONOCHIE Stage Carpenter, M. C. M. JOHNSTON Electrician .......... FRED NORTON Auiftant Electrician . . .NICK CARTER Prornpter ......... FRED WARNECKE Soanal Effect! ......... DAVID SAUER CAST OF HTHE l'IASTY HEART,, Orclerly ........... JEFF MARLOWE Yank. . . ...... ED RUCKER Digger .... .... F RED HODGES Kiwi ...... .....,.. H ERB SMITH Blofforn .... . . .CHARLIE WALDEN Tonzrny. . . ........ WIRT MARKS Margaret .......... BOBBY OYBRIEN Colonel ....... MAC MACCONOCHIE Lachie .... .......... G OVIE HILL HTHE HASTY HEART THE '4Hasty Heartn, by John Patrick is one of the best plays to come out of World VVar Il. A Broadway hit in 1945, the play is a comedy-drama in three acts. The interior of a hut, a temporary British General Hospital, somewhere Within the South East-Asia Command is the scene of the story. A gr-oup of six army convales- l43l N ,fxqx fqcx 49' if T I 11 9 i 1' ,Q It . 9 , iL ff ' I ,5 . ZW tm ll. I P 1- dv Q 1 o XQ','g,?3 f ss. EH cents, their nurse, an orderly, and their colonel compose the cast. Yank, an American with a Georgian drawl and a stuttering defect, Digger, an Australian, Tommy, an Englishman, and Kiwi, a New Zealander are typical representatives of their native lands, worldly and humorous. Their nurse, a young English girl, plays the only feminine role in the play. The action centers around Lachie, a lonely Scotch lad, who has been wounded in action. Orphaned at an early age, he was exposed to the tough knocks of life and had grown to hate his fellow man. The other patients in the ward knew he had only six weeks to live and attempted friendship, The going is tough but through the gift of a treasured kilt, they win Lachie's friendship. lVlargaret, the nurse, falls in love with Lachie and Lachie decides in his slow Scottish way that the feeling is mutual. With such a composed ending in view, disaster breaks. Lachie learns of his short time left to live, attributes the friendship of the patients, and the love of the nurse to pity, and his old distrust of man and hot Scotch pride flare up. Given a chance to return to Scotland for his last few weeks, Lachie accepts, although he well knows that loneliness awaits him in Scotland while he would be leaving the only friends he had ever had. His Scotch pride finally breaks and he stays. The St. Kitls Players put on a magnificent performance of the play and credit is due everywhere. The constant watch and in- struction of lVlr. Vergason, the outstanding acting and Scotch dialect of Govan Hill, the smooth actions of the supporting cast, and the faithful and efficient work of Jim Bourne and his stage hands, all contributed to another great success in the sterling annals of The St. Kit's Players. l444l u w A ' , . 5 jj:- :fi,,'.Ef '-z ff 'KX -QQ 4 IQ ' f,':-3 - . 97- I . 3 ren: .l, 2Q,,2m Aff. S '. ' - - 'N .- 'iran . I ,iwxfigjii fx , - f,? -' .M-1 vi JWX X ff RNPN l N ,fiil if 1, K K ,, 971 ,eww ?'f'T5'L55??64f4?:. o sb : lf ' if 2:1 ' f '-4' X311 ' ' ' W .Q ff- S' N X. M '21 if .f x --if f? 1' in is . ' N Bffwdl 14621, A A -fe 2' r , 'f ' e b.-ax 'VP' -:D - .9551 u ,0if , XI -fo. . V ,, . x M' ::4N3L',Q1,1gi7ifj. ' ti Xfigxi. ,' may 4:w'S-d5?,?'wI . all ml xl ' V 15 . A 5 1 7 1:-2' 'V:4u,N ,219 65559-fl J -M l m, THQ! Y9mJfif7f!H'.f-'G' . I lf ' o w f i R wif f--w.: ww 1 qsigsgfxwl. . ww' 'ws l lm if 4'.M1f41l 11 2 i :L 1-11ffN:f2'fty,g ' 1 mf 1 - iff - 4 , ' Tflwlfl C19 ff fs ffl, ,XX 'Ht ' '42- , , 1 Q:'1f,,,-gf ' ...,. A-. - '15 .- ' f iF4f'i'?s' liffg? A -' K9 - ii ,- .g,',41, 5 1 yin' ' V , M rf- '- as ,ggi I 1 X-x i: , , :sig 5 a I I MQWLQWVJ 2, ai I . K 0 ,nm fifff ' fm if 1 ' 0, X .,,, N-'fi , in-,a., A l 'l,ff imQj1 1 f . f L , . rr ty , l Aizwmyfxfvg - ML Sports of Colonial Williamsburg ATHLETICS J, 11 U, i 'ri Y ,ilyqvv X , 1 u,,. gf: A, ' 5 , mf' ze . ,M I , i . ,1 ',1,'f!A ,M wx. K L- ,fx 1' 53551 , --r f ,Q dy- . ,-v M 9 -51 , mf. 'Zag S s .. 1 x .f 1 ' W ,1- , I 1 1 r n C O A C H E S - MR. BRENAINIAN MR. BRINSER MR. JACOBS L 45 3 f 1M! W w ,M N M' M1M' , NN 11 1 NU W X R , ' 1 w , wwfww, , Wi M' w + my Y MM x,,,,x1,,y1 X !fW1 1 W vw' 14 1 I , www 11' W l r JJ 1.5 1 I V l w I r i I W 1 i x, my il W4 Y U' ,ja-2 , fhf , J, , .x-Y- Www GRACIE RILEE, Spomor BARBARA DAUGHTRY, Sponyor DAVENPORT AND POTTS, Cofuptczinf f 46 I September 2 1 ......... October 4. . . October 12. . October 26. . November 2. November 9. November 15 ......... November 23 ........ FOOTBALL RECORD-194-6 ST. C. OPP. Western High, Stadium ..., . . . 18 6 John Marshall, Stadium ...... . . 7 0 Episcopal High, Alexandria ..... . . . 6 20 Thomas Jeffers-on, Stadium .... . . O 24 Woodaberry Forest, here .... . . . 0 13 Petersburg, there .... . . 7 39 Benedictine, Stadium . . . . . 0 27 .Virginia Episcopal, here .... . . 26 0 -Z 'EE l: 47 I gil? A Q cf VI ! lm U U7 la lr 5 1? XX1, l .ix Q x O X-C1504 49395 f HDS' g rows Q O Sl. .A K o Wee? Left to right-from row: Dietz, Corley, Lightbourn, Moody, Miller, A. W., Davis, Johnson, W, T., Woods. Second row: Coach Tiller, iBoney, Weeks, Proffitt, Kelly, Co-captains Potts and Davenport, XXfellford, Haley, DesPortes, Hodges, 'Coach Brenaman. Back row: White, W. B., Newell, Cooper, Shoemaker, Garcia, Rucker, Andrews, Miller, R. C., Marks, Holland, Collins. FOOTBAI,I,e1946 THE 1946 St. Christophefs football team ended the season as it had begun itawith a decisive victory. Between the second and the final games, however, the Saints ran into a hve-game losing streak'-the longest of all time for one of Coach Brenaman's teams. The winning ways which were lost in the rain and mud of a Porrs, CemerfCo-Captain DAVENPORT, GuardQCo-Captain l48l . 3 disastrous fourth quarter in Alexandria on October 11 i were not regained until the bright, chilly .afternoon of November 23, when the victory-starved Saints gave their cousins', from Lynch- burg, the Virginia Episcopal School, a sound 26-0 trounc- ing on the Saints' home field. This closed the season, worst since before 1926, on a cheerful note. The losing streak reach- ed its climax on the after- noon of Friday, November 15, when Benedictine's Cadets defeated the hard-fight- ing, but outclassed, Saints, 27-0. It was the first victory over St. Christopher's for the Cadets in 18 years, and it gave them the City Championship. The Saints were outweighed and outmanned in this game, and that's the way it was the whole season. One of the greenest and lightest St. Christopheris teams in years h.ad to meet heavier opponents, many bolstered by ex-servicemen, that were just snapping out of the lean war years. At St. Christopheris, the strength of the team was far below that of the last few years-everywhere else the teams were far above their wartime par. This year's team did not lack any of the traditional Saint fighting spirit. They HOLLAND, Back Weisics, Back l ! -P C I-K R' ,G A 'U 5 H Q7 A! 1 6p5NT'Cl-B 'A ?:. c,2zs,,,1e, ae N X9Lff37 - -1-- 0,405.6 . were in there scrapping all , the time. Except against PM r 1 : - ' Petersburg, the Saints play- ed a good defensive game each weekend. Except a- gainst weak V. E. S., the Saints showed little real of- fensive punch. All through the season, the Saints were handicapped by injuries, which slowed up or bench- ed key players. The Red and Gray line, in particular deserves a great deal of credit for their season-long play. Almost every game they were faced with heavier opponents, but they did not fail to give a good account of themselves. Their dogged defensive work was usually the highlight of the game from the Saint point of view, and the scores registered against the Saints would have been much higher .against a school whose line had less spirit than that of the St. Christophefs forewall. The Saints gained few laurels on the all-star teams this year. The only team of this type which St. Chrisitophefs players were eligible for was the All-City Team. The only Saint on this team was Edmund Rucker, who tied for a tackle spot. Billy DesPortes and Bake Davenport received honorable mention. DesPortes was also selected as the best blocking back in the city. X 4 CoLLiNs, Tackle RUCKER, Tackle-All-City t 50 J , .rf at , N, A HH, . ,gl , IX f j XTX ti fry . H. ,f ff The team was co-cap- ' 1 J f 1 V it 1 tained this year by Center joe Potts and Left Guard Bake Davenport. 4 l l Western High 6g St. Christopher's 18. - T h e Saints started their season off with an auspicious 18 - 6 triumph over Western High School of Washington, D. C. The game, which was played on the soggy turf -of the City Stadium, was the first meet- ing of the .two schools on the field of friendly strife. Bobby Miller, Saint left-halfback, proved the hero of the day. His interception of a Western pass on his own 20 and 80-yard return for a touchdown, in the third quarter broke a 6-6 deadlock and 'sent the Saints out in front for good. Again in the fourth quarter, Miller intercepted a Raider ipass and returned it to the W-esitern 10. Andrews hit the line for the games last score a f-ew plays later. Western's Red Raiders scored first in -the initial quarter. After recovering a fumble on the Saints' 45, the Raiders rolled 45 yards to a touch-down. George Holmes, Western halfback, became the first, but definitely not the last opponent to cross the Saint go-al line in 1946 when he broke off St. Christo- pher's left tackle and raced 31 yards to pay dirt. The Saints came back in the second quarter to score on a 37-yard pass play from Weeks to DesPortes. Weeks got off a nice paiss with two Raiders hanging onto him and DesPortes outsped the Western secondary SHOEMAKER, End Al:-K1Ns, End l51l U 6' J Ls. J Ag f6 5eX X Q:-187 GTS ! S 1 my Vx fx to the goal-line. That was all the scoring until Miller's spectacular dash late in the i third quarter. The Saints, us- ing their T under game con- ditions for the first time, fumbled five times and each time Western recovered. This was a great help to the Raid- ers. Wilson Andrews, who battered through the Wash- ingtonians' line almost at will, and Billy DesPortes, joined Miller as the Saint stars. John Marshall 03 St. Christopher's 7. - T h e Saints rolled to their fourth straight football victory over the john Marshall justices on a ho-t early October afternoon. Soon after the second half began the Saints started a 60-yard drive which culminated in David Wee-k's live-yard sneak around right end with- out interference for the games only touchdown. Wilson Andrews kicked the extra point. Holland and D-esPortes spearheaded the scoring drive. The game was primarily a battle of lines, and the Saint forewall came in f-IFSI 'by a wide margin. In the first half, the justices, who held a 20-pound per-man weight advantage, managed to hold their OHI- weighed oppxznents to a draw. But the large justices -tired in the final quarter and the game ended with the Red and Grey line, led by Rucker, ripping the Justice forwards to shreds. The Saints 'should have scored at least once more, while the only justice scoring threat was stopped by Rucker's pass interception and fine Saint line play. ' K . I , g KELLY, Guard JOHNSON, Back aioiesfs, 5 52 3 aff ? mm I XT Qyaz N E. H. S. 205 Saint Christophefs 6. - T h 6 Saints suffered their first de- feat of the year at the hands of Episcopal High School's Maroons in Alexandria. At the same time the dismal losing streak go-t under way. The Saints turned in a credit- able performance, and the score was only 7-6 in favor of Episcopal High when a rain- storm began in -the fourth quarter. E. H. S. had the heavier team, and, therefore, the advantage in the mud. In addition, the breaks of the game in the form of a Saint fumble in their own territory, went against the Saints, and so Maroon Halfback Chris Holland scored two -touchdowns to give E. H. S. a 20-6 victory. The Saints just 'proved poor mudders. Before the rain, DesPortes and Holland had led the Saint offensive, and Holland scored the lone Red and Grey touchdown on an 11-yard run off-tackle no end an impressive Saint drive in the third quarter. Thomas Jefferson 245 St. C-hristopher's 0.-The Saints dropped their first football game to the Jeifs in six years on the Hnal Saturday of October, All-night rains the previous evening had turned the City Stadium turf into a virtual bog, and the beefy Belt Liners ipushed around their outweighed opponents, who could not 'gain sure footing in the slime. The first half was little short of a disaster for the Saints. They took the l l DEsPoRTEs, Back ANDREWS, End K 53 l Kf it 0 'P P-l 'T'C 'X K s 0o,,,3S.6'-A . , SQ-42 if 1613 I Qs! pf 9357 Q I , t QL? , O P X- X as aj alll ! Q, ll U, lor fIl l T opening kick-off, but failed to gain, so Weeks punted. George Chumbley, T e ej a y quarterback, too-k the punt on his own 40 and set sail down the sidelines. He ran through most of the Saint -team as he raced 60 yards to pay dirt. The jeffis were knocking at the Saint goal line almost immediately afterwards. The Red and Grey held once on their own 18, but Teejay came storming back to hang ulp their second six-fpointer on a 28-yard desperation pass from Meyer to Lee on fourth down. The jeffs hnished off their scoring in the first half with a 47-yard touchdown drive, Wallace covered the last 11 yards on a reverse. The Saints were unable -to move the ball out of their own territory in the fir-st two quarters. The Red and Grey gave a much better account of themselves in the second half. Teejay got a quick touchdown on a 43-yard reverse by Norman Scott, but that ended their scoring for the day. The Saints made two drives deep into Teejay territory, but their only touchdown, a pass play from Weeks to DesPortes, was called back on account of a penalty against St. Christophers Woodberry Forest 135 St. Christophefs 0.-The Saints 'played their best defensive game of the season to hold their traditional rivals from Woodberry to a 13-O score. It was the only time during the 1946 season that the Saints turned in a better FTW , .W ,, . -'yum--G, , ,, -, , , ,, H1 nrnaavunnunn BONEY, Tackle WELLFORD, Guard T543 performance that the 1945 team had against the same team. The Red and Gr-ey threaten- ed first, early in the second quarter. Bake Davenport recovered a fumble on the Tiger 18. The Saints drove down to the Woodberry 6, but there was a fumble in the Saint back- field due to a signal mix-up, and Woodberry recovered. Th-e Tigeris then drove all the way to the Saint 14, where the Red and Grey held for downs. Near the close of the second quarter, Charlie Peterson, Woodberry end, broke loose on an end-ano-und and ran 24 yards to score the games first touchdown. 1Early in the second half, the Tigers drove to St. Christopher's 7, but the Saint line, led by Edmund Rucker, stopped four straight plunges by Woo-dberryls Dean Davidson and took the ball. Soon after the fourth quarter began, Woodberry started a drive which carried to St. Christopher's 27. Davidson then fad-ed back and threw a pass to Duff Green who was in the end zone behind the Saint secondary. This ended the scoring. Woodberry threatened once more, but a Tiger pass was -batted down in the end zone as the game ended. Petersburg 393 Sit. Christopher's 7.-The slump-rid-den Saints 'suffered the worst defeat hung -on a Red and Grey football team si-nce Blackstone Military Academy routed the Saints 40-O in 1928, on the green turf of Pe-tersburg's Cameron Field in early November. It -was the first time a Saint football team had lost to the Cockade City gridsters. For the past three years, th-e Saints had never failed to pu-t a black .mark on a trio of 'splendid Petersburg season records. Today the tide had turned and the Saints were completely flooded by a well-balanced Wave attack. It was simply a case of too much 'Crimson for the Saints, who put usp their poorest exhibition of the season. The Red and Grey made only two scoring threats, one at the end of the first half, and another at the close of the second. A 24-yard scoring pass from Weeks to Shoemaker accounted for the Saints' only touchdown near the -end 'of the second quarter. A 50-yard pass play from Andrews to Holland was the Saints' second and last threat. Holland was stopped 10 yardls from the Wave goal line. Meanwhile, th-e bigger and older Crimson boys were methodically rolling across St. Christopher's last white stripe, scoring in every quarter. Half way through the first quarter, the Southsiders drove 45 yards for their Woons, Back MILLER, A., End l 55 J gI5T'7k CHQ -9 T XQ,,ffD! gig S for 4' 3. l y Lf XS ,f' 1 . H x 8 fl 1 X, I . Li, .df 3S.6lf 16 7 O Q5 initial touchdown. They quickly added seven more points on Paul Webbis 42-yard gallop into the end zone, and Bob Stevens conversion fnom placement. In the second quarter, the Wave drove 32 yards to St. Christopher's 28, from where Stevens passed to Burge for the touchdown. The Southsiders scored in the third quarter on a 20-yard pass play from Webb to Willis, and in the fourth quarter when Webb returned a punt to the Saint 14, and Willis finally drove over from the 1. The Crimson nightmare had a cheerful ending, at least, with the afore-mentioned Andrews-to-Holland aerial being the final play of the game. Benedictine 27g St. C.hrisrtopher's 0.-The Benedictine Cadets handed the Saints their fifth straight set-back of the 1946 campaign, and thereby iput an end to the greatest Saint winning streak of all time-the string of 17 straight wins over the West Enders. The Saints scrapped hard and gave a creditable showing, but the Cadets, their line-up full of ex-servicemen, were simply too big, too many, and too experienced. The Red and Grey line played well defensively, and they stopped three long Benedictine drives, two inside the Saint 10. The Cadets took -the opening kick-off and drove from their 27 to- the Saint 23, where the Saints stopped -the drive. After Andr-ew's quick kick had shoved the Cadets back to their own 22 early in -the second quarter, Sterling Wingo, -Cadet halfback, broke off left-tackle, cut for the sidelines and raced 78 yards -to a touchdown. Solon after- wards, Andrews' pass was intercepted, and Benedictine drove 31 yards to a -touchdown, with Ring covering the final eleven yards on a ni-ce run through 'half the St. Christoipher's team. Benedictine came back to move 47 yards to its third touchdown on two long passes. Then the Saints started their only real drive of -the game and pushed to the Cadet 19 on two passes from Weeks to DesPortes, but the halftime whistle prevented a Saint score. Early in the third quarter, the Cadets recovered a Saint fumble on St. Christophers 18 and drove to the 3, but the Saints stopped the drive there. In the fourth quarter, the Cadets drove 48 yards -to a touchdown, with Wingo vscroring on a 19-yard dash. After recovering another Saint fumble, the Cadets drove to th-e Saint 9, MILLER, R., Back CORLEY, End E 56 1 S? 4 but the Red and Grey stalled the drive. The Saints then picked up two first downs, but the Cadets took the ball over as the game ended. V. E. S. 03 St. Christophefs 26.-The 1946 St. Christopher's football team closed its season by overpowering Virginia Episcopal School, 26-O, before s-tu-dents and alumni who had gathered for Homecoming Day. The win snapped the Saints' five-game losing streak. All the Saints performed well, and the Saint line ripped the Bishop forewall to shreds on offense and defense. Billy DesPortes gained 207 yards running and receiving passes fa-r the Saints. The Saints struck swiftly for their first score. After V. E. S. had received the kick-off and punted back, a Weeks-to-DesPorties pass covered 43 yards to the Bishop 12. Andrews gained 4 yards, and DesPortes took the ball over. Early in the second quarter, the Saints drove 82 yards in five plays for a touchdown. DesPortes' 66-yard dash covered most of the distance. Andrews plunged over from the 1-yard line. Soon after the start of the second half, a misplay of Andrews' fpunt put the Bishops in a hole. Their return punt came out to the V, E. S. 30. Woods and DesPor.tes carried the ball to the Bishop 18. After a touchdown by Holland had been call-ed back because of a penalty, Holland once more broke off-tackle and ran 22 yards to pay dirt. The Saints quickly star-ted another drive which the Bishops stopped on their own 2. But a V. E. S. fumble was recovered by the Saints on the Lynchburger's 12. Red Johnson finally soo-red for the Saints on a sneak around right end without interference. The Bishops came back to make their only real threat of the game. They drove 58 yards through the Saint reserves, but the drive was stopped short of a touchdown when the Saints recovered a Bishop fumble on their own 17. The game ended soon afterwards with the Saints in possession of the ball. f57il , 675m ff '76 Q- Q, l'1 L O W A Q,1,4Df A 2- g i. I STATISTICS SCORING Td.R. Td.P. Td.P.Im,To4t. EPP. EP.1R.EP,Art.K.EP.K. Pts. ANDREWS . . .... 2 0 2 0 2 4 2 16 DESPORTES . . . . 1 0 2 0 0 1 0 12 HOLLAND ,. .., 2 0 2 0 O O 0 12 MILLER ..... . . , 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 6 WEEKS ..... . . . 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 6 SHOEMAKEIR. . , . , . . 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 6 JOHNSON , . . . , 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 6 PASSING Arts. Compl. Yards Td.P. Pct. L'ng'st Int. Por.Int, WEEKS ..... 58 24 348 2 .400 44 7 .121 JOHNSON .. 14 5 102 0 .357 33 1 .071 ANDREWS, , 19 2 67 0 .105 50' 21 .1-05 MAUCK ..... 1 0 0 0 .000 0 0 .000 PASS RECEIVING No. Yards Avg. I.'ng'sIL Tds. DESPORTES .... 9 205 22.8 1 SI-IOEMAKEIR 8 117 14.6 1 ADKINS ....... 4 49 12.3 0 INTERCEPTIONS MOODY .,.,... 26 8.7 0 , v WOODS - .--. 2 27 13.5 0 No. Yds. Tds. L ng st Avg. CORLEY ....... 2 19 9.5 0 WEEKS ..... 5 72 0 27 14.4 HOLLAND .. 50 50 0 MILLER .... 3 98 1 80 32.7 MILLER .....,. 18 18 0 WOODS .... 1 5 0 5 5. COOPER ....... 6 6 0 RUCKER .... 1 0 0 0 0. wi ...E RUFFIN, Guard COOPER, End ,qf72'TE5XX .57 If Cz, xl X13 x X , 5 Qyfib' U DESPORTES .... ANDREWS .... HOLLAND .... MILLER .... WOODS ..., MOODY .... WEEKS ..... JOHNSON .... DESPORTES .... WEEKS ....... ANDREWS ..,. HOLLAND ...., SHOEMAKER . . JOHNSON ..... WOODS ...... ANDREWS . . . MILLER .... WEEKS ....... HOLLAND ..... SHOEMAKER . . JOHNSON .,... Arts. 74 80 74 46 8 28 1 6 STATISTICS RUSHING Arts. Yards ... 65 287 55 2510 ... 44 166 ... 17 52 ... 14 44 20 32 ... Z2 3 . .. 14 -5 TOTAL OFFENSE Yards Avg. 492 6.7 MILLER . .. 351 4.4 MOODY ..... 317 4-.3 ADKINS ..... 216 4.7 CORLEY .,... 1 1 7 14 .6 'COOPER .... . 97 3.1 MAUCK . .. 71 4.4 PUNTING 13 .. 10 . 2 . 1 . 1 L'ng'St 66 24 18 13 13 15 19 7 Arts. 18 ...23 4 2 1 1 34.6 34.4 30.7 35.5 32. 29. Avg. Tds. 4.4 1 4.5 2 3.8 2 3.1 0 3.1 0 1.6 0 .1 1 -.4 1 Yards Avg. 70 3.9 58 2.5 49 12.3 19 9.5 6 6. 0 0. 50 1 56 O 45 0 38 O 32 0 29 0 WOODROOE, Cemer CHILTON, Manager J foyer X. 1 N9 'NO XC KXQ, L 59 J 332 5.- lgv Sf I X631 3 - 2+ A 7 5 Lg . , fKfQ'1'95 f N49 :X 2 E o X A K O X52 45.9 ,A X CO-CAPTAIN MAUCK COACH JACOBS CO-CAPTAIN WEEKS BASKETBALL RECORD-1297 Date OPPOIYEYYIU' Si. C. O jan. 10. . . .... Fork Union, here ... . .. 37 jan. 14. . . .... Benedictine, here . . . . . . 35 jan. 18. . . .... Petersburg, there ....... . . . 19 Jan. 28. . . .... john Marshall, there ,.,. . . . 37 Jan. 30. . . .... Petersburg, here ..... . . . 31 Feb. 1... .... V, E. S., here .........,......... ... 32 Feb, 4. . . .... Thomas jefferson, Blues' Armory ,... . . . 16 Feb. 8. . . .... Episcopal High, here .,.......... . . . 32 Feb. 11. . . .... Thomas jefferson, Blues' Armory. . . . . 16 Feb. 14. . . .... Woodlberry Forest, there ...,.... . . . 37 Feb. 18. . . .... john Marshall, here ..... . . . 30 Mar 1... .... V. E. S., Lynchburg .... 35 Mar. 4, . . .. .fork Union, there. . . . . . . 55 412 l 60 il PP' 44 37 42 39 42 31 26 24 31 48 32 30 63 89 Front row Cleft to rightj: Mauck, Weeks, Collins, Underhill, Edmunds. Back row: james, Mgr., Boney, Stiff, Garcia, Sh-oemaker, Holland, Coach Jacobs. BASKICTBALL, 19446-19-L7 St. Chi-istofpher's basketball team, 1947 edition, did not enjoy a successful 'Season as far as percentages gofwinning 3 out of 13 games-but the season still could not be marked down as a black failure. The Saints got off to a rocky start, losing Hve -straight and failing to win a single game in january. But those first Hve losses were typical of the Saint performances all season. The john Marshall and Benedictine games were dropped by two-point margins -shortly before the final whistleg in the Fork Union and second Petersburg contests, the Saints frightened the victors thoroughly, wresting the lead from Petersburg at one time, and putting up hard battles all the way. Only in the first Petersburg tilt, and later in the se-:ond Thomas Jefferson bout were the Saints routed. The losing streak was snapped against V. E. S. on February 1. This was the first state prep game for the Saints. The Red and Grey had a ine record in State Preparatory School competition, winning all three of their victories against V. E. S. and E. H. S. and losing only to Woodberry. This foil REBECCA ROCHE, Spozzfor N ,QTQSPQ 1 Ny ,623 fl' QU lil ldgifi l l Q,-J -ACH K O .f If UT . an OE or so fi Q45 ADO! X- 70+ gave the team second-place 1 honors, behind the league- leading Woodberry Tigers. Perhaps the most disap- pointed feature of the 1947 season was the failure of the Saints, for the first time in years and years, to win a game in the city. john Mar- shall took a pair of two-point decisions from the Red and Grey, while Benedictine, as mentioned before, also -turned back the Saints by two points. Thomas jefferson scored two decisive victories over St. C. Coach Jacobs and the team deserve credit for a fine effort this Iseason. The Saints started the year with only two lettermen, Bill Mauck and David Weeks, neither 'of whom had been a 1946 regular. There were a few other reserves from last year and several new recruits. ln addition to being very green, the Saints lacked any real height, and they faced taller opponents almost every time out. But even while losing, the 'boys never failed to put out all they had on the floor, and the traditional Saint fighting spirit was always very evident. As for individual honors, both Mauck and Und-erhill scored over 100 points, with Underhill, who iplayed in one more game, edging Mauck, 111 to 107. No Saint made the all-City team, but Mauck narrowly missed landing a Hrst team berth, and he was honored with the Captaincy 'of the second team. SHOEMAKER WEEKS, Co-Captain 1 62 J Fork Union 445 St. Christo- pher's 37.-The Saints dropped their first game of the season to Fork Union Military Academy by a 44-37 score on their own court. Fork Union maintained a sub- stantial lead throughout the first three quarters, leading 19-11 at the half and 33-21 at the end 'of the third quarter. But the Saints staged a smashing comeback in the final stanza to come within 2 points of the Cadet lead with two minutes left to play. Then Fork Union rallied to score 7 quick points and put the game on ice. Bill Mauck, who got 10 of the 12 Saint points in the fourth quarter surge, led the home team's scoring with 19 points. Buddy Sherill, Fork Union's lanky center, dumped in 20 points, and Cadet Captain Scooter Riotto, whose slick floor work and set shots were were the main cogs in the Fork Union attack, got 11 points. Benedictine 375 St. Christopher's 35.-The Saints lost -their second outing of the season to the Benedictine Cadets in the Westhampton gym by the margin of a single field goal. It was the Saints' first intra-city game. The Cadets pulled away to a 15-9 lead at halftime, but several rallies by the Saints narrowed Benedictines margin to 29-25 at the end of the third quanter. In a thrilling fourth quarter, fthe lead changed hands four times, and with the score tied at 35-35 with less than half a minute left to play, Benedictine center Guilford Dickens decided the game by sinking a sh-ort push shot. Dickens led Benedictine scoring with 16 points, while Bill Mauck canned 18 to pace the Saints. Petersburg 429 St. Christopher's 19.-Taking to the road for the first time, the Saints traveled to Petersburg and suffered their first real beating of the season. High-scoring Bill Mauck and all the rest of the Saints were held in check by the Crimson Wave defense. T. A. Underhill led the l - i UNDERHILL HOLLAND i533 f Qt QA .J '51 in it iff? 2 Q -IQ If .CX Z OO! ff 15 V, 13'-:ITN V -4 A51 59 WX F: K XXQy,fgD f 7-L2 Q ,ELS OH3q5.5 O Saints with 9 points, while Mauck got a single field goal. The en- tire Red and Grey 'team scored only 19 points, 9 of which were from the foul line. After put-ting up a fair battle in the first quar- ter at the end -of which they trailed 13-9, the Saints were never again in the game. The Wave led 21-17 at the half and completely routed the Saints in the final quarter. Stubblebine and Willis with 12 and 11 points re- spectively were the Wave's big guns. John Marshall 393 Saint Christopher's 37.-Returning to the hardwood after examinations, the Saints were nosed out once -f more, this time by john Marshall in diminutive Wythe Gymnasium. After suffering a near rout in the first half-they left the floor trailing 24-12-the Saints staged a great second half comeback, led by Mauck and Underhill. In the first half, the deadly set shooting -of Jayem's Garbett and Trainum was too much for 'the Sin-ts, but they changed the game into a nip-and-tuck affair in: the final quarters. Ted Filer, justice forward, broke up the game, which Clarence Holland had just tied once more art 37-37, with a two-pointer shortly 'before the final whistle. Petersburg 423 St. Christopher's 31.-Peters'burg's -Crimson Wave came up to Richmond for their second encounter of the seas-on with St. Chris-topiher's, but the Saints failed to gain revenge for their earlier shellacking, although they -tried hard enough. Petersburg had an easy time of it in the first and fourth quarters, but in between the Saints matched the Wave point for point. Petersburg led 20-19 at halftime and 30-27 art 'the end of the third quarter, but once more routed the Saints in the final stanza to win going away. Bill Mauck got 8 points for -the Saints, whilie Underhill and Stiff scored 7 apiece. Stevens paced the Wave with 13 markers, followed by Smith who got 10. MAUCK, Co-Captain GARCIA l 64 3 V, , St. Christopher's 329 Virginia Episcopal School 31.-The Saints, playing on the large Blues' Armory court for the first time, dropped their third intracity contest to Teejay. The jeffs led all he way, and the outcome was evident from the first quarter onwards. The Belt Liners' zone defense was too tight for the Saints, and they had to resort to set shots and fast breaks for their modest 16-point total. Teejay was far from impressive, but, paced by Bob Phillips' 10 points, they stayed safely ahead, leading 6-4 at the end of the first quarter, 13-8 at halftime, and 22-14 at the close of the third period. Mauck, Underhill, and Weeks scored all the Saints' points with 7, 5, and 4, respectively. St. Christopher's 329 E. H. S. 24.-The Saints won their second vict-ory of the season over visiting Episcopal High School on their home court. It was the second victory without a loss for the Saints in State Prep competition. The Saints outclassed the Maroons in every department, and their defense forced E, H. S. to try many shots from beyond the foul circle, of which but two found their mark. Led by T. A. Underhill's 14 points, the Saints built up a substantial 14-8 point halftime lead, and although the Maroons scored two points more than the Saints in the second half, the gray clad boys never allowed E. H. S. to come closer than 5 points to their lead. Thomas Jefferson 313 St. Christopher's16.-The Belt Liners clinched the City Championship for the second straight year by disposing of the Saints for the second time this season in a very poor exhibition of basketball on the Blues' Armory floor. After a ragged first half in which Teejay led 10-5, the jeifs took advantage of ceaseless Saintt errors to turn the third quarter into a rout, at the end of which they led, 24-8. The Saints came back to outscore Teejay 8-7 in the final round. Whitehorne and Bob and Don Phillips got 8 points each for the Belt Liners, while Mauck and Underhill led the Saints with 5 apiece. r l i COLLINS EDMUNDS I 65 1 WK '52 56 A 0 A Q,QD Wu' - c Wg twsw Woodberry Forest 483 St. Christopher's.-The Saints suffered their first State Prep setback at th-e hands of their old rival, Woodiberry Forest, on the Tigers' home fioor in Madison County. Led by 'Eli Tullis, who scored 16 points, high for the game, with his long, left handed push shots, Woodbetry pulled away from the Saints in the second quarter -to lead 21-10 at 'half-time. Tom Shoemaker got 7 points for the Saints in the first half. The second half was evenly matched, with both -teams scoring the same number of points. Bill Mauck led the Saints to within 5 points of Woodberry Forest at one time, but the Tigers kept safely ahead the whole way. The taller Tigers, led by Charlie Peterson, kept control of the backboards. Peterson was second in Wotud- berry scoring with 12 points, while Sleoemaker with 12 and Mauck with 10 led the Saints. John Marshall 323 St. Christopher's 30.-John Marshall 'turned back the Saints once more by two points-this time by a score of 32-30 on the Saints' floor. Paul Gentry, tall jay-em center, dropped in 15 points to take scoring honors for the day and pace his team all the way. Underhill and Shoemaker, wi-th 9 and 8 points respectively, led the Saints. The taller justices had a big advantage under the back- hoard, but the Saints' fight made up for it. The justices led 9-6 at the end of the first quartet and 2 19-15 at halftime. The last half was close all the way. jayem led 29-26 at the end of the third quarter, but Collins' push shot brought the score to 29-218. Gentry p-ut the justices out ahead 52-28 and the Saints failed to make up the difference. St. Christ0pher's 35: V. E. S. 30.-The Saints won their third victory of the season by turning back V. E. S. for the second time this season in Lynchburg. Led by Underhill, who glot 11 points, the Saints stayed ahead throughout -the game. They led 17-13 at halftime. The Bishops put on their only 'threat in the final quarter, but their rally, led by Kemper, fell short as the Sainfts STIFF BONEY l 66 I K pf 59x GN Q, J .-'xx' 'ii'DJ. f ff 5 UT o .fl w l L is to 4. AO O froze the ball for the las-t four minutes. Craft led Bishop scoring with 10 points and kept V. E. S. in the game during fthe first three quarters. Fork Union 635 St. Christopher's SS.-Traveling to Fork Union for their final game, the Saints were beaten by the Cadets for -the second time this season, Even in defeat, however, the Red and Grey managed to run up -the highest score for the Sainfts in the last two basleetball seasons. Fork Union almost routed the Sain-ts in the first half and led 33-19 at its close. However, the Saints came back in the final half to outscore 'the Cadets and narrow their margin of victory, although the hom-e team always maintained a safe lead. For Fork Union, 'Bud Sherill got 24 poin-ts and Scooter Riovtto played a fine floor gqame. T. A. Underhill got 13 points for the Saints, followed by Mauck with 9 and Weeks with 8. INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS G. F.G. F. T.P. Avg. per G. UNDERHILL ... .... 13 35 41 111 8.5 MAUCK .... .... 1 2 45 17 107 8.9 SHOEMAKER . . . . . 13 21 16 58 4.5 WEEKS ..... .... 1 2 14 15 43 3.6 EDMUNDS . . . .... 13 12 10 34 2.6 STLFE .... .... 1 1 9 5 23 2.1 COLLINS ... .., 11 8 1 17 1.5 HOLLAND .... ... 13 6 4 16 1.3 BONEY .... . . 3 1 0 2 .6 GARCIA . . . . . 4 0 1 1 .3 TEAM STATISTICS F.G. F. T.P. Avg. per G. OPPONENTS ....... . . . 199 91 489 36. ST. CHRISTOPI-IER'S .... ... 151 110 412 31.7 1671 KfO'l579. X Q fo GY if 'lie S-'5 fp!-IT' STI-T .6 2 C f 4 I OH3 6. S9937 93 ,, ILIA DESPORTES, Sponmr CAPTAIN DESPORTES WITH COACH BRINSER BASEBALL E681 Date April April April April April April April May May May May 9 13 17 20 23 27 30 3 7 10 14 1946 BASEBALL VETERANS BASEBALL RECORD Opponent Fork Union, here .... Benedictine, here. . . Petersburg, there ...,... Woodberry Forest, here. . . john Marshall, there ...... 1946 ..13 an St. C. O ..O ..4 H24 8 17 Episcopal High, Alexandria . . . 5 Thomas jefferson, there. . . 7 Woodberry Forest, there. . . 1 10 Thomas jefferson, here .... 2 Fork Union, there ...... 0 John Marshall, here ..... 6 l 69 l L 50 pw 'W if x f 19 if iii a Q 2 5 Q 'Ago OE Xt 4 Neo 9 -, rw if i if ff,ai,fl'2,l L f ,Q Xlg Mqj Date April April April April April April May May May May May 8 12 19 23 26 29 2 6 9 13 17 BASEBALL RECORD Opponent Fork Union, here .... Benedictine, here ..... Woodberry Forest, here .... John Marshall, here .... Episcopal High, here .... Thomas Jefferson, there .... Woodberry Forest, there ..... Thomas jefferson, here .... john Marshall, there .... Petersburg, here ...... Benedictine, Byrd Park .... i701 1947 St. C. 5 3 8 4 12 1 3 3 8 2 3 O 13 11 ' l Q15 Ugly, ain't they? KZJ If I had the wings of an angel. Q31 On eve of Waterlotm. my Raising poison ivy for Faculty. Q51 Toss 'em a peanut. QGD Boarder! 171 Saturday afternoon permission. 181 A 'trio of heels. l71l G3 s Q lj Ring Rams for lst. Q21 Uprights bound. Q35 Gruesome twosome. Q41 I-lick on hay pile Q55 Fight fiercely, lads. Q61 And tell Joe -4. Q73 Dizzy romps. Q85 Geedum! Q95 Benedictine rallies. 1103 Battling Bulldogs. fllj Confusing, ain'it it? l72l 111 All-set! 121 Sideline strategy. 131 Watch yo' end, jo-e! 141 Midgets amaze masses. 151 Ye olde Saint fighting spirit. 161 'Patty-cakeg Patty-cakve --. 171 St. C.'s mat-men. 181 Saturday morning athletes. 191 Jacobs junior juggernauts. 1101 Ye olde saga of the sawhorse. 1111 Rack 'em, boys! E731 NON-STUDENT SNAPS L 74 3 S ,-ox qt L - x k xgffi -Fi 5 ' : xi .A ff W Q . 1 ' -- 'Jai ---1 ' -I 5,63 ' ' ' X W- -f agar? 151- N P 5 -56'?5:i,-,Li .fn ,z., 'y gff' N 'l:3 1 Q wx., gf ' f f 2 3 Q X - , F Qf .W-Sn, f5FP7K5i5f:, :Lk -sl 41' TES . 'Q' lf gg! :2'f1 gixv n -,, Q.-F- N. ,Q iyynv 09 sz J' xv it Jizz' f ff,-5 'WS 41--1 -1' -- 4 -' : -' 'e nw .- iff? 1, 1' ... . . 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Yiwf' filwlfif 'f 1 f 1 W ff '- ' 4. J i . , -44 'Z ' ' . - 1 .MW f 4 uiiful Pfgf? ,Q ,, ,,.,, , lu, . ,, , L Q w fffif ' f A E. ' - ffm ' ' ' ' -- f-F ' kv' Vg W ff , , v 5 , -. D3-1,-.un-'S-f E5?1' 'L fi' Y' i' . 'U' 'fi .L..., Wig' ,-.14 ' .ff ' ' ja?- . .... A, ll- :?Fl . ' Y- ggi Th e'Virginia Gazette in Williamsburg IDDLE SCHOOL W, r . 5. M, ' . --L14-, V., 5, 4 vf' ,1, V , . gf' f A ,lv 1-1 If ff K' ,Y f gnu. X A U55 gf' Vi f' M A. BENQ I ' Aw ' 5' , u. if ls rf l i', kj Q, 1, H . ,.,4., X X Lx. , , N I. . ,M 3 1, , ' ,H - , . . W , Y . - . X V' s,e fv'Yy,3. V ' P' ' ' . 'U 'x S, -1 -Q - f , - .5 1, A. - gf ii-:-1 '1 -1 ' 4, D ,, if ' ,x 'V iw- ' -f ' ,, , . v ,, K W ,, H . ,4 . Y f A lvl? 'fu . lrwxl. ' ,- J- V- , . f -- f ' , , A - gs, ,- 'L' 1 ,V 1,1 . ,f . -3, -J -- Y 4. M 2 45, A - ,VH , Ax. I xv, ALM .Z .Lg .1 .E Y f Y J . li -Vulzbz , ' -A --71'--ff Q54 1. ,L - ' , ,- Hi,f1ffl'1, . ,,.3' , ' an If-,if'x.,Qs,fA,',g,f ' . '52-:,'. 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Q --5 4 I 'Ca' 4.55 ., 'f' I ' 5 -fx 1 . ,Q- 1 4. r , K 1 4 1 , i' -1 SECOND FORM Left to rightt-front row: Richardson, E.g Harris, Reynolds, R. S.g Joyner, C. F., Witt, J. T. Van Meterg Berger, Neal, T. J. Second row: Roberts, Daniel, J, R. V.g Williamson, L. B. Valenttineg El-cstromg Bradishg Fztulknerg Purcell, Orgain. Third row: Ware, J. L.g Rilnbleg Williams, H. J.g Williams, J. P., Pollardg Frazerg Carrington, W. T, Back row: rStreet, W. H., McCray, B. W.g Adkins, T. E.g Bowles, A, R.g Belfieldg McGuire, Miller, G.g Mageeg Covington, Tyler. Absent: McKemieg Ruffin, A. H. l FIRST FORM Left to right-front row: Fergusong Tabb, W. C.g Cary, C. G.g Butcher, R.g McVey, H. Hg Page, P. M,g Hester, G. P. Second row: Ferneyhoughg Jordan, W. R., Birdg Eubankg Bagley, C. 5.3 Bayliss, V. W., Segarg Galleher. Third row: Bowles, C. F.g Munsong McElroy, R. Wg Hill, T., Frenchg Gardner, Sutton, J. M. Back row: Marks, S. C.g Streut, Herberttg Balloug Bowers, Wheelwright. Absent: Anderson, W. A., Collier. l75l v w ' 695' I-,Qi ,Gilt N . W CT 2 lg! XP 5 'L QU Honor Committee-Hill, T., Bird, G. C., McVey, H. H., McGuire, L. B., Valentine, E. M. Berger, J. C., Witt, J. T. Q25 Lee Soriery-Pres., Valentine, E. M.g V. Pres., Williams, J. P. Sec'y., McVey, H. H. Q31 juckiom Soriezy-Pres., Witt, J. T., V. Pres., Harris, H. W.g Sec'y Bird, G. C. Q45 Miffiomzry S0fiezy4Bird, G. G3 McElroy, R. W.g Witt, J. T., Valentine, E. M. McGuire, L. B. fabsentj. l 76 il '1 '4 f F 5 Q v Q 2 Y L 5, E. 'I 4 s v , 5 5 5 'E 1 1 r. 1 ,Y ,, 1 ,f' A. I. X - 1 1 af. 'F X. N . .' wr: 'L W. -- .- , AJ 1. 1 - Ng - 5 XX - , Y ., . 4 X v X NX: . , f K , ' y 7 X ' X4 ' v , . ' 'L fi , 'F' 4' .W jf 1' 'X . f -1 v .. XX. ,,, 'f '54 X af L' X ,i is ,g 'r f'f,vf'w X'X , .XX 1 A .'!,j':,' , , ' X qw: X ,1X:',- .. ,. ' ig?.Q,fF5'f4 ,' 'ffl V 3? ' 4 X 1 - 1' Qc' -' ' ' . 1, '1:.1'Y'-U'V57f.' I 'vw V W 3, ' V, X, , . 31? .ii XT .. ,, ,.. T, ang, sq -'- , , , -,J-Y.. 1 bv Y , -,1 , u u XXXVLTXXXLXXQX X, . M ,x ,, , , --'iw XXXL VX if, Q . ' , , -X. 4 Y- x F , J , ,,v if A' . 'L kff.xf V 5 X f X-C45 it ,.-7 4, v Uh Xl.,,e2 1 11 .Q XXX '?.f.1,gXu JXQQQN7 X f , ' .X. ,f X'-v.,N 4. 'V Tina. iff '-Y-1 ,1 fy -' 5 '. .. . -:V .Jn-5?Xf? 7 35' 712'-,Y-r?X'X'4 . . ., 1- LX ,gg X51 My-ggnag' E 5 -3' 9 F' ' M ' ,V-5-H X15 , 1'j-,,fj....'fX.f.1f,f ,-X-,XX X . ,X X' X , ' 4,14 J ' 1 1 ' 'W'-1' g'f. ffC' 'G .- . , -M AJ 5 qu :P ' 'gf' fl:- :WA 1.3:-i'S'. 1 -uf-:'. W' ' . i3?airf.XXXX X. , '- .X . .4 , -Cf. H' 21 ,-.,w,rw?JJwN ' , 1 . Q X,X3X1iXXqiX,XX,-,X V. Jn- QL, X .H ' iQf?'5:Q'f'f'!': ki 755 if if ' Xl Xngml.-,XX X Y XXX IF 'ff' 123 'If-9-'V '1-N1lV-we - f . . M . - , ,X X.,XX X.m.:X,XgXX, X ,X X, .X X,,X 'Ez'-fi' f ..T..':-'?i1f'IU9wf' X15 , P ',,,..i,.e3Y,'ff :K '1i,a1:.'. . Q- , X X -55?mX?.' XJWXQQ .,.. -.f XXX!! J X5 Lfwfgfl.-vii - 'm'gfw4f'ej.,-A 4 -792. fl ini. 'LII - ..X,gXZ1.XXXi :a.X QQXXX-ph? XV f. A A ax Q- .4 4 X XXX X' .1 1 ' -'1'xy'R.wkf 4 Q1-,g.'-wavy' ff .f N .1:'. .v w' Q '- -w' - cg, 0 A '. . ff pkg? jf , Qfgfxx ngjf:,.5f-.,X,,X.,X 2 . X 1 Xbxwlq-L.XygZg,X:Zix'XXX ,QE . XIX X X' X X ,A ,XXPXXEB-1X.e,1XX X . ,lg X.. X X X . ' 1 ,, 1-if 1-, . M ,. X X, Hg.. ,f ,. N. .X X, X, .,. .,XX X mfslfi- -ffzw Qs.. .. xl f .X ' K . X vlfyitl gvfggif' 5351 ., 4 .2.8p,. X .3 Xl -N --y-sw..-X . W ' F . 3,-.'54!'4i,.:,Z'-f ff. 'X ,f:,., f V 4' if .1 ,. W 7 . ' YU 2l 5.'.f '11 x ., ' .bi .Xf .,,-, XAQi . 1 X' XXJL 'X 'U ,CX zjgqlfzf XX: .gf X- X:.r...,:S- ,X .nh X VX, X 43, X 'fig I' V' 5 '-EX '- , 1 ,- IE w ' I si. 'L ' ? ' ' .Y X - 1 ' iff' , X X H gl .-LI X. ' X Q . , X - J J? 1 'fx' ' . .X 1 1 f 1 4- ff' , V . ' -. fx.. ,X ,.', . f. .lf 1 A W f f .1 - N. , f , . , . 1 Xb' ' 1 ! 1, ', r , v , f . S. ,V I . f f , 1 a 1 , ,A . W 1 1 v 1 x 4 ,, Q Is A269 7, 4 .. is ,. 'J 7 ,,. -4 l LOWER SCHOOL FACULTY MISS JANE HENDERSON, HeadmiJtreJ.r B.A., Sweetbriar College MRS. IRVING H. BLACKW'ELL MISS HELENA BLUE B.A., Westhampton College B.S.M., University of North Carolina Gradua-te Student Columbia University Presbyterian General Assembly's Training MRS. PUTNEY WORTHINGTON Richmond City Normal School MRS. VOLNEY W. SHEPARD B.S., Oregon State College MRS. JACKSON M. SNEED St. Mary's Junior College Farmville State Teachers' College Duke University MRS. CHARLES H. MASON University of Richmond William and Mary Extension MRS. ALBERT JOHN OOHSNER, II Madison College William and Mary Summer School 77 School MISS 'ELSIE BRAUER B.S., Mary Washington College of Univer- sity of Virginia Collegiate Professional Teaching MISS GRACE EDMUNDS B.S., Mary Washington College Graduate Student William 6 Mary College Graduate Student Columbia University MRS. T. E. LAVENDER B.A., Radcliffe College Boston Nursery Training School University of Richmond MRS. M. S. SMITH B .A., Westhampton College PRIMER AND FIRST FORMS Left to right-front row: Goolsby, A. C., Sale. F., McKeel, D. W., Kempton, W. A., Dulaney, E. D., Crump. W. W., Deopker, F. C., Frix, A. G., Fairlamb, S. G. C., N'els-on, J. G., Begien, R. N., Wassum, C. S. Second row: Warren, R. H., Thompson, E. H., Bickers, J. F., Harrell, H. H., Young, W. A., McCullough, F. W., Laverge. B. J., Miller, C. M., Smith, J. B. Back row: McVey, G. J., Ryland, W. B., Morgan, B. S., Cabell, J. C., Orpin, W. F., Childrey, E. C., Brydon, D. M., Flannagan, R. C., Painter, W. L., Bayliss, J. T. Absent: Randolph. ' A f - -' --- Y---r---ve---W --W --' ---W -Af H-v'----e-Aw - VZ EQ I ,- it v J, l Q . 1 SECOND FORM Left to right-front row: Smith, S. S., Stone, J. B., Binswanger, M. I., Lord, F. K., Davenport, B. W., Robson, F. E., Johns, F. S., Cann, J. P., Birge, M., Guerry, DuP., Dabney, R. H., Jarman, L. W. Second row: Miller, J. C., Stringfellow, B. B., Ayer, J. R., Freeman, R. M., King, W. H., Stevenson, O. M., Thomas, W. A. R., Williams, 'E. S., Ryland, G. N., May, W. H., Winn, W. C., Fowlkes, F, V., Henrikson, V. R., Kirkpatrick, R. D., Evans, R. R. Third row: Reed, F. S., McLeod, H, M., Klaus, P. W., Parkinson, J. T., Wood, T. W., Sharp, P. D., Walmsley, S. P., Pole, F. L., Fee, J. H., McGuire, H. F., Barker, J. A. K., Coe, H. G., Minor, G. G., Jeffreys, C. T., Wilson, R. T. Back row: Bothwell, E. S., Rhoads, W. S., Wood, M. L., Wallerstein, S. R., Pyle, H., Ward. R. D., Pinckney, T., Rawlings, W. B., McCray, L. D., McCray, J. H., Glenn, P. W., George, W. B., Tompkins, W. F., Shields, H. A., Shield, E. H., McCray, G. C. S. Absent: Burleson, R. A., Rabb, R. L., Williams, F. L., Davis, J. C., Lavender, T. E., Seaton, W. E., Krost, L. M. i78l THIRD, FOURTH, AND FIFTH FORMS Left to right-front row: Hutt, T. E., May, J. J., Davis, E. M., Williams. D. L., Askin, F. B. Crump, T. N., O'Ferrall, R. R., Barnes, F. J., Carrington, L. H., Craigie, C. W., Munson, J. B. Jordan, R. C., Aiken, C. D., Jordan, J. E. Second row: Reynolds, R. R., Colt, J. L., Spalding H. C., Clift, W., Daniel, T. M., Gray, H. A., Beverly, W. B., Godidin, G. W., Weaver, J. M. Camp, P. Trice, F..A., Scott, W., Bryan, J. S., McGee, W. A., Clarke, A. M., Bayliss, M. F. Third row-Knight, W. A., Ellyson, W. G., Phillips, H. N., Dulaney, J. D., Rhodes H. A., Brydon, R. C., Joel, G. A., Horsley, T. B., Power, W. B., Williamson, J. B., Denny, C. M., Williams, E. O. N., Wise, J. D., Tucker, C. C., Bowles, E. -G., Ochsner, A. J., Reed S. P., Stone, C. W. 'Fourth row: Whitley, D. P., Whitley, R. T., Willis, J. P., Benson, E. L. Witt, A. L., Williams, J. P., Krosit, J. B., Montague, G. M., Jeffreys, W. A., Ratcliffe, C. H. Woods, M. B., Whitfield, N. B., Street. J. M., Todman. F. G., Siersema, R. C. Back row: Ware M. T., Moncure, G. V. M., Bullington, A. H., Taylor, D. H., Taylor, G. W. B., Boyd J. N. y Stevenson, S. W., Colt, T. C., Yeatts, W. A., Livy, R. B., Wallace, D. D., Reynolds, J. S., Bowman, D. Absent: Parrish, C. P., DeJarnette, J. C., Burleson, W. M., Cary, J. B., Laird, D. E., Shield, J. A., Davenport, H. G., Stanley, P. Von S. On Commencement Day when a boy from the Fourth Forrn is called to come forward to receive the gift to the school from the graduating class, he knows for the first time that he is the winner at an election held on one of the last days of school. 'He has been given the greatest honour and at the same time the greatest responsibility the school has to offer. For the faithful discharge of his duties his name is writ in gold on the tablet in the school-room as a Leader of the Lower School. lk lk HY lk lk lk J. S. REYNOLDS Leader of Lower School i li 79 3 rf Q! ,X--, 7 of SK, V X. 5 O E Vi iI,! sjfggig., l l .ill Mills, LOVVER SCHOOL OFFICERS Every Thursday after the regular Morning Prayer, the officers of the junior Missionary Society conduct a short service of prayer and offering. This service is to remind the boys of the needs of others and give everyone an opportunity to share with those in less happy circumstances. 4: x is at is wx MISSIONARY SOCIETY President ....... ..... F . G. TODMAN Vire-Pferiden: ..,.. ,... S . W. STEvENsoN Sefrefary ...... .... B . M. WOODS JACKSON SOCIETY Prerident .,.... , ....... M. WARE Vice-Preridenz ..... ..... G . MONTAGUE Sefremry ........ .... N . B. WHITFIELD LEE SOCIETY Prexident ..,....,.................. J. M. STREET Vice-Preriderzl ..... .,.R. B. LIVY Cahsentl Serrenmry ........ .... A . H. BULLINGTON if :of 4: if 4 we The boys who appear as Presidents of the junior Lee and junior jackson Literary Societies are reaping the rewards of zealous efforts putt forth from the First or Second Forms on up. They are the ones who always learned the declamation faithfully and carried it through to 'the last resounding line, drown- ing out false starts and vague murmurings from weaker members along the line. Now they sit behind the desk and preside over the meetings with quiet dignity. At Commencement they receive or relinquish the coveted cup according to the year's turn of Fortune. xopx E801 ' f XS. f .A X GL'4?3 ' Sr. C. Sr. C. Sr. C. FOOTBALL RECORD -Z8 ,......... Westhampton- 7 -19 .......... Wesrhampruan- 0 19 .......... Westhampt4o-n- 7 ES .....,. Totals .....,. Tji 8 LONVER SCHOOL ATHLETICS FIRST STRIN'G-LOWER SCHOOL lk lk lk lk lk lk CO-CAPTAINS STREET AND REYNOLDS WITH 'COACH REDDICK if 4 x 4 nf x LOWER SCHOOL .SQUAD x x JY x x x LOWER SCHOOL BASKETBALL TEAM 1 I 2 12 50 46.59 N 3 :X wif' of x 4, .wg '9 ' . f Fl if QW ,iii u ml i- ye. Qt is O07 if. SNL! A X Gig?-9 rknumlzdgmrnrs. . For their assistance in the task of publishing this volume, we express our deepest gratitude to: - Our Headmaster, Mr. john Page Williams for his Foreword and all- round help in all phases. Mr, john R. Brinser for his dedication article. Mr. Hugh C. Brenaman and Mr. E. H. Rucker, Sr. for their invaluable ,aid in our advertising department. Mr. john Branch Green for his aid as faculty adviser. Mrs. M. C. Johnston for her typing of football material. Mrs. Albert Ochsner for her aid in preparation of the Lower School material. Miss Jane Henderson for her excellent Lower School function write-ups. Woodroof, Johnston, Profiit, Stiff, Lightbourn, and Cogbill for their advertising aid .at the last minute. Mr. August Dietz, Sr. for Ihis excellent and benevolent art work. Mr. August Dietz, Jr. for his inestimable assistance. THE EDITORS. i823 N , . K ADVERTISEMENTS L . 1 E K L. Y 5 . f L ly ? ! f6 5 1-L- -i.. i- The C. F. SAUER CC i- -.- in-pq- g!1 v qlRICHMOND,VA 3 I 1 w 1 - ,qfjjglsf 1 W gh2 V. lg gA8O lyfl S .Ghristuphrrs rhuul A Church Schoolfor Boys RICHMOND, VIRGINIA PI4 Healthful, beautiful, and historic sur- roundings. Thirty acres of grounds and athletic fields. Boarding Department limited to fifty pupils. Separate Lower School for little boys between the ages of five and eleven years. Faculty of twenty-four college-trained and EXPERIENCED teachers. Small classes. Individual instruction. E For more than a Quarter of a Century St. Christopher s has Prepared Boys for Colleges, Universities and Technical Schools. For Illzrftmfed Catalog, Addreff REV. JOHN PAGE WILLIAMS, Headmaster Official QND AND emtnti tudin Photographers 1 9 4 7 'CRAPS AND TAPS lk lk lk Ik ANTHONY L, DEMENT1 AND ROBERT A. DEMENTI9 lk Ik It lk New Location GRACE STREETS, RICHMOND, f o r th 6 35 VIRGINIA 4 Of? X' X Erik! 'Y f , f--0' if A R ,If til. X IIU , Ui ii' S? Ek Of Qs , E AO I qijlpsx' s ,, 7 wx 49? yqxxx I 15 H NN 2 MQ! 'AW ff I DRINK C46 IN BOTTLES RICHMOND COCA-COLA BOTTLING NVORKS, INC 1801 WEST MARSHALL STREET HARRIS-BRENAMAN, Inc. Sporting Goods Athletic Supplies 717 EAST GRACE STREET AGENTS FOR A. G. SPALDING 84 BRO. P. GOLDSMITH SONs Compliments of GALLEHER ESC COMPANY -INC.-- I N V E S T M E N T S 909 EAST MAIN STREET RICHMOND, VIRGINIA Complimentf of KINGAN AND COMPANY RICHMOND, VIRGINIA MEISTER Sc SMETHIE Bookbinders 105 NORTH GOVERNOR STREET RICHMOND, VIRGINIA 1947 BINDERS OF THE RAPS AND TAPS Telephone 2-0794 4 'EISQX 0 w C, Is A , I-L, . C I' ,V Q I xx b Q13 1 .ff UV. IOP on I cg 4 U AV H lf' 221 SNC, .A X Ciydgm 'PR T, GARNFTT TABB T1-los. W. BROCKENBROUGH STUART RAGLAND TABB, BROCKENBROUGH Sc RAGLAND GENERAL INSURANCE Insurance - Your Silent Guardian 1101 EAST MAIN STREET PHONE 2-6546 COMPLIMENTS OF VVCsthampton Beauty SaIon COMPLIMENTS OF A FRIEND 66 99 300 W. RROOKLAND PARK BLVD. PIIILLIP'S PLACE 5704 GROVE AVE. We Spermlize in Fowl and Sodrr Sefzfire WE SERVE RICHMOND DAIRY ICE CREAM Under New Management By Coleman Westhaniluton S h o e R e P a i r SAM ELKIN, Proprietor Factory Method Used. Expert Work. Quick Service 312 LIBBIE AVE. DIAL 5-4902 , V, r Vgmfff ' 'nys' sYDNoR PUMP AND WELL co. ESTABLISHED 1889 RICHMOND, VIRGINIA Fihro Board Container Company Manufacturers of CORRUGATED FIBRE SHIPPING CASES 0 RICHMOND, VIRGINIA f'f?iYX .LM SQ a ru l 4OPNg, GW! ' M Ia off na, I of for I I I -'T II! ,OWS-X ff, i 'X , Q A I 2' ,pw ff! ffm stair 'VA N .hai ' Commmvewefef Setting out Well is a quarter of the journey Ask Dad to tell you the best time for you to begin a life insurance saving plan. We'11 Wager that he wishes his insurance program had been started when he was your age. The best time to begin any Worthwhile effort is novv. Liielnsuranue Compan of Virginia BRADFORD H. WALKER ROBERT E. HENLEX' si j l e 5 Chairman 0 the Board President ': yi . 1 0 1 v' ,z--JEL? u- in h Flowers for All Occasions . . . IULIAN P. TODD F L O R I S T NO FLOXVERS ARE FRESHER THAN OURS 210 N. 5th Street Phone 3-8435-Nite 6-2924 Richmond, Va. DAVENPORT 8539 CO. INVESTMENTS lk if if if if 1113 E. MAIN STREET RICHMOND, VIRGINIA QUALITY BAKERY SHOPPE Record Shop 5714 GROVE AVE. Chamberlayne Ave. If yOu've tried here and tried :ga there, try us anyhowf' Where quality and good tame RECORDS H MAGAGINES rejgyzfu , GREETING CARDS B. BRAUER'S SONS DEALERS IN Choice Home-Killed Meats SIXTH STREET MARKET TELEPHONE 3-5328 RICHMOND - VIRGINIA ' f Sty G 57 557 I-I M fo 1 5 V. I 'fyffjf IIIII X 'OEET !6fff4s', 1' II , f ll 1 Of xf If I f S- CQEQQ D. M. BONEY Sc COMPANY Antiques 111 EAST GRACE STREET RICHMOND,VIRGINIA ENGLISH AND AMERICAN ANTIQUE FURNITURE OLD ENGLISH SILVER OLD SI-IEFFIELD PLATE F. W. STIFF Sc CO. OAK GROVE GENERAL MERCHANDISE 4. .,. I SL1'I'Illg lfn' fflllllllllliilj' for 0111 60 ymfr Three Chopt Service Center PATTERSON AvE. 8: THREE CHOPT RD. Crown Gasoline Road Service PHONE 5-9619 P211'11Cll7S Tavern GOOD THINGS T0 EAT Ear-B-Q9-Svteak-Qlhirkena 0 ON U. S. -'lil AT DUTCH GAP, VA WESTHAMPTON LOTS Well Elevated, Monthly Terms. Select, Planrt Now, Build Later. J. MAYO BROWN SCHMIDT 8: WILSON, INC. R e a I t o r s 4101 E. FRANKLIN STREET 2-5801 Compliments Of ADDISON CLEANING COMPANY, IHC. fMiraeleanersj 5-7 SOUTH STAFFORD AVENUE FOR YOUR GOOD HEALTH DRIN K G O O D EVERY DAY d for the Huest Ice Cream of all, Enjoy RICHMOND DAIRY and I DOLLY MADISON I C E C R E A M R chmond Dairy C Richmond, V WJ Z ff! lf? 'gn' fx CMT It f ' I w I JOHN R. CHAPPELL RiChmond's Oldest Mutual Agency 4 ESTABLISHED 1925 -k Low NET COST INSURANCE -Ir Dia1-- 3-7361 - Dial ir zoo N. Ami slim, Room 104, Hillcrest Building if All Lines INSURANCE All Lines il 1 1 in I GARDEN The Soutlfs Most Beautiful Ballroom DANCING NIGHTLY TO THE FINEST DANCE ORCHESTRAS Dial 5-9151 for Table Reservations and Enjoy Your Nights at TANTILLA GARDEN 3817 W. Broad St. -'f', ,46 y , , ,- ,-',- , ,-f,v', ,o',o' ,o'ff,-',-',-', ,vn',of,-'ff -cv,-',-f,-0-uf-c-f1,v,v Richmond's Finest Alleys NVQ Invite You to . . . IEOIVI, AT TINY TONVN Day or Night . . . Wllere You Vvfill Always Be Comfortable SUMMER AND WINTER AIR CONDITIONING sYsTEM Cpen Bowling at All Times DIAL 5-9151 Be Safety - Wise Align With Bear - 2 Machines For Prompt Service- A MEYER soNs, INC. COMPLETE AUTO SERVICE 120 South 8th Street j ,Qi NV M4 MG C3 11 fflz- , U1 if MN 2 EX is ,N gl I ff of pm ,k?2f Iftfgad Q' ' I ' QW, 1 W 1 'I I iff I WRIGHT BRUTHERS, INC. Lumberon and Q Building Q Materials it MAN UFACTURERS UF VIRGINIA PINE Sc HARDWQOD LUMBER BOXES, SHOOKS, Sc CRATING if BELT BOULEVARD AND HGWE STREET Compliments of IAMES D. PATTON, IR. AND CHARLES M. TERRY Life and Personal Accident Insurance lk J. Ii.. M. NENVTON if 404 STATE-PLANTERS BANK BUILDING PHONE 5-1867 STICK TO STUCKEYH WVesthampton Ave. Service Station ROAD SERVICE 5500 Cary Street Road ALVA STUCKEY Proprietor DIAL 5-9533 Londeree Sc Wollsieffer ESSO SERVICE o CARY STREET AND RIO VISTA LANE RICHMOND, VA. 4400 GROVE AVE. DIAL 5-9670 Al I 1 A Qiigltfx A 194 Gm! ff' at r + I ' . I 2 A A E ' o A X of x0 A X. Qbfay , 'if X, 4, up v aff ff? 435+ GI 3? Myl- U ol I' II fp 'EVERYBODY LOOKS AT YOUR HUGSI' UZCEI' RUG CLEANSING AND STORING CO. EDUCATIONAL ENDOWMENT POLICIES THE UNION LIFE INSURANCE CO., INC. HOME OFFICE 15 NORTH SIXTH ST., RICHMOND, VA. FOR REAL CLEANING SERVICE CALL VVesthampton H U B Cleaning COIDPHDY STUART CIRCLE 514 Libbie Avenue PHARMACY DIAL 5-1571 STUART CIRCLE AND PARK AVENUE nfiie, PURE PAINT Q . , , 19 X wr . -If ' M LOWQQ xvpm, k dv y BQOWHHS 4 A nj-anus I 'oooh cnt Eg 3 Punk . Q0 V 35' ufwifn ,A,, QE SNUJLSHIS Sewing The Surface Since 1890 Atlantic Varnish 82 Paint Company T'C , qi XG A I f N3 vie lik X 4, ha RN I? X 5 L ORQEI QQ 35? X' dt, Q7 QS F I. W. FERGUSSON Sc SONS P 1' i n t e r s 'ig IIICIIIVIOND, VIRGINIA C0mPlimemS of Mutual Insurers, Inc. TAYLOR 51 SLEDD 610 E. MAIN STREET INCORPORATED i DISTRIBUTORS OF Pocahontas and Tidewater GENERAL INSURANCE Brand Canned Foods Service-Saving-Securities joHNsoN's DRUG sToRE PRESCRIPTION DRUGGISTS CHAMBERLAYNE AVENUE AT LOMBARDY STREET PHONE 5-8678 RICHMOND, VA. XVHITMANANDNORRISCANDIES DRINK C L I A X PALE DRY GINGER ALE and SPARKLING WATER Also TRU-ADE ORANGE and GRAPE 0 CLIIVIAX BEVERAGE CO. RICHMOND, VA 0 ' fm L E527 M ,O D X 'ff 'AXIVQQA L, 4:74315 'if-X ff! Cf? TSX is 1 , AO ofa? COMPLIMENTS OF WATKINS COTTRELL COMPANY COMPUMENTS Bernandine Children's OF Shop, Inc. LINCLE: IAKEFS sm N. Iibbie Ave. RICHMOND, VA. BARBECUE zz: EVERYTHING FOR THE LAD AND LASSH Rucker COMPLIMENTS OF and Richardson R E A L T O R S SALES - LOANS - INSURA NCE Iimmie Mitchell TENNIS PROFESSIONAL COUNTRY CLUB OF VIRGINIA 41 Instruction--Rackets-Supplies DONALD L. WEEKS 4 STATE PLANTERS BLDIG AGENCY MANAGER 140 The Equitable Life Assurance Society 904 EAST MAIN ST, of the United States RICHMOND, VA, inn: Directing the Why Toward Financial Security Since the Turn of the Century ATLANTIC LIFE INSURANCE CO. RICHMOND, VIRGIIVII-1 ORGANIZED 1899 o H0nest1y,It's the Best Policy I wr f' -A 4. ,- , ff. ' f IX 42 ,ff I If I X IM if Nw .A X 545123 N ,f f , cf 154 -yr 2 MA 01 EL ft J Ama ,AO 'QPQZXVN A AYLETT T. GODDI N FERGUS A. GOODRIDGE E Sc GODDIN CLAIBORNE, GGQDRIDG GENERAL INSURANCE 610 MUTUAL BUIL DING 0 RICHIMOND, VI PH-ONE 3-6713 RGINIA ' COMPLIMENTS OF Bickelhaupt, Inc. 1737 Summit Avenue RICHMOND QZID, VA. The SERVICE-INSTALLATIONS SALES- Iones Sc Gooding Finest In Home Appliances 3158 West Cary Street fln the Park and Shop Centerj Cotmplimenly MILLER of MANUFACTURING COMPANY BENNY-,S 1NICoRPoRATED M ILLWORK LUMBER O P E N D O O R WOOIDEN EoXEs Seventh and Stockton Streets RICHMOND, VIRGINIA Compliments of A Friend FROM GODDIN Sc CAYTON, INC. 14 way Dependable ! . . . Yes Sir., Dependable as the re- turningseasons. Every year since I 879, Southern farmers and gardeners have looked to Wood's as the place to get the choice seed which fully backs up their money and labor - the seed that makes farming more profitable and gardening more fun. WUUITS SEEDS We are distributors for leading strains of better field seeds . . . quality seed grain . . . choice vegetable seed . . . select flower seeds . . . lawn and pasture mix- tures . . . chemicals and disinfectants . . . and many supplies for the home garden. Write for FREE Wood's Catalog l l 1 f V34 if lf . X-1 ..L-liar 3-' I,-T Q2 A ' fifrg ogxx 94 L CMG U ,ty I ITL I I I Qi, N m! KD U1 01 7 VIRGINIA ENGRA VINC COMPANY Engravers for THE 1947 HRAPS AND TA PS 101 'GOVERNOR STREET, RICHMOND, VA. TELEPHONE 3-8459 ROSE SLLAEOON Lloyd Service Station Realtgfs Battery Charging lk Auto Repairing A Spefinfly 109 NORTH EIGHTH STREET 9 RICHMOND, VIRGINIA TIRES, TUBES, AND ACCESSORIES P E T E ' S Grove Ave. Pharmacy P. J. ARRIGHI, Prop:-ieim' 4911 GWVC Avenue i, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA 729 East Main Street Reliable Prescriptions DIAL 5-19627 25: RICHMOND, VIRGINIA DELIVERY SERVICE-DIAL 5-3405 RICHMOND FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION Sth and Main Streets SAVINGS LOANS Insured up to TELEPHONE on Ist Mortgage 55,000 - with a 2-1605 Prompt Service Liberal Return. Loans .... Printers of Raju and Tally THE DIETZ PRINTING CQ. 109 East Cary Street RICHMGND, VA. DIAL 2-8858 I XXI I 4 3? 4 'I EI 4fQE95 421. U W in U P 3 1 M as Ao XY C244 Best Wishes to ST. CHRISTO PHERJS SCHOGL From the Bakers of OLDE' B American Maid B read , ' , The Bread Wl'I'h 'l'he 2- --Sf 1, i 1 fa,-V wk- Md. -- .,.-4 Smoofher Tex'l'ure ,iffy ' r 1f:1 7f1,,.-- ' 'Ez QQQFQSQ X Y' f,1,.,a-is-wif I ,f . I I 'N h' NOZDE' S NM s N n I c H E o WTLHQ' , vw-, eh 1 ' i -'v gym 1 X ' ,.,.4f11'-. 5 Y W f, Jmoucan 711ml V .,,,, .i -. -L, ...Q f- , , W! .Sf . him li 466: W' 1 ,eff The Freshesf Thing in Town Fresh Every Suu Rise at A11 Grocers H -7f - 4- jxqff' fab Q7 fv'v Y 45 Cl? J Ak W f 9551! A ,VA .'x,g . 5421 i 'x H 1 x 'A J 12: XI 1 J xsx K o, .N Jw ' If L-.97 flhggxfff . IS. I LU, QOH F c lv fix os-9 r MILLER Sc PATTERSON Investments MUTUAL BUILDING DIAL 3-8 461 RICHMOND, VA. INCORPORATED 1794 Mutual Assurance Society o f Virginia Richmond, Virginia W. IXIIZADF AnD1soN Pfifzriptzl Agar!! G. MOFFETT KING Serretafy HSAINTS! slNNERs! We have all me LILVVIS G. CHEVVNING latest Records here by your I N C O R I, O R A T E D Favorite Artist. It ESTHAMPTON W Real Eslate Agents Y ELECTRIC CENTER 5716 GROVE AVENUE RICAL APPLIANCES SIXTH AND MAIN STREETS RICHMOND, VIRGINIA ELECT Complifvzenlf g Compliments Of NVESTNVOOD of PHARIVIACY 1NeoRPoRATED T H E E D I T O R S 5805 Patterson Avenue V1F1ffJlNUX UA I F 1 Y WKHZJME UF BE'f'EHM11h il' . WWW Mfwfmw UNE Qufxsrr UND Greeflhgy I0 cz Great School in a Great Gig!! QZIESGHNHEA. DDEAHE33? CCUJQ Haag Home 062 rsieefm :mere ff 1810-18 W. lWAIN STREET DIAL 5-2838 '57 ff 'JSE' '17 'mum 'ft'-'k',t.s I 1 P' T 4 11X X ,L ,, X r,,,4QJ' 1,,1 M i iW iM1W -mv ---v-.-- , 5 gif O f NT'CFlQ? 'QE X . 43. 5 7. flex. I fy Qi We Sell All Sizes of P O W E R LAWN MOWERS FOR COMMERCIAL or RESIDENTIAL USE REPAIRS On All Makes of Power Lawn Mowers 3306 W. Broad Dial 6-7295 Richmond Power Equipment Co., Inc. R. D. .IollNs'l'0N, Service Manager TYPEWRITERS New and Used Portable and Standard Models 'k For the Best in Typewriters Place Your Order NOW ir E. Earle Hielierson PHONE 2-5683 WIESTHAMPTON PHARMACY W. W. WHITE, Dnucoisr RITG. PH., B,S. IN PH. MEDICAL COLLEGE OF VA. lk PRESCRIPTIONS Carefully Compounded by Registered Pharmacists Only lk DRUGS, HOUSEHOLD REMEDiEs TOILET ARTICLES, SCHOOL SUPPLIES CANDIES, SUNDRIES wr 5813 GROVE AVENUE sr eimisrovnnifs OFFICAL DRUG s'roRE Dial 4-4561 RICHMOND, VIRGINIA John L. Ratelifffe INCORPORATED 501 EAST GRACE STREET RICHMOND, VA. L 5 I ll., n i I C7 GENERAL TIRE Diftributor goes a long way to make friends MARLOVVE TIRE COMPANY, INC. 10-HOUR RECAPPING SERVICE-7 ' lf- ..f' '1',Hj,'NJ9 , - 1 z, .' 'T Jdnij- , .H ,H ,: :ik 1' 'lf ZW f gm X, Sqzzeegee DIAL 5l9171 2701 WEST BROAD STREET, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA 1 IMA! 4 . ,WN 4494! 4l2f,fTgw 12'-ff A-fY5'j ' QI! fffgvf' N0 C! ffl III, ,AZYA 60 ' Sw-1,9 T I ! I l I 1 ,. , I lm I ,UW l HXSTSTX1 r A f I N W lyk' .-' wt- ,1 . Q3 ,fllQ'7'Rlb' X t,,4,J?!yf, .W , . if gl f , xiii, xg!! si-lkfo I - 1 Compliments of THE VIRGINIA ELECTRIC AND POWER COMPANY THE MARK OF A CHAMPION! When a young man can face the business world with the same undaunted courage that he bucks the line in football, and can take the bumps that inevitably will come to him in business, and can keep his fighting spirit and keep smiling . . . then he has the mark of a champion. The world needs young men like this and the world will make way for them. The life insurance business needs such men, so why not prepare yourself for a career in the life insurance business. It's a business of opportunity for young men of ambition and vision. Home Beneficial Life Insurance Company, Inc. THE HOME OF PROTECTION HOME OFFICE RICHMOND, VIRGINIA Compliments of A FRIEND . KA' I X3 -.11 , af 5 fw X wif ,X CX If Ch uf. 'U A ' -Y in 17 4 0 H .2 fl 7 Of, X X'fl:i,fJ'f B . 'ifxt 4-'94 Tessa Ta- Ciff -A r' N0 -5.5 XQEZJ 1 XL AOR Compliments of S. Strother Smith, Ir. REPRESENTING THE TRAVELERS INSURANCE CO. 801 Mutual Building Dial 3-1964 to I Wakefield Grin Richmond Valeteria, INC. HC H I E K E N The SOuth's' Most Modern Cleaning Plant IN THE 4: R O U G HH 2705 WEST BROAD STREET ' RICHMOND, VA. Every Bite a Tender Delight TEL5 5.2349 Complimenlr of 49 John E. Woodward F I N E F O 0 D S Insurance Agency Q 'f PHONE: 6-7844 MUTUAL BUILDING BROAD STREET ROAD-1 'MILE OUT RICHMOND, VIRGINIA RICHMOND, VIRGINIA THE TUCKAHOE MOTOR COMPANY Tuekahoe Garage HAUTOZWOTIVE SPECIALISTSU DIAL 6-3393 Pirk U p and Delivery NEAL AND HUTCHINSON g,MQ.f,ff E2f- Congratulations and Best Wishes to the CLASS OF '47 0 WUIITENIIYKE MANUFACTURING Co RICHMOND, VIRGINIA 0 ESTABLISHED 1889 i 1 l l 1 I ,KXO P M - fx 0 Q' wQ' ' ,fr M an . of X-1 if if 12 ff v ef ,mea A-I I 14 J U f L? 1 1 ,X I. , I M355 QXQ T LIFE, ACCIDENT HEALTH 'A' PARKS P. DUFFEY, General Agent RICHMOND, VIRGINIA Connecticut General Life Insurance Company ESTABLISHED 1865 GROUP HOSPITALIZATION ANNUITIES MosER I UNIVERSITY PHARMACY Phones 4-8474 - 5-9726 'k Photo Supply 'Everything Pholtographicn RTH FIFTH STREET Developing - Printing Enlarging Fm! S6fZ'jf6-DIAL 3 202 NO -3466 5718 GROVE AVENUE COMPLETE INSURANCE SERVICE A' L. Lorraine Life- Personal Accident Fire - Automobile - Surety Bonds Hardware Company, QP INC. Lowe Bros. Paints Ramon W. Andrews INSURANCE AGENCY DIAL 3-1964 MUTUAL BLDG. H se Furnishings and Sporting Good ou 3114 WEST CARY STREET DIAL 5-9101 ! diff? X. ,U FQQ1 ' U5 fr 'I ' O fi? f' V . 'X p M Kyo f 2:35 0 .gi , KX6-FTM W ff? I ff? S fzfi NS. xeafg X, 433' X ff '76 A q . A , xl 9 J OC! X E OPM ff R 5' 43 -' an U M US Q- 2 0 V75 5 AQ of Y , f' rlffx 64 'LA' 49' H o Q f G4i V 1 vf ay k J W - A X ,Qjl'5f27 'L X05 '55 r 1 lf J 4. XS Q,fD 0 ' bf 1 ' Q . 0 if og Y fzyx w .Ji ,fgj'5, ff? AW, '55 x 5 f an r'U F4 ik 5 F, J A S A0 W, .X 1615 K A, X E ,159 fs 5 G XA K O VRS. - .,. A AQ' N27 4, rr W pm 1 1 11' L , .V,,. 1 . 1 H3 M L 1 ' ,W- 1 'f xi K9 ,1 1 y' 91 1 V' I i w 5' ' 1 Q 1' . Qi-L, . ' if-1, 1 ' i 1 , 1 - .ffFZ'5 - ' 51-3,1 1 W, 1 ,xl . K .Liij f thru 1 WA 1 Q if 1, 1 '1 111 - 1, ll- . 31,111 1'f'y 1' ,v 1, ' I 2. 3, ,511 EF '1 1. '1 2-'X f' M 1,1 1 . . i'5'3,,r,,..vn ,1',1 A Vu 1' .11-'1 ., 11:11 56.1 W' L: :1-'35, 1 kjfjx-1A',','flg ' 4 -1 ,fi fry, 2519 53191 'Q fa yy '11 1' . M1 . IM 4' '1..f. e'5i+ Q5 1 , mv., ff 1,15 .- 111 11 1 1 111-Zh ft-Ji 11 fini' 'Q -'H it ' ,1 'K ggfl 'X-f. .' ' q ,QM ,M My V! Q-,931 1 1w H., ,11-. +:1Q,1,Jn .,.1f-. 91- 11, r,.l..1, 4 I 4i,1'v':viZ, A 1. . .1. Y, if 1911? 1 1 .. N, . - 13 H1 1 'z 1' I , GW M115-1511 1 1- 1,:1e11 11 4751 W :Tw ifTwf,Q212?1g fl ,1T'U ff-1',?,. 'X A Y u--S1352 it j?9?9'1 1-'J , 5.1311 11','Qf' v 1 1 , 53912 IWQ15 11411 ' 1 lf'- .,-,,-4. , f1,1Q?'ff1i1111-'fjg X' 11,-1' ?1 3 ' J Q, ' .1-11-gf I, V .1 1 v '. :JL - 5 1 ' , sq. 1j 'IS14 . ifV 1,'v, Fry - 5414521 1 we 'h 13' ?,11 .2 1 1111, .1,r 9527. '1 A! Q 1, L 3, 'lr 1, 1,1 51, du. A 11 'Q ' 'f 1 -1 1 l 1' IH .N I 1 1 , 'ffl 1 1 1 I f XV, 11 1' x , X ,, ' 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 , ' . , , , v 11 4 1.1 1 111x- xq 4111 R 4 1 '- x f ,- Y, ,. 7 5.35 2' V1 fi M . 11 1-11 1.01 12 4 ,, J ' 51 14,1-F 1, ' ,gr A , 4,16 V611 ' 12115 ., ?1v V,A --11 1 . 1 3 1 V 1 - 1 L er 5 1 1 ,V I- , ' X ' 1- , . Jf ' 1 , 3, , , -f M I 4 1 1 5' ' Q ' . ulx 1 t , M ' .Q 1 1-3, 1 , 1 f F' ' .1- i 1 ,.-','1 g,. ' ,. . ' , ', 1 33'ff'. ' 11, Y., 4 5' 'lf f'-'iz 1 1 'l Ig 131 W fem F 1 'W 5-14 1 vw55'ix VT . + 2 1 -1- Hm. K X, 1 ,.,g1Y1 i 1 A , rr ' ' ...M 1,-QR' FM' K ' 'W L a 2 fs-rw ww I 1 Q E


Suggestions in the St Christophers School - Raps and Taps Yearbook (Richmond, VA) collection:

St Christophers School - Raps and Taps Yearbook (Richmond, VA) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

1938

St Christophers School - Raps and Taps Yearbook (Richmond, VA) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 1

1939

St Christophers School - Raps and Taps Yearbook (Richmond, VA) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 1

1945

St Christophers School - Raps and Taps Yearbook (Richmond, VA) online collection, 1952 Edition, Page 1

1952

St Christophers School - Raps and Taps Yearbook (Richmond, VA) online collection, 1964 Edition, Page 1

1964

St Christophers School - Raps and Taps Yearbook (Richmond, VA) online collection, 1988 Edition, Page 1

1988


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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.