University of Virginia - Corks and Curls Yearbook (Charlottesville, VA)

 - Class of 1929

Page 1 of 500

 

University of Virginia - Corks and Curls Yearbook (Charlottesville, VA) online collection, 1929 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 500 of the 1929 volume:

CORKS and CURLS CORKS and CURLS 'M VOLVME XLII ANNO DOMINI NINETEEN HVNDRED AND TWENTYININE PVBLISHED BY THE FRATERNITIES AND LITERARY SOCIETIES 0 VNIVERSITY F VIRGINIA y x : xxx . 'Ir'hvrana Go THE ALUMNI of THE UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA umwn They have given to us more than riches, more than the cool beauty of the lawn, more than a record of achievement and honor in the world: They have given to us a heritage of indei pendence to farm our own convictions, of grace to respect the convictions of others, and of courage to follow our ways of living without willing them as laws for our fellows THIS BOOK IS DEDICATED TO THOSE WHCI: H'AVE GIVEN TO US THIS. HERITAGE m. aw ; -... -..v,;....;,..:. .mvmrmgv-JYHWMWVWWh The thing that hath been. it is that which shall be . . . Is there any thing whereof it may be said. See, this is new? it hath been already of old time, which was before us. Ecclesiastes 1:9, 10. Mpmn It has long been my customeon moonlight nightseto go alone to the topmost step of the Rotunda and yielding dreamily to the lights and shadows of the Lawn, lose myself in silent meditation. Not many nights ago I sat there, immetsed in all the beauty of a hundred years. Supposing that I was alone, I was more than startled when a voice above and behind me said, in tones of immeasurable sweetness: III, too, come often here when the moon is full. See how the moonlight whispers through the trees and touches Earth and Heaven? By his voice I knew that this was no ordinary man and, on turning toward him, I was not surprised to find him garbed in the 'robes of a Prophet. llP'rophet, I said, Iltcll me the meaning of the Beauty that lies before us.n llAlas! I can not. Nor would I if I could , , , , But I will tell you something that may help you to understand, not its meaning, but its glory? The Prophet seated himself beside me, and I listened intently to his story. H t l H MKW. u ,kuy w l w mum , IL i. an A ,. T5he CProphets Stmy : llI have walked far tonightmas I have on a thousand other nights. I have lookedmas I have a thousand times beforewn the University of Virginia. HNow and then I am troubled and sore at heart. You see, I live here I I I Il'mthe P'rophet raised his hand in a smt of half gesture- I I I I in the shadow of the Rotunda. Strange rumors reach me. WThe world breeds little men, my son, as well as men of larger mould. a call you my son because you are a student here and because you will one day wear the Honors of Honorj The world gave us Thomas jefe'rson I I I Ill-magain a slight raising of the hand toward the lower levels of the Lawnmll I I I I and sometimes it gives us men who call him, and all that he stood fonm Fool! uRumors come to me, here in the shadow of jejfersonls dream, of men who zealously wave aloft the Banner which they have named Morality while they sneer at the Torch of Honor which, in founding this University, he lighted. llBut you and I know, my son,wr else we would not be here tonight-that Morality is but of the F lesh and that Honor is of the Spirit. The flesh is cmruptible; the spirit is incormptible. 1:771: VY' - , ,T$ ' W, , x 1 Lu , vmwwjmwmwwwmqw: 3 l w 1 H l Awwmwxm.t -M-Aukgsgtmmnwmhuew- x t, E, F: t t l w t t l l Llflg'+iylakmlt1sk -'-:-..J:'.H y. ' '14: V k4 Jifhuw! i I rGhe Gateway I I I I hhTroubled and sore at heart, I set out tonight on a journey that always brings me Peace. I entered by this Gateway. Here hes the Way of Honor. Here shines the Light of Truth. For more than a century young men have entered here. For centuries to come, these young men, grown old, will guide the footsteps of their sons to this Gateway I I I I m e, m, .n hm, e H 77 r' ' W H LT h 123.11 e iwu eh, MiNmu Ehe Old Hospital I I I I I entered by this Gateway, musing to myself: qThe Way of Honor, the Light of Truthh I I I I and suddenly I stood before the portal of the old hospital. The last words of the inscription came to my lips: The Will to Work for Me'n.P What could it meanIthis small building, this handfulof brick and morta'r, these quiet, white columns I I I I hhe M NWRhM mt I h H; Mwww w .7 . ,. Lbzn , szJ' 3 , , . v, ,. . e, ,- '1: . ----H- g I'VE w h vu y t.vw.,wquwwwm1qu-WWW1 W W wn. y w v 'V F ,w urn ' v AE YY'V'VHWWN .E E E E E E w E H E . EEE E E Hw w ., , 2E 'E HMWug E E E E .. a p n u .A 4 LL u: .LALM I A An .1 A L M AMMmMLJaQMM'AvMuawwwAAMM , , he .7, 7 ?yh V I r' 3r ,, , , ii ,,-.,m:,wj , Wet-- E x E w w E E V E E , E ,E LLuJJ- lee-Jm; l: x 11H . ET LLMLLM'W 5. mllw ,xE 'l $341.14 w 1 x i h 951 ; $12? If E 7 E3 E '7': rGhe New Hospital v , , , and then a strange thing happened. Before my eyes a vast, modem hospital lay revealed. Wing after wing stretched out into the distance. Long rows of stately white columns slipped away into the moonlight. But the Old Hospital was still there. It has become a part of the New. The vast structure before me was but the gracious outgrowth of the Old , , , , Ei'L ., 4V l :wmww-vw mm '.' h , L .e-ALJH Q14. .4 WJJJLLLLMA v x .07... .7- W XMJKW Mummm mu..su.su.mu. nrva ml me-p-w-v rmniv-munAvmemm-m-vm wvwww W l J4. 1m H alum; minim hype. - , 1!! .ug--'- .I;'Sin '1 t- a gmtltk' . $.63? : J - W 73oward the Old Rotunda , , , , Eagerly I turned Ola matter how often I make this journey, I am always eager for i0 and, crossing the uneven ground, started up the walk that leads to where we are now sitting. In days gone, this was the bridle path of the Founder. Tonight I saw the realization of his dream- the Old Rotunda. For a moment a fiame of fwe leaped Skyward , , , , . ' WHxK'VWJI'uWy.MH1-.;;-'rv::'-1'.m;:w7'ivw Iqani-ugpmvwiquhe t! w 1 e KM. - h-Am'wuwwauz .xtvu.n.w N. .u- A. HeugmMM. tGhe Long Walk , , , , but on the moment it dies away and there before me, from the ashes of the Past rose the New Rotunda. The Phoenix, symbol of immortality, had refurbished its As I drew closer, at queer thought passed through wings. ,how How fleeting, How sure, how unhurried my mind: the New Rotunda was itself old! I thought, is the Present. eloquent is the Past! rzzz Xl l A O. ,e- iAiFH-e'evde- e w ew gt -F.t-.w...am L, , Chm; hiMhthltl WM ILU 11.! $1 I l. j a 5 f E a: E. g g. E g E a E g S E g E 2 2:5. 5 g E g i-E g g g g E g E .7 m avwra..-w I..- Civil War Tablets I I I I For the time my mind was ftlled with the Past. Old memories I I I I Careless boys at play I I I I I saw the Sons of Liberty and the Southern Guard-marching, marching I I I I Harpefs Ferry I I I I Chancellorsm'lle I I I I Gettysburg I I I I And then men came bearing two bronze tablets,Iand on these tablets I read the names of a half a thousand careless boys I I I I marching, marching I I I I 0' Great War Tablet I I I I Chateau Thierry I I I I St. Mihiel I I I I the A'rI gonne I I I I and once again men came bearing a bronze tablet. On it I read the names of other careless boys who shall grow not old as you and I and all of us grow old. Full blooded, carrying with them all the romance and heartbreak of Youth, they leaped joyously beyond the Battlements of Time. Slowly I turned and looked I I I I 'L-MW m, , , , , 7 , AW'VW: WW! WW hu Ivy m 'T' t2 v V W yvvnv WV. , I, Y'V .--....-..:.g77-,g -7 A A A . J - H A L , x 7,4 Vim J M UAAAAAA AA A AWALAAIA A! N 777': , 'Ghe Old Lawn I I I I not on the Lawn that lies there below us, but on the Old Lawn that jeferson built and loved,Ithe Old Lawn with its trees fresh in the ftrst vigor of young life, with its quaint paths, its rock wall. Surely the old days were better days. Surely the ancients were happier before the feet of earthhs myriad thousands I I I I And I envied The Past I I I I ,::m t .T 1M .j..: -4 ,. w .a 1.1 Vii: ;,tg1fJT TT TTVTTHVT T-yVVl TTTTTT TTTTT YTT TTTTTTTT WT vT-v Tr WTTTnT'Tn TTT TV'FTT'TYTWT TrTTT TTTT 1T- r'TTv WTWHWFWW TTVTTT 'T'TTT 1T TanvaTITTTmT .TTT TTTTTT 1 TT T Tl T T M M T T H T TT TE: huh I III U11 Tl TE: , MTMTVT Mu m; T --a--hhaw WM, a A new a j 13he New Lawn , , , , envied it until I saw that, though the young trees had grown old, earthhs flowers had not been trodden to dust; that the beauty of the Present had preserved the romance and 5 ,A . the glory of the Past. And I thought: The New Lawn is older than the Old? Whispering to myself, The New ' is older than the Oldf I turned and left the Lawn , , , , m NJ v7 pmmuwj v W Mm h 1 h Ghe Old Serpentine Wall , , , , soon to find myself alongside the Serpentine Wall. But these were new bricks, new mortar! And I thought: The Old Serpentine Wall is newer than the New!' And then,-my sowed had almost forgotten that you we're here with met-J remembered that the ancients did not realize that they were ancients! Tau, my son, are the Ancient of Days! I r r I , 17, t ; 54.1mm ... t V Hymn 'l .H up, Vi i WA Al t'Ghe 'lNew Serpentine Wall , , , , In you lie the hopes and the fears, the longings and the courage that will one day be the heritage of young men who will bear your image, think your thoughts, dream your dreams, see your visions. The University that you love i is a moulder of men. The torch that it gave your fathers will light the pathway of your sons. I felt this tonight , , , , loliffle-Eljj Wad: n W1 I t tn. WWU'WVW I1 WWW : x W W West Range , , , , as I paused before the rooms of two boys who were once unknown but who now are well known, who diedH and behold! they live! Both loved greatly, both suffered greatly: the one our nationk sweetest singer; the other our nationhs noblest statesman. One reached the heights of Parnassus; the other, the Depths of the Heart of the WO'fld , , , r 'Vy'n wwwm' mwww-qumm , . , h- JHJA:w:+g 4 44-- .; w.;.LuLg.u yLu-A be t; ., ,7 1.. . ,, , A. ,,,-,,,133xilh e'v-Mv' twrmvyr n va vt wt vyv -v,ww,vw nn r'yFw'wy-J .nrrh I i . i w', 't kquL, m j 4fLJAn-xms-LJ.A;xw-Amuwxuxmjnhuw.khulA.mu we , 4.: h H g H h Ldaggklni.gutmku; M h w h v t ..J.L.-m.1. ewwayt rGhe New Dormitories , , , , I have told you, my son, that my journey is no new 1 adventure, and yet tonight I saw not only the Past and the w: Present twhich are One but the Future. Before me rose t fwst the revered names of men who once taught heme I and then new dormitories, new students, as the Future , moved quietly into the Past. Perhaps the Future, too, is One! , , , , va-VYWVnTh'xwl n, .. m:nW ngvg TaFgSTWqu-wa .v. 1W. mpwvvrm ,7 IT, r Iv , HALuyAu 1. h-An-thlgAUtJJAMKbM JlAmkM4.M n . . sz. JAM ugugng- JJJWJ mm, : 44 4' .. -41 :, :; h;w;;-...,.;.:;..m;um, Man U: T - ;- - ,V Jiatuf r7f fl ' - 7 ,EM. WW - J 33 wv r .vv-w, y , nmwmwvmr'vvwx LE; L A, , M -... .ii,!-- ;, W w , H ,-.-.-... U.-h. 7,, k zwih rw ' , h ' - -w W ' ; r7 Sr - 2'; w H..5L'JA,S;V L.m,u.n.uLx.L$L.-..ug.. -L' ' Atuxml l, .w: u ., Euill. . - .-.u. x A. .:4 ,U'uy..-u 5...nm..-w....4.u..;...u..4sh 'r rr VVFW'vaWWf-Irhrw W .A Horse and Hack , , , , At this point my meditations, which had been entirely of a serious trend, were rudely shattered! A smile rose to my lips as I saw before me an ancient though emr inmtly respectable horse drawn vehicle. From dashlight to rubber tires it was in the height of fashion. How proud the driver looked as he sallied forth to pay court to his beloved , , , , 7., Yr- rdhtffrr t w t ww-WWF'TW'T' maw U 1 3 W Haynw. L. I am h t . p.4L..-.u....m. ' A www- L: s x La.g.wu;.e.4m U, W 2 mm 1 'I: mink L1H MUM WM... W'WT'WWYWV'TV' wumlu 1mm 01:. h ut'.:' ' t , mtmjzasdtawj .A H orseless Ca'm'age I I I I And yet not one whit more proud than this later lover who sat behind the wheel of his new and shining horseless carriage! I I I I In the shadows of my home here I have heard often of the Younger Generation I I I I Che tolerant smile on the Propheths lips was beautiful to beholdh I I I I and I wonder why man forgets that for a few breathI less moments every Generation is Young! I I I I 1 L .Aw-ngx N . .1... . u nu .tu-u11.tL.AL. .LquEuAIhhhau; Jmt wmm d h A ahfafA AATFWTMWW t t H t umlr TV q p-n ff 4 ' X 1 h uluwn- a tat g.gga $4.4. umLuQ k W . .1, ,. Av V53... ,7,5;;.. ,. I W MW h XHtt 4km mum a , 1 AJLVHA' '5 1.1' N Hakim; AAA. t 1 l h :uLL'nL W' mmM-J.1LAAJ . .qumuanQuo a 51 v 'menwwwwvvn ,L .5 I bU-Ah. -i Old Road I I I I Along this ancient highway that I followed, care free and happy boys and girls have driven mile on mile. Here and there are byIroads that lead off into shadowy glens. Small wonder that lovers alight here in the early twilight and, hand in hand, wander 01? into the woods,WIlaughi71g I I I I because life is sweet. No sooner are they gone than their byIroad vanishes I I I I irht . u t a U ywa t t. :4 1.9-; 4.9mm: wAmEAghgam KT g4V ' 7 'h - t i i' ' ' 7V '7 7 77 7 JJ ry 7y I r w mm y, ,wj-mfm- rm u my, mwwrrw 7 ij I t s mervvw wvwn urn t t t t n th...w..p..u. umMuL A.-WA.m,m.w.1 ,i Mk- ; a e76.-7..+-H,.ej ,7 y w Hg 3 A h 45x JALQALLLL .9; A A A A , - r'yvkerlkm'ytm ttmm 7 7mm y . , e m xe... Ly. Lu . I h V y N. -:.u ; -eJQ v hm, gt,4;.::.....a v 7 Q 7 W. 7 77; 3mm K.M w . .. u--m.u. ..V;,;,...;WW l mu.- m nL i 9:: WES? tliiEi? E ih ' 5? New Road : ' , , , The highway is paved now. The byrroads are f t harder to find, but they are still there. Lovers, sons and . daughters of Yesterdays children, still follow these 56! y 7 questered paths, and laugh-because life is sweet. Hand in hand they walk in the early twilight until, finally, they lift their eyes to the hillsewhere goldrbannered blue mounr ; , rains march orderly into the dormitories of the night , , , , ; V m V n ' VH1, WW 1 y . .JMHH : ht Q gf t H a a r emif .. pt. a Old Faye'rwedthey , , . , The highway led me presently to a building which I recognized as the old gymnasium. Here, removed from the academic life of the University, I felt still the presence of Honor. On the athletic teams, as well as in the clasSe room, Man's word is God in Man. , , , , That there may be a sound mind in a sound body , , , , U LHWH MQAMZ k Ww' mm 44! MM u M MULW ' WWW, I .JALUJAUJLI LN txb.;'$:-T: bl.. , .4, ..-'.-'-C' ..e. Hutyouppsg-un. e enhnhgnmygie-n ,mi w'.,vr, e. u ...r9+v..g..rm niHu. ' ' VOWL '1 r .,J memorial Gymnasium I I I I Retracing my steps I saw looming large in the moonI light the new Memorial Gymnasium. An ever increasing enrollment I I I I more bodies to be cared for I I I I a more spacious buildingIbut about it the same dignity, the same pledge of clean athletics as clung to the old. New sports, new equipment, new methods of training I I I I ..;.;w.;ha..,;; vnrna . geanrqp zswgw W ; t !. LAALUA'...A; I. aha r x -V tx vJ'W .uk x .n , f l l , lumg- nu .maell.MALunLvuqugunmen. Anuk Ad-..tgtguna-Mw- F ootball -1888 I I I I but the same men as those who, nearly half a century ago, played the game for the games sake. You would have smiled, my son, if you could have seen, as I did tonight, those earlier athletes dressed in their queer looking uniforms,- but soon your children will smile, perhaps laugh outright, at what to them will be the lquee'r looking uniforms, I I I I 'w r w wv-mmvww- , p1: rmwv , . 71$?th . e; Football-1928 v . , , now worn by our athletes. And yet, I am sure that those smiles will be tinged with a certain sweetness,e for the Past has been touched by the kind hand of Time. So long as Honor lives, my son, the University lives. These twain are One. Until the Future dares forget the Past, the Future and the Past are One! It matters not that , r l , J. 1 r' hmmmv-VW h t; X :7 d: .. r w t; VS 7 E: ,rvvrrrrrijWWVI-F . t u t t t t t H W t t t tw MW 1 Wu 'Hhvt Lh-wmhwbikjrrfgtliLHAN-gwe u h ; t i 1 F, t x 1 L, t 1 r 4 ' 'i 71 . , j P HZ : J t V? r . I v: 7. F 3 t V t . e .4 L. H: l' 1 f . : , ;-: ,r,,.-..w ,, W , m, 7 , 1 r7 , , W'WWM m ? :wnvwv W t t x: mm r I' M1wthmnmt t W t M3 x k e 't h t HUNT 1H get w , w, t A anht mrJ u A ,, , MN MW .1 M rGhe Young Generation I I I I customs and styles may change. The boys and girls who danced in the old days are not different from the boys and girls who dance in what we are pleased to call the new days. Human nature does not change with passing years. F01 more than a hundred years, students of this University have left their impress on I I I I I I IIIIIII vII wvxI IIIV, III III IrvIvaIWI m IIIIIII IIII I 2 IIIIIIIIIII IIFIIIIIIIIIIVII IIII IIIIII IIIIIIIII II IIIII rI WllPlvmWYwI$ I II h H , WWMW II II .JhtV 65:3 'ZJI h I ::3i . It 1: I I E3 h t'5he Younger Generation f ;I '1 :3 ,I, ,7 I ' , , , , the life of our nation. I thank God that from the - ; Father of the University of Virginia they have had a hen? I? 5 tage of which they may be justly proud: Political freedom,- : religious freedom,-intellectual freedom,-a freedom guarded and guided by the hne Spirit of Honor , , , , I speak to you, my son, as One returned from a journey,7 from a journey that always lm'ngs me Peace , , , , L a mnrm-w, - - l Kit; I ' - 4- ,, , . , -Igcijx 7;...ij LmL , . , .mrl 1,7:f'TiTJ' V d 7 7' ' 4 . . 4-: w , I I h, h i I m. 'VTWVVT'J. ' ' WWW WIWJ' 3-1 W t quv xwxmrnww-w-wv-I '7:vawrrs' '7 a 2:; 'I V :3 I u 4 A - - :I'rrfif:T?I 4... W'Zrtii .31. t E 3. :53 I? w. f 3 g . 1,: I: ,2 3. .. xh 3 1 k; ,3 r 1? :5, j 15 . tE t I '1': 8 'l ' '1' t e; pt ogue 5 ti 1 I W '51 11 i There was a pause, and I waited for the Prophet to conI tinue I I I I Suddenly I roused myself Icould it be that I had awakened from a dreamD I I I I The Prophet was gone. 1r :7 i ! Surely I had seen him, surely I had heard the immeasurI able sweetness of his voice. What could it all mean? Who was this man? Had jeffe-rson himself sat there on i the steps of the Rotunda? Or was it the Spirit of the University who had interpreted for me the Beauty of MoonI light on the Laum-who had shown me, not its meaning, but its glmy? Ah, well! What did it matter? I I I I Your Old men i shall dream dreams, your young men shall see visions. Surely, in the vision that'I had seen, jeffe'rsonIs dream had been realized I I I I I I I I Morality is but of the Flesh I I I I Honor is of the Spirit! t; I I I I The torch of Honor that is the Light of Truth! 11:1 ; I I I I The Old and the New are One! 3 I had looked on the University of Vitgim'a: I had learned t : I that the men that were are a part of it; that the men to be are the hope of it. I I I I, too, had gone on a journey which had brought me Peace! Photos by Houmczx GRADUATION EXERCISES or THE PAST Finals 4., ,: T seems that once there were twoelrishe?enoetwo brothers. twins. who Ii 71: r: among the Colonnades. and all but shook the staid Rotunda dome. The one called Hospitality is now mature-a cordial, sober man. His mate. Commence- ment dight. is older too and seldom plays boys' pranks. But lhenelet's say the seventies -how pert the two could be! 5;;15 late In June or early In July romped down the Lawn, chased hand in hand When through the romantic mist of retrospect we look back to the past, we see Commencement as a time for preaching and a time for dancing, a time for feasting and a time for-tiving. The students. free from examinations. and the professors free from students were a polishingethe students their speeches and shoes; the professors their family plate. Religion led the way. when on Sunday some qualified divine delivered a sermon before the eager Young Men's Christian Association. And a good substantial sermon it always was. hewn from the gospel. and framed to impress an even critical audience. To the speaker it must all have been a pleasant work. for the student body had ever been BibIe-minded. Professor Venable and the local clergy had long since seen to that. On Monday night came the Washington Celebration. a forensic orgy with music. Stentorian tones vied with passionate histrionics as cool orators forced almost frenzied declaimers to scream for a medal. Out in front. the air grew hot and fans were taster. A lull, and Mr. e. Virginia. subject: Beyond the Alps Lies Italy, had waha medal. There entered a bromide. Weber's Cermania Band to play vague Happropriate selections. Then the assemblage. tired of words. strolled by custom to the freshness of the Lawn. ubeautifully illuminated with hundreds of gas-jets and Chinese lanterns, under whose mellow light were to be enjoyed for a couple of hours a continuous promenading of the arcades and triangle. stirring strains of music. pleasant conversation. and calls at the homes of several professors. I311 CORKS 8 CURLS Well recovered from the trans-Alpine crossing. everyone was ready for the Jefferson Celebration on the next night. Tuesday. The visitors began crowding in at an early hour. and in no time the marshals Gully the equivalent of ushersy were at their wits' end to accommodate the guests who were insisting upon and often demanding seats well toward the front. Just as a parade serves as the curtain-raiser for Spain's national sport, so at eight-thirty a process'on came into Jefferson Hall in the following order: Board of Visitors. faculty. distinguished visitors, orators. and medalists. all uescorted by the marshals and passing up the center aisle under the arched batons of the chief marshals to occupy the stage. Then the program went ahead despite some disturbance caused by applause from the galleries and the rustling of dresses. But for the most part this evening was little different from the night before. Wednesday of the Commencement in 1875. the Semi-Centennial Year. was a day memorable for its poetry and exuberant oratory. The morning was occupied with the Alumni Celebration. which gave at least one graduate an opportunity to raise his voice above the undergraduate speeches that were cropping out everywhere. This was Daniel B. Lucas. West Virginia. whose uSemi-Centennial Poem contained the lines: For now at this Semi-Centennial. We return to the arms that have nursed; To thy breast as a fountain perennial. To quench an undying thirst. Of course the piece was much applauded, particularly by the older alumni. and all agreed that it was uvery true to life. Apparently the Washington and Jefferson Celebrations were. in effect. only elimina- tion contests to clear the way for that grand massing of eloquence. the Joint Celebration. The time was Wednesday night; the place. the Public Hall. For the occasion the stage was draped with the colors of the two societies with the mottoes of the rivals printed in gold letters. There was no procession; it was no time for theatrics. It was a night of gesture and exhortation. That the Magazine Medal had been awarded was obscured in the minds of those present by their admiration for an exceptional gentleman from Texas who udelighted his hearers to a rare degree with his beautiful Howery style on no less compelling a theme than uBlessings Brighten as They Take Their Upward Flight. It had been a long day. But. charming as the three days of rhetoric had been. it was to Thursday, Final Day. that everyone. especially the parents of graduates. was looking. The academic body assembled in front of the Rotunda at ten-thirty, although the candidates for degrees were seen loitering around somewhat earlier. The procession moved clown the Lawn headed by the Board of Visitors, who were followed by the fifteen members of the Faculty, the Alumni, graduates. proficients, those of distinction. and a small number of mere students. An hour was devoted to the conferring of degrees and distributing the certihcates of proficiency. after which there was half an hours intermissioneprobably to give the degree-men a chance to read their diplomas. This was. however, only the prologue to the climax of the morning, the oration by General John 5. Preston of South Carolina. Addressing his remarks chieHy to uthe nurslings of to-day. he mounted to a conclusion notable for its refreshing diction: But when I look at you to-day, and see your earnest and pious souls gleaming forth in your eager. bright eyes. and when I stand here in these I321 CORKS t3 CURLS lovely and hallowed places. with this sky and this land about me. and their breezes fanning my browehere in the shadow of Monticello-here where we now, decrepit fragments, were nurtured in that ennobling lore, and gathered that truthful spirit. . . . He was, he rejoiced. glad to see that it was all still alive. Four o'clock that afternoon brought the annual Alumni banquet in Massey,s dining- hall at the north end of West Range. These dinners were gay affairs, marked by a sufficiency of wine and many ornate toastseto Knowledge and Virtue, Our Former Professors. and so on. Indeed. it was not uncommon for the old grads to celebrate ufar into the night euntil, in round figures. nine o'clock. Since we are engaged in looking back, a quotable incident of the banquet in 1873 may be of interest. It should be borne in mind that Mr. Swann, the ex-Covernor of Maryland, had previously said in a Com- mencement address at the University, The American people will submit hereafter to no compromise of freedom. And only the day before the dinner, at the Joint Celebration. Senator Bayard of Delaware had closed his speech with the lines: But if you fall. or if you rise. Be each. pray God. a gentleman. A small group of students stood watching the banquet through an open door: Professor Southall was responding to a toast in a most eloquent manner, and as he neared the finish. Professor Venable. seeing the door ajar and portions of several faces in the darkness. arose from his table and came over towards us in order-we thought to close the door-to invite us in as partakers of the good things he and they had already enjoyed ad nauseam. At first we hesitated. but he was so insistent. in fact commanding. that there was nothing to do but accept; consequently the six or eight of us hled in and seated ourselves at one of the round tables to the right of the door. where in a few seconds he assigned two waiters. whom he directed to look after our comfort by serving as much as desired of the bountiful overllow. For more than an hour we enjoyed to our heart's content the tempting viands spread before us. some even imbibing the sparkling wines that seemingly flowed continuously as from a bubbling fountain. When nearing the close, shortly after nine o'clock. I approached Professor Venable. to bid him good-bye and to express thanks for this last evidence of generous hospitality. whereupon he laughingly remarked. 'One good turn deserves another: won't you see that Senator Bayard and Gov. Swann get to my house safely?' . . . Of course I was only too delighted to accede to the request. . . . On the way we three, perforce. were very close friends. but it remained for me to do most of the talking. until by slow steps we had nearly reached Jefferson Hall, and the movements of the distinguished were becoming more unsteady, when Governor Swarm had coherent presence of mind to say: 'Why Senator! If this were day, strangers seeing us might think our irregular gait due to excessive drink rather than to the very uneven pavement.' Over this they chuckled not a little, thinking possibly thereby the innocent had been deceived. In the meanwhile the F inal Ball was progressing liltingly. It had often been given in the reading-room of the Rotunda, but in our composite year uowing to the near com- pletion of the museum building 60 was held there amid many of the specimens that rested here and there in temporary position. The Alumni. fresh from the banquet. may have had their thoughts. A good many visiting girls thus contributing easily with the local debutantes a hundred fair onesn were mostly ultra-dressed and beclecked with a profusion of jewels and Howerchat gave a brilliancy and redolence singularly delightful! The museum. with its double burden of animals and dancers. was even then a bit crowded. Indeed. round dancing was quite unsatisfactory, and until midnight the cry was for square dances and waltzes. Supper was served in Washington Hall. where eloquence now served l33l gallantry. and smiles were medals. All too soon came the German, the distribution of favors, and the end of the ball. Commencement had been a season of open house, both at the University and in Charlottesville. Colonel and Mrs. Peters were found uAt Home. Monday Evening. June 29th, and Mrs. Schele de Vere also had been happy to see Mr. e at her reception on Monday evening. June 29th. Now it all was over. A Howery style. the formal procession. a toast. a waltzmall were to sink into the scrapbook of memory, and then sometime to fade to drab forgetfulness. Was it at the Commencement of . . . let me think . . . seventy-three? . . . seventy-hve? . . . Well. I won the medal anyway. . . . To-day the spirit of Commencement is the same as then. but in the new garb of expansion seems to be less warm. The changing order makes it 50. Sometimes a medal won means a medal given; again. the winning is a figure. We tolerate. chastened in its old age. the oration. Down the Lawn moves a new academic procession. its Faculty ranks bright with the crimson of Harvard. Oxford's scarlet flash. the blue of Yale. and much of Virginia's own orange and blue. Parents, as ever proud. watch their sons and daughters file up to take the variety of degrees that progress has demanded. Still come the girls. less bedecked than once, to dance-not in the museum or even in the old gymnasium. There gaiety? Of hospitality? Of life? Well. let us wait and see. for just beyond the rise gaiety? Of hospitality? Of life? Well, yet us wait and see. for just beyond the rise lies June. which, as some people still say of Christmas, comes but once a year. MALCOLM MACLEOD. ACADEMIC PROCESSION DOWN THE LAWN THE RECTOR OF THE. UNIVERSITY CYRUS HARDING WALKER To February 28. I930 BENJAMIN FRANKLIN BUCHANAN ............................................. Marion PAUL GOODLOE MclNTlRE ............................................... Charlottesville MARY COOKE. BRANCH MUNFORD ........................................... Richmond CYRUS HARDING WALKER .................................................. Heathsville LEWIS CATLETT WILLIAMS .................................................. Richmond To February 29, I932 ADAM CLARKE CARSON ....................................................... Riverlon DAVID DENTON HULL, JR .................................................... Alexandria HOLLIS RINEHART ........................................................ Charlottesville FREDERIC WILLIAM SCOTT .................................................. Richmond THE STATE SUPERINTENDENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION. ex aicio ........ Richmond THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNIVERSITY. ex oficio .............................. University THE SECRETARY OF THE VISITORS ELMER IRVING CARRUTHERS I351 The Honor Men ' HE. University of Virginia writes her highest degree on the souls of ' her sons. The parchment page of xholarshikthe colored ribbon - .. of a societyethe jeweled emblem of a fratemity-the orange symbol of athletic prowess-all these, a year hence. will be at the best the mementos of happy hourHlike the withered Hower a woman presses between the pages of a book for sentiment's sake. But- If you live a long, long time. and hold honesty of conscience above honesty of purse; Ancl turn aside without ostentation to aid the weak; Ancl treasure ideals more than raw ambition; And track no man to his undeserved hurt; And pursue no woman to her tears; And love the beauty of noble music and mist-veilecl mountains and blossoming valleys and great monuments- If you live a long time and, keeping the faith in all these things hour by hour, still see that the sun gilds your path with real gold and that the moon floats in dream silver; Them- Remembering the purple shadows of the lawn. the majesty of the colon- nades, and the dream of your youth, you may say in reverence and thankfulness : I have worn the honors of Honor. I graduated from Virginia. JAMES HAY. JR., '03. I361 History of Administration CHAIRMEN OF THE FACULTY 1825 1886 to 1888 PROF. GEORGE TUCKER PROF. CHARLES S. VENABLE. 1827 1896 10 1903 PROF. JOHN TAYLOE LOMAX PROF. P. B. BARRINGER 1826 1830 10 1832 PROF. ROBLEY DUNGLiSON PROF. ROB'T M. PATTERSON 1828 1833 to 1835 PROF. GEORGE TUCKER PROF. CHARLES BONNYCASTLE 1928 to 1830 1837 to 1839 PROF. ROBLEY DUNGLISON PROF. GESSNER HARRISON 1832 to 1833 1840 to 1842 PROF. GEORGE TUCKER PROF. GESSNER HARRISON 1835 10 1837 1844 to 1845 PROF. JOHN A. G. DAVIS PROF. WM. B. ROGERS 1839 10 1840 1846 10 1847 PROF. jOHN A. G. DAVIS PROF. JAMES L. CABELL 1842 10 1844 1854101868 PROF. H. ST. GEORGE TUCKER PROF. S. MAUPIN 1845 to 1846 1873 to 1886 PROF. EDWARD H. COURTENAY PROF. JAMES F. HARRISON 1847 10 1854 1888 10 1896 PROF. GESSNER HARRISON PROF. WM. M. THORNTON 1870 10 1873 1903 to 1904 PROF. CHARLES S. VENABLE PROF. JAMES M. PACE PRESIDENT OF THE UNIVERSITY 19044 DR. EDWIN A. ALDERMAN 1:171 CORKS 5 CURLS The F aculty EDWIN ANDERSON ALDERMAN. PH.B.. D.C.L.. LL.D ......................... Carr'l Hill President it K E; 4, B K; anen; Superintendent of Schools. Coldsboro. N. C., and Auistant Superintendent of Education. North Carolina. '882-92; Professor of History. State Normal College. I892-93; Professor of Education. University of North Carolina. '893-96; President of North Carolina University, 18964900; Preaident of Tulane University of Louisiana. I900-l904; Doctor of Laws. The University of the South. Tulane University. johns Hopkins Univenity. Columbia University, Dartmouth College. Harvard Univenity and the University of Pennsylvania; Member General Education Board; Vice-Prelident National Education Association, I903: Member the Virginia State Geological Commiuion: Member the Board of Visiton. United States Military Academy. West Point. '893; Member the America: and Louisiana Historical Societiee; Trultee the Woodrow Wilton Memorial Foundation; Century Club. New York City. l9l2; Member the Academy of Social Sciences; Member the Council Table of the World's Work, I920: Director Southern Railway. l9l4-23; Board of Visitors, United States Naval Academy. Annapolis. l9l3-2l; Truutee of the Institute of Economic:; Member Bond of Advisors. Imtitute of Politics: Member of the Bond of Governor: of the Thoma: Jefferson Memorial Foundation; Author of Life of William Hooper. Life of J. L. M. Curry. Obligation: Ind Opportunitiei of Citizemhip. Southern Idealism. The Spirit of the South. Sectionaliam and Nationality. The Growing South. Virginia: A Tribute. Can Democracy be Organized? Function and need; of Schools of Education in America The Growth of Public Education in America. Causes of the European War. etc.. and Editor-in-Chief of uLibrary of Southern Literature. CHARLB ALFRED GRAVES. M.A.. B.L.. LL.Dfl ..................... 2nd St., Charlottesville Emeritus Professor of Law 2 X; 4? A 4t; it B K; Raven; Master of Arts. Washington and Lee University. '869; Assistant Professor of Modern Languages and Engliuh. Waahington and Lee University. l869-73; Bachelor of Laws. Washington and Lee University. l873: Professor of Law. Washington and Lee University. 1373-99: Doctor of Laws. Davidson College. 1895; Doctor of Laws, Washington and Lee Univer- sity. '9' I; one of the Founders of the Virginia Lana Register,- Author of A Summary of Pencnal Property and of The Law of Real Property ; Author of Paper: Before the Virginia State Bar Association. 19M and l9l5. on The Forged Letter of General Robert E. Lee. WILLIAM MYNN THORNTON. B.A.. LL.D ................................... Monroe Hill Professor of Applied Mathematics i? K W; it B K; A II; T B H; 0 A K; Raven; Bachelor of Arts. Hampden-Sydney College; Doctor of Lawn Hampden-Sydney College; Professor of Greek. Davidson College. I874-75; Professor of Applied Mathematics. University of Virginia, since 1875; Chairman of the Faculty of the University of Virginia. 1888-96; United Slates Commissioner to Paris Expoxition of I900; Member of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers; Member the International Group of Awards on Civil and Military Engineering in the Louisiana Purchase Exposition. I904: Member the American Association for the Advancement of Science; Member the Society for the Promotion of Engineering Education; Member the American Society for Testing Materials. Itlletired. t 33 1 CORKS G CURLS WILLIAM MINOR LILE. LL.D ................................................ X East Lawn lame: Madison Professor of Law, Dean of the Law School K E; q, B K; t? A 4,: T.l.L.K.A.; Raven; Bachelor of Laws. Universily of Virginia, I882; Doctor of Laws. William and Mary College. I903; Professor at the University of Virginia since l893; Member the American Bar Association; Virginia State Bar Association; President the Virginia State Bar Association. I913; Member Standing Committee. Diocexe of Virginia tEpisco- an; Member the Board of Governors. Woodberry Forest School. WILLIAM HOLDING ECHOLS. 3.5.. CE ....................................... East Lawn Professor of Mathematics X 4,; d? B K; A II; T B U; Eli Banana; Bachelor of Science. University of Virginia. and Civil Engineer. '832; Profeuor of Engineering and Director of Missouri Echool of Mines. 1886-9l: Member the American Mathematical Society; American Mathematical Auocialion; Adjunct Pro- fessor of Applied Mathematics. I891. and Professor of Mathematics, University of Virginia. since I906; Author of Virginia Mathematical Articles. DiEerential and Integral Calculus. I902. RICHARD HEATH DABNEY, M.A.. PHD .................................. Preston Heights Corcoran Professor of History 4t K W; A II; 4t B K; Eli Banana; Raven; Studied in the Universities of Virginia. Munich, Berlin. Ind Heidelburg; Master of Arts. University of Virginia, IBSI; Master of Arla and Doctor of Philosophy, Heidelburg, I885; Assistant in New York Latin School. I851-82; Profeuor of History. Indiana University. l886-89: Adjunct Professor of History. University of Virginia. 1839-95; Asso- ciate Professor of Hiltory. University of Virginia. 1895-97; Profeuor of History and Economic Science. University of Virginia, I897; Professor of History tonlyL University of Virginia, nince I906; Dean of the Graduate Department. University of Virginia, 306-23; Member the American Historical Association. Southern Historical Society. Virginia Historical Society; Author of The Causes of the French Revolution ; Methods of Historical Instruction. in the Indiana University Bulletin: Is History a Science? in papers of American Historical Association; The Nineteenth Century in Europe, an outline sketch in Progress, issued by the Chicago University Association; John Randolph, A Sketch ; and a number of historical review; and articles on various :ubjecls. JOHN STAIGE. DAVIS. M.A.. M.D ............................................ Rugby Road Professor of Practise of Medicine it K W; Q B K; Raven; Master of Arts. University of Virginia. '888: Doctor of Medicine. University of Virginia, I889; Member the American Medical Association. Southern Medical Asso- ciation, Tri-Stale Medical Association. Medical Society of Virginia; Member American College of Physicians; Assistant Secretary American Academy of Medicine, I903; Louisiana Stale Medical Society, I892-93; Anglo-Americnn Medical Society of Berlin. l39l-92; Professor in the University of Virginia since I894; Author of the article on Stomatitis. in Tice's Practice of Medicine: Author Various Medical Papers; President Medical Society of Virginia. l922-23. I39I RICHARD HENRY WILSON, M.A.. PH.D ....................................... Purl: Street Professor of Romania Language: A H; 4t B K; E A X; Doctor of Philosophy. Johns Hopkins University. JAMES MORRIS PAGE. M.A.. PH.D.. LL.D ................................ McCormick Road Professor of Mathematics, Dean of lhe Universily K A; A II; it B K; E E; Eli Banana; Raven; Master of Arts. RAndolph-Macon. 1885; Doctor of Philosophy. University of Leipsic. '887; Fellow Johns Hopkins University. '896. and Lecturer on Mathematics at Johns Hopkins; Author of a Work on uDifferential Equations. and of papers on the Theory of Transformation Groups. which appeared in the American journal of Mathematics and in the Annals of Mathematics; Professor of Mathematics since I90l: Chairman of the faculty, l903-04; Member the American Mathematical Society; Doctor of Laws. Randolph-Macon College; Member of the State Board of Education of Virginia; Fellow the American Association for the Advancement of Science: Former Member the Senate of the United Chapters of 4t B K; First President of the B of Virginia Chapter of 1, B K. THOMAS FlTZ-HUGH. MA. .............................................. IX West Lawn Professor of Latin K A; 4t B K: Master of Arts, University of Virginia. I883; Studied Archaeology in Rome and Pompeii. '890: Student of Classical Philology. University of Berlin. '892-93. '899-190l; Studied Archaeology in Greece and Asia Minor in I902; Instructor in Bingham School, North Carolina. I88l-82; Professor of Latin. Central University of Kentucky. '883-34: First Assistant. Bellevue High School. Bellevue. Virginia. l884-89; Professor of Latin. University of Texas. 1389-99; Professor of Latin. University of Virginia. since 1899; Member the American Philological Asso- ciation since l89l; Archaeological Institute of America since 1897; Modern Language Association since '396; American Dialect Society since I902; Classical Association of Great Britain since I905; British Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies since l9ll; Associate Editor for the South and Southwest of the Cilderslecve-Lodge Latin Series. .898 to I905; Vice-President for Virginia of the Classical Associations. Middle West and South. I909: Member the Executive Com- mittee of the American Philological Auociations. 906-08; President the Classical Association of Virginia. I9l0-l3; Councillor Washington Society Archaeological Institute of America. l9'O-I2; Councillor Richmond Society. I9l2; Author of The Philosophy of the Humanities ; A System of Classical Pedagogy : The University of Virginia in Texas and the Southwest ; uProlegomenl to the History of the ltalico-Romanic Rhythm ; Carmen Arvale or the Tonic Law: of Latin Speech and Rhythm : uThe Sacred Tripudium and the Evolution of Latin Rhythmic Art ; Italico- Keltic Accent and Rhythm ; The Literary Saturnian. Part I. Livius. Andronicus ; The Literary Suturninn. Part II. Naevius and the Later Italic Tradition ; lndo-European Rhythm : The Letter! of George Long ; uThe Indo-European Superstress and the Evolution of Verse ; The Letters of Thomas Jefferson concerning Philology and the Classics ; The Old-Latin and the Old-lrish Monuments of Verse. 'lletired, l m l CORKS 8 cums IN! WILLIAM ALEXANDER LAMBETH. M.D.. PH.D.I .............................. Carr's Hill Professor of Hygiene Hot Foot; Doctor of Medicine. University of Virginia, 1892; Doctor of Philosophy. University of Virginia, I901; Adjunct Professor of Hygiene and Materia Medica, l902-04; Superintendent of Buildings and Grounds. l905-28. ALBERT LEFRVRE. B.A.. PH.D.. LL.B ..................................... University Place Corcoran Professor of Philosophy K A; A H; it B K: 0 A K: T.I.L.K.A.: Bachelor of Arts, University of Texas. I894; iIohns Hopkins. '894-95; Doctor of Philosophy. Cornell University. I898; University of Berlin. 8 - I900; Instructor in Philosophy, Cornell University, l900-02; Aasintant Professor of Philomphy. Cornell Univenity. 1902-03; Professor of Philosophy. Tulane University, 1903-05; Assistant Editor of the Philosophical Review. 1898-99; Doctor of Lawe. South Carolina: Member of the American Philosophical Association; Southern Society of Philosophy and Psychology; Author of The Ethical Syltem of Bishop Butler ; The Relation between Ethical S stem and Epistemology : Translator of Emmanuel Kant. by F. Paulsen; Former President Sout em Society of Philosophy and Psychology: President of the Colonnade Club. ROBERT MONTGOMERY BIRD. B.A.. 3.5.. PH.D ....................... 41 University Place Professor of Chemistry H K A; A II; 2 E; 1b B K; A X 21; Bachelor of Arts; Bachelor of Science. Hunpden-Sydney College; Doctor of Philosophy. John: Hopkins University: Fellow the American Association for the Advancement of Science; Member the American Chemical Society: Member the Society for the Promotion of Engineering Education; Chemical Specialist: to Committee on Education. General StaE. War Department. HALSTEAD SHIPMAN HEDGES, 3.5.. M.A.. M.D ............................. Park Street Professor of Diseases o! the Eye it A 9; 1; B K: H M: N 2 N; T.I.L.K.A.: Bachelor of Science and Master of Arte. University of Virginia, l890; Assistant Professor of Biological Laboratory. University of Virginia. '890-91; Doctor of Medicine. University of Virginia. I892; Interne. New York City Hospital, '892-93: Demonstrator of Anatomy. University of Virginia. l893-95; Resident Physician at Memorial Hospital. Orange. New Jersey, 1595-96; Demonstrator of Anatomy. University of Virginia. '896-97; Clinical Instructor. University of Virginia. 18984906; Professor of Ophthalmology. University of Virginia; Member Charlottesville Medical. Piedmont Medical, Virginia State Medical. ?mericap Laryngologicul. Rhinological. and Otological Societies; Fellow American College of urgeom. HARRY TAYLOR MARSHALL. B.A., M.D ........................................... Ivy Waller Reed Professor of Pathology and Bacleriology A A CD; '1? B K; A 0 A; E E; Raven; Bachelor of Arts and Doctor of Medicine. Johns Hopkins University; Member County. Slate. Southern. and American Medical Associations: Member of the American Association of Pathologists and Bacteriologisls; Fellow of American Association for the Advancement of Science. I411 CORKS 8 CURLS WILLIAM MENTZEL FORREST. B.A ...................................... Pinion Heights Iohn B. Cary Memorial Professor of Biblical HiIlary and Literature it B K; Bachelor of Am. Hiram College. .594; Graduale Student. University of Chic. . Divinity School. I900; Lecturer on Biblical Litenture. Ann Arbor English Bible Chain. I897- : Lecturer for Cllcutta Bible Lectureship. India. l90l-03: Editor of Biblical Department for Young Men of lndin. l902-03; John B. Cuy Lectureship. 90345. ARMISTEAD MASON DOBlE. M.A.. LL.B.. SJD .............................. Monroe Hill Professor of Lab t? F A; A II; 4'! A 4t; 9 K N; II, B K; E A X: T.l.L.K.A.; P. K. Society; OWL: Raven: '3 Club; Bachelor of Arts. University of Virginia. Iml; Mnler of Artu. University of Virginia. I902; Bachelor of Law:, Univenity of Virginia. 1W4; Member of St. Louis tMoJ Bu. l904-07: Doctor of Law. Huvnrd Univenity. I922; Adjunct Professor of Law. Univenity of Virginie. lw7-09: Professor of Law. University of Virginie. since im; Author of Dobie on Bnilmenu Ind Curien Ind HDobie: Cue Book on Bnilmcnts and Carriers ; Captain Unfuntryi. U. 5. Army U9I7L attached to 80th Division. Major tCeneraI Stun. attached to General Headquarters. A. E. F.. I918; Executive Director of the Centennial Endowment Fund of the University of Virginia. I920- 21: Lecturer Cornell Summer bu School I924. WILLIAM HARRISON FAULKNER. M.A.. PHD .............................. I Wen Lawn Professor of Germanic Languages B 9 II; A H; 4? B K: T.l.L.K.A.; lnltructor in French and Cermn. Univenity of Virginia. '894-95; Bachelor of Artl. 1895; Principal of the Houuton Academy. Houuton. Vl.. '895-97: Mute! of Arts, I898; thin and Greek Master. Episcopal High School. of Virginia. l898-l90l. JOHN LLOYD NEWCOMB. A.B.. C.E .................................. Miramont Apartment Professor of Civil Enginccring IT K A; A II; 4? B K; T B H; 9 T; T.I.L.K.A.: Raven; Buchelor of AItI. William and Mary College; Civil Engineer. University of Virginia: Adjunct Profusor of Civil Engineering. Univenity of Virginia. 1905-09; Profeuor of Civil Engineering. University of Virginia. lince I9l0; Dean of Engineering. University of Virginia. since I925; Auisunt to the Pretidenl. Universin of Vitginia. I926; Member of the Society for the Promotion of Engineering Education; The American Associr tion of University Professors. JAMFS CARROLL FLIPPIN. M.D. ........................................ University Place Professor of Clinical Medicine K 2; 'lb B K; A Q A; N E N; Raven; Doctor of Medicine. IWI: Demonstrator of Medical Biology, Univenily of Virginia. l902-04; Adjunct Professor of Bacteriology. University of Vir- ginia. l905-07: Author of Various Paperl on Medical Subjects. HARVEY ERNEST JORDON, M.A.. PH.D .................................. University Place Professor of Histology and Embryology 4, 2 K: qt B H; E Z; A 9 41:4, B K: Raven; Bachelor of Artl. Lehigh University. I903: Master of Arts. Lehigh University. IW: Doctor of Philosophy. Princeton University. I907; Member the H21 CORKS 53 CURLS American Association of Anntomists: The Association of Zoiilogists tEastem Branchh Fellow the American Association for the Advancement of Science: Member the Association of American Naturalists: The American Microscopical Society; Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine; American Genetic Association; Eugenics Research Society; Assistant in Embryology and Histo1ogy. Cornell Universily Medical College, New York City. 1904-06: Adjunct Professor of Anatomy. University of Virginia. 1907; Associate Professor of Anatomy. 1908-11 : Professor of Histology and Embryology since 1911; Former Member of the Staff of Embryo1ogy at the Marine Biological Laboratory, Wood's Hole. Massachusetts; Author of Various Papers on Cytological. Histological. and Embryological Subjects, and on Eugenics and Human Heredity; Author of a Textbook of Histology; Member of National Research Council; Author of a Textbook of Embryology twith Dr. I E. Kindredy Wat's Aftermath twith Davis Starr Jordonl CHARLES GILMORE MAPHIS. PED.D., LL.D ........................... Lyndhall Apartments Professor of Education and Dean of the Summer Quarter q; B K; t? A K; H F M; Graduate of Peabody College for Teachers; Professor of Secondary Educntion. University of Virginia, 1911-19; Director of Extension, University of Virginia. 1920- 24: Fellow the American Association for the Advancement of Science; Member the Virginia Academy of Science: Nalional Education Association; National Society for the Study of Educa- tion; Secretary of the Virginia Education Commission. 1911-13; President Virginia State Teachers' Association, 1916: President of the Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools of the Southern States. 1916-19; Director Personnel Work Southeast Division 5. A. T. C.: Committee on Education and Special Training War Department. 1918; Member Virginia Education Commission. 1918-20; President Association of Virginia Colleges. 1921-22: President National University Extension Asso- ciation, 1922-23; Member of the Virginia Commission on the Separation of the Schools for the Deaf and the Blind. 1922-23; Chairman Board of Visitors. Virginia School for the Blind. 1924-26; Member Virginia Commission for the Blind. 1926; Director of Institute. 1926. ROBERT HENNINC- WEBB. M.A.. PH.D ...................................... Rugby Road 1 Professor of Creek H K A; A H: 41 B K; Raven; Bachelor of Arts. 1901; Master of Arts. 1902; Hampden-Sydney College: Master of Arts. University of Virginia. 1904; Doctor of Philosophy, Harvard University. 1909; Member British Classical Association: Member the American Philological Association: In- slructor in Latin. University of Virgnia. 1904-06; Instructor in Latin and Greek. Harvard Univer- Iity. 1909-12; Professor of Greek. University of Virginia. since 1912. SAMUEL ALFRED M1TCHELL. M.A.. PH.D.. LL.D .................... Observatory Mountain Professor of Astronomy and Director of Leander McCormick Observalory B 9 II; A H; qt B K; E 3; T B H; Raven; Master of Arts, Queen's University, 1894: Doctor of Philosophy. Johns Hopkins University, 1898; Doctor of Laws, Queeni University. 1924; Tutor. 1nltructor and Adjunct Professor. Columbia University. 1899-1913; Assistant Professor. University of Chicago. 1912-13; Astronomer on Ec1ipse Expedition: to Georgia in 1900. lo Sumatra in 1901. to Spain in 1905. to Oregon in 1918. to California in 1923. to Connecticut in 1925. and to Norway in 1927; Adams Research Fellow; Fellow the Royal Astronomical Society; Fellow the American Association for the Advancement of Science. and Vice-President in 1921; Member of the American Astronomical Society; Patron A. A. V. S. 0.; Fellow American Academy of Arts and Sciences: Fellow of the American Philosophical Society; Societe Aslronomique; Aalronomische Cesellschaft: Advisory Committee on Astronomy. American Museum of Natural History. 1431 IVEY FOREMAN LEWIS. B.A.. M5,. PH.D ................................... II East Lawn Aliller Professor of Biology and Agricullure Z W; E E; 4? B K; Raven; Bachelor of Arts and Master of Science, University of North Carolina; Doctor of Philosophy, Johns Hopkins Universily, I908; Student in Bonn University and Holder of the Smithsonian Table at the Stallone Zoiilogica at Naples. I908; Investigator at the Kaiserliche Anatalt at Helgoland. I908; Instructor in the Marine Biological Laboratory. Wood's Hole. Massa- chusetts, I907. I910-23; Professor of Biology. Randolph-Macon College. 190545; l907-I2; As- sistant Professor. University of Wisconsin. l9l2-l4; Professor. University of Missouri. I9I4-l5: Fellow the American Association for lhe Advancement of Science; Secretary of the Union of the American Biological Association: Secretary the Botanical Society of America; Winner of the Walker Prile of lhe Boston Society of Natural History; Scientific Assistant and Investigator, U. 5. Bureau of Fisheries. '905-06, I909: Author of Various Scientific Papers. GEORGE BOARDMAN EAGER. JR, B.A., LLB ............................ University Place Professor of Law 4t K W: 9 N 13;? A qt: it B K: 9 K N; Z ; OWL; Raven: Bachelor of Arts and Bachelor of Laws. University of Virginia. l9l0; Member Louisville. Kentucky. Bar, 1910-11; President Class of I910. University of Virginia: Member American Bar Association; Virginia State Bar Association: American Sociely of Internationnl Law: American Academy of Political and Social Science; Pen- dennis Club. Louisville. Kenlucky: Adjunct Professor of Law. University of Virginia. I9lI-l5; Associate Professor of Law. l9l5: Professor of Law since I9l6. LLEWELLYN GRIFFITH HOXTON. B.S.. M.A.. PH.D ....................... Preston Height: Professor of Physics A K E; 4, B K: Raven; Bachelor of Arts. Bachelor of Science. Master of Arts. University of Virginia. I900: Doctor of Philosophy. Johns Hopkins University; Fellow of the American Physical Society; Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science: Member of the Society for the Promotion of Engineering Education; American Association of University Profes- sors; Member of the American Astronomical Society. ROBERT BENNETT BEAN. BS.. M.D ..................................... 5 Wayside Place Professor of Analomy E 3; 4t X; Bachcelor of Science. Virginia Polylechnic Institute. I900: Doctor of Medicine. Johns Hopkins University, 1904; Instructor at johns Hopkins University. l904e05; Instructor. University of Michigan. l905-07; Assistant Professor and Associate Professor. University of the Philippines. l907-l0; Associate Professor and Professor. Tulane University, l9l0-l6; Direclor of Anthropo- logical Investigations at Camps Lee and Gordon. 1918; Chairman. Section H. Anthropology. Amer- ican Association for the Advancement of Science. 1926-27; Member the American Anatomical Association; Councillor. American Anthropological Association: Corresponding Member the Anthro- pological Association of Rome; Fellow of lhe American Association for the Advancement of Science; Past President of the New Orleans Academy of Science; President the Anatomical Board of Virginia; Author of The Racial Anatomy of the Philippine Islanders, Types in the Three Great Races of Man, uHuman Types. and numerous anatomical papers. I441 JOHN LEVI MANAHAN. 3.5.. M.A.. PH.D .............................. 33 University Place Professor of Educalional Administration and Dean of the Deparlmcnl of Educall'on q; A K; Bachelor of Science. Ohio Northern Universily. I9l2; Master of Arts. Harvard University. l9l4; Doctor of Philosophy, Harvard University. 1917; Superintendent of Model School, Ohio Northern University, during summers of l9l3 and 19M; Assistant in Government. Harvard Univer- sity. l9l3-I4: Assistant in Education. Radcliffe College. I9l4-l5; Professor of History of Educa- tion, Miami University. summer of l9l5; State High School Inspector and Professor of Education. Miami University. I9l5-I6; Professor of Educational Administration. University of Virginia. since 19'6: Chief of Educalional Service at U. S. A. General Hospital. Nos. '7 and '9 during I918; Special Adviser in U. S. A. General Hospital. No. Zl U9l9h Dean of the Department of Educa- tion at the University of Virginia. I920; Professor of Public School Administration. Ohio State University, summers of l92l and t923; Active Member of the following professional associations: National Education Association. National Society for the Study of Education. Association of College Teachers of Education, American Association of University Professors, Southern Association of Teacher Training Institutions. Virginia Academy of Science, Virginia State Teachers Association. WALTER SHELDON RODMAN. B.S.. S.M ............................. Lyndhall Apartments Professor of Elcclrl'cal Engineering 4, E K; 9 T; T B H; 1, B K; 'CP K 4,; A H; Raven: Bachelor of Science. Rhode Island State College. 1904; Master of Science. Rhode Island State College. I907; Master of Science. Massa- chusetts Institute of Technology, I909; Instructor in Physics and Electrical Engineering. Rhode Island State College. l904-08; Poslgraduate Student. Massachusetts Institute of Technology. l908-l0: Member the American Institute of Electrical Engineers; The Society for the Promotion of Engineer- ilgg fEducation; The Illuminating Engineering Society; The American Association of University to essors. JAMES ALEXANDER WADDELL. B.A.. M.D ............................... Wayside Place Professor of Pharmacology. Malaria Medica. and Toxicology H M; it B K; Raven; Bachelor of Arts. University of Virginia. I90l: Instructor in Anatomy. I909-l 1; Doctor of Medicine. University of Virginia. 19H : Member the American Pharmacological Society: American Society for the Advancement of Science; Society of Pharmacology and Experi- mental Therapeutics; Society for the Study of Internal Secrelions; Charlottesville-Albemarle Board of Health: Associate Member Medical Society of Virginia; Pre-Medical Adviser; Chairman of Admission to Medical School; Contributions to the Virginia Medical Scmi-Monlhly. Iournal of Analomy, Archives of Internal Medicine. journal of Physiology, and journal of Pharmacology. WILLIAM ALLISON KEPNER. A.M.. PH.D., 5CD ........................... University Place Professor of Biology X 4b; 2 E; A H; 4t B K; Raven. Bachelor of Arts. Franklin and Marshall College. '398: Master of Arts. I900: Teacher in the Philippines. l90l-03; Student in Cb'ttingen University. 1903: Fellow in Biology. Princeton University. l903-04; Instructor in Biology. University of Virginia. l904-08: Doctor of Philosophy, University of Virginia, I908; Fellow the American Association for the Advancement of Science: Member the American Association of College Professots. I451 JOHN CALVIN METCALF. M.A.. LlTr.D.. LL.D ........................ Miramont Apulmelm Linden Ken! Memorial Professor and Dean of the Cradualc Department K A; T K A; E T; O A K; 4 B K: Raven: Bachelor of An; and Master of Arts. Ceor eIown College; Masler of Arls. Harvard University; Doctor of Letters. Georgetown College and nylor University; Doctor of Laws. Universily of Richmond; Professor of Latin. Soul: College. Tennessee. I890-94; Professor of Modern Languages. Mercer University. l894-95: Professor of English. Georgetown College. 18954904; Professor of English. Richmond College. 190447; Dean of Rich- mond College. 19'4-17; Member of lhe American Dialect Socieiy; Modern Language Association of America; Associalion of America University Professors: The Universily Club of Richmond; National Conference on College Entrance Requirements in Engliuh; Exchange Professor on Southern Exchange Foundalion. Universily of North Carolina. I920; Author of The English in the South ; George Cary Eggleston ; History of English Lileraturc ; History of American Literature : various magazine articles: Editor of Addison's Speclalor 5elcclionQ: Shakespeare's Macbeth; Join! Editor of Reading: in American Lilcralure; Edilor-in-Chief of The Lilcrary World. 3 volumel; Literary Editor of the Library of Southern Literature. Vol. XVII: Joint Edilor of The Enchanled Years. a Book of Contemporary Verse. GEORGE OSCAR FERGUSON. JR.. B.A.. M.A.. PH.D ........................ Wayside Place Professor of Psychology and Education K E; q, A K; ? B K; Raven; Bachelor of Arts. College of William and Mary. I907: Master of Arls, Columbia University. I9H; Doctor of Philosophy. Columbia University. I917: Univeraily Scholar in Psychology. Columbia Univenhy. l9l4-l5; Adjunci Professor of Philosophy and Psy- chology. William and Mary. l907-I l: Professor of Philosophy and Psychology and Associate Pro- fessor of Education, William and Mary. l9! l-l6; Principal. William and Mary Normal Academy. l9l2-16; Auociale Professor of Psychology and Education and Dircclor of the Psychological Laboratory. Colgate Universily. I9l6-I9; Chief Psychological Examiner. Camp Lee. Virginia. I918; Author of The Psychology of the Negro ; Member the American Psychological Association. WILLIAM ROYALL SMITHEY. B.A.. M.A.. PH.D .......................... University Place Professor of Secondary Educalion q, A K; 4i B K; Bachelor of Arts and Masler of Arls. Randolph-Macon College; Graduate Student. University of Chicago and Universily of Wisconsin; Doctor of Philosophy. University of Wisconsin; Aslis'anl in Education. University of Wisconsin; Principal Pelersburg High School; Professor and Director of Summer Quarter. Slnlc Teachers' College. Harrisonburg. Virginia; Secretary Virginia State Board of Education; Chairman Virginia Committee Commission Accredited Schools of Southern Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools: President Virginia State Teachers' Association; Member University Commission on Southern Race Questions: American Sociological Sociely; American Association of University Professors; Edilor Secondary Education in Virginia : Asso- ciate Edilor High School Quarterly. JAMES SOUTHALL WILSON. B.A . M.A.. PILD .................................. Oakhunt Edgar Allan Poe Professor of English K E; E T; $ B K; Raven: Bachelor of Arts. College of William and Mary; Master of Am. University of Virginia: Doclor of Philosophy. Princelon University; Assislanl Professor in the College of William and Mary. l906-08: Professor in lhe College of William and Mary. '908-l9: I461 CORKS 5 CU RLS Director of the William Ind Mary Summer Session. I9I5-l8; Member the State Board of Education of Virginia. l9l5-l9; Member the Modern Language Association of America: American Historical Association; Author of Alexander Wilson. Poet-Nlturliist ; Joint Editor of uThe Enchanted Years. I Book of Contemporary Verse. . ALBERT GEORGE ADAM BALZ. B.A.. M.A.. PH.D ........................... Rugby Road . Professor of Philosophy 9 A X; '5 B K: Raven; OWL; Cosmopolitan Club; Treasurer Clan of WW; Bachelor of Artl. University of Virginia. I908; Mute: of Arts. Univenity of Virginia. I909; Doctor Philosophy, Columbia University, l9i6; Univenity Fellow In Philosophy. Columbia University. l9l2- l3: Adjunct Professor of Philosophy. University of Virginia, l9l3- l6' Auociate Professor. t9l6- 20: Profeuon since I920: Membex the AmericuI Association for the Advancement of Science: American Philo- sophical Auocietion: Southern Society for Philosophy and Psyc hology; Societu Spinounn; Author of He- and Essence in the Philosophies of Hobbet end Spinoza : uThe Basie of Social Theory : Contributor of Articles to The Iaurnal of Philosophy: Studies in the History of Ideas: Second Lieutenant UnfantryL U. 3. Army; Perwnnel Olficer. S. A. T. C., University of Virginie. CARROLL MASON SPARROW. B.A., PH.D ................................... Monroe Hi Professor of Physics 4i 3 K: F A; Bachelor of Arts. Johns Hopkins University. I908; Doctor of Philomphy. Johns Hopkins University. l9ll. ARTHUR FICKENSCHER. DIPLOMA. ROYAL CONSERVATORY or MUNICH ........... Vanity Hall Professor of Music Graduate. Royal Conservatory; Studied in Munich under Rheinberger. Thuille. Schwartz. and Bun- Ineir: Concert Pilnist with Nihti, Anton Schott, Schumann-Heink. Bispham. Ondricek. And Mater- In; Teacher of Voice md Composer in San Francisco; Teacher of Voice and Composer in Europe. I9lI-l4: Teacher of Voice and Compoeer in New York City: Composer of Aucluin et Nichollette. a Symphonic Choral-Poem: The Visions. for Orcheutra and Voice; The Chamber Blue. a Mimo-Dnma: French Folk Songs. for uChorus ; Cermnn Foil: Songs : uTe Deum end Jubilate ; Requiem ; Lenten Song ; Six Songs ; The Wind : Horror's Realm : Where Go the Boats? : A Fiery Song ; Willowwood ; The Brass Band ; Piano Qunrtet ; Ind other works; Author of Accousticnl Relationships. JOHN JENNINGS LUCK. M.A.. PH.D ....................................... Colonnade Club Professor of Malhemalics A K E; A H; E T; d? B K: Raven: Hot Foot; 1MP; Bachelor of Arts. I902; Master of Arts. IKE; Doctor of Philosophy. I908. University of Virginia; Instructor in Mathematics. 1904-09; University of Virginia: Instructor in Mathematics. Vanderbilt University. 1909-13: Assistant Pro- fessor of Mathematics. Vanderbilt Univenity. I9l3-i6; Summer Faculty. George Peabody School for Teachers. l9l5-l7: Adjunct Profeuor of Mathematics. University of Virginia. l9l6-l9; Ano- cilte Profeuor of Mathematics. University of Virginia. I9l9- 23; Professor of Mathematics. Univer- sity of Virginie. 923-; Member the American Mathematical Society; American Mathematical Association: Board of Governors. Colonnade Club. I471 WILSON GEE. 35.. M.A.. PH.D ........................................... Moniibello Circle Professor of Rural Economics and Rural Sociology 3 E; A K 1'; eh I' M; Raven: Buchelor of Science. Clemson Agricultural College. I908; MIIICI of Alli. University of South Carolinl. I9l0; Doctor of Philosophy. Universil of California. 3; Instructor in Biology. University of South Carolina. IWB-09; Auisllnl in goiilogy and AuocilIe Enlomologisl. Experiment Slalion. Clemson College. I9lI-l2: Fellow in Zoiilogy. Univenity of California. I9IZ-i3: elected Imlruclor in Genetics. University of Californil. resigning to become Acting Professor of Biology. Universily of Soulh Carolina. 344; Profeuor of Biology. Emory University, l9l4-I7; Assistant Director of Agricullural Enemion Service. Clelmon College. '9 - l8; Technician. Medical Corpl, U. S. A.. Central Medical Department leonlory. Dijon. Funce. 19'8-19; Professor of Ruul Economic: and Rural Sociology. Univerlily of Virginia. I923e; Editor. Universily of Virginia News Leller. I925e; Diroclor. lmlilule for Relenrch in the Social Sciences. l926-; Member. American Country Life Auociltion: American Economic Auocintion; American Sociological Society; Americln Farm Economic Auocialion; and National lnslilule of Social Sciences. LAWRENCE THOMAS ROYSTER. MD ..................................... Grady Avenue Professor of Pediatrics 2 X; 4, B K; A Q A; de B n; Raven; Doctor of Medicine. Universily of Virginia. I897; lnterne. Willard Parker Hocpilal. New York City. l898; New York Infant Asylum. 1899; Oul-Palienll Deparlmenls. Good Samarilan Dispensary. New York. Bellevue. and Roosevelt Holpillll: Laboratory New York Board of Health. l897-99; Praelixed Medicine. Norfolk. Virginia. I900-23; Professor of Pediatrics. I923--; Member Churlotlesville Medical Society; Virginia Stale Medical Society: American Pediatric: Associalion: Stake Board of Health: Children's Code Commission of Virginia. 1920; American Genetic Associllion: Fellow American Medical Anocinlion; Ditector in American Child Health Associnlion; Honorary Member. Norfolk County Medical Society: George Wuhing- Ion Medical Society. Washington, D. C.; Contributor lo Abl'l System of Pedialric'. and Author of Various Scientific and Sociological Papers; Co-aulhor wilh Ch-pin of Dilute: of Children. TIPTON RAY SNAVELY. B.A.. M.A., PH.D ................................... Monroe Hill Professor of Economics A K W; 1b B K; Raven: Bachelor of Arls. Emory and Henry College. 19'2; Master of Arts. Univertiiy of Virginia. I915: Holder of Phelps-Slokes Fellownhip. l9l5-l7; Bennel Wood Green Scholatship. I9l7-l8; Master of Arts. Harvard Universily. I918; Doclor of Philosophy. University of Virginil. I919; Adjuncl Professor of Economics. Universiky of Virginia. '920; Special lnveui- gator for the Bureau of Labor. l9l7: Member lhe American Economic Ansocialion: The Socier for the Promotion of Engineering Education; Auociation of American Universily Profeuon: National Economic League; Nalional Tax Association; Royal Economic Society; Author of The Taxation of Negroes in Virginia, I917: The Migration of Negroes. publinhed by lhe U. 5 Bureau of Labor. l9l9: and of various scientific articles and papers. LEROY ADELBERT CALKINS. 85.. M.B.. M.D., MS.. PH.D ................. Preston Heights Professor of Obsleln'cs and Gynecology d? B H; 2 5; Virginia Slate Medical Society; American Medical Associalion: American Associa- tion of Analomisls: Fellow American College of Surgeons: Author of uThe Growth of the Humun Fetus, and several contributions lo medical publicalions. I431 WILBUR ARMISTEAD NELSON. 3.5., M.A .......................... Jack Jouett Apartments Corcoran Professor of Geology 3 5; d, B K; Bachelor of Science. Vanderbilt University. l9l0: Master of Arts. Stanford Uni- versity. I9l5; Chemist. Tennessee Packing Co.. l9l0-I I: Assistant Geologist. Tennessee Geological Survey. l9H-I4; Economic Geologist. N. C. and St. L. Railway. I9l4-I6; Mining Geologist, Paga Mining Co.. Cartersville, CL. l9l6-l8; Member Tennessee Highway Commission, l9l8-l9; State Geologist of Tennessee, l9l8-25: Fuel Distributor for Tennessee. l92'-22: President. Tennessee Academy of Science. I924; Head of Corcoran and Rogers School of Geology. University of Virginia; State Geologist of Virginia. 1925-28; President. Monteagle Sunday School Assembly. 1921-25; Fellow Geological Society of America: American Association for the Advancement of Science; Member of Association of American State Geologists UJast Presideno: Society of Economic Geologists; American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers: Seismological Society of America; American Association of Petroleum Geologists; Geological Society of Wash- ington; Virginia Academy of Science: Sons of the American Revolution: Member Executive Committee. National Conference on State Parks; Member Executive Committee. Division of States Relations. National Research Council; Chairman. Advisory Council to the Board of Surveys and Maps of the Federal Government; Author of Numerous Reports and Geological Articles; Vice- Chairman and Secretary. Southern Appalachian Power Conference. WILLIAM HALL COODWIN. B.A.. M.D ....................................... Rugby Road Professor of Surgery and Gynecology K A; q: P 27; A Q A; t? B K; Raven: T.I.L.K.A.; Bachelor of Arts. Transylvania University; Doctor of Medicine, University of Virginia: Former Resident Surgeon of the University of Virginia Hospital; Member of the House Stag. Bellevue Hospital. New York: Adjunct Professor of Surgery, I9IO-I6; Assistant Surgeon of the University of Virginia Hospital; Member the Albemarle County. Virginia State, and American Medical Associations: Southern State and Tri- State Medical Societies; Fellow the American College of Surgeons; Associate Professor of Surgery since I916; Lieutenant Colonel. U. S. A, JOHN HENRY NEFF. B.A., M.D ........................................... University Place Professor of Urology H K A; A II; A Q A; 4t P 2; Q B K; T.I.L.K.A.: l3 ; uZ : Raven; Bachelor of Arts. University of Virginia, I907; Doctor of Medicine. University of Virginia. 19'0; Urologist. University of Virginia Hospital; Member American Urological Association; Faculty Member on the 3-3-3 Athletic Council. GARDNER LLOYD CARTER. M.A.. PH.D ............................... Gildersleeve Wood Professor of Chemistry Bachelor of Arts. 1912. Master of Arts. l9l4. Doctor of Philosophy. 19'6. University of Virginia; Assistant Professor of Chemistry. Vanderbilt University. l9l6-l8: Assistant Gas Chemist. Chemical Warfare Service; Member the American Chemical Society; Treasurer General Athletic Association, 1921.22, 1922.23. JAMES COCK BARDIN. MD ............................................ Fry's Spring Road Professor of Romanic Languages 9 A X; E A X; Raven; OWL; Doctor of Medicine. I909, University of Virginia: Instructor of Romanic Languages. University of Virginia. l9l0-l3; First Lieutenant. Medical Corps. U. S. A.; First Lieutenant. Med.-O.R.C.: Member of Advisory Editorial Board of Inlcr-Amcrica; Editor of Leyendas Hirloricas Mcjicanas and El Reina dc Ia: Incas. E491 ALBERT JULIUS BARLOW. B.A.. B.B.A.. C.P.A ........................ Faculty Apartments Professor of Commerce and Business Administration B 9 11; A M A; A K W; Bachelor of Am. Bonon Univenily. l9l5; Bachelor of Buaineu Administration. Boslon University. I920; CerliEed Public Accounlunl. Stale of New Hunpahire; Instrucior in Accounting and Aclurial Science, Boston Univenity. I9l7-20; Profeuor and Head of Accounting Dep-rlment, Havana Brunch of Bodon University. College of Busineu Admininulion. Human. Cuba. l920-2I; Auocinle Professor of Accounting and Marketing. University of Virginia; Xember.of American Economic Association; American Association of University lnstruclon in ccounhng. ABRAHAM BERGLUND, B.A.. PHD .................................... Fnculty Apartments Professor of C ommcrce and Bminm Adminislrall'on A K 1'; Bachelor of Am. University of Chic-go. I904; Doctor of Philouophy. Columbia Univer- sity. I907; Taught Economics at Washington Sllle College. lW7-09; Special Agent. Burelu of Corporations. 190943; Taught Economics at University of Wuhinglon. I9l3-I8; Special Experl for United Stale: Tum Commission. l9l8-22; Auoci-Ie Professor of Trmporution. Univerlily of Virginia. I922; Member American Economic Association; American Anocintion for Labor Legisla- Iion; National Economic League: National Geographic Auocialion; Member of the American Auociltion for the Advancement of Science; Author of Book on Uniled Stale: Slecl Corporation. and of several articles on current economic quellIom in the AmcrIcan Economw Rcvlew. Quarterly journal of Economics, journal of Polmcal Economy; and Annals of Amencan Academy at PoIIlIcal and Socml Scuencc; Author of' Our Mercham Marine Problems and International Trade Politics. ATCHESON IAUCHLIN HENCH. B.A.. M.A.. PH.D ..................... East Jeienon Street Professor of English 2 A E; Bachelor of Arts. Lnfayelle. l9l2; Milk! of Am. Harvard. l9l7; Doctor of Philotophy. Harvard. I920; Instructor in Englith. Lafayelle. I9l2-I3: Aniuam Profeuor of English. Pennsyl- vania Military College, I9l4-l6: A. E. F., I9l8-l9; Animm Professor of English. Wedeyan University. l920-22; Member Modern Language Association of America. ELBERT ALVlS KINCAID. A.B.. M.A.. PHD .................................. Rugby Road Professor of C ommcrce and Business Administralion A T 9; A K W; O. D. K.; Raven; Bachelor of Arla. Wuhington Slate College. I9l0: Mule: of Ark, Harvard. I91 I; Doctor of Philosophy. University of California, I922: Universixz Scholar. Harvard, l9l0; Teaching Fellow. Harvard. l9ll; Auittanl Profeuor of Economics. uhington Stale College. I9I3-l6; Imlruclor. University of California. 19'6-22; Lecturer. American lmlitule of Banking. Oakland. California Chapter; Finmcial Writer for San Francisco Call, I9I9-20; Lecturer. Banking and Finance. University of California Extension. I9l8-22. DUMAS MALONE. B.A.. M.A.. PH.D ....................................... Edgewood Lane Research Professor of History 2 N; Raven; Bachelor of Arts. Emory College. I910; Master of Arts. 192'. and Doctor of Philonophy, I923. Yale Universiiy; Instructor in History. l9l9-23. Auislnnl Professor of History. I923. Yale University; Author of The Public Life of Thomas Cooper. and of several magazine articles; Member American Historical Association. I501 ROBERT KENT GOOCH. B.A.. M.A., D.PHIL. eron.Y' .................... Chancellor Sheet Professor of Political Science A T A; A H; Eli Bnnana; P. K.: Z ; I3 ; Reven; ? B K; Bachelor of Am. University of Virginia. I9I4; Mule: of Am. University of Virginia, I915; Bachelor of Arts. Oxford University. I920; Master of Arll. Oxford University. I922; Doclor of Philosophy. Oxford Univenity. I924; Rhonda Scholar. Oxford; Student. Faculte de droil. Pan's,- Master in Latin. Jeferson School for Boys. Chlrlolleurille. I9I3-l4; Instructor in Mathematics Ind Auiunnt in Philosophy. University of Virginia. I9l4-l9l5; Instructor in Latin and Greek. Univenity of Virginia Summer School. I916; Auocille Professor of Histo Ind Political Science. College of William and Mary. l920-2l; Professor of Political Science, Colege of William and Mary. l92I-24; Auociale Professor of Political Science. University of Virginia. I924; Captain. Battery B. 60th Artillery. C. A. C.. A. E. F.; Contributor to Political Science Quarlerly: Member American Politicel Science Ano- cuuon. ' W. PATTON GRAHAM. B. A.. M.A .................................... ll00 Wenland Street Professor of Ramam'c Language: Bachelor of Arts. Emory and Henry College; Master of Arts. University of Virginie: Student II the University of Grenoble; Student at the University of Chicago; Professor of French. Lynchburg High School; Professor of Modern Languages. Wesleyan College; Profeuor of Modern Langu-ges. Mercer University; Modern Languages. Cumberland Univerlity; Modern Languages. Central Col- lege; Associate Professor of Romanic Langunges. University of Virginia; Professor of Rommic Llngulges; Editor of Easy Slotict of French Life. from Guy de Maupuunl. FRANCIS HARRIS ABBOT. B.A.. M.A ................................... Fry's Spring Rold Professor of French A T 9; A 11; Bachelor md Muler of Arts. Univenily of Virginia, I899; Instructor in French. University of Virginia. I898-99; Univenity of Callingen. University of Leipsic, I899-I902: In- strucmr in French. John: Hopkins University nnd University of Chicago. JOSEPH KENT ROBERTS. B.A.. M.A.. PH.D ............................. Monlibello Heights Praiessor of Geology 1' A; 2 E; Bachelor of Arts. Emory and Henry College. I910; Master of Ark. Johns Hopkim University. I9l5: Doctor of Philosophy. Johns Hopkim University. I922; Fellow. Geologicll Society of America and American Associalion for the Advancement of Science; Member. Paleon- tological Sociely of America. Seismological Society of America Uintlem DivisionL Virginie Academy of Science; Professor of Geology. Emory and Henry College. 1916-20; Auislam Professor of Geology. Vanderbilt University. l922-24; Associnle Profeuor, I924-26; Professor of Geology. Universily of Virginia. I92F; Auislanl Geologist. Virginia Geological Survey. Summers I920. ZI. 22. 23, and 27; Tenneuee Geological Survey, Summers. l924-25; Kentucky Geologicll Survey. Summer I926; Geology of the Virginia Triassic. Tertiary Slnligraphy of Western Ten- nessee. Tuscaloosa Formation of Kentucky. and numerous magazine arlicles dealing with geologicel su jects. 'Absent on leave. 1928-29. FLOYD NELSON HOUSE, PH.D ........................................... University Plece Professor of Sociology Bachelor of Arls. University of Colorado. 19'8; Master of Am. 19'9; Doctor of Philosophy. Universily of Chicago. I924; Professor of Economics and Sociology. Otllwa University hKnnuO. 19.9-22; Professor of Economics. Middkbury College. I923-25; Auislanl Professor of Sociology. Univenity of Chicago. 925-26; Profeuor of Sociology in Ihc University of Virginia. I926: Member of lhe American Sociological Society and the American Association of University Professors. WILLIAM EDWARD BRAY. 3A.. M.D ................................... Universily Place Professor of Clinical Palhology 4? A 9; 4, B K; 4e 3 11; Raven: Bachelor of Arls. Univenity of Mississippi. I902; Studenl Auistanl in Bacteriology and Pathology. University of Virginia. l9l0-H; Assistant Surgical Pathologish University of Virginia Hospital. I91 HZ; Doctor of Medicine. University of Virginia. I9I2; lnlcrne. University of Virginia Hospilal. Ing-U; Slate Heallh Departmenl of Virginia. Summer: of l9l0-II-IZ; Instructor in Clinical Diagnosis and Auislnnl University Phyeician. University of Virginia. I9l3-l4; Rockefeller Sanitary Commission and Communily Health Work. Virginia. l9l4; Professor of Bacteriology and Pathology. University of Mississippi. 1914; Adjunct Professor of Clinical Diagnosis and University Physician. 19'5-22; Associate Profeuor of Clinical Diagnosis and Director of Laboralories. University of Virginia Hospital, l922-27. JOHN HOWE YOE. MS.. M.A.. PH.D ................................... Faculty Apartments Professor of Chemhlry K E; A X E; E T; E 3; Bachelor of Science. 19'3; Master of Science. I914. Vanderbilt University: Master of Arts. l9l7. Princeton University; Doctor of Philosophy. Princeton Uni- versity. I923; Graduate Student. University of Chicago hSummer Quarted. I913; CerliEcate of Fin! Aid Training. 19'8. United States Bureau of Mines: Assistant in Chemistry. l9ll-I3; Instructor in Biology. l9l3-l4; lnstruclor in Cheminry. I9l4-l5; Vanderbilt University: Assistant in Chemistry. l9l5-l7. Princeton University: lmlruclor in Zo610gy eSuI-nmer Quarted. l9l4; Instructor in Chemislry hSummer QuarterQ. I915-l6-l7. George Peabody College for Teachen: Chemical Engineer hon War Cu ResearchL U. 5. Bureau of Mines. l9l7-l8; First Lieutenant. Chemical Warfare Service. U. S. A.. l9l8-l9: Assistant Professor of Chemistry. Universily of Virginia. I9I9-23; Associate Professor of Chemistry. University of Virginia. 1923-27: Profeuor of Chemistry. I927; Graduate Work. Princelon University. 922-23; Fellow of the American Associa- lion for the Advancement of Science; Chemist Virginie Geological Survey. I925-; Winner of the Virginia Academy of Science Research Prize for I928: Author of HPholomelric Chemical Analysis -Volumc l. Calorimetry. Volume II. Nephelometry. FREDERICK DEANE GOODWIN RIBBLE. B.A.. M.A.. LL.B ................ Colonnade Club Professor 0! Law K E; 'ib A 4N T.I.L.K.A.; 3 T; $ B K; 0 A K; Raven; Bachelor of Arts. William and Mary College. I9I6; Master of Am. Universily of Virginia. I9I7: U. 5. Army, I918; Instructor in Commercial Law. Universily of Virginia. I920-2l: Bachelor of Laws. University of Virginia. I921; Member Virginia Bar Association. and American Bar Association; Editor Second Edition Minor on Real Property. I521 CORKS 6 CU RLS EDMUND S. CAMPBELL. M5.. . . . . . .1 .......................................... Univenily Professor of Ar! and Archileclure ORLAND EMILE WHITE. 135.. M.S., SC.D ............................... Fry's Spring Road Professor 0! Agricultural Biology and Director of the Blandy Experimental Farm Bachelor of Science and Master of Science, South Dakota Skate Co11ege of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts, 1909. 1911; Hilton Scholar, 1912, and Emerson SchoIar. 1913. Harvard; Mallet of Science. Harvard, 1912; Doctor of Science, Harvard. 1913: Member of Sociely of American Naturalists; Fellow of lhe American Association for the Advancement of Science; Member of the American Genelic Association; Bolanical Society of America; American Eugenics Society: Explorer's Club; Reseatch Assislanl and Instructor. South Dakota State College. 1909-11; Assistant in Genetics. Radcliffe. 1913: Assislant Curator of Plant Breeding. Brooklyn Bolanic Garden. 1913-16; Curator. 1916-24; Curator of Plant Breeding and Economic ths. 1924-27; Specialill. United States Department of Agriculture. July-November. 1918. Augusl-November. 1919; Mulford Exploration of lhe Amazon Basin Expedition, 1921-22; Secretary. Round Table on Agriculture and Populalion Increase. Institute of Politics. Williamstown. 1925; Editorial Board. American . journal of Botany. 1920-21; Editor of Genetics Section Bolam'cal Abstracts. 1922-27; Editor of Plant Cenelics Section, Biological Abstracts, 1927-; Author of Various Papers on Heredin and Genetics. and on the Natural History of the Amazon Basin. ARTHUR FERGUSON BENTON. B.A.. M.A.. PH.D ....................... Fry's Spring Road Professor of Chemistry 2 B K; E E; A. B.. M.A.. Ph.D.. Princeton Universily; Parl-lime Assistant in Chemistry. 1916-17; Sayre Fellow in Applied Chemislry. 1919; Proctor Fe110w, 1919-20; National Research Fellow. 1920-21; Princeton University: National Research Fellow. 1921-24. California Institute of Technology; Associake Professor of Chemistry. University of Virginia. 1927-28; Member American Chemical Society. American Eleclrochcmical, Spcigly. Virginia Academy of Science. and Fellow of the American Association for the Advkncemgnk; of Science. GARRARD GLENN. B.A.. LLB ................................................. Univenily Professor of Law LOUISE DATES. BS.. B.A., M.A ......................................... 10 Oakhum Circle Professor of Nursing Education EDWIN PARTRlDGE LEHMAN, B.A., M.D .................................... Rugby Road Professor of Surgery and Gynecology 1P B K; A 9 A: B.A., Williams College. 1910; M.D.. Harvard University, 1914; John Harvard Fellow. 1913 and 1914; Surgical House OfEcer, Peter Bent Brigham Hospital. Boston, 1914-15; Assistant Resident Surgeon. Barnes Hospital. St. Louis. 1915-16; Assislanl in Surgery. Washing- ton University. School of Medicine. 1916-20; First Lieulcnanl. Medical Corps, U. S. A., 1917-19; Resident Surgeon. Barnes Hospita1, 1919-20; Instructor in Surgery, Washington University, 1920-21; Instructor in Clinical Surgery. 1921-26; Assistant Professor of Clinical Surgery. 1927-23; Surgeon. St. Louis City Hospital. 1920-27; Assislant Surgeon lo Barnes Hospital. St. Louis City HospilaL and St. Louis Jewish Hospitals for Varying Periods up lo 1928; Consulting Surgeon. St. Louis Maternity Hospital. 1927-28: Professor of Surgery and Gynecology. University of Virginia. 192k; Member Albemarle County Medical Sociely. Virginia Slate Medical Sociely; Fellow. American Medical Associalion; Author of Scignlmc Articles on Surgical Subjects. 1531 SYDNEY WILLIAM BRITTON. 3.5.. M.D.. C.M ............................. University Puk Profcuor of Physiology 2 E: 3.5.. M.D.. C.M.. McGill University. Montreal; Cooper Fellownhip in Physiology. l92l-22; Demonstrator in Physiology. McGill Univenily. I922-23; Auisl-nl in Phyliology. I923-24; National Rmarch Fellow in the Medical Sciences Hahysiologyx Harvard Renarch Fellow and Tuching Auillnnl in Physiology. at Harvard Medicnl School. 192426; Associate in Physiology. John: Hopkins Medial School. 926-28: Member American Phyniologicnl Society; Author of Various Paper: on Medical Subjects. GEORGE W. SPICER. A.B.. PH.D ........................................ Brandon Aplrtmenl Acting Professor of Polill'cal Science 4 B K; A.B.. Randal h-Macon College; Ph.D.. Johns Hopkins University; lnllmclor in History. Rlndolph-Mlcon Acndgmy. Front Royal. l920-22: Associate Professor of Government. College of Williun Ind Mary. I923: Professor of Politicnl Science. College of Williun and Mary. I926: Acling Professor of Political Science. Univenily of Virginia, I923; Member. American Political Science Anocillion. American Association of University Profeuon; Author of The Constitutionll Shim and Government of Aluh U92D. HERMAN PATRICK JOHNSON. B.A.. M.A., PH.M .............................. En! Lawn Associate Professor of English Lilcralurc Bnchelor of Aria. University of South Carolina. 1W4; Master of Am, INS: Master of Philosophy. University of Chicngo. I909; Teacher of English in Columbia. 5. C.. High School. 30443; Principal. l906-w; Assistant Professor. University of Miuiuip '. l909-l4; Acting Profeuor of Englith. l9lZ-l3; Adjunct Profeuor of English Literature. tinivenily of Virginin. I9l4-l8; Member of Modern Language Auociuion cf sAqeriyn. quc ..J .- CHARLES WAKEFIELD PAUL ....... . .................................. McCormick Road Associate Professor of Public Speaking A E P; Graduate. Emerson College of Oratory; Member of Flcuhy. Emerson College. IWl-07: Adjunct Professor of Public Speaking. University of Virginia. lm-IS; Associate Professor Iince I918; Member of the National Association of Teachers of Speech and of the American Anociuion of University Profcuors. CARL CASKEY SPEIDEL. PH.B.. PHD ...................................... Dawson's Row Associate Professor of Analomy N 2 N; 4 B K; Bachelor of Philosophy. Lafayette. l9l4: Doctor of Philosophy. Princelon. l9l8; Parl-lime Instructor in Biology. Princelon University. l9l4-l6: Maule Research Fellow. Princelon. l9l4-l6; Instructor in Comparative Anatomy and Histology. Univenily of Akron, Ohio. l9l7-l3: Acting Profeuor of Biology. St. Lawrence University. l9l9-20; lnvelligllor during various summer: It Marine Biological Laboratory. Wood's Hole. Massachusells, Bureau of Fisheries. Wood's Hole. Massachusetts. Harpswe Laboratory. Maine. and the U. 5. Biological Station, Fairporl. Iowa; Stniluy Corps and Chemical Warfare Department. U. S. A.. l9l6; Member the American Analomical Associalion. American Auocialion for the Advancemenl of Science. Marine Biological Laboratory. l 54 l GEORGE BRIGHT YOUNG, MD ................................................ Ivy Road Associate Professor of Preventilivc Medicine ALFRED CHANUTIN, PH.B.. PH.D .............................................. University Aucciule Professor of Biochemistry EDWARD WATTS SAUNDERS. C.E ......................................... Mallet! House Associate Professor of Applied Malhemalics T B 11; Raven. LINWOOD LEHMAN. M.A.. PH.D .............................................. Eu: Lawn Auocial: Professor of Romanic Languages and Latin Z B T; ii B K: Raven; Bachelor of Arts. I915. Master of Arts. I917. Doctor of Philosophy. I920, University of Virginia; Instructor In Lllin. University of Virginia. I9l5- 24; Instructor in French. University of Virginia. 19'7- 20: Assistant Professor of Romanic Languages. University of Virginia. I920- 26; Assistant Professor of Latin. University of Virginia. 1923- 26; Auocinle Profeuot of Latin since IW6, Associate Profeuor of Romanic Languages since 1926: Editor of Lnbiche's UrI Ieanne Hamme Pram? iHenry Holt and Co.. i923; Studied in France. Summer of I921; Member of Modern Langutge Association; Author of various articles in journals. JAMES ERNEST KINDRED. M.A.. PH.D ......................................... nghunl Associate Professor of Histology and Embryology E;X Q A; Bachelor of Ark. Tufts College. l9l4; Master of Am. University of Illinois. I915; Doctor of Philouophy. University of Illinois. I9l8; Demonstrator in Histology and Embryology. School of Medicine, Western Reserve University. I920- 23; Member of the American Society of Zoiilogisls; Fellow of the American Association of Advanccid Science; Ohio Academy of ScIence; Americm Association of University Professors; Marine Biological Laboratory. ARTHUR FRANCIS MACCONOCHIE. BSc. iEngJ LOND ....................... Rugby Rogcl Auociale Professor 0! Mechanical Engineering A E 4P; T B H: Raven; Trigon; Iournal of Engineering; Bachelor of Science in Engineering, Universily of London; Lecturer, Technical School. Leeds. England: Senior Lecturer. Civil and Mechanictl Engineering Department, Huddersfield Technical College OEIinted lo University of LeedQ: Associate Member Institute of Mechanical Efngineering of London; Fellow. Edinburgh Geological Society: Member of Socier for Promotion of Engineering Education, Auociale Member Americm Society of Mechanical Engineers; Formerly of H. M. Geological Survey. Scotland. Barr and Stroud, Glasgow. the Royal Ordinance Factories. Woolwich; Assistant Geologist. Virginia Geological Survey; Author of Thermodynamics Applied to Engineering. FREDERICK LYONS BROWN. M.A., PH.D ............................. Faculty Apartment; Associale Professor of Physics E 5; Master of Arts. Northwealern Univenily. I916: Doctor of Philosophy. Northweslern. I922; Instructor in Astronomy. Northwestern. I9l6-l7; S. C., U. S. A.. and A. E. F.. I9I7-l9; ln- Ilructor in Mathematics, Northwestern. l9l9-22. I551 CORKS 6 CURLS HARRY ROGERS PRATT .................................................. Minor Cottage Associate Professor of Music and Dramatic Arl 4h F A; Musical Director of the Lake Plncid Foundation. I9ZI-Z3; Composer of Songs. Choruset. Piano Pieces. and Other lnstrumenlnl Works; Harvard. I906. Organisl. Composer. BEN-ZION LINFIELD, 8.5., GRAD. IN MATH.. MS.. PH.D.. D.SC ............ Lyndhnll Apartments Associate Professor of Mathematics A E II; 4, B K; Bachelor of Science. Universily of Virginia. I918; Master of Science and Graduate in Mathematics. University of Virginia, I920; Inslruclor in Mathematics. Univcnity of Virginia. 1918-20; Doctor of Philosophy, Harvard University. 1923; Graduate Student in the University of Paris, University of Strassburg. University of Rome, 923-26; Doclur-al-es-Science. University of Slrassburg, I925; Member American Mathematical Society; American Mathematical Association; Sociilc': Malhemalique de France; Author of arlicles in Transactions and the Bulletin of the American Mathematical Society. GEORGE BASKERVILLE ZEHMER. 35., MA ............................... Peabody Hall Associate Professor of Education 9 A X; 4, B K; 35.. William and Mary College. I9l6: M. A.. Columbia University, I922; Superintendent of Schools. Dinwiddie County. Virginia. l9l7-I9ZI; Auociale Professor. William and ery College, l92l-23; Auociale Director. Extension Division. University of North Carolina. l923-25: Director. Department of Extension. and Associate Professor of Education. University of Virginia. FRANK BANE. B.A ............................................................. Richmond Associate Professor of Applied Sociology ARMISTEAD CHURCHILL GORDON. JR.. A.B.. M.A., PH.D ............... Fry's Spring Road Associale Professor of English H K A: ? B K; Bachelor of Arts, William and Mary College, l9l6; Master of Arts. University of Virginia. I9l8: Doctor of Philosophy. Universily of Virginia. 192'; Instructor in English. University of Virginia, 19'9-22; Author of The Virginia Writers of Fugitive Verse hWhiler; Conlribulor lo Nalional Cyclopedia of American Biography; Associnte Bullclin Editor of Alumni News,- Auislant Literary Editor of Library of Southern Literature Gevised editionh Member the Modern Language Association of America. and American Association of University Professors; Book review in Internall'onal Book Review, Virgim'a Quarlcrly Review. elc.; Contributor lo Dictionary of American Biography. FRANK STRINGFELLOW BARR. B.A.. M.A .................. Journey's End. l2 Sweet. N. W. Associate Professor of History A T 9;, E T; 4h B K; Raven; Bachelor of Arts. University of Virginia, I9I6; Master of Arls. Universily of Virginia. I917: lnslruclor in English, Universily of Virginia. I9I5-l6; Rhoades Scholar from Virginia. l9l7; Bachelor of Am, Honours School of Modern History. Oxford I561 CORKS 8 CU RLS r ; um- i ata- r a-: 9 x 3' NB 1 V2 ' :1 44,51v4:2-W f. ' '-t autV: Eully Universily. 1921; Diploma in French Civilization and Literature. University of Paris, 1922; Fellow of the Educational Foundation of the Belgian Relief Commission. Universily of Ghent. 1922-23: Managing Editor. Virginia Quarterly Review; Contribulor of articles and book reviews to various newspapers and periodicals. BRUCE DODSON REYNOLDS. 3.5., D50. PH.D ......................... Montibello Heights Auociale Professor of Biology 2 5; Bachelor of Science. University of Virginia, 1920; Graduate Student, University of Iowa. 1920-21; Doctor of Science. Johns Hopkins University. 1923: Assistant in Biology. University of Virginia. 1916-17 and 1919-20; Instructor in Animal Bio1ogy. University of Iowa. 1920-21; School of Hygiene Research. Fellow, Johns Ho kins University. 1921-23: Assistant.Profeuor of Zoiilogy. University of Arkansas. 1923-24; Teac er in Summer Quarter. University of Virginia, 1917 and 1924; First Lieutenant Air Service. U. S. A.. 1917-19; Member Iowa Academy of Science; Virginia Academy of Science: American Association for the Advancement of Science; American Association of Parasitologiats. DUDLEY CROFFORD SMITH. 3.5., M.D ................................ 30 University P1ace Associate Professor of Dermalology and Syphilolagy K 2; Cb B H; A 0 A; O.D.K.; Raven; T.I.L.K.A.; Bachelor of Science and Two-Year Certificate in Medicine. University of Mississippi. 1914; Doctor of Medicine. University of Virginia, 1916; Instructor of Bacterio1ogy and Pathology. Unchrsity of Virginia. 1916-17; Instructor of Medicine and Member of House Stag. University of Virginia Hospital. 1917-19; Johns Hopkins Dispemary tBaltimoreL Summer 1919; Washington University 15L Louisa. Summer 1920; Tulane University tNew Orleano. Summer 1922; University of Pennsylvania 03 iladelphio. Summer 1924; Member County, State. Southern. and American Medical Associations: American Association for the Ad- vancement of Science: Syphilologist and Dermatologist. University of Virginia Hospital. ALLEN FISKE VOSHELL, B.A.. M.D ......................................... Vanity H111 Associate Professor of Orthopedic Surgery Q P A; 0 A K; T.I.L.K.A.; Raven; Bachelor of Arts and Doctor of Medicine. Johns Hopkins University. Resident Orthopedisl. Johns Hopkins Hospital. 1920-21; Instructor in Orthopedics. Johns Hopkins Medical School; Assistant Orthopedic Surgeon in Out Patient Department. John: Hopkins Hospital, 1920-21: Instructor, University of Virginia Medical School. 1921-24; Assistant Professor of Orthopedic Surgery. 1924-27; Associate Professor of Orthopedic Surgery. ARTHUR KYLE DAVIS. JR B.A., M.A.. B.LITT.. PH.D.,5 ................. Faculty Apartments Associate Professor of English Literature K A; it B K; E T: Raven; Skull and Keys: Vice-President. Clan of 1919: Bachelor of Arts. University of Virginia. 1917; Master of Arts. University of Virginia. 1919; Diploma in Economics and Political Science, University of Oxford. 1921; B. Litt., University of Oxford. 1923; Ph.D.. University of Virginia. 1924; Head of the Latin and Greek Department. Episcopal High School of Virginia. 1917-18; Central Officers. Training Camp for Infantry. Camp Lee. Virginia. 1918; Second Lieutenant, U. S. A.: Student Assistant in Phi1osophy. University of Virginia. 1919; Rhoades Scho1ar from Virginia. 1919; Instructor in Eng1ish Literature. University of Virginia. 1923-24; Archivist, Virginia Folk-Lore Society. 1923-24: Editor of English and Scottish 'Absent on leave, 1928-29. I671 Ballad. in Virginia ; Member of Modern Language Auocialion of America; Winner of Edgar Allan Poe Fiction Medal. Woodrow Wilwn Essay Medal for M:pzine Contribution: Lecturer in Hmud Summer School. I926; Vitiling Profeuor Sweet Bri'u College. l926-27: Secrenry. Popullr Literature Group. Modern Language Association of Ameticn. I927; Auocille Profeuor of English. University of Virginia. I927. LAWRENCE THEODORE LUDWIG. B.P.E .............................. Box 46. Univenily Associate Professor a! Physical Educalion B.P.E.. Springhld College. I925; Director of Phylicnl Education. Cleveland Public School Synem. 1920-22; Auisl-nl Professor of Phyticnl Education. Univerlily of Virginia. l925-28. FLETCHER DRUMMOND WOODWARD. M.D ............................. University Plue Associate Professor of Ololaryngology K E; N E N: T.l.L.K.A.; IMP: Doclor of Medicine. Univeni of Virginin. l9l9; Ex-IMerne. Univenity of Virginia Hospil-l: Ex-Houle Surgeon. Muahan-n ye. Eu. and Throu Hospital. New York City; Member of Albemarle County. Southern. and American Medial Auocinliom; Fellow. American College of Surgeons; Auilllnl Professor. Ololuyngology. I925. CHARLES PATTERSON NASH. 35.. LLB ................................... Rugby Road Associate Professor of La- K A; 1 A Q; E T; German Club; P. K. Society; Eli Banana; IMP; Raven: I3 ; Virginia Law Review Board; Editor-in-Chief, Virginia Lav Reviei. 1924-25. JAMES SHANNON MILLER. Jn.. B.A.. 35.. BE. ........................... Montibello Circle Auociale Professor of Electrical Engineering ? B K; T B H; Raven; Bachelor of Am. Bachelor of Science. Emory Ind Henry Colle e. l9l8: Instructor in Phyaics. University of Virginia. l9l9-20; Member of Americnn Institute of leclrical Engineers: Society for the Promotion of Engineering Education. CHARLES HENDERSON. E.E ................................................ Rugby Road Associate Professor of Experimental Engineering A T 9; A H: E B 4H Electrical Engineer. Univenity of Virginia. I920; Instructor of Applied M-lhemalics. University of Virginia. l9l4-l7; Instructor of Mathematics. Univcnily of Virginia. l9l9-20. GEORGE TALMADGE STARNES. B.A.. M.A.. PHD ...................... Fry's Spring Road Associate Professor of Commerce and Busineu Administralion 4v B K; T A K; A K 4'; Bachelor of Arts. Emory and Henry College. I9l8; Master of Am. Universily of Virginia. I922: Master of Arlu, Harvard, I924; Doctor of Philoso hy. Universily of Virginia. 1924; lnslmclor in the Dcparlmenl of Economics. University of irginin. 1922-24; Assistant Profeuor of Commerce and Business Administration. University of Virginia. l925-28. lfml CHARLES NEWTON HULVEY. 8.5., M$.. LL.B ........................ Box 402. University Associale Professor of Commercial Law A E 11; Commandant, Tennessee Milillry Institute, lW-H; Superintendenl. same lnslitulion. I9l5-l7; Lieutenant. Caplain. Colonel. Tennessee National Guard. 190745; Major UnfantryL U. 5. Army. l9l7-2l; iCommanding OEIcer First U. 5. Disciplinary Battalion; Professor. Military Science and Tlctics. N. C. Stale College; Instructor. First und Second Training CampO . Crlduule. Roller's School, IW: Student Georgia School of Technology. Army Curilon Schooll. North Carolina Slate College; Bachelor of Science. Sweelwaler College; Doctor of Law. University of Virginia, 3924; Mister of Science. University of Virginil, I925; Instructor iMnlhemalics and LawL University of Virginia, 1923-25; Assistant Professor of Commercial Llw since 1925. VINCENT WILLIAM ARCHER. 35.. M.D ..................................... Rugby Road Associate Professor of Roenlgcncalogy 6 A X; N E N; 4i B K; Raven; Bachelor of Science. Univeni of Virginia. I920; Doctor of Medicine. Univenily of Virginit, I923; Member American Medic: Association; Southern Medical Association; Virginia Slate Medical Society; Piedmont Medical Society: Radiological Society of America; Albemarle Medical Auocillom; in Practice. Atheville. N. C., 1923- 24; Direclor of X-ny Lubonlory. University of Virginiu Holpilnl; Nationgl Council of Ihe Y. M. C. A.; National Council of the Boy Scout: of America. EUSTICE E. WINDES. M.A ................................................... Rugby Place Associale Professor of Secondary Education FRANK ARTHUR CELDARD. B.A.. M.A.. PH.D ............................ University Place Associate Professor of Psychology K 9; Bachelor of Am. Clark University. I925; Scholar in Psychology. l925-26; Muter of Arll, Clark University. I926: Fellow in Psychology. I926-28; Assistant in Psychology. 926-28; Doctor of Philosophy. Clark University. 1928; lmlruclor in Psychology. Clark Univernily. Summer Ses- sion. I928. JESSE WAKEFIELD BEAMS. B.A., PH.D ................................... Preston Heighls Associalc Professor of Physics THOMAS CARY JOHNSON. JR.. B.A.. M.A ..................................... University Associate Professor of History K E; T K A; B.A.. Hunpden-Sydney. l9l5; M.A.. Universily of Virginia, I916. M.A.. Prince- ton University. I924: lmh-uclor in English. V, P. L. 1916-18. 19'9-20; Naval Air Service. l9l8-I9; Professor of History. Hampdcn-Sydney, I920-23; Instructor in History. Yale University. I924-25; Currier and Universily Fellow. Yale. 1925-27; Assistant Professor of History. Wake Foresl, 1927-28. FRANK W. HOFFER. PH.B., M,A.. B.D .................................. Faculty Aparlmenls Associate Professor of Sociology I591 ROBERT E. LUTZ. 8.5., PH.D .......................................... Brandon Apartment: Associate Professor of Chemistry LAUREN BLAKELY HITCHCOCK. 85.. M.S.. .......................... 6 Universily Cour! Associalc Professor of Chemical Engineering 85.. Massachusetts Institute of Technology. I920; U. S. Naval Aviation Corpl. October. I9l8- January, I919: U. 5. Field Artillery 03:3qu ArmyL l92l-28: Cnduale Field Artillery School. I922; Inslruclor in Malhemalicn. I923; Anny Graduate Student. Muanchutem Imlilute of Technology. June. I925-Seplember. 1926. MS.. in Chemical Engineering; Ordinance Deplrhnenl. 1927-28, Technical SlaK. Explosives Manufacturing Division: Associate Professor of Chemical Engineering. University of Virginia, I928; Member. American Chemical Society. Induurial Com- mittee of Virginia Section. ALFRED AKERMAN. B.A.. M.F ................................................ Universily Associate Professor of Forestry E N; NF B K; Instructor in Forestry al Yule. 1902-04: Stale Forester of Massachusetts. 1904-06: Professor of Forestry, University of Georgia. l906-l9l4; in charge of Timber Tract. l9l4-l8: II New York College of Forestry u Syracuse and in wood-working department of Winchester Repeating Arms Company a! New Haven. I9I3-20: wilh the Virginia Forest Service, I92l-26; Branch of Forest Management and Research. Georgia Forest Service. l926-23: Associate Professor of Forestry. University of Virginia, I92F. WILLIAM P. MADDOX. B.A. NOxonJ .............................. Preston Court Aparlmenl: Acting Associalc Professor of Political Science $ 3 K; Bachelor of Arts. St. John's College NMarylancD. 192'; Rhonda Scholar at Oxford Uni- versity. I922-25: Bachelor of Am. Oxford University. 1925: Certifical d' Elude. Universile' dc Grenoble a:l'anceL I924; Foreign Correspondent. New York Herald Tribune. 1924-25; Instructor and Assistant Professor of Polilical Science. Univenily of Oregon. 325-28: Acting Associate Professor of Polilical Science. University of Virginia. I923--; Member. American Political Science Association, Foreign Policy Associalon: Numerous Reviews on Book Pages. Several Articles in Current Periodicals. STANISLAW JOHN MAKIELISKL BS .......................... Blue Ridge Club Apartments Assistanl Professor of Ar! and Archilcclure Bachelor of Science in Architecture; Member American Inslitule of Architects; Licensed Architect of the State of Virginia. WILLIAM EDWARD BROWN, M.D ................................. Blue Ridge Sanalorium Assistant Professor of Phihisiolhcraphy PAUL OTTO, B.PHY.ED.. M.PHY.ED .............................................. University Assistant Professor of Physical Educalion I601 ARTHUR AUGUST PEGAU. B.A., M.A.. PH.D ............................. Colonnade Club Assislanl Professor of Geology v T - 1' E; .- 3; Bachelor of Arts. University of Virginia. I919; Master of Arls; University of Virginia. I921: Doctor of Philosophy. Cornell University. 1924. HENRY BEARDON MULHOLLAND, M.D ................................. University Place Assisianl Professor of Clinical Medicine '4? A 9: q3' P 5: T.I.L.K.A.; Doctor of Medicine. Universily of Virginia. I920; lnlerne and Resident Physician, University of Virginia Hospital, l920-22; University Physician and Instructor in Medicine. 1922-26: Assislanl Professor of Clinical Medicine, I926; Massachusetts General Hospital. Bouton. Summer. I920. JAMES EDWIN WOOD. JR 3.5.. M.D ...................................... Preston Height: AssisIanl Professor of Inlernal Medicine 4? B K; A 9 A; 12 P 3; Raven; Bachelor of Science. Universily of Virginia. I918; Sludenl Assistant in Pharmacology and Materia Medica. I920; Doclor of Medicine. University of Virginia. I921; House OlEcer. West Medical Service. 2Massnchusetls General Hospital. I92l-23; Residenl Physician, Mauachuscns General Hospital, 1923; Member Virginia Slate Medical Society. American Medical Association; in charge Cardiographic Department. University of Virginia Hospital; Instructor in Medicine. University of Virginia 1923-26; Assistant Professor of Medicine. I926: Fellow in Medicine of the Nalionnl Research Council. appointed lo work wilh Sir Thomas Lewis in London. 1926-27. HARRY STEPHEN LADD. B.A.. M.S.. PH.D .............................. Gildersleeve Wood Assislani Professor of Geology 3 X; t? E; E E; F A; Bachelor of Arts. Washington University. I922: Master of Science. Uni, versity of Iowa. I924; Doctor of Philosophy. 1925: Fellow of Yale University and of due Bishop Museum. l925-26. l928-29; Member of Paleontological Society; Geological Sociely of Washing- ton; Fellow Iowa Academy of Science. EDWIN MORRIS BETTS. MS ......................................... Brandon Aparlmenls Assislant Professor of Biology WILLIAM WIRT WADDELL. JR.. M.D ......................................... Universily Assisian! Professor of Padialrics FRANZ KARL MOHR. M.A.. DOCTOR Jums .............................. 23l Fourleenlh Streel Assislant Professor of Germanic Languages Altcnded the German Humanistic Gymnasia at Weidenau and Baden. Austria. Graduated in I907: Studied Law at the University of Vienna. Austria. l907-l2: was promoled there lo a dcgree of Doctor Juris. I912; Practiced Law. l9l245; Served in the Austrian Army. June. l9lS-Novembcr. E611 l9l8. with final rank of Lieutenant. two and one-half years in Military Courts in Kuhn. Galncin; Practiced Law. I9l8-2l : lmmigrated to U. 5.. August. I92I; Studied English. Instructor in Gcmnn at Elmhunt College. Illinois. I922-25; Studied during these years and during these summer quarters II the University of Chicago. recieved M.A. in Germanic, I925; Instructor in German at the Slele Univenity of Illinois, Urbain. 1925-26; continued Studies in Cermanicn Instructor in German, Univenity of Virginia. 1926-27; Assistant Profeuor of German since I927; Naturalized Citizen of the United States; Member of Deutschnhdem-Juristen-Verein. Vienna. LANCELOT L. M. DENT. B.A.. M.A ................................... Brendon Apartments Auislanl Professor of Philosophy 2 A E: qt 3 K; 0 A K; E T; Raven; Bachelor of Arts. University of Virginia. I925; Muter of Arts. University of Virginie. I926; Instructor of Philosophy, University of Virginia, 1925-27: Auistmt Professor of Philosophy. I927e. HUGH M. SPENCER. B.A., MS.. PH.D ..................................... Colonnade Club Assistant Professor of Chemislry EDWIN CARLYLE MARKHAM, PHD .......................................... Univenity Asafslanl Professor of Chemistry HARDY CROSS DILLARD. GRADUATE US.M.A.. LLB .......................... Vusity Hall Assistant Professor of Law B 9 11:4, A it; 0 A 12:42 3 K: P. K. Society; anen; Eli Banana; 1MP; '3 ; Virginia Law Review Bond; Decision: Editor. V l'rgim'a Law Review, 1926-27; President Law School. l926-27: Cradulte United States Military Acndemy. I924; Bachelor of Law. University of Virginia, I927. RICHARD HARDAWAY MEADE, JIL, 3.5., M.D ............................ University Park Assistant Professor of Surgery and Gynecology A W; Skull and Keys; T.l.L.K.A.: l3 : OWL; Raven; Bachelor of Science. University of Vir- ginia. l9l7; Doctor of Medicine. Harvard. I921; Fellow Trudeau Sanetorium. I921; lnteme. Wil- lard Parker Hospital. I92I-22; lnterne, Presbyterian Hos ital, New York, 1922-23; Surgeon. St. James Hospital. Nanlting, China. l925-27; Assistant AtlencEng Surgeon. University of Virginia Hos- pital. 1927-; Member, County and State Medical Societies: Piedmont Medical Society: American Medical Association. CHARLES BRUCE MORTON. H. 3.5.. M.D ................................ University Place Assistant Professor of Surgery and C ynecology H K A; N E N; A Q A; Raven; Bachelor of Science in Medicine. University of Virginia. I920; Doctor of Medicine. University of Virginia. 1922; Laboratory Auislant in Biology. University of Virginia. I9l7-l8; Laboratory Assistant in Biochemittry. University of Virginia, I9l9-20: House OEicer, St. Luke's Hospital. New York City. 1922-24; Fellow in Surgery in the Mayo Foundation. Mayo Clintc, Rocheater. Minnesota. l924-27: First Auislant in Experimental Surgery, Rochester. IGEI Minnesota. 1925-26; Member of the Olmstead County and Minnesota State Medical Associations: Albemarle County and Virginia State Medical Associations; American Medical Association: Asso- ciation of Rexident and Ex-Resident Physicians of the Mayo Clinic; Winner of the John Horlley Memorial Prize for Research in Surgery. University of Virginia, I927; Author of various papers on Peptic Ulcer and other surgical subjects. THELMA BRUMFIELD. B.A.. M.D .................................... HZO Wertland Street Assistant! Professor of Bacltriology and Pathology ALEXANDER VYSSOTSKY. PHD .............................................. University Assislanl Professor of Aslronomy PIET VAN DE. KAMP. PH.D .......................................... Observatory Mountain Assistant Professor of Astronomy ORESTE F. RINETTI. PH.D ............................................ Faculty Apartment! Assislanl Professor of Ilall'an Doctor of Philosophy. I920. University of Torino Utalyh From I920 to 1923. Instructor in Italian Language and Literature in the following lmtitutions of Torino; Instiluto Manzoni. lnltituto MaEei. lmtituto Commercial: Massimo d'Azeglio. R. LiceOeCinnluio Massimo d'Azeglio; Lieutenant of Machine Guns in the Italian Army, I9l5-18: Instructor in Italian at Yale. I925; Lecturer on Italian Literature. New York University. I925; Instructor in Italian. Columbia University. l926-28: Mem- ber of Modern Language Association of America. THADDEUS BRAXTON W'OODY. B.A.. M.A ............................. Fry's Spring Road Assfslanl Professor of Romania Languages 4h B K; Raven; Bachelor of Arts. University of Virginia. 1923; Master of Arts. Indiana Uni- versity. I927: Student, University of Porto Rico. University of Paris; Instructor in Romania Languages. Indiana University. Northwestern University. ADELAIDE A. MAYO, B.A.. M.A .......................................... Oahhurst Circle Assislanl Professor of Nursing Education CLAUDE MATTHEWS MACFALL. PH.D ................................ West Main Street Assistanl Professor of Biology NILS HAMMARSTAND. B.A,, M.A.. M.SC.. PH.D ............................. Cube Drive Assistanl Professor of lhe History of Arl Bachelor of Am. University of Upsala. Sweden; Master of Arts. University of Stockholm. Sweden; Master of Science in Civil Engineering. Royal Polytechnic Institute, Stockholm; Student in Arch- itecture at the Royal Polytechnic Institute in Munich; Studied Art in Paris: Archaeological and Art Studies at Harvard University; Author of various articles on architectural subjects. published in America as well as in various European countries. MRI ARCHIBALD B. SHEPPERSON. M.A.. PH.D ............................... Chancellor Sheel Acting Assistant Professor of English MRS. MARY JEFFCOTT HAMBLIN. B.A ....................................... University Acling Adviser lo Women OFFICERS 0F ADMINISTRATION HARRY CLEMONS. B.A.. M.A ........ . ............................... l28 Chancellor Sheet Librarian 1' T; $ B K; $ P $ Chin0; Bachclor of Art: and Muler of Am. Wesleyan Univenily. I902. I905; Master of Am. Princeton. I905; Auiuanl in Library. Welleyln. 1902-03; Scribner Fellow in English. Princeton. 1903-04; Jacobus Fellow of Princeton in Residence at Oxford. England. l906-07; lmlruclor in English. Princeton. 1904-06. l907-08; Reference Librarian. Princeton. I908- l3; Professor of English. University of Nanking. China. I9I3-20; Librariln. University of Vir- ginia. I927-. MARY LOUISE DINWIDDIE ............................................ Wes: Main Street Assistant Librarian Instructor in Library Economics in the Univertity of Virgini: Summer Quarter :ince I913, And in the Univeuily of Virginia Extension tince I922; Preaidenl of the Virginia Library Association. I926. VIRGINIA EMMA MORAN. B.A., M.A ......................................... Moniebello I Registrar ELMER IRVING CARRUTHERS ........ . ..................................... Eu! Rnnge Bursar A K 4'; Secretary lo the Rector and the Board of Visitors; Member Executive Commitlee. Charlollelville and Albemarle Chapter of the Red Cross; lnnructor in Accounting; Permanent Chairman of lhe Finance Commillee of CORKs AND CUan, Incorporated. CHARLES HAROLD HARCOURT THOMAS ............................. McCormick Road Assistant la the Bursar n K A, CARRIE WORRELL RICHARDSON .................................... Faculty Apartments Sccrclary la the President Secretary Alumni Board of Trustees. University of Virginia Endowmenl Fund. mu MARY BERNICE PROFFIT ................................................. Charloltelville Secretary lo the Dean JOHN A. HORNSBY. M.D .............................................. Ellie Wood Avenue Superintendent of the University Hospital CATHERINE REBECCA LlPOP GRAVES .............................. North Second Street Law Librarian RETIRED ON THE CARNEGIE FOUNDATION ORMOND STONE. M.A ................................................. Clifton Stalion. Va. Professor of Practical Astronomy MILTON WYLIE HUMPHREYS. M.A.. PH.D.. LL.D ........................ Werlland Slreel Professor of Creek ALBERT HENRY TUTTLE, MS ........................................... University Place Miller Professor of Biology and Agriculture FRANCIS PERRY DUNNINGTON, 35.. CE. M.E ........................ University Avenue Professor of Analylical and Industrial Chemislry HOWARD WINSTON. CE ................................................. Colonn-de Club Regislrar CHARLES ALFRED GRAVES. M.A.. B.L.. LL.D ............................... Second Street Professor of Law THOMAS'FITZ-HUC-H. M.A ................................................ IX West Lawn Professor af Lalin TUB! 1m memoriam iharlzs glitch $rahes fora at meetbum's Rina, leemarle County. Va. Qttuber 20, 1850 Etch at Gnibersitp, Virginia jaubemher 10. 1928 The career of lhe leachcr. even though it be one of dislinclion. a:ldom leads either to financial independence or lo broad national fame. Yet the great teacher's rewards are none the less real. and lo him may well come what President Eliot once called the durable satisfuclions of life. For the great teacher live: long afler his deaih in the enriched traditions of the institution he served. and in the awakened curiosity. the broadened vision and the ennobled personality of the students who have sat at his feet. and to whom he has indeed been Camaliel. And so it was with Charles Alfred Graves. To him the primary task of the teacher was to teach, and in the class-room he was at his best. For to this task he brought a keen mind. an unusual faculty for clear expression. rare courage and independence of thought and, above all. a conscientious thoroughness that is all too rare in modern pedagogy. Students who had sat under him frequently remarked in after years how well his teachings stuck; they were rarely forgotten. In his teaching he was vivid yet always restrained. dramatic but never theatrical. entertaining though he never lowered himself into becoming cheap. In his early life. Mr. Graves came under the living spell of General Robert E. Lee. and from the great Confederate Chieftain he acquired a high conception of duty that was a dominant passion in all his later life. His whole life was a practical expression of fidelity to this lofty ideal. And yet with this went a personal charm. a gentleness and charity. a sweetness and light that lcept him ever from being puritanical or narrow in his judgment of the conduct. or his respect for the opinion. of others. After Mr. Graves had completed a half-century of teaching at Washington and Lee University and the University of Virginia, his former pupils tendered him a testimonial banquet in the great city of New York. The toastmaster had been Solicitor General of the United States. American Ambassador to the Court of St. James. and was the Democratic candidate for the presidency of the United States. Around the table sat men who had risen high in the legal profession. gathered from all parts of this country. And the crowning thought in the minds of all was: uhxlhat- ever measure of success I have attained has been due in no small measure to the teachings and the personal inlluence of Charles Alfred Graves.n Surely there could b f w hne m endurin tributes to a reat teacher. 6 c r or 0 g g ARMISTEAD M. Donna. 1m memoriam mama Emit $umpbrey5 30m in annbrier Qllounty. w. Va. Smytemhet 15. 1844 Eieb at Ginihersitp, Virginia aubember 20. 1928 When l. as a fledglin graduate student. tint knew Dr. Humphreye. he was already a good grey scholar of fty-eiaht. I can see him now as he sat in the old hardawood ruth-bottomed chair whlch I still think of as the Chair of Greek . caressing hie thln In I peculiar way he had. or vainly trying to get his long legs under the classroom table which we: even then wheezy with its pleurisy of years. and scored by the idle pen-knives of many college generations. There he would sit and read. translate and expound, unfolding tha riches of his mind. He never lectured. in uet and formal fashion, and was a great diurenioniet. The shrewd or mischievous student. unprepared In Thucydide: or Herodotue. knew only too well how to divert the current of thought from the plain: of Attica into Virginia's holds. and for an hour. forgetting Mlltiades or Pericles. the stand pvofeuor would become the young eauer-eyed Confederate gunner. while we followed Lee and Jackson through their campaigns. until the clau-bell brought the story to a etartled clone. and the next assignment was hurriedly announced. In human contact: Humphrey; was a shy men. sensitive and retiring. Social gather- ings made him unhappy and ill at ease. but at a chance encounter he was all simplicity. natural and friendly. and as fond of talking as any Socrates. Fondest of all he was of rambling through the countryside. walking always with knees slightly bent and shoulders somewhat bowed.--but not from fatigue. for he was tireless. and his leg even in old age was as round and muscular as a youth's. Some trophy he always brought home from these tramps,-some rare blossom, it might be. with half a hope of meeting a friend who would want to know all about its habitat and structure, or a huge sack of hickory nuts to be fed to the squirrels which swarmed in the big oaks of his yard. Such. at a glance. was the man whom I consider to have been endowed with a larger measure of intellectual genius than any other I have known. Let us attempt a bare catalogue of his attainments. Professor of Greek in two universities. Vanderbilt and Virginia. and Professor of Latin and Greek in two others. Washington and Lee and Texas. he was. to begin with, as fine a Latinist as Hellenist. With both Iiteratures he was thoroughly familiar. and could write both languages with superlative skill. Sanskrit and Hebrew he acquired by private study. and offered a course in Hebrew at Washington and Lee. In the modern held his stock of languages included French. German. Spanish and Italian. in the last two of which he was his own teacher. In French and German he wrote for publication, acting for years as American reviewer for two classical periodicals published in Paris and Berlin respec- tively. A university professorship in Modern Languages was once offered him, and he declined another professorship in English. In Mathematics he twice taught the advanced classes for a considerable period in two of the universities which he served. and at a third he gave a course in Astronomy. Two American universities offered him Pro- fessorships in Physics. Geology and Botany were among his self-taught hobbies, and he gave a course in Botany at the University of Texas. In the science of Ballistics he was an authority. and a valued contributor to the highly technical American Journal of Artillery. It may not be amiss to add that he was as keen a player of the intellectual game of chess as he was of the princely game of war, and amused himself by originat- ing many intricate and baffling problems. Finally, among the many offers he declined was one, twice tendered. of the Presidency of a State University. In view of this all but Aristotelian versatility, quite pardonable was the exaggeration of those who were fond of saying hereabouts that on a month's notice Old Milt could fill any Chair in the University. As a teacher this great scholar must be found wanting. if by teacher one means a task-master or driIl-master. or a purveyor of easy information to semisomnolent under- graduates. But as a teacher in a true university. as distinct from school or college. he left little to be desired. For while the idle or indifferent student was perhaps sent empty away. no earnest seeker after knowledge ever found a better source. Upon him one's mind could rest as upon a deep. broad bed of authority. No trouble was too great for him to take in explanation of the student's difficulties. Every problem was pared down to its central core. and all came clear in the end. if clarity was feasible. Otherwise one got a frank I do not know or else we do not know , but. so profound was the man's learning. more often the former than the latter. In classical scholarship Humphrey's interests were predominantly linguistic and gram- matical. rather than literary and aesthetic. He was the scientist in literature. One heard less about the glory that was Greece than about the quaint habits of the Dative and the vagaries of the Optative. But after all there is no royal road to the learning which alone brings literary enjoyment. And anyone who thinks that Humphreys was. as a critic. deficient. in sensibility. would do well to ponder. say. his commentary on the Antigone, where. after the spade-work of textual. syntactical and metrical analysis, the student comes upon nuggets of pure literary gold. This is not the place in which to discuss in detail his published writings. Suffice it to say that he published both abundantly and brilliantly. and that he won for himself a place in the front rank of the scholars of his day. Not long ago an ex-President of the American Philological Association.--an office in which Humphreys had many years before preceded hime told me that. being recently in the South in attendance on a meeting, he had gone out of his way to make a sort of pilgrimage to Charlottesville. in order . said he to pay my respects to Professor Humphreys. I have never met him. but I regard him as one of the grand old men of American Scholarship. Yet withal so modest was he that in old age he could write. in speaking of his first publication.ahis Valedictory Oration at Washington and Lee in 1869,- l must confess that it now seems to me a rather tame production. as does everything else I ever wrote. And as the aged Aeschylus makes in his own epitaph no mention of his mighty tragedies. but exults only in the prowess he displayed at Marathon against the long-haired Medes . so does our aged scholar write. in reminiscence of his Confederate youth. I became known as 'the first gunner of Bryan's Battery'. a title in which I take more pride than in any other ever bestowed upon me. Truly here was a man who deserved well of his country. for he increased her prestige in the world of scholarship, and of his State. for he served her manfully through the dark days of war and the darker days of Reconstruction. and of the community of scholars known as the University of Virginia. to which by his achievements he brought fresh distinction and renown. ROBERT HENNING WEBB, 1m memoriam $r. glhzrt letehre horn in Saltimote, nib. Gautier 4, 1873 Etch at anthersity, Va. themhet 18. 1928 There are menemany menefor whom teaching is a profession. There are a few men for whom teaching is neither a profession. nor a mode of life. but life itself. In every n e we may identify this band of rue spirits. for they are the spiritual Children 0 Socrates. These children cannot distinguish between life and teaching: for them teaching knows no confines. no beginning and no end. for its aim is imm- itable. Master and pupil are co-workers in a creative enterprise. In the relation of master and pupil they Hnd the very image of the relation belween deity and man. Where the teacher is Socratic, the pupil becomes Socratic: his learning is growth, and his growth is achievement. Because the achievement is life itself. life in its most dynamic and luminous form. it is marked by peril and conditioned at every moment by adventure. But unlike all other adventures, it can never fail. For the man that teaches in the Socratic spirit. and for the student that learns in that spirit, every failure in the adventure of thought is recognized as a triumphant vindication of the claims of mind. In the pursuit of Truth the recognition of failure is a measure of success. When Socratic master and pupil perceived that creative effort has been abortive, they perceive the inexhaustible resources of the human spirit. The Socratic teacher sees in this no paradox but rather a definition of his objective: and the pu- pil, even though he be laggard. faint-hearted. and bewildered, has shared more largely than he realizes in an adventure that succeeds. The Socratic teacher is ir- resistible. and the most indifferent become pupils. Within this group of Socratic teachers Albert Lefevre must be numbered. His life and his teaching were one. This he recognized. It is doubtful. however, if he knew how intimate and profound was this identification. It would be difficult to find a teacher more elfective within the classroom. But we should be pitifully blind were We not to perceive that his teaching reached far beyond such limits. The 'Little Doc' of undergraduate aliection was a teacher in every moment and in every situation. His teaching was confined neither by time nor circumstance. ln moods of merriment and joy there was always the flesh of insight. the momentary revelation of deep sympathy and the sparkle of a ripened wisdom. His anger was never blind, and those who felt its force and sensed its direction would perceive. however dimly. an object worthy of hate. Life without companionship seemed to Albert Lefevre the irradiation of personality that quickens and informs. There are many students who will recall that a stroll to and from the lecture-room with the Little Doc brought a penetrating and decisive inHuence. The hours within the classroom were but a small part of his teaching. To him. as to a Socratic counsellor. were brought the most varied problems of life, by students. by friends. and by colleagues. And every one who Went to him for counsel departed with some increase of mastery over himself and his problem. Within the University of Virginia. its corporate life and tradition. Albert Lefevre found his spiritual home. He knew more than one institution as student and as teacher. But with his appointment as Corcoran Professor of Philosophy in I925 his life became indissolubly one with that of the institution. Its tradition he absorbed and it became effectively embodied within him. He grasped that which was real in the life of the University. and penetrating that reality with his own mind and per- sonality he gave to it new expressions. Albert Lefevre found within the Univer- sity's tradition a singularly happy setting for the teaching he sought to do. Philosophy, he knew. begins in wonder, as Plato attirmed; and philosophy. he believed. ac- complished its purpose only when it made valid its ancient claim to fulfill that wonder by the guidance of life. Convinced of the beauty and truth that dwelt within our corporate life, it was his heart's desire that the teaching of Philosophy in the Univer- sity of Virginia should enlarge the vision given by that beauty and truth. In devotion to this aim Albert Lefevre never faltered. for beyond all other things loyalty was most precious to him. In his loyalties he was steadfast, whether to friends or to the goods that are a blessing. He was loyal to his enmities. For his enemy he had sympathy and compassion and forgiveness. and the defense that arises from these. But for the object of his enmityafor the malign spirits that take posses- sion of men. for bigotry and intolerance. for pretense and masquerade.-he had an unswerving hate. Wlith Albert Lefevre. however, hate could exist only because it is an expression of love and loyalty. In the final object of his love. in Truth itself. he knew that the companionship of men must abide. Albert Lefevre died in the early morning of December the eighteenth. 1928. in his hfty-sixth year. He was. we know. not one to desert his post. For those who are rightly discerning. he still lives within the institution that he loved. ALBERT C. A. BALZ. 3511 memoriam Er. frauds kenry $111M Born in Ieesbutg, Virginia Gttoher 14, 1829 Bieb at anthersity. Virginia Zluly 5. 1928 At the Finals of 1897. my father Willilm R. Abbot, of Bellvue High School, deliver- ed the Innual address before the Alumni. He recalled the professors who had made up the Faculty in his student dayt-uy 1856. Mr. Smith. the only one left by the passing of 41 years, wu seated on the plaform among hh colleagues. At the climax of a long period, my father turned and bowed to him with the words: whom living we delight to honor. A wave of emotion swept us. We all loved Mr. Smith. Most of us had known him in the classroom. where three times a week we saw him wave his wizard fingers over experiments which made us clap-so beautiful they were. Others knew him only from having passed under the arcades a simple and dignified gentleman who saluted them. though undergraduates, with the same gracious gravity he would have used toward Lord Kelvin. Even then we thought of him as an old man. But he lived for more than thirty years after that. and preserved to the end of his long life that sweet serenity which had so impressed us in our youth. Indeed. I think serenity was the keymote of his power. He never fussed. he never was in a fume. When he was preparing an experi- ment, he used to say: I hope. gentlemen. I hope that this will turn out as l have said. It always turned out as he had said. And then the beatific smile that play- ed serenely over his face. while we youngsters stamped to show our pleasure! Once when it was a question of proving that water expands in freezing. he filled a metal cylinder and packed it with ice and salt into what looked like an old ice.cream freezer. tMost likely it was. for after the Rotunda burned we had mostly just such jury apparatus as could be hurriedly got togetherl. Well. he packed this thing and set it aside on one end of the lecture table, then started at once to absorb our atten- tion in something else. Suddenly there was an explosion. Bits of stuff blew about. Mr. Smith folded his hands and looked at the ruins with an approving nod: I hoped it would. This memory will possibly be common to all his students. He doubtless did this experiment every year. Maybe all professors of physics have this manner and impress their students in this way. Maybe so-l have not heard of it. Mr. Frank Smith was an artist. I had no talent for physics. nor the remotest wish nor expectations of becoming a physicist but my life was influenced by that course in physics. because Mr. Smith gave it. I could not enter his classroom without feeling there the presence of a great and lofty spirit. One felt. on coming out of his lectures. an Aristotelian katharsis. as if one had been hearing great music. or had been through a spiritual experience. He was an artist. His prayers were beautiful too. Professors used to make extempore prayers in those days-I cannot recall under just what circumstances: it may have been in the regular chapel services. if the invited preacher were a Methodist or a Baptist. Or perhaps it was in Y. M. C. A. meetings of some sort. But I was always glad when he stood up to pray. His voice rang out-but tranquillyaand he knew how to choose the words that would make the heart leap up. You had the feeling that to him. God might listen. I shall not repeat the chronology of his life. It makes part of the admirable reminis- cences of Mr. Smith. written by Mr. Thornton and published September 1928 in the Alumni news. The Persian scholar told his dying king. who wished, even at the last to know the history of man. that it could be condensed into three words: il naquit. il souffrit. il mourut. But he was born, he suffered. he died, does not end it for Mr. Francis H. Smith. He still lives on-trite as is the saying-in the memories of his old students. May we all inherit and deserve so fair an immortality! FRANCIS H. ABBOT. 3m memoriam 30bit QEager Qtnhman II 18011! at Bbilabelpbia, Bennsplhania 1905 Etch at Bbilabelpbia, Qennsplhania Slanuary 12, 1929 The announcement of the sudden death of John Eager Codman II who died from pneumonia after a brief illness, brought sorrow into the hearts of his many friends. At the Episcopal Academy in Philadelphia. where he completed his preparatory work. he excelled as a swimmer and as a member of the crew. After his graduation from Episcopal. he entered the University of Virginia in the Fall of I924. Here he easily won a position on the Swimming Team and gained prominence in such through- out his four years as a student. In his senior year he was honored by being elected Captain of the Swimming Team. Just as marked as his success as an athlete, was his ability as a student; his achieve- ments as such having ranked him among the highest in his classes. He was a mem- ber of Phi Sigma Kappa. He was graduated from Virginia in June of I928 and was just at the doorway of his career when death stayed the heart that had always beat for his fellow man. Everyone who knew him, loved and admired him for his kind but commanding spirit, for his high sense of integrity and honor. for his devotion to clean sportsman- ship. A leader to the end. C. A. P. AND E. P. W. 1m memoriam mbomas iborstielh 92mg, 3h. 90m in marinara, jaurth Qtarolina warm 2, 1907 mien in jaurfolk, Virginia gugust 3, 1928 In the fall of I925. Tommie. as we all knew him. entered this University. Little known upon his arrival. Tommie soon made a great many friends. and as the years rolled by. he became enshrined in the hearts of all those who knew him. He was born in Tarboro. North Carolina. on March 2. I907. His preparatory training for college was received at Oceana High School in Occana, Virginia. where he graduated in I925. While a student there he took part in many social and athletic activities. and attained the admiration and love of his schoolmates by his unfailing good humor and willingness to serve others. As a student in the University. Tommie's winning personality soon found for him a place in the high esteem of his fellow students. During the latter part of his hrst year. he became a member of Theta Chi Fraternity. Tommie was also a member of the Wrestling Squad and participated in other forms of athletics. No words can express our grief nor tell how much his loss has meant to us. There will always be a place in our memories for that true gentlemen of service, Tommie. A. M. XV. 3m Memoriam matter $unamp gamer, 3r. Mam in Rehlanbs, Qtalifornta Eercmber 3, 1905 Etch in jt'tunttlair, 392m Slump Elanuatp 22, 1929 Walter Bonamy Power. In. died suddenly on the morning of January 22. I929. He was an applicant for a degree the following June. He was born in Redlands. California. on December 3. I905, the son of Waite: Bonamy Power and Laura Stone Power. In preparation for college he attended St. Luke's School in Wayne. Pennsylvania. from which institution he graduated in I924 and entered the University of Virginia. matriculating in the Academic Department. Very soon afterward he became a member of the Delta Phi frater- nity. here retaining the prominence in athletics and literary activities which already had been gained in early school training. Bud was a person of a quiet nature. whose most lovable characteristics and re- markable sense of humor did not appear on the surface. He had the highest ideals of honor, truth. and loyality. and those who were drawn within the close circle of his companionship quickly recognized the unusual and magnetic qualities of a true friend, instantly commanding extreme admiration, aHection. and confidence. The memory of a splendid feeling for the finer things of life. the honorable name of a true and generous gentleman are left by him for those who mourn his loss. Certainly the expression of his association here may be summed up by the Words of the principal of St. Luke's in recommending him to the University of Virginia. He is a boy of wonderful character. a leader among his fellows . W. s. 0.. 1. K.. 1a.. R. L. H.. J. H. H.. w. T. H.. 13. hi, -Fi..H..-.. , 3111 memoriam Statues keitb $pmmers, 3h. Born in ?Bronxbille, 32ml 330th Eanuarp 4, 1907 Etch at the Enihetsitp ., Eetemhet 3, 1928 James Keith Symmers. Jr.. was born in Bronxville. New York. January 4. I907. the son of James Keith Symmers and Agnes Shuey Symmers. In preparation for college he attended the Taft School at Watertown, Connecticut. from which institution he was graduated in I926. and the next fall entered Harvard University. For own a year he was a student of the University of Virginia from the Fall of I927 till his death on Monday, December 3. I928. He was a true and fine gentleman. with a deep feeling of reverence for the ideals. customs, and traditions of the University. His warm and light-hearted gaiety at once attracted all who came in contact with him. As acquaintance ripened into friendship, his qualities of loyalty. generosity. and frankness com- manded a deep respect and admiration. S. H. VAN K.. JR. 1111 memoriam katrison williams, Sir. $0111 in 1mm 33m Qtitp erbtuarp 6, 1904 Etch in Eanbille. Virginia 31qu 22, 1928 Harrison Williams. Jr.. was born on XVashington Square. New York City. on the 6th day of February. I904. He was the son of Harrison Williams, of the New York Bar. and Jane Kirby Abbott Williams. and was of the eleventh American generation on both sides of his family. When Harrison was only live years old, he met his first tragedy in the death of his most loving and devoted mother. Afterwards. his father purchased an estate in Loudoun County. Va.. upon which. after his remarriage, he built a home, known as Williamsted. and thus in l9l3 Harrison came to Virginia to live. Of his years at the Episcopal High School. his headmaster. Mr. Hoxton. writes. uAlways cheerful and ever ready to lend a hand in any school enterprise. he was a pleasure to those who came in contact with him. A more loyal E. H. 5. boy never liVed. and we, too. are missing him and his occasional visits to the school. Harrison will not be forgotten at the place where he spent four years of his boyhood and where his bright and happy disposition. his eagerness to be of service to others and his lovable character helped to make life here better and sweeter for the rest of us. We are grateful that we can claim him as an 'Old Boy'. He was l3 years old when he went to the University of Virginia in the autumn of I922. Going there with a host of friends. he rapidly added to their number and developed a loyalty and affection for his college. which in depth and intensity. was in keeping with his character. The six years he spent there. until his graduation in June. l928, as a Bachelor of Science in Engineering. were years of great development and character building. He seemed to instinctively find the best in others and was as much loved by his professors as by his fellow students. He joined the Zeta Psi Fraternity in his first year at the University and had a very active part in the building of its house on Rugby Road. During his college years he was a member of the Trigon Engineering Society; Madison Hall Cabinet. I925; Associate Business Manager. Engineering journal. I924- 25; Assistant Manager of Boxing, I924; Ger- man Club; lnter-Fraternity Council, l924-26. Upon his graduation. he joined a field party of the Virginia Highway Commission. surveying for airports. On Sunday. the 22nd of July. I928. he. with a friend. started by motorcycle from Danville. Va., for High Point, N. C., to spend the day with old college friends. Just over the North Carolina line a valve blew out in their machine. throwing both boys violently. Harrison sustained a fracture of the skull from which he died at the Danville Memorial Hospital that afternoon at 2:00 o'clock. His funeral tool: place from St. James Church. Leesburg. on the 24th of July. and the next day he was laid to rest in the family plot in Forest Lawn Cemetery, in Buffalo. N. Y.. where lie members of live generations of his family. CORKS 6 CU RLS A Letter to Albemarle Autumn again must be upon the hills; These are the days that I remember best: The distant hnolls litre blue smoke in the west; And evening coming, with an air that chills The earth and makes its byways smell of death; The red leaves with the yellow murmuring; A thought of houses and how rich a thing It is to draw awhile this living breath. Should twilight now be something strange and still. And sad with deep autumnal color, fill Your hearth with flame, and light your pipe. Something too dark the seasons in their going Cover and steal away from our slow knowing, But we shall know it when the time is ripe. LAWRENCE LEE. Copyright, 1928. by Charles Scribner'n Sons. l791 , V momw to NET... 023...0$ MI... AFTER THE Fun: The Rotunda Fire N a Sunday morning in October, 1895, the Rotunda and the adjoining audi- torium were destroyed by tire. Faulty insulation was responsible for a short circuit in the wiring located in the roof of the auditorium. Uncle Henry. official curfew toller. noticed smoke rising from the auditorium while he was ringing the bell for chapel and in his excitement continued to ring for two hours. There was no adequate flre-thting apparatus in Charlottesville and appeals for help were sent to Staunton and neighboring towns and even to Richmond. The auditorium was doomed. but attempts were made to save the Rotunda by blasting the connecting passageway but the charges of dynamite failed to dislodge the heavy timbers along which the lire crept to the Rotunda. Arriving at the scene of action. the Staunton fire company discovered that the water pressure in the mains was too low to eject a stream from the hose lines. And so, accord- ing to a contemporary account of the fire, nStrong men stood around helplessly, women watched with tear brimmed eyes, and servants watched with awe the destruction of a symbol of learning far above their comprehension. But those late Victorians did not realize what a blessing was being bestowed upon the University, for the tire marked a transition in its life. Two rather valuable buildings were destroyed and the original charts of the Lewis and Clark Expedition. together with a collection of ubirds, beasts, and var- mits. went up in blue smoke. but the loss represented a sacrifice that bore fruition. Virginia for the first time discovered that she had loyal alumni ready to stand behind her in a crisis. The alumni not only helped restore the Rotunda but also were largely instru- mental in the erection of the three buildings at the lower end of The Lawn. A renaissance occurred and financial aid was contributed to the University; new buildings were erected and the faculty, which for ten years previous had received practically no salaries. were paid regular incomes for their services. ISIJ M- -.- v4- PRESIDENTS OF DEPARTMENTS CAIDI fMl INC $Taw warm mmmmamn 0.2m04x01x m0... mFZJRuZAAZx Applicants for Academic Degrees, June, I929 Bachelors of Science in Architecture LUCIAN MINOR DENT FREDERICK HENRY ALLEN JOSEPH EVERETTE FAUBER, Jr. LOGAN CLARENCE CLINE. Jr. THOMAS RICHARDS LEACHMAN GEORGE LINDENBERGER VAN BIBBER Bachelor of Science in Biology WILLIAM CLARK BARRETT. Jr. Bachelors of Science in Chemistry EUGENE HAMILTON SMITH HOWARD SWINEFORD YEATTS Bachelor of Science in Geology FRED ANDEREGG Bachelors of Science in Commerce JULIEN HARRISON JOHN HENRY MASSIE. Jr. WILLIS GREEN MUNCY PAUL CROSECLOSE MUSTARD ROBERT MUIRHEAD REED SYLVAN BURK ROTHSCHILD PAUL JACKSON ARRINGTON JAMES LEO CRAFT EDGAR MANKIN CROUCH RICHARD FOSTER DeBUTTS JOHN DRURY RHODES FRANK EVANS FARWELL HARRY RANDOLPH GRAVES DOUGLAS ANDREW SALE CLAYTON BAILEY STEED WILLIAM FRANKLIN STEED ALFRED LEWIS STEVENS JAMES EDWARD WARD. Jr. ALFRED PRENTICE WELSH RALPH CARLETON WHITE Bachelors of Science in Education ANNIE MARTIN HANCOCK MARGARET HESS ANN NEWTON HILLSMAN XENIA RUTH HOLMES HILDA PRICE JARVIS STEPHAN HERMANN KNEISEL WILLIAM BERNARD KNIGHT VIVIEN LUPTON ELIZABETH ALLEN MARGARET ARUNDALE HENRI PHILIP AYRES MAUD GLANVILLE BAPTIST MARY HENRIAN BASSETT MARGIE VIRGINIA BINFORD FLORA ESTHER BURGESS HENRY CLAY BURNETTE GEORGE WASHINGTON BURTON CARROLL CATTERTON VIRGINIA WEBB COCKE EDWARD ALVIN DAVIS ETTA STERLING DIGGS MARGARET CLIFFORD EAKLE ETHEL LOUISE McCLOUD MADELINE MONTAGU McMURDO JAMES WALKER McCLEARY LUCILE WOOD MAHONE LRNA EULA MARTIN Bachelors of Science ELIOT LAMAR HOLMAN WILLIAM THOMAS JARVIS. Jr. ROBERT ARCHER GOODWIN JONES JOHN LYTTLETON JUSTICE LAWRENCE R. KIRKPATRICK GEORGE WILDON LAURIER LLOYD WALTER STUART LOEBL RALEIGH THOMAS McLAUGHLIN. Jr HARVEY LEE MARSTON WILLIAM ROBERT MARTIN JULIAN RUTHERFORD MEADE DAVID BROCKMAN MONSKY WILLIAM A. MOOMAW PIERRE ALBERT MOORE JOSEPH KINNEAR MORFORD LINDSAY AVERETT MOTLEY. Jr. HARRY ARTHUR ORNSTEIN ROBERT SEDGEWICK OSBORN WILLIAM HUTCHINGS OVERBEY ISAAC PAUL PERKINS LAYTON PLATT ROGER VAN NEST POWELSON WALTER BONAMY POWER. Jr. MERIWETHER LEWIS PRICE. Jr. JOHN DEAN QUARLES BENJAMIN APRIL VERNON C. AUSTIN. Jr. FRANK CHAUNCEY BATTEY, Jr. ROBERT RAMSEY BLACK REEVES BROWN JOSIAH GAY BRYANT FRANK RUSSELLE CAPPS RANDOLPH WARNER CHURCH HERBERT COHEN HERMAN SOLOMON COHEN EUGENE de BULLET EDWARD ARTHUR DELARUE. Jr. MARCUS WALTHALL DINWIDDIE CHARLES GIBBS DOUGHERTY THEODORE QUENTIN DUGGINS MATTHEW TILGHMAN EARLE RALPH OWEN EASTON RAYMOND SMITH EDMUNDSON HUGH BOSWELL FEATHERSTON LAWRENCE MASON FENWICK FLOYD WILKS GARRETT HAGOP M. GASPARIAN CHARLES LOUIS GILBERT JOHN HARTWELL HARRISON GUY DEWEY HICKS ROBERT LLOYD HOLCOMB CLARENCE W. HOLLAND. Jr. Bachelors of Art ADOLF PHARO GAGGE CARL JOYCE GILBERT HOWARD HAYWARD HACKLEY CHARLES DISBROW LLOYD SAMUEL HODGES McGHEE. Jr. CHARLES E. A. MARSHALL. Jr. EDWARD WATTS NORRIS BERNARD NICOLAU NIGHTINGALE ALGERNON SIDNEY BUFORD NOLTI ASHBY PATTESON PERRY JOHN HENRY PURSE HOMER GILMER RICHEY PAUL EDMUNDS SACKETT I 5.3 I GORDON JOHN AULD SAMUEL RICE BAKER RICHARD REYNOLDS BEASLEY EDMUND FONTAINE BROUN. Jr. HARRISON LEIGH BUCK THOMAS STERLING CLAIBORNE ROSARIO CARMEL COCO MARTIN STUART CURTLER JACK PRESTON DALTON. Jr. EUGENE AUGUST DIETRICH, Jr. JACK MERCIER DOYLE J. STUART FITZHUGH, Jr. GERALD FLAUM KING LOGAN FORSYTH MARGARET RANDOLPH MacLEOD MARY MAUPINE GUY PRUDEN MORRIS MARY ESSIE PIERCE RUTH WHARTON RAMSEY MARY DOUGLAS RICHESON PETER B. SMITH. Jr. JAMES THOMAS STEWART ANNE CATHERINE SWART HARRY JAMES TARDY FRANCES MOORMAN WALKER CLOYD BYARS WARREN LEIGH CARRINGTON WHALEY SARAH M. WILKES SUE PRISCILLA WYGAL MIDDLETON ELLIOTT RANDOLPH CHARLES GORDON REID. Jr. SAMUEL ROSNER BENJAMIN FRANKLIN D. RUNK ANTHONY BREWIS RUSSELL NATHAN ANDREW SABATINO SANFORD BILLINGS SCHULHOFER FELIX SCHWARTZ MELVIN MCCABE SCOTT ANDREW SHAPIRO HOWARD HALLEY SHOCKEY RICHARD TALBOT SOLLENBERGER JOHN NEWTON STONEHAM ALEXANDER BELL STUMP JOHN BASS TAYLOR LAWRENCE ST. CLAIR THORNE JOSEPH AUGUSTINE TURNER. Jr. NELSON THOMAS TURNER FREDERICK WILLIAM TWYMAN. ll EMANUEL VOGEL THOMAS LEONARD WADE. Jr. JOHN REDMOND WALSH. Jr. WILLIAM STONE WEEDON VICTOR FREDERICK WERTHEIMER BEVERLEY TUCKER WHITE FRANCIS CHARLES WILLIAMS JESSE BIRCH WILSON. ll OSCAR PILCHER SADLER HARRY LeCATO SMITH. Jr. JOHN MORTON SMITH JOHN PEYTON SNEAD. Jr. GORDON BRUCE THAYER JAMFS WALTER THOMAS ROSWELL DELMEGE TRIMBLE. Jr. 8. ROGER TYLFR. Jr. W'LLIAM NIEBUHR WEAVER DAVID IRVINE WHITE RICHARD THWEATT WILSON. Jr. ALVIN GRAYDON WOOD WILLIAM CARSTFN WULBERN JOHN COOK WYLLIE THEN WE CADEMIC DEPARTMEN on f ABOUT .9091 2w I figmufufr Cu mam; 7b 17- Jut 1273.1, fdtLy L 57ft fad, .9va 114 16mm? relu'c hr, fuJ - 5 ' i. M'st ' r w 4.6.7 X 1:, mil? mailer: caveat: W I OFFICERS HARRISON FITZGERALD FLIPPEN ............................................ President SAMUEL HODCES MCGHEE ............................................... Vicc-Presl'dcnl WILLIAM HOCE WOOD ....................................................... Secretary PERCIVAL HUNTER FAULCONER ............................................. Hislorian MEMBERS NAME YEAR IN COLLEGE HOME ADDRESS FLETCHER JONES AARON ............... I ........................ NorwaIIs. Connecticut A T. MAXWELL WHITMAN ABRAMOVITZ. .. I ...................... New York. New York CARROL FRANKLIN ADAMS ............. I ..................... Charlotte C. H.. Virginia First Year Wrestling Team. WILLIAM HOLCOMBE ADAMS ........... I .................... Philadel hia. Pennsylvania JACK FRANKLIN ADLER ................. I ........................... Rorfolk. Virginia Z B T; CoIIcge Topics. CORNEIL DAVIS ADRIANCE. JR .......... I ............................ Galveston. Texas HARRY S. AFFLECK ...................... 3 ......................... San Antonio. Texas 3 A E; A E II; Football Adjunct. FRANK CYRUS ALDERMAN ............. I ......................... Fort Myers. Florida 6 X; Track Adjunct. C. ALEXANDER .......................... I ....................... New York. New York JOSEPH KUNKLE ALEXANDER .......... I .......................... Slaunton. Virginia 4w A 9; First Year Track Squad. WILLIS PEYTON ALEXANDER .......... 2 ...................... CharIollesviIIe. Virginia FREDERICK HENRY ALLEN ............. 4 ....................... New York. New York 2 X; A II; Virginia Reel Associate Editor; French Instructor; First Year Track Team. I926; Track Squad. I927: CORKS AND CURLS Art Staff. I926-27; Assistant in History of Arts; Business Staff Engineering journal, Dean's List. GEORGE SCOTT ALLEN .................. l ....................... New York. New York yum CORKS a cums I929 I Academic Class I NAME YEAR IN COLLEGE HOME ADDRESS LOUIS HASKELL ALLEN ................. 3 .................... Philadelphia. PennsyIvnnIa A X: Football Adjunci. I926. NORBERT ALTSCHUL ................... 2 ....................... New York, New York A E II; Dean's List. SAVORY THOMAS AMATO .............. 2 ........................... Norfolk. Virginia JOHN THOMPSON BROWN AMBLER. . . . I ........................... Roanoke. Virginia K A; Adjunct FootbaII, I928. FRED ANDERECG ........................ 4 ............................ Grenoble, France ALLAN ELLIOTT ANDERSON ........... 2 .......................... SI. Louis. Missouri A E Q; First Year Football Team. DANIEL VIRDEN ANDERSON ............ 3 ............................ Dover. Delaware II K A; Adjunct Manager Baseball I927- 28; Reportcrial SlaII and Associale Editor College Topics.- Deans List. I927- 28; Intermediate Honors. I928 JAMES FRANCIS ANDERSON ............ I ............................ Dover. DeIaware H K A; GIee Club; Busineu StaIf College Topics. CHARLES BRUCE ANDREWS .................................. CharIollcsviIIe, Virginia DAVID KEY ANDREWS .................. I ...................... Chattanooga, Tennessee 2 X; First Year Track Team; Adjunct Swimming. THOMAS CARL ANDREWS ............... 2 ............................ SuIIolk, Virginia WILLIAM EUGENE APPERSON .......... I ........................ Fork Union. Virginia LLOYD ELLIOTT APPLETON, R ......... 2 ............................ Rye. New York 6 A X; Freshman FoolbaII Squa. I927: Freshman Track Squad. I928. BENJAMIN APRIL .................................................. Ballston, Virgmia ID A; Baseball I926- 27- 28; Football. I926 I9I28; V CIub. I926- 27- 28. ELLIS APRIL ....................................................... Ballston. Virginia IF A; Freshman Boxing. I928. JOHN BUTLER ARNOLD ................. 2 ........................ Mexico City. Mexico A T A: A II: Freshman FoolbaII I927; Varsity Football Squad, I928. PAUL JACKSON ARRINGTON ........... 3 .......................... Manassas, Virginia 9 X; A K W; Dean's List. I927-28. GORDON JOHN AULD ................... 4 ..................... Uniontown. Pennsylvania GEORGE CURTIS AUSTIN ............... I ............................. Miami. Florida HOWARD BURR AUSTIN ................ 2 ..................... White PInin's. New York 2 ID E; Virginia Players. JAC ASTOR AUSTIN ..................... 2 ........................ Pine BIuE. Arkansas 2 A E; Freshman Basket-baII Team; Track Nzumemls. JOHN ALFRED AUSTIN ........................................... Warrenlon. VirgInia VERNON C. AUSTIN ..................... 4 ...................... Monroe. North Carolina Iquig; P. K. Society; First Year FoolbaII Team. I925; FoolbaII Squad, I926-27: Football Team. GILES VADEN AYLOR ................... 2 .......................... Red Hill. Virginia MYRON STERN BACHENHEIMER ....... 4 ..................... Wheeling. West Virginia ALBERT HARRIS BAIME ................. I ......................... Newark. New Jeney EDWARD ROUZIS BAIRD ................ I ........................... Norfolk. Virginia B 6 II: First Year FoolbaII Team. CHARLES BRITTON BAKER ............. I ...................... Filchburg. Massachusetts SAMUEL RICE BAKER. . . . . . . . . . . . . I ..... 3 ....................... Montgomery. Alabama I? K III; A II; Dean's Lisl; Intermediate Honors. WILLIAM HARRISON BAKER ........... 2 ................... Four Oaks, NorlI'I CaroIIna CLAYTON CHARLES BALES. JR .......... I ..................... Pennington Cap, Virginia WARREN MCELROY BALLARD .......... I ......................... Lynchbura. Vimima ALFRED SLADE BALLOU ................ 2 .......................... RIcIImoncI. Virgmia Z W: Skull and Keys; Adjunct Manager Track. I928. JOHN BANCROFT. III ..................... I ....................... WiIminglon, DeIawarc A T; Freshman Football Squad, I928. I 97 I l Academic Class 1 NAME YEAR IN COLLEGE HOME ADDRESS DONALD BANE .......................... I ...................... Pittsburgh. Pennsylvania JOSEPH GEORGE BARIESAS ............. 5 .................... Philadelphia. Pennsylvania 3 A E: Y. M. C. A. Board: German Club. GEORGE HOUCHTON BARKLEY ........ I .................... Charleston. South Carolina X '5. EARLY BARKSDALE. ..................... 3 ........................... SulhcrIIn. Virginia ARTHUR CRAWFORD BARLOW ......... 4 ...................... Charlottesville. Virginia A T 0; Freshman Football Squad. I925 JOHN EDWARD BARNES ................ 3 ....................... Birmingham. Alabama 1i P A; A II: FreshmanI Football Squad: Adjunct Manager Boxing: Business SlaII College Taplca; Varsily Boxing SquadI WILLIAM CLARK BARRETT ............. 4 ............................ Norfolk. Virginia B K: Instructor In BIoIogy. I923- 29. JOHN MARTIN BARRINCER ............. I ............................. Flint. Michigan A in First Year Track Team. JAMES SMITH BARRON. JR ............... 2 ...................... Virginia Beach, Virginia HARRY BARSKY ........................ I ......................... Brooklyn. New York ROBERT PARKES BARUCH .............. I ....................... New York. New York K A. FRANK CHAUNCEY BATTEY ............ 4 ........................... Savannah. Georgia X It; P. K. Sociely; SkuII and Keys: Eli Bnnana; AppIicanl for Academic Degree. ELMO PULASKI BATTLE ................. 2 .......................... Washington, D. C. GEORGE LOWELL BAUGHAM ........... Z ........................ Cordonwille. Virginia FREDERICK EDWIN BAUKHACES ....... 2 ........................... Mathews. Virginia MARTIN LUTHER BAUSERMAN ......... I ......................... Woodslock. Virginia HARRY EDGAR BAYLOR. JR ............. I ........................... Slaunlon. Virginia FREDERICK EDWIN BEACHLEY ......... 3 ....................... Hagcnlown, Maryland A X 9; Glee CIub. WILLIAM BENNETT BEAN .............. I .......................... University. Virginia Z W. W. DONALD BEARD ...................... 6 ....................... Hagerstown, Maryland LEE HALL BEASLEY .............. . ...... I ......................... Lynchburg. Virginia It A 9. RICHARD REYNOLDS BEASLEY ......... 4 ......................... Baltimore. MaryIancI A K E: German Club; EII Banana; First Year Cross Country Team; First Year Track Team. I926: Track Squad. I927. CURTIS CHARLES BEATY ................ I .............................. Orange. Texas A X 45. SULLIVAN GALE. BEDELL ............... 2 ......................... Jacksonville, Florida II K A: Dean's List. I928. LAWRFNCE JACK BEECHER ............. 2 ....................... New York. New York BEN BELITT ............................. I ......................... Lynchburg. Virginia HARRY KENNEDY BENHAM ............. 4 ............................. Boyce. Virglnia EMANUEL VICTOR BEN AMIN ................................ New Orleans. Lomsiana Z B T; Freshman Baseball; College TOPICS; C:Iee CIuII. PHILLIP E. BENTON ........................................... Ogdcnsburg New York FRANCIS LEXVIS BERKELEY ............. I .......................... Red HiII. Virginia A. JULIAN BERNSTEIN ................... 2 .......................... York. PcnnsyIvania q? E H. IRVING BERNSTEIN ...................... I .................... Oklahoma Cily, OkIaIIoma Z B T. SIDNEY BERNSTEIN ..................... 2 .......................... York. Pennsylvania 4' E II: Adjunct Swimming. HENRY EMERSON BICCS ................ I ..................... Charlotte, North Carolina I531 CORKS 6 CURLS :15; I Academic Class 1 NAME YEAR IN COLLEGE HOME ADDRESS SAMUEL GREEN BICICS. JR ............... 2 .................... Huntington, West Virginia B H: Virginia Reel Slag. HARRINGTON BISHOP ................... 3 ..................... Harrisburg. PennsyIvnnia Z X; Skull and Keys; First Year Boxing Team. I927; First Year Baseball Team; Boxing Squad. I928. HARRY HARRISON BISSELL ............. I .................... For! Leavenworth. Kansas GEORGE SKINNER BLACK ............... 3 ....................... Hagerslown. Maryland 1? E K; Inlermediale Honors; First Year FoalbaII Team: First Year Wrestling Squad. I927-28. ROBERT RAMSEY BLACK ................ 4 ....................... Hagerstown, Maryland It 2 K; Dean's List; InsII-uclor of French. WILLIAM MARSHALL BLACK. JR ......... I .......................... Lynchburg. Virginia 2 A E; FoolbaII Adjunct. WILLIAM MARSHALL BLACKWELL ..... I .......................... Richmond. Virginia Boxing Adjuncl. JOHN BLADON ........................... 2 ........................... Roanoke. Virginia INA Baskel- baII Squad. I928- 29. STANLEY JAMES BLAIR ................. I .................... Asbury Park, New Jersey ALLEN BLANK ............................ 3 .......................... Jamaica. New York THOMAS BLATT .......................... I ....................... Harrisonburg. Virginia HOWARD BRADLEY BLOOMER. JR ....... 3 ............................ Delroil, Michigan WILLIAM EARL BOEHM .................. I ..................... RoseIIe Park. New Jersey JOHN TRAVERSE BOLLINC .............. I ................... Charleston, West Virginia 2 X: Boxing Adjunct. JOSEPH BROWNING BOND. JR ........... 2 ..................... Swarthmore. Pennsylvania $ v K. JOHN JOHNSTON BOND ................. I .......................... Tallahassee. FIorida 9 X: Adjuncl Manager Baskel- ball; Adjunct CORKS AND CURLS. MOREY LEE BOOTH ..................... 3 ........................ Owensboro. Kentucky A W; P. K. Sociely; Skull and Keys; T.lAL.K.A., Adjunct Manager Football. I927-28; Assisianl Manager Football. I929. CHARLES MEICS BOSWELL .............. 2 ......................... Chase Cily. Virginia WILBUR FISK BOSWELL ................. I ............................ Decatur, Alabama t1, A 9: Boxing Adjunct. GEORGE SIMMERMAN BOURNE ......... I ......................... WylheviIIe. Virginia JOHN NEWTON BOWDEN ................ 2 ........................... Red Hill, Virginia JAMES ENICH BOWEN ................... 3 ........................... Altavisla. Virginia A T. First Year Baseball Squad I926 WILLIAM THOMAS BOWEN ......................................... Allavisla. Virginia A T; A IT; First Year FoolhaII Team. I925; 4Firsl Year Baseball Team. I926: P. K. Society; VarsIly Club; Vnrsily Baseball Team I928. JUDSON WARREN BOWLES .............. I .............. Washington. District of Columbia 2 N. PAUL FREDERIC BOWLES ............... I .......................... Jamaica. New York JOHN TRAVERS BOWLING ............... I .................. Charles Town. West Virginia FRANK EDWIN BOWMAN ................ 2 ......................... Warrenton. Virginia JAMES STEWART BOYCE ................ I ...................... Chevy Chase, MaryIand ROGER ELDRIDCE BOYLE ............... 3 .............. Washington. District of Cqumbia WILLIAM POST BRADLEY ............... I ....................... Englewood. New Jersey Z W; First Year Football Squad. MARION BRAWLEY. JR ................... I .................... Greenville. South CaroIina A K E; FoolbaII Adjunct: First Year Track. LOUIS H. BRESS .......................... 2 ............................ Norfolk. Virginia ISIIJ I Academic Class 1 NAME YEAR IN COLLEGE HOME ADDRESS DUDLEY EATON BREWER ............... 2 ....................... SI. Pelenburg. Florida BASKERVILLE BRIDGFORTH ............. 2 .......................... Richmond. Virginia WILLIAM BRADFORD BRIGGS ........... I ............... WashingIon. District of Columbia W. TAYLOR BRIGGS ...................... I ........................ New York. New YorIt Cross Country Team; Indoor Track Team. IRA PHILLIP BRINKLEY ................. 2 ............................. SquIk. Virginia SMITH R. BRITTINCHAM. JR ............. 3 ......................... Portsmouth. Virginia A 2 4?: Lacrosse Squad. I926-27-28. CHARLES CONWAY BROUN ............. I ........................... Roanoke, Virginia ? K W. EDMUND FONTAINE BROUN ............ 3 ..................... CharIeslon. West Virginia d, K 1'; A II; 0 A K; A X E; Z T; Associate Editor CORKS AND CURLS, I927; Managing Editor CORKS AND CURLS. I928; Inlermediale Honors; First Year Track Team. I927; Adjunct Manager Football, I927-28: Chemistry Award. I927; Dean's List; P. K. Society; Varsity Track, I928; Treasurer O A K. I929. ALEXANDER GUSTAVUS BROWN ................................. Richmond. Virginia A W; German Club; T I. L K. A.; First Year Football Team. I925; Fraternity Representative CORKS AND CURLS. CRYSTAL ELIZABETH BROWN ........... 2 ....................... Charlottesville. Virginia EARLE RAY BROWN ..................... I2 .......................... Yonkers. New York GEORGE HENRY BROWN ........................................ BeIIeviIIe, New jersey 9 X; Varsity Boxing Squad. I928- 29: Dean 5 Lisl. I928-29. GILBERT MORRIS BROWN ............... 2 ...................... CharIollesviIIe, Virginia HUNTER LUMPKIN BROWN .............. I ........................... Roanoke. Virginia REEVES BROWN .......................... 4 ......................... Cleveland. Tennessee Z 1!; A 11; Business Slat? of Virginia Reel. I927; Fraternity Representative CORKS AND CURLS. I927. STEXIART HARMAN BROWN ............ I ........................ Easlon. Pennsylvania ;.B 3.. Lnfayelle College. HARZRY PAUL BROWNING ............... 3 ........................ Newburgh. New York OSBORN FITZ-RANDOLPH BRUCE. JR.. .. 3 .................. Porl Washington, New York ?gzlg;29iefferson Literary Sociely; Adjuncl Manager Boxing. I927-28; Assistant Manager Boxing. GEORGE. SABIN BRUSH. JR ................ I ..................... New Haven. Conneclicul tb E K; I'iI-Il Year Track Squad. ALEXANDER HAMILTON BRYAN ....... 3 .......................... Richmond. Virginia A 1': Skull and Keys; German Club; Eli Banana; Virginia Club; Z ; Adjunct Manager FoolbaII; Firleear Boxing Squad. I926- 27; Bloxing Team I928. LAMONT STEWART BRYAN ....................................... Richmond. Virginia A W: Adj uncl Manager Football. JOHN CARLYLE HERBERT BRYANT ..... I ......................... Alexandria. Virginia A K E: Firs! Year FoolbaII Team: First Year Baskel-baII Team; First Year Track. JOSIAH GAY BRYANT .................... 4 ........................... Franklin. Virginia A T A; A U. P. K. Society; BuebaII Adjunct. JOHN CROSBY BRYDON, JR ............... I ....................... Scranton. Pennsylvania K A. CATLETT LOCKHART BUCKNER ........ 3 ............................. Paris. KenIucky HUBERT ARTHUR BUEL ................. 2 ..................... Union Cily. PcnnsyIvania ESTHER BURGESS ........................ I ....................... New York. New York EDWARD JOSEPH BURKE. JR ............. I .......................... Richmond. Virginia WALTER EDGAR BURKE ................. I ........................... Bealeton, Virginia JOHN THOMAS BURKETT. 1R ............. I ........................ LilIIe Rock, Arkansas 2 A E. I901 I Academic Class I NAME YEAR IN COLLEGE HOME ADDRESS WILLIAM FRANCIS BURKS ....... . ...... I ........................... Amherst. Virginia Member of Jefferson Society. BALDWIN COOK BURNAM ............... I ......................... Louisville. Kentucky FRED MCLOUD BUKNETT. JR.. . . . . . . . . .Creenville. South Carolina JOHN BLACKBURN BURNETT ........... 3 ........................... Slaunlon, Virginia Varsity Baseball Squad, I928. THOMAS EDISON BURNETT ............. 3 ........................... Bealelon, Virginia Wrestling Squad. GUY ELLINCITON BURNETTE ............ I ........................... Allavisla. Virginia B K. WYATT THOMPKINS BURNETTE ....... 4 ........................... Altavisla. Virginia B K; Manager of University of Virginia Press. HAROLD DONALD BURT ................ I ....................... Clifton Forge, Virginia RAYMOND NORMAN BUSHEL ........... 2 ......................... Brooklyn. New York FRANK EDWARD BUTLER ............... 2 ............................ SquIk. Virginia A E 43'. RIX PIERCE BUTLER ..................... I ........................... Norfolk. Virginia HOLT FAIRFIELD BUTT. III .............. 3 ........................... Norfolk, Virginia E A E; Y. M. C. A. Board. WILLIAM EDGAR BYRD ................. 3 ......................... Ballimore. Maryland E X; A II; German Club; T.I.L.K.A.; First Year Football Team. I926: First Year Baseball Team. I926; Varsity Football Team, I928-29; Varsity Club. WILLIAM DANIEL CABELL .............. 3 ....................... . . .University. Virginia Associate Editor College Topics,- Glee Club: Dean's List; Freshman Track Team; Assislanl Manager Wreslling. DANIEL HEARON CALL .................. 2 .......................... Richmond, Virginia 9 A X. WILLIAM CRUTCHFIELD CALLAWAY. .. 2 ....................... New York. New York GEORGE CAMERO N ...................... Z .......................... Pelersburg. Virginia A It; Finl Year Football Squad, I927; Varsity Squad. I928. PHILIP KELVIN CAMERON ............... 2 ...................... Clem Falls. New York IOHN ANTHONY CAMINITI .............. l ....................... New York New York MERRICK IRWIN CAMPBELL ...................................... Fort Pierce. Florida 2 d; E; Baskel- ball. I925- 27: Boxing, I927- 28; :Jetferson Society. I923; Eager Law Club, I927- 28. ANDREW FREDERICK CANNADAY JR .......................... Richmond Virginia Dean 3 Lisl I927; Cross Country Team, I927; 3Track Squad I928; JeHerson Sociely. FRANK RUSSELLE CAPPS ................ 3 .......................... Jacksonville, Florida 2 1b E; A K K: Boxing, I927-28. jAMES EARLE CARNER .................. I ........................... Roanoke. Virginia 2 4, E. .IAMFS IULIAN CARR ..................... 2 ........................... Leesburg. Virginia VI'ILQON MURRAY CARR. JR .............. I ..................... Pillsburgh, Pennsylvania MANUEL ICAZA CARRAL ................ 2 ......................... Mexico Cily. Mexico JAMES PAYNE CARROLL ................ I ...................... Charlollcsville. Virginia A x P. GEORGE ALLEN CARTER ................ 2 ........................... Danville. Virginia 4b A 9; Adjunct CORKs AND CURLS; Track Adjuncl. I928. IOHN THOMAS CASHEN ................. I ......................... Meriden. Connecticut WILLIAM NIELS CHACE ................. 2 ....................... Tiverlon, Rhode Island A X: Firs! Year Swimming Team. I928; Assislanl Manager Lacrosse, I928. RICHARD READING CHAMBERLAIN ..... I ...................... Maplewood. New Jersey JAMES JEFFRIES CHAPMAN. JR ........... 2 ........................ Gordonsville. Virginia ROBERT LOW CHAPMAN ................ I ....................... Greenwich. Conncclicul HORACE FRANCIS CHASE. JR ............ I ..................... New Haven. ConnecIicul IN! I Academic Class I NAME YEAR IN COLLEGE HOME ADDRESS JAMES HOLLIS CHENERY ................ I .......................... Richmond. Virginia ROBERT HUNTON CHILTON. 1R .......... 3 .......................... Richmond. Virginia A E 1,. ABRAHAM CHODOSH .................... I ......................... Carlerel. New Jersey PHILIP CHODOSH ........................ I ......................... Carteret. New Jersey HARRY CHRISTIE ........................ I ........................ Brooklyn, New York RANDOLPH WARNER CHURCH ......... 5 ......................... Lynchburg. Virginia EGBERT KENT CLARK ................... 4 ...................... Chevy Chase. MnryIand Virginia Reel Arl SlaE. I926-27-28. MILTON ALBERT CLARK ................ 3 ............................ Norfolk. Virginia BAILEY TYLER CLARKE. JR ............... I ........................ Owensboro. Kentucky A T. CHARLES CLARKE ....................... I .......................... University. Virginia 4i 2 K; First Year Boxing Squad. DAVID WRIGHT CLARKE ................ I ..................... Jamestown. Rhode Island EDWARD LEE CLARKE .................. 3 ........................ New Smyrna. Florida II K A; Firs! Year Football. I926: Captain First Year Swimming. I927; V in Swimming. I928; Football Team. I928 PHILIP SAFFORD CLARKE ............... l .......................... Bogota. New Jersey 4, F A: First Year Cross Country. WALTER WILLIAM CLEM ................ I .................... Worcesler. Massachusetts LOGAN CLARENCE CLINE ............... I .......................... Macon. Mississippi 3 X; A II; Boxing Squad. I926-27: German Club; Scarab; Assislanl Busines; Manager CORKs AND Cuan. WILLIAM MALVERN CLOPTON .......... 3 ...................... Chevy Chase. Maryland JACOB CARR COCHRAN ................. 3 ....................... BuEan. West Virginia CHARLES LEWIS COCKE ................. 3 ............................ Hollins, Virginia It K i'; A II; Associate Editor Conxs AND CURLS, 1926-27; Slalislics Editor Comes AND Cuan. I928; German Club; Scarab. MARION ESTES COCKE. JR ............... I ............................ HoIIim. Virginia 4, K W. HARRY HOWARD COCKRILL ............ 2 ........................ Lillle Rock. Arkansas K 2; German Club; Freshman Football Squad. I927; Varsity Football Squad. I928. ROSARIO CARMEL COCO ................ 3 ...................... Ozone Park. New York FRANKLIN HARRY COHEN .............. I ............................ Norfolk, Virginia A E H. HERBERT COHEN ........................ 4 ....................... New York. New York JAMES WEBB COLE ...................... I ............................ Norfolk. Virginia A E 4,; Adencl Boxing. 1928-29. JAMES COLEMAN ........................ 3 ....................... New York. New YorI: 'b E H; Dean's List, I928. JOHN RANDOLPH COLEMAN. JR ......... 3 ...................... CharIoIlesviIIc. Virginia RICHARD PATRICK COLEMAN .......... I ........................... Roanoke, Virginia 2 $ E. ROBERT RUCKER COLEMAN ............ 3 ......................... Lynchburg, Virginia SAMUEL WALTON COLEMAN. JR ........ 2 .......................... Gate City. Virginia ROBERTS COLES. JR ...................... I ....................... CharlottesviIIe. Virginia Z W: First Year Track Squad. PIERRE DEY COLLINS ................... 4 ........................ Weslfield. New Jersey EDWARD ANGELO COLONNA ........... 2 ....................... Charlottesville. Virginia GRAFTON MASSEY COMECYS ........... I ..................... Bethlehem, Pennsylvania 2 I? E. IE'2I CORKS 6 CU RLS I Academic Class 1 NAME YEAR IN COLLEGE . HOME. ADDRESS JOSEPH RUSSEL COMPTON .............. 3 ........................ Vichburg. Mississippi 2 A E; Assistant Manager Boxing. I927. NEILL MCLAURIN CONEY. JR ............. 2 ........................... Savannah. Georgia CHARLES HENRY CONLEY .............. 4 ......................... Frederick, Maryland 2 N: German CIub. ALLEN SAUL CONN ...................... 2 ..................... Newport Newa. Virginia ALEXANDER CARSON CONWAY ........ 2 ........................... Danville, Virginia K A. ABNER HUGH COOK ..................... 3 ........................ LillIe Rock. Arkansas ARTHUR LOUIS COOKE .................. 3 .......................... Plymouth. England EARLE TRUESDALE COOKE ............. 2 .......................... Plymouth. England WILLIAM CRAFRAFT COOKE ............ 2 ............................ Norfolk. Virginia 6 A X; Freshman Track Numerals. I928; Dean's List. ROBERT NELSON COOLEY ............... 2 ...................... Rural Relreal. Virginia CLARK COOPER .......................... I ......................... San Antonio. Texas FRANCIS MARION COOPER .............. I .......................... Towson. Maryland CEORCE COOPER, JR ..................... 2 ........................ Scarsdale. New York Cb K 2: Skull and Keys; P. K. Society: Associale Editor CORKS AND CURLS. I928; Adjunc! Manager Foolball, I927-28; First Year Track Team. I928. AMES REUBEN COPLAND ............... 3 ........................... AIIavisla. Virginia ILLIAM HENRY CORNELIUS ........... I ..................... Newport News. Virginia GEORGE ATLEE CORNWALL ............ 2 .......................... Richmond. Virginia EDWARD WAYNE CORRIN .................................. WiIIIInsburg, PennsyIvania Z ii; First Year Boxing Squad I929: Firs! YeIar FoolbaII Squad. I928. LEONARD TEMPLE COUPLAND ......... I ............................ Norfolk. Virginia X 1,. FRANK COWAN .......................... 2 ........................ PIainEeId. New Jersey LECKIE COX .............................. I .............. Washington. District of CqumbIa 2 N. MARY JANE COX ......................... I .......................... University. Virginia JAMES LEO CRAFT ....................... 4 ..................... BramweII. West Virginia CHARLES ELDRIDCE CRANDALL ........ I ....................... New York. New York 2 X. HAMPTON BURNETT CRAWFORD ...... I ......................... Pocahontu, Virginia II K A; Adjunct Manager Boxing. I928 HENRY ROUNTREE CRAWFORD ........ 3 .......................... Richmond. Virginia EDWARD POLK CROCKETT. JR ........... I ............................ Norfolk. Virginia ALVAH BAYLOR CROMWELL ........... 3 ............................ Norfolk. Virginia 2 A E: Y. M. C. A. Board. HARRY RICHTER CROSS ................ I ........................ Chesler, Pennsylvania 3 N. EDGAR MANKIN COUCH ................. 3 ....................... Beckley. Wes! Virginia B K; A 2 IF. PHILIP KINCSLAND CROWE ............. 2 ....................... New York. New York Z W; Associate Edilor of College Topics. COLLINS MEGRAW CROWTHER ........ I ......................... Baltimore, Maryland JOHN CRUMP ............................. I .......................... Memphis. Tennessee 2 A E; FoolbaII Adjunct. ROBERT EDWARD CULIN ................ 3 ....................... ChanottcvaIIe. Virginia SHEPHERD LUKE CULVER ............... 2 ...................... Langley Field. Virginia RICHARD ANTHONY CUPAIVOLI ........ 2 ............. WoochiIf-on-Hudson. New York A T; Lacrosse Squad. I929. LLOYD E. CURRIN ........................ I ....................... Sugar Grove. Virginia l931 I Academic Class 1 NAME YEAR IN COLLEGE HOME ADDRESS MARTIN STUART CURTLER ............. 3 ......................... University. Virginia FRANK STORY CUTCHIN ................ 2 ........................... Franklin. Virginia Associate Editor College Topics. WYTHE OVERTON DABNEY. JR .......... 3 ...................... Charloncsville. Virginia JAMES KEENE DAINGERFIELD ......... 2 ......................... Lexinglon. KenIuclIy Z N; Fint Year Foolball Squad. JACK PRESTON DALTON ............... 2 ........................... Holland. Virginia A T: Dean's LisI. WILLIAM PAGE DAME, ............... 2 ...................... Christ Church. Virginia I? K 1;; Adjunct Manager R.asebaII I928; Varsily Tennis Squad; CORKS AND CURLS. ROSCOE DANIELL ....................... 2 ......................... University. Virginia BRAXTON DAVENPORT ................. 2 .................... Charleston West Virginia BYRD WARWICK DAVENPORT .................................. Richmond Virginia I? K v P. K. Society; Skull and Keys; First 2Year FoolbalI Team; First Year Baseball; Varsily Foolb:li Squad. SEABURY DAVIES ....................... 2 ........................ Wincheslcr. Virginia A in Adjuncl Track. I928. THEODORE EUGENE DAVIES .......... 2 ....................... New York. New York AP 2 K. HENRY WILLIAM DAVIES ............... 2 .......................... Richmond. Virginia EDWARD MORRIS DAVIS. III ............ 5 .................. Spring House. Pennsylvania Z 1;; German Club; Scarab: Trigon. JAMES RAMSEY DAVIS .................. l ........................... Norfolk. Virginia K A: Adjuncl Manager Foolba . I928. DAVID LEMUEL DAWSON ............... I ............................ Allanla. Georgia SAMEL COOPER DAWSON .............. I ........................ Alexandria. Virginia Freshman BaakeI-ball and Baseball Squads. RICHARD WHITESIDE DAY ............. 2 ......................... Richmond. Virginia K E; A H; P. K. Socicly; Firsl Year Foolball Team: First Year Track Team. I927: Varsily Football. I928; Varsity Club. CESARE FRANCIS DE BLASE ............ 2 ........................ Brooklyn. New York GENE DE BULLET ......................... 5 ....................... Calonsvillc, Maryland Cb E K; Managing Editor Universily of Virginia Magazine. l926-27-28; Fcalurc Editor CORKS AND CURLS. I926-27-23; Literary Staff Virginia Reel, I924-25-26-27-28; Fencing Squad; In- slruclor in Geology. RICHARD EARL DE BUTTS ............... I ......................... Upperville. Virginia A K E: First Year Boxing Team. RICHARD FOSTER DE BUTTS ........... 4 ....................... Barboursville, Virginia A 4?; A II: German Club; T.I.L.K.A.; Lacrosse Team. I926-27-28; Varsily Squad. I926-27; Freshman FoolbaII. I925 XVILLIAM JONES DE BUTTS ............. I ....................... New York. New York A 4i; Freshman FoolbaII Team. JOHN ESSARY DEE ..................... 3 ...................... Lake Charles. Louisiana 2 A E; A K xII; Freshman Foolball Numeral: Freshman Track Numeral; Vursily Track Squad; Dean's List. CHARLES WARREN STONE DEFREES. ll ....................... Warren. PennsyIvania JAMES POTT DELAFIELD ..................................... Chappaqua. New York EX; First Year Basket- baII Squad; First Yearl Baseball Squad: First Year Tennis Squad. CHARLES WALTER DELANEY. JR ....... I ....................... Alloona Pennsylvania I? E K. EDWARD ARTHUR DELARUE. JR ................................. Richmond Virginia H K A; Raven Sociely; Varsity Track. I927- 4:28 Track Squad. I926- 27; lnlcrmediale Honors. I927; Reporlcr. Associate. Assignmenl, and News Editors College Topics; McGuire; School Club, I941 I Academic Class 1 NAME YEAR IN COLLEGE HOME ADDRESS JOHN MILTON DEMAREST .............. I ........................... Norfolk, Virginia JAMES NICHOLAS DEMETROPS ......... I ..................... While Plains. New York THEODORE. NORTH DENSLOW. JR ....... 2 ............. Washington. Dislricl of Columbia CLARENCE RODGERS DENT ............. 2 ........................... Roanoke. Virginia LUCIAN MINOR DENT ................... 4 ......................... Memphis. Tennessee 2 A E; Scarab. WILLIAM BLAND DEW .................. 3 ........................ Sweel Brian Virginia 4, 2 K; Scarab: DeanIs Lisl; First Year Cross Country; Varsity Track. WAVERLY WALTERS DICKSON ......... I ................. Wake Forest, North Carolina Cb F A; Adjunct CORKS AND CURLS. EUGENE AUGUST DIETRICH ............ 4 ......................... Richmond. Virginia 2 lb E: Manager-elect Lacrosse: ReporloriaI Slag College Topics,- Freshman Football Squad: Intermediate Honors. I925; Instructor of Economics; Dean's List. MARCUS WALTHALL DINWIDDIE ...... 5 ...................... Charlottesville. Virginia ROBERT ERNEST DISMUKES ............ I .......................... Columbus. Georgia B 6 II: FoolbaII Adjund. WILLIAM SHEPHERD DIX, JR ........... 2 .......................... Berryville. Virginia THOMAS LESTER DIXON ................ I ....... Norfolk. Virginia WILLIAM DOCTOROWITZ ............... 2 ....................... New York. New York WILLIAM HODWARD DODSON. JR ....... 2 ........................... Danville. Virginia A 2 4h DESMOND BERNARD DONNELLY ....... I .............. Hastings-on-Hudaon, New York 2 i? E. CEOCORY RICHARD D'ONOFRIO ........ I ........................ Brooklyn. New York HAROLD DORFMAN ..................... 3 ....................... New York. New York I? E H. WILLIAM ABRAHAM DORFMAN ........ I ........................ Hoboken. New York EDWARD LINDSAY DORRIER ........... 3 .......................... ScollsviIIe. Virginia JULIAN BOOTH DOSS .................... 2 ......................... Pen Hook. Virginia ROBERT FULTON DOUGLAS ............ 3 ......................... Universily. Virginia B K. EDWARD LEWIS DOUGLASS. JR ......... 2 ............................ Cincinnali. Ohio H K A: Baskel-baII Squad. I928-29. WILLIAM CHARLES DOWDEN .......... I ......................... Louisville. Kentucky MARVIN DOWNEY ....................... 2 .............. Washinglon. District of Columbia JACK MERCIER DOYLE .................. 4 ...................... New York. New York A T A; A H; Freshman Football; Freshman Track. JOHN RHODES DRURY .................. 4 ...................... New York. New York JAMES RANDOLPH DUDLEY ............ I ...................... Charlottesville. Virginia MARCELLUS KEY DUERSON. JR ......... 3 ........... , .............. Lynchburg. Virginia A X P: V. E. S. Club. THOMAS OLIVER DUNLAP. ....................................... Cincinnali. Ohio H K A: Adjuncl CORKS AND URLs: First Year Tennis Squad CUYK ARRINGTON DUNLOP ............. 6 .......................... Richmond. Virginia A. CHURCHILL GIBSON DUNN ............. 3 ......................... Pctersburg. VIrgInIa WILLIAM WILLCOX DUNN .............. 3 ......................... Richmond. Virginia B 9 II: Skull and Key:; German CIub: Reporlorial Staff of College Topics. I926- 27; Associate Editor of CaIIege TopIu. I928. EDWIN DARIUS DUPREE, jR ............. 2 ........................ Pine Bluff Arkansas HORACE NICHOLS DURSTON ..................................... Fort Worth. Texas A T 0; A X; P. K. Sociely; FoolbaII Adjunch 3Baseball Adjunct. MATTHEW TILGHMAN EARLE ......... 4 ........................ ...Eulon. Maryland IPJI I Academic Class 1 NAME YEAR IN COLLEGE HOME ADDRESS BENJAMIN WEISICER EARLY ........... 3 .......................... Richmond. Virginia MEREDITH AUSTIN EARLY ............. 2 ....................... StanardvaIIe, Virginia JOHN PHILIP EASTHAM ................. 2 ........................... Rapidnn. Virginia RALPH OWEN EASTON .................. 4 .................... Providence, Rhode Island 4? E K: A E H; Auialant Manager Wrestling. I927-28. RAYMOND SMITH EDMUNDSON ........ 3 ......................... Winchester. Virginia FRANKLIN EDSON, III ................... 3 ....................... Greenwich. Connecticut A Cb; Freshman BasebaII. I927; German Club. HARR:I EHRLICH ........................ I ....................... New York. New York I -. KENNETH HUNTLEY EKIN .............. I .......................... Towaon, Maryland 2 I E. HAROLD NORTON ELDRIDCE. JR ........ 4 ............ Norlhporl, Long Island. New York Z 1'; P. K. Society. JOHN ROBERT ELK. JR ................... 2 ..................... Pittsburgh. Pennsylvania JAMES LINDELL ELLIS ......................................... Meluchen. New Jersey A W: SkuII and Keys; Glee Club. I928: Freshlznan Baseball Team. WALTER HARRY ELLIS ................. I ........................ Newark. New Jersey THOMAS WILLIS ELLISON ............... I ........................ Wnynesboro, Virginia DAVID ELLMAN ......................... Z ........................ Brooklyn. New YorI: JOHN BROOKS EMORY. JR ............... 2 ........................ Cranford. New Jersey A X. CLAYTON BERNARD ETHRIDGE ........ I .............. Washington. Districl of CqumbIa SHEPLEY EDWARD EVANS ............. I ........................ Marion. PennsyIvania A $. EARL NOEL EVANS ...................... 3 ........................ Hernando, Mississippi WILLIAM AUGUSTUS EVANS ............ I ......................... Summit. New Jersey 2 A E: Football Adjunct. EARNEST HENRY EVERY, JR ............ 4 .......................... Melbourne. Florida A 4,: A P X; Trigon: German CIub: Golf Team. JAMES HALSTEAD EWING .............. 5 ....................... New York. New York DAVID FARQUHAR ...................... I ....................... Los Angeles, Califorma FRANK EVANS FARWELL ..................................... New Orleans. Louisiana 2 X; Assialant Manager Boxing. I927; Spanish Instructor; Deans List I926- 27. JOSEPH EVERETTE FAUBER ..................................... Lynchburg, Virglnia 2 K E; Scarab PERCIVAL HUNTER FAULCONER ....... 3 ...................... CharlottesviIIe. Virginia I K 2; P. K. Society: TVI.L.K.A.: IMP; Skull and Keys; First Year ankel-ball. I927; Varsily Basket-baII Squad. I928; V ; First Year FoolbaII: Varsily Football. THOMAS GREEN FAULKNER. JR ......... 3 ......................... Blackstone. Virginia B 6 H; BaskeI-baII Squad, I928-29: Dean's List: Intermediate Honors; Skull and Keys. THOMAS BRAIISFORD FELDER ......... 2 ....................... Greenwich. Conneclicul LAWRENCE. MASON FENWICK .......... 4 .............. NVashinglon. Districl of CqumbIa E N; P. K. Society. FINLAY FORBES FERGUSON. JR .......... I ........................... Norfolk. Virginia 3 X. MURRAY FERGUSON .................... 2 ....................... Longview. Washinglon CHARLES FIELD, IV ...................... I .......................... BuEan. New York WILLIAM HILL FIELD ................... 2 ........................ Stamford. Connecticut OASIS FILKER ............................ I ....................... New York. New York GEORGE BOYD FINCH ................... 2 ......................... Lynchburg. Virginia THOMAS WATSON FINCH ............... 2 ........................... Ruslburg. Virginia I901 I Academic Class 1 NAME YEAR IN COLLEGE HOME ADDRESS JOHN WOOD FISHBURNE. JR ............. 2 ...................... Chuloltesville. Virginia A ii; German Club; SImII and Keys; First Year Track Team. I928; First Year Boxing Team. I928; Varsity Boxing Team. I928; Fraternity Representative of CORKS AND CURLS. I928. CLASSELL SLAUGHTER FITZ- HUGHH 3 .......................... University. Virginia Z III; A II: P. K. Society; First Year TracIK Team. WILLIAM HENRY FITZ- HUGH ................................... Vicksburg. MIssIsslppI BERTRAM E. FISHEL ..................... 2 ....................... New York. New York EDWARD CUMBERLAND FISHER ........ 2 ........................... St. Louis. Missouri A T A; Fraternity Representative to CORKS AND CURLs. WILLIAM CHAPPELL FLAKE ............ 3 .......................... Richmond. Virginia 4? K E: A P X; German Club; AS.M.E. WILLIAM HUBERT FLANNAGAN ........ 3 .......................... Richmond. Virginia H K A; German Club; th, I926; Boxing, I928; Adjuncl Manager FoolbaII. I923; AI-l Staff VIrgInIa Reel. GERALD FLAUM ....................................... Jamaica. Long IsIand. New York 4, E H: CIee Club. I927- 28; Dean: LIsl. I928. ARTHUR BARON FLEISHMAN ....................................... Norfolk. Virginia Cb E II; First Year Football I928. HARRISON FITZGERALD FLIPPEN ...... 3 .......................... University. Virginia K E; A H; O A K; First Year Track Team. I927; Fin! Year Boxing Team. I927: Varsity Football. I927-28; Varsity Track Team. I928: Caplain Track. I929; Varsity Club: German Club; Eli Banana: IMP; Vice-Presidenl Madison Hall; President Academic School; G. A. A. Board; 3-3-3 Council. LAURENCE BUFORD FLOURNOY ........ 3 ...................... Independence. Missouri 1, E K; First Year Track. GORDON EDWIN FOGG .................. I ............................ Sioux City, Iowa 8 A X; Glee Club. FRANK WILLIAM FOOTE ................ 2 ....................... Hatliesburg. Mississippi 2 A E; Boxing Adjunct. JAMES FORD ............................. 2 .......................... Richmond. Virginia X 4,; P. K. Society; Skull and Keys; Adjunct Manager Boxing. I928-29; Adjunct Manager Track. I928. ROBERT EDWARD FORD ................ 3 .......................... Kingsford. Virginia PAUL DAVID FOREMAN ................. 3 ...................... BeIIefonlc. PennsyIvania FRANK ALBERT FORBTER ............. I ..................... Tuxedo Park, New York A T. WILLIAM WALTON FORRESTER ........ I .......................... Richmond. Virginia KING LOGAN FORSYTH .................. 4 ............................ Esmonl. Virginia Z W; Jeernon Society; Dean's List. I928. THOMAS MULDRUP FORSYTH .......... 3 ............................ Esmonl. Virginia Z W; P. K. Society; Skull and Keys; T.I.L.K.A.: Assistant Manager Football. I928: Intermediate Honors. JOHN HINTON FOX ...................... I ......................... Lynchburg. Virginia A K E; Football Adjunct. ' THEODORE LIVINGSTON FRALEIGH. . . . I ............................ Madison. Florida Z W. SAMUEL MILES FRANCIS ................ I ........................ While Gate, Virginia GEORGE ALEXANDER FRASER .......... 3 ............................. Houston. Texas H K A; Fin! Year Wrestling. I927: Freshman Lacrosse. I927; wVI Wrcslling. I928. LEO FRED ................................ 2 ......................... Brooklyn. New York CLAUDE FREDERICK ..................... I ....................... CharIollesviIIe. Virginia I971 I Academic Class I E YEAR IN COLLEGE HOME ADDRESS DEXTER SPEAR FRENCH ................ 3 ....................... New York. New York A ii; A II: German Club; InIcrmediale Honors; th Wrestling. I928; First Year Wrestling. I927; First Year Track Team; Virginia Reel 5135; CORKs AND CURLS; FootbaII Squad; Associate Edilor College Topics. NAM ALVIN FRIEDBERG ....................... I ..................... AlIanlic City. New Jersey 47 E H. KENNETH FRIEDE ....................... I ........................ New York. New York A E II. HARRY MAURICE FRIEDEN ............. 3 ............................ Norfolk, Virginia A E H; Business SlaE College Topics; Fraternity Repreacnlalive CORKs AND CURLs. ERNEST FRIEDEN ........................ I ............................ NorfoIIt. Virginia HUNTER LANSING FULFORD ............ 2 ............................ Norfolk. Virginia 2 A E. GORDON BURT FULLER ................. I ........................ New York. New York 2 A E; Freshman Football. ADOLF PHARO CAGCE .................. 4 .......................... Richmond. Virginia A X P. BRAXTON EDMONDS GALLUP ........... 2 ........................... Norfolk. Virginia B K; Universiiy of Virginia Orchestra. DOUGLAS TRACY GARDINER ............ I .............. Washinglon. Dislrict of Cqumbia F LOYD WILKS GARRETT ................. 6 ...................... For! Gibson, Oklahoma 4; T A: A II; P. K. Society; T.I.L.K.A.; Firs! Year Baskel-baII Team. I924; Varsily Baskel-baII Squad. I925-26-27-29. ROBERT NETTEAU GARRETT. JR ......... I ........................... Roanoke. Virginia HACOP CASPARIAN .................... 6 ............................. CaviIIa. Greece CHARLES WADSWORTH CAZZAM ..... 3 ....................... Birmingham. Alabama ZACHARY KERRY GEANEAS ............ 2 ........................ Brooklyn. New York Freshman Track Squad; Adjunct Manager FoolbuII: Adjunct Manager Track. HARRY JOSEPH CEGERSON ............ 2 ........................ BrookIyn, New York I? A; Boxing, I928. ERNEST FOSTER CEHRMANN .......... I ........................ Newark. New Jersey Kb F A; First Year Football Team. AMY CEISSLER .......................... 3 ......................... University. Virginia PASQUALE DANTE GENOVESE ......... 2 ................. Long Island City. New York ROBERT P. S. GENOVESE ............... 2 .......................... Astoria. New York FENTON ALLEN CENTRY ............... I ....................... St. Petersburg. Florida 2 X: Freshman Football Team. I923; Freshman Boxing. I929; Freshman Track Team. I929. ARTHUR HOWELL GERHARD. JR ....... I .................. Philadelphia. Pennsylvania JOHN GHERASIM. JR ...................... I ..................... WheeIing. West Virginia WILLIAM FORD GIBSON ................. 2 ........................ WytheviIIe. Virginia A X; Associate Manager Virginia Reel. WILLIAM JOHN GIBSON ................. 2 .......................... Richmond. Virginia BENJAMIN GILDERSLEEVE ............. 3 .......................... Damascus, Virginia CORNELIUS DUGGAN CILFOYLE ....... 4 ......................... Lynchburg. Virginia ROBERT EDMUND CILFOYLE ........... 2 ......................... Lynchburg. Virginia MATTHEW POLLOCK CILMOUR ........ I .................. Wilminglon. Norlh CaroIina E A E. BERNARD GLASSER ..................... 2 ........................... Norfolk. Virginia $ A. MARSHALL COCHNAUER ............... 2 ...................... CharlollesviIIe. Virginia ROBERT EDWARD COETTING .......... I ........................ Brooklyn. New York DAVID GOLDBERG ..................... 2 ..................... Newport News. Virginia IWI I Academic Class 1 NAME YEAR IN COLLEGE HOME ADDRESS CARL THEODOR GOLDENBURC, g; ...... I ......................... Lynchburg. Virginia A T Q; Frelhman Football Team. I IRVING DAVE COLDMAN ............... I .................. Long Island City. New York Freshman Basketball Squad. CHARLES LEE COLDSTEN ............... 2 ...................... CharIollewIIIe. Virginia d; E H. BOYER GONZALES. JR ................... 2 ............................ Calveslon, Texas I? E K: First Year Baseball. NOBLE MAXWELL COODLOE ........... 2 ........................... Slaunlon. Virginia 9 X; First Year Baseball Team. I928; Adjunct Manager Boxing. I928. WILLIAM ERNEST GOODMAN, III ....... 2 ................... Philadelphia. Pennsylvania 1 III; Skull and Key; Firsl Year Baseball Team, I928. BENJAMIN WATERS GORDON .......... 2 ..................... Camden. North CnroIina fb E K; Assistant Manager WrestIing. ROBERT LATIMER GORDON, JR .......... 2 .......................... Richmond. Virginia III K III; Adjunct Manager Football, I927-28; Adjunct Manager BaskeI-bnll, I927. ALFRED NEUMAN GOTTHEIMER ....... I ...................... Ncw York. New York WILLIAM SELDEN GRANDY ............ 3 ........................... Norfolk. Virginia A933; A H; German Club; Football Adjunct, I926- 27; Boxing Adjunct. I927: Manager Lacrosse. I GEORGE CILMER GRATTAN. III ......... 3 ....................... Harrisonburg. Virginia A T Q; A II; Freshman Track Team. I927; EII Banana; P. K. Society. JOHN SEGAR CRAVATT ................ I ......................... Blackstone. Virginia A K E; First Year Football Team. GEORGE WILLIAM GRAVES ............. 2 ...................... StandardsviIIe. VIrginIa HARRY RANDOLPH GRAVES ........... 4 ....................... Liberty MIIII. VIrginiII 9 A X; A K W: Wrestling Numerals, I925- 26: le. I927- 28; Captain of Wrestling. I92 9. ALFRED LEFTWICH GRAY. JR ........... 4 .......................... Richmond. Virginia Z 11;? K. Society. HORACE ALFRED CRAY. JR ............. I ........................... Waverly. Virginia 47 K 2. CLARK HARPER GREEN ................. I ........................ Stamford, Conncclicul H K A. IRVING ARTHUR GREEN ................ 2 ........................ Brooklyn. New York MONTGOMERY MEIGS GREEN .......... 22 ........................ Winchester. VIIgInII OSCAR CLAIBORNE GREGORY. JR ................................. RIcI'ImoncI. Virgina It K 1'; A II; Foolball Adjuncl. I927; Baskcl- baII Adjunct, I927; CORKs AND CURLS. I929. FRANCIS RHETT GRESHAM ............. 3 ............................. Salem. Virginia FREDERICK OLIVER GRIFFIN ........... 2 ......................... St. Joseph. Missouri 2 N; President First Year Cabinet Madison HaII; President junior CabInel Madison Hall. JOHN ELIOT GRIFFIN .................... I ....................... New York. New York THOMAS FRANCIS GRIFFIN ............. I .............. Washinglon. District of Columbia A W. MILTON LATOUR CRICG ................. 5 ......................... Alexandria, Virginia JOHN SOUTHEY CRINELS ............... I ........................... Amburg. Virginia HAROLD EDWARD CROTTA ............ I ........................ Newark. New Jersey Z B T; Freshman Football. ALTON ALEXANDER CULKIS ........... 3 ................. West New York, New Jersey SAMUEL BEALE GUNST ................. 3 ......................... Baltimore. MaryIand d? E II; Reporlorial SlaII College Topics. I926: Fralernily Representative CORKs AND CURLS, I927- 28; Aasislant Sport Editor College Topics. I928. I991 I Academic Class 1 YEAR IN COLLEGE HOME ADDRESS JOHN NBOATIWRIGHT GWALTNEY ....... 2 ....................... Ncw York. New York Z ii: Virginia Players: P. K. Society. EDWARD SMITH CWATHMEY .......... 2 ......................... University. Virginil B 9 II; German Club; Skull and Keys. FRED B. HACKET ........................ I ..................... Niagara Falls. New York A E 47. HARRY H. HADEN ....................... 2 ........................... PaImyra. Virginia A X: German Club; Foolball Squad. I923. LOUIS STREET HADEN .................. 3 ........................... Palmyra, Virginia A X P; First Year Track Team. I926- 27. JOHN BAGBY HALEY .................... 2 .................... Charleston. West Virginia A X; First Year Baseball Team. I928. WILLIAM ALEXANDER HALLOWES III. 4 ......................... Jacksonville, Florida Z 1!; Skull and Keys; P. K. Society; Firs! Year Baakel- baII Squad. I925; Fin! Year Baseball Teani. I926; Assistant Manager Basket ball. I927- 28; Manager Baskel-bnll. 1923-29; Bad Check Committee. I928; VIrgInia Reel Art Staff. I927- 28; Inlerfraternity Council. 328-29: T. I. L.K. A. CHARLES EDWIN HAMILTON. JR ............................ Charleston. West Virginia Z 1!; P. K. Society; First Year FoolbaII Squad: I926: Adjunct Manager Busket- ball. I927. HENRY HURT HANCOCK ........................................... Chalham. Virginia KARL B. HANCOCK ..... . ................ 4 ........................... Roanoke. Virginia WALTER DOUGLAS HANKINS ........... I ...................... Johnson City. Tennessee OSCAR MONTGOMERY HANSEN ........ 3 .......................... Savannah. Georgia 2 I? E: A P X. CLARENCE BLOODWORTH HANSON. .4 ............................ Augusta. Georgia ID T A; First Year Swimming Team. I926: in! Year Track Team. I926: Fraternity Representative CORKs AND CURLs; Varsity Swimming. I927; Advertising Manager College TopIcs. RALPH HAPPEL .......................... I ...................... Fredericksburg. Virginia HARRY H HARDEEN ............................................ Brooklyn. New York 'b E K; First Year Football Squad. First Year 33mins Squad; Firs! Year Baseball. RICHARD BITTLE HARLBS. JR ................................ Christiansburg, Virginia Q P A. GEORGE KENTON HARPER. JR ........... I .......................... Richmond. Virginia DANIEL FRANCIS HARRINGTON ........ 2 ............................. Bulle. Montana HUGH THOMPSON HARRINGTON ....... I ......................... Freeporl. New York B 6 11: First Year Boxing Squad. FLOYD MORRISON HARRIS ........................................... Aldic Virginia A K E: A H: German VClub; T. I. L..K.A. Firsl Year Football Team I926; First Year Boxing Team. I927; FootanI ' ' Iy927- 28: Varsity Club. GEORGE BRODHEAD HARRIS. JR ........ I .................... Philadelphia. Pennsylvania HUGH MONTGOMERY HARRIS ................................... Lynchburg. Virginia 2 X; Freshman Boxing Squad. I928; Freshmanl Track Team, I929. VICTOR IRVIN HARRIS .................. 2 ...................... Newport News. Virginia CD A; Durant Scholarship, I928. WILLIAM LYLE. HARRIS ................. 3 .......................... Florence. Alabama JOHN ALEXANDER HARRISON ......... l ....................... New York. New York BENJAMIN LESLIE HART. JR ............. I ........................ Kansas City, Missouri E A E. EDWIN EARLE HART .................... 3 ........................... Philippine Island: A T; A K 4,; Freshman Lacrosse Squad. I927; lBoxing Squad; Dean 3 Lisl. JOSEPH HASPEL. JR ............................................ New Orleans. Louisiana Z B T: College TopIcs Slam FREDERIC OLIVER HATCH .............. 2 ................................ Akron. Ohio ID A 9; BasebaII Adjunct, I928: Boxing Adjuncl. I928; First Year Swimming Team. I 100 I CORKS E3 CURLS . V fk I929 I Academic Class 1 NAME YEAR IN COLLEGE HOME ADDRESS WALTER WOOD HATCH ................. I ..................... Harrisburg, Pennsylvania CI, A 9. FRANK STANLEY HAUGH ............... I . . . . . . .- ................. Rochester. New York FRANK WILLIAM HAUPT ................ I ......................... Eulon. Pennsylvania JAMES ELLIOTT HEATH ................. 4 ............................ Norfolk, Virginia A 4n T.I.L.K.A.; Glee Club; Secrelary and Treasurer German Club. I927-23; Cheer Leader. 1926-27; First Year Track. I925-26: BukeI-bnll Adjunct. EPPA HUNTON HEATON. JR ............. 2 ........................... Leesburg. Virginia NORMAN LOUIS HEMINWAY ............ I ......................... Summit. New Jersey JOHN OVERTON HENDERSON ........... 3 .......................... Universily, Virginia X tb; Skull and Keys: P. K. Society; Assistant Manager BuebeII. I929; Interfraternity Council. RICHARD LEONARD HENDERSON. JIL. . I ...................... Newport Newa, Virginia A B X. JOSEPH HENDRICKS ...... . .............. I ................... Greensboro, North Carolina WILLIAM ANDERSON HENRY ........... 3 ...................... Rosemont. Pennsylvania HIRAM jEFFERSON HERBERT ........... I .......................... Villemonl. Virginia CHRISTIAN STANGER HERITAGE. JR.. . . 4 .............. Washinglon, Dislricl of Columbia A X P: A P X; First Year Gym Team. EDWARD WILLIAM HEROLD ............ 2 ......................... Newark. New Jersey WALLACE EDGAR HERRELL ............ 2 ........................... Marshall, Virginia JOHN ROBERT HESTER .................. I ..................... CharIolle. North Carolina DHONUIL MACLEAN HICKCOX .......... 2 ...................... Port Chester, New York HENRY ALONZO HICKMAN .............. 2 ....................... Wilmington. Delaware. B 6 II; German Club. GUY DEWEY HICKS ...................... I .......................... Richmond. Virginia EDWARD BEATTIE HICKSON ............ 3 ......................... Lynchburg. Virginie FREDERICK STUART HILDER ........... 5 ......................... Clencarlyn. Virginia A X P; Glee Club. NATHANIEL THOMAS HILDRETH ....... I ....................... Charlottesville. Virginia d? K 2; Fralernily Representative ConKs AND CURLS. HARRY HILFER .......................... 3 ....................... New York. New York A E H. CHARLES EDWARD HILGENBERG ....... I ......................... Baltimore. Maryland K E. CARRIE ELISE HILL ...................... I ....................... Charlottesville. Virginia HENRY HOFMANN HIRSHBIEL. JR ....... 2 ............................ Norfolk. Virginia A X P; Drum-major of Bend. MATTHEW H. HIRSH ..................... 3 ......................... Baltimore. Maryland ID E II; Dean's List, I928. FRANK HITCHCOCK ...................... I ........................ Westbury. New York PRESTON FLOOD HIX .................... I ............................ Norfolk, Virginia A K E; Fin! Year Track. FREDERICK HAMLIN HOBBS. R .......... 2 ............................ Norfolk. Virginia A 4?; A II: Scarab; German Clu ; Football Adjunct. I927. WILLIAM ROBB HOFER .................. 3 ....................... Memchen. New Jersey JACK LARGE CAMERON HOGGAN ....... 2 .......................... Richmond. Virginia ROBERT LLOYD HOLCOMB .............. 4 ....................... Bridgeport, Conneclicut HOWARD THOMPSON HOLDEN ......... I ............................ Allanle, Georgie Freshman Cross Country; Freshman Track. BEVERLY LONG HOLLADAY ............ 3 ............................. Suffolk. Virginia 4? 1' A; A II; P. K. Sociely; Virginia Reel SlaE; Beakel-bell Adjunct. I927-28. I 101 1 I Academic Class 1 YEAR IN COLLEGE HOME ADDRESS CLARENMCE. WHITAKER HOLLAND JIL. ............................ Eulville. Virginia A T Q; A II; P. K. Society; Swimming Squa4d. WILLIAM WHITAKER HOLLAND ........ 3 ........................... Eulville. Virginia A T 9; A ll: Football Adjunct; Eli Banana: P. K. Society; Freshman Baseball Team. I927; Vusily Baseball Squad. I928. RICHARD RODES HOLLAR ............... I ........................ Waynelboro. Virginia F. L. HOLLOWELL ........................ I ...................... Ynzoo City. Mininlppi ELIOT LAMAR HOLMAN ...................................... Florence SouIII Carolina A 4?; Skull and Keys; Varsily Lacrosse. I925- 426- 27- 28. ROBERT HAYES HOLMES JR ............ I ...................... New Orleans. Louisiana WENDELL RAY HOLMES ................. 2 ...................... Swiuville. Pennsylvania A X P: Glee Club; Glee Club Quartet; Inlerfrnlernily Council. ASBURY STEELE HOOPER ............... I ............................ Selma. Alabama 4, A 9. GEORGE CARLTON HOPE ................ I ............................... Rue, Virginia EDWARD LEE. HOPEWELL ............... I ........................ .SIruburg. Virginia BEIRNE HOPKINS ........................ 4 ........................ Hot Spring. Virginia HAROLD ERNEST HOROWITZ ........... 2 ....................... New York. New York A E I': Dean's List; First Year Swimming Team. I928. TOMLIN BRAXTON HORSLEY ........... 2 .......................... Richmond. Virginia CHARLES FREDERICK HOUSTON, JR.. . . . 2 ....................... New York. New York ESTES VAUGHAN HOWARD ............. I ......................... Lynchburg. Virginia Orchestra. ARDEN HOWARD. JR ...................... I ............................. Vinita. Virginia CLIVE SPENCER HUFFMAN. JR ........... 3 ....................... New York, New York 9 .A X. CARLTON HULL ......................... 2 ........................ Kotciulko. Miniuippi GEORGE RANDOLPH HUMRICKHOUSE. 3 ........................... Boydlon. Virginia A T Q; A ll; Foolball Adjunct: Track Adjunct; Assistant Manager Track. I928; P. K. Society. THOMAS JOHNSON HUMRICKHOUSE. .. 2 ........................... Boydion. Virginia A T Q; Freshman Baseball Team. I928; P. K. Sociely. JULIUS FRANKLIN HUNT ................ 6 ....................... Wingsdule. New York A X: 6 T; A P X; A. S. C. 5.; 3.5.. C.E.. University of Virginia: Engineering journal Staff. l925-26-27. JACK DYER HUNTER .................... I ............................... Waco. Texas THOMAS LOMAX HUNTER .............. 2 ....................... King George. Virginia JOHN DAVID HURT ...................... I ............................ Mobile. Alabama JOHN OMOHUNDRO HURT .............. 2 ........................... Roanoke. Virginia A T; Frelhmnn Swimming Team. I927. ARTHUR RICKETTS HUTCHINC- ......... 3 ........................... Norfolk. Virginia CHARLES EUGENE HYDE. JR ............. I ......................... Memphis. Tenneuee 41 2 K; Freshman Boxing Squad, I928. HARRY HYMANN ........................ I .......................... Hudson. New York . A. VINCENT CLENDON IRWIN ............. 2 ........................ Annapolis, Maryland ROBERT KEAN IVEY .................... I ......................... Lynchburg. Virginia A K E; Football Adjunct. WILLIAM CHRISTOPHER IVEY .......... 2 ......................... Lynchburg. Virginia A K E: First Year FoolbaII Team. I927; First Year Baskcl-ball Team. I927; Fin! Year Boxing Team. I928; Football Squad, I928. FREDERIC M. JACOBS .................... 3 ........................... Roanoke. Virginia JAKE JACOBSON ......................... I ......................... Portsmouth. Virginia JOHN MASON JAMESON. JR .............. I ........................... Roanoke. Virginia I102l CORKS 6 CURLS l Academic Class 1 NAME YEAR IN COLLEGE HOME ADDRESS ARTHUR MERRITT jARMAN ............ 5 ...................... Charlotlesville. Virginia WILLIAM THOMAS JARVIS .............. 4 ..................... Virginia Beach. Virginia BROOK JENKINS ......................... I ......................... Wyoming. Delaware JAMES DOUGLAS JENKINS .............. 2 .................... Charleston. South Carolina JAMES JACK JENKINS .................... 2 .................. Port Washington. New York OLIVER NUTTER JENNINGS ............. I ........................ Southporl, Connecticut PHILIP SAMUEL JESSUP ................. 3 ...................... Charlollesville. Virginia INOCENCIO JIMENEZ .................... I ............. Panama City. Republic of Panama FREDERICK ARTHUR JOHNS ............ 3 ........................... Notfolk. Virginia A Z 4?; Tennis Team. I927-28; Swimming Team. I927-28; Intermediate Honors. I928. JAMES FRANCIS JOHNSON .............. I ............................. Miami, Florida 2 I? E. COLEMAN CARNEGIE JOHNSTON ....... 4 ......................... Lexington. Kentucky 2 N; Wreslling Team, I927-28. C. WALDO JOHNSTON ................... 4 ..................... Springdale, Pennsylvania A T. JOSEPH SHACKFORD OHNSTON ....... I ........................... Bedford. Virginia Cb F A; First Year Ba: el-baII. WILLIAM THOMAS JOHNSTON .......... I .................... Rozelle Park. New Jersey THOMAS MORRISON C. JOHNSTON ..... 2 ......................... Lexinglon, Kentucky 2 N; First Year Football Squad. I927-28. WILLIAM SINCLAIR JOHNSTONE ....... 2 ..................... Caslonia. North Carolina ARCHER JON$. JR ....................... 3 .......................... Richmond, Virginia A K E; P. K. Society; T.I.L.K.A.; Captain First Year ankel-baII. I927: V Baskcl-ball. I928-29: Varsity Club; Associate Editor V irgl'm'a Reel. CARROLL PAYNE JONB ................ I ............................ Allanla. Georgia 2 N. EDWARD VALENTINE JONES. JR ......... 2 ...................... Newport News. Virginia ELLIOTT JONES .......................... I ......................... Petersburg, Virginia B 9 H. jOHN BARKSDALE JONES. JR ............ 2 ...................... Knoxville. Tennessee WILLIAM ASHBY JONES, III ............. I .......................... Richmond, Virginia B 6 II; Football Adjunct. WILLIAM ELLSWORTH JONES ........... 3 .................... West Orange, New Jersey A X; A K W; First Year Lacrosse. I927; Lacrosse Team IVI. I928; Frnlernily Representative ConKs AND CURLS. FLETCHER JORDAN, JR ................... Z .................... Greenville. South Carolina K A. HERMAN LEGALLIENNE JOSEPHSON... 3 ........................ Brooklyn. New York FRANK OVERTON JUDY ................. 3 ............................ Stanley, Virginia RICHARD LEE JUDY ..................... 2 ............................ Stanley, Virginia JOHN LYTTLETON JUSTICE ............. 4 ........................... Slaunlon. Virginia SOLOMON HARRISON KAHN ............ I ........................... Norfolk. Virginia A E II. GLENN AUGUSTUS KAMINER ........... 3 ..................... Gadsden. South Carolina 2 A E; T.I.L.K.A.; P. K. Society; Freshman Football Numeral; Frcuhman Baseball Squad; Varsity Foolball V. I927-28; Track Squad; Baskel-ball Squad; V Club; Skull and Keys. GEORGE J. KASLOFF ..................... 3 ....................... New York. New York A E H. ISHAM KEITH. JR ......................... 3 ......................... Warrenlon. Virginia A 1H A H; German Club; Virginia Players; Managing Editor of Virginia Real,- Assistant Manager Baskel-ball. I928-29. I103l I Academic Class 1 NAME YEAR IN COLLEGE HOME ADDRESS JOHN AUGUSTINE CHILTON KEITHU .2 ......................... Wanenlon. Virginia K A; Skull and Keys: German Club. CHARLES HAWES KELLEY .............. I . ....................... Manquin, Virginia NORMAN KELSEY ........................ 2 ....................... Bronxville. New York III I' A; Adjunct Manager Baskel-baII. I928-29. JOHN E. KEMPF .......................... I .................... Tompkinsville. New York BEVERLY RANDOLPH KENNON. III ..... 2 ........................... Norfolk. Virginia X III; German Club; Assistant Manager Lacrosse. I929. HARRY ROGERS KERN. JR ................ 3 ......................... Winchester. Virginia BLAKE KIDD ............................. 4 .......................... Covington. Virginia II K A. ROBERT SCOTT KIMBALL. JR ............ I ....................... Ipswich, Maunchusem E I? E. JERE CLEMENS KING, JR ................. I ....................... Birmingham. Alibama ROBERT KING ............................ 2 ........................... Cqueper. Virginia WILLIAM HENRY KING, III .............. 2 ......................... Porlsmoulh. Virginia WILLIAM VIRGINIUS KING, JR ........... I .......................... Thornhill. Virginia EDWARD LINDEN KINNEY .............. 2 ...................... Charlottesville. Virginia L. RANDOLPH KIRKPATRICK. JR ......... 3 .................. BennellsviIIe. South Carolina JAMES WILLIAM KIRIGEY, JR ........... I ....................... Chatlanooga. Tennessee I? A 9; Freshman Football Squad: Adjuncl CORKS AND CURLS. RAYMOND FRANKLINE KLINE .......... 4 .......................... University. Virginia CHARLES PHILIP KLINCENSMITH. H.. .. I ........................... Pontiac. Michigan SAMUEL ROBINSON KNIGHT ............ 2 ..................... Spring Lake. New Jersey ABRAHAM KOLTUN ..................... I .................... Richmond Hill New York JOSEPH GEORGE KOSLOFSKY ........... 3 ...................... New York. New York WILLIAM ALEXANDER KRAUSS ........ 2 ............... Hasbroucl: Heighls, New Jersey ABE. LEON KRUCER ...................... I ........................... Norfolk Virginia 1? A. ISRAEL MAURICE KRUGER .............. I ......................... . .Norfolk. Virginia ISIDORE WILLIAM KRULICK ............. 2 ....................... New York, New York HENRY WILLIAM LADEWIC. JR ......... I ............................. Chicago. Illinois 2 N: A P X. WILLIAM LEONARD LAFORCE .......... Z ............................. Dante. Virginia MICHAEL ANTHONY LA CIGLIA ........ I ............................ Norfolk. Virginia ALTER LAIBSTAIN ....................... I ............................ Berkley. Virginia MAURICE LAIKEN ....................... 3 ........................ Brooklyn, New York Assistant in Spanish; Dean's List. EDWARD LAMM ......................... 4 ......................... Mexico City. Mexico THADDEUS BOOTHE LAMPTON ........ I .......................... Jackson. Mississippi B 9 H. JOHN BLACK LANCASTER ............... 2 ............................ Norfolk. Virginia X 4,; P. K. Society. DONALD LANE ........................... I ...................... Rutherford. New Jersey 2 N. FLOYD LANKFORD. JR .................... I ......................... Baltimore. eryland K 2. HENRY HANNAN LANSMAN ............ 2 ........................ Brooklyn. New York ROBERT WHITWORTH LARMOUR ...... 3 ............................ Norfolk. Virginia WILLIAM CARROL LATIMER ............ 2 ............................ Atlanta. Georgia X :p; I H; German Club: Freshman Boxing. I928; Varsity Boxing Squad. I929. ARMANDO JOSEPH LAURITANO ............................... New York New York I1041 I Academic Class 1 NAME YEAR IN COLLEGE HOME ADDRESS ARTHUR DUDLEY LAWRENCE. JR ....... l ......................... Yonkers. New York ANDY JACOB LAWSON .................. 3 ............................. Calnx, Virginia JACK LAWSON ........................... 2 .......................... Flint Hill. Virginia THOMAS RICHARDS LEACHMAN ....... 4 ....................... Charlottesville. Virginia SAMUEL GORDON LEARY ............... 3 ......................... Alexandria, Virginia 9 A X. JOHN RAYMOND LEATHERBURY ....... 3 ......................... Baltimore. Maryland Glee Club; Boxing Squad. JOHN NEISON LEAVELL ................ I ......................... Louisville. Kentucky A T A: FoolbaII Adjunct, I923. EDWARD ALSTON LEE .................. 3 ....................... Montgomery, Alabama It A 9; A II: P. K. Sociely; Track Adjuncl. 1927-28; Assislanl Manager Track. I928-29; Madison Hall Junior Cabinet. SAINT GEORGE TUCKER LEE ........... I ....................... Concord. Massachusens A T 9: Football Adjunct. I928. SAMUEL LILE LEE ....................... I ......................... Lynchburg. Virginia A T Q; Freshman FoolbaII Team. I928. jAMES ALEXANDER LEITCH. JR ......... 5 ....................... Charlottesville. Virginia MARVIN ELMER LEMON ................ I ...................... South Roanoke. Virginia RICHARD BLACK LEONARD ............. I ......................... Baltimore. Maryland K E. HERMAN KERNER ....................... 4 ............................ Orange. Virginia GORDON CRANDALL LESSELS ........... I ...................... Wynantskill. New York DAVID R. LEVIN ......................... 2 ......................... Portsmouth. Virginia A E II; Dean's List. GILBERT BURNET LEWIS. JR ............. 2 ..................... Concord. North Carolina 4:0 F A; Baskel-ball Adjunct; Track. HERBERT IVERSON LEWIS .............. 2 .......................... Gloucester. Virginia d, F A: Freshman Football Team. I927: Freshman Baseball Team, I928. JOHN DAINGERFIELD LEWIS ............ 2 ......................... Baltimore. Maryland :1; K E: A H; Freshman Baseball. I928. JOHN WINFIELD LEWIS ................. 2 .......................... Richmond. Virginia MINOR BOTTS LEWIS. JR ................. 2 ....................... Clifton Forge. Virginia 4, K 2; German Club; Skull and Key:: Freshman Football. I927; Captain Freshman Baseball Team. I928. ALBERT DONNER LEWY ................ 3 ............................. Cleveland. Ohio 1? E II: Freshman FoolbaII Team. I926; Freshman Baseball Team. I927: Varsity Baseball Team. I928; Vnrsily Football Team. I928. TEMPLIN RICKARD LICKLIDER. JR ....... I ............................ Norfolk. Virginia 9 X; Track Adjunct. I928. BERNARD ISAAC LIDMAN ............... I ............................ Norfolk. Virginia It A. ALEXANDER COVENTRY LIGGETT ..... 2 .............. Washinglon. District of Columbia K A: SIaE Virginia Spectator. BRAXTON BRACC COMER LILE. ......... 2 ............................ Trinity. Alabama Iv A 6: A II. JACOB WALLACE LITVACK ............. I ....................... New York. New York CHARLB DISBROW LLOYD ............. 3 ..................... Harrisburg. Pennsylvania GEORGE WELDON L. LLOYD ............ 2 .......................... Clarendon. Virginia WILLIAM EMMONS LLOYD .............. I .......................... NokcsviIIe. Virginia jOHN MONROE LOCKHART ............. I ........................ Birmingham. Alabama 2 A E; Freshman Football. I928. llnm I Academic Class 1 NAME YEAR IN COLLEGE HOME ADDRESS WALTER STUART LOEBL ................ 4 ........................... Roanoke. Virginia REGINALD AUGUSTUS LOFTUS ......... 3 .............. Washington. District of Columbia HUGH CLARION LOGAN ................. I ............................. Tampa. Florida W. H. LOHR ............................... 3 .......................... Momerey. Virginia WILLIAM THOMAS LOVE. JR ............. I ..................... Culonia. North CIroIina X 4?; Boxing Adjunct. LUNSFORD LOMAX LOVING ...................................... Lynchburg. Virginia 4i K W: A II; Freshman Baskel- ball Team. I9IZZ7: Baseball Adjunct. I928 WILLIAM JORDAN LUCK ......................................... Middleburg. VIrgInia GORDON LINDSON LUKE. ................ I ......................... Irvington. New YorI: Z W. EUCLID BUXTON LUNINC ............... 2 ...................... Newport News. Virginia Boxing Squad. MICAJAH WOODS LUPTON .............. 3 ........................ Birmingham. Alabama A K E; A II; German Club; Freshman Track. I927; Football Adjunct. I926; Alternate Auislant Manager FoolbaII. I928. jOHN WALLACE LYNCH ................. 3 ....................... Georgetown. Delaware A T; Business SlaE Virginia Real; Reporlorial Slat? College Topics; Dean's Lisl: Instructor In Physics; Wesley Club. FREDERICK MORDECIA LYON ........... I ...................... Durham. North Carolina K A; A Ix 4'. JOHN HOWARD WILLETTS MCALLISTER I ........................ Bridgeton. New Jersey 41- V K; Freshman Wrestling S.quad MARCELLUS DAUNIS MCBRIDE. ......... 2 ....................... CharloltesviIIe. Virginia A T A; Freshman Cross-Counlry, I927; Vanily Crou-Counlry. I928. OWEN EUGENE MCBRIDE ................ I .............. Washington. District of Columbia E N. JOHN MCLAREN MCBRYDE. JR ............ I ...................... New Orleans. Louisiana CHARLES BRELSFORD MCCOY ........... 3 ........................ Wilmington. Delaware 4, K W; A II; P. K. Society: Inlermediale Honors; Auislam Manager Baskel-ball. HARRY ROBERT MCCOY ................. 3 .............................. Hurt. Virginia B K: Freshman Foolball, I926: Freshman Track. I927; Varsily Football. I927-28. CYRUS jOHN MCCUE. JR .................. 2 ........................... Slaunlon. Virginia ALAN MCCULLOUCH ..................... I ............................ Norfolk. Virginia B 9 H; Freshman FoolbaII. I928. JOHN CHAUNCEY MCCURDY ............ 3 .................... Burgellslown. Pennsylvania EDWARD LEAVELL MCDONALD. JR ...... 2 ......................... Lexington. Kentucky A T A: Freshman Wrestling; Vanity Wrestling. PAUL MCDONALD ........................ 2 .......................... Cainesville, Georgia H K A; Business Slag College Topics, I928; Secretary Junior Y. M. C. A. Cabinel. I928-29; Secretary First Year Y. M. C. A Cabinet. I927-28. JOHN PAYNE MCDONNELL .............. I .............. Washington. District of Columbia JESSE. CLARK MCDOWELL ............... 2 .............................. Victoria. Texas d: K III; A 11; SIaIislics Edilor CORKS AND CURLS. I929. THEODORE ANDREWS MCDOWELL ..... 3 ............................... Medina. Ohio A T; A 2 II; Dean's Lisl. ALFRED BUFFIN MCEWEN ............... 2 .......................... Richmond. Virginia A T; FoolanI Squad. I928. JOHN FULTON MCGAVOCK .............. 3 ....................... CharlottesviIIe. Virginia A 4'; Ceran Club; IMP; T.I.L.K.A. I1061 CORKS 5 CURLS I Academic Class I NAME YEAR IN COLLEGE HOME ADDRESS EDWARD BYRD MCGEORGE. JR .......... 2 .......................... Richmond. Virginia Z 1'; Skull and Keys; German Club; Assistant Manager Track. I926- 29. SAMUEL HODC-ES MCGHEE. JR .............................. Greenwood. South Carolina X tb; A H; P. K. Sociely: T.I.L...;KA ;Z4FresI1man Baseball I926; Assislanl Manager Fool- baII. I927: President P. K. Society. I928- 29; Vice- President Academic School. 928-29; Honor Commillee. JOHN FERRISS MCCOWAN. JR ............ 3 ........................... Savannah, Georgia WILLIAM PROVINCE MCGUIRE .......... 4 ......................... Winchester. Virginia A 1'; Eli Banana: Presidenl German Club; Fraternity Represenlalivc CORKs AND CURLS; Chair- man Bad Check Commillec; Head Cheer Lender. JOHN EDWARD McHUGH. JR ............. l ...................... Long Island. New York 1 F A. LEWIS WALKE McILHANY ............... 3 ...................... Charlottesville. Virginia A T A; A II: Captain Freshman Cross-Counlry. I926; Freshman Track Team. I927: Varsity Track. I926; Varsity Cross-Coumry Team. I927-28; German Club; Madison HaII Firs! Year Cabinet I926- 27; JeEerson Socicly. RALPH MCKITTRICK ........................................... Rosemonl. Pennsylvania 2. N; P. K Sociely; FoolanI Adjunct. I927- 2:8. RALEIGH THOMAS MCLAUGHLIN JR... ...................... BIucIIeId. West Virginia GEORGE. ROBERT MCMAHON ............ I .................... Huntington. Weal Virginia A 1,; Glee Club. PERRY REED MCMAHON ................. I ........................... Glendale. Virginia CAINES MCMILLAN, II. . . 2 .............. 2 ......................... Baltimore. Maryland K A; Freshman FootbaII Squad; Reporlorial Slaff College Topics. THOMAS HARVEY MCMILLAN ........... 2 ..................... Charleston, West Virginia A X. TOLER LEMLEY MCNEILL ................ 3 ....................... Harrisonburg. Virginia 6 A X. JOHN BUXTON MADDREY ............... 2 ............................ Norfolk. Virginia 9 X; Virginia PInyen. JOHN K. MACRUDER ..................... I .......................... Clarendon. Virginia ROGER GREGORY MAGRUDER ................................. Charlottesville. Virginia Z 1'; German Club; Freshman Football Squad.3 I927; Skull and Keys. BENJAMIN MALVIN ...................... 3 .................... Far Rockaway. New York ROBERT EARLY MANLEY. JR ............. I .......................... York. Pennsylvania JACK MANNIE ............................ I ....................... New York. New York 1 E II: Freshman FoolbaII Squad. I928. ALFRED LEE. MARCHANT ................ 3 ......................... Baltimore. Maryland AUGUST MELVIN MARCHANT ........... I .......................... GIoucester. Virginia EDWARD ARCHIBALD MARKS. JR ....... 2 .................... South Orange. New Jersey 9 X: Circulation Manager College Topics: Dean's List; I9Z7-28; College Topics. I928-29; Virginia Spectator. JOHN ALBION MARSH ................... 3 ............................. DixerId. Maine 9 X; A K 1'. CHARLES EDWARD AMBLER MARSHALLS ........................... Slaunlon, Virginin HORACE STOWE MARSHALL .................................. New York. New York 9 X: Adjunct College Topics. HARVEY LEE MARSTON ................. 4 ......................... Baltimore, Maryland 41 K 2; Eli Banana; Skull and Keys; German Club; Freshman FootbaII Team. I925; Freshman WreslIing. I926: Madison HaII Cabinet. I927-28; Auislanl Manager Baseball. I928; Varsity Club. HENRY FRANCIS BEAUMONT MARTIN 2 ........................... Danville. Virginia JAMES CALVIN MARTIN ................ I ........................ ....Sago. Virginia l1071 I Academic Class 1 NAME YEAR IN COLLEGE HOME ADDRESS JOHN DONELSON MARTIN. JR ........... 3 ......................... Memphis. Tennessee 2 A E; Freshman Baseball Numeral; Boxing Squad. WILLIAM ROBERT MARTIN ............. 4 ....................... Glen Allan. Mississippi CD A 9; A II; A K 1!; P. K. Society; JeEerson Literary Society; Secretary Madison HaII. I927- 28; CORKS AND Cuan Stati. JOHN AUBREY MATTER ................. 2 ......................... Alexandria. Virginia JOHN JACOB MATTERN. JR .............. 2 .......................... Richmond. Virginia A X P; A P X. ROBERT FRENCH MASON. JR ............ 3 ............................ Fairfax, Virginia B 9 II; German Club; Reportorial Sth College Topics. JOHN HENRY MASSIE. JR ................ 2 ........................... Edinburg. Virginia GEORGE CARL MATTHEWS ............. 2 ...................... Elkhorn. West Virginia II K A; Baseball Adjunct. I928; Fraternily Represenlalive CORKs AND CURLS. I929. WILLIAM BEAUFORT MATHEWS ....... I ............................ Huuig. Arkansas H K A LEWIS CHARLES MATTISON ..................................... Lynchburg, VIrgInIl E A E: Scarab; Reel Board; College Topics B:oard; Glee Club. HENRY ALDEN MAUPIN ...................................... CharlottevaIIe. VIrgInII THOMPSON BROCQE MAURY ........... 3 ...................... Brookline. Massachusells FORTE LEICHTON MAYERS ............. I ...................... CoIIInIVIIIe. Conneclicut LEMUEL EDWARD MAYO ............... I ......................... Porlsmoulh. Virginia d? 2 K; Caplain Freshman Cross-Counlry Team; Freshman BaskeI-ball. FRED JAMES MEADE .................... 2 ........................... Danville. Virginia JULIAN RUTHERFOORD MEADE ........ 4 ........................... Danville. Virginia Dean's List; Assistant in English; Virginia Players. WARREN COOK MEANS ................. 2 ........................ Pine Bluff, Arkansas 2 A E. JOHN CLAYBROOK MEREDITH .......... I .......................... ScollsviIIe. Virginia ANDREW WILLIAM MERLE, jk ........... 2 ......................... Baltimore. Maryland K 3; A II; Freshman FoolbaII Squad. I927; Freshman Baskcl-baII Team. I928; Freshman Track Team. I928. FRANCIS JAMES MERRITT ............... I .................... New Rochelle, New York 2 $ E. ROGERS MEYER ......................... 2 ...................... Ridgewood, New Jersey A W; SIKUII and Keys; Glee CIub. BEVERLY MERCER MIDDLETON ........ 3 .............. Washington District of CqumbIl E N; Business Manager Virginia Players. I927- 28; College TopIcs SlaII I928- 29; P. K. Society. CARY FRANKLIN MILLER ........................................... Orlando, Florida 1395i; Freshman Football Team. I926: Freshman Banket- baII Team I927; Varsity Football Squad. 8. CHARLES LAVELL MILLER .............. 3 ................... PIIIIadeIpIIIa. PennsyIvanIa 2 4? E; Boxing Squad. I929; FraternIly Representalivc CORKs AND CURLS. I IRVING MILLER .......................... 2 ........................ Brooklyn. New York JULIUS SHELDON MILLER ............... 2 ............................ NorfoIII. Virginia AUSTIN B. MITCHELL. JR ................ I ................. Charles Town. West Virginia WILLIAM CALVIN MITCHELL, JR ........ 2 .................... Charleslon. West Virginia A X; Freshman Basket-baII Team. I928. WILLIAM THOMPSON MITCHELL ....... I ....................... Walertown. New York IF A 9. MASAO MIURA .......................... 3 ......................... Berkeley, CaIIfomIa BERNARD SOLOMON MIZROCH. . . . . . I ....... Norfolk, Virginia GEORGE VOWLES MONCURE ............ 3 .......................... Richmond. Virginia K A: ReportorIaI Staff College Topics.- Freshman Boxing Squad; Football Adjunct; P. K. Society; Associate Editor College Topics: Madison HaII First Year Cabinet; SkuII and Keys. IIOSI I Academic Class 1 NAME YEAR IN COLLEGE HOME ADDRESS DAVID BROCKMAN MONSKY ............ 4 ....................... Montgomery. Alabama 41 A. CHARLES PAUL MONTGOMERY, II ...... I ....................... Montclair. New Jersey K 2. WILLIAM A. MOOMAW .................. 3 ........................ Rocky Point. Virginia JAMESX HERBERT MOORE. ............... I .................... Charleslon. Wes! Virginia A '. PIERRE ALBERT MOORE. ................ 4 ...................... New Orleans, Louisiana WILLIAM PERRY MOORE, JR ............. 3 ............................ Norfolk, Virginia r922 :27SkuII and Keys; Frcshman Baseball Squad. I927; Madison HaII First Year Cnbinel. GILBERT IEDMOND MORCROFT ......... 2 ...................... Pittsburgh. Pennsylvania 4? A 9: A II; Freshman ankel-ball Team; Dean's List; Tennis Team: Varsity Baskel-ball Squad: Fraternity Represenlalive CORKS AND CURLS. JOSEPH KINNEAR MORFORD ............ 4 ......................... Lexington. Kenlucky A K E: Skull and Keys; German Club; Eli Banana; Freshman Football Team. I925; Freshman Track, I926. NATHAN WOLFE MORGAN .............. 3 ...................... 6 . . .Danville. Virginia RICHARD BECKER MORGAN ............ 2 .......................... Kealchic. Louisiana ROY LEONARD MORGAN ................ 2 .................... Sislersvillc. Wes! Virginia HERBERT LESLIE MORCENROTH ....... I ....................... New York. New York Cb A 9. EDWARD WATTS MORRIS ............... 3 ........................ Birmingham, Alabama A W; A H; German Club; T.I.L.K.A.; CORKs AND CURLs: Freshman Track. I927: Fraternity Editor CORKS AND CURLS. I929. JOSEPH PERRY MORRIS .......... , ....... I ............................ Norfolk. Virginia ROBERT DABNEY MORRISON ........... 2 ......................... Lynchburg. Virginia d, K 1!; A II; German Club; Baseball Adjunct, I928: Fraternity Representative CORKS AND Cuan. WILLIAM WARD MOSS. JR ................ 3 ............................ Norfolk. Virginia K 2; German Club: Skull and Keys: Freshman Baskcl-ball Squad. I927; T.I.L.K.A.: Assistant Business Manager CORKS AND CURLS. HUNTER CRISLER MOTLEY ............. 2 ........................... Madison. Virginia X Cb: A II: Freshman Foolball. I927; Freshman Boxing. I928; Freshman Track, I928; Varsity Football. I928: V ; Varsity Club. LINDSAY AVERETT MOTLEY. JR ......... 4 ........................... Danville. Virginia A K W; Jefferson Society; Literary Staff Virginia Reel; .A 'I I in C- w and B ' Administration: Deans LIsl. JOHN MOYLER. JR ........................ 2 .......................... Richmond. Virginia Z 1': Skull and Keys; German Club: Baskct- ball Adjunct. I928-29; Freshman Track Squad. I928: Fraternity Representative CORKS AND CURLs. CHARLES P. MULDER. JR ................. 5 ..................... Salisbury. North Carolina WILLIS GREEN MUNCY .................. 5 ............................. Bland. Virginia JAMES MARTIN MUSTARD .............. 2 ............................ Cismonl. Virginia PAUL GROSECLOSE MUSTARD .......... 6 ............................ Cismonl. Virginia ROBERT WALL MUSTARD ............... I ............................ Cismont, Virginia DOUGLAS GEE. MYERS ................... I ......................... Petersburg. Virginia A di'; Freshman Football Team. I928. HARRISON CARTER MYERS, THRf ................................... Pelersburg VIrgInIa A tit; ;Z Skull and Keys;T L...;KA P. K Socxety; Freshman Boxing Team. I927; Varsity Boxing Squad. I928-29. EDUARDO NAVARRO. JR ................. 3 ................. Panama. Republic of Panama flonl I Academic Class 1 NAME YEAR IN COLLEGE HOME ADDRESS CLIFFORD HALL NEILSON .............. I ..................... Bridgetown. New Jersey 1i E K. GEORGE ROBERT NEILSON ............. l ....................... New York. New York NOWELL DARDEN NELMS .............. I ..................... Newport News. Virginia 9 X: Freshman Track Squad, l928-Z9: Adjunct Bueineu Staff Virginia Reel. EDWIN ROLSON NELSON ................ 2 ................... Huntington. West Virginia B 9 H; Freshman Baseball Squad. I928; German Club. WILLIAM SEDDON CABELL NELSON. . .. l ........................ Winchester. Virginia A K E; Freshman Football Team; Freshman Boxing; Freshman Track. EDWARD THOMAS NEWELL. JR ......... l ...................... Challanooga. Tennessee 2 X; anket-ball Adjunct. I929. ROBERT ALLEN NEWMAN .............. l ......................... Lynchburg, Virginia JOSEPH NEY ............................. 2 ....................... Harrisonburg. Virginia Z B T. ARTHUR STARR NIENDORFF ........... 2 .............................. Dallas. Texas A X. HAROLD GEORGE NIX .................. 2 .............................. Opp. Alabama A T: Dean's List. JOSEPH DABBS NOEL ................... 3 .............. Washington. District of Columbia B 9 II; Tennis Team. I928; German Club. FREDERICK RUDOLPH NOLDE .......... I ......................... Richmond, Virginia GEORGE FREDERICK NOLDE. JR ......... 2 .......................... Richmond. Virginia ALCERNON SIDNEY BUFORD NOLTING 3 .......................... Richmond. Virginia A 4'; Skull and Keys; German Club; Raven; Inlermediale Honors; Freshman Foolball Squad: Wrestling Squad. I928; Assignment Editor College Topics. l927-28. HENRY REDWOOD NOTTINGHAM ...... l ....................... Cape Charla. Virginia CHARLES SHEPHERD NOWLIN ......... 2 ......................... Lynchburg. Virginia 4e K 1': Foolball Adjuncl. I928. GEORGE EDMUND NUCKOLS ............ 3 .......................... Richmond. Virginia A T A: A P X: Varsity Basket-ba . l928-29. LORIN NUSBAUM ........................ 2 ........................... Norfolk. Virginia Z B T; CORKS AND Cust. CHARLES PAXTON GATES .............. 3 ......................... Memphis, Tennessee X 4,; Skull and Keys; P. K. Society; Boxing Squad. JACOB OCHS ............................. 2 ......................... Arverne. New York CHARLES OCHS .......................... 2 .................. Rockaway Island. New York e? A; Cross-Counlry. 927-28; Boxing. I927-28. FREYHAN ODENHEIMER ................ 2 ...................... New Orleans, Louisiana Z B T; Freshman Foolball. I927; Varsity Football. I928; College Topics: Glee Club. JAMES JOSEPH ODONNELL ............. 3 ........................... Norfolk. Virginia WILIIEOAUGHBY NEWTON OFFLEY ....... I ......................... San Antonio. Texas ROBERT FREDERICK OLIVER ........... 2 ...................... Newport, Rhode Island Freshman Foolball Squad, I927. HARRY OlSON ........................... 2 ...................... Ridgeway. Pennsylvania X N: A P X. HARRY ARTHUR ORNSTEIN ............ 3 ........................ Brooklyn. New York A E H: Dean's List. NORWOOD BENTLEY ORRICK .......... 2 .............. Washinglon. District of Columbia i1 K 4'; Skull and Keys; Freshman Foolball, I927; Varsily Football Squad. I928: Baskel-ball Adjunct. I927; German Club; Dean's List; Instructor in Biology. I928. HAL CARL OSBOURNE ................... l .......................... Fincaskle. Virginia Illol CORKSEBCURLS . x . I929 I Academic Class 1 NAME YEAR IN COLLEGE HOME ADDRESS ROBERT SEDCEWICK OSBOURN ........ 4 ........................... Ithaca. New York 2 A E: A II; Madison HaII. ' WILLIAM JOHN OVEN. JR ................ I ......................... Tallahassee. Florida 9 X; Basketball Adjunct. I929; Adjunct CORKS AND CURLS. LEVY DABNEY OVERTON .............. 3 ......................... Walkerton. Virginin JOHN WARREN OWENS ................. I ...................... Chevy Chase. Maryland 2 N. LAWRENCE PACE ....................... 2 ....................... Harrisonburg. Virginia WILLIAM WORDEN PACE ............... 2 ...................... Glen Rock. New Jersey CHARLES VANCE PALMER .............. 3 ............................ Sioux City. Iowa FRED SHANK PALMER .................. 3 ....................... Middlelown. Maryland B K; Glee Club. I926-27: Wuhinglon Literary Society. ROY GLENN PARKS ..................... 3 ........................... Hopelon. Vitginin JAMES SHEPHERD PARRISH. JR ......... 4 ............................ SquoIk. Virginia K A. HERBERT THOMAS PATEMAN ......... I ........................... Norfolk. Virginia ALVIN HYATT PATTERSON ............ 3 ........................ Baltimore. Maryland 2 X; German Club; Skull and Keys: Assistant Business Manager CORKs AND CURLS. I927- 28; Manager of Swimming Team, I928- 29 ISAAC NATHAN PATTERSON ........... 3 ..................... Swedesboro. New Jerky KENNETH STUART PATTON ............ 3 ......................... Belgrade. Jugoalavia A X. JOHN ALDEN PAUL ...................... I ......................... Walertown. FIoridn Z 1!; Fruhman Boxing Squad. I928: Freshman Cross-Country Team. I928. WILLIAM WELLMAN PAXTON .......... 2 ....................... Monchair. New Janey K E; Freshman FoolbaII Team. I927; Freshman Track Team. I928; Varsily Football Team. I928; Varsity Club. EDWARD MALCOLM PAYNE ............ 4 ...................... Beckley. Wen Virginia A T A: A E H; P. K. Society: Eli Banana. CROVERMAN BLAKE PAYNE ........... I ..................... GreenEcId. Mnuachuselts WILLIAM ANDERSON PAYNE ........... I ............................ Evanslon. Illinois K E; Freshman Football Squad. I928. WILLIAM HERNDON PEARSON .......... I ........................... Norfolk. Virginia 2 X; Freshman FoolbaII Squad. I928. MARK MAUPIN FENCE. .................. 2 ...................... CharlollesviIIe, Virginia ALBERT DORSEY PENICK ............... 2 ....................... Montclair. New Jersey A T Q: A H; Freshman Football Squad. I927; P. K. Sociely. GILES ALBERT PENICK. JR ............... I ............................ Tulsa. Oklahoma A T 9. NICHOLAS GRIFFITH PENNIMAN ....... 2 ......................... Baltimore. Maryland tb K E: A H; Freshman Truck. I927. JOHN F. PENROSE, JR ..................... 3 ......................... Winchester, Virginia ISAAC PAUL PERKINS ................... 4 ........................ Fork Union. Virginia 22 $ E; Football. I925. I928; Football Adjunct: Treasurer JeIferson Lilerary Society: Assislanl Business Manager College Topics,- Denn's List. I926-27-28-29; Fraternity Reprcacnlalive CORKS AND Cums. I928. ASHBY PATTESON PERRY .............. 4 ......................... Memphis. Tennessee ANDREW DALZELL PETERS ............ I ........ . ............. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania A T Q. GORDON PICKETT PEYTON ............. 4 ........................ Brooklyn. New York 21 X; Captain Freshman Swimming Team, I926; Swimming Team. I927- 28- 29; Baskct-ball Squad. I927. I929; Lacrosse, I927- 28- 29. Illll CORKS 53 CU RLS l Academic Class 1 NAME YEAR IN COLLECE HOME ADDRESS JOHN LEWIS PEYTON ................... I ........................... Slaunlon. Virginil A W; Freshman FoolbaII Team. I928. WINSTON PHELPS ....................... 3 ...................... Ridgewood. New Jersey A T; Dean's Lin; Lacrosse Squad. I928; Glee Club. EDWARD LEROY PHILLIPS .............. 3 ...................... Burgeu Store. Virginia FRANCIS MURRAY PHILLIPS. JR ......... 4 ................. Charla Town. West Virginia JOSEPH FORREST PHILLIPS ............. 4 ..................... Newport Ncwn. Virginia HUBERT BEAUMONT PHIPPS ........... 2 ........................ Weslbury. New York JOHN JULIAN PICKERAL ................ 2 ........................ Middlemwn. Virgini- JOHN BENJAMIN FINDER. JR ............ I .......................... Richmond. Virginie A W: Freshman Boxing Squad. LAYTON PLATT ......................... 4 .......................... Monroe. Louisiannn K E; Frelhman BasebaII. I926. RISQUE: WILSON PLUMMER ............. 2 ......................... Pelenburg. Virginia A T A: Freshman Wrestling. I928. JOHN SAMUEL POINDEXTER ........... 3 ...................... Chattanooga. Tennessee 2 X; A II: German Club; Eli Banana; Boxing Manager. I929. MILTON EMANUEL POLAKOFF ......... I ........................ Brooklyn. New York JAMES jEFFRIES POLLARD. JR ........... I .......................... Richmond, Virginie JAMES MELVILLE PORTER .............. I ........................ Saint Louis. Missouri JESSE JAMES PORTER ................... 2 ............................. Louisa. Virginia K E; Freshman Baseball Team. I928. HARRISON TRUEHEART POSTON ...... 3 ......................... Lynchburg. Virginia I? E K; Scarab; An 5155 Virginia Reel: Asaislanl Manager Swimming; Adjunct Virginia Playerl; Dean's Lin. CHARLES POWELL ...................... 2 ....................... Cape Charles. Virginia ELWOOD ALEXANDER POWELL ........ I ....................... CreenIuwn. New York ROGER VAN NEST POWEL'SON ......... 2 ....................... New York. New York 2 IP E; Dean's List. WALTER BOUAMY POWER, JR ........... 5 ......................... Redlands, California A in German Club; Lacrosse Team. I925-Z6-Z7. Captain, I927; Football Squad. I926-27. JOHN HENRY PRATT. JR ................. 3 ............................. Tampa. Florida E A E. ALLAN BLACK PRICE. JR ................ 2 ......................... Lynchburg, Virginia MERIWETHER LEWIS PRICE ............ 5 ......................... Universily. Virginia WILLIAM CLACGETT PRICE ............ I ........................... Scarboro. Virginia 1? A 9; Freshman Boxing Squad. I929. DAVID PRINCE ........................... 3 ........................ Brooklyn. New York PHILIP MORRIS PRUSSAK ............... 3 ..................... Jersey Cily, New Jersey EDWARD MARSHALL PRYOR ........... 2 ...................... Charlollesville. Virginia JORDAN ANTHONY PUGH .............. 2 ........................... Norfolk. Virginia JAMB DUNCAN FULLER, JR ............. 3 ...................... Saint Augustine, Florida lb A 9; A II; A K N11; Adjuncl Manager Boxing. I927-28; German Club; Assinanl Manager Boxing. I929: Madison Hall junior Cabinet; Ansociale Edilor CORKS AND CURLs, I928; Edilor of Deparlmenls CORKS AND CURLS, I929. CHARLES WALTON PURCELL ........... 2 ............................ Louisa. Virginia JOHN HENRY PURSE. .................... 4 .......................... Savannah. Georgia A X 2'. WILLIAM GILMER PURYEAR ............ 2 ....................... South Boston. Virginia ELLISON WITHERS PUTNEY ............ I ....................... New York. New York d? K ii: Freshman Baskel-baII Squad. JOHN FRASER PUTNEY ................. I ........................ Saint Louis. Missouri 9 X; Freshman Track Squad. IHZI CORKS 8 CURLS . V I929 l Academic Class 1 NAME YEAR IN COLLEGE HOME ADDRESS JOHN DEAN QUARLES .................. 4 ...................... Charlottesville. Virginia I A 9; A II: P. K. Society; Dean's List. PAYNE. DABNEY QUARLES ............. 2 ...................... Charlottesville, Virginia QI A 9; A II; Track Adjunct; JeEerson Literary Society; Dean's List; P. K. Society. JEHU DIRICKSON QUILLIN. JR ........... I ............................ Berlin. Maryland EDWIN MORTON QUIMBY, JR ............ I ............................ Suffolk. Virginia A T A. ROBERT MINTER RAINEY, JR ............ 2 .................... Oklahoma Cily. Oklahoma A K E; A II; P. K. Society; Captain Freshman Boxing. I928; Boxing Team. I929; Dean's List. ROBERT BRUNSWICK RAINS ............ I ........................... Detroit. Michigan BEVERLEY HETH RANDOLPH .......... 3 .......................... Richmond. Virginia A 1!; Skull and Keys; P. K. Sociely; Freshman Foolball Squad; Assislanl Manager Baseball; News Editor College Topics. MIDDLETON ELLIOTT RANDOLPH ..... 4 ......................... Warrenton. Virginia A K E: Q A K; Skull and Keyn- P. K. Society: Eli Banana: IMP; Freshman Baseball Team. I926; Varsily BasebaII. I927- 28; V Club; Head Cheer Leader, I927 23. WILLIAM ALEXANDER READ ................................ Newport News. Virginia K A: B.A. Virginia Military Institute ROBERT MUIRHEAD REED .............. 4 .................... NewtonviIIe. Massachusem 9 A X: A K 1'. THOMAS ROSSER REEVES .............. l ......................... Richmond. Virginia CHARLES GORDON REID. JR ............. 4 .......................... Ivy Depot. Virginia JARRY A. REIST .......................... I .......................... York. Pennsylvania GEORGE BRADFORD REMICK ........... I ......................... University, Virginia CHESTER CAWCROFT REXFORD ....... 2 ....................... Jameslown. New York 2 d4 E; Freshman Basket-baII: Baseball Adjunct. CHARLES HARPER RHETT .............. 2 ........................... Bedford, Virginia A T Q; Freshman Boxing Team. I928. WILLIAM BRISBANE. RHETT ............ 2 ..................... Garden Cily. New York A T Q. WEBSTER STERLING RHOADS. JR ....... I .......................... Richmond. Virginia x 1,. HOMER GILMER RICHEY ................ 3 ...................... Charlottesville, Virginia CHARLES WOLFE RIEBER ............... 2 ....................... New York. New York JOHN CALHOUN RISHER ................ I .......................... University, Virginia THURMAN ATVILLE RITENOUR ........ 2 ......................... Winchester. Virginia JOHN EDWARD ROARK ................. I ......................... Alta Visla. Virginia B K. ARCHIE DOUGLAS ROBERTSON ......... 3 ......................... Belle. Wes! Virginia A X. WILLIAM STERLING ROBERTSON. JR... . . I .................... Charleston. West Virginia 44 K 1!; Associate Pholographic Editor CORKS AND CURLS; Business 5133 Virginia Real. DELMA ROBINS .......................... 2 ........................ Fort Smith. Arkansas WILLIAM RANDOLPH ROBINS, JR ....... 3 ......................... Baltimore. Maryland FRANKLIN PIERCE. ROBINSON .......... 4 ....................... Milwaukee, Wisconsin 0 X; Varsity Boxing Squad. I928-29. HERBERT GEORGE ROBINSON .......... 3 ........................... Norfolk, Virginia 2? X; Skull and Keys; P. K. Society; Freshman Cross-Counlry Team. I926; Freshman Track Team. I927; Cross-Counlry Team. I927; Varsity Track Team. I928-29; Madison Hall Cabinet. I927-28; Fraternity Represenlalive CORKS AND CURLS: Varsity Club. JOHN HUNTER ROBINSON .............. I ........................... Cismom. Virginia $ K W. l1131 I Academic Class I NAME YEAR IN COLLEGE HOME ADDRESS KENNETH WHITE ROBINSON ........... I ........................... Norfolk. Virginia E X: Freshman Football Team. I928; Track Adjunct. THOMAS MANLEY ROBINSON .......... I ............................ Cimonl. Virginia THEODORE M. ROBISON ................ 2 ....................... New York. New York DUDLEY GEORGE ROE. JR ............... 2 ...................... SudIenviIIe. MnryInnd A T A: Freshman Crou-Counlry. I927; Freshman Baseball Numeral. I928; Boxing Adjunct. I928- 29 SPARTACO GENE ROGATI ............... I ....................... New York. New York EDWARD GAY ROHRBOUCH. .IR ......... I ..................... GIenviIIe, West Virginia I A 9; Freshman Boxing Squad, I928. . WILLIAM S. ROSENBLATT ............... 2 ...................... ChqunesviIIe. Virginia A E H. THORNTON TURNER ROSE ............. 2 ....................... King George. Vitginia WILLIAM ROSENBERGER. JR ............. 2 ......................... Lynchburg. Virgini- ALBERT STRUBLE ROSENKRANS. JIL. . . . I ........................... Norfolk. Virginia 2 1, E. SAMUEL ROSNER ........................ 3 ........................ Brooklyn. New York d: A. WILLIAM FENTON ROSS ................. 2 ............ A .............. R ichmond. Virginie RALPH BAKER ROTHELL ............... I ............................ CIaonn. Georgia BERNARD ROTHENBURG ................ 3 .......................... Richmond. Virginia d: A. SYLVAN BURK ROTHSCHILD ............ 4 .......................... Richmond. Virginia It E II; Dean's Lisl. I925-28. CARTER REDD ROWE. ................... I ...................... Fredericksburg. Virginia 4A A 9. JOSEPH M. RUBENS JR ................... 3 .......................... Richmond. Virgini- Ib E II; Freshman Track Team, I926- 27. NATHAN RUBY .......................... I ......................... Newark. New Jersey 45 A. EDWARD LORRAINE RUFFIN ........... 2 .......................... Richmond. Virginia 4, K E; Freshman BaskeI-ball Team. I928. MARSHALL DECRAFFENRIED RUFFIN. I ........................... Roanoke, Virgini- Ib K W; Football Adjunct. I928. ROBERT DEJARNETTE RUFFIN ..................................... Norfolk. Virginia 0 A X; Freshman Cross- Country Team. I926- 27: Varsily Cross- Counlry Squad I928; College Topics SlaII, I926-27; Inlermediale Honors; Inalruclor In Lalm: VIrgI'nIa Reel Staff. BENJAMIN FRANKLIN DEWEES RUNK. . 4 ...................... Greenwich, Connecticul Z W: A II: Dean's List. I928; P. K. Society. ANTHONY BREWIS RUSSELL ............ 4 ............................ Cato. New York GEORGE RAMSEY RUSSELL ............. I .................... ...CreenviIIe. Mississippi JOHN EDWARD RUSSELL ................ Z ........................... OatIands, Virginia NATHAN ANDREW SABITINO ........... 4 ........................ Brooklyn. New York NORMAN SACKS. JR ...................... I ...................... Cedarhurst. Long Island OSCAR PILCHER SADLER ................ 2 ........................ Buckingham. Virginia ARTHUR DEWEY SALE .................. I ............................ Corbin. Virginia DOUGLAS ANDREW SALE ............... 4 ......................... Winchester. Virginia A X P. ALEXANDER HAMILTON SANDS ........ 3 .......................... Richmond. Virginia B 9 II; SIKUII and Keys; P. K. Socicly; ReporIoriaI SlafI of College Topics. I926-27; Associale Editor of College Topics. I923. I114I CORKS 8 CU RLS I Academic Class 1 NAME YEAR IN COLLEGE HOME ADDRESS GEORGE GORDON SCHMUCK ............ I ..................... Lansdowne. Pennsylvania RICHARD LUCIAN SCHOEN .............. I ...................... Charlollesville. Virginia Freshman Track. SANFORD BILLINCS SCHULHOFER ..... 3 ....................... New York. New York A E II; Dean's List; Interfralernily Council. RUDOLPH EDWARD SCHULZ ............ I .............................. Warten. Ohio CHARLES JOSEPH SCHUSTER. III ....... 4 ......................... Baltimore. Maryland 2 A E. FELIX SCHWARTZ ....................... 3 ....................... New York. New York IF A. HARRY SCHWARTZ ...................... I ......................... Baltimore, Maryland G. M. SCHWARTZSCHILD. JR ............. 2 .......................... Richmond. Virginia I? E H. MELVIN MCCABE SCOTT ................. I ..................... Stone Mountain. Virginia LOUIS L. SCRIBNER ...................... 4 ......................... Earlysville, Virginia 9 X; A P X; First Year Baseball, I926. JOSEPH PRINCE SEBRELL ............... 2 ........................... Norfolk, Virginia X Cb; P. K. Society; Adjunct Manager Boxing. I927; Adjunct Manager Football, I927. ARMISTEAD FONTAINE SELDEN ........ 4 ...................... Charlottesville. Virginia CHARLES WALLACE SELDEN ........... I .......................... Richmond. Virginia A Z 4,. ERNEST MCCOY SENECA ................ I ...................... Princess Anne. Virginia B K. BENJAMIN JAY SENTER ................. 2 ....................... New York. New York CECIL COWDEN SERONSY ............... 2 ............................ LoweIIviIIe, Ohio PHIL NELSON SHACKLEFORD ........... 2 ............................. ProEil, Virginia ISABEL MATTOON SHAFFER ............ 2 ...................... Charlottesville. Virginia MACK IRVIN SHANHOLTZ ............... 3 ......................... Winchesler. Virginia JAMES ROBERT SHANKLIN .............. 2 ......................... Gary, West Virginia A Cb; German Club: Skull and Keys. RICHARD VAIR SHANKLIN. JR ........... 3 ................... . ..... Gary. West Virginia A in A II; German Club; First Year Track. I927. ANDREW SHAPIRO ...................... 3 ......................... Pelersburg, Virginia 4b A: Intermediate Honors, I928. HAROLD THOMAS SHEEHAN ........... I ........................... Norfolk, Virginia K E. HYMAN SHEINTOCH .................... I ......................... Pelersburg, Virginia CHARLES ABRAM SHEPHERD ........... 2 ........................... Palmyra. Virginia NATHAN SAMUEL SHERMAN. III ....... I .................... Oklahoma Cily, Oklahoma JAMES STARR SHILSON ................. 2 ........................... Norfolk. Virginia d! A 9; First Year Boxing Team. I927-28; Dean's List; University Band; First Year Track Team, I927-28; First Year Cross-Counlry Team. I927-28. JOHN BAIRD SHINBERCER .............. I ........................... Norfolk. Virginia A K E; Captain Firs! Year Foolball. I928; Firs! Year Baseball. I928. HOWARD HALLEY SHOCKEY ........... 4 ......................... Winchester. Virginia JAMES E. SHOEMAKER .................. 2 .................... WiIkinsburg, Pennsylvania FRANCIS LOUIS SCHRADY .............. I ........................ Elmsford. New York JOSEPH NORMAN SHUMATE ............ 5 ...................... Charlottesville. Virginia HERBERT SILVETTE ..................... 2 .......................... Richmond. Virginia JOHN BACWELL SIMPSON ............... I ........................... Doswell. Virginia 44 A X. JACK WILLIAM EDGAR SIMPSON ....... I ........................... Norfolk. Virginia 6 X: Adjunct Art Staff Virginia Reel,- Firsl Year Boxing Squad. I928-29. 1 11.3 1 I Academic Class 1 NAME YEAR IN COLLEGE HOME ADDRESS THOMAS PORTER SIMPSON ............. I ......................... Knoxville. Tennessee FRANK PAUL SIPPLEY .................. I ....................... Princeton, New Jersey JOHN COCHRAN SKINNER ............... I ................. Charles Town. West Virginia jOHN ROGERS SLIDELL ................. I ...................... New York. New York JAMES THOMAS SLUDER ................ 4 ......................... San Antonio. Texas a A E. WARREN HARVEY SMALL .............. 2 .................... New Rochelle. New York 2 P E: Boxing Squad. I928-29: First Year Swimming Squad. I927-28. CHARLES ALPHONSO SMITH ............ 2 .......................... University. Virginia B 6 II; First Year Football Team. I927: First Year Boxing Team I927: Football Squad. I928; Skull and Keys; P. K. Sociely. Tennis Team; IUniversity Tennis Championship Holder. I928. CHARRLES GORDON SMITH, JR .................................... Great Lakes. IIIinoiI I? CHARLES WILLIAM FREDERICK SMITH Z ...................... Isle of Wight. England Cross-Counh'y. I928; JeEerson Society; Historian. I928-29; Student Instructor Biology; Dean's Lisl. EDWARD JAQUELIN SMITH ............. 2 .......................... BerryviIIe. Virginia EUGENE HAMILTON SMITH ............. 4 ............................. Vigor. Virginia F. WILLIS SMITH ......................... I ........................ Trenton, New Jersey GRAHAM FRANCIS SMITH ............... 3 ...................... Brockton. Masuchuietts 8 X: A ... II; Adjunct Business Staff VIrginicI4 Reel. HARRY LECATO SMITH ....................................... CharlotlesviIIe. Virginia K;A First Year Wrestling Squad; Skull and Keys; German Club. jOHN EDWARD SMITH .................. 5 ............... Haslings-on-Hudson. New York 2 P E; Skull and Keys: Caplain First Year Boxing Team; Boxing. 2- 3- 4. JOHN MORTON SMITH .................. 4 ............................ Atlanta. Georgia J. WELLFORD SMITH .................... 2 .......................... Richmond, Virginia RICHARD HENRY SMITH ................ 2 ........................... Norfolk. Virginia THOMAS WIISON SMITH ................ I ......................... Stevenson. Maryland '17 K 2. WILLIAM HARRISON SMITH .................................. CharIollesviIIe, Virginia B 9 H; First Year Boxing Team. I928; First Year FoolbaII Squad. I927; First Year Track Team. I928; Boxing Squad. I929; German CIub; Skull and Keys. ALFRED NATHAN SNELLENBURG ...... 2 ...................... Wyancole. PennsyIvania MCCORD SOLLENBERGER ............... I ........................ Ballimore. Maryland HERBERT M. SONNEBORN. JR ........... I ..................... Wheeling. West Virginia CASPER FRED SPITZER .................. I ...................... Charlollesville, Virginia JOSEPH MAURICE SPITZER ............. 2 ....................... New York. New York GEORGE FINLEY SPRAGUE, JR .......... I ........................... Twin Falls, Idaho Freshman Cross-Country; Indoor Track; Business Staff College Topics. BATES STAFFORD ....................... I ...................... Charlottesville, Virginia DONALD BERNARD STAFFORD ......... 3 ...................... Baton Rouge. Louisiana 2 N. HENRY ELLER STALEY .................. I ...................... CharIoltesviIIe. Virginia LOUIS CURD STALEY .................... 3 ...................... Charlotlesville. Virginia DAVID RINEHART STAUFFER .......... I .............. Washinglon. Dislricl of Cqumbia JAMES WILLIAM ST. CLAIR ............. I .................... Price Hill, Wen Virginia A X; First Year Football Team, I928. CLAYTON BAILY STEED ................ 5 ............................ Esmonl. Virginia WILLIAM FRANKLIN STEED ............. 5 ............................ Esmom, Virginia CHARLES WILLIAM STEEL, JR ........... I ...................... Graflon. Wesl Virginia IllGl I Academic Class 1 NAME YEAR IN COLLEGE HOME ADDRESS HARRY CHARLB STEINBERG .......... I ....................... Morristown. Tennessee ROBERT HOWARD STEINER ............ I ...................... New York. New York SAMUEL ALVIN STEINCOLD ............ 2 ........................... Norfolk. Virginia BENJAMINE STEINMAN ................. 2 ................. Livingston Manor, New York A E 11; University Band. JOHN WESLEY STEPHENS. JR ............ 5 .......................... SIaunton. Virginia ALFRED LOUIS STEVENS ................ 4 .......................... San Antonio. Texas A 2 II; Dean's List; Student Imlructor Accounting. GEORGE RAYMOND STEVENS .......... 3 ........................... Roanoke. Virginia THOMAS EUGENE BAGLEY STEVENS.. 2 ............................. Cleveland. Ohio Ge 1' A; Varsity Swimming Squad. I929. GEORGE MINNS STINNETT .............. 2 ....................... Bedford. Pennsylvania JAMES DEVLIN STOCKWELL ............ 4 ...................... Mooreston. New Jersey 2 P E; A E eh; Boxing Squad, 3. DAVID FARNHAM STODDARD .......... 2 ....................... Arlington. New Jersey KARL RUCKER STOEHR ................. I ...................... Big Slone Gap. Virginia ROBERT STORRS ......................... 2 ........................ Hartford. Conneclicul K 2; First Year Football Squad. I927. DAVID CHARLES STOUDER ............. 2 ......................... Fort Pierce. Florida 2 P E; Baskel-ba and Football. I927. MRS. LOLA WIC-GS-STOVALL ............ I ...................... CharlotlesviIIe, Virginia EDWARD TOBEY STUART. JR ........... I .................... Philadelphia, Pennsylvania B 9 H. ALEXANDER BELL STUMP .............. 4 ........................ Edgewood. Maryland A T; Inslruclor in Biology; Dean's List. EDWARD MARSHALL STURHAHN ...... I ........................ Hartford, Conneciicul GEORGE MILTON SULLIVAN ........... I ....................... Wcslminsler. Maryland A X P. CROSBY HUNGERFORD SUMMERS ...... I ......................... Janesville, Wisconsin 2 P E; Adjunct Lacroas; Freshman FoolbaII. EDWARD CLAYTON SUMMERS ......... 2 ........................ Janesville. Wisconsin 2 P E; First Year ankct-baII. CLAUDE COUNTS SUTHERLAND ........ 3 ............................. Culley. Virginia WILLIAM CLIFTON SUTHERLAND ...... l ...................... North Garden. Virginia WILLIAM THOMAS SUTTON ............ l ........................... Norfolk, Virginia 4? F A; First Year Boxing. JOHN ANNANDALE SWANSON .......... 3 .............. Washinglon. Dislricl of Columbia A X P. ANNE. CATHERINE SWART .............. 3 ...................... CharloltesviIIe, Virginia ROBERT HULDANE SWINDELL .......... 4 ......................... Baltimore. Maryland B 9 11; German Club; Swimming Team. I928. ROBERT EARL SWINDLER ............... I ............................ Lebanon. Indiana CHARLES HENRY SWING. JR ............. I ...................... Charlottesville, Virginin BOYD GRIFFIN SWITZER ................ I ........................... Roanoke. Virginia JAMES KEITH SYMMERS, JR ............. 2 ...................... New York. New York RICHARD WORTHAM TALLEY .......... 2 ........................ Ware Neck, Virginia nglgA; A H; Virginia Reel; Adjunct Manager Buebnll. I928-29; AdjuncI CORKS AND CURLS. WILLIAM GRAVES TALLEY ............. 2 .......................... Richmond. Virginia Cb F A; Associate Editor CORKs AND CURLS; Adjunct Manager Track. I923-29. THOMAS WILLIAM TANNER ............ 2 ........................... Roanoke, Virginia THOMAS BRYAN TATE .................. I ........................... Danville. Virginia I 1 17 l I I Academic Class 1 NAME YEAR IN COLLEGE HOME ADDRESS COLSTON TAYLOR ....................... I ...................... TnmcIIE. Wen Virginia GEORGE RANDOLPH TAYLOR ............................. Greensboro. North Carolina A K E; Skull and Keys; German Club: EII Banana; FInt Year Football I925; Vanity Football. I927- 28; Vanity Club. jOHN BASS TAYLOR ..................... 4 ................... Signal Mountain. Tennessee I? A 9; A II; Assistanl Business Munager CORKs AND CURB. I927; Business Manager CORKs AND CURLS. I928. PARKER COSTIN TAYLOR ............... 2 ........................ MachIpongo. Virgini- IA921; 21g; German Club; Fin! Year Tuck Team. I928; Track Team. I929; FOOIbIII Adjunct. PEMBROKE JONES TAYLOR ............. I .................. Wilmington. Norlh CaroIIm A K E; First Year Track. RANDOLPH TAYLOR .................... Z ..................... Princeton. West VIrgInI- WARREN POINDEXTER TAYLOR ....... 3 ......................... Richmond. Virginia GEORGE STUART A. TEASS ............. l ......................... Lynchburg, Virginia WALTER DAVIDSON TENNEY .......... I ........................... Norfolk. Virgini- CORDON BRUCE THAYER ............... 3 ...................... New York, New York A E It: ch; Cross-Country Team. I927: Secreluy JeEenon Society. I928; Associate Editor College Topics, I928-29. JOHN GERARD THEBAN ................. I .................... PIus-nleIIe. New York ALFRED PEMBROKE THOM. III ......... I .............. Wuhinglon, District of Columbia B 9 II: Indoor Track. I929. ARMSTRONG THOMAS. JR ............... 2 ......................... BAIlImore, Maryland JAMB WALTER THOMAS ............... 4 ......................... Porto Alegre. Brazil X 41'; Skull and Keys: German Club; Intermediate Honors; Freshman Track. I926; Track Squad I927- 28; ch; Candidate for BHA Degree. PAUL STUART THOMAS ................. 2 ..................... Piedmont. Wen Virgini- E P E; Freshman Baskcl-ball. WILLIAM TALLEY THOMAS ............. I .......................... Richmond. Virginia 3 N; First Year Football Team. I928. JOHN RUSTEL THOMASSON ............. I ......................... Lynchburg. Virginia GEORGE W. THOMPSON ................. 2 ........................... ShadweII. Virginia A 1!: German Club: Boxing Squad: College Topics. WILLIAM VERNARD THOMPSON ................................. Peansburg. VIrgInIa IRVIN JAMES THORNE ................... I ....................... New York. New York DOZIER WILLIAM GUEST THORNTON. . 3 .......................... Gadsden. Alabam- HARRISON ALLYN THORNTON ......... I .................... Alexander City. Alabama PARK EDMUND TICER ................... I ......................... Alexandria. Virginia WALTER MCLAVEN TIFFANY ........... I ....................... Brooklyn. New York WALDEMAR DIVICHT TODD ............ 3 ...................... CharlollevaIIe Virginia 9 A X; AuIIlanl In Philosophy and English, I928-29; Dean's List. L. $20le; TOWNSEND, JR ................. I ......................... Rockland. Delaware JOHN ROBINSON TRECENZA ............ I ....................... New York. New York IF A H. CLARRY CLYDE TRICE .................. I ............................. Louisa Virginia ROSEWELL DELMAGE TRIMBLE ........ 4 .......................... Richmond Virginia 41 I' 2;; .I;E Slag College Topics,- FIrsl Year Cross- Coumry; P. K. Society: Skull and Keys; Assignment EdIlor College Topics: Track Squad I927- 23. JOSEPH WHITE TRUNDLE .............. I ........................... Danville. Virginia X 49: VIIgInIa PIayers. CHARLES VIRGINIUS TURNER .......... I ........................ CordonsVIIIe, Virginia Illsl I Academic Class I NAME YEAR IN COLLEGE HOME ADDRESS HOWARD TURNER ...................... 3 ................... East Falls Church, Virginia JOSEPH AUGUSTINE TURNER ........... 4 ........................... Roanoke. Virginia 42 K W; A II; Photographic Edilor CORKS AND CURLS. I927- 28; P. K. Society; First Year Base- baII: AssislanI Manager Baskel- baII. I923. NELSON THOMAS TURNER .............. 4 ......................... Baltimore. Maryland 2 A E; A E 1i; T.I.L.K.A.; P. K. Society; German Club; Manager Boxing, I927-28; V Club; Virginia Players. RALPH MARSHALL TURNER ............ I ......................... Lynchburg, Virginia WILLIAM GEORGE TURNER ............. I .............. Washington, District of Columbia 2 N. T. HOWARD TURNER ................................................ New York 2 N; A II: First Year Track; First Year F.00Iball I927: Varsity Football I927- 28- 29: ' 'V Club. EVAN WILSON TURRELL ................ 2 ............................ Troy. New York LOUIS DREWREY TUTTLE ............... 3 ........................... Norfolk. Virginia ERIC TWACTMAN ........................ I ....................... Greenwich. Connecticul d? K E; Adjunct Art SlaII Virginia Reel. FREDERICK WILLIAM TWYMAN ........ 4 ........................ Appomallox. Virginia WILLIAM HAMILTON TYLANDER ....... 3 ......................... Fort Pierce, Florida 5. ROGER TYLER, JR ...................... 2 .................... Huntington. West Virginia CLARENCE WILLIAMS TYNDALL ........ 2 .......................... Onuncock, Virginia RAYMOND UHL .......................... 3 ..................... Mounl Savage. Maryland CHARLES ABRAM VANBERCEN ......... I ......................... Syracuse, New York GEORGE LINDENBERGER VANBIBBER. . 4 .......................... Bel Air, Maryland JULIAN MORRIS VANBUREN ............ I ....................... PIninEeId, New Jersey SPENCER HERBERT VANKIRK .......... 2 .................... McKeesport. Pennsylvania RICHARD KARL VANZANDT ............ I .................... Huminglon. West Virginia E N. ALAN JOSEPH VANDENBERG ........... I ....................... New York. New York WILLIAM PHILIP VARNEY, JR ............ I ............................ WiImeIle. Illinois JOSEPH PENN VICKERS .................. 4 ........................... Roanoke. Virginia A X P. BEN SAMUEL VINCENT. JR ............... 2 ......................... Midlothian. Virginia EMANUEL VOGEL ....................... 4 ....................... New York, New York JOHN BISHOP VON SCHLEGELL ......... I ......................... Baltimore. Maryland LECH RICHMOND WADDELL ............ 4 ...................... Charlottesville. Virginia THOMAS LEONARD WADE. JR ........... 4 ............................. Afton. Virginia JOSEPH WADSWORTH ................... I ........................ Hartford, Connecticut ROSCOE MARVIN WAGSTAFF ........... I ............................ Atlanta. Gcorgia ALEX WADDELL WALKER .............. I .......................... Ivy Depot, Virginia FREDERICK CAMDEN WALKER ......... I ........................... Schuyler. Virginia ROBERT STRINCFELLOW WALKER. III. . 2 ................... Woodberry Forest, Virginia Freshman Track: Madison Hall junior Cabinet; German Club. CORBIN GRIFFIN WALLER ............... 3 ........................... Norfolk. Virginia A III: German Club: Skull and Keys; Lacrosse Team I928; First Year Boxing Team. I926; FIrsl Year Baseball Team. I926 WILLIAM TUCKER WALLER ............. I ....................... South Boston. Virginia LEON WALLERSTEIN, JR ................. I .......................... Richmond. Virginia JAMES EUGENE WALSH ................. 3 ........................ Hartford. Connecticut EDMOND P. WALMSLEY ................. 2 ........................ AnnapoIIs. Maryland 4?- V K: Captain Firsl Year Swimmmg Team; CORKS AND CURLS Represenlalive. IIHII I Academic Class I NAME YEAR IN COLLEGE HOME ADDRESS JOHN REDMOND WALSH. JR ............. 4 ........................... Savannah. Georgia K E; A II: P. K. Sociely: Freshman FootbaII. I925; Business SlaH Virginia Real.- Fra- lernity Represenlalivc CORKS AND CURLS. l927-28. JAMES EDWARD WARD. JR ............... 4 ........................... Norfolk, Virginia A E Q: A E II; Madison HaII Cabinel. I927-28: Secrelary Madison HaII Cabinet, 928-29: Assitlan! Manager Football. I923. HARRY C. WARD ......................... 3 ............................. Calax. Virginia CONRAD K. WARREN .................... 2 ............................ Helena, Montana 4, II A: First Year BaskeI-baII Squad. I928; Sludenl Inslrurlor Biology. FRANCIS COURTNEY WASHBURN ...... I ...................... Pillsfneld. Mamchusells K E. ALFRED HOWARD WASSERSTROM ..... 2 ....................... New York. New York A E H: Dean's List. IRVIN CABELL WATKINS ................ I .......................... FarmviIIe. Virginia ROBERT FLETCHER WATSON ........... I .......................... University. Virginia EDWARD ELMORE WATTS .............. I ........................... Danville. Virginia KARL CROVERMAN WATTS ............. 2 .................... Huntington. West Virginil II K A. WILLIAM B. WAUC-H ..................... I .......................... UnionviIIe. Virginia BENJAMIN WOODRUFF WEAVER ....... 2 .............. Washington, District of Columbia 2 N; First Year Football. I927-28; Football Squad. I928-29; German Club. JOHN RANDOLPH WEAVER ............. I ......................... Porlsmoulh. Virginia A 4,: Freshman Football Team. OSWALD MASSENA WEAVER ........... I .......................... University. Virginia 2 1!; Captain First Year Cross-Country Team. I928. GERALD BETRAM WEBB. JR .............. I ............................ Denver. Colorado 4; K E; Fealure Wriler College Topics. ROBERT HENRY WEBB .................. I ...................... Bowling Green. Virginia JOSEPH DUNNINC WEED ................ I ........................... Savannah, Georgia X 4?; Freshman Football, I928. WILLIAM STONE WEEDON .............. 4 ....................... Wilminglon. Delaware HERMAN WEINBERG .................... 2 ........................... Slaunlon, Virginia I? E H. MARTIN BOHDAN WEINCOLD .......... I ......................... Brooklyn. New York CHARLES WILLIAM WEISICER .......... 3 .................... East Orange. New Jersey A X P. RICHARD STANLEY WEISS .............. 2 ........................ . . . .Norfolk. Virginia A E H. ALFRED PRENTICE WELSH .............. 2 ............................. Newton. Kansas GREEN PEYTON WERTENBAKER ....... 3 .......................... University. Virginia 4; K s11; E T; Managing Editor Virginia Speclalor: Associate Manager Virginia Rch; CoIIege Topics; CORKS AND CURLS, I924-25-27-28; Virginia Players. I924-25; Glee Club; JeEerson Society; Speclalar Representalive; lnler-Publications Association. VICTOR FREDERICK WERTHEIMER ..... 4 ............................ Norfolk, Virgina Z B T. WILLIAM IRELAND WESCOTT ........... 2 .................... MerchantviIIe. New Jersey 9 A X. LOUIS EPPSTEIN WESTHEIMER ......... I ......................... Saint Louis. Miuouri SAMUEL BROWNELL WESTLAKE ....... I . . . ...................... Saint Louis. Missouri FRANK LAWRENCE WHALEN ........... 2 ........................ Boston. Massachusetts WILLIAM HENRY WHEAT, JR ........... I ...................... Fort Thomas. Kentucky A T A; Freshman Boxing. I928-29. I 120 I I Academic Class 1 NAME YEAR IN COLLEGE HOME ADDRESS ALFRED TYNDALE WHITE .............. 2 ............................. Houslon. Texas 2 P E; Lacrosse: Madison Hall; Law Club. BEVERLY TUCKER WHITE ..................................... Montclair, New Jersey A T 0, A II; Freshman Track Team. I926; LV Track: Varsity Club; P. K. Society. CHRISTIAN STREIT WHITE III .......... 3 .......................... University Virginia DAVID IRVIN WHITE. II ................. 4 ....................... Monchair. New Jersey A T 0; A 11; German Club; Literary SlnII Virginia Real. DEXTER FLINT WHITE .................. 3 .................. Manchester. New Hampshire 2 P E. JOHN MAXWELL WHITE ................ 3 .......................... University. Virginia JOHN TOBIN WHITE ..................... 3 ...................... New Orleans. Louisxana ID 1' A; P. K. Society; Adjunct Manager BasebaII, I927- 28; Assistant Manager Baseball, I929; Represenlnlive CORKS AND CURLS. LUKE MATTHEWS WHITE, JR ............ 2 ....................... Montclair. New Jersey A T O: A II; Freshman Track Team, I923; P. K. Sociely; Fraternity Representative CORKS AND CURLS. MEYER RICHARD WHITEHILL .......... 2 ............................ Norfolk. Virginia Z B T. JOHN SHERWOOD WIDDICOMBE ........ 3 ...................... Grand Rapids. Michigan RICHARD CUNNINGHAM WIGHT. JR.. . . . 2 .......................... Richmond, Virginia 9 A X; A K W. WALTER BLAIR WIGHT. JR .............. I ....................... Challanooga, Tennessee GEORGE AUSTIN WIGHTMAN ........... I ....................... Great Neck. New York 4? 2 K. LUTHER KIRKPATRICK WILES .......... I .................... Huntington. West Virginia 2 N. SAMUEL WILLIAM WILEY ............... I ......................... Ballimore, Maryland K 2. GEORGE B. WILKES. JR ................... 3 .......................... University. Virginia ALFRED SCOTT WILKINS ............... I ........................... Waverly. Virginia CHESTER ARTHUR WILKINS ............ I . .Takoma Park. Washinglon. District of Columbia OSCAR LEE WILKINS ..................... I ........................... Roanoke, Virginia WILLIAM F. WILKINSON ................. I .............. Washinglon. District of Columbia jAMES FOSTER WILLETT ................ 3 ...................... Chevy Chase. Maryland A T 0. MILTON PAUL WILLIAM ................. I ........................ Brooklyn. New York AYNARD SCOTT WILLIAMS ............. I ....................... New York. New York A 2 tb; Firs! Year Boxing Squad. DANIEL LASSITER WILLIAMS ........... 2 .......................... Richmond, Virginia A W; P. K. Society; First Year Boxing Squad; Foolball Adjuncl. EMIL OTTO NOLTING WILLIAMS ........ 2 .......................... Richmond. Virginia 4! K 2; First Year FoolbaII Squad. I927; First Year Boxing Squad: Varsity Football Squad. I928: Skull and Keys; German Club: Adjunct Manager Baseball. I928. HARVIE LINCOLN WILLIAMS ........... I ....................... Charlottesville, Virginia A T A: Freshman Football. I928. JAMES MEYRICH WILLIAMS ............. 4 .................... East Orange. New Jersey 2 P E; Baskel- baII. JOHN PACE WILLIAMS .................. 2 .......................... Richmond. Virginia A W: Skull and Keya; P. K. Society; Reporlorial Staff College Topics; FoolbaII Adjunct. PEYTON RANDOLPH WILLIAMS ........ 3 .......................... Richmond. Virginia A '1': First Year Football; SlaE College TopIcs; Skull and Keys; P. K. Society; T.I.L.K.A.; Wrestling Squad. I928; New; Editor College IToplcs: Madison HaII CabInel. RALPH GLENN WILLIAMS ........................................... Ivanhoe. Virgmia I12ll CORKS 6 CURLS I Academic Class 1 NAME YEAR IN COLLEGE HOME ADDRESS ROY HULLIHEN WILLIAMS .............. I .......................... Richmond. Virginia 9 A X; Freshman Foolball Squad. I928. ROY MARCELLUS WILLIAMS ............ 7 ....................... Charlottesville. Virginia A X P. THOMAS JAMES WILLIAMS .............. 3 ..................... East Orange. New Jersey WILLIAM PATTON WILLIAMS ........... 2 ......................... Blacksburg. Virginia WILLIAM RUSE WILLIAMS. JR ............ I .......................... Richlands, Virginia A K E; First Year FootbaII. THOMAS HENRY WILLINGHAM ......... I .............................. Rome. Georgia X 1,. WILLIAM MORTIMER WILLSOM ......... 2 ..................... High Bridge, New Jersey Wrestling Squad. HERMAN PAEPCKE WILMS .............. 4 ............................. Chicago. Illinois EUGENE JOSEPH WILSON ............... I ............................. Bay City. Texas A E 4?. RICHARD THWEATT WILSON. JR ........ 4 .......................... Richmond. Virginia Intermediate Honors; Denn's Lin: College Topics. WILLIAM BLACKBURN WILSON. JR ...... I .................... Rock Hill. South Carolina K E; First Year Foolball Squad. I928. CHARLES WHEATON WINSTON ......... I ....................... Minneapolis. Minnesola BICKERTON WINSTON ................... I ....................... Minneapolis, Minnesota FRANK CARDINER WISNER ............. 2 ........................... Laurel Miuiuippi A K E; A II; P. K. Sociely; First Year Track Team. I923; Tuck Team. I929; Fraternity Represenlalive CORKs AND CURLS. GORDON BLOOMFIELD WOLCOTT ...... I ....................... Ealonlown. New Jersey BENJAMIN COKE WOOD ................. I ............................ Norfolk. Virginia 0 X. WALTER LOEB WOLF .................... 3 .................... Philadelphia. Pennsylvania ROBERT BALDWIN WOMBLE, JR ......... 2 ......................... Baltimore. Maryland 6 X; First Year FoolbaII Team. I927: Adjuncl Business Manager CORKS AND CURLS. I928-29; First Year Boxing Squad. I928; Fraternity Representalive CORKS AND CURLS. ALVIN CRAYDON WOOD ................ 4 ........................... AIlavisln. Virginia Dean's List; Jefferson Society; Virginia Spccialor; College Topiu. GEORGE WALTER WOOD ................ 2 ..................... CharIeston. Wes! Virginia A X; Associate Manager VIrgInia Reel, I927: Managing Board Virgmia Reel I928. BENJAMIN C. WOOD ................................................. Norfolk Virginia WILLIAM HOGE WOOD. JR ................ 4 ....................... Charlollesville Virginia 4: K E; P. K. Society; Skull and Keys; First Year Football; Varsity Football Squad; Z ; Eli Banana. THOMAS EUGENE WOODWARD ......... 2 ................................ Akron, Ohio i? A 8; A II; Adjuncl FoolbaII, I928; Adjunct Track. I927. ERNEST MINOR WOOLFOLK ............. I .......................... Monrovia. Virginia ELIAS RECTOR WOOTTON .............. 3 ........................ Columbus, Mississippi A T A; CORKS AND CURLS. I927-23: Art Editor Virginia Reel. I928-29; Mississipppi Club: Art Edilor CORKS AND CURLS. I928-Z9; Editorial Staff Spectalor. I928-29: German Club. JAMES MOHR DOUGLAS WORRALL ..... I .................... PhiIadeIpIIia. PennsyIvania Z 41: First Year Cross-Counlry Team. I928. CRICSBY HART WOOTEN ............... I ........................... Roanoke. Virginia H K A. WILLIAM SWOPE WRAY ................. 2 ..................... Northfork, West Virginia H K A; Adjuncl Manager Track. I927-28. lIzzl CORKS a cums I I929 I Academic Class I NAME YEAR 1N COLLEGE HOME ADDRESS EDWARD HENRY WRIGHT. III .......... 4 .................... South Orange. New Jersey Z 1'; Skull and Keys; P. K. Socicly; T.I.L.K.A.; Virginia Players; First Year Baubnll Squad. I926; Tennis Team. I928. JOHN MATTHEW WRIGHT .............. 2 ...................... Dobbs Ferry. New York A T O; Freshman Football Squad. I927. MACKIE THOMAS WRIGHT .............. 2 ......................... Mexico City. Mexico WILLIAM CARSTEN WULBERN .......... 4 .................... Charleston. Soulh Carolina JOHN COOK WYLLIE ..................... 3 ........ Sanlo Domingo City. Dominican Republic JOHN CUMMINGS WYLLY ............... 2 ........................... Savannah. Georgia X Cb; A II: German Club; Fteshman Football. I927; Freshman Boxing. I928; Varsity Football Squad. I929. WINSTON WILEY WYNNE ............... 2 ............................ Norfolk. Virginil JAMES THOMAS YOUNG ................. 2 ..................... Charleston. West Virginia 2 X: German Club; Adjunct Boxing; Dean's List. JAMES WALTER YOUNG ................. 2 ..... I ................... Knoxville. Tennessee 2 A E: Boxing Adjunct: Dean's List. ROBERT B. YOUNG. JR .................... 3 ........................... Savannuh. Georgia WHITINC F. YOUNG ...................... 3 ........................... Hmplon. Virginia ISADORE SAMUEL ZFASS ................ l ............................ Norfolk, Virginia Amyw Education Department OFFICERS WILLIAM B. KNIGHT .......................................................... Presidenl MEMBERS NAME YEAR IN UNIVERSITY HOME ADDRESS ELIZABETH ALLEN ...................... 2 ...................... Charlollesville. Virginia MARGARET ARUNDALE ................. 2 ...................... Charlottesville. Virginia MRS. ARTHUR PUTMAN AYLINC ....... I ......................... Universily, Virginia HENRI PHILIP AYRES ................... 3 ........................ Brooklyn. New York KATHERINE HILL BABER ............... I ......................... Canersville, Virginia MAUDE CLANVILLE BAPTIST ...... . . . .. 2 ......................... Ivy Dcpol. Virginia MARY HENRIAN BASSETT .............. I ............................ Preston, Virginia IRWIN LEROY BERNSTEIN .............. I .................... Oklahoma Cily, Oklahoma LETITIA JOHNSTON BLAKEY ........... 2 .......................... University, Virginia ADA COLEMAN BOAZ ................... I .......................... Covesville, Virginia CANON RAYMOND BOWMAN ........... I ........................ The Hollow. Virginia ESTHER BURGESS ....................... 2 ......................... Alexandria, Virginia GEORGE W. BURTON .................... 4 .......................... WhitmeII. Virginia CARROLL CATTERTON .................. 3 ........................ Free Union, Virginia VIRGINIA WEBB COCKE ................. 4 ...................... Charlottesville. Virginia I123J NAME YEAR IN UNIVERSITY HOME ADDRESS ALVIN CARL COOPER ................... I .......................... Richmond. Virginia CHARLES LEWIS COSTELLO ............ 3 .......................... BIucmom. Virginia EDWARD ALVIN DAVIS ................. 4 ......................... Earlysville. Virginia IDA dc LOACHE .......................... 3 ........................... Norfolk. Virginia ETTA STERLING DICCS ................. 4 ........................... Casper. Wyoming GIBSON LARMAND ELCIN ............... 2 .......................... Lecsburg. Virginia MARGARET L. FLICKINGER ............. I ........................ Winchester. Virginia KATHLEEN FRYBERCER ................ 2 ..................... Wallingford. Conneclicul MRS. HUGH H. FULLER .................. I ...................... Charlottesville, Virginia MALCOM CAMPBELL GILL .............. I .......................... Abingdon. Virginia KATHARINE ARNETT CRAMMER ....... I .............. Washington. Districl of Columbia LUTHER WARD GREENE ................ l ......................... Universily. Virginia ANNIA MATIN HANCOCK ............... I ........................ Appomaltox. Virginia M. BARCLAY HANCOCK ................. I .......................... Scousvillc, Virginia MRS. ALFRED S. HARRIS ................. 2 ...................... Charlottesville. Virginia CLIFFORD GRAHAM HARRIS ............ I .......................... Covinglon, Virginia Glee Club. MARY OWEN HILL ...................... I ...................... CharloltesviIIe. Virginia ANN NEWTON HILLSMAN .............. 4 ......................... Universily. Virginia JAMES FONTAINE HODNETT ........... 2 ........................ Marlinsville. Virginia EMMA ELIZABETH HOFF ............... I ...................... Charlouesvillc. Virginia XENIA RUTH HOLMES .................. 2 ............................. Luray. Virginia JAKE. S. HURT ........................... I ......................... Wylhevillc. Virginia MARGARET REID HUYETT .............. l ...................... Charlollesville. Virginia MRS. HILDA PRICE JARVIS ............. 4 ......................... University. Virginia CALLIE MARGARET JOHNSON .......... I .................. Hope Mills. North Carolina LOLA C. JOHNSON ....................... I ...................... Charlollesville. Virginia HELEN HUMSTON JONES ............... I ...................... Charlottesville, Virginia WILLIAM SUMPTER KIBLER ............ I ............................ Slanley, Virginia RICHARD ELI KIEENY, JR ................ 3 ...................... Middletown, Maryland B K; Freshman Baseball. I926; Washington Literary Sociely; Education Club. MRS. SUSIE BADGER KILLIAM ................................... Unwersily. Virginia STEPHEN MERMANN KNEISEL .......... 4 ...................... Jersey Cily. New Jersey WILLIAM BERNARD KNIGHT ........... 4 ......................... Alexandria, Virginia 9 A X: Varsily Club; V in Truck, 927-28; President Education Department. I928-29: Varsity Cross-Counlry: uch ; Freshman Baskcl-ball Squad. I926; Freshman Track Numerals; Freshman Cross-Counlry Numerals. FLORENCE ALICE. LATERNAU .......... I ...................... Charlottesville, Virginia ROBERT HAMILTON LILLARD .......... I .............................. Duel. Virginia ROTHWELL JACKSON LILLARD ......... I .............................. Duet. Virginia SUE BLAND LOVEJOY ................... I ...................... CharlottesviIIe, Virginia VIVIEN LUPTON ......................... 3 ...................... Charlottesville, Virginia HAROLD PEAKE MACDONALD .......... I ....................... Montclair, New Jersey A W; Track Squad. MARGARET RANDOLPH MACLEOD ..... 2 ...................... CharloltevaIIe. Virginia ETHEL LOUISE MCCLOUD ............... I ........................ Newark, New Jersey MARJORIE, ROSE. MCLACHLAN .......... I ...................... CharlollesviIIe. Virginia MADELINE MONTAGU MCMURDO ...... I ......................... University, Virginia SALLY ROANE MCMURDO ............... I ......................... University. Virginia MR5. NELSON A. MAHONE .............. Z ...................... Charlollesville. Virginia l124l CORKS 6 CU RLS NAME YEAR IN UNIVERSITY HOME ADDRESS ERNA EULA MARTIN .................... I ............................. ProIEI. Virginia MARY MAUPIN .......................... 3 ........................ Free Union. Virginia BETTY TEEL MILLER .................... I ......................... University. Virginia RUTH P. MOON .......................... 4 .......................... ScotlsviIIe. Virginia GUY PRUDEN MORRIS ................... 4 ......................... Porlsmouth. Virginia Education Club. NORMAN WILLARD MORRIS ............ 3 .............................. Dyke. Virginia ELBET LAWSON MUMMA ............... I .......................... KeysviIIe. Virginia DAVID KESLER MUNTZINC ............. I ......................... Slephenson, Virginia Cross-Coumry. MAUD VERNON ORNDORFF ............ I ......................... Woodslock, Virginia SUSIE CHILTON PALMER ............... 3 ........................ Kalmarnock. Virginia MARY ESSIE. PIERCE .................... I .......................... Richmond. Virginia EMILY ERNESTINE PUCH ............... bI ...................... Charlottesville. Virginia ALBERT PURCELL .......... . ............ I ........................ Round Hill. Virginia MRS. LOIS WALKER QUARLES .......... 2 .................... South Orange. New Jersey GEORGE ELLIOTT QUICK ................ I ............................. Faber. Virginia MRS. E. M. RAMSEY ...................... I ...................... Charlouesvillc. Virginia MARY ELEANOR RAWLS ................ I ............................ Norfolk. Virginia CHRISTINE REYNOLDS .................. I ........................ Long Island. Virginia CHRISTINE MARY RICHARDSON ....... I ...................... Rocky Mount. Virginia MARY DOUGLAS RICHESON ............ 2 ...................... CharIollesviIIe, Virginia HENRY CLAY ROBERSON ............... 2 .............................. Wise, Virginia ELLA TOMPKINS ROBESON ............. 2 .......................... University, Virginia ELEANOR A. SCOTT .................... L I ........................ Appomattox, Virginia HARRY PAUL SHAFFER ................. 2 ......................... Alexandria. Virginia RUTH SHUMATE ......................... I ...................... Charlottesville. Virginia SAM SICELMAN .......................... 2 ....................... New York. New York CHARLES RALEIGH SMITH .............. 3 .......................... Covington. Virginia MARSHALL NOBLE SMITH .............. I .......................... Gadsden. Alabama JeEerson Literary Society. ' JOHN THOMAS STEWART. JR ............ 6 ......................... Portsmouth. Virginia Instructor in Biology. LACO EARL STIDLEY .................... I ..................... Orkney Springs. Virginia MARY ONA STILWELL ................... I ........................... Roanoke. Virginia IDA CATHERINE STONEHAM ........... I .......................... Red Hill. Virginia ANNIE. RUTH STROUD ................... I ...................... Chapel HiII. Tennessee REY CRICKENBERGER STUART ......... 3 ........................ ChurchviIIe. Virginia JACK SULLENBERGER ................... I ............................ Spruce. Virginia MAXINE E. SUTHERLAND ............... 3 ...................... North Garden, Virginia WILLIAM VERNARD THOMPSON ....... I ......................... Pearisburg. Virginia MADCE HELEN TREVILLIAN ............ I ...................... CharlouesviIIe. Virginia ROBERT LEWIS VAUGHAN ............. 3 ........................ GordensviIIe. Virginia VALLEY VIRGINIA VERNON ............ I ............................. Pirkey, Virginia NANCY ELIZABETH WADDELL .......... I ...................... CharlottesviIIe. Virginia LOIS URANIA WACSTAFF ............... I ........................... Skipwilh. Virginia FRANCES MOORMAN WALKER ......... 2 ........................... Bcdford. Virginia IIZJI NAME VIRGINIA VALENTINE. WALKER ........ l ......................... University. DAVID BARR WEBB ..................... 3 ...................... Lynch Station, MARY STANFORD WILKES .............. I ............... . ......... University. SARAH M. WILKES ....................... 4 ......................... University. J. JAMES WILLIAMS ...................... l ........................... Evinglon, LILLlE PAYNE WOODSON ............... I ...................... Charlottesviile. SUE. PRISCILLA WYGAL ................. I ............................ Dryden, YEAR IN UNIVERSITY HOM E ADDRESS Virginia Virginia Virginia Virginia Virginia Virginia Virginia mm f1261 . . 7;: nfuf'a. 4': fart AAJ'Ih SW nor: for- M MY! our 3614:!- MW :o;s$;?? t .- Luis... rrAvyLH-w... ttig ,Jh.;..r .1 Utmw', .- 1 m.g-x. ymmg-.... r31. 1i h. Ltu-1'4-Hr ,,K4 .1 . n ' .'.- .4. h: Viz? IN RECOGNITION OF WORK OF HIGH DISTINCTION IN THE COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES THE ACADEMIC FACULTY al the ANNUAL CONVOCATION EXERCISES of the UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA SEPTEMBER 27. I928 CONFERRED CERTIFICATES OF Intermediate Honors UPON THE. FOLLOWING ?:3LE$LVIE:I?EEE AkNDERSON DEXTER SPEAR FRENCH R A ER F EDE GEORGE SKINNER BLACK R RICK ARTHUR JOHNS LAWRENCE RANDOLPH KIRKPATRICK. 1K EDMUND FONTAINE BROUN. JR. CHARLES BRE ARTHUR LOUIS coon: BFORD MCCOY BENJAMIN WEISIGER EARLY ALGERNON SIDNEY BUFORD NOLTING THOMAS GREEN FAULKNER. JR, DOBERT n: JARNETTE RUFFIN THOMAS MULDRUP FORSYTH ANDREW SHAPIRO These sludcnts during their first lwo sessions in the College. have attained an average grade of 85 per centum or more. on courses aggregating onc-half the requiremenls for the degree in Arts and Sciences. without failure on any course. H271 SYMBOLS A Dar Len 3; WE S TE RN Tclcgnm or Cable- gram unless in char- acter is indicated by a symbol In the check or m the Iddreu. Ca? 1c Lnnr 7 Vv'cck End Loin ? A NIWCOHI CARLTON ?CIJIOZNT 1 C WILLIVUI. raw vvtlv'lfthb'm Ibo Mm. mm as glm-nm lhoducluu on lw-nu ltleru'ul u-d dnv lemn. sud IL: mm: L! rump; nl do:.-..;:..,; u; .1... .1. gu .81 gm bung, u STAN DAILU 1 IML. OGONTZ PA BY CARRIER PICEON TO PHILADELPHIA COLLECT APR l I929 505 PDQ THE EDITOR CORKS 6: CURLS UNIVERSITY VA I HATE TO SEND YOU THIS HERE TELEGRAM STATING THAT I CANT WRITE THEM REMINISCENCES OF TWENTY am YEARS AGO ON THIS OCCASION OF DRAWING ALLEGED FUNNY PICTURES FOR YOUR ESTEEMED PUBLICATION FOR TWENTY am STRAIGHT YEARS STOP THERE AlNT NOTHING 1 WOULDNT DO FOR CORKS a CURLS AND MY GRAMMAR AND LITERARY STYLE IS ALMOST PERFECT COMMA DUE TO EXPERT TUTELACE AT THE UNIVENSITY SEMICOLON BUT EVER SINCE THE QUALITY OF OUR INSPIRATION HAS BEEN AMENDED TO y; OF I PER CENT WHY I AM TOLD THAT MY LITERARY OUTPUT IS ONLY yz OF I PER CENTUM so 1 REGRETFULLY BUT FIRMLY DESIST BUT IN SENDING YOU THIS BRIEF APOLOGY I WILL DASH OFF A FEW CONFIDENTIAL FACTS AND FANClEs WHICH I HAVE NO DOUBTS ONE OF OUR TALENTED WRITERS CAN WEAVE INTO A CANDID AND CRIPPING SAGA OF THE MIST DlMMED YRS AT THAT TIME YOUR AMANUENSIS MUST REMEMBER UNCLE HENRY WAS OUR VENERABLE BELL RINGER BILLY LILE HAD AN AWFUL LOOKING RARITY IN THE SHAPE OF AN AUTOMOBILE THERE A WERE ONLY Two m COLLEGE WIDOWS DOBIE WORE A GREEN VEST THE FOOTBALL COACHES WERE PLOTTING TO BEAT YALE HAVING DEFEATED LEHIGH AND LAFAYETTE TOO PIELS DARK WAS FREELY IMBIBED THE TURKEY TROT AND ALEXANDERS RAG TIME BAND WERE ALL THE RACE MAURICE COSTELLO AND FLORA FlNCH AND JOHN BUNNY WERE THE STARS OF THE INFANT MOVIE INDUSTRY THE HOT FEET RULED THE LAND AND EVEN THE WRITER OCCASIONALLY WALKED HOME OF Two COLLEGE Wloows NIGHTS TO OLD DAWSONS ROW IN HIS BARE FEET AT THAT TIME WE HAD NO HIP FLASKS OR PRE WAR STUFF NO RADIO ANNOUNCERS WITH HARVARD ACCENTS NO GOLD DIGGERS BIC. BUTTER AND EGG MEN CHUMMY ROADSTERS PARKING PROBLEMS PETTING NECKING ROTARY WOMAN SUFFRAGE NO POST WAR PROBLEMS EXCEPT ARGUMENTS BETWEEN CONFEDERATE VETERANS AND SMART ALEC DAMYANKEE DRUMMERS NO PHONEY KU KLUX KLANS FLU OR CRIME WAVES NO MALE WRIST WATCHES SCOTCH JOKES OR GOLF EPIDEMICS NO COEDUCATION OR LITERARY STUDIES OF LIFE IN HARLEM NO JAZZ OR WHOOPEE NOBODY HAD HEARD OF COMMANDER BYRD EPPA RIXEY SLIM LINDBERGH FATS HOOVER HANDSOME HINDENBURC AL SMITH BENNY MUSSOLINI H L MENCKEN OR SHERWOOD ANDERSON SUCH WORTHlEs AS DOC WADDELL DR ALBERT GEORGE ADAM BALZ AND DR WILLIAM SUMNER APPLETON POTT WERE MERE STUDENTS THEN SLOUCHING ALONG THE CLASSIC ARCADES CUTTING LECTURES THERE WAS NO POLAND CZECHOSLOVAKIA jUGOSLAVlA OR HOLLYWOOD AND IF ONE HAD SUGGESTED THE OLD DOMINION FLOPPING INTO THE REPUBLICAN MENAGERIE HE WOULD HAVE BEEN ESCORTED OUT OF THE ACADEMIC PRECINCTS ON A RAIL TARRED a FEATHERED LYNCHED DRAWN 6t QUARTERED AND FORCED TO STUDY B MATH OR THE EINSTEIN THEORY STOP IF YOUR TALENTED SCRIVENER WILL JUST BEAR THESE FEW FACTS 1N MIND HE CAN NO DOUBTS PORTRAY LIFE AT THE UNIVERSITY 20 YRS AGO VERY ACCURATELY STOP TWENTY YEARS Il-zsl AGO WHY MR EDITOR AT THAT TIME MOST OF YOU YOUNG GENTS WERE WIGGLING AROUND IN YOUR SWADDLING LINGERIE IF ANY AND YELPING WHEN THE. SAFETY PINS WENT DEMOCRATIC THIS IS A QUEER YANKEE EXPRESSION UP HERE AMONG THE YANKS POSSIBLY THIS SUBJECT EMBARRASSES YOU so I WILL CONTINUE WITH A FEW PERSONAL FLIGHTS THAT I HAVE JUST THOUGHT OF AT THAT TIME I WAS A CALLOW DlFFIDENT YOUTH OF A FEW SUMMERS MEASURING 51x FEET FOUR IN MY SOCKS AND LIVING A SIMPLE RUGGED LIFE IN MY LOG CABIN HOME ON THE. FAIR GREEN VELDT OF SOUTHWESTERN VIRGINIA 1 READ LAW BY THE CLARE OF PINE KNOTS AND EKED OUT A MEAGER EXISTENCE IN THE FOREST BY SPLITTING UP RAILS INTO TOOTH- PICKS FOR USE AT THE UNIVERSITY COMMONS IS IT STILL RUNNING AFTER RECEIVING MY ART DIPLOMA IN THE P 0 AT ABINGDON VA FROM THE CORRESPONDENCE SCHOOL MY KEEPERS DECIDED ON A UNIVERSITY CAREER WHEREUPON I WAS LASSOED AND TAUGHT TO WEAR SHOES COLLARS AND A STORE sun WITH NIFTY PEG BOTTOM PANTS AT CHARLOTTESVILLE I WAS COURTEOUSLY WELCOMED BY THE CHIEF OF POLICE UNCLE BUZZARD PETE DR ALDERMAN NICK THE PHI GAM BULLDOG AND HEBE HIS FIANCEE NICKS NOT THE OTHERS DR ALDERMAN GRACIOUSLY USHERED ME INTO THE MUSEUM BUT WHEN I INSISTED ON ENTERING THE ACADEMIC DEPT WHY HE. APOLOGIZED I THOUGHT IT WAS A ZOOLOGICAL SPECIMEN HE MURMURED TO DOC KEPNER WHO HAD JUST LUMBERED UP IN PURSUIT OF A BUTTERFLY WHEREUPON 51x MEN LATER IDENTIFIED As zoos FLED INTO THE CHAPEL TONY As 1 FAMILIARLY CALL HIM WHEN HE ISNT AROUND HAS ALWAYS A GENTLEMAN WELL ANYWAYS AFTER FLUNKING A BAKERS DOZEN OF ENTRANCE EXAMINATIONS THAT GRAND MAN DR JIM PAGE FOR NO GOOD REASON AT ALL DECIDED TO ACCEPT ME ON SEVERAL CONDITIONS NAMELY THAT I WOULD SATISFY HlM IN REGARDS TO A MATH A LIT A GERMAN A SHAVE A SHINE AND A HAIR CUT AND IMMEDIATELY I TRIED OUT FOR PITCHER ON THE B B TEAM AND WAS INJECTED INTO THE BULL PEN WITH EPPA RIXEY AND PAUL BARRINGER BY THE B B COACH THE NOTORIOUS UMPS RlGLER WHO WAS HIGHLY ELATED ON ACCOUNT OF BELIEVING HE HAD THREE A NO ONE TWIRLERS FOR HIS VARSITY BUT SUBSEQUENT EVENTS INDICATED HE WAS ONLY APPROXIMATELY 33 l-3 PER CENTUM CORRECT THEREUPON 1 TURNED MY ATTENTION TO TRACK TENNIS CHESS THE MANDOLIN WRITING FOR THE MAG IS IT STILL RUNNING AND FINALLY AND LASTLY BEGAN s MOKING CIGARETTES BUT NEVER DID NO CROCHETING OR FANCY WORK THEN CAME THE GREAT DAY OR RATHER IT WAS AFTER MIDNIGHT WHEN A GENTLEMAN WITH SCOTTISH BAGPIPES CLIMBED UP THE STEPS TO MY CUBICLE AT 900 w MAIN ST AND CLAIMED HE WAs JIM MCCONNELL GOOD OLD JIM THE EDITOR OF DIE LAUGHING CORKS a: CURIS AND HE WANTED ME TO DRAW SOME INIMITABLE PICTURES FOR HIS PUBLICATION DRAW THE PICTURES IN FRONT OF A MIRROR HE SAID AND THE READERS WILL DIE LAUGHING I DID AS DIRECTED AND HIS PREDICTION CAME TRUE PARTLY THAT YEAR CORKS 8: CURLS LOST 3 OR 4 THOUSAND DOLLARS AND IT HAS BEEN DOING THE SAME EVER SINCE 1 THINK BUT MAYBE YOU BIRDS ARE MAKING MONEY ARE YOU WE NEVER COULD WELL ANYWAYS THAT WAs JUST ONE OF MYRIADS OF DEMOCRATIC FAILURES I HOPE YOUR GIFTED SCRIVENER WILL SORT OF GLOSS OVER THESE CONFIDENTIAL EPISODES OUT OF RESPECT TO MY FEELINGS I TRIED TO STUDY CHEMISTRY UNDER DICKY BIRD NOT TO BE CONFUSED WITH DICK BYRD BUT HE. CONFUSED ME WITH MY BROTHER WHO HAD BEAT HIM PLAYING TENNIS OR SOMETHING AND HE. FLUNKED ME I WILL NEVER FORGET THE CARBON JOKE THAT DICKY INCORPORATED IN HIS LECTURES IT SEEMS THERE WERE A COUPLE OF CARBONS WELL ANYWAYS I WAS A FLOP SOCIALLY TOO IN CALLING ON A YOUNG LADY ACROSS THE. R R TRACKS I DISCOVERED THERE WAS ONE TOO MANY ARDENT SWAINS LURKING BEHIND FENCES WITH COBBLESTONES UP THEIR SLEEVES THEN I USED TO GO WITH A SCOTCHMAN WHO WAS COURTING A LOVELY LADY OUT IN THE STICKS AND I COULD NEVER FIGURE OUT WHY HE WANTED ME. ALONG UNTIL YEARS LATER I DISCOVERED IT WAS SIMPLY TO SPLIT UP THE EXPENSE OF THE LIVERY STABLE. NAG AND RIG HE HIRED WHICH COST TWO FIFTY PER TRIP I THINK THEN DICK WILSON INVITED ME TO RESIGN FROM HIS FRENCH CLASS BECAUSE I WAS TOO BUSY DRAWING PICTURES FOR CORKS 6: CURLS TO ATTEND HIS LECTURES WHICH AT TIMES WERE VERY INTRIGUING HE SEEMED HURT AND HE SAID YOU DONT KNOW ENOUGH FRANCAIS TO MAKE 35 ON EXAMINATION NEST CE PAS COCHON I REPLIED IN PERFECT PATOIS YOU HAVE WRONG MON BON CABBAGE AND HE WAS SO STARTLED HE LET ME STAY WELL MR EDITOR THERE WASNT NOTHING I WOULDNT DO FOR CORKS 8x CURLS EVEN TALKING AT A FRENCH PROF IN FRENCH I REMEMBER SPENDING ONE WHOLE NIGHT KILLING ALL OUR PET ROACHES 1N CORKS 8: CURLS OFFICE THEN IN THE BASEMENT OF MAD HALL BECAUSE THEY WERE EATING UP OUR PASTE THAT WE HAD STOLEN FROM TOPICS OFFICE AND WE. WERE TOO POOR TO BUY ANY MORE I HOPE YOU GENTS APPRECIATE THE HARDSHIPS OF THEM RUGGED PIONEER DAYS ALL IN ALL I CAN SEE NOW THAT I WAS QUITE A PROBLEM TO THE AUTHORITIES AND MANY OF THEM HAVE GRAY HAIRS NOW AS A RESULT NO DOUBT I WOULD HAVE. BEEN GRADUATED AT A MIDNIGHT SESSION OF THE FACULTY ONLY THE FACULTY NEVER STAYED UP THAT LATE LIFE WAS PLEASANT IN THEM DAYS AND AS I LOOK BACK THROUGH THE VISTA OF BYGONE YRS I CAN WELL REALIZE WHY I DIDNT WANT TO PART WITH THE GLAMOR AND ENCHANTMENT OF VIRGINIA WHERE EVERY MAN WAS HIS OWN BOSS AS LONG AS HE KEPT REASONABLY WITHIN THE. BOUNDS BUT AT LAST THE FATAL DAY OF PARTING CAME WITH ONLY ONE GERMAN ESSAY IN THE WAY OF A DEGREE AND ON THE. DAY BEFORE THE PARCHMENTS WERE LADIED OUT I SAYS TO DOC FAULKNER HOW WAS THAT ESSAY DOC . AND HE SAYS THE BSAY WAS ALL RIGHT BUT THE. GERMAN IT WAS TERRIBLE HOWEVER RATHER THAN HAVE TO TEACH YOU ANOTHER SESSION BY JOVE I WILL OKEH THE BLOODY DISSERTATION AND SEND YOU OUT INTO THE. COLD WORLD TO FIGHT YOUR OWN WAY AND GLUECKLICHE REISE MON ENFANT OR WORDS TO THAT EFFECT 50 OUT I WENT BUT I LOVED THE OLD PLACE MR EDITOR AND I CAME BACK , ONE SUMMER SESSION ON A SUNNY DAY AND MY OLD Room IT WAS ALL 50 BEAUTIFUL I THOUGHT I WOULD SAUNTER AROUND TO MY OLD ROOM AT 23 W RANGE TO STIR UP SOME OLD MEMORIES BUT THERE WAS A MAN AND HIS WIFE AND A BABY LIVING IN MY OLD ROOM AND THE. BABY WAS YELLING SO THE NEXT TIME I COME. BACK MR EDITOR IT WILL BE ON SOME NOBLE MIDNIGHT IN JUNE AND AFTER I LOOK AT THE MOON SHINING OVER THE LAWN A WHILE I THINK I SHALL TAKE OFF MY SHOES AND SOCKS AND WALK OVER TO OLD DAWSONS ROW AGAIN MEANTIME BEST OF LUCK WITH THE BOOK AND I HOPE YOUR AUTHOR WILL BE ABLE TO DISTILL A COUPLE OF READABLE PARAGRAPHS OUTBSI: TlIgIESE HERE CONFIDENTIAL MEMOIRS YOURS AS EVER CARL ZEIS G ' .m....:. to mumamn moh- wPZIRVSEan x Applicants for Degree of Bachelor of Laws, June, 1929 OSCAR jULES ANDRE DONALD SWAN BEARD WILLIS WILSON BOHANNON CHAMPE. TERRELL BROADDUS NELSON ALBERT BRYAN LUCIUS A. BUCK JOSEPH T. BUXTON. JR. EDWARD CODRINGTON CARRINGTON. JR. RUTLEDGE CARTER CLEMENT RICHARD NATHANIEL CROCKETT WILLIAM MAHONE CRUMPLER. JR. CURTIS EMERY CUDDY FREEMAN JUNIOR DANIELS THEODORE ESSEX DEAN JOHN PRESTON EDMONDSON NORMAN SHANNONHOUSE. ELLIOTT WILLIAM LAWRENCE GIBSON FRANK BOSTICK GILMER FRANK HALE GOODRICH GORDON IRVING GORDON DAVID RICE GROOME CHARLES FULKERSON HAGAN. JR. JAMES POTTS HART, JR. SHIRLEY MAXWELL HELM RICHARD KENNON HINES. JR. WALTER ARTHUR HOFFMAN WALTER JOHNSON HOLLORAN FLOYD GRAHAM HURST ALFRED RODMAN HUSSEY. jn. NATHAN BENNETT KAMINSKY WILLIAM MEADE KELLER JOHN ADAMS LELAND II331 MAURICE GERALD LONG. JR. HOMER WILLIAM LYNCH CHARLES PEYTON McCABE THOMAS ATKINSON McEACHERN. JR. THOMAS EUGENE MASSIE HERBERT WEEDEN MILLER ELDRED LISCOMB MINOR WILLIAM AUGUSTUS MONCURE. JR. ELDRIDGE HORD MOORE LEWIS DEXTER MOWRY. JR. DONALD THURSTON PATTERSON THEODORE PHILLIPS CLAUDIE HARDEN PIPES FRED HUNDLEY QUARLES. JR. JAMES ELAM ROBERTS JAMES COLEMAN RODGERS ROBERT GARRETT SANDERSON EWING GORDON SIMPSON JOHN EDWARD SMITH LINWOOD MERCER SMITH JOHN BOOTH SULLIVAN MARY ELIZABETH SWAIN DAVID HIGNUTT TAYLOR FRANK LlLE TAYLOR HORACE ARGYLE TEASS ROBERT BENJAMIN TYLER MACILBURNE VAN VOORHIES RUSSELL BUNTON WHITE JESSE BIRCH WILSON, ll RICHARD SLOAN WRIGHT. JR. JOHN GARTH YANCEY GEORGE PEPPER CARROLL YOUNG THEN MW im on mam I828-j 39346155 . :rc. I l . .l::.!'::!l' 2 clamc $45!, in. Law sighs woul. W 3 +0 Wt. MSoLns L? g fussing, ft. bull. : 2wj OFFICERS ROBERT BENJAMIN TYLER ................................................... President FREEMAN JUNIOR DANIELS ............................................. Vice-Presidcnl FRANK HALE. COODRICH .................... . ...................... Sccrclary-Trcasurer FRANK LILE TAYLOR ......................................................... Historian THIRD YEAR CLASS NAME YEAR IN UNIVERSITY HOME ADDRESS OSCAR JULES ANDRE ................... 3 ........................ Salem. West Virginia Acting Sccrelary Madison Hall; Chairman Minor Law Club. WILLIS WlLSON BOHANNON ........... 3 ............................. Surry. Virginia B.A.. Virginia Military Institute K A; $ A 4H Staff Virginia Law Review; Raven. CHAMPE TERRILL BROADDUS .......... 5 ............................ Chance. Virginia A X; $ A 41; Lacrosse Squad. I927; Lacrosse Team, I928; V Lacrosse; Adjunct Manager Football. 1924-25. JOHN E. WILLIAMS BROWN ............. 6 .................... Huntington. West Virginia A 4:; A H; 43 A Cb; T.I.L.K.A.; Vice-Prcsidcnt German Club; lntcrfralernity Council. NELSON ALBERT BRYAN ................ 3 .................. Wilkes Barre. Pennsylvania 3.5., Pennsylvania Slate College q, E K. LUCIUS ADOLPHUS BUCK ............... 4 .......................... Covington. Virginia B K; 4? A .3; Raven; Editorial Board Virginia Law Review; Editorial Board CORKs AND CURLs. 1926-27; Minor Law Club; Instructor in Law, l928-29. EDWARD C. CARRINCTON. Jr ............ 6 ....................... New York. New York RUTLEDCE CARTER CLEMENT ......... 4 ........................... Chatham. Virginia K E; P. K. Society. RICHARD N. CROCKETT ................. 5 ............................ Dublin, Virginia WILLIAM MAHONE CRUMPLER ......... 5 ............................ Suffolk, Virginia K A; 42 A A. I1341 I Department of Law 1 NAME YEAR IN UNIVERSITY HOME ADDRESS CURTIS EMERY CUDDY ................. 6 ........................... Roanoke, Virginia A T A; 0 A K; 11 A 4,; T.I.L.K.A.; German Club; Varsity Club; Freshman Football Team, 1923; Freshman Track Team. I924; Varsity Football. 1924-26: Varsily Track. I925; Trigon; G. A. A. Board, l926-27. FREEMAN JUNIOR DANIELS.. ........... 5 ...................... BeVerly. West Virginia M.A.. University of Virginia; B.A.. Davis Elkins College 41 A 9: tb A K; 0 A K; Book Review Editor Virginia Law Review; Vice-Presidenl Law School; P. K. Sociely; Assislant lo the Gradual: Manager of Athletics; Madison Hall Cabinet; Secrelary Interfralemily Council; Student Assistanlship Law, I928; Minor Law Club; lnslruclor College. I928; Chairman Summer School Honor Committee; Chairman Student Employmenl Bureau, I926. LOFTUS CLIFFORD DAWSON ............ 5 ...................... Charlottesville. Virginia THEODORE ESSEX DEAN ................ 5 ....................... New York. New York Cb E K; Virginia Players. JOHN PRESTOSN EDMONDSON ........... 3 ........................... Redford. Virginia K 2: P. K. Society. NORMAN SHANNONHOUSE ELLIOTTU ...................... Edenton. North Carolina A 2; q; q; B K B..A. University of North Carolina FRANK BOSTICK GILMER ............................................. Chicago, Illinois B 9 II; 0 A K; P. K. Society; Skull and Keys; T1....;LKA First Year Boxing Team, V925; Varsily Boxing Team, 1926- 27- 28; Captain Boxing Team. I928: Z : President G. A. A 1923; ul3'; Varsity Boxing. I928. FRANK HALE GOODRICH ................ 3 ........................... Brownsville. Texas DAVID RICE GROOM ..................... 7 ......................... McNair, Missiuippi Registered for Exams Only. CHARLES FULKERSON HACAN ......... 4 ............................. Bristol, Virginia 43; K A: 45 A A. JAMES POTTS HART ..................... 3 ........................... Roanoke. Virginia 35.. Virginia Military Institute $ K it; Raven; Edilorial Board Virginia Law Review. SHIRLEY MAXWELL HELM .............. 3 .............................. Houston. Texas RICHARD KENNON HINES. g ......................................... Macon. Georgia ..,A Virginia Military Institule K A: 45 A 4,; P. K. Society; ColIimnisl College Topics,- Associate Manager Virginia Reel,- SHE Virginia Law Review,- An Staff Conxs AND CURLS. WALTER ARTHUR HOFFMAN ........... 3 ........................... Rosalind. Virginia WALTER JOHNSON HOLLORAN ......... 5 ........................ Rochester. New York JOSEPH WILTON HOPE JR .......................................... Hampton, Virginia 3.5.. Virginia Military lnslilule K A; N E N; P. K. Society; Eli Banana. FLOYD GRAHAM HURST ................ 5 ............................ Norfolk, Virginia A T A: 4, A in ALFRED RODMAN HUSSEY. JR ........... 3 ...................... Plymouth. Massachusetts 3.3.. Harvard College Raven Society; Chairman Board of Supervisors of Law Clubs; President Charles Graves Law Club; Instructor in Law. NATHAN BENNETT KAMINSKY ......... 6 ............................ Norfolk. Virginia 8.5.. Universily of Virginia Assislanl in Spanish. WILLIAM MEADE KELLER ............... 6 ....................... Charlottesville. Virginia B5.. University of Virginia B 6 II; A II; 4, A Ch; 0 A K; T.I.L.K.A.; German Club; Assistant Manager Football. I926; uZ ; Virginia Law Review. JOHN ADAMS LELAND ................... 3 ...................... Johnson Cily. Tennessee K A. f1351 CORKS 6 CU RLS I Department of Law I NAM E YEAR IN UNIVERSITY HOME ADDRESS MAURICE GERALD LONG JR ............. 5 .............. Washington. Districl of Columbia K A; Cb A 1?; Skull and Keys; T. I. LWKA: German Club; First Year Baseball. I925; Baseball Squad. I926-27: SIaE Virginia Law Review. . HOMER WILLIAM LYNCH ................ 3 ....................... Georgetown, Delaware K A; Reporlorial Staff College TapIcs. I926-27: Associate Manager Virginia Real, I927-28: Editorial SME Virginia Law Review. I927-28.31928-29. CHARLES PEYTON MCCABE ........................................ Leesburg. Virginia THOMAS ATKINSON MCEACHERN. JR... ........................... Bil oni. Mississippi 1, K 1'; 1' B K; 1' A 1'; 0 A K; A H; A K 17'; T.I.L.K.A.: Raven; P. K. Society: Intermediate Honors; Madison Hall Cabinet: Jefferson Society; President JeIfcrson Sociely. I926; Editor-in- Chief Conxs AND Cums. l927-28: InsIructor in Spanish. 1924-29: OWL: Presidenl Interfraternily Council. THOMAS EUGENE MASSIE ............... 5 ...................... Charlottesville, Virginia B 9 II; 1' A 4'; German Club: Eli Banana: Virginia Law Review. HERBERT WEEDEN MILLER ............. 5 ............................ Orlando, Florida 2 X: 1' A A; Editorial Board Virginia Lana Review; Art SlaE Virginia Reel,- Baskel-ball Squad, 925-26; Track Squad. I925. JOSEPH BISHOP MILLER ................. 8 ...................... Charlottesville. Virginia A T A. ELDRED LISCOMB MINOR ............... 9 ....................... PIninviIIe, Connecticut WILLIAM AUGUSTUS MONCURE ........ 3 ......................... Alexandria. Virginia A K E; A II: German Club; IMP; First Year Foolball Team. I926: First Year Baseball Team. I927; Varsity Football Team, I927-28. ELDRIDCE HORD MOORE ............... 3 .......................... Abingdon. Virginia A.B.. King College 1, A 9; 1' A 1': Virginia Law Review. LEWIS D. MOWRY ....................... 5 ...................... Englewood, New Jersey DONALD THURSTON PATTERSON ..... 3 ....................... Kansas City. Missouri 2 N: 1, A A. THEODORE PHILLIPS ................... 6 ........................ Cambridge. Maryland B 6 H; A II: 0 A K; T.I.L.K.A.; P. K. Society: First Year Football Team. I923; Vanity Football Squad. I924; V Football. I925-26: Wrestling Squad. I924: Varsity Club; Z ; President InterfI-alernily Council. I928; G. A. A. Board; Aslislzml Football Coach, I927. CLAUDIE H. PIPES ....................... 7 ........................... CIanlon. Alabama PERRY SIMPSON POFFENBARGER ...... 3 .................... Charleston. West Virginia A T A. FRED HUNDLEY QUARLES. JR ........... 7 ...................... CharloltesviIIc, Virginia B.A.. University of Virginia 1' A 9:1 B K; 1' A 1': 0 A K; A II; A K 1'; Raven; P. K. Society; Intermediate Honors: Final Honors in Polilical Science. I926; Football Squad 1922- 25; JeEcrson Lilerary Society. I923- 29; President Jefferson Literary Society. I925; Madison Hall Cabinet I925- 26; Vice- Presi- dent Madison Hall 1926-27: President Woodrow Wilson Socier I927: Assislant in Political Science. 925-29; Editorial Board Virginia Law Review: Inlerfralemily Council I927; Deans List: Editor-in-Chief Virginia Law Review. JAMES ELAM ROBERTS ................. 6 .......................... Richmond. Virginia 1' K E. ROBERT GARRETT SANDERSON ........ 5 ........................ Bird's Nesl. Virginia EWING GORDON SIMPSON .............. 7 ......................... Cherrydale. Virginia J. EDWARD SMITH ....................... 5 ...................... New York. New York LINWOOD MERCER SMITH ........................................ Richmond Virginia Varsily Swimming Team. I926- 28- 29: Track Team. I926. JOHN BOOTHE SULLIVAN ............... 7 ...................... Willimanlie. Connecticut A T. HRH CORKS 6 CURLS . b . x I929 fKK AmK Kk K A AK ;K a . .1 7 : -g 7 V 7L I Department of Law 1 NAME YEAR IN UNIVERSITY HOME ADDRESS MARY ELIZABETH SWAIN .............. 3 ........................... Norfolk. Virginia X 9; President Women's Student Government Association. DAVID HICNUTT TAYLOR .............. 4 ........................ CentreviIIe. Maryland FRANK LILE TAYLOR ....................................... Charlcalon West Virginia a X; T A in Raven; Editorial Board Virginia 5Law Review; Historian Law School; Inletfralernity ounCI HORACE ARGYLE TEASS ................ 7 ......................... Lynchburg. Virgmia ROBERT BENJAMINE TYLER ..................................... Palmyra. New York 9 A X; GI A A; 0 A K: Raven; President 3Law School: Instructor Law School; Deans LIsl; Notes Editor Vir'gmm Law Rewew; Member Honor Commillee. MACILBURNE VANVOORHIES .......... 7 ........................ Port au Prince. Haiti A T A. GUY FORREST VIA ...................... 3 ...................... Charlottesville, Virginia RUSSEL BUNTON WHITE ............... 4 ..................... Kilianning. PennsyIvania JESSE BIRCH WILSON. II ................ 6 .................... Paeonian Springs, Virginia RICHARD SLOAN J WRIGHT ............ 5 .......................... Stearburg, Virginia JOHN GARTH YANCEY .................. 7 ............................ Liberty. Missouri 4, A A. GEORGE P. YOUNG ...................... 5 ......................... Blackstone. Virginia SECOND YEAR CLASS SAVORY EDWARD AMATO .............. 2 ........................... Norfolk. Vi'rginia GEORGE MURPHY ARMISTEAD ......... 5 ........................ LiuIe Rock. Arkansas JAMES RILEY AYERS. JR ................. 2 ......................... Pelersburg. Virginia X It; 4, A Q: P. K. Society; Glee Club; VIrgInIa Law Review Board. HORACE CREELEY BASS ................ 6 ........................... DanviIIe. Virginia B.A.. U'niversily of Virginia A E 4,: Virginia Law Review; Inlcrmediale Honors; Glee Club. I924-25; Boxing Squad, I924-25: Adjunct Manager Football. I924-25. JOHN KERMIT BIRCHFIELD ............. 2 ........................... Roanoke. Virginia A 2 IF: I? A A. HERBERT LEE BOATWRIGHT, IIR ........ 2 ........................... Danville, Virginia A W: Cb A 4H P. K. Society; Law Review Board. ARMISTEAD LLOYD BOOTHE ................................... Alexandria. Virginia B 9 II; Ib B K: O A K; I? A in T....5.;ILKA Skull and Keys: Raven Society; German Club: Varsily Club: Inlermedialc Honors; News Editor College TopIcs. I927; Manager Basket- baII. I928; Cheer Leadei; FoolbaII Squad. I923; Virginia Law Review,- Executive Comminee of Inler-Fra- lernily Council: Instructor in History. WALLER DAVIES BROWN ............... 4 ..................... Concord, North Carolina HERBERT WILSON BRYAN .............. 2 .................... SI. AIbans, Wes! Virginia JAMES TAYLOR BUCKLEY .............. 2 .................... Downinglon, Pennsylvania X 4A HERBBERT HENRY BUTLER JR ........... 4 ..................... Swedesboro. New Jersey B;K LiIe Law CIub; Vice- President WashingIon Literary Sociely. I927. ROBERT GAMBLE CABELL III ........... 6 .......................... Richmond. Viruinia A K E; 4? A It: 0 A K; Skull and Keys; P K. Society; German Club; T. I. L...;KA IMP: ';I3' First Year Baskel- baII Team I924; FIrsl Year Baseball Team. I924; uV' Baskcl- baII. I926- 27: uV BasebaII. I926-27; Varsily Club; Caplain BaskcI-baII, I927. MERRICK IRWIN CAMPBELL ............ 4 ......................... For! PIcrce. Florida WILLIAM LAW CLAY .............................................. Savannah. Georgla X 1!; Skull and Keys; Eli Banana: German Club: VirgInIa Law Review Board; Freshman Football. I925; Freshman Boxmg. I925; Boxing Squad I928- 29. l1371 CORKS 6 CURLS I Department of Law 1 NAME YEAR IN UNIVERSITY HOME ADDRESS HENRY WARREN CONANT .............. 2 ......................... Rehobolh. DeIaware A Z 4?. JOHN EARL CORRETTE ................. 3 ............................. Butte. Monlnna I?! A: P. K. Society; Virginia Law Revlcu. W. LEROY CORRON ...................... 6 ........................ Front Roynl, Virginia JOHN HARVIE CREECY .................. 34 .......................... Richmond Virginia TRAVIS GARLAND DANIEL ................................ Greensboro. North Carolina A K E; A II; German Club: Eli Banana: First Year Football Team. I925; First Year Track Team. I926; Varsity Football Squad. l926-27- 28; V Foolba I927; Boxing Team I927- 23. FRANK GASSAWAY DAVIDSON ......... 5 ......................... Lynchburg. Virginia A T 0; A II; Eli Banana; German Club; Basket-ba Squad. BERNARD SOLBERT DAVIS ............. 2 .................... AllanIic Cily. Ntw Jersey IF E II; Glee Club. l927-28; Coach Fin! Year Swimming Team. l927-28. RICHARD GIBSON DEANE ............... 6 ......................... Univenily. Virginia v? E K; It A A; A E II: Advertising Manager Virginia Real; Varsity Football Squad; Varsity Track Squad: Virginia Lana Review; Glee Club. CLARENCE LESTER DRUMMOND ....... 4 ........................... Nandua. Virginia WILLIAM MCLEOD FERGUSON ............................... Newport News. Virginia A W;41 A 4?; Eli Banana; P. K. Society; Skull 4and Keys; Law Review Board. THOMAS JOSEPH FICARRA ............. 5 ........................... Norfolk, Virginia ELLIOT CUTHRIE FISHBURNE .......... 6 ........................ Waynesboro. Virginia 3.5., University of Virginia Z W: German Club. WILLIAM BEVERLY FRYBERGER ....... 2 ........................... DquIH Minneso'a JOHN MARSHALL GOLDSMITH ............................... Christiansburg. Virginia d, P A: German Club; OWL; V Club; T.....;ILKA Fin! Year Cross- Counlry. 1924; First Year Baskel- ball. I925; First Year Track Team. I925: Jefferson Sociely; Cabinet Madison Hall, I926- 27: Varsity Track Squad. I926- 27; V Track. I928; Varsity Baskel- ball I927- 28. TOSEPH WARREN GRAY ........................................ Nashville, Tenneuec ROBERT HOWELL CROVER ............. 2 ........................... Norfolk, Virginia LOUIS LEE GUY .......................... 2 ........................... Norfolk. Virginia It, A 9: Virgima Law Review. ROBERT VOSE HALSEY ................. 2 ............................. Chicago. Illinois THEODORE HARDEEN. fa ................ 6 ........................ Brooklyn. New York d, E K; First Year Foolba I Varsity Football Squad; Varsity Lacrosse. WALTER CLAY HARRIS ........................................ Ocean View. Virginia B K; Freshman Foolba . 1925- 26: Nash Law4 Club. PHILIP HENRY HICKSON ................ 5 ......................... Lynchburg. Virginia A T O; A ll: German Club; Adjunct Manager Track. LAWRENCE HAROLD HOOVER ......... 2 ........................ Timbcrvillc. Virginia LON MOORE HOWE. ..................... 4 ...................... East Radford. Virginza JOSEPH COLLIER HUTCHBON .................................... BoydIon. Virg'rLa K E; P. K. Sociely; T. I L. K. A.; First Year Track Team. 1926; First Year Cross- Counlry I925; Varsily Cross- Counlry. I926- 27- 28: Captain Cross- Country. I928; Varsity Track Team. I927- 28' Vanily Club. JACK D. HYDE ........................... 4 ......................... Jacksonville. Florida Cb A 9; Varsity BaskeI-ball. l928-29. LOUIS CLAY JAMES ...................... 4 ...................... Princess Anne. Virginia B K; Jefferson Society: Nash Law Club; Wesley Club. ROSS ANTHONY KEARNEY ............. 2 ........................... Phoebus. Virginia JAMES AMBROSE LEITCH ............... 5 ...................... Charloneavillc. Virginia A T: 4, A A: A 2 H; V Club; P. K. Society; Baskct- ball I925; Track. 1925: Indoor and Outdoor Track, 1926-27- 28. I1381 CORKS 81 CURLS . . , x I929 I Departmenl of Law 1 NAME YEAR lN UNIVERSITY HOME ADDRESS JACK NEAL LOTT ........................ 5 ..................... Johnslon. Soulh Carolina K;A Dean 5 List, l926- 27-28. HUCHH DEWITT MCCORMICK ........................................... Ja ava. Virginia A T: A II;v .. T; P. K. Society; V Club; Business Manager Virgima Reel; Varsily Baskel- ball Squad. l924-28; Varsily Foolbnll Squad. 1925- 26: Jefferson Society; Executive Committee A. C. C. E.; Inler- Publication Board. JAMES MILLER MCCREADY .............. 2 ..................... Edgeworlh, Pennsylvania X 4N P. K. SOCIety. WESTON OiVEN MCDANIEL ............. 4 ....................... Clifton Forge. Virginia FRANK B. MCDONALD. JR ................. 2 .......................... Waycross. Georgia ALEXANDER BYRD MCDOWELL. JR ...... 2 ..................... Swiflwaler. Pennsylvania A E in 44 A A. jEROME IRVING MACHT ................ 5 ............................. Crewe. Virginia JAMES BARKER MAY .................... 4 ....................... New York. New York It E K; d! A A; Fire! Year Swimming; Varsity Swimming Team, 1927-28-29; Captain Swimming. I929; Virginia Players. WILLARD S. MIELZINER ..................................... Philadelphia. Pennsylvania Cb E IT; First Year Swimming Team. I925; First Year Baseball Team. 1926; Varsily Swimming Team. I926; Varsity Baseball Squad. i927; Varsity Baseball Team. 1928; V Club; Inter- fralernily Council Represenlalive. l926-27-28. WILLIAM ERVIN MILLER ................ 2 .......................... Paducah, Kentucky WILLIAM MAURY MITCHELL ........... 2 ............................ Base . Virginia Direclor Virginia Spectator.- Washington Literary Sociely; Nash Law Club. HARRY MORRIS. JR ....................... 5 ....................... New York. New York HUNTER HOLMES MOSS ................. 4 ................... Parkersburg. West Virginia rb K 2; tb A tb; O A K; Z ; Skull and Keys; T.l.L.K.A.; Assistant Football Manager. I927: AasisIanI Editor-in-Chief CORKS AND CURLs. I927; Law Review,- Intermediate Honors; Editor-in- Chief CORKS AND CURLS, I929; lnlerfralcrnity Council. i928-29. HERBERT HAYE; MURPHY ............. 4 ............... Hastings-on-Hudwn. New York 2 P E; Tennis.2 . 3. 4. HOMER iLlAD NOFFSINCER ............. 5 ........................... Finculle. Virginia JAMES WALLACE OULD. JR .............. 2 ......................... Lynchburg. Virginia C. ARMONDE PAXON .................... 4 ...................... Hagerstown. Maryland I? 23 K: It A A; Virginia Players; lnterfraternity Council. DRAPER WALTER PHILLIPS ............ 2 ........................... Roanoke. Virginia MERRILL JAMES POORE ................. 2 ........................... Helena. Monlann PEDRO MARIA PORRATA ............... 4 ................... Subann Grande. Porto Rico RUSSELL LEE POST ...................... 2 ........................ Hartford. Conneclicul 6b A Cb; Lam Review.- P. K. Society. ROBERT LOUIS OUARLFS ............... 2 ........................... Roanoke. Virginia 44 K W. RALPH RICHARDSON REPASS ........... 2 ............................ Marion. Virginia A. 3.. Emory and4 Henry College FRED RICHTER ..................................................... Norfolk. Virginia JAMES ELMAN ROBERTS ................ 6 .......................... Richmond Virginia 11, K E; A II; P. K. Society. LUDLOW THOMAS ROGERS ............. 2 ...................... Durham. North Carolina X 4?. GEORGE RIVES SHAFFER ............... 4 ...................... Charlottesville. Virginia B. A., University of Virginia 2 N; P. K. Society. DAVID RAYMONDy SHELTON. JR ......... 4 ........................... Buckner. Virginia Il39l I Department of Law 1 NAME YEAR IN UNIVERSITY HOME ADDRESS JAMES HENRY SIMMONDS .............. 4 ......................... Lynchburg. Virginia JAMES EDMONDS SLEMP ................ 4 ..................... Big Stone Gap. Virginia A Z W; P. K. Society. WILLIAM EYRE TAYLOR ................ 7 ........................ Machipongo. Virginia B.A.. Universily of Virginia A K E; A H: Eli Banana: IMP; First Year Basketball. I923. LAWRENCE S. THORNE ................. 4 ......................... Yonkers. New York FRANK MORTIMER TINKHAM ........... 5 ....................... Jamestown. New Yuri: 4i F A. JUAN ANGEL TIO. II ...................... 5 ..................... San German, Porto Rico TAYLOR VINSON ........................ 4 .................... Huntington. West Virginia A 13; lb A 41; T.I.L.K.A.; V Club; German Club; Manager of Track, I929. FRANK MORTON WAGNER .............. 3 ...................... Blueerld. West Virginia SAMUEL WEINBERG ..................... 4 .................... Far Rockaway, New York FREDRICK PALMER WHITNEY .......... 2 ........................ Frankford, Delaware ARCHER ANDERSON WILLIAMS ........ 5 .......................... Richmond. Virginia B.A.. M.A.. University of Virginia III K W: I? B K; O A K; A K 1!: Raven; Skull and Keys; P. K. Society; Reporlorial SIIH College Topics. I924; Athlelic Editor CORKS AND CURLS. 927-28; lnlermediaie Honors. 1925; Assistant Manager Basket-ba , 1927-28. FIELDINC LEWIS WILLIAMS ............ 5 .......................... Richmond, Virginia A W; O A K; ;.Z' Skull and Keys; P. K. Society; Eli Banana; Associale Editor CORKS AND CURLs. I926; Bad Check Committee: lnterfralernity Council; Intermediate Honors; First Year Foolba Team. I924; Football Squad. I925; Wreslling Team, I926-27-28; le ; Wrestling Coach. JAMES MEYRICK WILLIAMS. JR .......... 4 ..... . .............. East Orange. New Jersey FREDRICK ANSEL W'ORLEY ............. 2 .................... Creenville, Soulh Carolina K A. FIRST YEAR CLASS RHENUS HOFFORD ALDERMAN. JR.. . . . . I ............................ Atlanta, Georgia ANDREW STIRLING ALEXANDER ....... I .................... Charleston. West Virginia X vb. JOSEPH BERWICK ANDERSON .......... 2 .............. . ............ Pensacola. Florida HENRY ARMISTEAD, JR .................. 3 ........................ Little Rock. Arkansas WILLIAM EVERETT ATKINSON ......... 5 .................... Asheville. Norlh Carolina K 3; Skull and Keys; P. K. Society; First Year Football Squad; First Year Baseball Team. I925; Varsity Football Squad. I926; Varsily Baseball Team. 1927; Varsin Club: T.I.L.K.A. JOHN WISE AYRES ...................... 2 ....................... Cape Charles. Virginia WILLIAM LAWRENCE BAKER ...................................... Norfolk Virginia K E. A...B Virginia Military Institute WILLIAM PARKER BAXTER ............. 6 .................. Wilmington. North Carolina W. DONALD BEARD ..................... 6 ....................... Hagerslown, Maryland IRVING ALONZO BEAUCHAMP .......... I ......................... Castlewood. Virginia ANDREW PLUNKET BEIRNE ............ 3 ........................... Cobham. Virginia EDGAR FRANKLIN BELAVAL ........... 3 ........................ San Juan, Porto Rico HENRY EASLY BELT .................... 3 ....................... South Boston. Virginia GEORGE EARL BENDALL ................ 2 ........................... Danville. Virginia HUBERT BENNETT ...................... 5 ........................... Chalham. Virginia LESTER iNCLiS BOWMAN ............... 3 ......................... Petersburg. Virginia RAYMOND JEFFERSON BOYD ........... i ........................... Honaker. Virginia OLIVER LANDER BRIGHT ............... I ...................... Flemingsburg. Kentucky Ilml I Department of Law 1 NAME YEAR IN UNIVERSITY HOME ADDRESS PERCY HOUSTON BROWN .............. 5 .................... Huntinglon. West Virginia A K E: German Club; Eli Banana;1MP;Firsl Year Baskel- ball Team. 1924; First Year Base- ball Team. I924; Varsity Baskel-ball.1926; Varsity Baseball 1926; Varsity Club HARRISON LElGH BUCK .................................... Pelham Manor. New York 0 A K: A H; A III; German Club; 0Z; T.1....;LKA Varsity Club; Virginia Club: Raven; Assislant Manager Football. 1927: First Year Baseball. I926; Manager Football. 1928; Inter- mediate Honors. I927; Fralcrnity Editor Conxs AND CURLS. l927-28. JAMES deFORREST BURCH .............. 3 ...................... Charlottesville. Virginia ALFREDq, FRANKLIN BURGESS ................................... Greer. Soulh Carolina 4, A 9. A..B Davidson College THOMAS ELLIOTT CAMPBELL .......... 1 ........................... Milford. Virginia LESTER LUFF CARLISLE ................ 1 .......................... Fredrica. Delaware .1, p A. A.B.. Universily of Pennsylvania MACY MILTON CARMEL ................ 2 ........................... Phoebus, Virginia JOHN BERNE HANUM CARTER ......... 3 ........................ Chester. Pennsylvania Z 1'; A II; First Year Foolball Squad. 1926; P. K. Society: First Year Track Team. 1927: Boxing Squad. I928: T.1.L.K.A. HERMANN STACY CLARDY. . ........... l ..................... Andrews. South Carolina HERMAN SOLOMAN COHEN ............ 4 ...................... Charloltesville, Virginia FRANCIS PETERSON COLEMAN ......... 4 ....................... Birmingham. Alabama 1? P A; P. K. Sociely. JOHN HARVIE CREECY .................. 3 ......................... Richmond Virginia CWYNN KENNETH CROWTHER ......... 3 ........................ Baltimore. Maryland A;X Sports Editor College Topics; First Year Lacrosse Team, I927; Lacrosse Team; V. 1928. ROBERT WOOD DALLAS ................ I ......................... Salisbury. Maryland JOHN RANDOLPH DAVIS ................ 4 ........................... Norfolk. Virginia ROBERT BOLTON DAVIS ................ l ............................ Bristol. Virginia MONTAGUE UNIA DIXON ............... 4 .......................... Norwood. Virginia Woodrow Wilson Sociely. OTIS PRESTON DOBIE .............................................. Emporia. Virginia 4, A 9 A. B. Randolph: Macon College CHARLES GIBBS DOUGHERTY ..................................... Norfolk Virginia El 2; A II: German Club; Assislanl Manage;1 Football. 1928; Manager Football. 1929; Vanily u . CURTIS MERRY DOZIER. JR .............. I .......................... Richmond. Virginia 9 x. MALCOLM BENNETT EASTERLIN ....... 3 ......................... Montezuma. Georgi- : A E; CORKS AND CURLS Representative; Glee Club. I927. HUGH BOSWELL FEATHERSTON ....... 4 ..................... Roxboro. North Carolina WILLIAM MCLEOD FERGUSON .......... 4 ..................... Newport News. Virginia JULIAN BIXBY FITE ..................... 4 ........................ Muskogee, Oklahoma B.A.. Universily of Virginia d, F A; P. K. Society; First Year Foolball. I925; First Year Boxing. 1925; First Year Track. 1926; College Topics; Varsity Foolba Squad. I926; JeEeIson Society; Varsity Boxing Squad. I929; lnlermediale Honors; Assistant in Philosophy. JAMES STUART FITZHUCH. JR ........... 3 ...................... Charlollcsville. Virginia WILLIAM WALKER FLORANCE ......... I .......................... Richmond. Virginia K A. EUGENE PRAGER FLORSHElM .......... 3 ........................ Lillie Rock. Arkansas I1411 I Department of Law 1 NAME YEAR IN UNIVERSITY HOME ADDRESS JOHN XHOLT FOX ........................ I ........................ Sutton. Welt Virginia HUMES JEFFERSON FRANKLIN ......... 3 .......................... Hillsville. Virgini- HERSCHEL B. FRYBERGER. JR ........... 2 ........................... Duluth, Minnesola JEROME MCDUFFEE GARLAND ......... 3 ...................... Chevy Chase. Mgryllnd A T A WILLIAM GRIGGS CASSAWAY ................................ EIIicoll City. Maryland M. A. B., John? Hopkins HOWARD CECIL GILMER, IR ......................................... Pulaski Virginia II K A' E T A..B. Hampden-Sydney GORDON IRVING GORDON .............. 5 ........................ Chester. Pennsylvania FRANCIS BLACKMAN COULDMAN ...... I . . . . ............... Fredericksburg, Virginia MARCELLUS CALHOUN GREEN ......... 4 ......................... Jackson, Mississippi B.A. University of Virginia K A; E T; Advertising Manager College 7apics, I927- 28, Busineu Manager College Topics. I928-29; Fraternity Reprelenlalive CORKS AND CURLS. FRED GRIFFITH ......................... I ............................ Hague, Virginia HOWARD HAYWARD HACKLEY ........ 4 .......................... CaslIelon. Virginia B K; E T; Business Manager Virginia Spectator, I928-29: Interpublicalion Council. I928-29; Intermediate Honon. I927; President Wuhinglon Literary Society, I927; Woodrow Wilson Society; Fraternity Representative CORKS AND CURLS. I928-29; Assistant in Public Speaking and Forensic Debating, I928-29; President Baplill Club. CAMMIE BROWN HADEN ............... 2 ........................... Palmyra, Virginia A X. MAHLON STEWART HALE .............. 3 ...................... Brookhaven, Mississippi 2 A E; Freshman Football. I926. JAMES LYON HALL ...................... 5. ..................... McDonogh. Maryland GP 1 A; P. K. Society; First Year Swimming Team. I924; Varsity Swimming Team, I925- 26; Vir- ginia Players. I925- 29. RICHARD THOMAS HALLUM. JR ......... I ...................... Pickens, South Carolina NORMAN WEST HARRIS ................ I .......................... Decalur, Alabama SIDNEY HARRIS ......................... 3 ........................ Baltimore. Maryland EDWIN g. C. HENEBERCER ............. 3 ....................... Harriwnburg, Virginia A T ; A II. MILEOAN THOMAS HICKMAN ............ I ............................ Painter, Virginia FREDRICK LANE HOBACK .............. Z ........................... Roanoke. Virginia WILLIAM MONTELLE HOBSON .......... I .......................... Richmond, Virginia ALLAN TOWNES HODCES .............. I .................... Greenville, South Carolina ELLIOTT HAMPTON HOWE ............. 3 ....................... East Radford, Virginia CHARLES M. HUESTER .................. 3 ....................... Scranlon. Pennsylvania LAWRENCE WARREN I'ANSON .......... I ......................... Portsmouth Virginia A B. William and Mary H K A; O A K; Business Staff Law Review. WILLIAM ALEXANDER IRVINE ......... 3 ......................... Pelersburg Virginia WALKEYE E.jOHNSON ................... 5 ..................... Concord Wharf. Virginia 2 P E: A II; T. I L...;KA P. K. Sociely; Treasurer Inter- Fraternity Council. LYLE D. KEITH .......................... I ...................... Davenport. Washington DENHAM ARTHUR KELSEY, JR .......... I ....................... Williamsburg. Virginia K A; CF A A. LEWIS KISSER KESSER .................. 3 .......................... Norfolk. Virginia A E II; First Year Football Squad, I926. I 142 I I Department of Law 1 YEAR IN UNIVERSITY HOME ADDRESS ALFRED ULYSSES KREBS ................ I ....................... Birmingham. Alibama E A E; Freshman Boxing. JAMES SLOAN KUYKENDALL ........... I ...................... Romney West Virginia HARRY CLABAUGH LAMBERTON ...... I .............. Washington. District of Columbia GIST LESESNE ............................ 4 .................. Sparlanburg. South Carolina WILSON KEYSER LEVERINC. JR ........ 4 ........................ Baltimore, Maryland SAMUEL LEVIN ......................... 3 ........................... Norfolk, Virginia WILLIAM CLIFFORD LUKE. .............. 5 ................. Charles Town. West Virginia 2 N: A H; P. K. Society; Fin! Year Football. I924-25; First Year Boxing. I924-25; First Year Baseball. I924-25: Varsity Football. I926-27, I927-28; Captain FoolbaII Team. I928-29; Varsity Boxing I925-26. I927-28: V Club; Eli Banana: IMP. SIDNEY BERGER LUTIN ................. 3 ........................... Norfolk. Virginia BERNARD MCCLAUCHERTY. JR ................................ BIueIieId West Virginia q, A 9. A. 3.. Davidlson College JOSEPH HOWARD MCCONNELL ........ I .................... Davidson. Nonh Carolina K A A B.. Davidson College GEORGE SHIRLEY MCHOMEY ........... 3 ......................... Porlsmouth. Virginia LOUIS MACKALL. R ...................... 4 .............. Washington. District of Columbia A K E: SkuII an Keys; P. K, Sociely; First Year Fooiball Team. I925; First Year Bullet- In Squad, I926: Football Squad. I928; Baskel-baII Squad. I927-28. JOHN THOMAS MAHONEY .............. I ...................... Challanoogn, Tennessee A1; A 6. CHARLES HARRISON MANN. JR .......... 3 ......................... Jacksonville. Florida 6 X; Adjunct Manager Boxing. I926- 27. Auinanl Manager Boxing. I927- 28; Assistant Business Manager ConKs AND CURLS. I928- 29. HOWARD CARLTON MARCHANT ....... 3 ......................... Baltimore, Maryland K 2; Skull and Keys; German Club; Fin! Year Football Team. I926: First Year BasebaII Team, I927; Varsity FoolbaII Squad. I927; Vanity Baseball Squad I928; T. I L. K.A. RAYMOND VASTINE MARTIN. JR .............................. Beckley. West Virginia LANDON CUTLER MAY .................. 4 .......................... Richmond. Virginia HOWARD FERGERSON MEEK ............................... Huntinglon Wen Virginia 3. A.. Amherst College B 9 H. THOMAS WATERMAN MOORE .......... I .................... Huntington. West Virginia 3.5., Scwance K 2. JAMES EDWARD MOUNT ................ I ...................... Gaithersburg. Maryland LOUIS DEXTER MOWRY ................. 5 ...................... Englewood. New Jersey E P E; Golf Team. 2. 3. 4. JOHN ALFRED MULLICAN ............... I .................... Philadelphia. Pennsylvania CHARLES CARROLL NATHAN ........... I ....................... GrantsviIIe. Maryland H. ELLIOTT NETHERTON .............. I ......................... LaCIrange. Kentucky RICHARD NEWMAN ..................... I ...................... Newport News. Virginia Glee CIub. BERNARD NICOLAU NIGHTINCALE ..... 4 ........................ Jacksonville. FIorida FRANCIS GRATACAR ORMSBY .......... 5 ........................ Easton. Pennsylvania WILLIAM HUTCHINCS OVERBY ........ 5 ........................... Chalham. Virginia d? A 6: A 11; Track Manager. I923; Varsily ClubI Dean 3 List; P. K. Society. OSCAR EDWARD PARRISH ........... 3 .......................... Richmond, Virginia A T A; P. K. Society; Basket- 2 Adjunct. ALAN BRAINARD PINKERTON .................................. Bayonne. New Janey E III; A H; German Club: First Year Baskcl- ball. I926; Boxing Squad. I923. I 143 l CORKS 6 CU RLS I Department of Law 1 NAME YEAR IN UNIVERSITY HOME ADDRESS BLEDSOE COLHOUN PINKERTON ....... 5 ....................... Bayonne, New Jersey 3.5.. University of Virginia Z ii; Skull and Keys: P. K. Society; Firs! Year Football Squad. I924; Vanity Football Squad. I925; V Club; Varsity Football Team. 1926-27-28; T.I.L.K.A. HAROLD LEE PRICE ..................... 5 ............................. Luray. Virginia EDGAR THOMAS REEVES. JR ............. 3 ........................... Herndon. Virginia BRADLEY ROBERTS ..................... I ............................ BrisloI. Virginia AB King College Q A 9; Varsily Boxing Squad. GEORGE. DRISCOLL ROCHE ............. 5 ............................ Chillicothe. Ohio 2 E. CHARLES A. ROND, III ................... I ........................... Norfolk. Virginia 9 X. PAUL EDMONDS SACKETT .............. 4 ......................... Lvnchburg. Virginia A K E; Skull and Keys; German Club; Raven Society; Eli Banana: IMP; Dean's List; Inlet- medinle Honors; Fin! Year Track Team. I926; Varsity Track Squad. I927; V Track. I928; Secretary V Club. I928-29. WILLIAM STOKES SATTERTHWAITE... I ....................... Wilmington. Delaware GEORGE VIELE SCOTT, JR ................ I .......................... Burkeville. Virginia jOHN NEY SEBRELL, JR .................. 4 ........................... Norfolk. Virginia X in Skull and Keys; P. K. Society: Assistant Manager Baseba . I928; Cheer Leader; Fra- Iernily Represenlalive lo ConKs AND CURLS. MORRIS WOODRUFF SEYMOUR ......... 2 ...................... New York. New York STEPHEN HARDY SIMES ................ I .................. Portsmouth. New Hampshire JAMES EDMOND SLEMP ................. 2 .............. Washington. Dialricl of Columbia JOHN KIRKPATRICK SLOAN ............. 3 .......................... Richmond. Virginia A 1!; Skull and Keys; P. K. Society; IMP: T.I.L.K.A.; Madison Hall Cabinet; V Club: First Year BFooIbalI Team; Varsily Football. I927-28; First Year Baseball Team; 3-3-3 Council; C. A. A. card. B. BROWN SMITH ........................ I .............................. Dorms. Texas RICHARD TALBOT SOLLENBERCER. . .. 4 ......................... Baltimore, Maryland LEON STEINBERG ....................... 3 ....................... Morristown. Tennessee JAMES DEVELIN STOCKWELL ........... 4 ..................... Moorestown, New Jersey 2 P E. CORNELIUS JAMIE SULLIVAN .......... 3 ....................... Port Huron. Michigan ROBERT EDWARD TAYLOR ............. 5 ......................... Lynchburg, Virginia B.A.. University of Virginia A T. WALTER HERRON TAYLOR, IV ......... 4 ........................... Norfolk, Virginia JOUETT ROSS TODD ..................... 2 ......................... Louisville, Kenlucky HARVY LISTER TOWNSEND ............ I .................... PhiIadeIphia, Pennsylvania LEWIS CUSSONS TRICE .................. I ............................ Toano. Virginia A X P. JOHN POYNTZ TYLER. JR ................ 4 ........................ Fargo. North Dakola A K E; P. K. Society. ROBERT EZRA UNDERWOOD, 1R ......... I ............................ Amarillo, Texas STEPHAN KISSLING VAUCHT ........... I ................. Point Pleasant. Wes! Virginia LEONARD EDWARD VIELBIC ........... 3 ...................... Floral Park. New York A X; First Year Lacrosse Team, I927; Lacrosse Team; V Club, I928; Assistant Business Manager Conxs AND CURLS. JOSEPH OLIVER WALTON ............... I ........................... Burns, Mississippi ARCHIBALD ROBINSON WATSON, JR.. . . I ...................... New York. New York IHH I Department of Law 1 NAME YEAR IN UNIVERSITY HOME ADDRESS WILLIAM WYANT WHARTON ........... 3 ............................. Aflon. Virginia DICK MARSH WHEAT ................... 4 ...................... Fort Thomas. Kentucky A T A; P. K. Society; Skull and Keys. ALFRED T. WHITE ....................... 2 ............................. Houslon. Texas PAUL WHITEHEAD ...................... I ......................... Lovingslon. Virginia 2 X; Freshman Football Squad. I928; Freshman Baseball Squad, I929. WILLIAM HICE WEICERINC ............. 2 ........................... Youngstown. Ohio FRANCIS CHARLES WILLIAMS, JR ........ 4 ......................... Shcridan. Wyoming X 4H Skull and Keys; German Club; Glee Club: Eli Banana; Freshman Track. I926: Freshman Baskel- ball. I926: Varsily Track Team. I928; Varsily Club; ;V Applicant for Academic Degree HENRY ALEXANDER WISE ................................. Sackcls Harbor, New York B. A.. Virginia Mililary lnstitule K A. FREDRICK ANSEL WORLEY ............. 2 .................... Greenville. South Caro!iIIa BEVERLEY ROBINSON WORRELL ....... 2 ........................... Roanoke, VirgInIa lllbl 1.442.. 102:2 yr M, -, CORKS Ca CURLSW R l929 The Law Clubs , HE. need of some method of giving the law student practical experience in the preparation for trial and argument of cases had long been felt at the Law School of the University, but of the numerous experiments designed to cure this lack, none had proved successful. It was in the answer. then, to a gfowing demand that. under the encouragement of a member of the faculty who had become deeply interested in the question. a group of second year men organized in the spring .of last year the movement generally known as the law clubn system. The scheme is one that has been successfully tested at other law schools throughout the country. having been developed originally at the Harvard Law School, where in more than fifty years of activity it has become an integral part of the work there. The plan contemplates the organization of a system of student courts wherein cases are tried as they would be in an actual court of law. In order to maintain interest and provide a definite goal. the operation of the plan is based upon a competition which runs through the three years' course. and by means of which the leading club is chosen each year. There are six permanent clubs in existence now. each of which is composed of eight men from each class, the first year men being elected in September of each year. The presidents of these clubs form the governing board. known as the Board of Supervisors. and the chairman of this board is named by the faculty on the basis of scholarship and general standing from the three names submitted in the spring by the retiring board. The office carries with it tuition in the school. Up through the second year. the judges in all cases are students from the second and third year classes. In the third year the semi-linals are held in the First term. with members of the Law Faculty sitting as judges. The two winning clubs meet after Christmas in the final round. This year. the Honorable Walter I. McCoy. Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia will sit as chief justice, and from year to year in the future other leading members of the state and federal judiciary will be asked to preside at these Finals. Court is conducted with all the dignity of an actual court of law. Trial is without a jury. being upon points of law only. with appellate procedure observed. and one or more justices sitting on the case. A formal written brief is required to be submitted by each side at least a week before trial. which brief is graded by judges. At trial. each side is permitted a stated time in which to present its case. and counsel are subjected to questions by the court from time to time. The entire system is operated and controlled by the students themselves, and mem- bership is purely optional. Yet the benefits are great. and the work not unduly burden- some. In general. the cases tried involve points of law arising in the fields which the men who are arguing in the case are covering in their courses at that time. The system is designed to supplement the courses and to link them together. and under it all upper- classmen in the clubs are available to advise and assist the lirst year men. It is hoped that the clubs will gradually take their place as a part of the established order of things. and will serve to maintain the traditions and carry forward the ideals for which Virginia has been and is so justly famous. A. RODMAN HUSSEY. JR.. Chairman of the Board of Supervisors. IHTI They,re Still Here The Honor System HE Honor System at the University of Virginia may be thought of as having its root in the doctrine of Jefferson, who suggested a system of government in . .. the University founded on reason and comity. which would be likely to nourish in the minds of youth the combined spirit of order and self-respect. The physical and administrative plans of the new University were such that great personal liberty of action on the part of students was inevitable. and petty matters of discipline were unsuited to the scheme of things. The root idea did not. however. become a positive force in the University until l84Z when. at the suggestion of Henry St. George Tucker. professor of law. a regulation was introduced providing that each candidate should attach a written pledge at the end of his examination papers. certifying Hon honor that he had derived no assistance during the time of the examination from any source whatever in giving the answers to questions. It had been a prevalent idea prior to that time that cheating on examinations where no trust or confidence was involved did not amount to deceit. The pledge of 1842 was extended later so as to preclude the giving of assistance as well as the receiving of it, and this is the law today. Any semblance of espionage disappeared with the introduction of this pledge. The students of the University of Virginia soon took the enforcement of a sort of unwritten code of conduct into their own hands and became its jealous guardians. The t149J CORKS 6 CU RLS changes in the Honor System since the introduction of the full pledge have been almost entirely matters of procedure, the necessity for which have grown out of a steadily enlarging student body. Essentially the ideas back of what for lack of better terms is called the Honor System are the same they were from its beginning. Certain things at Virginia. for the purposes of the Honor System. are considered inherently dishonorable. These are lying. cheating. and stealing, in any form and to any degree within or out of the classroom. Many matters of student discipline are without the fold of the Honor System and in those cases where the University regulations do not apply matters are left to the good judgment of the individual. Herein is the kernel of successful operation of the Honor System at the University of Virginia. A traditional consciousness on the part of the students is maintained where conduct involving these three forms of violation is concerned. and refusal to extend the arm of honor to a large variety of offenses accounts in a large part for the fact that the Honor System at the University of Virginia is today intact. while a very large number of colleges and universities elsewhere in the United States. which at one time had successfully working honor systems. now report their ineffective operation. or absolute failure. Investigation discloses in almost every case that the Honor System and honor committees have been supplemented by some form of student court. intending to draw a variable line between honorable and dishonorable acts. and to deal with them accordingly. The line is straight and clear at Virginia and the penalty. absolute and dishonorable discharge from the University. is severe and positive. It is sometimes diEicult to explain the Honor System to people who have not lived under it. The simple procedure whereby two students who have observed another cheating or otherwise attending approach and accuse him and. where an explanation is unsatisfactory. ship him because he has by his act lowered the standard of the student body of which he is a member. is sometimes misunderstood. The fact that he may. if he denies the accusation. request and secure a hearing before an honor committee is sometimes confused with so-called squealing, or tale-bearing. The honor committee upon a review of the case merely passes judgment upon the decision of the first accusers with a view to giving the full benefit of doubt to the accused. The student body years ago set up a standard beneath which no student could fall and remain a member of it. The offenses are few. the penalty severe. Lying, cheating. and stealing are not matters of degree at Virginia. Cheating on one question on an examination is just as dishonorable as cheating on an entire set of examinations. The breaking of a pledge to the dean or to a fellow student is. under the Honor System. equal to the most evil lie imaginable. The stealing of a note-book or of a page from a borrowed volume is at Virginia the equivalent of theft in any form. I130! CORKS 8 CU RLS It is not necessary to re-state for Virginia students and alumni the general phases of the Honor System with which they are already familiar. Virginia has no monopoly on honor. but this conception of honor. not too inclusive, is the finest heritage we have. It is the thing to be most jealously guarded by the present student body. It is the thing most subject to insiduous attack. It is impossible to stress too much the idea that every individual member of the student body and the faculty has a responsibility where the Hnoor System is concerned. It is necessary that every one should be alert to its signihcance and that the dangers of indiEerence and ignorance may never be permitted to weaken to splendid a thing. Therefore, it is the intention here to brieHy suggest some of the forces which constantly endanger the Honor System to some extent. It is not as an alarmist but as a true lover of Virginia that the writer feels that it is easier to keep our eyes on the ideal than to again get the same line focus, once it is lost. Virginia has changed a great deal since the introduction of the pledge in 1842. Especially rapid have been the changes in several respects since the last war. These changes bring with them the innumerable problems and difficulties which the older order always has to face in the advance of the newer one. One prominent author in writing of student government recently. with especial em- phasis on the Honor System at this university. leaves his readers with the feeling that he is uncertain as to the length of time our fine traditions can last on the present basis. The dangers to the Honor System in this particular university may be generally classified as those arising out of general indifference on the part of faculty and students; A FIELD OF HONOR l1511 those arising out of the student body alone; and those arising out of the faculty alone. The first of these conditions needs no explanation because indifference takes the vitality out of any worth-while thing. Indifierence on the Virginia campus. where it exists at all. it is believed. arises out of the condition of group leadership rather than individual leadership on the campus. The student body today is without an individual leadership of two or three outstanding men, but has in their place a wide range of student groups. each with its own particular interest. The most obvious delinquency likely to occur on the part of the student body is its failure to thoroughly acquaint new men coming to the University with the Honor System. The first-year man fresh from high school is naturally in a frenzy of doubt with regard to everything. from his personal appearance to his ability to get along under new conditions in which he is to live. A large number of these new men come to Virginia from preparatory and high schools where the honor system. as it exists in the minds of Virginia students. is not in operation. A result is that some of the ideas are new to them. The most difficult conception for the new man to acquire is that he has an individual responsibility for the maintenance of the tradition of truthfulness at Virginia. His own truthfulness is not enough and the occasional liar is an unhealthy spot in the student body which must be removed. The Honor System sets up truth as the cardinal virtue and lying as the supreme sin in human character. It is this thought that must be put into the minds of every hrst-year man entering the student body. Another source of misunderstanding is the pledge which is attached at the end of written work which is expected to be the result of the individual effort of the writer. The pledge in reality is the in- instances could be related dividual's statement that where men. h o n e st in he understands the condi- tions under w h i c h the pledged work is done. It is not a re-statement of the fact that the work has been done honestly. The transfers. so- called. from another uni- versity to this one. espe- cially to its professional departments, offer a spe- cific problem. Numerous themselves. who have at- tended o t h e 1' colleges. have failed to grasp the Virginia conception or have failed to agree with it. These men find dif- ficulty in adjustment to the, for them. new con- ception which we have. Another source of danger to the Honor Sys- tem as it now operates is CORKS 6 CU RLS an ever increasing body of Hrst-year men. It is to be hoped that at Virginia the proportion of the first-year men to the student body as a whole may never become larger than it now is. There are those who would like to see Virginia numbered among the large universities. There are certain advantages which this would bring but would not the sacrifices be too great? Dean William M. Thornton has well expressed this possibility when he says: In our great hypertriphied American universities, with their enormous faculties. the president hardly knows his own professors; the professors do not know the men in their own classes; the students do not know their own class-mates. The true academic life is stifled and the virtues of manliness and honor and reverence and love. once begotten from it. perish before the birth unless elsewhere engendered. Against this danger we know not as yet how to fight. As the trusts have stiHed initiative in business; as the factories have choked the life out of the individual producer in the decorative arts; so the great University may transform the face of modern education. We can only cryeAbsit omen! Still another danger which may take its source in the student body is the hasty and unwise choice of honor committee members. There is nothing that exacts more careful judgment on the part of the student than the wise casting of his vote when it comes to a choice of honor committee members, for a weak honor committee which shrinks from the application of the one penalty provided. can do irreparable damage to the state of mind. which is the Honor System. No honor code can stand the test of time and experience without a drastic penalty for its violation. and this penalty must be uniformly, impartially and impersonally admin- istered publicly.n The Honor System has always been thought of as strictly a student proposition. The faculty, however. can have and does have a powerful influence in its successful operation. and it may be truthfully said that students and teachers are friends at Virginia. They work together very closely and practically no difficulties arise between them. It is. however. from the faculty that suggestions for extension of the Honor System are most likely to come. Delinquencies of the students annoy no one quite so much as they do his teacher, and an exasperated teacher occasionally, with some justification. feels the desire to bind his students around with rules and laws of the severest sort. This problem has arisen but once within the last several years and it is to be hoped that the student court movement may never arise again. Just as the transfer in the student body creates a specific difficulty. so the new faculty member. previously unacquainted with this university. creates a specific problem. Occa- sionally a new faculty member. realizing that there must be differences of viewpoint. seeks out the information necessary to understand the Virginia attitude. This is not always the 11.331 CORKS Ed CURLS 1K 1' KIfhe- case. The problem arises in that these new members do not have the traditional attitude toward their students and the older student cannot help detecting a real difference in the atmosphere of his classroom. The hrst-year man naturally becomes confused. Fortunately. the difficulties suggested above arise but rarely; but the fact that they have arisen from time to time and that the danger is ever-present must not be overlooked by the present day student body. which has no less responsibility for its perpetuation than had our fathers. As President Alderman has so admirably stated. The University of Virginia. whatever may be its shortcomings. robbed of the state of mind created by its Honor System. would remain a thing ill-used and violated. O. ARTHUR KIRKMAN. JR. PRESIDENT ALDERMAN IIJJI N E II NI 501$. - -o. IlllI-I. m libi5 Q; WWW l. Wad APPLICANTS FOR DEGREE OF M.D. Applicants for Degree of Doctor of Medicine, June, I929 JAMES PORTER BAKER. jn. WILBUR ALLEN BARKER JOHN WILLIAM BOLEN THOMAS BRADLEY ARTHUR PARKER BUTT, jk. FRANCIS LEROY BYERS AUBREY RICHARDSON CARTER HOW'E REESE COLEMAN. JR. CARL CONRAD COOLEY FRANK DUNCAN COSTENBADER JOHN MALLOY CLAYTON COVINGTON BELLE BONNER DALE ALVA DUCKETT DAUGHTON MAURICE MILTON FLIESS ARTHUR EULYNG CLOVER JOHN MONROE. GREEN JOHN HOWARD GREENE CHARLES SLICER GROSECLOSE EUGENE SWANSON GROSECLOSE DONALD OSBORNE HAMBLIN TARRING WHITFIELD HEIRONIMUS, JR. GUY WINSTON HORSLEY WILLIAM CHILDS HUTCHESON TROY HOWELL HUTCHINSON JED HOTCHKISS IRVINE CHARLES KAVOVIT THOMAS CYPRIAN LAWFORD MAURICE LEON LEBAUER SIDNEY FERRING LEBAUER MEYER HARRY LEGUM HENRY WALLACE LITVACK ROBERT BONSER LOBBAN JULES ROBERT LONDON ROBERT w CRENSHAW McCLANAHAN PAUL RUTHERFORD MACFADYEN CHIMER DAVIS MOORE JOHN RYAN MYERS ALBERTO NAVARRO PAUL OTTO MINOR BRANSFORD PAYNE ROBERT TUNSTALL PEIRCE. JR. ROBERT EDWIN PEYTON FREDERICK PILCHER. JR. JOHN ALSOP PILCHER. JR. CHARLES LINWOOD SAVAG JOSEPH MCBRIDE SLOAN WILLIAM COWELL STEPHENSON, 1n. CHRISTOPHER MADISON TURMAN. JR. JOHN DAVIS DABNEY WARE HYMAN B. WEINBERG HARRISON RAWLINcs WESSON WILLIAM LEWIS WILLIAMS HERBERT DEGRANGE WOLFF. JR. BASCOM BROCKENBOROUGH YOUNG I157l THEN W 3415MB DEPAQTMENTM EMMY YEAR'S Acoj u... I '1 u-R'oludm: w fufrm - ' Shffafa 15 6: Lu. rm 4..- f$ v , , I WWW vict'nvd. of. Q E 1:. Mateo: . 3:5? - :':.-.'-.7:'.g x4 m; OFFICERS WILLIAM CHILES HUTCHESON ............................................... President HARRISON RAWLINCS WESSON ......................................... Vicc-Prcsidcn! PAUL SWANSON HILL ......................................................... Secretary WILLIAM MORGAN CHEW .................................................... Treasurer WILBUR ALLEN BARKER ...................................................... Historian FOURTH YEAR CLASS NAME YEAR IN UNIVERSITY HOME ADDRESS WALTER JOHNSON ALLECREE ......... 8 .......................... University, Virginia Cb X. IAMES PORTER BAKER. JR ............... 8 .......................... Hillsboro. Virginia 4:' E K; 4, B K; 0 A K; 4i P 22; A H; E 3; Raven Club: German Club; Intermediate Honors. I923; Whitehead Medical Society; Circulation Manager University of Virginia NIagazinc. I923; Reporlorial 5135 College Topics. I924; Department Editor CORKS AND CURLS. I926; lnslructor in Physical Training and Physiology. VHLLIAM ALLEN BARKER ............... 4 ........................... Danville. Virginia Cb B II; A S2 A; I E; Whitehead Medical Society; Historian. Medical School. JOHN WILLIAM BOLEN .................. 6 ............................. Calax, Virginia A K K. THOMAS BRADLEY ..................... 6 .............. Washington. District of Columbia 22 N; tb P E; First Year Track. I923; La'boralory Assislanl in General Chemistry; Wlhitc'nead Medical Society. ARTHUR PARKER BUTT. JR .............. 9 ........................ ElkEns. West Virginia t? B H. Ilium CORKS 6 CURLS . . .' KR l929 I Medical Class 1 YEAR IN UNIVERSITY HOME ADDRESS FRANCIS ELEROY BUYERS ................ 6 ....................... Harriwnburg. Virginia d? B II; Whiiehead Medical Sociely; First Year Track. I924; Varsily Track Squad. I925. AUBREY RICHARDSON CARTER ........ 4 .......................... Dry Fork. Virginia 4: B H; A Q A. 3.5.. Universily of Richmond HOXXEKRIEESE COLEMAN. JR .............. 4 .......................... Lexington. Virginia CARL CONRAD COOLEY ................ 7 ............................ Phlegar. Virginia A K K. BUS Universily of Virginia FRANK DUNCAN COSTENBADER ........ 4 ........................... Norfolk. Virginia Np B II. 8.5.. Hampden-Sydney College JOHN MALLOY CLAYTON COVINGTON. 4 ................... Laurinburg. North Carolina 35. Davidson College H K A; 4i B H; O A K: Whitehead Medical Society. BELLE BONNER DALE ................... 5 ............................ Tampico. Mexico B.A., Due West Woman's College; M.A.. University of Virginia II X; Women's Sludenl's Association; A. A. U. W.: Whilehead Medical Sociely. ALVA DUCKETT DAUGHTON ........... 7 ................... East Falls Church. Virginia 2 N; 45 P E; Whilehead Medical Society. MAURICE MILTON FLIELSS ............... 6 ...................... Clifton Forge. Virginia ARTHUR EULYING CLOVER ............ 6 ...................... Charlottcwille, Virginia 45 x. JOHN MONROE GREEN .................. 4 ......................... Georgetown. Georgia A K K JOHN HOWARD GREENE ......................................... Clinlwood Virginia A K K B. A.. Randolph- 4Mtlcon College CHARLES SLICER GROSECLOSE ......... 5 ........................... Ivanhoe. Virginia Q X. EUGENE SWANSON GROSECLOSE ...... 7 ............................ Pulaski. Virginia 9 X: ch P 2; German Club; Dean's List. I925-26; First Year Football Team. I922; Foolball Squad, I923; Varsily Club: V ; Track Team, l926-27; Track Squad. l924-26-27: Wrestling Squad. I925; Firsl Year Baseball, I923; Whitehead Medical Sociely; lnslruclot in Physical Training. DONALD OSBORNE HAMBLIN ........... 5 ......................... Universiiy. Virginia ? P E. TARRING WHITFIELD HEIRONIMUS, JR.. 4 ...................... Grafton. West Virginia A K K. GUY WINSTON HORSLEY ............... 7 ......................... Richmond. Virginia BS. in Biology, University of Virginia H K A; d5 P 22:: 5; German Club; Reporlorial StaE College Topics. 1924- 25- 26; Wrestling Squad. I925- 26. WILLIAM CHILDIS HUTCHESON .................................... Boydlon, Virginia K... V N E N; 2.; Raven Sociely; President 7Medical School. I928- 29. TROY HOWELL IHUTCHESON ........... 4 .............................. Wise. Virginia JED HOTCHKISS IRVINE ................. 8 ...................... Charionesville. Virginia B.A.. University of Virginia 4? K E; d, B K: A 52 A: 0 A K; A H; T.I.L.K.A.; Raven Sociely; V ; Captain Cross-Counlry Team, I924; Caplain Track. I925; American Championship Relay Team. I924; C. A. A.. I924-25. l1591 SEA? Tgvysugw W;I ,, M , CORKS 8 CURLS I Alcdical Class 1 NAM E YEAR IN UNIVERSITY ' HOME ADDRESS CHARLES KAVOVIT ............................................ New York. New York A E n; q, A E. B.A. Columbm UanErll!y THOMAS CYPRIAN LAWFORD .......... 4 ......................... Lynchburg. Virginia A K K. MAURICE LEON LEBAUER ............... 5 ................... Greensboro. North Carolina Q E II; First Year Foolball Team. I924: First Year Track Team, I924: Varsity Track Team. I925-26-27-28; V : Whilehead Medical Sociely. SIDNEY FERDINAND LEBAUER ......... 5 ................... Creemboro. North Carolina 4, E II: Fin! Year Football Team. I924: Baskel-ball Squad. I924: Vanity Track Team. I926- 27- 28: V ; Whitehead Medicnl Sociely MEYER HARRY LECUM ............................................. Norfolk. Virginia Fin! Year Foolball Team. I923; Firsl Year Baskcl- ball Team. I923- 24. HENRY WALLACE LITVACK ............ 4 ........................ Brooklyn. New York A E H: 45 A E ROBERT BOSNER LOBBAN .............. 6 ..................... Alderson West Virginia 4, B H; F In! Year Track Team. I924; Varsity Track Team. I925- 26- 28: :V Varsity Club. JULES ROBERT LONDON ................ 4 ........................ Brooklyn. New York ROBERT WINGFIELD C. MCCLANAHAN. 6 ........................... Roanoke. Virgini- 4, K 1'; GD P E; A Q A: IMP; Skull and Keys; P. K. Society; German Club; Eli Banann; Raven; Dean': Lial; First Year Football Team; Football Squad; President Madison Hall. l926-27. PAUL RUTHERFORD MCFADYEN ........ 5 ..................... Concord. North Carolina CHIMER DAVIS MOORE ................. 4 ........................... Cambria. Virginia 4i 3 H JOHN RYAN MYERS .............................................. Lynchburg. Virginia BS. Lynchburg College ALBERTO NAVARRO .................... 5 ................. Panama Republic of Panama PAUL OTTO .................................................... Reading, Pennsylvania M. P E... Springflcld College MINOR B. PAYNE ........................ 7 ............................ Clifford, Virginia ROBERT TUNSTALL PEIRCE. JR .......... 7 ..................... Newporl News. Virginia 35., University of Virginia K 11:45 P 2:1nlermediale Honors. I924; P. K. Society. ROBERT EDWIN PEYTON ...................................... Barbourswlle Virginia B ...A John Hopkins University FREDERICK PILCHER. JR ................. 4 ......................... Pelersburg. Virginia I? B H; A II A; Whitehead Medical Society. JOHN ALSOP PILCHER. JR ................ 4 ........................... Roanoke, Virginia 45 E II: Whitehead Medical Society. CHARLES LINWOOD SAVAGE ........... 6 ......................... Porumoulh. Virginia JOSEPH MCBRIDE SLOAN ................ 5 ................... Hunlinglon. West Virginia ID K A; d? P 2; Whitehead Medical Society. WILLIAM COWELL STEPHENSON ....... 8 ........................... Roanoke, Virginia A 1!: d! P 2; Skull and Keys; P. K. Society; Eli Banana; uZ : I3 ; Football Team, l920-2l: uV ; Glee Club. 1920; Track Team, I922; First Year Football Team. I919; First Year Track Team. l9l9. CHRISTOPHER MADISON TURMAN, JIL. 6 .................... ' ........ Arcola. Virginia 35.. University of Virginia It X; Whitehead Medical Society. I1601 I Medical Class 1 NAME YEAR IN UNIVERSITY HOME ADDRESS JOHN DAVIS DABNEY WARE ........... 4 ......................... Sewanee. Tennessee N E N. B.A.. Cornell University HYMAN BLACKER WEINBERC .......... 4 ......................... Petersburg. Virginia HARRISON RAWLINGS WESSON ........ 4 ...................... anrenceville. Virginia 4? B H; I E; Vicc-President Medical School; Whitehead Medical Society. JULIUS EWELL WEST .................... 7 ......................... Alexandria. Virginia 4? X; Whitehead Medical Society. WILLIAM LEWIS WILLIAMS ............. 4 ....................... Birmingham, Alabama 4: B 11. B.A.. Howard College HERBERT DECRANCE WOLFE. JR ........ 4 ......................... Petersburg. Virginia X '14: N E N. BASCOM BROKENBOROUCH YOUNG... 4 ......................... Blackstone. Virginia N 2 N. THIRD YEAR CLASS THOMAS LEE ALLMAN .................. 6 ....................... Rocky Mount, Virginia JAMES EDWARD AMlSS ................. 5 ............................. Luray, Virginia 4? B H. DEWEY LORING ANDERSON ............ 3 .............................. Gore, Virginia 3.5., Lynchburg College HENRY REID BOURNE .................. 5 ......................... Wytheville. Virginia DOROTHY DILLARD BRAME ............ 3 ............. North Wilkesboro, North Carolina B.A., Randolph-Macon Woman's College WILLIAM ANDREW BRUMFIELD. JR. . .. 3 ......................... Blacksburg, Virginia BS. in Biology. Virginia Polytechnic lnsliiule K E: N E N; Instructor in Anatomy. MANFRED CALL. 1 ..................... 6 .......................... Richmond, Virginia CHARLES VERNON CARNER ............ 7 ........................... Norfolk. Virginia 2 q, E; 44 P E. HILL CARTER. Ill ........................ 5 ........................... Ashland. Virginia B 9 II; Skull and Keys; German Club; Dean's Lint; TJ.L.K.A. JOSEPH PAUL COCO .................... 4 ...................... Long hland. New York JOEL LEROY DEUTERMAN ............. 3 .......................... Arlington. Virginia B.A.. George Washington University Q B H; Whitehead Medical Society. JOHN RANDOLPH EGGLESTON ......... 4 ......................... Sewanee. Tennessee 35.. University of the South ERNEST SCOTT ELLIOTT ................ 4 ....................... Independence, Virginia VICTOR SHAW EVANS .................. 5 .................... East Orange, New Jersey 2 A E; d? P 2; P. K. Sociely; Dean's List. 1924-25-26; Lacrosse Team. l924-25. TEARL BURTON EZELL .................. 3 .......................... Chesnee. Tennessee JOSEPH HELMS FARROW ............... 7 ........................... Roanoke, Virginia BS. in Biology. University of Virginia A T A; d? P E: P. K. Sociely; Whilehead Medical Society; Boxing Team. I927; th ; Eli Bannnn. I161! I Medical Class 1 YEAR IN UNIVERSITY HOME ADDRESS EUCENAE FiBEVERLY FERRISS, JP. .......... 4 ....................... PoplaI-vilie. Mississippi 35.. Mississippi A. Ind M. College B 9 II; German Club; Eli Banana. WILLIAM MILLER CAMMON ........... 6 ............................. Bristol. Virginia II K A; German Club: Z ; T.I.L.K.A.; Skull and Keys; First Year Baskel-ball Team. l9l9-20; Varsity Baskel-ball. l920-21; V. DAVID PEIRCE GRAHAM ............... 3 ...................... Max Meadows, Virginia d? B II: Whilehead Medical Sociely. GEORGE TAYLOE. GWATHMEY. JR ...... 8 ........................... Norfolk. Virginia B.A., University of Virginia I? Pv -; tb B K; 0 A K: Raven Sociely; Intermediate Honors, 1923; Jelferson Society, I922-27; President JeHerson Sociely. I926: Assistant in 6Mathcmalics. I923- 26. EDWARD KNAPP HAWKE ................................ TTTPeTnIngIoT. New 1:3,, A 2 4?: I? B H; Whitehead Medical Society; Deans List 1924- 25. PAUL SWANSON HILL ................... 3 ............................. Wise, Virginia PAUL KELLS ............................ 6 ....................... Wilmington. Delaware CHARLES KEPPLER. JR ............................................ Clifton, New Jersey 9 VI V 2V PhHC. New Jersey College of Pharmacy JAMES PETERS KING .................... 3 ........................... Redford. Virginia K E: N E N; Inslructor in Anatomy. SOUTHGATE LEIGH. JR .................. 5 ........................... Norfolk. Virginia B.A.. Universily of Virginia B 6 II; It B K: I? P 2; Raven Society; Dean's List; Intermediate Honors; An Staff Virginia Reel: Associate Ar! Editor CORKS AND CURLS: German Club; First Year Fooiball Squad. I924; First Year Track Squad, I925: Varsity Track Squad. I926. ARCHIBALD ALEXANDER LITTLE ...... 4 ........................ Meridian. Mississippi N E N. - HAROLD HIQUES MCLEMORE ........... 5 ............................ Norton. Virginia ALEXANDER TAYLOR MAYO ........... 3 ......................... Portsmoulh Virginia WILLIAM MARYON MOIR .......................................... Roanoke. Virginia B. A.. Roanoke College FREDERICK MCCULLOCH MORRISON.. ......................... Lynchburg. Virginia d? K 1!; A H; $ P 3; German Club; Photographic Editor CORKS AND CURLS, 1926-27; Football Squad. ROBERT EDWIN ODOM ................. 6 ........................... Norfolk. Virginia tb E K: ID P E; Adjunct Business Manager CORKS AND CURLs. I924: lnstruclor in Biology: Assislant Business Manager CORKs AND CURLS, '925. EDWARD STEWART ORGAIN ............ 5 .......................... Richmond. Virginia dJ K E; A H; lb P E; Eii Banana; Intermediale Honors, I926; Statistical Editor CORKs AND CURLs, 1925-26-27. WILMER HOWARD PAINE. JR ............ 3 ........................ Knoxville. Tennessee 3 X; I? B H; Whitehead Medical Society. JOHN CLAIBORNE. PALMER ............. 6 ............................ Guinea. Virginia jOHN DAY PEAKE ...................... 3 ...................... Rocky Mount. Virginia 35.. Randolph-Macon College 45 A 9: 4, B II: Whiichcad Medical Sociely. PROSSER HARRISON PICOT ............. 6 .......................... Richmond. Virginia ? P E. I1021 I Medical Class 1 YEAR IN UNIVERSITY HOME ADDRESS DANIEL BROWN PIERSON. jR ............ 7 ..................... Big Stone Gap, Virginia A T A; 4, P 22; German Club; Eli Banana; Whitehead Medical Society; IMP. MORTON MORRIS PINCKNEY ........... 6 .......................... Richmond. Virginia 35.. University of Virginia A W; A H; d, P E; 41 B K; O A K; 13 : Raven; Cheer Leader, l924-25-26; Sports Editor CORKS AND CURLS. I926; Vice-Presidem Interfralemity Council. I927: Madison Hall Cabinet. I924: TJ.L.K.A.; IMP; German Club; Intermediate Honors; Editor-in-Chief College Topics. 1926-27; F in! Year Football Squad. I923; First Year Track Squad. I924; Swimming Team, I926. ALFRED WAYLAND PINKERTON ....... 5 ........................ Bayonne, New Jersey Z W; 4, P 2: German Club; First Year Cross-Counlry Team. I924; Crou-Coumry Team. I925; ch : Track Squad. I925; Dean's List. 1925. WILLIAM ORGAIN PURDY .............. 4 .......................... Broadnu. Virginia BENJAMIN WATKINS RAWLES. JR ....... 6 ........................... Richmond. Virginia K A; A II; 4$ P 2; German Club; First Year Football Squad. I923; Football Squad, l924-25; Track Squad. 1925; Manager Baskel-ball. I927; News Editor College Topics. 1924-25-26; Varsity Club. ALFRED CHAMBERS RAY. JR ............ 3 ........................... Alhllnd. Virginia Q K 2; 't B II; Whitehead Medical Society. PAUL HOUSTON REVERCOMB .......... 5 .......................... Covington. Virginia 1k K 2; PP P E; P. K. Society; Dean's List. CHARLES WILLIAM RODGERS, JR ....... 3 ........................... Staumon, Virginia WILLIAM HAMILTON ROPER ............ 3 ...................... Johnson City. Tennessee B.A., University of Richmond K A; P. K. Society; T.I.L.K.A. LEWIS BENJAMIN SHEPPARD. . ......... 5 ......................... Glen Allen. Virginia B K; JeEerson Society; Wealey Club. EMORY LEE SHIFLETT .................. 3 ............................. Elklon. Virginia B.A.. Roanoke College ' WILLIAM LANGLEY SIBLEY ............ 5 ....................... Birmingham. Alabama 4, 12 A; N E N; German Club; Adjunct Manager Bukcl-ba . 1924-26; Dean's List. l924-25-26. ROBERT BARRETT SKINNER ............ 3 ......................... Pelersburg, Virginia BS. in Biology. Virginia Polytechnic Institute RICHARD FRANK SLAUGHTER. JR ....... 3 ...................... Newport News. Virginh K 2- 1, P v 5.. University of Richmond CLAUDE BRACKETT SMITH ............. 6 ........................... Crandon, Virginia 85.. University of Virginia BERCLIOT STROMSOE ................... 3 .......... Hempstead Gardens, L. 1.. New York ACHILLES LACY TYNES. JR ............... 3 ........................... Slaunton. Virginia 3.5.. Hampden-Sydney College K A; d: B H. OLIVER LEON VONCANNON ............. 6 ...................... Chattanooga. Tennessee 3.5.. University of Virginia 9 X; Pb P 2; German Club. ALLAN ELLIOT WALKER. JR ............. 5 .............. Washinglon. Dislricl of Columbia BS. University of Virginia E N; d7 P v :Ccrman Club; Whitehead Medical Socicly; First Year Track Squad. I924. THOMAS LEONARD WATSON. JR ......... 7 .......................... UniversIly. Virginia 3.5.. Universily of Virginia I1631 I Medical Class 1 YEAR IN UNIVERSITY HOME ADDRESS ROBERT lELOMAX WELLS .................................... Virginia Beach. Virgima EN' 1, pv g; 0 A K. BUS, College of William and Mary RICHARD ELWY WHITE ....................................... Glen Rock. New Jersey 35.. Hobart College; M. A. Columbin College WILLIAM MASSEY WHITEHEAD ........ 6 ......................... Lovingston. Virginia 2 X: vb P 2; German Club; Eli Banana; Inlerfralernily Council: Whitehead Medical Society; F int Year Track Squad. 1924. WILLIAM BEVERLY WILKINS ........... 5 ......................... Alexandria. Virginia 2 A E; N E N. WILLIAM CHALMERS WILLS ............ 8 ......................... Lynchburg. Virginia 35.. Universily of Virginia A T Q; d? P 2; Skull and Keys; P. K. Society; German Club; Varsity Club: Manager Blakel- ba . 1923; Eli Banana; IMP; JAMES EDWIN WISSLER ................. 5 .......................... Univenity. Virginia d? B H; Dean's Lisl. l925-26. SECOND YEAR CLASS JOHN JACQUELIN AMBLER .............. 6 .......................... Richmond. Virginia 2 X; Adjunct Manager Football. HOWARD HICKS ASHBURY ............. 5 ......................... Ballimore, Maryland di K 1!; First Year Track Team. I923: Varsily Track Squad. I924-25; Glee Club. I923. HARLOE BAILEY ........................ 3 ........................... Snltville. Virginia PHILLIP BRESS .......................... 5 ........................... Norfolk. Virginia THOMAS DICKENSON BROWN .......... 4 ...................... Charlollesvillc, Virginia I? B H. WILLIAM AMBROSE BROWN, JR ......... 5 ......................... Portsmouth. Virginia CHARLES CRAWFORD CANADA ........ 4 ........................... Crotloes. Virginia A T 9; ID P E; P. K. Society; Adjuncl Manager Baseball; Eli Banana. GEORGE. DANIEL CAPACCIO ............ 3 ........................ Brooklyn. New York WILLIAM MORGAN CHEW .............. 5 ........................ Waynesboro, Virginia d, K 2; Skull and Keys; P. K. Society: Eli Banana; Z : Whitehead Medical Sociely; Adjunct Manager Baseball. I925: Vice-Presidenl Glee Club. I927; Dean's List. JOHN BRADLEY COUSAR ................ 2 .................... Bishopville, Soulh Carolina B.A.. Presbyterian College of South Carolina WILLIAM EUGENE DAMERON .......... 2 ......................... Lynchburg, Virginia ADAM TYREE FINCH, JR .................. 2 ......................... Chase City. Virginia d; A 9; 4:' B H. CARLYLE GREGORY FLAKE ............ 5 .......................... Richmond. Virgimn fID K 2; Skull and Keys; P. K. Society; T.....;1LKA Varsily Track Team, I927- 28; uV ; Baskel- ball Squad. I926; Varsily Football Squad I927; Varsily Club; FIrsI Year Team. I925. SAMUEL HOWARD GARST. . . .I .......... 2 ........................ Blountville. Tennessee B.A., Bridgewater College ALEXANDER GORDON GILLIAN ........ 5 ......................... Pelernburg. Virginia 35., University of Virginia d? B H; tb B K; 0 A K; Raven Sociely; Eli Banana: German Club: P. K. Society; bVI : Varsity Boxing Team. I924; Skull and Keys; Intermediate Honors. ROBERT EARLE CLENDY ................ 2 ............................ Dublin. Virginia K A; 4? P E; German Club. I164l I Medical Class 1 NAME YEAR IN U NIVERSITY HOME ADDRESS MEYER GOLDSTEIN ...................... 2 ......................... Parlsmoulh. Virginia 4, A. Ph.C., Medical College of Virginia SAMUEL BUTLER CRIMES ............... 6 ......................... Baltimore. Maryland 3.5.. Universily of Virginia B 6 H; 44 P 2; Eli Banana: Skull and Keys; Dean's List: First Year Football Team. I923: First Year Baseball Team. I924; Varsity Baseball Squad, I925; Virginia Orcheslrial Ensemble. PETER ALLEN HALEY. II ............... 5 .................... Charleston. West Virginia A X; $ X; Whilehead Medical Society. WINTHROP HUNTINGTON HALL ....... 5 ........................ Cranford, New Jersey 2 4? E; 5 2 N; First Year Foolball Squad. I924; Swimming Team. I925; Wrestling Team. I925; Whitehead Medical Society. WELDON MERRITT HARLOE ............ 2 ...................... Maloalm, West Virginia RUTH SCHWARTZ HART ................ 3 ........................ Winler Park. Florida ROBERT BEALL HIGHTOWER ........... 2 ......................... Sluunlon. Mississippi :1, B H. 35.. Mississippi A. and M. College CLIFTON KECK HIMMELSBACH ......... 5 .................. Upper Darbey. Pennsylvanin 4P B II; Wrestling Squad. l925-26-27. ANGUS HINSON .......................... 4 ......................... Abbeville. Alabama A 4? E. JOSEPH WILLIAM HOUCK ............... 2 ....................... Harrisonburg. Virginia B.A.. Cornell University 4? B H; A A Q. HARRY GILMAN HUDNALL ............. 5 .......................... Covington. Virginia 35., University of Virginia B 8 11:4: P E: A 11; German Club. JOHN THOMAS JAMES .................. 2 ............................. Gain, Virginia JEAN BARKSDALE JONES ............... Z ......................... Pelenburg, Virginia B.A.. Rundolph-Macon Woman's College HARRY RAPHAEL KELLY ............... 4 ...................... Union City, New Jersey CHARLES FULLER KINCHELOE, JR ...... 5 ................... East Falls Church. Virginia 23 N: tb P E; A II: P. K. Society; First Year Boxing Team. 924-25: Varsity Boxing Team. 1925-26-27; bVl ; T.I.L.K.A. HERMAN MICHEL LEVINE .............. 4 ....................... New York. New York THOMAS PRESTON MCKEE .............. 4 ........................... Sallville. Virginia ARTHUR MAZYCK ...................... 5 ..................... Columbia. South Carolina 2 A E. LODWICK STERRETT MERIWETHER. . . . 2 ......................... Lynchburg, Virginia B.A.. Washington and Lee Univenity: 35.. Virginia Polytechnic Institute ROBERT STEPHEN MlLLEN ............. 4 ........................ Elmhurst, New York Varsity Basketball. 1927-28; V. MARGARET ELIZABETH MORIARTY... 2 ....................... Newton, Musachusells 13.5., Simmons College TIMOTHY JOHN NASH .................. 4 ....................... New York. New York WILLIAM HENRY PARKER .............. 4 .......................... Covington. Virginia H K A; GP B H; Whitehead Medical Society. JOHN EDWARD ROBERTS ............... 4 ......................... Alexandria, Virginia 9 A X; N E N; First Year Baskel-ball Numerals, l925-26; Track Squad. I927. I1651 CORKS 5 CURLS I Medical Class 1 YEAR IN UNIVERSITY HOME ADDRESS JOHNN HAMILTON SCHERER ............ 5 .......................... Richmond, Virginia A T A: Eli Banana: German Club ASA ELMORE SEEDS .................... 4 ........................... Waverly. Virginia ELDRIDCE COOK SIMMONS ............. 5 ......................... Pelenburg. Virginia 3.5.. University of Virginia MELVILLE. DWIGHT SMITH ............. 4 ...................... Johnson City. Tennessee JOHN PEYTON SNEAD. JR ................ 5 ........................... Smcdley. Virginia FRANCIS ARTHUR SNIDOW ............. 6 .......................... Parisburg. Virginin E 't E; 4b K; Whitehead Medical Sociely. JACK SPENCER ........................... 2 ......................... Lynchburg, Virginin Ph.G., Medical College of Virginia BEN STEINCOLD ........................ 4 ........................... Norfolk. Virginia EMILIE CAROLINE ISTROHMAN ......... 3 .................. Orangeburg, South Carolina B .A. Convene College ALBERT CHESTERFIELD STUTSMAN.. ........................... Roanoke, Virginia BII 3.5.. Roanoke College FRANCIS NICHOLSON TAYLOR ......... 2 ........................ Blacksburg. Virginia tb K E O A K B. A.. Universily of Richmond WAL FER LEE THOMAS jR ............... 3 ......................... Lynchburg. Virginia B. A.. Lynchburg College; M. A.. University of Virginia $ B H. DAWSON EDWARD WATKINS. JR ........ 6 ........................ Fork Union. Virginia 3.5.. University of Virginia E IF E: Q P E; Whilchead Medical Society; Circulalion Manager College Topics. l927-28. BLISS KING WEEMS ...................... 2 ........................ Grecnville. Tennessee FRANCIS GEORGE ZICK ................ 4 ........................ Grass Luke. Michigan SAMUEL ZIMMERMAN .................. 5 ...................... Charlottesville, Virginia FIRST YEAR CLASS EDWIN EDMUNDS BARKSDALE ......... I ........................... Sulherlin. Virginia WILLIAM STOKES BEANE ............... I ......... King and Queen Court House, Virginia H K A: CD B H NATHANIEL LEWIS BOSWORTH ................................. chinglon. Virginia A K E: Skull and Keys: German Club; Eli 5:Banana 1MP: FIB! Year Football Team. I924; Wrealling Squad. 1926-27; . le JAMES LAWSON CABANISS .............. 4 ....................... Bedford Cily. Virginia JACK LEON CANTOR .................... 4 ......................... Pclersburg, Virginia AUSTIN BROCKENBROUGH CHINN ..... 3 ........................... Warsaw, Virginia 7? K E: Adjuncl Manager Foolball. i926; Skull and Keys; German Club: Eli Banana. THOMAS STERLING CLAIBORNE ........ 4 ........................... Camden. Arkansas Ch 2 K; A K... v; Raven Sociely; Inlermediale Honors: Manager Wreslling. HARRY BOYD COAKLEY ................ l .............. Washinglon, District of Columbia ALFRED JOSEPH COIN ................... 3 ......................... Porlsmoulh. Virginia ROBERT RUBEN COLEMAN ............. 3 ........................... Norfolk, Virginia JOHN MCALLISTER COPPER ............. 2 .......................... Lyndhursl. Virginia A 41'. I 16411 I Medical Class 1 YEAR IN UNIVERSITY HOME ADDRESS FRANK DUNNINGTON DANIEL ................................ Charlottesville, Virginia d, 2 K q: B II B. A.. Davidlson College JOHN WALTER DAVIS. ja ................ I .......................... Humplon. Virginia K 2; N a N. BWS Virginia Military Instilute GEORGE HAMILTON DERIEUX .......... 5 ...................... Tappahnnnock. Virginia H K A; Dean's List, I927-28. WALTER ANSELL DERRICK ............. I ............................ Pulaski. Virginia '1, B H. H. ROLFE DUPUY ........................ 2 ........................... Norfolk, Virginia I? B H. CLARENCE D. FREEMAN. JR .............. 5 ......................... Portsmouth. Virginia WESLEY FRY ............................ 6 ....................... Hot Springs. Arkansas B.A.. M.A,. University of Virginia I? B H. CHARLES LEWIS GILBERT .............. 4 .......................... Richmond. Virginia K A; A 11:1, P- v; First Year Football Squad. I925; First Year Track Team. I925; Cross- Counlry Team; ch ; P. K. Society; Intermediate Honors; Varsity Track Team; u :V Boxing Squad; Varsity Club; T.I.L.K.A. MEYER ROSEN GOLDBERG .............. 4 ...................... Newport News. Virginia EMANUEL GREENSPON .................. 3 ..................... Newporl News. Virginia RANDOLPH BRYAN CRINNAN .......... 4 ........................... NarfoIk. Virginia I B 11; Captain First Year Cross-Counlry. I925; ch HENRY HAMILTON HAMMER ........... 2 ........................... Narrows, Virginia JOHN HARTWELL HARRISON ........... 4 ........................... Danville, Virginia A It: A II: 0 A K; T.I.L.K.A.; Raven Society: Z ; German Club; First Year Swimming Team. I926; Swimming Team. I927; BaskeI-baII Team. I928; V Club; Intermediate Honors; Lacrosse Team. I927-28. LEE LUTHER HASSELTINE .............. 4 ....................... Fort Monroe. Virginia jAMES BEEBE HAWES .................. 2 .................... Huntington. West Virginia g I: N E N; German Club: Varsity Boxing Squad; BasebaII Adjunct; Whitehead Medical ociely. ALBERT ALLEN HAYES ................. 2 ........................... Roanoke. Virginia ROSSER NOLAND HILLSMAN. JR ......... 4 ......................... Lynchburg. Virginia A X. LELAND FLOYD HOBBS ................. 4 ........................... Norfolk. Virginia CF 2 K; A X 2; Chairman Mndiwn HaII Cabinet. FREDERICK DIXON HOLLOWELL ....... I ...................... Yazoo City. Mississippi A...B Mississippi CoIIcgc X 17 E; I? B H. ROBERT TASKER HUMPHRIES .......... 3 .......................... Culpeper. Virginia A X. WILLIAM DABNEY JARMAN ............ I .......................... FarmviIIe. Virginia 3.3., Hampden-Sydney College x44;$BII:0AK. ROBERT ARCHER GOODWIN JONES. . .. 4 ...................... Newport News. Virginia EDGAR WILSON KIRBY. JR ............... I ......................... Porismoulh. Virginia HERMAN LENOWITZ .................... I ....................... East Radford, Virginia Illi'I'I I Medical Class 1 NAME YEAR IN UNIVERSITY HOME ADDRESS GERSHON JOHN LEVIN .................. 5 ........................... Norfolk. Virginia A E II; $ A E. GABRIEL LLULL ......................... 3 ...................... Rio Piedru. Porto Rico JOHN CAMERON MCCLUER. JR ........... 4 ......................... Jnmlica. New York HULBERT CHRISTOPHER MCCOY ....... 5 ........................... Norfolk. Virginia A E 1,: ? B H. FRANCIS NELSON MCCAVOCK .......... 4 ..................... Max Meadows, Virginia ? B H. MELVIN WOOD MCGEHEE ............... 5 ....................... Carbon. West Virginia 7 85.. University of Virginia A X; 1, B H. EDGAR PRENTICE MCKINNEY .......... 2 ......................... Nacogdochet. Texas 1, F A; Dean's Lisl. I928. R. FABER MARTIN ....................... 3 ............................. Faber. Virginia PHILLIP LOUIS MILLER ................. l ........................... Norfolk. Virginia CARL HERBERT MYERLEY ............. 3 ....................... Danville. Pennsylvania CHARLIE MORRIS NEBON ............. 5 .......................... Richmond, Virginia B.A.. University of Virginia $ K 4'; 4 P 2: Skull and Keys; German Club; Intermediate Honors; Denn': Lisl; Fraternily Represenlalive lo Coaxs AND CURLS, 1927- 28. JOHN RANDOLPH PERDUE .................................... Rocky Mount. Virginia K A; d, H II. 3.5.. Randolph- lMacon College BEVERLY KENNON PETER .............. I ....................... Harrisonburg. Virginia ELIZABETH LEWIS SAUNDERS .......... I ......................... Blacktburg. Virginia WILSON T. SOWDER ..................... 3 ...................... Rocky Mount. Virginia HUGH O. STALEY ........................ I ...................... Rural Retreat. Virginia EDWARD CARL STEVENSON ............ 5 .......................... Richmond. Virginia BS. in Engineering. University of Virginia 2 d? E; A X 2: T H II; Raven: Edilor-in-Chief Engineering journal: Assislant in Mathematics, Engineering. and Physics CLIFTON JEAN STRAUSS ................ 3 ....................... Belleville. New Jersey FRANK ANDES STRICKLER .............. I ........................ Bridgewater. Virginia HERBERT WILLIAM SWERTFEGER ...... 4 ............................... Ogden, Iowa GEORGE GARLAND TANNER ............ l ......................... Brighlwood. Virginia ROBERT IRVINE TRENT ................. 4 ............................ Wilcoe, Virginia A 2 4n N E N; Circulation Manager Virginia Reel. 1927-28. WAT HENRY TYLER .................... 5 ......................... Fargo, North Dakota A K E: Skull and Keys: P. K. Society: Eli Banana; 1MP; I3 ; Firsl Year Football Team. I923; First Year Baakel-ba Team. I924; Firs! Year Track Team. I924; V Football, I925; V Basketball, 1926-28: V Track, I926; President Vanity Club. I927. JOHN EARNEST VAUGHAN ............. l .......................... Bagwood. Virginia DELMAN FRANKLIN WEAVER. JR ........ l ............................ Orange. Virginia K 2;; q, B H. WILLIAM NIEBUHR WEAVER .................................... University. Virginia Z 11:4 P .2; Adjunct Manager Track. I926; Dean 5 List; German Club. SAMUEL C.WE1NBERC .................. 3 ......................... Pelcrsburg. Virginia ROBERT EDWIN WESTMORELAND ..... 4 ......................... Petersburg. Virginia llnsl I Medical Class 1 NAME YEAR IN UNIVERSITY HOME ADDRESS JAMES EDMOND WHITE ................ I ............................ Norfolk. Virginia ROBERT WILLIAM WHITE ............... 4 ....................... Chincoteague, Virginia A E 4th HUGH GRICSBY WHITEHEAD ........... 3 ........................... Norfolk. Virginia B 9 H; Skull and Keys; Dean's List; German Club; T.I.L.K.A.; Tennis Team. I927; Captain Tennis Team. I928; Reporlorial SlaE College Topics. 1926-27; Associate Editor College Topics, I928. MUNFORD RADFORD YATES: ............ 3 ......................... Lynchburg, Virginia N 2 N. JOSEPH EDGAR YOUNG. JR ............... 2 . . . . . .............. Gxeensboro, North Carolina 4, B H. r 1 X K -..7ZL A$al 5a; Adm Lafamm, ;t faith JSCM?Fl-llkfrlf Ym Mon. 74? Jatykfadwlbur M ? J CHEM r1691 L50 moi? p.200 :0? ,: Def :0 4:3 machuoD 5:... IL. ,,,, V arvav 1. an. I 1r - . . .. . 1 41 p , 44H .ai41lhnf11r . . r. - . 1, 1,. . 41!.1111IIIIIH114! .11.. 1411.- 111.11 .III14DF. 4 4.5ll . .3 Hz. 11111111461111. g4 I 11.11 1, .4 ll , I1. :11 '11 , 11111 Love in the Simpering Sixties or TAKE OF F THAT COAT, YOU BOOB , .. 1TH an air of erudite sophistication engendered by collegiate modern- ' isms, the undergraduate is inclined to regard the antics of the past and prudish as mere juvenile imbecilities. In the heyday of the ac- cordion and mandolin, when a woman s ankle caused a traffic Jam of one- -horse gigs and high bicycles, love-though uninspired by saxophone or white corn whilskewas not so desiccated after all. In the days when the deities of Virginia dwelt on Monroe Hill. philandering thrived in spite of Jeffersonian edicts and college castigations. The founder forbid professorial matrimony and dyking chastised student amorists, but long before co-education. as far back as the nineties, Virginia had ceased to be a retreat for Benedicts, bute ah, well. hark ye to your elders, and let there be no stamping. Originally, Mr. Jefferson stipulated that all professors should be bach- elors, but the state of single blessedness soon palled upon the first encumbents and, knowing no better, they took partners unto themselves with most disastrous results in two instances-one because he beat his wife and the other because his wife beat him. Wife heating was too common an occurrence in those glorious days to warrant recounting the story in the first instance, but of the latter case there is a pathetic record. The second professor, with tears in his voice, often wailed: She has Hogged me full many a time and oft. At times spurred by his manly feelings, he felt a desperate courage to assert his rights, but his zeal was considerably abated by the steady pressure of his lovely Steamer, as he styled his spouse. who uproved right stiff upon a wind. Generally by the ufaithful backing of a corner his hide was saved, but one early morning being driven from his shelter. the pestered professor Hung open the door and Hed out on the Lawn in his night shirt. With the uSteamer hard on his heels, he tacked across the Lawn and then straightening out his course pattered towards the Rotunda. while student cheers reverberated from the arcades. Fast he ran but faster puffed the Steamer. as the exasperated dame pursued her Heeing lord with flying feet. Overhauled at the Rotunda steps, the bullying behemoth bagged her prey and beat her lord and master ll7ll until his cries for mercy were mingled with the yelled encouragements of spectators. A very wise man was Mr. Jefferson when he discountenanced matrimony. Love under the elms along the colonnades was frowned upon. Why the objection is a moot question, but we will chalk it up to permeations of Vic- torian principles. Let the amorous swain be caught a-gadding and the Big Horn of the Range caught up the cries of iidyke. dyke, echoing from the Row and Lawn and Ranges. At the bray of the four-foot horn, the clans gathered and forming a torch-light parade escorted the lover on his pilgrimage. But his pilgrimage would lirst carry him to the Rotunda. Mounted on the Rotunda steps with the hosts swarming about him and the mouth of the Big Horn muzzling against his car, he was requested to speak. In a conciliatory Casabianca tone. the victim would nervously begin: uFellow Stua. No records show that any man got farther than this. His opening words would turn the tumult loose again. Coal scuttles, substituted for shawns and sack- buts, added to the uproar. The torches flared up, the horns went wild, and the crowd cried, SpeecheSpeech, when there was no speech. Making a rush for the orator, the mob would enthusiastically carry off the dishevelled lover to the home of his beloved. If the beloved did not care for the appear- ance of her caller, the hapless one was once more borne off by the mob- but this time to the ice pond where he was bathed in mud. The University has its full quota of legends, even stories centering around the Rotunda clocks. Let us adjourn to the library as Mr. J. Towser Jones. on January 15, l858. did with his smiling anamorata. He came, he saw, he ascended to the whispering gallery, an antecedent of the petting pits. After a few echoing exchanges had been added to the accumulated treasures of that venerable repository, the pair proceeded to wend their way to the top of the Rotunda, reached by a pitch dark passageway through the roof of the portico where the great clock works. The student thought the atmosphere propitious and turned towards the girl with such haste that the coat tails of his borrowed Prince Albert caught in the cogwheels of the clock. As the wheels turned over, he became wound up and feeling himself slowly but surely sucked in. in desperation declared himself unequivocally to the girl and handed over his watch and fond sentiments. But the girl failed to appreciate the drama and callously perverted a tragedy into a farce. by saying: Take off that coat, you I1721 boob, or you'll lose your britches, too. The presumption is that he acted on the suggestion. for the clock lost fifteen minutes and has never really recovered its equanimity. Though livery stables existed, even as U-Drive-Its thrive today, students of the gasless age refused to have their fun at two bits a mile, not that they objected to moral turpitude but that there were means by which cost might be obviated. Students much preferred to appropriate professors' spring wagons and buggys. Draped in enveloping dust robes. students expounded the details of amorous techniquHmmy guys in those daykwhile virtuous maidens listened with heaving bosoms. Trying to write amusingly about love in those desiccated ages is a hopeless jobelove was too well chaperoned, and one can never perform well before audiencePand so we try to improvise and are reprimanded for not sticking to facts, we bring in a Rabelisian element and are censored, hence in despair we lay the blame at the feet of our fathers which art in heaven, and so forth, love without end, amen. NO boas AuouED I THE UNIVERSW! n; ' CL 1 Wolves on the Fold The man who laughs will often cross himself to sigh Before the twinkling is half hidden from his eye, And so the visionary battles for his dreams, Vividty struggling just to keep life what it seems. But at the quiet core of things Where gods are men, and men are kings, There tears are used to whet the axe-man,s stone, And men must smile at life, or weep atone. From the swirling core of this creation came A great spirit, jumbting the pinnacles of fame, And battling on the precipice of freedom. The spirit was a dream of peace, and curving walls. The green grass, the majesty of cotumned halts, The languor of a swallow on a summer afternoon. Here youth mas love, and love was youth's sadness 1n the softness of the night. when the moon Carved clear shadows on the fresh-cut lawns, And birds sang glory to an unnamed, unknown song. Then after thirty years a man returned. Where the cordmood of his strength and youth had burned, And the ashes of its memory longed for sights to be, As a seashell in exile sadly sings to the sea. But the house of his dreams lay mangled, Dead in the dust of unfamiliar brickheaps, Gone with the rarity of otd-time friends and customs; For life roared by in a diferent trey, And the man cried for that which used to be. . . . ISHAM KEITH, JR. Il74l wmwmwmo 02-mmmz.G2m 10h. wFZIxOJnE ... . ... 1 ...V. 1.. ,u.p.nI..rvsJ . Alitui1.Mg Applicants for Engineering Degrees, June, I929 WILLIAM GOVAN BROWN. JR. ROBERT TURNER BROWNING DANIEL JOSEPH CARROLL COPPS WILLIAM HENRY FRAVEL CHARLES DORSEY HARMON WILLIAM HENRY HINTON HARRY REGINALD HOLT WILLIAM WHITMORE HURT EDWARD FRUTH JOACHIM BERNARD JERRY KYLE ROBERT EDWIN LEE, JR. DONALD GRANT MACDONALD CHARLES EDWARD McMURDO HUGH YOST MEETZE PAUL SELDEN PEACH OVID STEPHEN PETRESCU LAWRENCE REGINALD QUARLES EDWARD WILCOX RICHARDS WILLIAM MINOR LlLE ROGERS HERBERT GEORGE SEIFRIED DAVE A. SERGENT. jn, WILLIAM WALLACE SYMINGTON. JR. ARTHUR CARL THOMPSON JOHN ALFRED WOTTON. JR. l1771 TH EN me Em 3ERING DEPARTMEN on Elm THE GAY 90'91 ' ' c cqu -- 4, o g '1 ' o 'Ill'hflvlaull Z'Vn 811,45 IJWI C'V'II'W- 11003uf'fuh'lfll'cut' fl? 1' Ijg'gqvi; 1,10 0911107111712 ,; 319;; l.dv,'o',4,g$1: 11:41.41; ; 1,0... . 14..fl.1,,...,,;llf.4,u.l 1 681.357 91; :67un Ill 1'4 1 I. Vl'lgI-v' vlSI 'x F OFFICERS WILLIAM MINOR LILE ROGERS ............................................... President WILLIAM W. SYMMINGTON. JR ........................................... Vicc-Prcsidcn! EDWARD W. RICHARDS .......................................... Secretary and Treasurer GEORGE J. RATHBURN. JR .................................................... Hislorian FOURTH YEAR CLASS NAME YEAR IN UNIVERSITY HOME ADDRESS DANIEL JOSEPH CARROLL COPPS ...... 4 .......................... University, Virginia K E; First Year Football, I925; Firs! Year Track Team; Varsity Football Squad. CHARLES HUGHES DICKINSON ......... 4 ...................... Charlollcsvillc. Virginia ALEXANDER HARROW DUNLAP ........ 5 .............. Washinglon. Dislrict of Columbia WILLIAM HARRY FRAVEL .............. 5 ................... East Falls Church. Virginia 2 N; A X E; Trigon; Assistant Editor Engineering journal; First Year Track Team. l924-l925. CHARLES DORSEY HARMON ............ 5 ........................ Waynesboro. Virginia d3 B K; T B H; d? T: Raven. WILLIAM HENRY HINTON .............. 5 ......................... Pctersburg. Virginia d? K E; II K; Adjunct Football; Wrestling Team. HARRY REGINALD HOLT ............... 5 ........................... Keswick. Virginia WILLIAM WHITMORE HURT ............ 4 ............................ Marion. Virginia BERNARD JERRY KYLE ................. 5 ............................ Brandy. Virginia ROBERT EDWIN LEE, JR .................. 4 ...................... Charlottesville. Virginia A T; 8 T; Interfralernily Council; Assistant in Field Work. DONALD GRANT MACDONALD .......... 5 ........................... Lcesburg. Virginia B.S.E.. University of Virginia. I928 T B H; O A K; Trigon; German Club; Raven Society; A.S.M.E.; Instructor in Engineering; President of Engineering Department. l927-28. CHARLES EDWARD MCMURDO .......... 5 ...................... Charlottesville. Virginia HUGH YOST MEETZE .................... 5 .......................... Manassas. Virginia JOHN WILLIAM NIXON .................. 5 ......................... Purcellville. Virginia 117M CORKS 8 CURLS I Engineering C lass 1 NAME YEAR IN UNIVERSITY HOME ADDRESS PAUL SELDEN PEACH ................... 4 ......................... Uppcrville. Virginia E N: 9 T. OVID STEPHEN PETRESCU. . . . .......... 5 ......................... Winchester. Virginia LAWRENCE REGINALD QUARLES ...... 4 ...................... Charlottesville. Virginia SAM RUSH SAYERS ...................... 3 ......................... Wylheville. Virginia HERBERT SEIFRIED ..................... 4 .......................... Belleville. Virginia DAVE A. SERCENT, JR ................... 4 ..................... Big Stone Gap. Virginia WILLIAM WALLACE SYMINCTON. JIL. . . 5 ......................... Baltimore. Maryland A K E; 0 T: A. S. M. E.; P. K. Society; Eli Banana: Z ; First Year Football Team. I924; th Wrestling. I926; Football Squad. 925-26: V Football. 1927-28; Varsily Club; Vice- Presidenl School of Engineering. 1928-29. ARTHUR CARL THOMPSON ............. 4 ...................... Charlollesvillc. Virginia CLAUDE MALLORY WILKINSON ........ 4 .......................... Richmond. Virginia A E ii; 0 T; Instructor in Engineering; Associate Busincu Manager Engineering Journal, l926-27; Business Manager Engineering journal. 1927428. JOHN ALFRED WOTTON ................ 4 ........................... Roanoke. Virginia II K A; Trigon. HUNTER SAMUEL WRIGHT ........................................ Elk Hill Virginia B K; Student Member of A. l. E E. and A. S. M. E. THIRD YEAR CLASS JOHN DEAN ABELL ...................... 3 ......................... Ivy Depot. Virginia EDWIN EADS ANDREWS. JR .............. 3 ...................... Charlollesville. Virginia 9 A X; T E II; Trigon: A. S. M. E.: Freshman Lacrosse Team. I927; lVl. I928. FRANCIS PACE BACON .................. 3 .................... Pass Chrislian. Mississippi WILLIAM BLAIR BARNES ................ 3 ............................ Lanexa. Virginia WILLARD ANDREW BAUSERMAN ....... 3 ......................... Woodstock. Virginia JAMES WALKER BEVERAGE ............ 4 .......................... Monterey. Virginia HOWARD BRADLEY BLOOMER. JR ....... 3 ........................... DeIroil. Michigan H K A; Trigon Engineering Society; Dean's Lisl. I927-28; Reporlotial Slat? College Topics,- Fnternily Repreunlalive CORKS AND CURLs. l927-28: Treasurer A. S. M. E.. l927-28; Editor- in-Chicf Virginia Speclalor; Associate Editor College Topics. JACK BODNER ............................ 3 ........................... Norfolk. Virginia WILLIAM GOVAN BROWN. JR ............ 4 ..................... Concord, North Carolina ROBERT TURNER BROWINC ...................................... Flint Hill Virginia E N: 9 T; T B 11; A. S. C. E.; Fin! Year Track Squad. WILLIAM RANKIN CHAPMAN ......................... Washmglon. District of Columbia THOMAS DAVIS ......................... 3 ........................... N.orfollc Virgima WILLIAM LEE DAVIS. JR .................. 3 ......................... Portsmouth. Virginia A 2 Q4; 0 T. HARRY STANLEY DUNHAM ............ 3 ........................... Sallvillc. Virginia PHILIP A. GALLAGHER .................. 3 ......................... Portsmouth. Virginia 8 X; Lacrosse Teun. I928. ROBERT EDWARD LEE GILDEA ........ 3 ....................... Caromvillc. Maryland JAMES SNEAD GODSEY ................. 3 ........................ Cumberland. Virginia GEORGE DONALD HARINCI .............. 3 ..................... Hackensack. New Jersey A T: 9 T. ALVA ALEXANDER JOHNSON .......... 3 ........................... Mineral, Virginia CARL KANTER ........................... 3 ........................... Norfolk. Virginia A E II; Dean's List. ALBERT JACK KRAMER ................. 3 ......................... Winchcslcr. Virginia I1791 I Engineering C lass 1 NAME YEAR IN UNIVERSITY HOME ADDRESS PAUL BERNARD KREBS ................. 2 ....................... Birmingham. Alabama 2 A E; Crou-Counlry. I928; A. S. C. E. WILLIAM LIGHTFOOT LAFFERTY ...... 3 ............................. Crozel. Virginia ELM MAE. LESEUR ...................... 2 ............................ Britlol. Virginia HAMILTON HIRST MANN ............... 3 ........................... Slaunlon. Virginia DAVID LEE. MAULSBY .................. 4 ...................... Charlottesville. Virginia d? K E; P. K. Society; Skull and Keys; First Year Track Team; Trigon. DRAYTON ALEXANDER MAYERS ....... 4 ...................... Collinsville. Connecticut 9 A X; 9 T; CORKs AND CURLS Representative. I928. CARNETT VIRGIL MOORE .............. 3 .......................... Buchanan. Virginia CILFORD GODFREY QUARLES .......... 3 ...................... Charlottesville. Virginia GEORGE JAY RATHBURNE. JR ........... 4 ......................... Easton. Pennsylvania Z 1'; Trigon Engineering Society. AVERY H. REED. JR ....................... 3 ........................... Marion. Kentucky EDWARD WILCOX RICHARDS ........... 6 ......................... Warrenton. Virginia GEORGE AUSTIN ROBERTSON .......... 2 ........................... Norfolk. Virginia 2 X; Fin! Year Wrestling Squad; Finl Year Swimming Team; Adjunct Track: First Year Y. M. C. A. Cabinet: Second Year Y. M. C. A. Cabincl; Firsl Year anroue Squad; College Topics Stag. 1927; Boxing Squad. I928; Swimming Team. I929; Llcrouc Squad. I929. FRANK WILLIAM ROSE. JR ............... 3 .............. Washington. District of Columbia RICHARD CROSBY VAN VOORHIES ..... 3 ........................ Port au Prince. Haiti A T A; 9 T: Fin! Year Wrestling Squad. MARVIN REA WALTERS ................. 3 ...................... Charlottesville. Virginia HOWARD SWINEFORD YEATTS ......... 5 ...................... Bluefield. West Virginia SECOND YEAR CLASS JOHN EDWARD BLANN ................. 2 .............. Washinglon. District of Columbia HODCE CASEY BOULWARE ............. 2 .................... Silver City. New Mexico 4? A 9; Trigon Society. WILLIAM BRADFORD CAMPFIELD ................................. Slaunlon, Virginia DAVID RICE CREECY. JR ................. 3 .......................... Richmond. Virginia JOHN WILLIAM EDWARDS .............. 2 ...................... Charlottesville. Virginia ALFONSO R. T. ESPOSITO ............... 2 ........................... Norfolk. Virginia EDWARD HALE EVERETT .............. 2 ....................... Nelly's Ford, Virginia ASHTON LITTLE CODLEY .............. 2 ................... Wallingford. Pennsylvania A T. DORRANCE ALFRED GRAHAM .......... 2 ........................... Slaumon, Virginia ALVIN C. GRAVES ....................... 2 .............. Washinglon. District of Columbia A 2 4h BRUCE C?V1NCTON CUNNELL .......... 2 .............. Washington. District of Columbia KA: rigon. CLARENCE MORTIMER HAWKINS ...... 2 ........................... Potomac. Virginia FRED WILLIAM HESTER ................. 3 ............................. Houston. Texas II K A: Trigon. JOHN RANDOLPH JANNEY. JR ........... 2 ........................ Newark. New Jersey 2 X; First Year Football Squad. I927; Football Squad. I925. DENNIS STAFFORD KELLEY ............ 2 ......................... Alexandria. Virginia THEODORE. SIMONSON KINNEY ........ 2 .................. Hasbrouck Hls. New Jersey ALLEN QUARLB LADD ................. 2 ........................... Cobham. Virginia ROBERT ALEXANDER LANCASTER ..... 2 ................... New Brighlon. Long Island CI, K W; Trigon Engineering Society; Dean's List; German Club. THEODORE JOHN LOCASCIO ............ 2 ........................... Norfolk. Virginia Ilsol I Engineering C lass I NAME YEAR IN UNIVERSITY HOME ADDRESS ELLIS EDWIN MCCOY. JR ................. 2 ...................... Charlollesvillc. Virginia SALVADOR MELO ....................... 4 ................. Tanloyucn. Veracrus. Mexico THOMAS WALKER PACE. III ............ 3 .............. Washington. Dislricl of Columbia MORTIMER E. PAYNE ................... 3 ............................ Sharps. Virginie A E 4?. HERMAN PFEIFER. JR .................... 2 ....................... New York. New York RICHARD WINGFIELD QUARLES ........ 2 ......................... Richmond. Virginia JOHN DARBY READ ..................... 2 .................... Charleslon. South Carolina A T 0; Adjunct Basket-bell; Adjunct Baseball; Trigon Engineering Society; P. K. Society. CHARLES ABRAMS SHEPHERD .......... 2 ........................... Palmyra. Virgima A x P. WALTER ARMISTEAD SUMMERS ....... 2 ........................... Norfolk. Virginia WILLIAM DAVID THORNHILL .......... 2 . . . ................... BIueerId. West Virginia HARRY WYANT THURSTON ............ 2 .......................... Richmond. Virginia CROVER LEE WHITE. JR .................. 2 ........................... Norfolk. Virginia A E 4?; Universily Band. I926-27. WILLIAM SOLOMON WILKINSON. JR.. ........................... Norfolk. Virginia A T 0; Freshman Football Team. I927; Freazhman Baskel- ball Team I928; Freshman Baseball Team. I928; Trigon Engineering Society; P. K. Sociely CHARLES CLARENCE WILSON .......... 2 ............................. Salem. Virginia WILLIAM ALLEN WOOD. III ............. 2 ........................... Norfolk, Virginia 9 X; Vanily Boxing Squad, I928-29. FIRST YEAR CLASS VAHE MARTYR ARAKELIAN ............ I ............................ Salonicu. Greece CURTIS CHARLES BEATY ............... I ............................. Orange, Texas GEORGE DEWEY BELOTE. ............... I ...................... Cape Charles. Virginia COLLINCWOOD BRUCE BROWN ........ I .......................... Montreal. Canada WILLIAM MARSHALL BURGER ......... I .......................... Farmville. Virginia FREDRICK IVANHOE CABELL ........... I ......................... University. Virginia COURTLAND ELLIS CHANDLEE ......... I .................... Mounlvernon, New York ENSICN JOHN HENRY COWELL ......... I ..................... Glen Ridge. New Jersey JAMES NELSON DANIEL ................. I ...................... CharlollewiIIe. Virginia 4A 2 K. JOHN LAWRENCE DAWSON ............. I ......................... Summit. New Jersey 9 A x. TAZEWELL WAYNE EDWARDS ......... I ...................... Charlottesville. Virginia HOMER PHILANDER ELLIOTT. JR ....... I .................... Charlellon. West Virginia WILLIAM W. FORRESTER ............... I ......................... Richmond. Virginia MILTON GOLDBERG ..................... 2 ........................ Portsmouth. Virginia A E H; Dean's List. WILLIAM RAYMOND GORDON ......... I ........................... Denver. Colorado A X. WILLIAM TAYLOR HAM. JR .............. 3 ........................... Norfolk. Virginia JOHN HITCHCOCK ....................... I ............................. ProEn. VirgInIa GEORGE RAYMOND JONES ............. I .............. Wuhinglon. District of Columbia A T. ROBERT BRINKLEY JONES, JR ........... I ......................... Richmond. Virginia ROBERT KIRKMAN ...................... I ...................... Port Jervos. New York 11 K A. JAY OLIVER KNIPE ...................... I ...................... Winthrop Munchusells I181! I Engineering C lass I NAME YEAR IN UNIVERSITY HOME ADDRESS PHILIP KURTZ KRAUS .................. I ....................... New York. New York MARCUS JAY LAWRENCE ............... 2 .............. Washinglon. District of Columbia X 4n Trigon Engineering Society. WILLIAM FITZGERALD LIPSCOMB ...... I ..................... Virginia Beach. Virginia 9 X; Fin! Year Swimming Team, I928-29. JOHN JANNEY LLOYD. JR ................ I ........................ Rochester. New York EUGENE JACKSON LONG ................ I ......................... Univenity. Virginia HARRY PEAKE MACDONALD. JR ........ I ....................... Montclair. New Jersey JACK STAUFFER MCILHENNY ........... I ...................... Charlottesville, Virginia CHARLES HERBERT MCMAHON ......... I ........................ Baltimore. Maryland EDWARD JOHN MEROW ................ I .................... Linle Valley, New York WILSON BARRETT MICHIE .............. I ......................... University, Virginia B K. BROWN MILLER ......................... 3 .............. Washington, Dislricl of Columbia KIRK MONTAGUE MOORE ............... I .............. Mount Pleasant. Soulh Carolina ERLE PARKER ........................... I ........................ Newark. New Jersey ROYB MACKENZIE PATERSON. . . . . . . I. . . I ..................... Newport News. Virginia oxmgI RAMON EMILIE PEREDA ................ 2 .......................... Juncos. Porlo Rico ARTHUR PETER. jR ...................... I ......................... Louisville. Kentucky A T A. THOMAS JAMES PETERSON ............ I ....................... Audubon. New Jersey JOSEPH LITTLEBURY POLLARD ........ I ......................... Portsmouth. Virginia A E ih HARRY BORUM PRICE. JR ................ I ........................... Norfolk. Virginia 9 X; Adjunct Manager Boxing. I928-29. WILLIAM KEYSER PRICE, JR ............. I ...................... New Market, Virginia WALTER DONOVAN PURKS ............. I ............................. Gaby. Virginia TOM MUNFORD RINEHART ............. I ....................... Wilmington. Delaware THOMAS MORTON RINEHART ......... I .......................... Covington, Virginia H K A. DAVID STRAUCHAN ROBINSON ........ I .............................. Pulls. Virginia WILLIAM TYLER ROSS .................. I .......................... Roanoke. Virginia CHARLES ADOLPH RUEGER ............ Z .......................... Richmond. Virginia It K 2; Fim Year Football. I927; First Year Swimming; Varsity Football Squad. I928: Trigon; Skull and Keys. DONALD WILSON SCOFIELD ............ I .................... Rozelle Park. New Jersey LEOPOLD SENDER ....................... I ................... Philadelphia, Pennsylvania LAXVRENCE A. SHORT ................... I ...................... Charloltcsville. Virginia JOHN HENRY SHUFF .................... I ............................ Pulaski. Virginia 4? X; Adjunct Manager Swimming, I928-29. jOHN COLLINS SMITH ................... I ......................... York. Pennsylvania EDWARD BURNS SNYDER ............... I ............................ Barberlon. Ohio CLYDE SPICER ........................... I ............................... Ivy. Virginia EDWIN LEROY STINE, JR ................. I ......................... Winchester, Virginia OSCAR OWEN STRANGE ................ I ......................... Lynchburg. Virginia MARVIN MCTYIERE SUTHERLAND ..... I ............................ Pulaski, Virginia JOHN LIVINGSTONE VAUGHAN ........ I ......................... Shawsville. Virginia 41 X. JOHN HERBERT WAITE ................. I ....................... Waynesboro. Virginia HARRY ALOYSIOUS IVELDON .......... I .................... New Rochelle. New York 11ml CORKS 5 CU RLS I Engineering C lass 1 NAME yum IN UNIVERSITY HOME ADDRESS EDWIN HOLT WILLIAMSON ............ 4 ............................ DeLand. Florida WILLIAM RODES WOODBURY .......... 2 ........................... Slaunlon. Virginia $ A 6. POST GRADUATE STUDENTS EDWARD FRUTH JOACHIM ............. 6 ...................... Charlottesville. Virginia A X; 8 T; A. S. M. E.; Assistant in Senior Applied Mathematics and Experimental Engineering. l927-28; Assistant Advertising Manager, V irgim'a journal of Engineering. l926-27; Assistant Busi- neu Manager Virginia journal of Engineering. 1927-28. WILLIAM MINOR LILE ROGERS ......... 6 .......................... Covington. Virginia B.A.. BS.E.. University of Virginia A T 52; A II; 0 A K; Trigon; Raven Society; CORKs AND CURLS Business Staff. I923-28; Track Squad. l924-27; Baskel-ball Squad. I926; lnlermediale Honors: Assistant in Physics, :ggg-gg; Aasislant in Electrical Engineering, I928-29; President of Engineering Department. mm mm. mm X cummquA ; 9 muss EEK b! Eshay A llnaj CCKX Tweoh'rmenl m K ruc..-.uo DISCOVERED IN THE DEPTHS OF THE ROTUNDA DUNGEON BY SOME OF OUR LESS ARDENT ADMIRERS WHILE SNOOPING ABOUT THE UNIVERSITY. THE EXPLORERS IDENTIFY THE OPERATORS AS EITHER FACULTY MEMBERS 0R STUDENTS. VIRGINIA GOES BERSERK! MAM WIFE DON'T WM ME 12: WORK SO HARD No MORE 50 SHE osL-vsas DE curs Hsesa F ! 1 YASSUH .' AN' SHE form ME WALKIN' UP VINEGAR HILL qu DAT meucu mccER LADY, AH' sue Am'r SAID NOTHIN' 'BOUT IT A-TALL! Nossunll You KNOW DAT SCOTCH GEMMEN DAT AH wmrs on 7 WELL, DIS MAwuw' AT aREAKFAS' TIME HE GIMME A 5M -.v...-4 YASSUH! AH HEERN ms MAwum' DAT DEY'S LOTS o' vouna GEMMEN JES' A-CLAMORlN' To TAKE DEM B-MA'I'H LE9SONS WELL, DAT MOWT BE POSSc$LE YASSUI-l! Mme. BEFo' LAS', ONE 0' PROF. LILE'S CHICKENS DONE TRMPSE RIGHT IN MN FRONT YARD -AN' AH DONE SHOO n' RIGHT BACK HoME AGIN - SAFE Au' SOUND - GOLLY ! YESTIDDY AH DONE BET ON A Mass RACE AN AH WINS $1: T DAT LYNCHBURC 800T- LEGGER wms METO COME ovee AN' snoo-r CRAP M'mmx Gm - auwm savsxmcsen, AH DON'T LIKE CRAP AN' AH DON'T LIKE GIN YASSUH! AN' mp YOU-ALL KNOW DAT VIRCtMIA DONE GONE REPUBLICAN ? WHADDAYUII KNON ?ouT DAT -Hun 7 OE U51; WX-Wr m CORKS 53 CU RLS Applicants for Graduate Degrees, June, I929 CORNELIUS JONES APPERSON MELVIN VVINFREY AYLOR MORRIS HENRY BITTINGER HARRY MELVILLE BOWLING LLOYD JONES BRAY HAZEL LEE BRELAND WILLIAM ORLANDO BRISTOW, JR. EDGAR DUFFIELD BROOKE PAUL RANDOLPH BURCH ROBERT LANCELOT BURRUSS JOHN GUY CARSON EDGAR WINFRED CHAMBERLAIN OSCAR THOMAS CLOSE WILLIAM GARLAND COLEMAN ALLEN BLOW COOK WILLIAM BAMFORD CROCKETT LAURENCE MAJOR DICKERSON MARY LOUISE DRAKE JACK WILLIAM EVANS MAJL EWING PAUL HENRY FARRIER BENJAMIN FLOYD FLICKINGER WALTER S. FLORY. JR. WALTER EDWARD GARBER RICHARD CECIL GARLICK JAMES MONTROSE GRAHAM. JR. EDWARD WADSWORTH GREGORY. JR. CLARA SHEPHERD HADEN LEWIS MACHEN HAMMOND AMY OTLEY HANKINS TINSLEY CARTER HARRISON EMORY QUINTER HAWK EARL CHESTER HOLSINGER MAJORIE FELICE IRWIN LUCY THWEATT jONES DAYTON McCUE. KOHLER GEORGE GAINES LECKIE HERMAN LERNER RUTH FRETWELL LEWIS LOWREY LOVE, JR. MALCOLM LORIMER MAcLEOD FRANK MARSHALL. JR. FRANCIS CLAIBORNE MASON JAMES RICHARD MORT JOHN HULON MOTE CHAUNCEY w. NEWTON CHARLES ROLLIN LORAIN ODOR NICHOLAS EWING OGLESBY '. HARRY MARVIN PEARSON MARTHA ELIZABETH REED HAZEL SAWYER HIRAM M. SHOWALTER KATHERINE GROSECLOSE SIEG RUDOLPH AMMEN SMITH EDWARD CARL STEVENSON EDWARD LELAND STEWART WILLIAM FRANKLIN STINESPRING WILLIAM JACOB STIREWALT JOSEPH ROBERT TAYLOR MARY OLIVIA THOMPSON WILLIAM LOGAN THRELKELD MONTIE MORTON WEAVER JOSEPH WEEKS JAMES GILMER WHARTON THOMAS WALLACE WHITAKER THOMAS AUBREY WHITE. FLOYD HENRY WIRSING WHITING FAULKNER YOUNG r A A 4,. o 7 . I I EN m5 ADUATE DEPARTMENT u CSTONE AGE1 1 ---:2?:E-EET' Tkw was MON?- 0; 3:. EE: 6W5 1km 0; bawdy, as a A tr F1 OFFICERS ANDREW JACKSON EASTWOOD .............................................. President JOHN L. VAUGHN ......................................................... Vicc-Prcsidcnl E. RUFFIN JONES. JR .................................................. Sccrelary-Trcasurcr D. A. GRAHAM ................................................................. Historian DEPARTMENT OF GRADUATE STUDIES NAME YEAR IN UNIVERSITY HOME ADDRESS EDWIN ANDERSON ALDERMAN, JR ...... 6 ......................... University. Virginia B.A., University of Virginia Cb I' A; Skull and Keys: P. K. Society; Managing Editor Virginia Reel, l926-27; Manager Lacrosse, I926; Baseball Adjunct. 1924-25; Dean's List; Owl; Virginia Players. 1928-29. BENSON SUESSEROTT ALLEMAN ....... 3 ..................... Gettysburg. Pennsylvania 85. DANIEL POPE ALLEN .................... l ......................... Clarksville. Virginia B.A.. Hampden-Sydney College EDWARD ALVEY. JR ...................... 4 .......................... Richmond. Virginia MARION H. ANCELL ..................... 5 .......................... University, Virginia MELVIN WINFREY AYLOR .............. 5 ............................. Aylor, Virginia ROBERT HARVIE BARKER .............. l ........................... Danville, Virginia HARVEY FRANCIS bAUCH. Ill .......... I .............................. Rogers. Texas RICHMOND THOMAS BELL .............. 2 ....................... Milwaukee. Wisconsin 8.5.. University of Wisconsin II K A; Instructor in Chemistry. ALVIN BLOCKSOM BISCOE .............. l ....................... Wlilmington. Delaware 8.5.. Dickinson College 8 X; 43 B K; O A K; A K 4!; Instructor in Economics. I1901 I Craduale Class I NAME YEAR IN UNIVERSITY HOME ADDRESS CLARENCE JOHN MARTIN BLUME ...... I ...................... Concord. Massachusetts HAZEL LEE BRELAND ................... 2 ....................... CoIIeevIIIe. Mississippi WILLIAM ORLANDO BRISTOW. JR ....... 5 ........................... Franklin. Virginia 5.. University of Virginia d! l' A; P. K. Society; T.I.L.K.A.: Glee Club. I924-25: Assislant Manager BasebaII. I928; Manager BasebaII. I928; Dean's Lisl; Inlcrfralemily Council; Vice-Prcsidcnt P. K. Sociely. I923; Assistant in Philosophy. EDGAR DUFFIELD BROOKE ........................................ Roano'm Virginia EdiIor- -I-n -CIIIef of the VIrgInIa Rch. I928- 291: PresIdenl and Business Manager of Glee Club I928-29; Edilor-in-Chief of College Topics I928-29; Business Manager of VIrng'a Spcclator. I927-28; Vicc-Preaidcnt of Jefferson Sociely. I927-23; B.A. Degree. June. I928; Applicant for M.A. Degree. EngIIsh Assistanl. I9Z7-28. I928-29; Intermediate Honors. I927-28. FLORENCE dc LAUNAY BUFORD ........ 4 ........................... Edgerlon, Virginia 8.5.. Universily of Virginia JAMES MADISON BUTLER ............... 5 ............................ Suffolk. Virginia EMILY SINCLAIR CALCOTT ............. 3 ........................... Norfolk. Virginia 35.. Slate Teachers College of FarmviIIe ARCHER STUART CAMPBELL ........... 2 ......................... Lynchburg. Virginia 3.5.. Universily of Pennsylvania 9 X; Instructor in Accounting. JEANNETTE SEEDS CARTER ............ 4 .......................... University. Virginia B.S.. Universily of Virginia LUCIAN HUGH CARTER ................. I ......................... CIincIIporl. Virginia CLAYTON DOUGLAS CARUS ............. I .......................... University. Virginia ALICE ELIZABETH CLARKE ............. I ......................... Baltimore, Maryland OSCAR THOMAS CLOSE ................. 3 ............................ Shamrock. Texas B.A.. Davis EIItins College; 3.5.. Universily of Virginia 1b A 9; A H: 0 A K: IMP; T.I.L.K.A.; Varsity FoolbaII. I927-28; Varsity BasebaII. I928; Varsity Club: 3-3-3 CounciI; C. A. A. Board; Coach Comminec; German Club. ELTON C. COCKE ......................... 5 .......................... RockaIIe. Virginia Research Fellow in Biology. 3.5.. Universily of Virginia ALLEN BLOW COOK ..................... Z ........................... Norfolk. Virginia JOHN JAY CORSON, III .................. 4 ...................... CharlollesviIIe. Virginia WILLIAM BAMFORD CROCKETT ........ 2 ...................... CharIoltesviIIe, Virginia GEORGE LEWIS CUNNINGHAM ......... 2 ....................... Greer. South Carolina B.A.. Universily of South Carolina EDWARD GREENE DAVIS. JR ............ I ....................... Balon Rouge. Louisiana CHARLES WHEATLEY DAWSON ........ 7 .......................... University. Virginia LAURENCE MAJOR DICKERSON ......... 2 ........................ Massaponax. Virginia 8.5.. WilIiam and Mary CoIIege LEONARD CHAPMAN DRAKE ........... I ............................ Buford. Georgia MARY LOUISE DRAKE .................. I ........................ Waynesboro, Virginia ANDREW JACKSON EASTXVOOD ........ 2 ......................... WcIIVIIIe. Virgima B.A.. UniversIly of RicIImond ROBERT LEWIS ECHOLS ................. 5 .......................... University. Virginia B.S.. University of Virginia X It; A H; EII Banana; Inslruclor in Malhemalics. llsIll I Cradualc Class I NAME YEAR IN UNIVERSITY HOME ADDRESS JACK W. EVANS .......................... 5 ......................... Lynchburg. VIrgInIa 3.5., University of Virginia 2 A E. MAIL EWING ............................ 3 .......................... EvanvaIIe, Indiana B. A.. University of the South MARY NORWOOD FISHBURNE .......... 2 ...................... CharIolIeIVIIIe. Virginia OSCAR GARTH FITZHUGH .............. 5 ........................... Lignum. VIrgInia BENJAMIN FLOYD FLICKINCER ......... I ........................ Winchester. Virginia WALTER S. FLORY JR .................... I ........................ Bridgewater, Virginia CLAUDE FREDERICK .................... I ...................... CI'IlI'IOIIcIVIIIc. Virginia WALTER EDWAR GARBER .............. 3 .............................. PIIII. Virginia RICHARD CECIL CARLICK. JR ............ I .......................... Richmond, Virginia JAMES MONTROSE GRAHAM, JR ......... 6 ................... Ml. Lebanon. Pennsylvania 8.5.. UnIvenIly of Virginia ADWIN WICFALL GREEN ............... 2 ...................... CharIollevaIIe. VIrgInIa WESLEY HAMMOND GREENE ........... I ......................... University. Virginia CLARA SHEPHERD HADEN ............. 4 ...................... CharIollevaIIe, Virginia SAM RUTHERFORD HALL ............... 2 .................... MooreIIcId. West Virginia B.A.. Washington and Lee University LEWIS MACHEN HAMMOND ............ 4 .......................... Cqueper. Virginia B.A.. University of Virginia d, K E; QI B K; A II; German Club; EII Banana; Raven Society; Intermediate Honors; Dean's List. I926-27; Fin! Year Football Squad, I925: FIrsI Year Track Team. I925; Varsity Track Squad. I926-27; Assislnnt in Philosophy. TINSLEY CARTER HARRISON ........... I .......................... Hampton. Virginia FRANCES ELIZABETH HARSHBARGER. 2 ...................... Port Republic. Virginia B.A.. Bridgewaler College DAN MANVILLE HARTLEY .............. I .................... BarnweII, South Carolina EMORY QUINTER HAWK ................ 3 ............................ BrIsloI, Tenneue B.A.. DaIevIIIe College MARGARET HESS ........................ 2 ..................... Drewry's BIuE. Virginia CECIL BOLTON HEWSON ................ 2 ...................... Charlottesville. Virginia MARGARET RANDOLPH HITCHCOCK.. I ............................. ProIIIl. Virginia EARL CHESTER HOLSINCER ............ I ......................... Broadway, Virginia SELESE HUNTER ......................... I ............................... Waco. Texas MARJORIE FELICE IRWIN ............... 2 ............................. Normal. Illinois B.A.. Lynchburg College CECILE JULIETTE JOHNSON ............. I ......................... Baltimore. Maryland E. RUFFIN jONES, JR ...................... 5 ............................ Norfolk. Virginia B.A.. UnIversIly of Virginia Instruclor In BIoIogy; Baskel- baII Squad. I927- 28. LUCY THWEATT JONES ................ 6 ...................... CharIoIlcvaIIc. VIrgInIa B...A M5. Universily of Virginia CATHERINE DEVAUL KEMP ........................................ Norfolk Virginia BS. Slate Teachers 3CoIIege of FarvaIIe I192I CORKS 8 CU RLS I Graduate Class 1 NAME YEAR IN UNIVERSITY HOME ADDRESS DAYTON MCCUE KOHLER ............... I .................. Wormleyburg, Pennsylvania B.A.. Gettysburg College tPEKzIPBK. NATHANIEL PRUDEN LAWRENCE. JR.. . 2 ........................... Bristol. Tennessee WILLIAM LESTER LEAP ................. I ...................... CharlollesviIIe, Virginia HERMAN LEARNER ...................... 4 ............................ Orange. Virginia B.A., University of Virginia A E II. GEORGE GAINES LECKIE ............... 5 ......................... Richmond, Virginia 35.. University of Virginia 2 A E. LOWREY LOVE, JR ....................... I ...................... Halliesburg. Mississippi MALCOLM LORIMER MACLEOD ........ 8 ...................... New York. New York 3.5.. University of Virginia FRAgII; MARSHALL, JR ................... I .......................... Chatham. Virginia FERNANDO MARTINEZ .................. 2 ....................... Camp de Cam. Spain 35., OgIelhorpe University FRANCIS CLAIBORNE MASON ........... 7 ........................... Norfolk, Virginia ARTHUR MAZTCK. JR .................... 4 ................... Burlington. South Carolina JANET HAMILTON MEADE .............. 4 ......................... University. Virginia JOSEPH RODDEY MILLER JR ................................ Rock Hill. South Carolina B...A Erskine College; M. A., University of Virginia JAMES RICHARD MORT ................. I ............................ Bristol. Virginia JOHN HULON MOTE ..................... 2 ......................... Monticello. Georgia 35.. MS., University of Georgia CARL HlRAM MCCONNELL .............. 2 ...................... East Rndford, Virginia CHAUNCEY WAYLAND NEWTON ....... I .......................... BIueEeId. Virginia JOSEPH EMERSON NEWTON ............ I ................... Philadelphia, Pennsylvania CHARLES ROLLIN L. ODOR ............. 3 ......................... Lynchburg, Virginia JEANETTE OSBORNE .................... 2 ...................... LawrenceviIIe, Virginia 3.5., University of Virginia IDA ADAMS PATERSON ................. 2 ..................... Newport News. Virginia B.A., RnndoIph-Macon Woman's College CALVIN HALL PHIPPINS ................ I ........................ Fork Union, Virginia WALTER LEON RANDOLPH ............. I .......................... Bankslon. Alabama MARTHA ELIZABETH REED ............ I ......................... Blackstone. Virginia VARINA MOORE RHODES ............... 3 ......................... University. Virginia ESMOND ROBERT RIEDEL ............... I ........................... Holland. Virginia JOHN MAXWELL ROBESON, JR .......... 6 ......................... Lynchburg. Virginia 8.3.. Universily of Virginia A T A; Instructor in Biology. CHARLES CEPHAS RODEFFER .......... Z ........................... Slaunlon. Virginia ELISE ANDERSON RODGERS ............ I .......................... FarmviIIe. Virginia JEANETTE HOWE RUSTIN .............. 3 ......................... University, Virginia HAZEL SAWYER ......................... I ...................... CharIoIlenviIIe, Virginia I193J I Graduate Class I NAME YEAR IN UNIVERSITY HOME ADDRESS ROBERT FRANCIS SELDEN .............. 6 .......................... Hampton. Virginia 35.. University of Virginia ROBERT WATSON SEVERANCE ......... I ..................... Florence. South Carolina NAOMI POWELL SHEPPE ............... 2 ........................... Slaunlon. Virginia HIRAM MILLER SHOWALTER ........... I .................... Dale Enterprise, Virginia GEORGE NELSON SHOWER ............. I ....................... Manchcslcr. Maryland KATHERINE CROSECLOSE SIEC ........ I ........................ ChurchviIIe, Virginia JANE CHAPMAN SLAUGHTER .......... I ......................... University. Virginia GEORGE WELLINGTON SMITH .......... 2 ..................... Mimintown. Pennsylvania B.A.. M.A.. Gettysburg College RUDOLPH AMMEN SMITH ............... I ........................... Fincaslle. Vitginia EDWARD COLLINS SMITHER ............ I ............................ Wecms. Virginia LELAND BRADLEY SNODDY ............ 2 ......................... Lexington, Kentucky WILSON THOMAS SOWDER ............. 3 ...................... Rocky Mount. Virginia GERALD CORWIN SPEIDEL .............. 6 ......................... Matamorns. Virginia DAVID ROLSTROM STEVENS ........... I ....................... Birmingham. Alabama EDWARD CARL STEVENSON ............ 5 ......................... Richmond. Virginia EDWARD LELAND STEWART ........... I ....................... Lumberlon. Mississippi WILLIAM FRANKLIN STINESPRINC ..... 7 ....................... Harrisonburg, Virginia B.A., University of Virginia I? B K; Colonnade Club; Instructor in Greek; Virginin Orchestral Society. JAPEZ CURRY STREET .................. I ........................ Bridgewater. Virginia ARTHUR STOVALL ...................... 2 ...................... Charlottesville. Virginia JOHN EDGAR STROUD .................. I ...................... Chapel Hill. Tennessee ROBERT JOSEPH TAYLOR .............. I ........................ Louisville. Mississippi CALISLE MONROE THACKER ........... 2 ................. St. Matthews. South Carolina 35., The Citadel MARY OLIVIA THOMPSON .............. I ........................... Bedford. Virginia RALPH RUDOLPH THOMPSON .......... 7 ......................... HunlsviIIe. Alabama B.A.. University of Virginia WILLIAM LOSAN THRELKELD .......... 2 ......................... University. Virginia B.A., Georgetown College JOSEPH LEE VAUGHAN ................. 6 ......................... University. Virginia B.A., M.A.. Universily of Virginia HARRY MORTON WALDRON ........... 2 ........................... Thulon, Virginia B.A.. University of Richmond HAZWELL HUNTER WALKER ........... 3 ........................ Baltimore. Maryland LINWOOD HUGHES WARWICK ........ IO ...................... Charlollesvillc. Virginia 85.. University of Virginia MONTIE. MORTON WEAVER ............ 2 ...................... Lansing. North CaroIina 35.. Emory and Henry College JOSEPH WEEKS ......................... 2 .......................... Manakin. Virginia JOHN ELMER WELDON ................. 2 .......................... Sanders. Kentucky B.A., Universily of Kentucky JAMES GILMER WHARTON ............. I ................... SmilhviIIe. North Carolina IMHI I Graduate Class I YEAR IN UNIVERSITY HOME ADDRESS THOMASE WALLACE WHITAKER ........ 2 ........................ Monrovia. California BUS University of California THOMAS AUBREY WHITE ............... 5 .................. Wilmington. North Carolina CECILIA YOUNG WILLARD .............. l ..................... Hickory. North Carolina JOSIAH JAMES WILLARD ..................................... Hickory, North Carolina K A. B.A. Davidlson College ERWIN WOOD WILLIAMS ............... 6 ....................... King George, Virginia LOUISE MILLER WILKES ................ 3 ......................... University. Virginia EUSTACE EVANS WlNDES .............. 2 ......................... University, Virginia 35.. M.A.. George Washington University ROBERT CORNELIUS WINCFIELD ....... 2 ......................... Kenbridge, Virginia FLOYD HENRY WIRSING ................ l ......................... Univetsily, Virginia EVERLY JOHN WORKMAN .............. I ......................... University. Virginia CHARLES CONRAD WRIGHT ............ l ........................ Bridgewater. Virginia WHITINC FAULKNER YOUNG ..................................... Hampton. Virginia BS HMS College of Willlam and Mary brsowm MSW W 541;sz I1961 'W 5 7t. MS, V irginia ,3 Heritage One often wonders if it is true, That uthe old order changeth to the new W hen one sees these things that cannot die. That watch from their throne the years slip by. Tradition, custom, must ever stand And with things immortal go hand in hand. Beauty and laughter will always stay When all else has foreVer passed away. In this world of ours most things must die, Such tiny, paltry things as you and I. To some, Eternity downs its bars And they find their resting place with the stars. Man builds and quickly turns to destroy That which he builds as a child with a toy. But V irginids heritage doth stand Unshalfen against his destructive hand. And so we'll see her strong and steadfast. A monument to Truth until the last. Her beauty will ever be unmarred, H er standards will float high, unstained, unscarred. W. R. MARTIN. I'196J CORKS 6 CURLS Woodrow Wilson's Student Days at the University of Virginia By RICHARD HEATH DABNEY . HOSE who know only the public ' ? career of Woodrow Wilson know little of him as a mere human being. Many of his opponents. for example, while admitting that he was a man of intellect. imag- ine that he was heart- less. selfish and cold. If such persons could read a number of the letterhranging in date f r o In February lst, 188', to December 29th. l922-received from him by the writer. they would see the absurdity of this idea. Some of these letters are lost; but ninety-six of them are still in my possession. a nd the more important of these prove that few men have ever felt more intense affection for their wives. their par- ents or their friends than did he. Few even of his admirers are aware that this man. carrying the weight of the world on his shoul- ders. and finally stricken down by tragic illness in the midst of his heroic struggle to bring lasting peace to mankind. had a heart full of fun and a mind bubbling over with humor. Who of e '. I'o; A'f' h Woodrow Wilson. as a University Student those who think of statesmen as always majestic and always walking on stilts dream that Wilson. as a law-student. among in- timate friends. cut capers and didos like any other youth? Who could imagine that he and the writer were wont to address each other then, and for years afterwards, as uiilimitable idiot and thou very ass ? In the autumn of 1879 Thomas Wood- row Wilsonefor that was his full name, and many of his friends called him Tommy ecame to the Univer- sity of Virginia to study law. Being my- self at the beginning of my second year in the academic department. it was therefore not my privilege to be Wil- son's classmate. I did. however. have the good luck to have a room close to his. which was the one on the first Hoor of House F. Dawson's Row. at the southwest corner of the houseemy own room being 13 Monroe Hill. Why there is no tablet to indicate that Wilson lived in House F, I do not know. For he spent the entire session of 11971 1879-'80 there. but only three months of the next session in 31 West Range. being obliged to leave the University at Christmas on account of obstinate dyspepsia. It was only by good luck that my room was so near his during his first session. but it was by deliberate choice that I secured 37 West Range the next year in close proximity to his room. During 1879380 he boarded with the Misses Ross. who fed about eighty students in the room at the south end of West Range. where the classes in Music now meet. I also got my meals there, although I did not sit at the table with Wilson. We were table companions. how- ever. when. the next year. we changed to Massie's dining room at the other end of West Range. where the physiological laboratories are now situated. Another piece of good luck for me was that Wilson. who had joined no fraternity at Princeton. where fraternities were forbidden by the faculty. had heard good reports of the one to which I happened to belong. the Phi Kappa Psi. No wonder. then. that. since I liked Wilson immensely from the first day I met him. I soon proposed him for membership. Nor can there be any wonder that I have ever since been proud of having enticed such a goat into the fold. Seeing as much of him as I did. it did not take me long to discover that he was one of the ablest and linest men among all my contemporaries. Nor did it take many months for many others to discover that he was no ordinary man. At the present day. when the passion for football. pugilism and other intercollegiate contests has so overshadowed every- thing else that many students are probably not even acquainted with the location of the Washington and Jefferson Literary Societies. it would be much more difticult for a man like Wilson to become prominent. Such a man woula now be a mere nonentity in com- parison with any member of the football or boxing team. But in Wilson's day there was not a single intercollegiate contest between any team representing the University and that representing any other institution. There was a boat club which held an annual ubumping race on the Rivanna. and which sent a crew to rowain the summer, after the end of the session-against the crews of such cities as Richmond. Washington. Fredericksburg and Petersburg. There was also an annual intramural field day, when foot-races, jumping matches. etc.. were held. There was also a gymnasium. without instructor. in the building. now occupied by students. at the south end of East Range. In, I believe. 1877-78. there had been a baseball team which had been trounced by Washington and Lee, which had a pitcher who could do what was then a new thing. viz.. pitch a curved ball. Being very fond of baseball. I tried hard to get up a team in my first session. but we never got so far as to arrange a match with Washington and Lee or any other college. Wilson was also fond of baseball, and he and I used to get out behind House F and throw a ball to each other. but I do not remember that we ever played an actual game together. To the modern student. accustomed as he is to the excitement of a series of athletic contests extending from early fall to late spring. to picking and choosing among an endless succession of moving picture shows tnot to speak of regular theatrical performances. con- certs. eth. to joy-rides in automobiles and to other diversions. student-life in Wilson's clay seems perhaps appallingly dull. Nor will the modern student think it was any gayer when he learns that lectures were not suspended during the examination periods. and that the one and only holiday during the entire session was Christmas Day. But the notion that student- life at that time was a bore may perhaps be modified when we reflect that a man's happiness depends much less upon external things than upon his own mental attitude and his own Ilttal internal resources. If a manis heart is young, if his hopes are high his ideals lofty and his ambition keen. he will not find life dull. To Woodrow Wilson life at University of Virginia was far from being a bore. although automobiles and movies had not yet come into being, and although he feasted his eyes upon neither touchdowns nor straight-from-the- shoulder blows to the point of the jaw. His intense intellectual energy as well as his keen sense of humor would alone have saved him from boredom. even if he had had no diversions. But he did have diversions. His good tenor voice enabled him. for example. to join the Glee Club; and. although the eight fellows who composed it did not have the advantage of being trained by a Fickenscher or of taking trips to various cities. they were none the less able to enjoy themselves and to give enjoyment to the fair maidens under whose windows they sometimes stood and warblecl at dead of night. We fellows were perhaps more romantic in those days than students are now. Whether wisely or foolishly, we placed the fair sex upon a pinnacle. and then more or less bowed down and worshiped them. Yet we were not entirely serious in our sentimentalism. The jocose was mingled with the romantic. When a fellow was given to ardent pursuit of young ladies. he was said to be taking the calico ticket. a phrase which is now obsolete At that time a stu- dent who was less 1mpecunious than most of us would sometimes hire a buggy tanother word now almost obsoletel and take his girl to drive. If he drove by the gymnasium, some lynx-eyed youth taking exercise there would be sure to see the approaching buggy and would instantly raise the stentorian cry of CALICO! Whereupon all hands promptly leaped from gymnastic apparatus to the windows, in order to catch at least a Heating glimpse of the blushing maid. Woodrow Wilson was not one of the ardent calicoists who devoted more time to the calico ticket than they did to their scholastic tickets. But he did take calico in moderation. In fact. some of the young ladies whom he visited were so stirred by what they had heard of his eloquence in the Jeff Society that some of their friends induced that body to admit ladies to the hall one Saturday night when Wilson was to deliver an oration on John Bright. one of his favorites among English statesmen. This oration was afterwards printed in the Virginia University Magazine for March, 1880. But singing in the Glee Club and taking calico were not Wilson's only diversions. He was a member of a group of able students who used to meet at regular intervals to discuss seriously all sorts of questions. Wilsonis passionate interest in matters of govern- ment always led him to prefer political questions; but that preference did not keep him from joining in the discussion of other topics. although I well remember the disgust with which he told me that a member of the group mentioned above had proposed that the question for the next meeting be whether there be any fundamental difference between right and wrong. The weekly meetings of the Jeff. however. attorded Wilson his chief diversion. For he was able there to cultivate his great powers of oratory and debate in the discussion of questions in which his interest was intense. Strange to say. the most memorable debate in which he participated here was on the very question which. more than any other. broke the uSolid South in the recent presidental election. That question was: Is the Roman Catholic element in the United States a menace to American Institutions? The debate took place on the afternoon of April 2nd. 1880: and. as a larger crowd was expected than the uJett hall would hold, the ' Wash Society kindly offered its more capacious 115ml hall for the debate, which was for the medals annually offered by the Jeff. There were four contestants. Homor of North Carolina. Abney of South Carolina. Bruce, then of Virginia. but afterwards Senator from Maryland. and Wilson. The first two were excellent speakers, but Bruce and Wilson were undoubtedly their superiors. Between these two it was nip and tuck. So close indeed. was the contest that the faculty committee of judges were unable Of my memory be not a faulO to reach a decision before Monday. although the debate had been held on F riday afternoon. Their decision was that Bruce was entitled to the first prize and Wilson to the second. I never heard Bruce say whether he believed in the affirmative side of the question at the time when he upheld it so well in debate. I know. however. that Wilson did firmly believe in the negative side. which was the side that he maintained. His knowledge of American institutions and of general history was too sound, even then. for him to fear the bugaboo of papal domination in this country. Nor have I the slightest doubt that. had his life been prolonged until November 6th, I928. he would have cast his vote for the brilliant Governor of New York. Woonnow WILson's ROOM ON THE RANGE RECIPIENTS 3f EEREES DOCTORS OF MEDICINE JAMES ROBERT ADAMS ............................................... Charlottesville. Va. JOEL WILSON BAKER ..................................................... Roanoke. Va. RUFUS BRITTAIN ......................................................... Tazewell, Va. CALVIN THOMAS BURTON ............................................... Whitme . Va. JOHN ALFRED CALHOUN. JR ................................................ Ensley. Ala. PAUL DOUGLAS CAMP, JR ................................................. Franklin, Va. ELIZABETH COCKE COLE .................................................. Norfolk, Va. WILLIS FRANK COTTEN ................................................. McComb. Miss. JOHN HENRY COULTER. JR ................................................ Lacrosse. Va. JOHN E. COX .............................................................. Falkner. Miss. ALBERT MAY EADDY ................................................. Johnwnvillc. S. C. LOUIS HENRY EDMUNDS .................................................. Halifax. Va. DANIEL FALLIS ......................................................... Brooklyn. N. Y. CARSON LEE FIFER ...................................................... Wyoming. Del. JOSEPH BROWN GRAHAM .............................................. Talladega. Ala, LOREN PRITCHARD GUY .................................................. Norfolk, Va. EDWIN CROWELL HAMBLEN ........................................... Crecnville. Miss. EDWARD BUCHANAN HOLMES ...................................... North Holslon. Va. HUBERT BURNER HOLSINCER ...................................... McGaheysville, Va. WILLIAM RIELY JORDAN ................................................ Richmond. Va. PAUL KASS ............................................................... Houston. Texas VIRCIL LEONIDAS KELLY. JR ........................................... Oceans. W. Va. ROBERT LEONARD KING ................................................ Pearisburg. Va. WALTER JACKSON LACKEY ............................................. Fallslon. N. C. WILLIAM LOUIE LACY .................................................... Culpepcr, Va. MAX LANDMAN ....................................................... New York. N. Y. FORD KAWOOD LUCAS .............................................. East Redford, Va. PAUL MCFARLANE ...................................................... Scotlsville. Va. JOHN BRAXTON MCKEE ................................................... Sallville. Va. VINCENT GIULIANO MAGGIORE ...................................... Brooklyn. N. Y. VINCENT JEROME MEADS .............................................. Porismoulh. Va. OSCAR NOEL MORISON .............................................. Christianburg. Va. CECIL EDWARD NEWELL ............................................ Chattanooga. Tenn. CHESTER REEVES NUCKOLLS ............................................ Hillsville. VA. DAVID SHANKS PHLECAR. JR ........................................ Chrisliansburg. Va. FRANK COULSON PINKERTON .......................................... University. Va. VALENTINE LAWRENCE PUIC, JR ........................................ Laredo, Texas MILTON ELIAS ROBBINS ................................................ Brooklyn. N. Y. HERMAN COODRICH ROSE ............................................ New York. N. Y. I2011 HARRY jOHN SECKY ................................................ Astoria. L. L. N. Y. MORRIS SPINDEL ....................................................... New York. N. Y. CHARLES BAYNE STRINCFELLOW ...................................... University. Va. GEORGE M. STROLL .................................................... Brooklyn. N. Y. FRANK ELLSWORTH TAPPAN .......................................... Berryville. Va. FRANK FITZGERALD THWEATT. JR ..................................... Pelersburg. Va. DOUGLAS DORIOT VANCE ................................................ Bristol. Tenn. EMORY EWING WALTER ............................................. Challanooga. Tenn. CHARLE EDWARD WATSON. JR .......................................... Vnrina. N. C. JAMES WINSTON WATTS. H ............................................. Lynchburg. Va. THOMAS EPPS WILSON, JR ................................................. Clinton. Miss. JACOB WILKINS .......................................................... Richmond, Va. jOHN NORMAN WILKINSON ............................................. Culf'porl. Miss. JOHN FRANKLIN WOODWARD. JR ......................................... Norfolk. Va. PATRICK PlH-TSANC WU ............................................... Shanghai, China MAX YACHT ............................................................ Brooklyn. N. Y. BACH ELORS 0F LAWS HAMPTON PARTON ABNEY. JR .......................................... Sherman. Texas WILLARD LEE ALEXANDER ............................................. Florence. S. C. JOHN SUMMERFIELD ANDREWS .......................................... Roanoke. Va. RALPH BINCHAM AVERY .......................................... Cryslal Springs. Miss HOWARD W. BABCOCK .............................................. Williamson. W. Va. JOHN HENRY BENCKENSTEIN ........................................... Orange Texas CARLYSLE ALLEN BETHEL .............................................. Richmond, Va. PERRE BOWEN. JR ...................................................... SI. Leonard's. Md. WILLIAM LANG BRAMBLE .......................... . ..................... Norfolk. Va. PHILIP PARKS BURKS ..................................................... Bedford. Va. JOSEPH WILLIAM CHINN, JR ............................................... Warsaw. Va. GAVIN HAMILTON COCHRAN ............................................ Louisville. Ky. ASHLEY COCKRILL. JR ................................................. Little Rock. Ark. SOLON BERNARD COLEMAN ................................................ Snell. Va. ALTON INGRAM CROWELL ................................................ Pulaski, Va. T. FRANKLIN DANIEL ................................................... Blackslone. Va. JOHN HENRY HUTCHINGS DENNIS. JR ................................. Wiharlon. Texas THOMAS SOUTHARD ELLIS .......................................... WXashinglon. D. C. GORDON KENNETH EVANS ............................................. Pasadena. Cal. JOHN DOUGLAS FRY .................................................. Soulh Boslon, Va. JOSEPH STRAS CILLESPIE ................................................ Tazewell. Va. E. ROBERT CLAUBER ............................................... New York. N. Y. JOSEPH VINCENT CORMAN ............................................. Lynchburg. Va. RUSH CROCKETT CWYNN, JR ............................................... Marion. Va. JULIAN HARRIS ............................................................ Decatur. Ala. ALBERTIS SYDNEY HARRISON, JR ......................................... Alberla. Va. LAUFFER TRUBY HAYES .............................................. Logan, Wes! Va. BENTLEY HITE ........................................................... Snowville. Va. HARRY HOXVARD HOLT. JR ............................................... Hamplon. Va. THOMAS LEE HUTTON ......................... A ...................... Glade Springs. Va. RAYMOND LAVILLON JACKSON .......................................... Keswick. Va. JOHN HERBERT JOHNSON ............................................... XVaycross Ca. CARTER THOMAS LOUTHAN ............................................ Slaunlon. Va. WILLIAM ASBURY MCCLAIN. JR ....................................... Sweelwaler. Tenn. WILLIAM ROBERT MCELROY ............................................ University. Va. CHARLES DAMER MCKENDRICK ........................................ Baltimore. Md. LEO JOSEPH MEADS .................................................... Porlsmoulh. Va. 120-11 GUSTAVE ADOLPH PETERSON ........................................ Forcslville. Conn. ALFRED B. PITTMAN. JR ................................................. Memphis. Tenn. HARRY WILSON PORTER. JR ................................................ Louisa, Va. GEORGE JOHNSTON PUCH ................................................ Norfolk. Va. JOHN BARTON RETTEW. JR ............................................ PhiladelpHia. Va. CARROLL LEE. RICHARDSON .............................................. Marion. Va. LEWIS REYNER SAMET .............................................. Newporl News. Va. WILLIAM PENDLETON SANDRIDCE. JR ................................... Danvillc. Va. MARTIN SPECTOR ........................................................ Slaunlon, Va. ROBERT STUART STARCHER ...................................... Hunlinglon. West Va. JOHN CORNELIUS STENNIS .............................................. DcKalb, Miss. CHARLES STRAUB ........................................................ Helena, Ark. WALTER HARRY STROMENGER ....................................... Pelhnm. N. Y. CHARLES WILLIAM SUBLETT ............................................ Danville, Va. RUPER VERDUN SURRATT ............................................ Burlingtan. N. C. JOHN LUTHER WALKER ........................................... ' ..... L ynrwood. Va. JAMES RAIFORD WATSON .............................................. Lexington. Miss. ROBERT EDWARD WEBB ................................................. Mayfneld. Ky. GEORGE MACDUFF WEEMS .............................................. Ashland. Va. LYLE GROVE WELLER .................................................... Slavnlon. Va. BERT CALLITAN WETHERBY ........................................ Johnson Cily. Tenn. CHARLES FRANKLIN WILLIAMSON ...................................... Pelersburg. Va. VICTOR PETERS WILSON ................................................ Hampton, Va. JOHN WOOD. JR ........................................................... Frederick. Md. MCDONALD EDWARD WRENN ............................................ Norfolk. Va. BACHELORS OF SCIENCE IN ENGINEERING CHARLES HALL DAVIS. JR ............................................... Petersburg. Va. HARRY DOUGLAS FORSYTH ............................................... Esmonl. Va. EDWARD FRUTH JOACHIM .......................................... Charlottesville, Va. DONALD GRANT MACDONALD .......................................... Lcesburg. Va. JOHN HENRY PHILLIPS ................................................ Winlergrcen. Va. WALTER LEE PHILLIPS. JR ............................. ' .................. R ichmond. Va. CHARLES BOOCHER REED ................................................ Marion. Ky. DANIEL HARRISON RISHER .............................................. Universily. Va. WILLIAM MINOR LILE ROGERS .......................................... Covington, Va. EDWARD CARL STEVENSON ............................................ Richmond. Va. GILBERT CARLETON UNCER. JR .................. . ...................... Richmond. Va. HARRISON WILLIAMS. JR ................................................. Lecsburg, Va. CIVIL ENGINEER JULIUS FRANKLIN HUNT ............................................... Wingdale. N. Y. MECHANICAL ENGINEER EDWARD FRUTH JOACHIM .......................................... Charlollesville. Va. BACHELORS OF SCIENCE IN EDUCATION BESSIE S. ANDERSON ................................................. Charlollesville. Va. ESTELLE BEALE. .......................................................... Smilhfleld. Va. LINDA SPARKS BERREY ............................................... Criglersville. Va. CARSON M. BRADLEY ...................................................... Luray. Va. ANNE LlLLlAN CALKINS ................................................ University. Va. I 2031 JOSIAH BEATTY McELROY CARTER ...................................... Red Hill. Va. OSCAR THOMAS CLOSE .............................................. Charlottesville. Va. HELEN LUCILE EASTHAM ........................................... Charlottesville, Va. ALBERT WESLEY FRANCIS ................................................ Marion. Va. EDGAR ALLEN GOBLE .................................................... Hohton. Va. LAURA BLANCHE GREGORY ................................. . .......... South Hill. Va. EULA MAE GRIFFIN ..................................................... Porlsmoulh. Va. CLARA SHEPHERD HADEN .......................................... Charlottesville. Va. RUTH SCHWARZ HART ............................................... Winter Park. Fla. OTEY BROOKE HELM ..................................................... Roanoke. Va. ELEANOR FRANCES HUNTLEY ............................................ Ashland, Ky. ODELL MAY LAVINDER .................................................... Salem. Va. CENORA MCFADDIN ...................................................... Lebanon. Va. JOHN OSEPH MORRIS ...................................................... Pirkey. Va. ELLA CORE REEVES ................................................. Bridgewater. Va. MAUD RENSHAW ...................................................... Philadelphia. Pa. VARINA MOORE RHODES ................................................ University. Va. MARY ALBRIGHT STINESPRING ........................................ Universily. Va. GLADYS VIRGINIA STONE. ............................................... Richmond, Va. SARAH FRANCES THORNTON ........................................... Richmond. VI. LOUISE MILLER WILKES ................................................. University. Va. BACHELORS OF SCIENCE IN ARCHITECTURE FRANCISCO DEPAULA CARRAL ....................................... Mexico City. Mex. WILLARD EDWARD STAINBACK ...................................... Henderson. N. C. MARSHALL SWAIN WELLS .............................................. Univenily. VI. ABNER JAY ZERMAN ............................. . ................... East Orange. N. J. BACHELOR OF SCIENCE IN CHEMISTRY THOMAS AUBREY WHITE ............................................ Wilmington, N. C. BACHELORS OF SCIENCE IN COMMERCE WILLIAM jUNIUS ALLEN .................................................. Norfolk. Va. ANDREW RUSSELL BARBEE ................................................ Orange. Va. GARLAND CECIL BOOTHE ................................................ Roanoke. Va. CHARLES WILLIAM COWL ............................................ Harrimnburg. Va. FRANK DOMlNICK MEAD ................................................ Baltimore. Md. ALEXANDER QUERY ................................................ New Rochelle. N. Y. PAUL BOOKER ROBINSON .................................................. Piqua, Ohio WILLIAM HENRY SORTOR ............................................ Englewood. N. J. GEORGE BLESH WELCH .................................................... Lake. Miss. BACHELORS OF SCIENCE RICHARD ALPHONZO BILLUPS. JR .................................. Oklahoma City. Okla. JAMES BAYLOR BLACKFORD ........................................... Richmond. Va. DAVID GERALD BRESS ........... . . . .Norfolk. Va. WILLIAM ORLANDO BRISTOW, J ........ Franklin. Va. JAMES GUNN BROWNE ................................ Charlollcsvillc. Va. JACK LEON CANTOR .................................................... Petersburg. VA. BICKERTON WINSTON CARDWELL ...................................... Richmond, Va. FRANK MASON CHUBB ............................................ Mt. Washington, Md. JOHN EAGER CODMAN, ll .............................................. Philadelphia, Pa. I204l CORKS 6 CU RLS FRANK CASSAWAY DAVIDSON. JR ....................................... Lynchburg. Va. CHARLES WHEATLEY DAWSON ......................................... University, Va. GEORGE HENRY DERIEUX. JR ....................................... Tappnhannock. Va. GEORGE JOSEPH DOLGIN .............................................. Brooklyn. N. Y. EARNEST DUPONT. JR .................................................... Wilmington. Del. JACK W. EVANS .......................................................... Lynchburg, Va. RALPH COMER MICHAEL FLYNT ...................................... Washingion. Ca. HARRY WILLIAM GILBERT ............................................ New York, N. Y. JULIAN BURKE GREENE .............................................. Washington. D. C. JAMES STAKELY HALL ................................................ Knoxville. Tenn. ROBERT WILLARD HICKSON ............................................ Lynchburg. Va. HENRY CLAY HOFHEIMER ................................................ Norfolk. Va. NATHANIEL LITTLETON HOLLAND ...................................... Easlville. Va. HARRY GILMAN HUDNALL .............................................. Covington. Va. QUINTUS HUTTER ...................................................... Lynchburg. Va. LAWRENCE KATZENSTEIN .............................................. Baltimore, Md. GORDON WHNSTON KENNERLY .......................................... BmIAh.Vm MAURY STAFFORD KNOWLTON ...................................... Perlhshirc. Miss. ABE. ALFRED KOBRE .................................................. Charlottesville. Va. GEORGE CAINES LECKlE ................................................. Richmond. Va. HERMAN MICHEL LEVINE ............................................ New York. N. Y. JACK NEAL LOTT. IR ..................................................... Johnston. S. C. LOUIS LOVENSTEIN ...................................................... Richmond. Va. MELVIN WOOD MCCEHEE ............................................ Carbon. West Va. WINFIELD SCOTT MACCILL. JR ........................................ Garrett Park, Md. JEROME IRVING MACHT ............................................... Crewe. Va. HARRY BRENT MACKOY. jR ............................................. Covington. Ky. JOSEPH MUIR MERCER ................................................... Savannah. Ga. ISRAEL IRVING MOUBER .............................................. New York. N. Y. EDWARD KING O'MEARA .............................................. Brooklyn. N. Y. OHN DABNEY PENICK .................................................. Montclair. N. J. LEDSOE COLHOUN PINKERTON ....................................... Baymne. N. EUGENE B. PUMPIAN-MINDLIN ................................... New York City. N. CHARLES HENRY ROSS ................................................. Memphis. Tenn. JOSEPH MARSH RUFFIN ................................................ Richmond. Va. RIDLEY MCLEAN SANDIDGE ............................................ Owensboro. Ky. LESTER SEBULSKY ......................................................... Flora. Miss. WILBUR LEONARD SHAPIRO ............................................ Baltimore. Md. WILLIAM CRAWFORD STEWART ........................................ Monroe. N. C. SAMUELCAMPSTONEHAM .............................................. Rule,VL LAWRENCE TURNER TRICE. ........................................... Howardsville. Va. THOMAS HARCOURT URMSTON ..................................... Chattanooga. Tenn. WARREN WHITE VIA ................................................. Charlollcsville. Va. JAMES HENRY WEBB. JR ................................................. Cherrydnle. Va. HENRY DAVIS WEED, JR ......................... ...Savannah. Ga. ROBERT EDWARD WESTMORELAND ................................... Pctersburg. Va. JAMES THOMAS WHITEHURST .......................................... Petersburg. Va. JOHN BLANTON WINN. JR ................................................ Versailles. Ky. ANNE SHIPPEN YOUNG .................................................. University. Va. BACHELORS OF ARTS GEORGE MURPHY ARMISTEAD ........................................ Little Rock. Ark. CHARLES LUNSFORD AYRB ............................................ Richmond. Va. GILBERT VALENTINE BECKER ........................................ Brooklyn. N. Y. EARL SAUNDERS BELOTE .............................................. Lynchburg. Va. ISAAC SEYBERT BEVERAGE ............................................. Monlerey. Va. I2051 ARMISTEAD LLOYD BOOTHE .......................................... Alexandria. Va. EDGAR DUFFIELD BROOKE .............................................. Universily. Va. JAMES YOUNG CAUSEY .............................................. Harriwnburg. Va. RANDOLPH ROYALL CLAIBORNE, JR ..................................... Camden. Ark. STUART COOKE. JR ....................................................... Richmond. Va. JOHN HARVIE CREECY .................................................. Richmond, Va. jAMES VANDEUSEN EPPES ........................................... Hopewell. Va. CHARLES GRAHAM EVANS, JR ......................................... Danvillc. Va. JULIAN BIXBY FITE .................................................... Muskogee. Okla. ARTHUR WILLIAM FORESTER ...................................... Tuxedo Park. N. Y. PATRICK ARMISTEAD GIBSON .......................................... Richmond. Va. JOSEPH WARREN GRAY .............................................. Brenlwood. Tenn. MARCELLUS CALHOUN GREEN .......................................... Jnckson. Miss. LAURA BLANCHE GREGORY ............................................ South Hill. Va. LEWIS MACHEN HAMMOND .............................................. Culpeper. Va. CHARLES DORSEY HARMON .......................................... Waynesboro. Va. JOSEPH CHAPPELL HUTCHESON. I .................................... Houston. Texas RALPH EMERSON KENNEDY .............................................. St. Paul. Va. HERMAN LERNER .......................................................... Orange. Va. HOWARD WEAVER MCCALL. JR ....................................... Challanooga. Tenn. CHARLES MORRIS NELSON .............................................. Richmond. Va. HOMER I. NOFFSINCER ................................................... Fincaslle. Va. CHARLES ROLLIN LORAIN ODOR ....................................... Earlysville. Va. BEVERLEY KENNON PATTON ............................................ Bon Air. Va. HAROLD LEE PRICE ........................................................ Luray. Va. AMES WHlTE RAWLES .................................................. Richmond. Va. UCILE RANDOLPH REAMEY .............................................. Vinlon. Va. ALBERT RHETT STUART ................................................ Euslover, S. C. TENCH FRANCIS TILCHMAN. JR ........................................... Norfolk. Va. FIELDING LEWIS WILLIAMS ............................................ Richmond. Va. CARY BRECKINRIDCE WILMER. JR ...................................... Sewnnee. Tenn. WILLIAM WYLLIE, JR ........................................... Sanlo Domingo Cily. D. R. BACHELOR OF ARTS WITH FINAL HONORS-FRENCH ROBERT CATESBY TALIAFERRO .......................................... Nuuall. Va. MASTERS OF SCIENCE GEORGE HUBERT AULL ........................................... Clemson College, 5. C. 3.5.. Clemson College EconomicQ Thesis: A Study of Marriage and Divorce in Country and Ciiy. CHARLES EDWARD BASS ................................................ Evinglon. Va. 8.3.. University of Virginia CeoIog3O Thesis: Geology and Pctrography of lhc Draper Quadrangle, Virginia ANTHONY BISCHOFF .............................................. Tracy's Landing. Md. 3.5.. Washington College Uiducalion Thesis: Standard Tests in High School. EMILY SINCLAIR CALCOTT ................................................ Norfolk. Va. 3.5.. Slate Teachers College of Farmville Englile Thesis: Doomsday in Mcdiaevnl English Literature. ARCHER STUART CAMPBELL ........................................... Lynchburg. Va. 3.5., University of Pennsylvania EconomicQ Thesis: Old Trading Methods and Organizations. JEANNETTE SEEDS CARTER ............................................ Universily. Va. 85.. University of Virginia U3iolugy Thesis: Observnlions on Rhabdococslcs of Albemarle County. Virginia. I2m:1 CORKS 8 CU RLS h . x I929 x6hex xhx f 7x 1h ' - 1 a 2 a hi 7 T A 7.7 5 , late h ' ELTON CROMWELL COCKE .............................................. Rockville. Va. 35.. Universily of Virginia hBiolog-w Thesis: The History of the Vegelalion of the Dismal Swamp as Determined by Fossil Pollen Analysis. ALICE CRAWLEY .......................................................... Prospect. Va. 35.. University of Virginia hEducalionh Thesis: Organization of lhe Malerial of Inslruclion in American History in Secondary Schools. THOMAS FINLEY DEBNAN ................................................ Squlk. Va. 3.5., University of Virginia hEconoml'cQ Thesis: Accounling for Depreciation of Machinery. WILLIAM jENNINGS EVANS ............................................ Columbus. Min. 3.5.. A. and M. College of Mississippi hPoIl'lical Sciencd Thesis: Outlines of National Administralive Organization. LLOYD HAROLD GRIFFIN ................................................ Portsmouth. Va. 3.5.. Virginia Polylechnic Inslilute hEducah'onh Thesis.- The Scientific Teaching of Reading in Rural Elementary Schools. ETHEL HONAKER ....................................................... Wytheville, VI. 85.. University of Virginia hEducalianh Thesis: A Testing Program for High Schools. LEWIS KERR JOHNSON ............................................... Charlottesville. Va. 3.5.. Universily of Virginia hEconomicQ Thesis: Labor Legislation in North Carolina. LOUISE LOVENSTEIN .................................................... Richmond. Va. 3.5.. Universily of Virginia hEninsD Thesis.- Poetry and Novels by American Negro Writers. CARL HIRAM MCCONNELL ............................................. East Redford, Va. 3.5.. Lynchburg College hBianggO Thesis.- Experimenlal Observations upon the Endodermal Glands of Pelmalohydra Oligaclis. FERNANDO MARTINEZ ............................................ Campo dc Case. Spain 8.5.. Oglethorpe University hSpanile ThesE: El Idiom: Espanol en Cuba y Las Diferencias que lo Dislinguen del Espanol Usado en apana. . MARY NICHOLS ........................................................... Roanoke. Va. 3.5.. Stale Teachers College of Farmville hEducalionh Thesis: An English Syllabus for the Junior High School Teachers' Use. JOHN MAXWELL ROBESON. jR ........................................... Lynchburg, Va. 83., Universily of Virginia hBioIogyh Thesis: A Study of lhe Fossil Pollen as Found in Peal from the Dismal Swamp Area of Virginia and North Carolina. HERMAN MOE. ROTH .................................................... Richmond. Va. ' - 85., University of Virginia hPhyaicQ Thests: Applications of Pholo-Eleclric Cells lo Timing with a Slandard Clock. JAMES BERNARD SAUNDERS ............................................ Kenbridge, Va. . 3.5.. Universily of Virginia hPhysicQ Them: The Vibration Calvanomelcr Observed Slroboacopically. ROBERT SMITH SIMPSON .................................................. Rosalyn, Va. 85.. Universily of Virginia UJoIilicaI Sciencd Thesis: Presidential Leadership in lhe United States. CHARLES C. WALTERS ................................................ Harrisonburg. Va. 3.5., University of Virginia hEconomicQ Thesis: Labor Legislation in Virginia. l2071 GEORGE MACDUFF WEEMS ............................................. Ashland. VII. B...S University of Virginia IEconomicQ ThesIs: The Virginia State Corporalion Commission and Its Valuation Theones. MASTERS OF ARTS EDWARD ALVEY, JR ..................................................... Richmond. Va. B.A., Universily of Virginia IEducalionI Thesis: Do Educational Gains. as Measured by Standardized Tesla. Testify Ability Grouping in English? MARY AURELIA BARTON ................................................. Raphine. Va. B.A.. Mary Baldwin College hEnglisM Thesis: The CrOWIh of Realism in Ihe Southern Novel Since the Civil War to I928. VIRGINIA LUCILLE BEAZLEY ........................................ Newport News. Va. B.A., ColIege of William and Mary hEngII'sM Thesis: Mediaevalism in the Poelry of John Keats. JOHN WESLEY BOITNOTT ............................................. Bridgewaler. VII. B.A., Bridgewaler College IEducaIIonI Them: The Turnover of Principals in the Rural Accredited High Schools of Virginia. JAMES BAKER BOWERS. JR ............................................... Richmond. Va. B.A., Hampden-Sydney College IHI'sloI-yI Thesis: Slavery and Secession Sentimenl in Virginia. l860-I86l. CECILE GREY DAVIS ...................................................... Sulherlin. VII. B.A., Lynchburg College IEngII'aIO Thesis: Certain Aspects of Symbolism in Hawthorne. BENJAMIN WILLARD DESHAZO ........................................... Danville. Va. B.A., Wake Forest College IEducalionI Thesis: The History and lhe Present Slalus of lhe Platoon Synlem of Schools in the United States. SALLY BORUM DIGCS .................................................... Matthews. Va. B.A., University of Wyoming IEninle Theu's: Some Relations between the Spanish Celestine and English Dramatic Lileralure. ANDREW JACKSON EASTWOOD .......................................... Wellville. Va. B.A., University of Richmond IEConamicO Thesis: Recent Tendencies Toward Scientiflc TaIiE-Making in the United Slales. VIVIAN FARLOWE ..................................................... New Church. Va. B.A., Western Maryland CoIIege 033010330 Theda: Algae of Ponds as Delermined by an Examination of lhe lnleslinal Contents of Tadpoles. L. A. DAFFAN GILMER .................................................... Houston. Tex. B.A., University of Virginia hLalI'nI Thesis: A Consideration of the Structure and Style of Cicero's Oralions. RUFUS CLAUDE GRAHAM ................................................ Jonesville. Va. B.A., Emory and Henry College hEducalionI Thesis: The Attitude of the People of Virginia Toward Ila Tax Support Schools and Educational Lilenlure in Magazines. CALLIE LOUISE GREER ...................................................... Lodi, Va. B.A., Emory and Henry College IEnglisH Thesis The Dutchman in the American Novel. HOWELL HOLMES GWIN .................................................. Atlanla Ga. B. A.. University of Virginia UEngIIsM Thesis: The lnHuence on Keats of Spenser. Millon and Shakespeare. CHARLES BANNER HAGAN ................................................ Bristol. Va. B.A., Emory and Henry College Ujoml'cal Sciencd Thesis: Mexican Properly Righls. Izoxj CORKS Ea CURLS SAM RUTHERFORD HALL ............................................ Mooreheld. W. Va. B.A.. Washington and Lee Univeraity tBialagLO Thesis: Obeservalion on Hydra and Pelmalohydrn under Delermined Hydrogen Ion Concentration. FRANCES ELIZABETH HARSHBARCER ............................... Port Republic, Va. B.A.. Bridgewaler College tHislorw Thesis: Women in the Feudal Regime. FREDERICK LANE HOBACK .............................................. Roanoke. Va. Them: No-13! Slack. B.A., Roanoke College Uiconomicd JOHN GORDON HOLT ....................................................... Tipton. Ga. B.A.. Furman University tEducaliont Thais: A Comparative Study of the Fourth Grade in the Schools of Tift County. Georgia. EDMUND RUFFIN JONES. JR ................................................ Norfolk. Va. 35., B.A.. University of Virginia tBiologyh Thesis: The Male Reproductive System of Prorhynchus Applanatus tKenncD. JESSIE PALFREY LEAKE ................................................... Stnunton. Va. B.A.. University of Alabama tEnglile Thesis: A Critic Among Critics: Macaulay and Hi: Contemporaries. IRVING LINDSEY ........................................................ Alexandria. Va. B.A., George Wnshinglon Universily tMalhemalicQ Thug: An Extension of the Point-lo-Line and Point-to-Place Distance Formulas lo N-Dimensional pgce. STUART 'ALEXANDER MCCORKLE .......................................... Murat. Va. B.A.. Washington and Lee University Uaolilt'cal Sciean Thesis: Our Recognition Policy Towards Mexico. DONALD RINEHART MILLER ............................................ Baltimore, Md. B.A.. Bridgewater College tEducalioM Thesis: A History of the High Schools of Virginia. FANNY HARRISON MILLS .............................................. Ruuellville. Ky. B.A.. Kentucky Wesleyan College tEninsIO Thesis: Nature Coloring in the American Novel with Emphasis upon Its Use in the Works of Craddock. Allen. Howells. Glasgow. Cather and Ostenso. IDA ADAMS PATERSON ............................................. Newport Newu. Va. B.A.. Randolph-Macon Woman's College tLatinh Thesis: A Chapter on the Charm of Lucretius. JOHN RANDOLPH PHILLIPS ............................................ University. Va. B.A.. University of Virginia UinglisM Thesis: A Study of the Social Revolt Found in John Calsworthy's Plays, Novels and Short Stories. CALVIN HALL PHIPPINS ................................................ Fork Union, VI. B.A.. Univerlity of Richmond tEducalionh - Thesis : A Comparative Survey of the Public and Private Secondary Schools of the State of Virginia. LUCILE DAVIS SHELBURNE ............................................. Richmond. Va. B.A.. Lynchburg College UEngHsM Thesis: Charlotte BronteACerluin ReHeclions of Her Life in Her Novels. MIRIAM MCKNIGHT SIZER .............................................. Rhodesville, Va. B.A.. William Ind Mary College tEngh'sD Thesis: Winston Churchill as a Novelist of Reform. RALPH RUDOLPH THOMPSON. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .' .................... Huntsville. Ala. B.A., University of Virginia tLalinh Thesis: The Classic Tradition of the Distinction between Rhythm and Metre. BERTHA PFISTER WAILES ............................................ Sweet Briar. Va. B.A.. Sweet Briar College tSociologw Thesis: Backward Virginians: A Further Sludy of the Win Tribe. I2091 CORKS 8 CU RLS HERBERT THOMPSON WEBSTER ....................................... Plymouth. Win. B.A.. Lawrence College iEnglile Thesis: The Underworld in the Eighteenth Century Novel. JOHN ELMER WELDON .................................................... Sanders, Ky. B.A.. Universily of Kentucky iEducalioni Thesis: Scientific Measurement in Education. JAMES ROWLAND WILDMAN ........................................... Wylheville. Va. B.A.. Universily of North Carolina iEducalioM Thesis: A School Survey of Wylheville and Wylheville District. ELSIE HORTENSE SMITH WILLIAMS ................................ Fredericksburg. Va. B.A., Western College for Women iLalini Thesis: Colloquialium in Terence. JOHN BASCOM WOLFE, ..................................................... Dryden, Va. B.A.. Emory and Henry College iEducaliovO Thesis: lnlramural Athletics in lhe High School. DOCTORS OF PHILOSOPHY RAYMOND DEAN COOL ................................................ Bridgewalcr, Va. 8.5., Bridgewnler College. M.S., Universily of Virginia iChcmislrw Disserlalion: The Kinetics of Polymorphic Transilions of Solids. TAYLOR SCOTT HARDING ............................................ Washington. D. C. B.A., Yale University M.A.. University of Virginia iEnglisM Dissertation: Aclaeon-A Sludy of Fox Hunting in Its Fundamental Relationships to English and Celtic Literature. WILLIAM STAPLETON LONG ............................................ Universily, Va. B.A.. Randolph-Macon College. M.A.. University of Virginia iEngII'aIO Dissertation: The Novels of Charles James Lever. FRANCIS ELLIOTT HALL MCLEAN ....................................... Hanover. Ind. BUS MS. 'Universily of Virginia iEnglisM Disserlalion: Periodicals Published In the South before '380. ISAAC TAYLOR MUSSER. JR ........................................... Eu! Radford. Va. 3.5.. M.S.. Universily of Virginia fEconomicQ Disserlalion: French American Trade Since I910. LEHMAN PATTON NICKELL .............................................. Hcrndon, Va. BS M.S.. Universily of Virginia iEconame Diuerlalion. Hislory and Economic Developmenl of the Port of Hampton Roads JOHN WILLIAM NUTTYCOMBE .......................................... Universily. Va. 3.5.. Virginia Polytechnic Inslilule hBiologyi Disserlalion: Observations on Stenoslomum. ARCHIBALD BOLLING SHBEPPERSON .................................... Universily, Va. B...A Washington and Lee University. M. A.. University of Virginia iEnglisH Disscrlalian: Types of the Burlesque Novel from Fielding to Thackeray. HENRY EDWIN SHIVER .............................................. Spartanburg. S. C. B.A.. Clemson College. M.A.. University of Virginia iChemislryi Disserlalion: The Equilibrium Between Creatinc and Creatinine. FLOYD FRANK SWERTFEGER ........................................... Pelersburg, Va. BS NL..5 Universily of Virginia Unhilowphyi Disserlallon: The System: dc Philosophie of Pierre Sylvain Regis. A study in the History of Carlesianism. f2101 A Ghost About the Lawn The heart of me: a glittering banquet hall Where ungrateful feasters drantt their fill Mid purple draperies and sitvered skill, Weeps for the tips of those who have sought me But were unwise until it was too late. My mouth was betrayed with kisses of lost pride. Litre the sodden drunkenness of tears F atting crazity on wine-drenched roses, As if the sorrows loosed from all the years Lay jumbled on the cracked marble steps Of this festooned, dead revel. . . . This same heart it Was that joyed in the singing Of a bird's swift twilight winging, A bright scar on the breast of a sunset: That wept as music stole from a slim waterfall, Felt purting to a moonlit beach, For it only breathed a certain quiet charm in life. The hnatity of ironclad rute, mli spirit's last desecration, Has COVered my heart with scales of regret: Can the mind of man or the hopes of youth Hide the sadness of former perfection, Which hung titre a ftame-point on the earth, Non: passed in a hasty scramble for modernity. . . . ISHAM KEITH, JR. CORKS 6 CURLS Poe and the University of Virginia By JAMES SOUTHALL WILSON HE University of Virginia had been open by a few days less than a year when the name of Edgar A. Poe of Richmond, Virginia. was entered on the matriculation book on February 17, 1826. The original group of buildings on the Lawn were not yet wholly completed. There was a make- shift library in one of the Lawn HPavil- ions and the libra- rian was himself a young student. The faculty consisted of some eight professors. able and scholarly. but for the most part foreigners with one year's residence in the country in which they were attempting to establish Mr. Jef- ferson's young Uni- versity on principles that blended the free- d o m of Virginia gentlemenH with boarding school re- strictions. s u c h as having the secretary of the faculty make the rounds of student rooms to see if the fellows were up and dressed and ready for work. That tempestuous little college. which we like to imagine so romantically with its F ounder looking protectingly down upon it from his Monticello mountain. was a very different environment from the great University that we know. uThe beginning of the University of Virginia was very bad. wrote George Long. the first classical professor to an English correspondent. And Edgar Poe from the first was surrounded by its turmoil. His two letters that survive. written to his foster father. are filled with references to the unrest. In May he wrote that the Grand Jury has put the students into a terrible fright. most of the fifty whose names were on the sheriffis list had run off a second time into the woods; there had been several fights. he added. among the students since Mr. Allan's visit to the University. At the time of his second letter. Septem- ber Zl tMr. Jeffen son had died between the dates of the two lettersi , he said again that there had been a great many fights lately and spoke of the consternation among the students at the prospect of exam- inations. He felt that it was hardly fair to examine those who had been in attendance only one session with those who had at- tended two. but was confident of coming off as well as the rest if he did not get fright- ened. With a touch of pride. after saying that the Rotunda was nearly finished. and the books had been removed into the library. I2131 he commented on the fine collection. He himself had enrolled with only two professors. Long in Latin and Blattermann in modern languages. and he justified his confidence in himself by passing with distinction in the Senior classes in Latin and in French. Years afterward in l875, Professor Long had only a feeble memory of Poe's name. which. he wrote. made him assured that he was not among his worst students and indicated that he was probably not among the very best. That he roomecl hrst on West Lawn and later on West Range. that he attended classes in Pavilions IV and V, then the homes of Blatter- mann and Long. that he had at least one fight himself. was only once before the Faculty and then as an innocent witness. that he broke up a little table in his room for the warmth of a visitor on one of his last nights at the University. and that he mentioned to Thomas Wertenbaker this night that he had accumulated debts. vaguely remembered by Mr. Wer- tenbaker some fifty years later as about two thousand dollarszathese details are almost the only definite and authentic additional facts that we know about his life at the University. except what he himself wrote Mr. Allan in two letters from the University and another written in anger some years later. Most of the published reminiscences of fellow students written years later are untrustworthy. There is one letter. written by Dr. Miles George in l880 that bears evidence of more accuracy and that does not contradict other known facts. He seems to have known Poe fairly well. He said of the lad. He was very excitable and restless. at times wayward, melancholic and morose. but againein his better moods frolicsome. full of fun and a most attractive and agreeable companion.H He recalled. too, that he was fond of quoting poetic authors and reading poetic productions of his own. and would sometimes sketch uupon the walls of his dormitory. whimsical. fanciful and grotesque figures.n There we have. perhaps. the truth in miniature of the young Poe at the University of Virginia. Poe later. January 3, l830. in a bitter letter from West Point to his foster father, John Allan. when attacked for his fault in another matter. wrote a passionate defense of his conduct at the University of Virginia. and charged that it was wholly Mr. Allan's mistaken stinginess that led to all his diEiculties in Charlottesville. He put the expenses at the University as at least three hundred and fifty dollars a session and declared that Mr. Allan had sent him there with only a hundred and ten. When he sent Mr. Allan institu- tional bills, amounting to thirty-nine dollars more than he had given the boy. he had received from him only forty dollars. leaving Poe one dollar in his pocket: and not until near the close of the session did Mr. Allan send him the one hundred more that was all that he allowed him for the session. The result. Poe wrote. was that he was forced into debt and into the company only of students who were in circumstances like his own. Mr. Allan wrote on the letter that it was a most bare-faced. one-sided statement: and we cannot know where the truth rests. There were debts. certainly. however incurred. and they were the grounds given for Mr. Allan's refusal to allow Poe to return to the University. Altogether Poe's months at the University were probably not very happy ones but there is no reason to suppose that for that reason they were without important influences upon his life. Was any of the work that Poe later published written at the University of Virginia? It would be of course foolish to imagine that his mature poetry published long afterward was any of it conceived so early and the beginnings of his fiction-writing are quite evidently traceable to his early years in Baltimore. after he left the West Point Academy. Even IZHI poems like Al Aaraf and To Helen.n though Poe referred to them as productions of his very early youth. are pretty surely of a later date than the publication of his first volume. There are ten poems in the little volume. Tamerlane and Other Poems. published in Boston in the summer of 1827. Poe had entered the army as a private on May 26 and it is accordingly probable that each of the ten poems were written either at the Uni- versity of Virginia or in the five stormy months between the close of the college session in December and the enlistment. It is also reasonable to suppose that had there existed other verse of which he approved he would have included it in this thin little volume with its less than seven hundred lines of verse. Poe had left his University before he was eigh- teen but these poems. too, are youthful. F our of the ten poems were not used by Poe in his later collections and the other six were so greatly changed as to be new poems in effect. Yet there are lines that suggest the peculiar traits of Poe; uSo lovely was the loneliness. ua tremulous delight. uDeath was in that poison'd wave. In the preface, Poe himself wrote that the greater part of the poems . . . were written in the year l82l-22. when the author had not completed his fourteenth year. The statement is in accord with others of yummy; , w 4 v ,3 A EE-E Poe by which he sought to throw dust in men,s eyes: certainly most of these lines were not written by a boy of twelve. but most probably by the lonely lad on Rowdy Row. West Lawn. How much Poe was influenced in his later years by his months in Albemarle perhaps not even he himself could have reckoned. His Tale of the Ragged Mountains has no local color and his glimpse of the glory and grandeur of Greece and Rome might have come to him under any circumstances. But there can be little doubt that the ten months study under two able European scholars were next to his excellent earlier schooling the most important factor in preparing him for the hard years of literary struggle. Edgar Poe spent but a session at the University of Virginia but the University of Virginia has lived over a hundred years with the spirit of Poe. From 1896. when the movement was started to form a uPoe Memorial Association. which was later to secure to the University the beautiful bust by Julian Zolany. the interest in Poe at his Alma Mater has grown into one almost of intimacy. In I909 his centennial was observed with dignity and appropriateness. Among the students themselves he has his most manifest memorials. Their interest in everything that relates to him approaches universality touched sometimes with the fervor almost of a passion. They do not imitate him either as to his behavior or his poetryethey may have done so onCHbut they want intellectually to know him. and the breadth of his interest and artistic achievements stirs them to admiration. Perhaps the memories of Poe are helping to form a literary association about the Lawn. Public life and its avatars have. rather than letters and the arts. been the Virginian's. as in general the Southerner's, boast. And the University of Virginia, founded by President Jefferson, has been in this like its State. From time to time now there is in the air a rustle and a fragrance like the stirring of an early spring wind that presages the awakening of a more animated interest in literature. A growing number of young writers are hailing from the Lawn and beauty is sought more boldly by the undergraduate than before. Perhaps Edgar Poe is after all as much an influence upon the place as are the fair-fronted buildings before which he used to pass. I216I Statistical Studies in Scholarship Number of Students in the University IW7-08 College ...................................................... 325 Graduate .................................................... 3I Engineering .................................................. I I I Medicine .................................................... I05 Law ........................................................ 225 Education ....................................................... TolaI; ................................................... 795 Scholastic Standing of the Fraternities I927-28 DeIla Psi ................................................... 85.I Phi DeIla Theta ............................................. 84.4 Bela Theta Pi ................................................ 84.4 Phi Kappa Psi .............................................. 83.9 Chi Phi .................................................... 83.4 Sigma Phi EpsiIon ............................................ 83.4 Bela Kappa ................................................ 83.2 Della Kappa EpsiIon .......................................... 83.I Phi Epdlon Pi ............................................... 82.6 Alpha Epsilon Pi ............................................. 82.2 DeIla Sigma Phi .................................. . .......... 82.I Phi Alpha .................................................. 82.0 Pi Kappa Alpha ............................................. 8l .8 Sigma Chi .................................................. SI .6 Delta Upsilon ............................................... SI .6 Kappa Sigma ................................................ 8l .5 Della Chi ................................................... 8l .4 Phi Gamma Delta ........................................... 8I .I Alpha Tau Omega ........................................... 80.8 Thela Della Chi .............................................. 80.5 Kappa Alpha ............................................... 80.I Della Tau Della .............................................. 79.3 Sigma Nu .................................................. 79.6 Zeta Psi ................................. . ................... 79.4 Sigma Alpha EpsiIon ..... . .................................... 79.3 Theta Chi .................................................. 79.3 Phi Kappa Sigma ............................................ 79.2 Alpha Chi Rho .............................................. 79.I Zeta Bela Tau ............................................... 79.0 Phi Sigma Kappa ............................................ 78.9 Alpha Mu Sigma ............................................. 78.8 Della Phi .................................................. 78.6 I 2124 1 l9l7-18 439 I6 I03 99 95 752 l 926-27 80.8 79.8 84.2 8L9 83.6 8L9 szgsssugszaassssss OWNNNObOLJwAWONED'OLibb V. x. an. o A I 927-28 l259 I44 I47 248 280 IOI 2l79 I 924-25 8L7 8l.l 84.4 8L7 79.9 79.6 82.2 80.8 NNNGGQNN N ' gppperwssoeesseeesss N-$NOON-NOUI-U3NOON-$-8 O- N- C CORKS 6 CURLS Average Grade by Departments 1 927-28 I 926-27 1 925-26 College ..................................................... 77. 5 76.9 75.8 Law ....................................................... 87. 0 88. I 87.3 Medicine .......... . ........................................ 85.6 85.6 85.8 Engineering ................................................. 81 .2 84. 5 76.8 Graduate ............ . ...................................... 87 . 9 86 . 5 86 . 9 Educalion .................................................. 83.5 81 .8 82.5 Comparison of Fraternity Men with Non-Fraternity Men by Departments Fraternity Men Non-Fraternily Men 1926-27 1927-28 1927-28 1926-27 77.7 77.9 76.3 87.7 87.2 . 88.7 77.4 81.0 .................... Engineering .................... 81.4 86.9 88.3 87.6 ..................... Medicine ..................... 84.1 85.0 89.0 $. 1 ..................... Graduate ..................... 86. 8 86.4 78.3 77.6 ..................... Education ..................... 84. 4 81.9 Highest Grade 1 927-28 1 926-27 1924-25 98.33 98.00 97.5 Lowest Grade I 927-28 I 92627 1924-25 17.0 13.0 21.0 Average Standing of All Fraternity Men. Non-Fraternity Men and the University as a Whole Fraternity Men Non-Fralernily Men Whole University 1 927-28 I 926-27 I 927-28 I 926-27 I 927-28 I 926-27 84.3 80.7 81.4 80.8 83.9 80.7 Average Grades of Men in College Activities 1927223 l926-27 Managers and Associate Managers ......................................... 83.4 82.8 Editors of College Publicalions ............................................ 85.2 86.9 Department Officers ..................................................... 88.0 87.4 General Athletic Associalion Officers ....................................... 81.3 85.8 Y. M. C. A. OEIcers .................................................... 87.3 86.8 Scholastic Standing of Athletic Teams 1927-28 l926-27 Football ........... . ................................................... 81. 6 81.3 Baskel- ball ......................................... . ................... 85. 8 76.9 Baseball ............................................................... 81. 9 82.3 Track ................................................................. 83.2 84.0 Boxing Team .......................................................... 86.3 82.5 Average Grade of Student Members of the 3-3-3 Council 1927-28 1926-27 1924-25 83.5 84.0 85.6 12191 M emories tBy a University Student Overseast Some fetioIDs are crying for Cognac, while others are nuts about Beer, Some claim that Chianti or Asti Spumante are drinks that will bring them good cheer; But none of such stop will I guzzlc as a regular teddy. I hope, just show me the way to the old U. V-a. and a regular Old Corner Dope. There are times when a Porto is pleasant, and a Kummel is rarely declined, And some bellow for Bock or for crimson Medoc, and various drinks of that kind; But really I can't get their number. perhaps rm an old misanthrope; And I may be a fact when I wish for Sheppe's stool and a regular Old Corner Dope. C hartreuse is trEs bonne pour la same. and C hablis is relished by same, And Claret is fine if you like a light wine. and the teather-throats hotter for Rhum; But when you are ohcred some Absinthe, be sure that your ansnwr is Nope! And take it from I, that when your throat's dry, you'll shout for an Old Corner Dope. f2201 M DRUNKS ALLOWED U PSTMRS Some Songs the Souses Sang at Soirees FORENOTE . HE evil that men do lives after them and they say is a liar. Nonetheless most folk-lore arises from some trivial, though startling, fact and in time gathers .. sufficient momentum to become integral with the sagas of peoples and places. The Editors do not vouch for the truth of these incidents but merely summarize each as re-summarized to them. Saga says a certain Dick became known as Interfraternity Dick during his last two of nine years in college. During his first years he was wealthy and spent his money freely on his friends. In his spare years his friends did not desert him. One fraternity after another supported him by letting him room free of charge in their houses and different members inviting him out to meals. He became a quasi-honorary member of every fratern- ity he sojourned with and hence his title. In his last year on the Lawn he acquired deafness as an adjunct to his imaginary old age and with it a long rubber tube with a hugh tin l22l1 funnel at one end. After this he would sit around parties. amus- ing and amused. refusing to hear anything that was not properly yelled into the funnel while he had the other end of the tube in his ear. In his sober moments he heard almost perfectly. Saga says a certain Jim won early fame by carrying his Scottish pipes to all parties where the only tune that he could play was. The Campbells Are Coming. He also spoke his piece on such occasions: A recital of a speech alleged to have been hrst delivered in the Senate of Arkansas during reconstruction days against the passage of a bill which had as its aim compulsory pronunciation by all citizens of Arkansas as Ar-KAN-sas. It began. Mr. Speaker. you . . e . and thereafter followed thirty minutes of ridiculously obscene reasoning against the bill. in which anatomical discrepancies between Peruvian princes and Roman gladiators and erotic absurdities about the Declara- tion of Independence. the Goddess of Liberty and the Star Spangled Banner served to bring it to the crescendo of, uChange the name of Arkansas? No. by Cawd! Never! Once his friends stole his pipes and he appeared at the scheduled party with a young pig under his arm. By twisting the pig's tail he improvised the Scottish music. On another occasion when he was five sheets in the wind friends put a live cow in his room on Dawson Row and blew the fuses. On his return in the wee hours he became momentarily frantic with the belief that he had d. t's. Saga says a certain Buggs known as Half-Pint Buggs, acquired his cognomen on account of his stature and not his capacity. He often mounted a table and recited verbatim for the edification of the assembled the indictment in the case of State v. One William Yates. whose immortal nuisance at a church festival on a recl-hot stove was clearly against the peace and dignity of the commonwealth. Buggs also added to his aurora by staging his famous fishing party during Easter Week for gold fish in a fountain that used to be in Fence and Sterling's. Saga says the Hot Feet was an honorary drinking society. It went into involuntary disquietude after its infamous Convocation Day escapade, which consisted of denuding the vat of stiffs and suspending them from trees on the Lawn and in constructing a conckle- shell walk from the Rotunda down the Lawn in which certain crockery was improvised as shells. Saga says that when a certain Boggie approached the passing point, he shinned up the most convenient tree and took his rest astride a limb with arms around the trunk. Finally. he picked a tree near the Chapel for his feat and was discovered by pious faculty members on their way to eleven o'clock service the fol- lowing morning. The pledge that resulted prevented him from exercising his evolutional proclivities in the future. I2221 Saga says Little Jeff. a certain professor. and a friend. drew a blank and enlisted in the U. 5. Navy. T he prof. and friend failed on the physical; but Little Jeff was accepted. He forgot all about it until ordered to report for duty at the Naval Base in Hampton Roads. Woodrow Wilson had to be approached to secure his release from enlistment. Fortunately. or unfortunately. Little Jefl's father was a personal and political friend of the President. Saga says a certain Bal had two rooms thrown into one on the Lawn. He was also a horseman of local fame. On one inebriate occasion. a friend stumbled into his room for a drink and found Bal in bed. with a horse tied to the foot. Bal got up. untied the horse, mounted. turned the horse till he faced the mantel. dismounted. took and gave a drink, remounted. re- turned the horse to his former position. dismounted. tied his horse to the bed. and reassumed his recumbent position. His subsequent boldness in hauling a certain estimable lady from bed in the wee hours to ask her why her nose was red is rumored to have caused the University to acquire a certain work of art. Saga says that prior to pledge dances such festivals were held in the Rotunda. The occasion on which The Three Musketeers rode up the Rotunda steps and into the hall during a Final Ball had a great deal to do with the adoption of the present system. Saga says a certain Mac was the gentleman drunk of his day. Once while under the influence an auto knocked him down. He got up and politely apologized for getting in the way. He attended church every Easter. In preparation for this annual absolution from sin he spirited himself to the very crest of the waves. donned silk hat. Prince Albert. striped pants. patent-leather shoes. spats and cane and marched decorously to the front pew. where he sat attentive and swaying until the recessional. Once Mac and a friend stole a live guinea hen which they took to Mrs. Page's dining room one night in Easter Week, deposited on the table and demanded of the waiter that it be forthwith killed and cooked for their dinner. A gale of laughter and Mrs. Page resulted in their expulsion for the night. So hen under coat. they hied to the Corner where they ran into Harry. Now Harry was a beloved college character with an idiosyncrasy about chickens reputedly derived from childhood games. With him one Cluck meant tight. Mac was unaware of this and presented it to Harry on suggestion from his friend. This gallant and generous overture might have proved fatal to Mac had not aston- ished bystanders intervened. This Mac was in the fishing party referred to above. Saga says there was once a University Country Club where mild soirees were held in conjunction with Saturday night hops. Students went in groups of ten to hfteen. each group in its hired tallyho. They drank and sang as they drove. At the last party in this club a good deal of that most potent brand of Blue Ribbon Beer was consumed. After the party broke up the club mysteriously burned. Some said the partiers got cold and I 223 J burned it for warmth; some said the partiers set it aflre to exhult in the light; but the truth is in parting three or four bottles of the stuff were left behind. one of which was seized with an acute case of spontaneous combustion and so caused the Hames. After the tire this form of tallyhoing was directed to and from the Keswick Country Club where Blue Ribbon Beer was banned. Saga says a certain Ed in his student days had a copper stomach. Alumnied he returned to the Lawn. Pre-wamed friends made several trips to ShiHiet's Hollow against his coming. He happened to be in trim. For two days they imbibed with him. On the second night he attempted to hide out in a room on the third Hoor of an exclusive boarding house. They found him just as he was removing his tie. New recruits demanded that he have just one drink with them for old-time's sake. Ed agreed on condition that each take the equal drink he poured. The bargain was struck and in desperate attempt to remove himself from the picture. Ed poured a drink- ing tumbler brimming full of the stuff and drank without grimace or chaser. Two others followed suit and fell preemptorially into the expectant beds. Dumfoundecl to find his brain and feet still co-ordinating, Ed released the others and attended a fra- ternity dance with them. In the dear days before Interfraternity Dick adapted a tin ear phone. before Piper Jim first recited uChange the Name of Arkansas Never, before Half-Pint Buggs sounded the uIndictment v. One William Yates. before the Hot Feet conckle-shelled the Lawn. before Boggie slept in trees. before Little Jeff joined the U. 5. Navy. before Bal rode for drinks from his bed to mantelpiece. before the Musketeers galloped into the Rotunda. before Mac gave Harry a guinea hen. before Blue Ribbon burned the Club. before the immortal tumbler of corn of Ed the Open Soiree1 was born. This delightful daughter of Baccus was for years the Queen of Festive Nights on the Lawn? From the days of real beer up to the advent of the bootlegger she held sway. Once a triumphant social system. she is now only a tradition. And with her passage into that realm of lies writers agree on, the University of Virginia has lost something, perhaps slightly vulgar in sight and sound. but withal infinitely fine inside. For in the common lSaga says that the Open Soiree was for the most part a harmless drinking party. Each fraternity in turn would secure a keg or two of beer and invite every student to help drink it. Often there were three or four soirees on one night. The students gathered at The Corner after supper. attended en masse the nearest soiree. then moved on to the next and next. etc.. gathering momentum in number and spirit as they went. A few succeeded in getting actually light. Nearly everyone acquired a pleasant psychological jag. The last Open Soiree of size tperhaps, the largest of am was in the old Castle by the water-tank on Rugby Road. Twelve kegs and one barrel of beer were provided and the entire student body invited. It started at sunset when Japanese lanterns were lighted on the three-acre grounds and the first tap was spudded in. Between frve and six hundred attended and many of the participants stayed over for the B. V. D. be game with drinks at each base and track meet with beer at the finish which shockingly amused the church-goers Sunday morning. 2Saga says that at Virginia the word Lawn is synonomous with the word Campus as used at other colleges. I224l cellarsx of the fraternity houses where all classes and creeds4 paid her homage for so many years every student with the thirst of sociability brushed shoulders. swapped lies.5 exchanged ideas, sang songs. learned understanding and drank deeply of the spiritsG and and of the spiritT of Virginia. , In an effort to preserve for posterity5 some of the esprit of those dead days the collector0 of these songs that follow has endeavored to clothe them in garbs fit for the press and pulpit10 and at the same time present them with as little loss of the color of the vine11 as possible with the hope that they will revive in the memories of the alumni unforgettable moments12 and reveal to those who come after a touch of that philosophy of life on the Lawn that teaches men to tread the pitfalls of gin13 without losing the uncom- mon tang of beauty in common things.H aSaga says that in the old clays moat fraternity houses had a large room in the cellar fitted up for a miree room. The furniture was simple: Bare concrete floors. a heavy oak table with cleats for legs. oak benches along the walls and a row of pegs about Eve feet from the floor around the room on which hung steins and tin cups. By common custom anyone. invited or uninvited. was welcome to use the room. Fiaternities without such cellars were free to use any such room not in use without the formality of as mg. Saga says soirees were attended by fraternity and non-fraternity men and non-student citizens of the community alike, Anyone was welcome. ' rSaga says there was always on hand a goodly number of clever recanteurs whose lurid wit would make a traveling salesman blush. uSaga says the mythological names of the spirits of Virginia may be found by consulting any obsolete wholesale distillery list. TSaga says that the spirit of Virginia is well known though as yet without any succinct or picturesque nomeclature. zSaga says speeihcallyefuture sons and daughters of Virginia. JSaga says that the U. S. Post Ottice regulations must be knuckled to also. mSaga says many person; through the medium of a few. Saga says the color of the vine is red. It seems at first rancid but mellow: with use. Thus. good comes of the bad. uSaga says we all have had them. 'Saga says that this is a fictitious phrase invented long ago by certain scourages of the human race who imagine themselves foremost in the ranks of public protectors of private morals. Saga says this word used to mean universal rather than vulgar. Here follow some songs the souses sang at soirees: Ghristofo Golombo1 In fourteen hundred and ninety-two In a village in Italic, A dago walked about the streets A-selling hol-tomalie; He breezed up to the queen one day, Said: Give me some ships and cargo . And I'm a. lantI-lubbermg aon-of-f-gun . e CHLOMOe If I don t bring back Chicago! fmmanotd rareunronwniiomllipwbyfiorteypriat lUnexpurgated. each chorus diEers with picturesque profanity. There are innumerable stanzas omitted covering every phase of the hero's life. It is attempted to preserve the theme. CHORUS: He said the Ivorld Ivas round-o; He knew land could be found-o- That hardeswearing, sea-faring, Son-of-a-gun. Colombo! This Spanish Queen was married to A don called Ferdinand, Who of C olombo jealous grew And ran him from the land. C olombo htched the regal gems. Bought ships and hired hands, And with a motley. scurvy crew Shoved-ohr for unknonm lands! CHORUS Colombo took a one-eyed mate, Who loved him lilac a brother; And every night at half-past eight They supped with one anothere Their meat was full of strippers fair, Their bread chock-full of canker- They chemed the soles of boots and shoes And even gnaIved the anchor! CHORUS In fourteen hundred and ninety-lwo Physicians Were not many; The only doctor in the crew Was a bearded fen: named Benniee Colombo went to him one day tHis looks mere calm and placitU And the damn old few gave him a brew Of muriatic acid! I2261 CHORUS Colombo sailed on o'er the seas In search of land and booty; He spied a Iane close to the Main- Creat Scott! She was a beauty! The sailors leaped into the sea, A-shedding shirts and collars; 1n hfteen minutes by the clock She met nine hundred callers! CHORUS They landed at San Salvadore Then peopled with red niggers- And found the native women were Quite expert as goldediggers. He soon got weary of the sun And daily tropic rain, And surfeited with savage rum, Returned back soon to Spain! CHORUS The Queen of Spain rejoiced plain O'er Christofo's return; The King waxed wrath and cursed in court The day Colomb' was born. This dago bold soon grew too old To grace with jollity The courts of queens who drained him clean-e He died in poverty! CHORUS I2271 ?arting Toast2 Here's to you, John lanes! Here's to you. our jovial friend! W e'll drink before Ive part this sacred companye We'll drink before nae part! Here's to you, John lanes! Agonf W hen your best girl calls you a son-of-a-gun- Goodness! That's ag-o-ny! When your teeth are falling out one by once- Coodness! That's ag-o-ny! But when you walk up to the altar With the ring in your hand. And the parson says to her: Will you marry this man? And she comes right out With a tho, by-damn! COODNESS! THA T's AC-O-NY! Dan, cDant Dan, Dan, the Laboratory Man, H e hangs around the refuse can; He gives out the tubes. He cleans up the much, And laughs out loud At the students when they CORK or have tough luck! 5mm u a well-spiked loving cup is passed from hand to hand. The drinker could drink until hi: toast ended. The thirsty singer: usually made short shift of each toast so as to hasten their turn at the cup. 'There are other graphic words to lhil. 'Best known under another name. Last Night as I Game Home5 Last night as I came home, As drunk as drunk could be ; 1 found a hat on my hat-racli.I Where my hat ought to bem HMy dear wife, my darling wife, 0, what is this I see? A hat on my habrack, Where my hat ought to be? HYou dear fool, you poor fool, You son-of-a-gun, says she, 11,5 nothing but a flower pot My mother sent to me! O, Mister chn'temie'r6 O, giva us a drink, Bartender. Bartender! For me love it, yes. we do; 0, say, won't you please. oblige us, oblige us. With another drink or tum! m'Reputed of early English origin. There are many more verses dealing with anatomy and household hardware. Modest opace forbids more here. uBrought Soulh by Sailor JeE about I912. Rollicking but rarely heard at Virginia. I 229 1 And when we get drunk lust stick us in a bunke For ifs nobody's business but our own! And when Ive get sober We'll go and get drunk all overe ,Cause it's nobody's business but our oIvn! cShe 4351511qu King of England7 0, the English sing of a British King, And 'tlvas many a year ago That he ruled the land with an iron hand; But his mind was meek and lame He loved to chase the bounding stag Throughout the royal mood and He was exceedingly fond of Eating the royal puddin,- God save the Bashful King of England! His only nether garment Was a dirty woolen shirt With which he tried to hide his hide; But he couldn't hide the dirt. He was mild and woolly and full of fleas. And his terrible beard hung down to his kneese Cod save the Bashful King of England! 1In its altogether. perhaps erroneously. attributed as the cause of a balladier losing an official lille. I2301 Now the Queen of Spain was a sprightly dame, O, a sprightly dame Was she; And across the sea had spread her fame Unto his majesty- This Queen, she sent a message By a special messenger To ask the King to come to France To spend the meet: with here Great Scott. what a scandal it did stir! N ow, England's King was a bashful thing And made his love by proxy; To accommodate this Spanish dame He sent his friend Duke Yorksie; But the King of France lvas first on the job And put the skids under his royal nobe Which dicinY sit so well in dear old England! W hen this sad news reached Windsofs Halls, The good King madly swore By his smord and bread he'd have the head Of the Frenchman drenched in gore; And he raved before his Chancellor, The lords and ladies all: uO, she much prefers me rival. Because me head is battle God save the Bashful King of England! Then he promised half his kingdom And the hand of fair Hortense, To any man in all the land Who'd kill the King of Francee And he send the Duke of SniITenhuj?r To giVe the Frog some poisoned snujf Ami bring the Queen to him in dear old England! 12311 s f Soon as the Spanish Queen hrst heard When England's King beheld the sight. He thrice and loudly swore; Hortense threw up her breakfast And swooned upon the floor; just like a rake the Frenchman's neck Had stretched for twenty ells, Which gave his voice an added charm Like silver vesper bellse God save the Bashful King of England! - Of the Englishman's intent, She fled Paree on a drunken spree- ' 61 No one knew where she went! The King of France received the Duke 1 In a tavern in M ontmarte And filled him full of frogs and bull And heavy sugared tarts; Which didn't gain a thing for dear old England! The wily Duke was not outdone For he took his host to ride And on a mighty stallion Was galloping by his side, W hen round his neck he slipped a thong And spurring his steed he galloped along, And dragged him to the Bashful King of England! And all the ladies from Sufollf Came down to London Tonm To see the lordly Frenchman With a neck of such renonm; And storming through the castle halls They shouted loud round the city wallse To hell with the Bashful King of England! To hell with the Bashful King of England! i2321 Ghe Eli Song Eli Banana, The starry banner, We are drunk, boys, yes every one: It's not the hrst time, Nor yet the last time, That together we'll get out on a hell of a bum. The old Rotunda, We'll make it thunder, With the hie, boys, and with the drum: It's not the Jirst time. Nor yet the last time. That together well get out on a hell of a bum. We are young yet. We are unhung yet, But were old enough to drink old Cleason's rum: We're just the right size. For folly Elis, And it's hell to pay when we get out on a bum. From Monticello, There comes an echo Of the hfe, boys. and of the drum: It's not the first time, Nor yet the last time. That together we'll get out on a hell of a bum. We,re on the lawn, boys, At break of dawn, boys, With the fife. boys, and with the drum: It's not the first time, Nor yet the last time, That together we'll go out on a hell of a bum. l2331 r5116 73. I. L. K. A. Song Come fill your glasses up For Tillfa, for Tillfa, for Tillaa. C ome fill your glasses up And pledge a loving cup Oh come, fill your glasses up For Tillfa. for Tillaa, for Tilka. C ome raise your glasses high For Tillfa, for TiUea. for Tillta. C ome raise your glasses high Proudly our flag shall fiy And loudly each man shall cry For Tillfa, for Tillfa, for Tilifa. Come let your glasses drain For Tillfa, for Tilka, for Tilka. Come let your glasses drain Drain to fair Tiliga's name And then Ml them up again For Tillfa, for Tilka, for Tilka. tGhe Good Old Song8 That good old song of Wah-hoodvah, We'll sing it orer and o'er; ll cheers our hearts and warms our blood To hear them shout and roar, We come from old Virginia, Where all is bright and gay; Let's all join hands and give a yell For the dear old U. V-a. FN0 singing fest at Virginia could end without it. I234l What though the tide of years may roll, And drift us far apart; For Alma Mater still there'll be A place in emery heart. In college days we sing her praise, And so when far away, In memory we still shall be A! the dear old U. V-a. Wah-hoo-wah, W ah-hoo-Ivah, Uni-v, V irginia; Hoo, rah, ray! H00, rah, ray! Ray! Rap! U. V-a. It is impossible to acknowledge credit to original authors or to those who hrs! published any of the songs included. Equally impossible Io include in so brief a space all songs sung by the souies. We feel it unnecessary to give the words to nuch favorites as Carry Me Back lo OM Virginny. Sweet Adeline. Sweet Marinbu, Ole Black Inc. Down in 1115 Carnheld, Alma Maler. just a Lillie Lave. Football March- ing Song and many other of rare senliment so often seen in print. We oEer sincere apologies to original authors for changes of word and phrase in the interest of cleanliness. 6041613! Tihere Amt Any. L,Envoi The soft June sun now sinks at quiet evee Dim shadows troop in phantom-lilze parade O'er storied Lawn and classic colonnade And linger as if asking for reprieve. These are the shadows of the years I leave. The men I've known. the lips I've kissed must fade As dream-tand fancies from some N yad's glade. Night's curtain falls. I hardly can believe The drama's done. Tomorrow I must fold Fate's boole-page over to another play, And looking toward it hope that it shall hold As pleasant scenes as those '1 leave today. So now farewell, let,s match this last hour die. From turquoise into gold slow fades the sky. T. B. GRESHAM. t28. l237l Old and New Comer THE OLD CORNER THE NEW CORNER .250 ..m .5 coin... Etoiaom :1 .3 co-x... :m .3 .31.... Juan. :0 ionic 632m .:3::.E$ $8.3m i222?! 50.n3m :5.qu :0 .n. .3.qu .2332 :0 .3 $2; :1 .1 :23. .35... .-.....a1 6.3.32 $2.1m .35.; :33: :1 .n. .33.... J3... .1: :2 .z $2; .uE-Ets $231.5 qubm .Joamoo i335 coa..on:2w Virginia Eta Chapter of Delta Kappa Epsilon Founded at Yale. I844 Established a! the Universily of Virginia. November 26, I852 FRATRES IN FACULTATE LLEWELLYN GRIFFITH HOXTON. 35.. MA, PH.D. JOHN JENNINGS LUCK. M.A.. PH.D. FRATRES IN URBE HEDLEY McNEER BOWEN PHILIP ALEXANDER BRUCE EDWARD WATTS GAMBLE FRANK AUBREY MASSIE MAYNADIER MASON ROGER RICHMOND RINEHART JACK RINEHART DAVID JOSEPH WOOD COLLEGE RICHARD REYNOLDS BEASLEY FLOYD MORRISON HARRIS WILLIAM CHRISTOPHER lVEY ARCHER GRACCHUS JONES. JR. MICAJAH WOODS LUPTON JOSEPH KINNEAR MORFORD ROBERT MINTER RAINEY, jn. MIDDLETON ELLIOTT RANDOLPH GEORGE RANDOLPH TAYLOR PARKER COSTIN TAYLOR FRANK GARDINER WISNER LAW PERCY HOUSTON BROWN WILLIAM AUGUSTUS MONCURE ROBERT GAMBLE CABELL. III PAUL EDMUNDS SACKETT TRAVIS GARLAND DANIEL WILLIAM EYRE. TAYLOR LOUIS MACKALL, JR. JOHN POYNTZ TYLER MEDICINE NATHANIEL LEWIS BOSWORTH WAT. HENRY TYLER ENGINEERING WILLIAM WALLACE SYMINCTON. JR. INITIATES MARION BRAWLEY JR. JOHN CARLYLE HERBERT BRYANT RICHARD EARL DEBUTTS JOHN HINTON FOX JOHN SEGAR EPES GRAVATT PRESTON FLOOD HIX I241! WILLIAM SEDDON CABELL NELSON ROBERT KEAN IVEY JOHN BISHOP VON SCHLEGELL JOHN BAIRD SHINBERGER PEMBROKE JONES TAYLOR WILLIAM RUSE WILLIAMS, JR. E9320 63.02 5275.09! coxum coxsacoto; .aE-::3 $2510 :5 .Eozu-mui .353. .3150 .tuI :0 .8300 icon! .u 53:3! .255 52:90 .xot..o c3323.. 2k .w 6:80 .:c32uos. :m 63:32 65.64 6:26: :outoaom .:.t:m .ucouctok 53:33. :0 .::Sm $05.5 ..m .s. .380 Virginia Alpha Chapter of Phi Kappa Psi Founded at lagerson College. 1852 Established 0! Ike University of Virginia, I853 FRATRES IN FACULTATE WILLIAM M. THORNTON. LLD. RICHARD HEATH DABNEY. M.A.. PHD. JOHN STAIGE DAVIS, M.A.. M.D. GEORGE BOARDMAN EAGER. B.A., LLB. FRATRES IN URBE HOWARD WINSTON THOMAS MUNFORD BOYD COL. C. A. COLE HAROLD SEYES VOGES COLLEGE SAM RICE BAKER CHARLES B. MCCOY E. FONTAINE BROUN. JR. JESSE C. MCDOWELL CHARLES LEWIS COCKE ROBERT D. MORRISON WILLIAM PAGE DAME C. SHEPHERD NOWLIN OSCAR C. GREGORY, jR. NORWOOD B. ORRICK ROBERT L. GORDON JOSEPH A. TURNER LUNSFORD L. LOVING G. PEYTON WERTENBAKER LAW JAMES P. HART ROBERT L. QUARLES THOMAS A. McEACHERN, JR. ARCHER ANDERSON WILLIAMS MEDICINE ROBERT W. C. MCCLANAHAN FRED McC. MORRISON CHARLES M. NELSON ENGINEERING ROBERT A. LANCASTER INITIATES CHARLES CONWAY BROWN IOHN ROBERTSON MARION ESTES COCKE WILLIAM STERLING ROBERTSON ELLYSON WITHERS PUTNEY MARSHALL DE GRAFFENRIED RUFFIN L. SCOTT TOWNSEND I 243 l 0.95:. .veoEE-z .3232 65:0 6025 .892 .320 Etonom :0 .33... 5:39.26! 632-! 3.23231... 3930 fogging .53.. .5E..Eon. .2215; .5 :m .393: :3 .83... :2 6.3... coin... S.Ew .523: .325 . 95 .5Eani... Eta Chapter of Phi Kappa Sigma Founded al the Universily of Pennsylvania. I850 Established al the Univam'ly of Virginia, December 31. 1854 FRATER IN FACULTATE EDWIN ANDERSON ALDERMAN. PH.B.. D.C.L.. LL.D. FRATRES IN URBE HUGH THOMAS NELSON. M.D. RICHMOND TERRELL MINOR WARREN STONE LEE LYTTLEDON WADDELL WOOD COLLEGE HARVEYI LEE MARSTON GEORGE COOPER. JR. ROSWELL DELMEDGE TRIMBLE EMIL OTTO NOL'HNG XVILLIAMS WILLIAM HOGE W'OOD NICHOLAS GRIFFITH PENNIMAN MINOR BOTTS LEWIS jOHN DAINGERFIELD LEWIS EDWARD LORRAINE RUFFIN PERCIVAL HUNTER FAULCONER BYRD WARWICK DAVENPORT LAW HUNTER HOLMES MOSS JAMES ELAM ROBERTS MEDICINE JED HOTCHKISS IRVINE WILLIAM MORGAN CHEW EDWARD STEWART ORGAIN CARLYLE GREGORY FLAKE. PAUL HOUSTON REVERCOMB AUSTIN BROCKENBROUCH CHINN ENGINEERING DANIEL JOSEPH CARROLL COPPS DAVID LEE. MAULSBY WILLIAM HENRY HINTON WILLIAM CHAPPELL FLAKE GRADUATE LEWIS MACHEN HAMMOND INITIATES THOMAS WILSON SMITH ERIC TWACHTMAN HORACE ALFRED GREY GERALD BERTRAM WEBB NATHANIEL THOMAS HILDRETH I2451 338n- .- acuaz :33; .3qu .5250 :23! 6525 6.3:: 5322?. iausim 6:3... 63:82; coE:O :33: . Sn :0 .5.Ew E252: :3 .5.Em .550 .535. 605.31... .kEcauZG 5.32 635 6255.3: .3 .35.... 4.33m .Eim .:3nE3 :32 63.3.5.0 .ga:o::0o2 :m .35... Omicron Chapter of Beta Theta Pi FRATRES IN FACULTATE WILLIAM HARRISON FAULKNER, M.A.. PH.D. BERNARD MANN PEEBLES. B.A.. M.A.. PHD. SAMUEL ALFRED MITCHELL, M.A.. PHD. ALBERT JULIUS BARLOXV, B.A.. B.B.A.. C.P.A. HARDY CROSS DILLARD. LLB. FRATRES IN URBE MCLANE TILTON, JR.. LLB. CHARLES COLEVILLE TENNANT. M.D.. M.M.D. ORLANDO HINTON MASSIE GEORGE BUDD DILLARD COLLEGE WILLIAM WILCOX DUNN. JR. HUGH THOMPSON HARRINGTON SAM GREEN BIGGS. JR. EDWIN ROLSON NELSON THOMAS GREEN FAULKNER. jR. ALEXANDER HAMILTON SANDS. JR. EDWARD SMITH GWATHMEY WILLIAM HARRISON SMITH HENRY ALONZO HICKMAN CHARLES ALPHONSO SMITH ROBERT FRENCH MASON. JR. ROBERT HALDANE SVVINDELL LAW ARMISTEAD LLOYD BOOTHE THOMAS EUGENE MASSIE FRANK BOSTICK CILMER HOWARD MEEK WILLIAM MEADE KELLER THEODORE PHILLIPS MEDICINE HILL CARTER. Ill ALEXANDER GORDON GILLIAM EUGENE BEVERLEY FERRIS. JR. SAMUEL BUTLER CRIMES HARRY GILMAN HUDNALL. SOUTHGATE LEIGH. JR. HUGH GRIGSBY WHITEHEAD, JR. INITIATES ROBERT ERNEST DISMUKES. JR. THADDEUS BOOTHF. LAMPTON. JR. EDWARD ROUSIE BAIRD. llI ALAN MCCULLOUGH WILLIAM ASHBY JONES. III JOSEPH DABBS NOEL. JR. ELLIOTT JONES EDWARD TOBEY STUART. jR. ALFRED PEMBROKE THOM. III l-znl .I .u .231 .33... r: .3935:ow :3. .3 coEzoN .m .93 c .:.E-m .0 3E1. .5 :2 J .023: .30: 57222 3:2...2 .225. :55?! I :5 6.0:! .Ssonom. . .3! .EEE .8390 .:10 .2238; 623.0 :o-aor 633-0 .5356 . In. 60:35: .auam JEEES :00! cou.oa:o..ow .fnndunq324. n. . $102.3: . Nu Charge of Theta Delta Chi Founded at Union College. I847 Established al the University of Virginia. 1857 FRATRES IN FACULTATE BALZ. ALBERT GEORGE ADAM B. A. M. A.. PH D. ZEHMER. GEORGE BASKERVILLE BARDIN. JAMES COOK M..D FRATRES IN URBE JOHN SPOTTSWOOD GRAVES, B.A.. M.A.. LL.B. LEWIS WILLIAM GRAVES, JR., BS.. LLB. JOHN JAY CORSON, lll. BS. ADINELL HEWSON MICHlE EDWARD ROLL COLLEGE APPLETON, LLOYD ELLIOTT. JR. McNEILL. TOLER LEMLEY CALL. DANIEL HEARON REED. ROBERT MUIRHEAD COOKE. WILLIAM CRACRAFT RUFFIN. ROBERT DEJARNETTE GRAVES, HARRY RANDOLPH SOLLENBERGER. RICHARD TALBOT HUFFMAN. C. SPENCER TODD. WALDEMAR DWIGHT KNlGHT. WILLIAM BERNARD WESTCOTT, WILLIAM I. WIGHT, RICHARD CUNNINGHAM LAW HOWE, ELLIOTT HAMPTON HOWE. LON MOORE WILSON. JESSE B. ENGINEERING ANDREWS. EDWIN E.. JR. MAYERS. DRAYTON ALEXANDER MEDICINE ROBERTS, JOHN E. INITIATES DAWSON. JOHN L. LEARY. SAMUEL GORDON FOGG. GORDON SOLLENBERGER. MCCORD HENDERSON. RICHARD L. SIMPSON, jOHN B. HOGGAN. jOHN L. C. WILLIAMS. ROY H. I249l :5..on .SEcm .87. 625.00 $55.3: :EEquG .523: $3.2m .335 6:55 532.60 .3 5.3.. .3130: ... .1 6.30.. iota; Jotuw ..m .G 5:54 .2265 .323: ..m $0.3... 58.0! .3338 68:5 :3:on 61:30 53.5.2. .chEoG Omicron Chapter of Phi CammaLlDelta Founded al Washington and jcierson College. I848 Eslablishcd al lhc Universily of Virginia. january 7, I858 FRATRES lN FACULTATE ARMSTEAD MASON DOBIE. M.A.. LLB. ALLEN FlSKE VOSHELL. B.A.. MD. HARRY ROGERS PRATT FRATRES IN URBE HENRY L. FONDA THOMAS L. FARRAR WILLIAM s. HlLDRETH FRANK c. McCUE HARRISON BOLIVAR TUCKER MARSHALL SWAIN WELLS COLLEGE JOHN EDWARD BARNES GILBERT BURNET LEWIS FLOYD WILKES GARRET HERBERT IVERSON LEWIS RICHARD BITTLE HARLESS THOMAS E. BAGLEY STEVENS CLARENCE BLOODWORTH HANSON. JR. RICHARD WORTHAM TALLEY BEVERLY LONG HOLLADAY WILLIAM GRAVES TALLEY THURMER HOGGARD CONRAD K. WARREN NORMAN KELSEY JOHN TOBIN WHITE LAW FRANCIS PETTERSON COLEMAN JOHN MARSHALL GOLDSMITH JOHN EARL CORRETTE JAMES LYON HALL JULIAN BIXBY FITE FRANK MORTIMER TINKHAM. JR. MEDICINE EDGAR PRENTICE MCKINNEY WILLIAM LANGLEY SIBLEY GRADUATE EDWIN ANDERSON ALDERMAN. JR. WILLIAM ORLANDO BRISTOW INITIATES LESTER LUFF CARLISLE ERNEST FOSTER GEHRMAN PHILIP s. CLARKE IOSEPH SHACKFORD JOHNSTON WAVERLY WALTERS DICKERSON lOHN EDWARD McHUGH WILLIAM THOMAS SUTTON H.311 .3 .235 .t-sxooJ .aEEU .2055 ..o..:u .8. .39.! .93: $.an ogoom .::..3-m :52; 6.82:... :1 .32! .2302 .33.; 632an .5358 c255 6.5.; .:03E20 Juan .23....5 Eta: .xahN-E 6:32; .5 .ucgu .221 3.35:8 .35.; .nuuotum Juno .uooo .xooer coazuh. .LoEE-v. Virginia Omicron of Sigma Alpha Epsilon Founded a! University of Alabama. I856 Eslablishcd a! Universily of Virginia, February I6. I858 FRATRES IN FACULTATE ATCHESON LAUGHLIN HENCH. B.A.. M.A.. PHD. LAUNCELOT LONGSTREET MINOR DENT. B.A.. M.A. FRATRES IN URBE JOHN COLON BROOKS. LL.D. CHARLES EDWARD MORAN. LLB. COLLEGE HARRY SINCLAIR AFFLECK WARREN COOKE MEANS JACK ASTOR AUSTIN JOHN PRATT GEORGE JOSEPH BARIESAS CHARLES JOSEPH SCHUSTER HOLT FAIRFIELD BUTT. 1 JAMES THOMAS SLUDER JOSEPH RUSSELL COMPTON NELSON THOMAS TURNER ALVAH BAYLOR CROMWELL jAMES WALTER YOUNG JOHN ESSARY DEES JOHN THOMAS BURKETT FRANK FOOTE JOSEPH EVERETT FAUBER HUNTER LANSING FULFORD LEWIS CHARLES MATTISON GLEN AUGUSTUS KAMINER LUClEN MINOR DENT JOHN DONNELSON MARTIN. JR. LAW MALCOLM BENNETT EASTERLIN MAHLON STEWART HALE GEORGE DRISCOLL ROCHE MEDICINE VICTOR SHAW EVANS ARTHUR MAZYCK WILLIAM BEVERLY WlLKlNS GRADUATE GEORGE GAINES LECKIE JOHN EVANS ENGINEERING PAUL BERNARD KREBS INITIATES WILLIAM MARSHALL BLACK MATTHEW POLLOCK GILMORE JOHN CRUMP BENJAMIN LESLIE HART. jn. WILLIAM AUGUSTUS EVANS ALFRED ULYSSES KREBS GORDON BURT FULLER JOHN MONROE LOCKHART I 2.231 .. toucmn. 6......5 .cogon. .w J fab 3:: 530 z .m 6:35;, .mgocohu J ..o E . m .2 032 :93 . . . . :5, 9.3.92 .xooiuu J. o . . . E2; 325 53.5 2:502. .1 1 2:15.; .505 5:223: kazw- .Laiuaungvdrann.cwo-gwwnrlihhnhkai t n I r.a..o;.Lul.lI... ,-'0.t.!3.8u:110 3 L Upsilon Chapter of Delta Psi Founded al Columbia. I847 Eslablished al University of Virginia. April 20. 1859 FRATRES IN FACULTATE CUTHBERT TUNSTALL. B.A.. M.D. RICHARD HARDAWAY MEADE. JIL, 3.5.. M.D. FRATRES IN URBE JOHN WATTS KEARNEY CARL HENRY NOLTING EDWARD DICKINSON TAYLOE COLLEGE MOREY LEE. BOOTH RODGERS MEYER ALEXANDER GUSTAVUS BROWN. III EDWARD WATTS MORRIS ALEXANDER HAMILTON BRYAN ALGERNON SIDNEY BUFORD NOLTING JAMES LINDELL ELLIS BEVERLEY HETH RANDOLPH JOHN WOOD FISHBURNE. JR. GEORGE WASHINGTON THOMPSON DEXTER SPEAR FRENCH PEYTON RANDOLPH WILLIAMS JOHN FULTON McGAVOCK DANIEL LASSITER WILLIAMS WILLIAM PROVINCE MCGUIRE JOHN PAGE WILLIAMS LAW HERBERT LEE BOATWRIGHT WILLIAM McLEOD FERGUSON HARRISON LEIGH BUCK JOHN KIRKPATRICK SLOAN FIELDlNG LEWIS WILLIAMS MEDICINE MORTON MORRIS PlNCKNEY WILLIAM COWELL STEPHENSON. JR. . INITIATES LAMONT STEWART BRYAN HENRY PEAKE MACDONALD THOMAS FRANCIS GRIFFIN JOHN LEWIS PEYTON JOHN BENJAMIN PINDER Iznnl ?.aoz .coauctLaO .quozh .4. .:oEom coauom 3.5. 515 6.2.3 :5 30:0 .2on .nEu::.$ focum onoam :1 5933 $3.3m 63... .3E3u4 .nuaosm .395on 5:25.... .264 .02ch gZEW 6.5.3553 6.3.330 6:155... 6025 .5532 c9255 60:2;14 5:35 6:32.53. $2fum Alpha Chapter of Chi Phi Founded al Princelan Universily, 1824 Established a! the University of Virginia, IWay I0. I859 FRATRES IN FACULTATE WILLIAM HOLDING ECHOLS, BS.. C.E. WILLIAM ALLISON KEPNER. M.A.. PHD. FRATER IN URBE THOMAS LAFAYETTE ROSSER COLLEGE GEORGE HOUGHTON BARKLEY FRANK CHAUNCEY BATTEY TEMPLE COUPLAND JAMES FORD JOHN OVERTON HENDERSON WILLIAM S. MCDONALD JOHNSTONE BEVERLY RANDOLPH KENNON. Ill JOHN BLACK LANCASTER WILLIAM CARROL LATIMER WILLIAM THOMAS LOVE HUNTER CRISLER MOTLEY ANDREW ALEXANDER JAMES RILEY AYERS JAMES TAYLOR BUCKLEY SAMUEL HODGES McGHEE CHARLES PAXTON OATES WEBSTER STERLING RHOADS JOSEPH PRINCE SEBRELL CHARLES GORDON SMITH JAMES WALTER THOMAS JOSEPH WHITE TRUNDLE ROBERT STRINGFELLOW WALKER. HI JOSEPH DUNNING WEED THOMAS HENRY WILLINGHAM JOHN CUMMINGS WYLLY WILLIAM LAW' CLAY JAMES MILLER MCCREADY LUDLOW ROGERS EDWARD CODRINGTON CARRINGTON. JR. JOHN NEY SEBRELL. JR. FRANCIS CHARLES WILLIAMS. jn. MEDICINE DABNEY JARMAND HERBERT DEGRANGE. WOLFF ENGINEERING MARCUS JAY LAWRENCE GRADUATE ROBERT LEWIS ECHOLS .0 :25: 62:5 6::0 :1 co...2 5332-1 521-... 622 :1 525.3: .uao...3:.:$ 3.3.82.3. 6.2m .v. 63:33.. 53.33. 6312.3. .89: 52:31 623m .a:.:om .nttucc .:-v:EO bycoo 63:32; .:o!oz .2322... .325 53:93.; Eta: Psi Chapter of Sigma Chi Founded al Aliami. 1855 Established a! the University of Virginia, December 10. I860 FRATRES IN FACULTATE LAWRENCE THOMAS ROYSTER. MD. STEPHEN HURT WATTS. M.A., M.D. FRATRES IN URBE ROGER VASSAR BELLEMORE. STUART W'ALKER GEORGE PERKINS GEORGE W. UTSLER EDWARD VAN WAGENEN COLLEGE FREDERICK HENRY ALLEN FENTON ALLEN GENTRY DAVID KEY ANDREWS HUGH MONTGOMERY HARRIS HARRINGTON BISHOP CARY FRANKLIN MILLER JOHN TRAVERS BOLLINC EDWARD THOMAS NEWELL. JR. WILLIAM BRADFORD BRIGGS ALVIN HYATT PATTERSON WILLIAM EDGAR BYRD, JR. WILLIAM HERNDON PEARSON LOGAN CLARENCE CLINE. jn. GORDON PICKETT PEYTON CHARLES ELDRIDGE CRANDALL jOHN SAMUEL POINDEXTER JAMES PATT DELAFIELD HERBERT GEORGE ROBINSON FRANK EVANS FARWELL KENNETH WHITE ROBINSON FINLAY FORBES FERGUSON WILLIAM FENTON ROSS JAMES THOMAS YOUNG LAW HERBERT WEEDEN MILLER PAUL WHITEHEAD MEDICINE WILLIAM MASSIE WHITEHEAD ENGINEERING JOHN RANDOLPH JANNEY GEORGE AUSTIN ROBERTSON l' 259 1 :om $9.; .2523! 631.00 :0 .6 6332-2 is 63.3! .5 .EE .5 .5255... .:ou.m .5 .o 6332; :33: .8120 v2! coE:O .u::2:oo 692.5. .57; .3585 $33.80 tofu...- .:u2m .i 4. .5303 .535: :33... 9355 ..u .3 5022:; .tZoEK .526 :m .3 632...: 6251.! :1 .0 .5235 .32320 Alpha Chapter of Pi Kappa Alpha Founded al Univeme of Virginia, March I. I868 FRATRES IN FACULTATE R. M. BIRD. 8.5.. B.A.. PH.D. F. P. DUNNINGTON. 85.. CE... M.E. A. C. GORDON. JR.. B.A..M.A., PHD. J. H. NEFF. B.A.. MD. J. L. NEWCOMB. B.A.. C.E.. R. H. WEBB. B.A.. M.A.. PH.D. C. B. MORTON. M.S.. MD. FRATRES IN URBE ARCHIBALD D. DABNEY ARTHUR C. ONES CLEMENT D. FlSHBURNE. GEORGE R. . MICHIE JOHN W. FISHBURNE J. ADDISON PATTERSON WILSON L. SMITH COLLEGE EDWARD ARTHUR DELARUE. JR. EDWARD LEWIS DOUGLASS. JR. BLAKE KlDD PAUL MCDONALD EDWARD LEE CLARKE KARL GROVERMAN WATTS DANIEL VIRDEN ANDERSON WILLIAM SWOPE WRAY GEORGE ALEXANDER FRASER GEORGE CARL MATTHEWS WILLIAM HUBERT FLANNAGAN SULLIVAN GALE BEDELL WILLIAM HENRY CORNELIUS LAW CHARLES FULKERSON HAGAN. JR. HOWARD CECIL GILMER. JR. JACK NEAL LOTT. JR. LAWRENCE WARREN YANSON MEDICINE JOSEPH MCBRIDE SLOAN WILLIAM HENRY PARKER GUY WINSTON HORLSEY GEORGE HAMILTON DERIEUX. jR. ' ENGINEERING jOHN ALFRED WOTTON. g3. HOWARD BRADLEY BLOOMER. JR. REDERICK WILLIAM HESTER GRADUATE RICHMOND THOMAS BELL INITIATES HAMPTON BURNETT CRAWFORD THOMAS OLIVER DUNLAP. jn. WILLIAM BEAUFORD MATHEW'S GRICSBY HART WOTTON CLARKE HARPER GREENE ROBERT KIRKMAN JAMES FRANCIS ANDERSON THOMAS MUNFORD RINEHART I 261 J .311 into; .334 .830 .FEEm 6.26.. :0 .cuom :2 .O ...2.33 .3222... 6:30 :1 .w 632m outtEu 6.30 :m 6395 .nEoE $1.5 .5351: $357.55 .35.:11 cotao 625.80 .22.? ..z .3 3.2635 .:o:-m Just :2 .... .Estou coEEuI 65:25:. ..m i .cotoxgi :0 .m 635351 :3 i 5353.51 c.0322 .0320 covauas. .J .v. .sitok 693002 .zuthzu Beta Chapter of Zeta Psi Founded al Nenv York Univeraily. 1847 Esfablished of UM University of Virginia. 1868 FRATER IN FACULTATE IVEY FOREMAN LEWIS. B.A.. M.S.. PHD. FRATRES IN URBE PAUL B. BARRINGER NEVIL T. HENSHAW MURRAY BOOCOCK GORDON B. NELSON EDWARD S. CLARK LOGAN M. NELSON WILLIAM R. DUKE FRANK H. OFFUTT WILLIAM R. DUKE. JR. W. ALLEN PERKINS W. ESKRIDGE DUKE EDWIN H. THOMPKINS LEWIS T. HANKEL GEORGE E. WALKER BERNARD PEYTON CHAMBERLAIN COLLEGE ALFRED SLADE BALLOU WILLIAM ERNEST GOODMAN. 3RD WILLIAM BENNETT BEAN ALFRED LEFTWICH GRAY. JR. WILLIAM POST BRADLEY JOHN BOATWRIGHT GXVALTNEY REEVES BROWN WILLIAM ALEXANDER HALLOWES. 3RD. STEUART HARMAN BROWN CHARLES EDWIN HAMILTON ROBERTS COLES. JR. GORDON LINDSAY LUKE EDWARD WAYNE CORRIN ROGER GREGORY MAGRUDER PHILLIP KINGSLAND CROWE EDWARD BYRD McGEORGE. JR. EDWARD MORRIS DAVIS. 3RD. JOHN MOYLER. JR. HAROLD NORTON ELDRIDGE. JR. JOHN ALDEN PAUL GLASSELL SLAUGHTER FITZ-HUGH BENJAMIN FRANKLIN DEV'EES RUNK KING LOGAN FORSYTH OSWALD MASSENA WEAVER THOMAS MULDRUP FORSYTH EDWARD HENRY WRIGHT. 3RD THEODORE LIVINGSTON FRALEIGH jAMES MOHR DOUGLAS WORRALL MEDICINE ALFRED WAYLAND PINKERTON WILLIAM NIEBUHR WEAVER LAW JOHN BERNE HANNUM CARTER JAMES EDMONDS SLEMP ELLIOT GUTHRIE FISHBURNE ALAN BRAINARD PINKERTON BLEDSOE. COLHOUN PINKERTON ENGINEERING GEORGE JAY RATHBUN l 263 1 9.3! .5.Em 65.0.. .23: 5925.... cu .acoJ 6:53.. :0 .35: .33.: $23.6 .1055 :oSEuw iotia $3.3. 6-9.2. .oocu..o.... .coccugom E35 6523;. $23; .: :202 c.5330 co.nE4x 52:50 :ovrm $3.5 Suicoo 55:55 .535 c.3220 .53! 655 .cuExoi .uuox Lambda Chapter of Kappa Alpha Founded a! Washington and Lee University, I865 Eslablished a! the Universily of Virginia. 1873 FRATRES IN FACULTATE ARTHUR KYLE DAVIS. JR.. B.A.. M.A.. B.Ln'r.. PHD. THOMAS FITZHUGH. B.A.. M.A. WILLIAM HALL GOODWIN. B.A.. MD. JAMES CALVIN METCALF. B.A.. M.A.. err.D.. LL.D. CHARLES PATTERSON NASH. 85.. LLB. JAMES MORRIS PAGE. B.A.. M.A.. PH.D.. LL.D. FRATRES IN URBE CHARLES W. ALLEN J. ANDERSON CHISHOLM WALTER S. CHISHOLM J. MARSHALL GRASTY A. A. MORSON KEITH JOHN BLADON ALEXANDER CARSON CONWAY. JR. GUY ARLINGTON DUNLON MASON JAMESON J. A. C. KEITH ALEXANDER COVENTRY LIGGETT GAINES McMILLAN, II V'lLLIS WILSON BOHANNON WILLIAM MAHONE CRUMPLER WALKER FLORANCE MARCELLUS CALHOUN GREEN MILTON HICKMAN RICHARD KENNON HINES. JR. CHARLES LOUIS GILBERT ROBERT EARLE. GLENDY S. B. WOODS WILLIAM F. LONG L. s. MACON. 1n. WILLIAM D. MASON CHARLES D. SMITH JOHN R. WOODS GEORGE VOWLES MONCURE WILLIAM PERRY MOORE. JR. JAMES SHEPHERD PARRISH WILLIAM READ HARRY LzCATO SMITH J. J. WILLARD WILLIAM PATTON WILLIAMS JOSEPH WILTON HOPE. JR. DENHAM ARTHUR KELSEY. JR. JOHN ADAMS LELAND MAURICE GERALD LONG. JR. JOSEPH McCONNELL HENRY WISE ROBERT TUNSTALL PIERCE BENJAMIN WATKINS RAWLFj JOHN THOMPSON BROWN AMBLER JOHN CROSBY BRYDON. JR. WILLIAM HAMILTON ROPER ENGINEERING BRUCE COVINGTON GUNNELL INITIATES FLETCHER JORDAN. JR. JOHN PAYNE McDONELL WILLOUGHBY NEWTON OFFLEY f2651 .0 65:91 rm 6:55 639:5 53350 .5295 693.2: .EanonocoI .323m 5025...; .2922, .3 .953: .3255 .i .3923 . :3 .225 631 .F .ouaoiotEax r. d 6:55 :0 52E .229 . .6 6.35-2.53: :0 .am .3... .J 6:55 :6 .onol .xoaJ :4 .w .3.- .935200 canuq .34 Virginia Delta Chapter of Alpha Tau Omega Founded at Richmond. Virginia. 1865 Established at the University of Virginia, Nov. 25, I868 FRATRES IN FACULTATE FRANCIS HARRIS ABBOTT. M.A. ELBERT ALVIN KINCAID. M.D.. PHD. CHARLES HENDERSON. E..E. FRANK STRINGFELLOW BARR. B.A.. M.A. K. Z. FRAZIER. B.A.. M.A. FRATRES IN URBE JOHN STUART BATTLE. LLB. M. ANDRE BURTHE ALBERT STUART BOLLING. M.A.. LL.B. COLLEGE ARTHUR CRAWFORD BARLOW HORACE NICHOLS DURSTON CARL THEODOR GOLDENBERG GEORGE GILMER GRATTAN. Ill CLARENCE WHITAKER HOLLAND. JR. WILLIAM WHITAKER HOLLAND GEORGE RANDOLPH HUMRICKHOUSE THOMAS JOHNSON HUMRICKHOUSE SAMUEL LlLE LEE ST. GEORGE TUCKER LEE JAMES S. HANCKEL PERCY BROW'N GEORGE BARLOW WILLIAM jORDAN LUCK ALBERT DORSET PENICK GILES ALBERT PENlCK ANDREW DALZELL PETERS CHARLES HARPER RHETT WILLIAM BRISBANE RHETT BEVERLEY TUCKER WHITE DAVID IRVINE WHITE. II LUKE MATTHEWS WHITE, JR. JAMES FOSTER WILLET JOHN MATTHEW WRIGHT LAW FRANK CASSAWAY DAVIDSON EDWIN RANDOLPH GRYMES HENEBERGER PHILIP HENRY HICKSON ENGINEERING JOHN DARBY READ WILLIAM MINOR LlLE ROGERS MEDICINE CHARLES CRAWFORD CANADA HMI WILLIAM S. WILKINSON. JR. EDWIN HOLT WILLIAMSON WILLIAM CHALMERS WILLS EocEEm i055 63:53 6.3.3.5: .goqzam .2.an 62:; .3231. L-xum :3 .3 5:60 rm .1 .-;In. .EoEouacoE Sun catch 63.3. . .232 5.3m .5525 53:30 69:32:; 9:! 6025.; .30! .535 :0 .3 .couExzx .5853: .5.Ew ca .25.... :0 .w .2255 69.2.33... 3.8.335 $12330 .0 Wu. ! x 1! t3! Zeta Chapter of Kappa Sigma Founded al the Univeraily of Virginia. December IO. I869 FRATRES IN FACULTATE GEORGE OSCAR FERGUSON. 111.. M.A.. PHD. JAMES CARROLL FLIPPEN. MD. WILLIAM MINOR LILE. LLD. F. D. C. RIBBLE. JR.. M.A.. LL.B. DUDLEY CRAWFORD SMITH. M.D. JAMES SOUTHALL WILSON. M.A.. PHD. JOHN HOWE YOE. MS.. M.A.. PHD. FRATRES IN URBE EDWIN HENRY COPENHAVER. JIL. B.S.. LL.B. GORDON SMITH LYTTLETON JONES. M.D. EDWARD CONWAY MAPHIS REV. WILEY R. MASON LEMUEL F. SMITH. LLB. LYTTLETON WADDELL. B.A.. LLB. JOHN R. WINGFIELD, JR. THOMAS LEONARD WATSON HOWARD ARTHUR HOLLAND. LLB. FLETCHER WOODWARD. MD. ROBERT PARKES BARUCH HARRY HOWARD COCKRILL JAMES RAMSEY DAVIS RICHARD WHITESIDE DAY HARRISON FITZGERALD FLIPPEN CHARLES EDWARD HILGENBERG F LOYD LANKFORD. JR. RICHARD BLACK LEONARD ANDREW WILLIAM MERLE. JR. WILLIAM WARD MOSS. jk. COLLEGE CHARLES PAUL MONTGOMERY. ll WILLIAM WHELMAN PAXTON WILLIAM ANDERSON PAYNE LAYTON PLATT JESSE. JAMES PORTER THOMAS HAROLD SHEEHAN ROBERT STORRS JOHN REDMOND WALSH. JR. FRANCIS COURTNEY WASHBURNE SAMUEL WILLIAM WILEY WILLIAM BLACKBURN WILSON. JR. WILLIAM EVERETT ATKINSON WILLIAM LAURENCE BAKER RUTLEDGE CARTER CLEMENT CHARLES GIBBS DOUGHERTY WILLIAM ANDREW BRUMFIELD, JR. JAMES WALTER DAVIS, JR. JOHN PRESTON EDMONDSON JOSEPH COLLIER HUTCHESON HOWARD CARLTON MARCHANT THOMAS w. MOORE. 1n. MEDICINE WILLIAM CHILDS HUTCHESON AMES PETER KING J RICHARD FRANK SLAUGHTER 3.55 :32 . 6:...32n So.?D 63.33:; 68.3.39 .33... 62.50.... :20 630m :0 62.5.2. :1 .353... 63:13... .3223... 52.30 .23.. .2 63.5.2. 67599.30 125$.qu 6.5.5 c.2302, 63.0 3.35.32 .30 .3Eogh 62.6.. Jacuucux. .2330 :0 .353... ...ol.m 60:2, Beta Chapter of Sigma Nu Founded at Virginia Military Instilulc. 1869 Established a! lhc Universily of Virginia. December IO, 1870 FRATER IN URBE CHARLES H. SMITH COLLEGE CHARLES H. CONLEY, JR. LAWRENCE M. FENWICK FREDRICK O. GRIFFIN BEVERLY M. MIDDLETON THOMAS HOWARD TURNER, JR. B. WOODRUFF WEAVER PAUL HARRY OLSON LAW GEORGE RIVES SHAFFER COLEMAN CARNEGIE JOHNSTON JAMES KEENE DAINGERFIELD RALPH McKlTTRlCK DONALD BERNARD STAFFORD. JR MORRISON CARNEGIE JOHNSTON HARRY H. BISSELL GEORGE W. TURNER WILLIAM CLIFFORD LUKE DONALD T. PATTERSON MEDICINE ALVA DUCKETT DAUGHTON THOMAS BRADELY CHARLES F. KINCHLOE. jn. LOMAX WELLS ALLEN ELLIOTT WALKER ENGINEERING WILLIAM HARRY FRAVEL PAUL SELDON PEACH ROBERT T. BROWNING INITIATES JOHN OWENS RICHARD K. VAN ZANDT JUDSON W. BOWLES WILLIAM THOMAS LUTHER WILES HENRY W. LADEWIG I2711 LECKIE COX HARRY CROSS CARROLL JONES CHESTER ALEXANDER OWEN W. MCBRIDE DONALD LANE 25 52202 .d .8235 .sohouu... .8.- ..u .3125 .320 .5qu 3.23.... 52:19 631 ..k .331: $2125 .1 32.330 . 73m .-..:-1 .0390 .960! 6.1.525 .2... .3233; cotuo alaham i223! .:!s-om .3330: .suaonioz .SEEEoE .359; .536: $2232.00: 53.835 87$ ...-:3: $.33! 52.3.! .3235: :3 53-: RH W Virginia Beta Chapter of Phi Delta Theta Founded a! Miami University. Oxford. Ohio. '848 Eslablishcd a! the University of Virginia. December 24. I873 FRATRES IN FACULTATE HALSTEAD SHIPMAN HEDGES, 35., M.A.. MD. WILLIAM EDWARD BRAY, M.A., MD. HENRY BREADON MULHOLIAND, M.D. FRATRES IN URBE EDWARD VALENTINE WALKER ALBERT IRVING COLLEGE EDWARD A. LEE 1. DUNCAN FULLER. JR. W. ROBERT MARTIN JOHN B. TAYLOR GILBERT E. MORCROFT FREDERIC O. HATCH J. DEAN QUARLES PAYNE D. QUARLES LEE H. BEASLY B. B. COMER LlLE THOMAS E. WOODWARD GEORGE A. CARTER HODGE C. BOULWARE LAW FREEMAN J. DANIELS FRED H. QUARLES. JR. OTIS P. DOBIE LOUIS L. GUY JOHN D. HYDE WILLIAM H. OVERBEY EDUCATION OSCAR THOMAS CLOSE INITIATES A. STEELE HOOPER WALTER W. HATCH JOSEPH K. ALEXANDER ELDRIDGE H. MOORE. WILLIAM C. PRICE BRADLEY ROBERTS HERBERT L. MORGENROTH BERNARD McCLAUGHERTY. JR. EDWARD G. ROHRBOUGH W. RODES WOODBURY CARTER R. ROWE WILLIAM F. BOSWELL JOHN MAHONEY ALFRED BURGESS JOHN TREGENZA jAMES W. KIRKSEY WILLIAM T. MITCHELL I273l zztum 395: Sidn- Suuao $235.22 .3355 .02 . .oEEEn. .230 6333 ...oohdacotam Jeubm :2 ioESSIEx' .Eucoous. Eocix .25736 cozzk 63.50! :0 .noEonzcux, JETQ' .n. .uuosxS 8.3.0:: ...oaun. ...:qu :3 Jung; $95: , , .....iHIAIMHVE. ..- , .. :.... Vi. .. , ?.?XQHMNJ... .v IHI .. , Wu. 4 4.5.2.1.! ... :tiv: k. 5.... q , .. . . 29. l. .r 632. Q H. . .. s . . . r vicio... -- .. nil. . . 13H . ., u .. . . , . . . . .. . Hi-p1 . .... , e . .. .. . x g Q Beta Iota Chapter of Delta Tau Delta Founded at Bethany College. I859 Established a! the University of Virginia, February 25, I889 FRATRES IN URBE EDWIN KELL O'BRIEN, 85.. CE. LEWIS D. CRENSHAW, BA. ROBERT MASSIE PAGE. MD. WILLIAM ALONZO RINEHART JOHN ELDON SHEPARD. JR. LEE H. WILLIAMSON WILLIAM R. SHEPARD JOSEPH B. MILLER. JR. jOHN McGILL DOUGLAS COLLEGE jOSIAH GAY BRYANT EDWARD M. PAYNE. JR. DICK M. WHEAT EDWARD C. NUCKOLS LEWIS W. MclLHANEY EDWARD C. FISHER. JR. MACKIE T. WRIGHT JOHN BUTLER ARNOLD DUDLEY G. ROE, JR. RlSQUE W. PLUMMER JACK MERCIER DOYLE RECTOR WOOTTEN MARCELLUS D. MCBRIDE EDWARD L. MCDONALD jOHN N. LEAVELL HARVIE. WILLIAMS EDWIN MORTON QUIMBY WILLIAM HENRY WHEAT. JR. LAW MACILBURNE VANVOORHIFS CURTIS EMERY CUDDY PERRY S. POFFENBARGER FLOYD GRAHAM HURST JOSEPH B. MILLER DICK MARSH WHEAT OSCAR E. PARRISH, JR. JEROME M. GARLAND MEDICINE JOSEPH HELMS FARROW DANIEL BROWN PIERSON JOHN HAMILTON SCHERER ENGINEERING RICHARD C. VANVOORHIES ARTHUR PETER. JR. i2751 02.09.! :0 .53.: 52:3 ..l 5...: coink .naut-Em c.5320 .3.EQE:I J5...- u.a.o; 63:30! 61:35: .4. $21: 62:205. .535 633 .3120 52.3.2 .coz-m .85.. .I :3qu 5323.2 .2002 .BoEu 62:00 50.2 :30 ..m wan P. ff... wili. ,. . Virginia Chapter of Delta Chi Founded at Cornell University. I890 Established at lhe Universily of Virginia. I905 FRATRES IN URBE HARMAN ANDERSON DlNWlDDlE GARLAND D. McNUTT WILLIAM C. FIFE PERRIN F. SHAW COLLEGE LOUIS HASKELL ALLEN THOMAS HARVEY MACMILLAN VERNON C. AUSTIN. JR. WILLIAM CALVIN MITCHELL WILLIAM NIELS CHACE JAMES HERBERT MOORE J. BROOKS EMORY, JR. ARTHUR STARR NIENDORFF WILLIAM FORD GIBSON, JR. KENNETH S. PATTON HARRY H. HADEN ARCHIE DOUGLAS ROBERTSON JOHN BAGBY HALEY JAMES WILLIAM ST. CLAIR WILLIAM ELLSWORTH jONES GEORGE WALTER WOOD LAW CHAMPE TERRILL BROADDUS CAMMIE B. HADEN GWYNN KENNETH CROWTHER FRANK LILE TAYLOR LEONARD E. VIELBIG MEDICINE PETER ALLEN HALEY. 11 ROBERT TASKER HUMPHRIES ROSSER N. HILISMAN. JR. MELVIN WOOD McGEHEE ARCHITECTURE JULIUS FRANKLIN HUNT ENGINEERING WILLIAM RAYMOND GORDON I277I vcom 7! Julm .cchom :0 Ewan .532. :0 ins. 653.20 :ubm 3.25:3 :oanqm 62:06 ion. 63.3. ..G .xoua .3035: 60:30 $0.355 52:32... .n. .3150 $2370 3.31.292 53.22 imam Eek 6:: .9220 6:2 .cuEEE; .Ecuo , . 3.4.. 341355.. W? Psi Chapter of Phi Sigma Kappa Founded at Massachusetts Agricultural College. 1873 Established al the University of Virginia. january I9. I907 FRATRES IN FACULTATE HARVEY EARNEST JORDAN. M.A.. PH.D. WALTER SHELDON RODMAN. B.S.. S.M. WILLIAM j. MADDOX. A.B., PHD. FRATRES IN URBE EUGENE DEBULLET ROBERT EDWIN ODOM THEODORE ESSEX DEAN JAMES PORTER BAKER THEODORE HARDEEN. JR. EWING GORDON SIMPSON DAYTON M. KOHLER NELSON ALBERT BRYAN COLLEGE ROBERT R. BLACK HARRY H. HARDEEN GEORGE 5. BLACK LAWRENCE B. FLOURNOY RALPH OWEN EASTON EDMOND P. WALMSLEY BENJAMIN GORDON GEORGE S. BRUSH JOSEPH B. BOND. JR. GEORGE AUSTIN WIGHTMAN THOEDORE E. DAVIES LEMUEL X. MAYO EUGENE C. HYDE CHARLES W. DELANEY CHARLES Y. CLARKE CLIFFORD L. NEILSON JOHN HOWARD W. McALLISTER LAW JAMES BARKER MAY C. ARMONDE PAXSON RICHARD GIBSON DEANE MEDICINE THOMAS STERLING CLAIBORNE LELAND FLOYD HOBBS FRANK A. DANIEL ENGINEERING NELSON B. DANIEL ARCHITECTURE HARRISON TRUEHEART POSTON WILLIAM BLAND DEW. JR. BOYER GONZALES. JR. IZTQI .0 ins! 63.53: 5.26 :m .uaasmon .53: :5on 63...; 639.5 coioa r: .5255 :23; .EuI .4. .5255 5.3. iota: 69.2.30 $1.95 .co-um connoo .232; iotin .2693 :0 5:! 62.123! 23$ couctim $2.32 ..m. .3 5.1500 ,, 1.3.... J... . .9 .43.. Rho Chapter of Delta Phi Founded at Union College, 1827 Eslablishcd al the Universily of Virginia, March I. I907 FRATER IN URBE D. ELLIS BROWN GEORGE CAMERON jOHN M. BARRINGER RICHARD FOSTER DEBUTTS WILLIAM jONES DEBUTTS SEABURY DAVIES FRANKLIN EDSON. lll ERNEST HENRY EVERY. JR. SHEPLY EDWARD EVANS WILLIAM SELDEN GRANDY JAMES ELLIOTT HEATH. JR. FREDERICK HAMLIN HOBBS. JR. JOHN McALLISTER COPPER COLLEGE MEDICINE ROBERT LLOYD HOLCOMB WILLIAM TAYLOR HAM. JR. ISHAM KEITH, 1n. GEORGE ROBERT MACMAHON HARRISON CARTER MYERS, JR. DOUGLAS 0. MYERS WALTER BOUAMY POWER, JR. RICHARD VIAR SHANKLIN JAMES ROBERT SHANKLlN CORBIN GRIFFIN WALLER jOHN RANDOLPH WEAVER JAMES BEEBE HAWES JOHN HARTWELL HARRISON JOHN E. WILLIAMS BROWN LAW TAYLOR VINSON WILLIAM GRIGGS GASSAWAY IQHI 5.:2 3E2::$ :P i .22; :0 .3930 .5330 63:52. 52.680 .2310 602.366 ..u .0 6:55 czuad ionncio 65.x; I 32:93. .:mEm :Iu .axOoEoo .:oziooam .2952 53.5.! 4:322 :11 Jovsoam .coEozam 46-30 6.32an .3; .33on 5.9500 :u JoFEO .caEBoO :2152 . ,uok 7 7A Q. q, , v2 1W. Iff. q 0ij Jif' ?n. .41.. Virginia Eta Chapter of Sigma Phi Epsilon Founded at Richmond College. I900 Established at line University of Virginia. I906 FRATER IN FACULTATE DR. WILLIAM ALEXANDER LAMBETH. M.D., PH.D. FRATRES IN URBE JACK KENNAN HALBURTON MCCOY. MD. PAUL S. HILL E. S. ABERNATHY HARRY LECATO SMITH JAMES LEIGH HAWKINS WILLIAM H. WEIGERING ROBERT KING COLLEGE 1. PAUL PERKINS CHESTER CAWCROFT REXFORD HOWARD BURR AUSTIN FRANCIS JAMES MERRITT EDWARD CLAYTON SUMMERS DAVID CHARLES STOUDER CROSBY HUNGERFORD SUMMERS DESMOND BERNARD DONNELLY EUGENE AUGUST DlETRlCH WARREN HARVEY SMALL ROBERT SCOTT KIMBALL PAUL S. THOMAS CHARLES LAVELL MILLER ROGER VAN NEST POWELSON RICHARD PATRICK COLEMAN DEXTER FLINT WHITE FRANK RUSSEL CAPPS HENRY ROUNTREE CRAWFORD JAMES EARLE CARNER KENNETH HUNTLY EKIN GRAFTON MASSEY COMEGYS LAW LEWIS DEXTER MOWRY HERBERT HAYES MURPHY WALKLEY E. JOHNSON JOHN WISE AYRES JAMES MEYRICK WILLIAMS ALFRED TYNDALE WHITE MERRICK IRWIN CAMPBELL FRANK HALE GOODRICH JAMES DEVLIN STOCKWELL JOHN EDWARD SMITH ENGINEERING HOWARD SWINEFORD YEATTS JAMES SNEAD GODSEY MEDICINE CHARLES V. CARNER WINTHROP HUNTINGTON HALL FRANCIS ARTHUR SNIDOW DAWSON EDWARD XVATKINS FREDERICK D. HOLLOWELL ARCHITECTURE OSCAR MONTGOMERY HANSON GRADUATE JAMES MONTROSE GRAHAM f253l 32:03 .5qu .32.: .lE.oI 68.32 58.0; 55::3 Co335 .3225 .5021! .:2.30 .nou-iaum .oau:..oI uoEouom 6-2::m .Eoznosm .3353: .3qu .31... Phi Zeta Chapter of Alpha Chi Rho Founded at Trinity College, 1895 Established a! University of Virginia, lune 8. I907 FRATER IN FACULTATE MALCOLM McLEOD FRATRES IN URBE JAMES CULLEN WIANT WENDELL AVON YATES COLLEGE FREDERICK EDWIN BAUKHAGES, 1H WENDELL RAY HOLMES FREDERICK EDWIN BEACHLEY DOUGLAS ANDREW SALE MARCELLUS KEY DUERSON. JR. JOHN ANNANDALE SWANSON ADOLPH PHARO GAGGE JOSEPH PENN VICKERS LOUIS STREET HADEN CHARLES WILLIAM WEISIGER. JR. HENRY HOFMANN HIRSCHBIEL. JR. ROY MARCELLUS WILLIAMS ENGINEERING CHARLES ABRAMS SHEPHERD ARCHITECTURE CHRISTIAN STANGER HERITAGE. JR. FREDERICK STUART HILDER jOHN JACOB MATTERN. JR. INITIATES CURTIS CHARLES BEATY GEORGE MILTON SULLIVAN JAMES PAYNE CARROLL. JR. LEWIS CUSSONS TRICE I2851 xo... 62.506 .Locntow Joann 539...: ion 523$ .53! .:onaE-O 63.5 63:30! 63:33 6330-20 2.88.. r... .1535. :2, .385 igm Eta! .ngm :1 5-532 .3112 .39230 6959.1, .EsEM .335 625 6.33.; uE-oz .23 . data .9533... .c-Egouz c3533 .xocaan. :m 6035 .:oanE.w Xi Chapter of Theta Chi Founded at Norwich University. I856 Eslablished a! the Universily of Virginia, September 26. I913 FRATRES IN URBE BENJAMIN HERMAN BAILEY. MD. WILLIAM DONALD BEARD. B.A. NOBLE ClLLEY POWELL. B.A.. DD. COLLEGE FRANK C. ALDERMAN PAUL JACKSON ARRINGTON HENRY EASLEY BELT jOHN JOHNSTON BOND OSBORN FlTZ-RANDOLPH BRUCE. JR. GEORGE HENRY BROWN NOBLE MAXWELL GOODLOE TEMPLIN R. LICKLIDER, JR. JOHN BUXTON MADDREY EDWARD ARCHIBALD MARKS. 1R. HORACE STOWE MARSHALL JOHN ALBION MARSH WILLIAM JOHN OVEN NOWELL DARDEN NELMS JOHN F. PUTNEY FRANKLIN PIERCE ROBINSON JACK WILLIAM EDGAR SIMPSON LOUIS SCRIBNER GRAHAM FRANCIS SMITH JULIAN MORRIS VAN BUREN BENJAMIN COKE WOOD HERMAN PAEPEKE WILMS ROBERT BALDWIN WOMBLE. JR. LAW CURTIS MERRY DOZlER. JR. JOHN HOLT FOX GIST LESESNE MEDICINE EUGENE SWANSON GROSECLOSE. CHARLES HARRISON MANN. JR. CHARLES A. ROND ROBERT BURWELL STARKE CHARLES KEPPLER. JR. OLIVER LEON VONCANON ENGINEERING PHlLlP A. GALLAGHER WILLIAM FITZGERALD LIPSCOMB HARRY PRICE. JR. GRADUATE ARCHER STUART CAMPBELL. BS. ALVIN B. BISCOE. 85. JOHN HENRY SHUFF JOHN LIVINGSTON VAUGHN. JR. WILLIAM ALLEN WOOD. lll FRANK MARSHALL. JIL. BS. lzsn .uE.o.EE.n. ...oE.o:t2$ 5:222... .EEu?om .2532; .Eonoccow .32 .53332 42.3: anqum .0220 c23x Chi Chapter of Zeta Beta Tau Founded al the College of the City of New York, I898 Eslablishcd al lhe Universily of Virginia. Iune I2. I9I5 FRATER IN FACULTATE ERNEST LINWOOD LEHMAN, B.A., M.A.. PH.D. COLLEGE VICTOR FREDERICK WERTHEIMER RICHARD WHITEHILL LORIN NUSBAUM JOSEPH NEY FREYHAN ODENHEIMER HAROLD EDWARD GROTTA JOSEPH HASPEL. JR. IRWIN BERNSTEIN HERBERT SONNEBORN E. v. BENJAMIN. JR. JACK ADLER LAW EUGENE P. FLORSHIEM I2591 aka; .EzuE .:-:I :w .LoaaMoJ c0522:- .u.Euufom 6:33. .355 EchEO .5326 :2 coaumoq :w .:.3-Eom .EEo-Eazcom 9.3503 655.22... 6558:... .2552 2:5 Nu Chapter of Phi Epsilon Pi Founded at the City College of New York. I901 Established al lhe University of Virginia. December. ,8. I9I5 COLLEGE A. JULIAN BERNSTEJN SIDNEY BERNSTEIN JAMES COLEMAN HAROLD DORFMAN GERALD FLAUM ARTHUR B. FLEISHMAN ALVIN FRIEDBERG CHARLES L. GOLDSTEN SAM B. GUNST MATTHEW H. HIRSH ALBERT D. LEWY JACK MANNE SYLVAN B. ROTHSCHILD JOSEPH M. RUBENS. JR. G. M. SCHWARZSCHILD, JR. HERMAN WEINBERG LAW BERNARD S. DAVIS WILLARD S, MIELZINER MEDICINE MAURICE L. LEBAUER SIDNEY F. LEBAUER H911 unto Jeezm .:o;oaos. .4... 6:55 :12: .3255 .5 .3-0 62.35 .5 .5982 3:2... 6;; .55m 63.355 3.55 6.05.25 633...; 33-0 .2230 50-25 635ng 6:31 .5120 .252. 8.23: cozam 53:3 .2555, .uizal 423.5 .330 .3331 .5qu I Alpha Mu Chapter of Delta Sigma Phi Founded al lhc College of the City of New York. December I0. I899 Established a! lhc Universily of Virginia. May 14. I921 FRATRES IN FACULTATE REES MORGAN. M.D. ARTHUR FRANCIS MACCONOCHIE, B.Sc. TlPTON RAY SNAVELY. M. A.. PHD. GEORGE TALMAGE STARNES. M.A.. PH.D. FRATRES IN URBE GORDON CROOKES LEWIS WILEY JACKSON ROLLINS. JR.. MD. HAROLD ANDERSON VIA COLLEGE ALLAN ELLIOT ANDERSON FREDERICK BRUCE HACKETT FRANK EDWARD BUTLER. JR. FREDERICK ARTHUR OHNS SMITH RUFUS BRI'ITINGHAM. JR. GORDON BRUCE. THA ER ROBERT HUNTON CHILTON. JR. JAMES EDWARD WARD. JR. AMES WEBB COLE. JR. EUGENE JOSEPH WILSON lLLlAM HOWARD DODSON. JR. AYNARD SCOTT WILLIAMS LAW HORACE GREELY BASS HENRY WARREN CONANT. JR. JOHN KERMlT BIRCHFIELD NORMAN SHANNONHOUSE. ELLIOT JAMES DEFORREST BURCH ALEXANDER BYRD MCDOWELL WILLIAM WYANT WHARTON MEDICINE EDW'ARD KNAPP HAWKE ROBERT IRVINE TRENT ROBERT WILLIAM WHITE ARCHITECTURE CHARLES WALLACE SELDEN. JR. ENGINEERING WILLIAM LEE DAVIS. JR. JOSEPH LUCIFER POLLARD. JR. ALVIN CHUSHMAN GRAVES GROVER LEE WHITE. JR. MORTIMER ELIOT PAYNE CLAUDE MALLORY WILKINSON I 2931 .h .3 .525 53.5.2. .:o!on.os. .nEBm .52.:5 .84 .xcunam 6:73: 5.2602 .onCoous. ..u .1 .coiam .3: $2.33 53.... $.21 53.8 .55... fa: 333. .8120 .52 echix .351 co.nosu .auohocam .:o:.ua:o .. .4 I J.?iwl ...11-.a i141 'Cl' il-a.?!cli . Virginia Chapter of Delta Upsilon FRATRES IN URBE ROBERT EDWARD LEE HENRY EUBANK JOSEPH NORMAN SHUMATE COLLEGE JAMES E. BOWEN C. WALDO JOHNSTON W. THOMAS BOWEN JOHN WALLACE. LYNCH JACK PRESTON DALTON THEODORE ANDREW MCDOWELL EDWIN EARLE HART ALFRED BUFFIN MCEWEN JOHN OMOHUNDRO HURT WINSTON PHELPS ALEXANDER BELL STUMP LAW JAMES AMBROSE LEITCH HUGH DEWITT MCCORMICK JOHN BOORTH SULLIVAN ENGINEERING ASHTON LITTLE GODLEY GEORGE DONALD HARING ROBERT ERWIN LEE INITIATES FLETCHER JONES AARON FRA NK ALBERT FORESTER JOHN BANCROFT. Ill GEORGE RAYMOND JONES BAILEY TYLER CLARKE. JR. HAPOLD GEORGE NIX RICHARD ANTHONY CUPAIUOLI ROBERT EDWARD TAYLOR I2951 .m Eta: :oELuo :m .22; .5232 i351 .2012 cocuem .2355 ntuizuw c335 .5 Eta: :39;qu .Eanzcsaom 603.320 5....zw Joni! .300 .33! .5524 :m .2an cocooom :' av g Mu Chapter of Phi Alpha Founded 19,4. Washinglon, D. C. Established a! University of Virginia. April. I922 FRATER IN URBE HENRY RUBIN COLLEGE APRIL, ELLIS APRIL. BENN BEECHER, LAWRENCE EHRLICH, HARRY GEGERSON, HARRY GLASSER. BERNARD HARRIS. VICTOR HYMAN, HARRY SCHWARTZ, FELIX LAW CARMEL. MACY MACHT. JEROME MEDICINE GOLDSTEIN. MEYER KRUGER. A. LEON LIDMAN. BERNARD MONSKY. DAVID OCHS, J. CHARLES ROSNER. SAMUEL RUBY. NATHANIEL ROTHENBERG. BERNARD SHAPIRO. ANDREW HARRIS. SYDNEY GREENSPON. MANUEL Eoiuz 3.8:: .3504 6.9520313 63:... do :6 .534 cohesisom .NzioSI 105;... count... 526:! .353; .555 concav- .E.av. :35! 6.3306 :0 .523 :3; .35.... .59150 .chEouw .ouotu .2..n:onom Mu Chapter of Alpha Epsilon Pi Founded a! New York UnIVersily, I9l3 Established at the Universily of Virginia, November 29. I924 FRATER IN FACULTATE DR. BEN-ZION LlNFlELD COLLEGE NORBERT ALTSCHUL GEORGE J. KASLOFF FRANKLIN COHEN DAVID R. LEVIN BERTRAM E. FISHEL HARRY A. ORNSTEIN KENNETH M. FRIEDE WILLIAM C. ROSENBLATT HARRY M. FRIEDEN SANFORD B. SCHULHOFER HARRY HILFER BENJAMIN STEINMAN HAROLD E. HOROWITZ ALFRED H. WASSERSTROM S. HARRISON KAHN RICHARD S. WEISS LAW LEWIS K. KESSER MEDICINE CHARLES KAVOVIT GERSHON LEVIN HENRY W. LITVACK ENGINEERING MITON C. GOLDBERG CARL KANTER GRADUATE HERMAN LERNER I2991 aI .F .3 6305.5 ital cozam 6.232 m .3330 soooi .852. .3335 act 5330 .muocom S52! 22.3 .a. c9320 ...oE.u1 So .3 S .u .w 6:255 :2 Chi Chapter of Beta Kappa Founded a! Hamline University, I901 Established al the University of Virginia. December 8. I927 FRATRES IN URBE ROBERT C. BURGESS DAN O. NICHOLS. MD. COLLEGE WILLIAM C. BARRETT. JR. ROBERT F. DOUGLAS WYATT T. BURNETTE HARRY R. MCCOY EDGAR M. CROUCH FRED S. PALMER EDUCATION RICHARD E. KIEENY. JR. ENGINEERING H. S. WRIGHT LAW LUClUS A. BUCK HOWARD H. HACKLEY HERBERT H. BUTLER XVALTER C. HARRIS LOUIS C. jAMES MEDICINE LOUIS BENJAMIN SHEPPARD INITIATES GUY E. BURNETTE J. E. ROARK BRAXTON E. GALLUP E. M. SENECA Hm I Farewell in Two Manners I. FAREWELL TO VIRGINIA I haVe said good-bye so often heretofore, so many times. and for so many reasons, that you must think my low turns with the seasons and surely you'll not listen any more. Yet I have found that living is unsure and full of unintentional malfeazancee a man must often choose between two treasons, and I have had to make the choice before. You know this: there are many complex currents guiding the body when the mind is true- I haVe never walked with heroes or knight-errants, and yet I do what I am bound to do. My life leads me on many curious errands, but always, in the end. I come to you. II. FAREWELL TO THE NIGHT This is my last saluteeit's rather brave, considering how many years I find confronting me alone. Still, I don't mind: I'd rather you had left me what you gave gallantly for awhile, but love won't sac, and it's too late now-all that's left behind. You brought me happiness of every kind, and the gift WAS too great, so here's a grave. I'm going, now. I don't know where I'm going. but you'll be lost there, and I'll be alone; there,s dark rain beating and cold sea-wind blowing emptily through me, and my lips are stone. And it's a last salute: I leave you, knowing that much of what I leave you is my own. G. PEYTON WERTENBAKER. f3021 E3? IPIREI'IFI V awwwwww 0+;Tzzooor zgwgoraoapw mg Lambda Pi Academic Fraternity Founded a! the University of Virginia. 1896 FRATRES IN FACULTATE WILLIAM ALLISON KEPNER. M.A.. PHD. WILLIAM HARRISON FAULKNER. M.A.. PHD. RICHARD MONTGOMERY BIRD. BA. 85.. PH.D. .O. BRIS TOW CANADA CARRINGTON .H. CARTER .COLEMAN .BROUN JR. BRYANT .DAUGHERTY .FISHBURNE. jR .FITZHUGH JAMES MORRIS PAGE. LL.D.. PHD. jOHN LLOYD NEWCOMB. B.A.. C.E. WILLIAM MYNN THORNTON. LL.D. ALBERT LEFEVRE. B.A.. LL.D.. PHD. RICHARD HENRY WILSON. M.A.. PHD. RICHARD HEATH DABNEY. M.A.. PHD. WILLIAM HOLDING ECHOLS. 85.. CE. FRANCIS HARRIS ABBOT. M.A. GRADUATE MEMBERS T c. DANIELS w. M. KELLER F c DAVIDSON C. F. KINCHELOE. JR. L. M DENT w. C. LUKE J. B. FITE. T. A. McEACHERN. JR. L A. D. GILMER H. D. MCCORMICK J. M GOLDSMITH T.S. MEADE H. G. HUDNALL aw. MORRIS J. H. IRVINE ACTIVE MEMBERS H F FLlPPEN B. B. C. LILE D. s FRENCH L. L. LOVING F. c. GARRETT M. w. LUPTON c. C. GRATTAN. 111 w. R. MARTIN w. s. GRANDY C. B. MCCOY o. C GREGORY J. C. MCDOWELL J. L. HALL L.W.Mc1LHANY F. M. HARRIS A. w. MERLE. JR J H. HARRISON c. E MORCROFT R. G HENEBERGER H C. MOTLEY P. H HICKSON R. D. MORRISON F. H HOBBS. JR w. H. OVERBY B. L. HOLLADAY A.D.PEN1CK C. w HOLLAND N C. PFNNIMAN G. R. HUMRICKHOUSE A. B. PINKERTON w. E. JOHNSON J s. POINDEX l'ER 1. KEITH JR J D. FULLER. JR M. s KNOWLTON JR. J. D QUARLES w C. LATIMER. JR. P D QUARLFs E. A. LEE R. M. RAINEY. JR J.D. LEWIS w. B RHETT. JR. l3041 F. M. MORRISON E. S. ORGAIN T. PHILLIPS M. M. PINCKNEY F. H. QUARLES. JR. B. W. RAWLFS J. E. ROBERTS W. M. L. ROGERS .ROBINSON .D. RUNK S.HANKLIN JR SMITH .STUAR'I .STUART jR. .SWINDELL TALL EY .TURNER. jR. .H. TURNER ?gznw?RTp DHerwg??Hwagpowm: .W. WISNER JR. T. E. WOODW'ARD CORKS 6 CURLS Skull and Keys Founded a! the University of Virginia. I9II GRADUATE MEMBERS E. A. ALDERMAN. JR. W. L. CLAY. JR. P. H. PICOT W. A. BROWN R. L. ECHOLS J K. SLOAN N. L. BOSWORTH JR. W. C. FLAKE J E. SMITH M. CALL S. B. CRIMES G. R. TAYLOR H. CARTER L. MACKALL A. A. WILLIAMS W M. CHEW R. W. C. McCLANAHAN F. L. WIIJJAMS A B CHINN H. H. MOSS F. C. WILLIAMS. JR. ACTIVE MEMBERS A. S. BALLOU J. A. C. KEITH J. YOUNG F. C BATTEY M. B. LEWIS, JR. B. H. RANDOLPH. JR. H. BISHOP S. M. LONG M. E RANDOLPH A. H BRYAN R. G. MACRUDER H. G. ROBINSON M. L. BOOTH H. C. MARCHANT C. A RUEGER G COOPER. JR. E. B. MCGEORGE. JR. A. H. SANDS B. W. DAVENPORT H. L. MARSTON J. N. SEBRELL W. W. DUNN. JR. R. MEYER J. R. SHANKLIN J. ELLIS G V MONCURE C. A. SMITH J. W. FISHBURN, Jn. W. P. MOORE H. L. SMITH J. FORD J. K MORFORD W. H. SMITH D. FRENCH W. W. MOSS. JR. W. P. TAYLOR T. M. FORSYTH J. MOYLER. JR R D. TRIMBLE W. E. GOODMAN. III C. D. NELSON C. G. WAU..ER E. GWATHMEY A. S. B. NOLTING D. M WHEAT W. A. HALLOWES C. P OATES E. O. N. WILLIAMS J. O. HENDERSON N. B. ORRICK F M. WILLIAMS R. HOLCOMB A. H. PATTERSON J. P. WILLIAMS P. H. FAULCONER S. B. PURDY P. R WILLIAMS T. G. FAULKNER. JR. W. H. WOOD. JR G. A. KAMINER E. H. WRIGHT. III I306l PHI DELTA PHI Minor Chapter of the Legal Fraternity of Phi Delta Phi Founded a! The Universily of IWicIn'gan. I859 Established. I890 FRATRES IN FACULTATE WILLIAM MINOR LILE FREDERICK DEAN GOODWIN RlBBLE ARMlSTEAD MASON DOBIE ALFRED BOLLING THOMAS MUNFORD BOYD L. W. WOOD DAVID JOSEPH WOOD JAMES RILEY AYRES. JR. HERBERT LEE BOATWRIGHT WILLIS WILSON BOHANNON ARMISTEAD LLOYD BOOTHE CHAMP TERRELL BROADDUS ROBERT GAMBLE CABELL. III WILLIAM LAW CLAY. JR. WILLIAM McLEOD FERGUSON FRANK HALE GOODRICH MEMBERS I3091 GEORGE BOARDMAN EAGER, 11:. CHARLES PATTERSON NASH HARDY CROSS DILLARD FRATRES IN URBE ALLAN PERKINS C. E. MORAN L. T. HANKLE. JR. ADDINELL HEWSON MICHIE RICHARD KENNON HINES. JR. FLOYD GRAHAM HURST MAURICE GERALD LONG. JR. ELDRIDGE HORD MOORE HUNTER HOLMES MOSS RUSSELL LEE POST FRED HUNDLEY QUARLFS. JR. FRANK LILE TAYLOR FIELDING LEWIS WILLIAMS TAYLOR VINSON PHI ALPHA DELTA CORKS 6 CU RLS Thomas Jefferson Chapter of Phi Alpha Delta Law Fraternity Founded at Chicago, Ken! School of Law. 1897 Eslabll'shed. I910 FRATER IN URBE ROSSER CLEVELAND FORBES HONORARY MEMBERS HON. WILLIAM HODGES MANN HON. SAMUEL W. WILLIAMS ACTIVE MEMBERS J. KERMIT BIRCHFIELD HERBERT WEEDEN MILLER LUCIUS A. BUCK DONALD T. PATTERSON WILLIAM M. CRUMPLER. JR. CHARLES A. PAXSON RICHARD G. DEANE DRAPER W. PHILLIPS CHARLES F. HAGAN EWING G. SIMPSON SHIRLEY M. HELM HORACE A. TEASS JAMES A. LElTCH. JR. ROBERT B. TYLER JAMES B. MAY RICHARD S. WRIGHT ALEXANDER BYRD MCDOWELL JOHN G. YANCEY INITIATES D. ARTHUR KElSEY. jn. F. B. MACDONALD. JR. W. W. WHARTON l3lll :..0 .In. CORKS Q CU RLS Pi Mu Chapter of Phi Chi Medical Fraternity Pi Mu Founded al the University of Virginia. 1892 Phi Chi Founded a! the University of Louisville. I889 Amalgamalion of the Fralcrm'lies Eiecled. I922 FRATRES IN FACULTATE DR. ROBERT BENNETT BEAN DR. jAMES ALEXANDER WADDELL FRATRES IN URBE DR. PAUL B. BARRINGER DR. M. P. GORDON. 13. DR. HUGH T. NELSON MEMBERS Class of 1929 ARTHUR EUBYING CLOVER PAUL RUTHERFORD McFADYEh CHARLES SLICER GROSECLOSE. ROBERT E. PEYTON CHRISTOPHER TURMAN Class of 1930 WALTER jOHNSON ALLEGREE EMORY LEE SHIFLETT JOSEPH PAUL COCO - CLAUDE BRACKE'IT SMITH ALEXANDER TAYLOR MAYO JULIAN E. WEST jOHN CLAIBORNE PALMER TEARL BUXTON EZELL DEWEY L. ANDERSON . Class of 1931 HOWARD HICKS ASHBURY PETER ALLEN HALEY. I! HARLOE BAILEY WELDON MERRI'I'T HARLOE GEORGE DANIEL CAPACCIO THOMAS PRESTON MCKEE JOHN BRADLEY COUSAR ASA ELMORE SEEDS FRANCIS ARTHUR SNIDOW Class of 1 932 HENRY HAMILTON HAMMER EDGAR WILSON KIRBY, JR. JOHN ERNEST VAUGHAN Iznle DZ 1205 32 . 1.13,. 1.11.... L IIIJI . , ll: F5511... .r1'vtm'tM QI'i Pi Mu Chapter of Nu Sigma Nu Medical Fraternity Founded al the University of Michigan. 1882 Eslabll'died, I904 FRATRES IN FACULTAT E DR. STEPHEN HURT WATTS DR. HALSTEAD SHIPMAN HEDGFS DR. BRUCE MORTON DR. FLETCHER DRUMMOND WOODWARD DR. WILLIAM VINCENT ARCHER DR. CARL CASKEY SPEIDEL DR. JAMES CARROL FLlPPEN DR. WILLIAM WIRT WADDELL DR. ROBERT LEONARD KING FRATRES IN URBE DR. HUGH THOMAS NELSON DR. MARION HOWELL WATSON DR. THOMAS RUFFIN PRATT DR. 0. N. SHELTON DR. WILL WATERS MEMBERS Class of 1919 WILLIAM CHILDS HUTCHESON JOHN DAVIS WARE PAUL OTTO JOHN RYAN MYERS BASCOM BROKENBOROUGH YOUNG HERBERT DEGRANGE WOLFF. JR. Class of 1930 JOHN RANDOLPH EGGLESTON ARCHIBALD ALEXANDER LITTLE. JR. CHARLES KEPPLER, 1:. ROBERT BARRETT SKINNER WILLIAM ANDREW BRUMFIELD. JR. JAMES PETER KING WILLIAM MARYON MOIR WILLIAM LANGLEY SIBLEY Class of 1931 JOHN EDWIN ROBERTS MELVIN DWIGHT SMITH WINTHROP HUNTINGTON HALL F. G. ZICK L. S. MERIWEATHER Class of 1932 EDWIN E. BARKSDALE J. WALTER DAVIS. JR. JAMES B. HAWES EDGAR P. MCKINNEY ROBERT L TRENT MUNFORD R. YATES t$20.m OI: .In. CORKS 6 CU RLS Sigma Chapter of Phi Rho Sigma Medical Fraternity Founded al Norlhwulern Universily. l87l Eslablished 0! Ike University of Virginia. I904 FRATRES IN FACULTATE DR. WILLIAM HALL GOODWIN DR. HENRY SWIFT NEFF DR. HENRY BEARDON MULHOLLAND DR. JAMES EDWIN WOOD. 111. DR. FRANK STAFFORD FRATRES IN URBE DR. R. A. CANDY DR. A. GENTILE DR. F. H. FECHTIG MEMBERS Class of 1929 JAMES PORTER BAKER. JR. ALVA DUCKETT DAUGHTON GUY W'INSTON HORSLEY ROBERT TUNSTALL PIERCE, jn. WILLIAM COWELL STEPHENSON THOMAS BRADLEY EUGENE SWANSON GROSECLOSE ROBERT WINGFIELD C. McCLANAHAN IOSEPH MCBRIDE SLOAN 'D. o. HAMBLIN Class of 1930 MANFRED CALL. Ill JOSEPH HELMS FARROW GEORGE TAYLOE GWATHMEY ROBERT EDWIN ODOM A. W. PINKERTON BENJAMIN WATKINS RAVVLES. JR. 0. L. VAN CANNON C. V. CAMER WILLIAM M. GAMMON PAUL KELLS FREDERICK McCULLOCH MORRISON P. HARRISON PICOT EDWARD STUART ORGAIN MORTON MORRIS PINCKNEY R. FRANK SLAUGHTER ALLAN ELLIOTT WALKER THOMAS LEONARD WATSON, JR. WILLIAM MASSIE WHITEHEAD VICTOR EVANS SOUTHGATE LEIGH. JR. R. LOMAX WELLS WILLIAM CHALMERS WILLS D. B. PIERSON PAUL RIVERCOMB Class of 1931 ROBERT EARLE GLENDY CHARLES CANADA CHARLES FULLER KINCHELOE, JR. SAMUEL BUTLER CRIMES HARRY GILMORE HUDNULL DAXVSON EDW'ARD WATKINS. JR. JACK SPENCER FRANCIS NICHOLSON TAYLOR Class of 1932 NATHANIEL LEWIS BOSXVORTH. JR. AUSTIN BROCKENBROUGH CHINN CHARLES LOUIS GILBERT JOHN HARTWELL HARRISON CHARLES MORRIS NELSON WAT HENRY TYLER WlLl lAM NIEBHUR WEAVER HUGH GRIGSBY WHITEHEAD. JR. .1 lfrmm .In. CORKS 6 CURL IiNJ x L929 Alpha Eta Chapter of Phi Beta Pi Medical Fraternity Founded al Wcslcrn Pennsylvania Medical College. I89! Established, I908 FRATRES IN FACULTATE DR. WILLIAM EDWARD BRAY DR. RAYMOND DEVAN KIMBROUGH DR. LEROY ADELBERT CALKINS DR. JAMES ERNEST KINDRED DR. RICHARD TAYLOR ERGENBRIGHT DR. REES R. MORGAN DR. HARVEY ERNEST jORDAN DR. LAWRENCE THOMAS ROYSTER Dn. DUDLEY CRAWFORD SMITH FRATRES IN URBE DR. EUGENE ANTHONY BAIN DR. ELLIS COLUMBUS MOORE Dn. EDWIN CROWELL HAMBLEN Dn. CHARLB HANSEN PETERSON Dn. VIRGIL LEONIDAS KELLY. JR. DR. WILEY JACKSON ROLLINS DR. WARREN WOMACK KOONTZ DR. THOMAS JACKSON SIMS Dn. THOMAS EPPS WILSON MEMBERS Class of 1929 WILBUR ALLEN BARKER ROBERT BONSER LOBBAN ARTHUR PARKER BUTT. JR. CHIMER DAVIS MOORE FRANK LEROY BYERS FREDERICK PlLCHER. JR. AUBREY RICHARDSON CARTER JOHN ABOP PILCHERWg. FRANK DUNCAN COSTENBADER HARRISON RAWLINGS ESSON JOHN M. CLAYTON COVINGTON WILLIAM LEWIS WILLIAMS Class of 1930 JAMES EDWARD AMIS JOHN DAY PEAKE OEL LEROY DEUTERMAN ALFRED CHAMBERS RAY. JR. ILMER HOWARD PAINE ACHILLES LACY TYNFS JAMES EDWIN WlSSLER Class of 1931 A. TYREE FINCH CLIFTON K. HIMMELSBACK DAVID PIERCE GRAHAM JOSEPH WILLIAM HOUCK EDWARD KNAPP HAWKE WILLIAM HENRY PARKER ROBERT BEALL HIGHTOWER ALBERT CHESTERFIELD STUTSMAN WALTER LEE THOMAS Class of 1932 WILLIAM STAKES BEANE FREDERICK DIXON HOLLOWELL. JR. THOMAS D. BROWN WILLIAM DABNEY JARMAN FRANK DUNNINGTON DANIEL HULBURT CHRISTOPHER MCCOY WALTER ANSELL DEARICK FRANCIS N, McGAVOCK H. ROLFE DUPUY MELVlN WOOD McGEHEE WESSLEY FRY JOHN RANDOLPH PERDUE RANDOLPH BRYAN GRINNAN DELMAR FRANKLIN WEAVER. JR. JOSEPH EDGAR YOUNG. JR. I3191 aL ! 45 ....3 ! IaJ MW... w. Beta Delta Chapter of Alpha Kappa Kappa Medical Fraternity Founded a! Darlmaulh College, 1888 Eslablished, I922 HONORARY MEMBERS DR. WILLIAM EDWARD BROWN DR. THOMAS HENRY DANIELS FRATRES IN URBE Dn. CALVIN THOMAS BURTON DR. HUBERT B. HOLSINGER MEMBERS Class of 1929 JOHN W. BOLEN, JR. JOHN MONROE GREEN HENRY REID BOURNE. TARRING WHITFIELD HEIRONIMUS. JR. HOWE REESE COLEMAN. JR. TROY HOWELL HUTCHINSON CARL CONRAD COOLEY THOMAS CYPRlAN LAWFORD JOHN HOWARD GREENE HEROLD HIQUES McLEMORE Class of 1930 E. SCOTT ELLIOT PAUL SWANSON HILL WILLIAM ORGAIN PURDY Class of 1931 WILLIAM AMBROSE BROWN. JR. HARRY RAPHAEL KELLY SAMUEL HOWARD GARST TIMOTHY JOHN NASH ANGUS HINSON ELDRIDGE COOK SIMMONS BLISS KING WEEMS Class of 1932 J. LAWSON CABANISS FRANK A. STRICKLER CLARENCE D. FREEMAN. JR. GEORGE GARLAND TANNER B. KENNON PETER ROBERT EDWARD WESTMORELAND 13211 W; .i r . g: 4' f ?.5 'K $2., :1 f. l .: x:- K. a Cu, TH ETA TAU Pi Chapter of the Engineering Fraternity of Theta Tau Organized al the Universily of Minnesota. Oclober I5. I904 Installed a! the University a! Virginia. May 26. I923 FACULTY MEMBERS jOHN LLOYD NEWCOMB. A.B.. C.E. WALTER SHELDEN RODMAN, 3.5.. MS.. S.M. WILLIAM B. BARNES WILLIAM GOVAN BROWN. JR. ROBERT T. BROW'NING WILLIAM LEE DAVIS R. E. LEE. GILDEA JAMES SNEAD GODLEY M. L. GRIGG GEORGE DONALD HARING CHARLES DORSEY HARMON CLARENCE MORTIMER HAWKINS HARRY REGINALD HOLT EDWARD F. JOACHIM PAUL B. KREBS BERNARD JERRY KYLE MEMBERS WILLIAM L. LAFFERTY ROBERT E. LEE. JR. D. ALEXANDER MAYERS PAUL SELDEN PEACH GILFORD c. QUARLES LAWRENCE R. QUARLES EDWARD w. RICHARDS FRANKLIN WILLIAM ROSE. JR. ROBERT FRANCIS SELDEN WILLIAM WALLACE SYMINGTON. 1.; WILLIAM D. THORNHILL HARRY WYANT THURSTON ROBERT CROSBY VAN VOORHIES CLAUDE M. WILKINSON TRIGON ENGINEERING SOCIETY 44 CORKS a cums n l929 Trigon Engineering Society Founded al the University of Virginia. May. I924 HONORARY FACULTY MEMBERS ARTHUR FRANCIS MACCONOCHIE. B.Sc. JAMES SHANNON MILLER. B.A.. BS., E.E. CHARLES HENDERSON. E..E. GRADUATE MEMBER EWING GORDON SIMPSON. E.E. ACTIVE MEMBERS EDWIN EADS ANDREWS. JR. JAMES WALKER BEVERAGE HOWARD BRADLEY BLOOMER. JR. HODGE. CASEY BOULWARE ALEXANDER HAMILTON BRYAN BARTHOLOMEW FREDERICK CONLON DANIEL CARROLL COPPS WILLIAM CHAPPELL FLAKE. jn. WILLIAM HARRY FRAVEL BRUCE COVINGTON GUNNELL FREDERICK WILLIAM HESTER WILLIAM HENRY HINTON WILLIAM WHITMORE HURT ROBERT ALEXANDER LANCASTER MARCUS j. LAWRENCE DAVID LEE MAULSBY DONALD GRANT MACDONALD CHARLES EDWARD McMURDO HUGH YOST MEETZE JOHN WILLIAM NIXON OVID STEPHEN PETRBCU HERMAN PFEIFER. JR. GEORGE JAY RATHBUN. JR. WILLIAM MINOR LlLE ROGERS JOHN THOMPSON DABNEY REED SAMUEL RUSH SAYERS WILLIAM SOLOMON WILKINSON EDWIN H. WILLIAMSON JOHN ALFRED WOTTEN. JR. I325I 5n. 4xmmiv. c IAJ Alpha Gamma Chapter of Alpha Kappa Psi Commerce Fraternity Founded at New York University, I904 Eslabliahcd. I92, HONORARY MEMBERS TlPTON RAY SNAVELY. B.A.. M.A., PHD. ELMER IRVING CARRUTHERS FACULTY MEMBERS ALBERT JULIUS BARLOW. B.A.. B.B.A.. C.P.A. ELBERT ALVIS KINCAID. B.A., M.A.. PH.D. GEORGE T. STARNES. B.A.. M.A., PHD. WILSON GEE. 8.5.. M.A.. PH.D. ABRAHAM BERGLUND. PHD. ACTIVE MEMBERS WILLIAM JUNIUS ALLEN EDWIN EARLE. HART PAUL J. ARRINGTON WILLIAM ELLSWORTH JONES ARCHER STUART CAMPELL JOHN ALBIEN MARSH FRANK RUSSELL CAPPS LINDSAY AVERETT MOTLEY. JR. JOHN ESSARY DEES JAMES DUNCAN FULLER ANDREW JACKSON EASTWOOD JOHN DEAN QUARLES HARRY RANDOLPH GRAVES ROBERT MUIRHEAD REED KARL BULOW HANCOCK BENJAMIN FRANKLIN D, RUNK INITIATES LUCIAN HUGH CARTER HARRY PAUL SHAFFER F RANK MARSHALL. JR. GEORGE RAYMOND STEVENS JOHN AUBREY MATTER REY CRICKENBERGER STUART FREDERICK MORDECIA LYON RICHARD CUNNINGHAM WIGHT. JR. l327l Alpha Xi Chapter of Delta Sigma Pi Commerce Fraternity Founded al New York Universily, I907 Established. I925 FACULTY MEMBER CHARLES NEWTON HULVEY. BS., MS.. LL.B. HONORARY MEMBER PAUL GOODLOE MclNTlRE ACTIVE MEMBERS HARRY s. AFFLECK ALVIN BLOCKSON BISCOE JURY NELSON BROWN EDGAR MARVIN CROUCH ARTHUR R. HUTCHINCS JOHN B. JONES. 1n. TED ANDREWS MCDOWELL JOHN HENRY MASSIE. JR. PAUL GROSECLOSE MUSTARD CHARLES VANCE PALMER DELMA ROBBINS GRAHAM FRANCIS SMITH CLAYTON BAILEY STEED ALFRED LEWIS STEVENS JAMES EDWARD WARD. Jn. I3281 CORKS 8 CURLS Kallikrates Chapter of Alpha Rho Chi Architectural Fraternity Founded at the Universities of Michigan and Illinois. I9I4 Established a! UN: University of Virginia. I922 FRATER IN FACULTATE STANISLAW JOHN MAKIELSKI. BS. MEMBERS GEORGE LOWELL BAUGHN LUClAN MINOR DENT ERNEST HENRY EVERY, JR. WILLIAM CHAPPELL FLAKE. jn. MARSHALL GOCHNAUER CORNELIUS DUGGAN GILFOYLE ROBERT EDMUND GlLFOYLE OSCAR MONTGOMERY HANSEN CHRISTIAN STRANGER HERITAGE. JR. JULIAN FRANKLIN HUNT JACK LAWSON HENRY WILLIAM LADEWIG JOHN JACOB MATTERN, 1R. GEORGE EDMUND NUCKOLS HARRY PAUL OLSEN LOUIS LORRAIN SCRIBNER JAMES ELMER SHOEMAKER THOMAS WILSON SMITH WILLIAM PATTON WILLIAMS l329l Alpha Kappa Chapter of Alpha Chi Sigma Chemical Fraternity Founded a! University of Wisconsin. I902 Established a! University of Virginia. I922 FRATRES IN FACULTATE ROBERT MONTGOMERY BIRD. B.A.. 85.. PHD. JOHN HOWE YOE, M3,. M.A.. PH.D. HUGH M. SPENSER. A.B.. MS., PH.D. EDWIN CARLYLE MARKHAM. PHD. LYNDEN F. SMALL, PHD. ROBERT E. LUTZ. PHD. ACTIVE MEMBERS GEORGE LEWIS CUNNINGHAM JOHN HENRY PURSE MARCUS WALTHALL DlNWlDDlE. HOWARD HALLEY SHOCKEY LEONARD COLEMAN DRAKE EUGENE HAMILTON SMITH WILLIAM HARRY FRAVEL EDWARD L. STEWART JAMES MONTROSE GRAHAM. JR. CARRIE M. SWANN WILLIAM WHITMORE. HURT ROBERT J. TAYLOR JOHN LYTTLETON JUSTICE. CARLYLE M. THACKER MARK PAYNE LOWRY LOVE. THOMAS AUBREY WHITE JOHN HULON MOTE HOWARD SWINEFORD YEATTS WHITING FAULKNER YOUNG INITIATES PROF. LAUREN BLAKELY HITCHCOCK WILLIAM ROSS JOHN SHANK PALMER WILLIAM A. MOOMAW ISAAC PAUL PALMER RICHARD WINGFIELD QUARRELS 13301 Theta Chapter of Alpha Phi Omega Fraternity Founded at Lafayette College. I925 Established. I929 ACTIVE MEMBERS B. B. COMER LILE PAUL MCDONALD WILLIAM L. LEAP HlRAM J. HERBERT B. FLOYD F LICKINGER C. BAILEY STEED jAMES E. WARD, JR. OTIS P. DOBIE HOWARD GILMER, JR. CHARLES W. F. SMITH THOMPSON AMBLER l33ll The University of Virginia U. M. Thomas Jeffersonh He who conceived you lived upon a hill And read the skies, the earth, good books, and men. Of all this wisdom gathered to his will H e built that he might walk the World again. They who haVe loved the earth have served it best; He breathed its air, rode through V irginia mud, Beheld the mornings, and her starry west, A stallion's zest for being in his blood. N ow autumns blow red leaves across his grave, The crocus finds his mountain perch in spring; Yet, though he feels no changing season near. He stirs among these captured dreams that save: Endless shall be for him awakening In the unsaddled young who pasture here. LAWRENCE LEE. Copyright, 1929, by Charles Scribner's Sons. unlucullu 0' '9 ' 3101;? I'll. th-tlollroullh. Du. thnnmau'n .IHI '- JI' III 29 Jthll aft. 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AM 4 Cma'c6 tali'liftald nch utl' M4 b4'M Alemerv a ' amv$ add $1.35, 4 taxllntdhagtflw'rlglww WIMILAJ. JHJL MLAtnu'K ,2W4 kw Md $941411 9404' Acwwek-wan:$ ofztfrufl4 14116 kflgtwkMkumo$bz4 Wx yat will fufa irffm Mmiku 4; d1 ymL. odygxazutv'b $7,1u14gu'l an MAIN ?Juavd Jf-rw' ' czt7$aa'$r1 w'44-.fd44Mhuzt4an-y 11$an+wf J M. PAGE. Dcar. UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA CHARLOTTESVILLE Jan. 16, 1929 To the Students of the University of Virginia Residing in University Dormitories Your attention is called to the fact that the regulation quoted below has been adopted by the President and Administrative Council of the Univer- sity. Violation of this regulation may involve forfeiture of his room on the part of any Student living in a University dormitory, or such other penalty as the President and Council may impose, The use or possession of intoxicat- 1ng liquor by students in any of the dormi- tories or other University buildings, or otherwise within the precints of the Uni- versity, or'the permitting by occupants of dormitories of such use or possession within their dormitories, is forbidden. . . . K 2 .-1Iml.1cmmmmmmngm-m Tinker Song You who are beauty called to mind by a lilac dusk and a silver wind have silks and pearls in an iron cotfer, a greater treasure than I can offer. I3361 For my mares are few, a gypsy tune. dognwod in blossom, an April moon. and a stolen kiss in a winding lane before I am seeking the road again. Speaking of Progresse WANX pages of this number of CORKS AND CURLS have been given to gig plowing that progress has come to the University. A good number of students still at the University do not need pictures of the Corner in I905 to remind them of the fact; they can remember the days when Mrs. Pages house looked at University Avenue over a lawn with trees, when fraternity houses had not gone suburban. and when the more ancient diversions of petting and ice-skating were the exclusive activities of that neighborhood now dedicated to the Temple of Sport. To some the change symbolized by this increase in stone and mortar indicates that the University is growing toward a maturity of greater service and wider benefits; others take it as mean- ing that the movement which hit Zenith City has come to Albemarle. Regard- less of attitude, however, the idea of progress has become sufficiently interesting to break up bridge games and to disturb the prestige of the two reigning topics of the gumming sessions. The best way to find out about progress is to ask some one who doesn't believe there has been any. The non-believers divide, roughly, into two groups. In one group are those who resent what they call encroachments on the rights of students. They resent the fact, illustrated in other pages of this book. that the administration once requested the students as gentlemen to desist from riotous imbibing, while it nowiorders them to stop drinking. They resent the efforts being made to organize a class system, to arrange the University in horizontal layers like a birthday cake. to regiment the lives of students outside of class. They resent the whole system implied in the words freshman. campus. and udorm.n They look back with misty eyes to the fabled day when a student lived where he chose and how he chose, passed if he could make aw. I .m. I the grade and busted out if he couldn't. They quote the traditional answer of Reddy Echols to the student who asked if there were any optional questions on an exam: They're all optionaletake 'em or leave 'em! It doesn't make much difference to them that early regulations of the University contained rigid laws in regard to uniforms and early rising; they look back to a very real traditionastarted somewhere and passed on by someone-that the faculty is a group of fellow gentlemen who don,t feel called upon to bother their younger confreres except in classes. The other group of the faithless is made up of men who believe that the University is not fighting for its birthright. They believe that a University as proud of itself as Virginia should choose a few tangible ways of expressing its pride. They point to the shame of the gridiron, the scanty boxing squad, the silent bleachers, the degeneracy of Topics, or the lack of intellectual giants in the college. Other universities have these-Virginia should. How? Their answer is pat: make an athletic fee compulsory for entrance; make everybody suhscrihe to Topics: organize the University for participation in its college life; make student opinion such that an athlete will be ashamed not to fight for the glory of the school. Their keynote is organizationeorganization of classes. of athletics. of all the other activities that attach themselves to a university. And back of their ideas lurks the idea of compulsion, of administrative inter- vention on behalf of the students. Now it seems quite obvious that these two attitudes are hopelessly at odds with one another, and also that each, negative as it might seem, implies a very hn-itive conception of what progress should be. Take the second group, whom v e av call the Organizers, as opposed to the first whom we tag with the narre of l itertarians. It is perfectly conceivable that the administration could follow the desires of the Organizers. and so order the student life so as to produce better football teams, and possibly more Phi Beta Kappa stock as well. Compulsory athletic fees would certainly produce larger crowds at gamekhuman parsimony being what it is-and a greater desire on the part of students to indulge in muscular exhibitionism. Compulsory subscriptions to Topics would at least give that moribund sheet the means to employ a com- petent proofreader. and possibly an opportunity to indulge in even grander editorial whims than the production of a talkie based on the honor system. And the organization of a class system, with the new brick elephant facing the golf course reserved as ahrst year dormitory, would create a competitive zest that would produce quick results, both in the held and in class. Without I 33s I doubt, this type of organization is efficient; it brings quickly to the surface all the combativeness in a man, and the feeling of class solidarity frees him from the present day necessity of keeping his neck in. Organizations will produce results. But what further results? First, the University will grow. The prevailv ing den-of-iniquity myth which hovers over the place, and which causes hun- dreds of worthy parents to send their children to other places, would be forever laid to rest when the fact became known that men entering the University were placed in adequately proctored dormitories, where study is the rule of the night. The fact that the University authorities were sufficiently interested in the students all-round development to decree compulsory athletic fees and magazine fees and Mad Hall fees would convince outsiders that it was a decent place-a place that would take care of the youth of the land. With the shagginess of its present reputation smoothed out, Virginia would have a waiting list. And the waiting list would be absorbed; pressure from the citizens of the State would force it, and the call for bigger teams and better scholars would demand it. My estimate is that there would be live thousand in five years. and from then on. . The second result would be that there would be a breakdown in the present feeling of gentlemanly aloofness which characterizes the faculty atti- tude toward the student. With athletics, periodicals, and other extra-curricular activities subsidized by the administration, the faculty would be definitely in business with the students, and would feel obliged to see that the money it authorized was well spent. With the proctorial system which a dormitory THE NEW DORMITORIES UNDER CONSTRUCTION I3391 CORKS 6 CURLS would make necessary, the faculty would incur-and would shoulder-a definite responsibility for the habits and morals of the young. The inevitable antagonism which would arise would set the two groups apart as adversaries. A third predictable result would be the ruin of the present honor system. The honor system, as presently constituted. has drawn its strength from three circumstances: the comparatively small size of the enrollment, the relative homogeneity of the students. and the faculty's willingness to let the students take care of themselves. These factors have made it possible for old students along its principle to set an example to newer students without the necessity of too much windy preaching or high-pressure salesmanshikand without the danger of faculty interpretation. Already with two thousand students, many of whom arrive at the University without previous knowledge of its meaning. the idea has gained currency that the honor system is merely a method of student policing. and not an unconsciously accepted mode of living. With five thousand students, proctorial overseeing, class rivalry and student-faculty antipathy, it would be a farce, and it would be discarded. just as it already has been in many honest universities which once blithely undertook to install it. Without indulging in any more prophetic frenzies. we can envisage the characteristics of the University of the Organizers: size, productivity, service, efficiency. There would be good teams and good scholars, spirit within the school and loyalty among the alumni. And Virginia would be exactly like a score or two of other state universities scattered over the country. What have the Libertarians to op- pose to this? A few phrases hard of definition, and a few ideals which ballle clear expression. The idea of mutual re- gard between faculty and students is a very intangible one. The notion of ufree- dom of the students is even more dith- cult of clear statement, and much easier to twist into absurdity. And, strange as it may seem, thousands of men have been educated and gone into the world and made successes without giving even a I3401 CORKS 5 CU RLS single thought to the honor system of the University of Virginia. Is it worth- while, for the sake of such imponderables, to block the road toward the fertile pastures promised by the Organizers? The Libertarian will say that the light is worthwhile. He will say that it is quite worthwhile to make Virginia that unique sort of institution to which the studious person can go and pursue his studies undistracted by the call to the colors or the rah-rah of the class meeting, and to which the extra-curricular addict can go and with a reasonable amount of study. free himself for the more manly activities that his own conscience and his own ambitions dictate. In such an institution athletics will be indulged in by those interested in sports. scholarship by the scholars, periodicals by the windy-minded, and drinking by the lazy. Wise professors will encourage the studious, and not be too zealous in attempting to convert a potential business man into an international lawyer or a school teacher. This institution will not claim for itself the advantages of a Sunday school, a gymnasium class, a correspondence course or a grist mill; it will merely be an institution of higher learning, where a man can test for himself his capabilities in life and pursue them to their logical conclusion. Such an institution might not be a consistent victor over its more highly organized rivals on the athletic held; but. provided the sportsmen had their sport, it would be under no necessity to indulge in this modern form of publicity. It might not turn out as many Ph. D.'s as other schools, because it would not feel any divine desire to turn a good clerk into a poor professor. In a word, it would allow nature to take its course, and it would not attempt to flood the world with half-baked philosophies. as- sumed enthusiasms and quack gospels. Its alumni might not remember it with teary-eyed songs at stag parties, but they would recall it as the place in which their lives signilicantly began. Now it is ridiculous to suppose that the students alone could bring into exis- tence this university of the Libertarians. I341J The faculty, the Legislature, the citizens of Virginia. the general infiltration of Babittry into the provincehall these factors will play their part. But it is equally absurd to believe that the students can do nothing. that they are the victims of a malelicent fate. As a matter of fact, the Libertarians have many potent allies. In the first place, the faculty is for the most part on their side. Provided the amenities of any American community are observed. the administration is anxious not to interfere with the life of the students. As a matter of fact. the faculty has been more vigilant in protecting the rights of students than the majority of the students themselves. After all. freedom of the students means freedom of the faculty, and the latter are as unwilling to lose their privileges as the former. In the second place, Virginia by its nature and traditions is better equipped than any other university I can think of to realize the Libertarian ideal. Its relatively small enrollment makes it possible for it to sustain its life by custom rather than by law-a vitally necessary state for achieving the Libertarian ideal. And a proper selection of newcomers for fitness rather than numbers would keep it so. Also. in spite of a few creaking timbers. the honor system is still a worthy structure; and it can be made to remain so. provided its exponents lay off the evangelistic method of disseminating it. and consider it rather in the nature of table manners than divine decree. What then is necessary, on the part of the students. to help the cause of Libertarianism? It may seem an anti-climax to say it, but it is quite true that the only necessities are honesty and willingness on their part to settle their affairs for themselves. Honesty is really admitting that the Rotunda has no connection with Lambeth Field, and willingness to carry their burdens on their own shoulders. When athletics go dead, the obvious course for the athletes to pursue is to bum up trade among the benighted esthetes, and not cry to the administration for a compulsory athletic fee. When Topics' circulation drops to zero, the implication is not that the student body is composed entirely of morons, but that the staff is dying on its feet. And the remedy is not a subsidy or a university press financed by the University, but a few intelligent editorials and an ability to gather news. Altogether. it is a matter in which individual leadership, at the cost of a yard or more of neck protrusion. will prove more valuable than any number of silent gripes. In this respect it is well to remark that the ban on neck-pro- trusion is a mere parvenu among Virginia traditions. In fact, it did not come H421 CORKS 6 CURLS I . into existence until the decline of the ribbon societies, which were once harmless drinking organizations with a perfectly valid claim to existence. Not until they forsook their ancient occupations did they promulgate their ukase against individual expressioneperhaps for lack of something better to do. And if anything is to be done now, it must be started by an overthrow of the ridiculous idea of dignity which now prevails. If Libertarianism, or Organization either. is worth fighting for, it is worth talking abouteloudly. And that is what it finally cames to. So far the fight has been among small groups, with the great mass of students asleep in their rooms. But the Organizers are organizing, and the general apathy of the students gives them a good chance to marshal their forces. Will the Libertarians find their leaders? -LAMBERT DAVIS. l343l RIPLEYS UNDERSTUDY TAKES A PEEK 1,. 6mm Days When Feta I'lchachAny subptg4 7 E :4Il m:: Clock RM The Ky, Here 0:- Sn: Week's Z4 ' ,gmrilq Studen-T E University EFH V: L:Lwll NM Analkino -7 Sfudenf S Um! Prominent AProfcssor i' HrgTor : HiPs osxhon :7 The Founders Du; : Marathon 1327? -Umvers'xtg A 4 To Staunton 1n 1 Hrs. . And 15 Mm. The Big Game Hunt 07: The Lawn Tor $ M Animals Escaped From brooke's MVSeum-HIZ Irg'mn Once LeA On The Water Tthovcl HeodDmss A HorscCRace From Vine ar Hill Crew Races 1885- 88 O'n The introduced M. The EHeC orner That Con JNol Be Kivanno River. Unveiluu OF -, n. smug o: f j: U52; To Assust ' . Virgmds Fema- Auxtudc 'Wxth All This Show 111m Ad x , r; NCOPS Down Toward Women-kassor Ou ht To Be Good Skiing A A 8'5 -j Vinegar HI Removed Because His Wk M, ontitellol ABy Frans of V lour Barreh Brat Him USHO Medical Siudents Once Sewcd A Drunxen Farmer Up In +3... The 31cm Of HIS Own T EUmvcrsitg Wu SmwT In For Four buys 1899 1 AT UNIVERSITY HISTORY: BELIEVE IT OR NOT! 1 Maphu mm 105 Yds. In The Mud To Save IQ The. V.?l Game HZ? VI MIR;a hEIWIIH'I T61 I'J-lllllg IIIII IG1I1IIUIIIII1 u ,7, 1M IIT K I s cm TM TOR OZmZuerA Coiggiacmg 01? ??? Rotunda Roof B Enraged Cherish, students 188 .I ' ' I . It As 1113ng Sindmlsuexe EscortedTo f . - nsTordI- Lght Processionlgm- 70 U3? Pisltgl Pradite At NoonAShdut OnABetRan He Chmrman OK The Badly Had Some ' ! Fran e Rotunda TcThe Cmdtrq And DIHiculb, While Riding Back From a Burt Wmng 0-H Boxing Clam And $Monticello Wxih Pres Roosevelt 'Hux Shots I 189? A NeHYraiessor ,' Ham Abroad 'I Camtd A Sword . .3. j w ' 1 w Cum Tonkct - .: I A man Fm- '1His L I- l I Sivdenls 1 ,1 $ 1841-45 : Inn. 11 1 J AJuItor In 3km Hall Used To Preserve Hls OunTnsuIea kAltbbol Pollcemen Were Unceremlmeous'ly Incarcerated When Caught About The Unwasdy 1895-1905 w I gated Ahgnuso refers Warm IIsgecxIIIIIsIImIIIaI Proof Can Be Furnished That A1105 Above Arc True, But Do Not Re uesi H H We Will Not :Tell How We Know R If Clever Enough You Can Find The Facts arYourseli camera.gl, Retrospect W hite moonlight floods the silent room. and flickering embers fade and die; The moon gleam falls on ashes graying, and both are cold as love gone by. Then I remember other days, I hear once more the words you said, I see once more that narrow lane, a round red moon high overhead. But old songs stale and old moons fade. and love becomes a thing apart: a dream of that which might ham: been before you tiredhand broke my heart. The end is thinking of the past, but this helps ease my paiF no doubt the line you handed me is being marked again. f3461 ALUMNI MEMBERS CHRISTIE BENET ................................................ Columbia. South Carolina MURRAY MASON MCGUIRE .......................................... Richmond. Virginia DAVID IOSEPH WOOD ............................................ Charloltcsville. Virginia FACULTY MEMBERS JOHN JENNINGS LUCK JOHN HENRY NEFF ALLEN FISKE. VOSHELL STUDENT MEMBERS HARRY FITZGERALD FLIPPIN JOHN KIRKPATRICK SLOAN OSCAR THOMAS CLOSE IBHJ OFFICERS FRANK BOSTICK GILMER ..................................................... President JOHN KIRKPATRICK SLOAN .......................................... Secretary-Trcasurcr DAVID ELLIS BROWN ....................................... Cradualc Manager of Alhlch'cs EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE DAVID ELLIS BROWN OSCAR THOMAS CLOSE WILBUR ARMSTRONG NELSON JOHN KIRKPATRICK SLOAN WILLIAM CLIFFORD LUKE HARRY FITZGERALD FLIPPIN FRANK BOSTICK GlLMER WEARER JOHN HARTWELL HARRISON ROBERT STEPHENS MILLEN ANDREW WILLIAM MERLE JACK E. HYDE ALEXANDER HAMILTON BRYAN FRANK RISSEL CAPPS WILLIAM CLAY JOHN WOOD FISHBURNE JULIAN BIXBY FITE VERNON AUSTIN WILLIAM EDGAR BYRD. Jr. OSCAR THOMAS CLOSE RICHARD WHITESIDE DAY CURTIS EMORY CUDDY GARLAND TRAVIS DANIEL RICHARD DoBUTTS PERCIVAL HUNTER FAULCONER BENJAMIN APRIL WILLIAM EVERETT ATKINSON WILLIAM THOMAS BOWEN PERCY HOUSTON BROWN WILLIAM EDGAR BYRD. Jr. CURTIS EMORY CUDDY HENRY HARFORD CUMMING CARLYE GREGORY FLAKE HARRISON FITZGERALD FLIPPIN WILLIAM MILLER GAMMON CHARLES LOUIS GILBERT JOHN MARSHALL GOLDSMITH BASKET-BALL EMMANUEL VOGEL DAVID CHARLES STOUDER JOHN EDWARDS ROBERTS WARREN VIA BOXING FRANK BOSTICK GILMER EDWIN EARLE HART. Jr. VIRGIL LEONIDAS KELLY HONORARY JOHN s. LaROWE FOOTBALL HARRY FITZGERALD FLIPPIN FLOYD MORRIS HARRIS ALBERT GERST HOFHEIMER GLENN AUGUSTUS KAMINER ALBERT LEWY WILLIAM CLIFFORD LUKE HUNTER CRISLER MOTLEY BASEBALL ROBERT GAMBLE CABELL. Ill BICKERTON WINSTON CARDWELL OSCAR THOMAS CLOSE DAVID HAND DUNN TRACK JOSEPH COLLlER HUTCHESON WILLIAM BERNARD KNIGHT MAURICE LEON LeBAUER SIDNEY FERDINAND LeBAUER JOSEPH ALEXANDER LEITCH I3301 ROBERT GAMBLE CABELL. Ill PERCY HOUSTON BROWN ARCHER GRACCHUS JONES WAT HENRY TYLER WILUAM CLIFFORD LUKE HUNTER CRISLER MOTLEY ROBERT MINSTER RAINEY CHARLES HARPER RHETT DANIEL LASSITER WILLIAMS WILLIAM WHELMAN PAXTON THEODORE PHILLIPS BLEDSOE CALHOUN PINKERTON JOHN KIRKPATRICK SLOAN WILLIAM COWELL STEPHENSON WILLIAM WALLACE SYMINGTON GEORGE RANDOLPH TALYOR HOWARD TURNER J. T. MELROSE WILLIAM SAMUEL MIELZINER MIDDLETON ELLIOT RANDOLPH JOHN KIRKPATRICK SLOAN JOHN WESLEY STEPHENS. Jr. JAMES LOBBAN HERBERT GEORGE ROBINSON PAUL EDMUNDS SACKETT HOWARD TURNER WILLIAM STONE WEEDON BEVERLEY TUCKER WHITE FRANCIS CHARLES WILLIAMS. Jr. CORKS a cums Km I929 5 .4 H a E: n .- 5. H Athletics at Virginia KES, but you can't touch the team of - '93, '08 or I915. , There 15 an air of finality 1n this closing word of the Old Grad. Another begins to view the ruins of an athletic gran- deur that was Virginia'se-to live in this athletic past. And the enthusiastic Cavalier of today, singing the praises of teams in five major sports and a host of minors. loses a stroke in the stymiH'iit's nothing to what we had in the nineties. Reviewing the history of athletics in the days when uover fifty percent of the University men wore beards one is impressed with the heights to which these first teams carried the then cardinal red and silver grey of the University of Virginia. How enthusiastic must have been that band that within the short span of little more than a year gave to Virginia a football team, a baseball team, CORKS AND CURLS. College Topics and many other activities now prominent in the life of the University! Listen to the story as told by an alumnus of the early athletic life here following the establishment in 1854 of gymnastic classes under the direction of Professor J. E. D'Alphonse: uAnd from the opening to the close of the ipreliminaries' we were all shouting with laughter, for the professor, whose figure may be summed up in the one word roly-poly,ewhose stubby nose barely emerged yet emerged with a twinkle from his round, rubicund and jolly visage, bubbled over with a merry mixture of buffoonery and wit. And gymnastics continued to hold sway until the Rives Boat Club was born in 1877 as the first organized sport at the University. For ten years the waters of the Rivanna River Hoated the hulls that carried Virginia fours and eights in practice for the meets at Lynchburg, Fredericksburg and Richmond. But the sport along with a number of singing and mandolin clubs infesting the Lawns and Ranges and probably classified as sports gave way in 1883 before the rising tide of football and baseball. I351! The first University of Virginia nine had a foundation in the Lawn and Range teams of 1887. and in the spring of this year the forerunners of the Cavaliers entered intercollegiate sport for the first time to lose to the Navy 9 to 7 and trim Randolph-Macon 9 to 8 in the other game played that season. Intramural track was the fall sport. two November days being devoted to a field day in a program that included the usual running and jumping events as well as potato and three-legged races and throwing the baseball. Tennis clubs were prominent in the late eighties. and there was the University Jockey Club. But the sport that as early as 1890 was predominantly the characteristic fea- ture of University life was in the mak- ing. In 1888 eleven men and a substitute mastered that curious wedge - shaped for- mation of early football in a five-game schedule which included two victories over Pantops, two over Episcopal High School and a 26 to 0 loss to Johns Hopkins University in the first college football ever played by a University team. Although nearly twenty years behind Yale. Rutgers. Princeton, and Harvard in establishing the gridiron sport, Virginia went about her football seriously. Rigorous training rules were inauguratedeso strict that the satis- faction of the thirst of that tennis-shoed. weary gridder who found the going rough in those forty-five-minute halves was checked from reaching too over- zealous a point by placing oatmeal in the water buckets. The sport was firmly established on an intercollegiate basis by 1889 when Georgetown, Lehigh. Navy. Johns Hopkins and Wake Forest were met with the Navy game as the only loss. F our years later Virginia had her first coach. John Poe, the first of the famous uPrinceton Poes, coming here as coach and trainer. The record made by his team stands out as one of the best in the history of Virginia. Eleven games were played by the team of 1893 with losses to Penn State, Navy and Georgetown, and these last two defeats were countered by victories later in the season. Boxing had started by 1895. It was of the gymnastic variety that in later years under the direction of Coach ffPop Lannigan gave rise to the first f352f a 'x corms 5 cums rnmm I929 III: :k i f1 mi N 11;: In; I I 011 1191 ll l1l;l$:; iexngaa Virginia boxing team in I922. Then came basketball and finally wrestling. lacrosse and swimming. As endless as arguing the relative beauty of the graceful. one-armed classic of Greece and the Hippant, thin-clad. modern Happer; as useless as debating the supremacy of the corner Follies' girl over the bewitchingly seduo tive miss who had Mark Antony under control, is comparison of athletics today with those of the earlier day of the University. They are products of a different age. Unquestionably the teams of by-gone years made the better statistical records for in football games won and lost Virginia elevens fell below six hundred percent only six times during the period 1888 to I916, while within the last ten years only the team of I925 has an average bettering this mark. But have we not placed around these earlier years the halo of many victories over Northern teams that were not? Two victories over the Navy. a win and a tie with the Carlisle Indians, the IO to O defeat of Yale, and the scoreless tie against Princeton this past season are the accomplishments of Virginia teams against the major elevens of the East. For years Virginia ruled the South on the gridiron just as she has stood at the top in track and boxing. The great team of 1893 was declared by the referee at the Virginia-Navy game that year to i'rank next to Princeton, Harvard, Yale. and Pennsylvania. In that day when Walter Camp,s All-American teams were closed corporations to other than Harvard, Yale and Princeton, North Carolina and Trinity were Virginia's only big Southern rivals and a loss to either of these was something like a slap in the face. David- son, Sewanee, Wake Forest. Vanderbilt, Richmond and Randolph-Macon were the other Southern teams of any importance. The history of the University of Virginia drew the best of the South to the University. Our rivals. less favorably situated, took whatever of athletic material there was left, and up until 1919 Virginia had lost no more than fourteen games to teams in the South. Georgetown, Bucknell, and Lafayette were just learning to walk on the gridiron, while Princeton, Harvard, Yale. and Pennsylvania were our masters. They had given more time to the devel- opment of the sport than had Virginia. And we were further along the road than were our Southern rivals. r3531 CORKS 6 CURLS 11x P ,t h. s. The situation is paralleled in our history in track and boxing. Among the first to place emphasis on track, Virginia has been able to hold a place near the top of the list. F or the First two seasons of boxing. not a match was lost nor was any team in the country to be feared. Boxing had been perfected to a higher degree than was to be found in other universities. But with the educational advancement of these other colleges and univer- sities in the South there has been a corresponding betterment in an athletic way until these teams have hit our stride or bettered it. The University of Georgia found her first victory over Virginia in I916 when a Cavalier team, weakened in the loss of practically all of the strong team of I915, also gave North Carolina her first win in eleven years and Vanderbilt her second defeat of Virginia. How high the pinnacle upon which Virginia rested in those early days and how disdainful of her Southern rivals may be gathered from this extract of College Topics, review of the season of 1893: wThe next game was the one with the V. M. 1. Although we had no trouble winning it 22-0, we would be more than glad to be able to pass over it without mention. Victories over school teams who are merely strong in their own estimation and who are only deemed so by a few who allow themselves to be deceived by the bragging of children have never been of any great satisfaction to the students of this university. And so in this broader day of athletics when football alone gives to some universities a gate profit of half a million or more dollars, Virginia finds herself competing on even terms with these teams which once she stooped to conquer. And as if the rise of these other colleges and universities and the consequent loss of many athletes who in the old days would have come here were not enough, she has placed about herself a strict code of eligibility. guarded by her honor system. Certainly there has been a great improvement in sportsmanship. As early as 1895 Virginia had started her campaign for clean athletics which culminated in I920 in the formation of the Southern Conference. With Randolph-Macon, Virginia set out in 1895 to form a State association which sought to place athletics on a more iigentlemanly basis. The two colleges were joined in this move by V. M. I. and V. P. 1. While there may have I3541 CORKS a cums KOM I929 III: 3,111. i: UTE y I . -ms-1u u: r; - a-Q.:-. m a3 been irregularities during these first days of sport here. we are inclined to look upon these stories of paid athletes as myths. The hired athlete is a product of this modern era. Eligibility rules were soon instituted to prevent the repeti- tion of such cases as that of Goliath Garth who played football but remained a stranger to his classes. The famous case of the mysterious Simms, Weist, and Land who came at midseason, played. and were lost at Thanksgiving. was investigated and found wanting of evidence of any irregularity. Nor is it reasonable to suppose the payment of athletes in those days when a Virginia football team traveled to play Kentucky and Vanderbilt on a total guarantee of $650 and returned with $50 cash. Eligibility rules were few, however, and there were times when three or four ex-captains of other college teams graced Virginia's line-up. It is esti- mated that only one member of the team of 1893 would be eligible today. But these eligibility rules were steadily enlarged upon, and some sixteen years ago the universities of Virginia, North Carolina and South Carolina. meeting at Columbia. pledged a clean athletic life. This move was a probable fore- runner to the formation of the Southern Conference. That early day when it was urged that ladies be admitted to contests free because uthey do not care to waste fifty cents on something they know nothing of. and many stu- dents are deterred from taking them on the same grounds ; that period that saw eleven men play FooreAu. 1..., Pennsylvania one day an Princeton the next; that EgoQtLY day when Virginia's baseball team competed at the Chicago's World's Fair with the nation's best teams and placed second to Yaleethat era is cherished as epochal. But we believe that athletics today show A L a vast improvement over those of by-gone days. Even in defeat the team of today. highly coached and physically fit as opposed to the poorer coached and unscientihcally trained team of yesterday, must be the master of this early team. H H Against that time when at Georgetown victory was charged to Divine intervention and the referee, we have the sportsmanship of today. In contrast to the time when a victory was a victory. irrespective of the strength of the foe. a Virginia team of today must run a gauntlet of teams of relatively even strength. Opposing that period of none or few eligibility rules is the high standard of eligibility existing at the University today and an enforcement of this standard that has become a characteristic of the University of Virginia. m CS MI... 02.130 .Ewr.m :ZD NI... ..,. 1:1. .F rcpt w, k Kanv L F. him. . I w .r VARSITY FOOTBALL TEAM, 1928 CORKS 6 cums KOM I929 II n ...: gjih nah 11g up I I I LIINHLKi'J - Ex 3-: mag Football, I928 WILLIAM CLIFFORD LUKE Captain HARRISON LEE BUCK Manager CHARLES B. DAUCHERTY Assistant Manager THOMAS MULDRUP FORSYTH Assistant Manager JAMES WARD Assistant Manager EARLE NEALE Head Coach JOHN KELLISON Assistanl Coach HOWARD ARTHUR HOLLAND Assislanl Coach ROY E. RANDALL Assislant Coach TEAM HARRY FLIPPEN ................... End VERNON AUSTIN ................. Guard HOWARD TURNER ................. End R. W. DAY .............. Ccnler and Guard W. T. BYRD ......................... End GEORGE TAYLOR ................ Center WM. PAXTON ....................... End HUNTER FAULCONER .......... Fullback WM. LUKE ........................ Tackle ALBERT LEWY .................. Fullback RICHARD DEBUTTS .............. Tackle JOHN SLOAN ................. Quarterback W. W. SYMINCTON ............... Cuard BLEDSOE PINKERTON ....... Quarterback HUNTER MOTLEY ................ Cuard GUS KAMINER .................. Halfback O. T. CLOSE .................................................... Halfback RECORD Virginia ............................... 66 Randolph-Macon ....................... 0 Virginia ............................... l3 South Carolina ......................... 24 Virginia ............................... 0 Princeton .............................. 0 Virginia ............................... 0 V. M. l. .............................. 9 Virginia ............................... 0 Vanderbilt ............................ 34 Virginia ............................... 20 W. and L. ............................ 13 Virginia ............................... 0 V. P. l. .............................. 20 Virginia ............................... 2 Maryland ............................. '5 Virginia ............................... 20 Carolina .............................. 24 Virginia ............................... l2! Opponcnls ............................. I42 3391 v - .::....-. . qsgwmc. mmocm muhmmac muow .Dc DGm JJIxDFOOu ...511 CORKS e cums remm l929 i K --:,: '.. ruse Football t OOTBALL practice started on the third of September a at. n: and by the time school opened, Coach Neale and his 62.1.1.1 assistants. Kelhson, Holland and Randall. had a promising Squad of about fifty candidates, including thirteen letter men and several very promising players from the previous year's F reshman team. In spite of a difficult nine-game schedule containing two new formidable foes in Vanderbilt and Princeton. prospects looked very bright. Then Dame Fortune stepped in and began taking a toll of injuries; the crippled list grew week by week until it finally assumed incredible proportions. Notwithstanding these adverse con- ditions, such as few coaches are called upon to contend with. Greasy always had a hard fighting if not victorious eleven. The two bright spots of the season were the victory over W. and L. and the tie with Princeton. Following is a summary of the nine games. two of which were won, six lost, and one tied: CAPTAIN LUKE Virginia, 66; Randolph-Macon, 0 The I928 season was opened with an overwhelming victory over Rane dolph-Macon. Flashing a powerful running attack through the line and around the ends, the Virginia team crossed their opponents' goal line nine times while the latter never threatened. The visitors were unable to pierce the Orange and Blue defense. The heavier Virginia forward wall smeared their line plays and when they resorted frequently to passes, the alert Cavalier backs were equally effective in keeping them well in hand. Coach Neale made numerous substitutions in the second half. and. in spite of the fact that a steady drizzle set in, the reserves continued to gain through the gamely fighting but outweighed Ashlanders. Gamecocks Take Close Game On October 6, a thrilling encounter, marred only by an excessively hot sun, was played with the Gamecocks from South Carolina. As a result I361! Virginia lost her first conference tilt by a 24 to l3 score. Things started with a rush when Harry Flippin raced seventy yards on the opening kick-off for the Cavaliers' first score. The Palmetto State team tied the score, however, when Wimberley intercepted a pass and broke away. In the third quarter a punting duel, in which Sloan had the better of Zobel, placed the Orange and Blue in the visitors' territory. Sloan then ended a drive from the forty-yard line by going over for Virginia's second score. SOUTH CAROLINA GAME The fourth quarter started with the home team enjoying a l3 to 6 lead. It was then that the Maroon and Red opened up and showed what they really had. Their brilliant last quarter rally netted them three touchdowns- two of which were by passes and all three of which were scored by Zobel. This fleet halfback was the outstanding star of the game. He was a constant threat and broke away for numerous long runs. Wimberley proved a worthy running mate while Wolfe at tackle was the visitors' outstanding linesman. Each team made seven first downs but the South Carolina aggregation completed five passes out of thirteen while Virginia was successful in only two out of eleven. Luke and Turner played particularly well in the Virginia line while Close and Sloan bore the brunt of the offensive assignment. The latter 5 punting was especially noteworthy. f3621 CORKS 6 cums KOM 1929 - mi ... : 1111MB J p u m II Bil. I tl lngge i - x izeimtzsesaa 1 Princeton Tied The following week a large number of miscellaneous vehicles loaded down with Virginia students pulled out of Charlottesville and headed north. This general exodus was due to the fact that the football team was slated to meet Princeton in Palmer Stadium on Saturday the fifteenth. Accordingly. a large cheering section was on hand to back the gallant band of Cavaliers who, with remarkable disregard for the stability of the dope bucket, battled a highly rated Princeton team to a scoreless tie. Showing a complete reversal of form over the previous Saturday. the Virginia eleven plaved a heads up hand of football throughout. This was evidenced Eoth bv the determined offense which kept the Tigers worried in the first half, and the even more brilliant defense which thwarted numerous Princeton onslaughts in the second half. Although neither team scored a first down in the opening quarter. the Virginians had the advantage; Close,s running ability and Sloan's consistency in outpunting Requardt kept the ball in Tiger territory. In the second quarter. the Cavalier attack materialized into a very real threat. The first drive, resulting from Close's twenty-yard run back of a punt followed by two first downs, was terminated on Nassau,s twenty-hve-yard line by a bad pass from center. A second chance to score was thwarted on the twelve-yard line by a hfteen-yard penalty and another miscue. Princeton. coming back strong in the second half. kept the ball for the most part in Cavalier territory, once within the ten-yard line. However. passes, place kicks. line plays and end runs were all of no avail against the hard charging Virginia line and the heady Virginia backs. Cadets Break Jinx The next game witnessed another upset but this time it was to Virginiais disadvantage. Showing another complete reversal of form. the Cavaliers were handed a 9 to 0 defeat by the Flying Squadron at V. M. I. The Virginia team. suffering from a decided slump and playing sluggish football, was no match for the hard fighting and keyed up Cadet eleven. The latter, smarting from four defeats in as many years at the hands of the Orange and Blue team. were out for blood and played over their heads to win the verdict. Due chiefly to the brilliant runs of Captain Ab Barnes and to the good generalship of quarterback Hawkins, the V. M. 1. team was in a position to prove a constant menace to the Virginia goal line. 13631 The first score in the game came late in the opening quarter. Harner's resolute line plunges. coupled with several gains by Barnes, had brought the ball close to the Cavalier goal line in a sustained drive which came to an end when Hawkins fumbled on the fifteen-yard mark. Sloan recovered the ball on the eight-yard line but on the next play a blocked kick resulted in a safety and two points for the Cadets. V. M. L's other score came in the last three minutes of play. An inter- ception by Hawkins of a Virginia pass and a forty-one-yard run by Barnes led up to this, the only touchdown of the game. Barnes threw the ball over the goal line into the waiting arms of Moody, Cadet left end. Swamped by Vandy A crippled Virginia team journeyed to Nashville to meet, on October the twenty-seventh, the strong Vanderbilt eleven. The latter, led by their brilliant captain, Jimmy Armistead, ran wild to the tune of thirty-four points as over against none for their visitors. The Virginians, outweighed and minus the services of Captain Luke, Close, and Faulconer, were unable either to stem the powerful offense which Vandy unleashed early in the game or to seriously contest the home team,s supremacy. Vanderbilt had little trouble in the initial period and succeeded in reeling off substantial gains through the Old Dominion team. Sloan showed sterling qualities on the defense; time and again his brilliant tackling halted rushes which otherwise would have been converted into touchdowns for the Cold and Black. Throughout the second and third period the Cavaliers fought on more even terms with their opponents. The Orange and Blue forward wall suc- ceeded in checking Vanderbiltis scoring power and the crippled backfield put on its first real drive. Five successive first downs were chalked up but a fifteen- yard penalty and a Vandy rally prevented a score. Late in the fourth quarter Armistead returned to the fray long enough to make a fifty-eight-yard run and his fourth touchdown for the day. Virginia, 20; Washington and Lee, 13 November the third was a red letter day on the schedule when a crowd of nine thousand witnessed a rejuvenated Virginia team down Washington and Lee in a thrilling 20 to '3 contest on Lambeth Feldethe third consecutive triumph over the Minks. l364l CORKS 5 cums KOM I929 K 1 III: i' lltlu 'iii' l, I '1 J11 e t cri' 5 ; . kz-am The Cavaliers started off with a rush, scoring two touchdowns within the first ten minutes of play. Opening the game with a neatly performed on-side kick. Virginia got possession of the ball well into the Generals' territory and succeeded in keeping it there until Sloan went over for the first touchdown. Shortly after this he paved the way for the second score by a beautiful run back of a Mink kick-off and a twenty-yard pass to Flippin. WASHINGTON AND Lu: GAME With the score l3 to 0 against them, the Generals staged a brilliant come- back in the second period and scored two touchdowns to tie the score. How- ever. the very whirl play which constituted the strongest threat in their offense proved the undoing of the visitors. In the midst of a determined march down the held. White's attempt to give the ball to Lott resulted in a fumble. F lippin, fast Cavalier end. who. incidentally, was playing the game of his life, scooped up the ball and outdistanced his Blue and White pursuers in a forty-nine-yard dash to the goal line. After this event both teams fought on even terms to the end of the game which came immediately after a last desperate Mink bid for a score via the air line. Cobblers Victorious Virginia once more illustrated her inconsistency when, the week following the sensational victory over W. and L., she bowed to the V. P. I. eleven. I3651 However. the twenty to nothing score was somewhat out of proportion to the relative merits of the two teams. The Cavaliers scored more first downs than their opponents but lacked the necessary punch in the crucial moments. Vir- ginia lost her first opportunity early in the game when Mattox, Cobbler half- back, fumbled the ball on the third play after the kick-off. The Old Dominion team had the ball on V. P. L's sixteen-yard line but were unable to gain and a grounded pass over the goal line ended their chance for a score. VIRGINIA POLYTECHNIC INSTITUTE GAME The Techmen then began a brilliant march from their twenty-yard line which did not halt until Spear went over for a touchdown. The Orange and Blue, nothing daunted, attempted retaliation which, unfortunately, ended on the one-foot line. Peake, Tech's backfield ace, accounted for a second touchdown just before the half ended, and another score in the third period when, living up to his reputation as one of the best backs in this section of the country, he ran seventy yards to the Virginia goal line. Maryland's Passing Game Successful On November the nineteenth, the Virginia team featured in a third suc- cessive Home Coming Day, this time Maryland being the host. The Old Liners acquired three touchdowns to one safety for the visitors, but On all I3661 CORKSG cums KOM I929 ' K III:' I ll!!! 1 I D II IJJl-f fairness to both teamsi the 18 to 2 score was not indicative of the real nature of the game. The Cavaliers, minus six regulars. put up a game defense which Maryland could pierce with any success by the aerial route only. Passes, directly or indirectly. accounted for each of the three touchdowns. Virginia opened the scoring with a safety which resulted from a well placed quick kick by Sloan and a bad pass by the Maryland center. The Terrapins took the lead shortly after this when Heagy. their right end, caught NORTH CAROLINA GAME a short pass over the center of the line and ran forty-five yards for a touchdown. A determined rally on the part of the Cavaliers ended just before the half when Maryland's last minute defense held them for downs almost on the goal line. The Old Liners scored in the third quarter with a pass from Kessler to Dodson and again in the fourth quarter as a result of more passes. The Cavaliers, having made numerous substitutions, launched a series of heartening attacks in the closing minutes of the game. but all ended in failure to score. Throughout his stay in the game, Sloan as usual performed brilliantly as a tripIe-threat man, while George Taylor. acting captain and center for Virginia, was one of the outstanding players on the field. Snyder did the best work for Maryland. I3671 Tarheels Win Thriller Before a crowd of twenty thousand spectators. including a number of celebrities. the Virginia and North Carolina football teams staged a contest which for pure thrills could not have been surpassed. The game was nip and tuck all the way through; though holding the lead twice, Virginia came out on the short end of the 24 to 20 score. A sensational passing game was re- sorted to by both sides since the teams were so evenly matched and since the lead changed hands so often. The Virginia team showed that it meant business when. within the first five minutes, a pass from Sloan to Flippin accounted for a sixty-yard gain followed shortly with a touchdown by Falconer. North Carolina. however. demonstrated that it was going to be a real game by marching ninety-two yards for a touchdown, thereby cutting Virginia's lead to a scant one point. The Cavaliers increased this to seven points in the second quarter when Flippen scooped up a fumble and ran forty yards for a touchdown. In the third quarter, the Tarheels again came within a point of tying the score when Magner culminated a successful Carolina passing attack by circling the right end for another tally. The visitors finally went into the lead when further passes brought them one more touchdown. Starting the last quarter with a retaliating aerial attack, the Cavaliers took the van on a pass from Sloan to Close. This advantage was short lived for Ward's accurate passing ended in what proved to be the winning touch- down with Erickson taking the ball over. Virginia's last desperate heaves failed to produce a score and the final whistle gave the Tarheels a hard-earnecl 24 to 20 victory. Ian ......... . ... . . In ,VIVKW-.1S.Irno10' 30 I tOWIWI t 9o.to4u- s... o . nI. ,$.Q . . p a O . KJ .I- u .0 .u a p A . .P .. .9 ., E33993 . . 1 :L. a o u, 'u u n A .. v .. . . c o! ' ?flmxna59mn'f . FOOTBALL COACHING STAFF. I928 Left to Right.- Cuddy. McConnell, Kellison. Holland. Neale. Randall PRESIDENT AND MRS. Coounc: AT THE VlRCINlA-NORTH CAROLINA FOOTBALL GAME 1.111.1le ' KKAAJKABMXA lkALkJA LL JAAJJ. D HH BASKETBALL HH U ii :k yh. 1:1. .71 . .- , , t'l:-':I'l .- v. V, BASKET-BALL TEAM, 1929 CORKS a cums 20M l929 'X nl : 2 21 I 2 n I I 1y , - n a a l Elli 5' 2 ,2 - RF-awz-Q Basket-Ball, l 929 ROBERT S. MILLEN ............................................................ Captain HENRY H. LANNIGAN .......................................................... Coach HOWARD H. HOLLAND .................................................. Assistanl Coach WILLIAM A. HALLOWES. Ill ................................................... IWanagcr ISHAM KEITH. JR ....................................................... Assislanl IWanager CHARLES E. MCCOY .................................................... Assislanl Manager WILLIAM ROSENBURGER .............................................. Assistant Manager TEAM ANDREW W. MERLE ............ Forward EMMANUEL VOGEL .............. Cuard J. HARTWELL HARRISON ...... Forward DAVID C. STOUDER .............. Cuard JACK D. HYDE. .................. Forward JOHN E. ROBERTS ................ Cuard ROBERT C. MILLEN ................. Center RECORD Virginia ................................ 21 Randolph- Macon ....................... 3 I Virginia ................................ 35 Duke ................................. 23 Virginia ................................ 22 Johns Hopkins ......................... Zl Virginia ................................ 22 Maryland ............................. 30 Virginia ................................ 32 Georgia ............................... 40 Virginia ................................ I9 W. and L ............................. 47 Virginia ................................ 25 V. P. l ................................ 26 Virginia ................................ Zl V. M. I ............................... 9 Virginia ................................ 27 N. C. Slate ............................ 4' Virginia ................................ 20 Norlh Carolina ......................... 28 Virginia ................................ 25 Maryland ............................. 22 Virginia ................................ 40 Catholic University ...................... 2I Virginia ................................ 34 V. P. I ................................ 25 Virginia ................................ 25 North Carolina ........................ 40 Virginia ................................ 36 West Virginia .......................... 45 Virginia ...... 2 .......................... 38 Davidson ............................. 27 Virginia ................................ 37 V. M. I ............................... 23 Virginia ................................ 46 Marshall College ....................... 32 Virginia ................................ 30 W. and L .............................. 50 I373l Basket-Ball t .. IRGINIA'S basket-ball record was not as im- . t , pressive this season as it has been in the last few ,s... years. The team got off to a poor start, drop- ping seven out of the first ten contests. From this time on, however, there was a decided change in the play of the Cavaliers. Steady improvement was made in every department of the game and, as the result, the Old Dominion five captured six of the nine remaining battles. Captain Millen led his team in the scoring column. fol- lowed by Harrison and Vogel in the order named. In the first contest of the season, the Randolph- Macon five scored at 31-21 victory over the Virginia basketeers on the Memorial Gymnasium Hour. The . passing and shooting of the Cavaliers was extreme1y ragged. The visiting center, Woodson, played a great part in conquering the Orange and Blue by locating the basket from all angles for a total of twenty- three points. Millen and Roberts led the local offense. The following Wednesday the Cavalier quintet displayed a complete reversal of form by downing the Duke cagers 35 to 23. During the first half the two teams appeared very evenly matched but the Old Dominion had 1itt1e troub1e pulling away from their opponents in the second period. The game was somewhat marred by personal fouls. Thirtyetwo were committed; twenty- one of which were charged to Virginia. Vogel, Orange and Blue guard, led the night's scoring with twelve points to his credit. The Virginia captain and center. Millen. was close behind with an eight-point total. Three days later Johns Hopkins furnished the opposition in a contest which proved to be one of the most thrilling ever staged in the Memorial Gymnasium. At the half the score stood nine to eight in favor of the Cavaliers. The second period was even more hotly fought than the hrst and a 13 to 13 deadlock ensued near the end of the game. In the last few minutes the lead changed hands frequently until Merle, Orange and Blue guard, sank the winning goal a few seconds before the final gun. Final score: Virginia, 22; Johns Hopkins, 21 . CAPTAIN MILLEN I 3741 w corms e cums KOM I929 III: .VI 1 ll RI! J-nl up 7! I I II . II! Li t .- Kiarrzsesmla a By scoring thirty points while the Cavaliers were ringing it; 4 up twenty-two, the University of Maryland handed Virginia $1 her second defeat of the season. Caylor of the Old Liners captured high point honors with fourteen counters while Hyde led the home team in locating the basket. Captain Millen also played a splendid game for the losers. The next night Georgia ended her northern invasion with a 40 to 32 win over the Cavaliers. Good passing and unusual accuracy from the charity line characterized the visitors' play. In fact. it was their superiority at foul tossing that gave them the margin of victory. The outcome was in doubt until the latter part of the game but then the Georgians managed to get the lead and keep it. Palmer. Georgia forward. tied with Jones of the Orange and Blue in scoring. each of them running up fifteen points for their respective teams. In her next contest Virginia was forced by the strong Washington and Lee quintet to accept the short end of a 47 to 19 score. The close guarding of the Minks was one of the features of the game since only four field goals were registered by the Old Dominion invaders. Cox. star W. and L. forward. led the scoring for the night by dropping ten field goals through the basket. Captain Millen was high point man for Virginia with a ten-point total. V. P. I. came next and, by virtue of a strong come- back in the last minutes of the fracas. emerged victorious with a one-point lead. The Orange and Blue kept ahead until the last minute and a half when Captain Brown scored the deciding goal. The University five were on the long end of a '7 to 6 score at the half but the Techmen dis- played an entirely different brand of ball in the final period. Harrison of Virginia was high point man of the meet. scoring five field goals and two foul shots. The Saturday following. the V. M. I. quintet. con- querors of the Cobblers, invaded the Memorial Cym- nasium. The outcome proved to be one of the biggest upsets of the season for Virginia had little trouble in admin-. istering a 21 to 9 defeat to the Cadets. Only three field h goals were scored by the visitors during the game. Their Vocal- HARRISON I375 ! captain, Harner. was responsible for six points of the Cadet total score. The Virginia center, Millen. again led the scoring for the game by sinking five held goals and two free throws. The southern trip into North Carolina was disastrous for the Old Dominion basketeers. In the first contest N. C. State conquered the Cavaliers 41-27 in a fast game. Scoring honors went to Johnson, State forward, who garnered twelve points for the Carolina team. A Chapel Hill invasion also proved unsuccessful from the Virginian point of view since the Cavalier quintet fell before the Crack University of North Carolina team. 28 to 20. Merle and Millen hit the basket most frequently for the Orange and Blue. The northern trip was a great deal more successful. A former defeat at the hands of Maryland was avenged 25 to 22 in an extremely spectacular contest. The teams were rarely ROBERTS separated by more than two points at any time during the game. Captain Millen cinched the meet for Old Dominion just ten seconds before the final whistle. The Virginia captain, Harrison, and Vogel accounted for most of the Orange and Blue scoring while Evans led the Old Liners. Catholic University was the next victim. falling before the Cavalier onslaught, 40 to Zl . Captain Millen and Stouder. both of the Old Dominion, tied for scoring honors of the game. During the first period the Virginia hve garnered more points than their opponents could score throughout the contest. Since the Orange and Blue defense was on par with its offense, the result of the game was never in doubt. Another former loss was avenged when the V. P. I. basketeers arrived at the University for a second tilt with the Cavalier cagers. Captain Millen went on a scoring rampage and contributed seven field goals to the Virginia cause. Har- rison took second place in scoring eight points for the home team. Final score: Va., 34; V. P. 1.. 25. North Carolina took the second game of the season 40 to 25. This contest was much closer than the score indicates. In the last few minutes the Cavalier defense crumbled and the Tar Heels were allowed to widen their margin of victory. I3761 comcs a cums KOM l929 . r571 ' x III I t 81; a n U a f! I p I I I I I II I, t; s , t izawam Satterfield and Brown were the big guns for-Carolina in the shooting line while Harrison led the local team in finding the basket. Displaying a splendid brand of ball, the Cavalier cagers dropped a heart- hreaker to the strong quintet from West Virginia, 36 to 45. The Orange and Blue stayed ahead until the last few minutes when the Mountaineers secured a one-point lead. Then, by means of clever freezing plays and fast breaks for the basket, the visitors broke through the Cavalier defense and pulled the game out of the fire. Captain Millen of Virginia was the scoring ace of the fracas, netting seventeen points for the old Dominion five. Davidson was conquered in the next meet, 38 to 27. Except for the first few minutes of the battle, the Cavaliers held the lead throughout. Millen again led the scoring with eleven points to his credit. Hyde and Merle also showed up well in finding the basket. For the losers, Calhoun was high point man. V. M. I. failed to stop the Virginia five in the second game of the season played at Lexington. Mil- 45M In the last game of the len, Harrison, and Vogel WU season the Cavalier cage- were responsible for a great men lost to the Washington part of the Cavalier score and Lee basketeers by a 50 while Harner and Brown to 30 score. The game was starred for the Cadets. The featured by the brilliant of- hnal score: Va., 37; V. M. tense of the visitors. While 1., 23. Cox, W. and L. forward, The cagers from Mar- captured high point honors, shall College fared no bet- the Generals, center. Wil- ter. losing 32 to 46. Merle. liams, was easily the out- Old Dominion f0 rw a rd , standing p 1 a y e r of the was the leading scorer of game. Captain Millen, the night with six field goals playing his last game for to his c r e d i L Wilson Virginia. a g a i n led the ' showed up well for the home team in the scoring visitors. V s w column. I377l The Reunion of I 914 . $ $571 TRACK $ 3 Jr- WWWQJ ..' .A..H wk? -- .- .4 D .' ' ,.$. ml. '. . ,3 1. TRACK TEAM, 1928 comcs a cums row I929 J Track FOR 1929 HARRY FLIPPEN ................................................................ Captain TAYLOR VINSON ............................................................... Manager EDWARD MCCEORCE .................................................. Assistant Manager EDWARD LEE ........................................................... Assistant Manager GEORGE HUMRICKHOUSE ............................................. Aufslanl Manager TEAM 1928 HENRY CUMMING F. C. WILLIAMS HARRY FLIPPEN HERBERT ROBINSON jOSEPH HUCHESON PAUL SACKETT MAURICE LEBAUER SIDNEY LEBAUER WILLIAM GAMMON HOWARD TURNER jOHN GOLDSMITH WILLIAM WEEDON ROBERT LOBBAN C. L. GILBERT JAMES LEITCH RECORD Virginia. 64 l-Z; North Carolina. 56; V. P. L. 33 l-Z. Virginia. 73 2-3; Princeton, 52 2-3. Virginia. 65 I-Z; Navy. 60 1-2. Virginia. 70 l-Z: Washinglon and Lee, 55 I-2. Virginia. 73; Maryland, 53. Virginia, 54; Army. 72. IRRII Track, I 928 7-1HE I928 track season was by far the most successful .t tbgi . . u . u w 3:: Virginia has experienced in many years. In February the indoor team won the South Atlantic Champion- ship at the annual games sponsored by the University of Rich- mond. Nor was the outdoor season any less brilliant. F ive victories were scored over strong teams while only one defeat was suffered by the Old Dominion runners. The Orange and Blue colors were not lowered in the South. Four Southern Conference teams. V. P. 1., University of North Carolina, Washington and Lee. and the University of Maryland. fell before the Cavalier onslaught. In the east, the Old Dominion cinder artists conquered the squads from Princeton and the United States Naval Academy. CAPTAIN The lone defeat of the season come when the Virginians en- CUMM'NG gaged the Army in a dual meet. The success of the team was mainly due to a few brilliant men. Captain Cumming continued to uphold his brilliant record as one of the outstanding sprinters of the country. He led the field in every dash in which he partici- pated. Flippen, National Pentathalon Champion, was a consistent winner in both the high and low hurdles and could be depended on to place in the broad jump and the javelin throw. The first two places in the shot-put and discus events usually were captured by Maurice and Sidney LeBauer. Herbert Robinson proved to be one of the best middle distance men in the South. The team's one weakness lay in the distance runs. The points in these events usually went to Virginia's opponents. In every engagement except one. hOW' ever, enough points were scored in other events to offset this deficiency. Indoor Season Captain Henry Cumming and Herbert Robinson were the only Cavaliers who participated in the Millrose games at Madison Square Garden. The Virginia leader was eliminated in the second heat of the 45-yard dash. In I3SZJ CORKS a cums how I929 k ' t IIII 11 1 D U l ; v 1 I I I 7! ,l - -t ' gt .ivzw k 'H-J'i-i. 4:. 2 this race Cumming was the only man running from scratch and was unable to overcome this handicap in so short a race. Robinson covered himself with glory by running third to Dr. Peltzer of Germany in the l.000-meter scratch invitation run. The entire Orange and Blue indoor team swung into action on February 20, when they journeyed to Richmond to take part in the South Atlantic Invitation games. The honors of the meet went to Virginia, thereby giving her the indoor championship of the South Atlantic states. The Cavalier team. with a total of 22 points. led her nearest competitor by a ten point margin. Captain Cumming and Maurice LeBauer were the stars of the meet; Cumming raced 45 yards in 5 seconds Hat to equal the record of the games. Lebauer smashed his own I927 record by 2 feet 3 inches when he hurled the shot 45 feet. The following week the Cavaliers were host at the Virginia Invitation Games held in the Memorial Gymnasium. Duke University ran Up a ten- point lead on Virginia, winning the meet 33 to 22. Cumming won both dashes while Maurice and Sidney LeBauer captured first and second places in the shot-put and discus throw. White led the field in the 50 yard hurdle race. The same night at the A. A. U. meet held in New York, Herbert Robv inson ran fourth in a 600 metre race which determined the championship of the United States in this event. Outdoor Season TWO CONFERENCE FOES DEFEATED IN FIRST MEET The initial outdoor meet of the season was held at Blacksburg where Virginia engaged the strong V. P. I. and North Carolina squads in a triangular meet. The Cavaliers came out ahead with 64V2 points. Second place went to the Tarheels High Hurdm; wnm, Winner r3831 who scored 56 points while the Techmen brought up the rear with a 33V2 score to their credit. Captain Henry Cumming placed the Cavae liers in the lead by capturing the I00- and ZZO-yard sprints. Harry Flippen, run- ning for the first time on the Orange and Blue Varsity. broke the tape in both hur- dles. He also further dem- onstrated his versatility as a trackman in capturing third places in the javelin throw and the broad jump; Sidney LeBauer put the shot 43 feet for a win in this event while M. LeBauer took second place. Another first place was secured for the Orange and Blue when Goldsmith won the high jump. Carolina was superior in the distance runs, taking first and second places in all of these competitions. Knight of Virginia ran third in the mile. while Gilbert. also of the Old Dominion Squad. duplicated this performance in the two-mife race. Maurice and Sidney Le- Bauer captured third and fourth places in the discus throw. Gammon added three points to the Virginia score by finishing second in the broad jump. The Cavaliers garnered seven first places, five seconds and three third places in this meet. Cumming Wins Again Cumming Win: at Georgia Tech Relays The four-man track team which represented the Old Dominion at the sixth annual Georgia Tech Relays took one first and one third place. Cum- ming, running against some of the foremost sprinters in the country, broke the tape in the century dash. In spite of a wet. heavy track his time was ten seconds Hat. The Cavalier half-mile relay, composed of Cumming. F lippen, Thomas, and Williams. finished third, the first two places going to the Uni- versity of Indiana and Notre Dame. Princeton Bows to Cavaliers On April 28th Lambeth Field was the scene of a thrilling dual meet between Princeton and Virginia. The Cavaliers continued victorious. forcing I3841 comcs a cums ffo l929 t I ' N III I i l ' ll I. I I I II J ll W ki-tr-W the Northern invaders to take the small end of a 73 2-3 to 52 1-3 score. Papas and Rockwell, crack Princeton sprinters were no match for Captain Cumming who again led the way in both dashes. Virginia's National Pen- tathalon champion. Harry Flippen. received the high point honors for the day. He bested Captain Jadwin of Princeton in the hurdles in close thrilling races. Not content with this. Harry also annexed hrst place in the broad jump and second in the javelin throw. The LeBauer brothers divided sixteen points in the shot-put and discus, each taking one first place and one second. The distance runs accounted for the greater part of the Tiger score as the half-mile. mile, and two-mile runs were all led by the visitors. Navy Overcome The following Saturday the Old Dominion added another formidable foe to her list of the conquered by defeating the squad from the United States Naval Academy. The final score was 65V2 to 60V2. The Cavaliers were without the services of Robinson, middle distance star. Flippen was forced to retire from some of the events on account of an injury. This mis- fortune, however. did not keep him from continuing his record as a high scorer in every meet of the year. Captain Cumming won both the IOO- and ZZO-yard sprints in brilliant times, racing the first in 93A seconds and the latter in 2i 3A. The midshipmen showed great strength in the quarter-mile by annexing all the places in this event. The Cavaliers retaliated by accomplishing the same feat in the broad Jump. The Midshipmen crossed the line first m the half-mile. mile, and two-mile runs. The Navy pole vaulters were also superior to those of th e Orange and Blue. Gold- smith and Weedon, both of Virginia, tied for hrst honors in the high jump. Maurice and Sidney LeBauer scored sixteen points for Old Do- minion by winning first and second places in both the .. . , ShOttPUt and CliSCllS throw- High Hurdles. Princeton Meet: Flippen. Winner I351 Generals Outclassed The Monday following the Navy meet the track team journeyed to Lexington to engage the Mink cinder artists. Although Robinson and Flippen were unable to make the trip. the Cavaliers had little trouble in downing th e Lexingtonians. Cume ming broke the tape in the century dash, covering the distance in IO seconds Hat on a wet track. He did not enter the two-twenty. White, with first place in both hurdles, tied with Maurice LeBauer and Backus of W. 8: L. for high point honors. Hucheson, Virginia cross country star, captured the two-mile run. Gammon won the broad jump while Goldsmith and Weedon again tied for first place in the high j ump. The pole vault resulted in a quadruple tie between two Cavalier and two Mink entries. Old Liners Defeated The first meet on Virginiais Northern invasion was held at College Park. Maryland. Here the Cavaliers increased their number of victories, downing the Old Liners to the tune of a 73 to 53 score. The successful outcome of this engagement gave the team a perfect record in the South. Both the 100- and ZZO-yard sprints were won by the Old Dominion captain, Henry Cumming. F lippen duplicated this feat by leading the way in the hurdle events. The high jump ended in a tie between two Orange and Blue jumpers, Goldsmith and Weedon. Maurice LeBauer distinguished him- self in the shot-put by defeating Zulick. holder of the Southern Conference title in this event. Robinson, after two weeks of forced idleness, contributed to the Cavalier victory by leading all competitors in the half-mile run. Cumming Show: Heels to Midshipmen The One Dark Spot-Army, 72; Virginia, 54 The lone defeat of the season was handed to the Cavalier track team by the strong Army squad in a dual meet held at West Point. The cadets won Isssl CORKS 5 cums KOM l929 x III: t 1 n U I 11' i I ,, Jll- f R V eight of the fourteen events, winning by the above score. Virginia th 0 u g h defeated made a splendid showing. Captain Cumming ended his track career for the Orange and Blue in a brilliant fash- ion when he bested the West Point sprinters in the 100 and ZZO-yard clashes. On this occasion his time fdr the century sprint was 9 8-10 seconds, while he covered the 220 yards in 22 seconds flat. Robinson outran Lermond of the Army in the half-mile but the latter came back strong to win the mile in 4 minutesl33 seconds. Harry F lippen added eleven points to the Virginia total when he led the field in both hurdle races and placed third in the broad jump. Cold- smith garnered first place in the high jump for the Orange and Blue. The shot-put was won in a decisive fashion by Sprauge of the Army who set a new home record by throwing the shot 47 feet I I inches. Maurice LeBauer took second place in this event for the Cavaliers. Turner won the javelin throw and added five points to the Virginia score. The Army took the lead in all of the distance runs and, as a result. acquired a safe lead over her Southern invaders. Roblnson Wlm the Quarter 23.0 Fm 026 DJME IFumEIxJ BASEBALL n G L. HH DDD $ DOD $09 BASEBALL TEAM, 1928 comcs a cums row l929 N III : I II I II I I J1 II D O I I J II - 66 .- igfimgg Baseball, I 929 MIDDLETON ELLIOT RANDOLPH .............................................. Captain HOWARD W. HOLLAND .......................................................... Coach HARVEY LEE MARSTON ...................................................... Manager JOHN OVERTON HENDERSON ......................................... Aasislanl Manager BEVERLEY HETH RANDOLPH. JR ..................................... Assistant Manager JOHN WHITE ........................................................... Assistant Manager TEAM, 1928 JOHN XV. STEPHENS. JR.. Captain ................................................. Pilcher WILLIAM E. ATKINSON ......................................................... Pitcher J. T. MELROSE ................................................................... Pitcher BENJAMIN APRIL .............................................................. Catcher WILLIARD S. MIELZINER ........................................................ Pitcher OSCAR T. CLOSE .............................................................. Firsl Base M. ELLIOT RANDOLPH ..................................................... Second Base WILLIAM BYRD ...... . ........................................................ Shortstop BICKERTON CARDWELL .................................................... Third Base WILLIAM T. BOWEN ......................................................... Righl Field D. H. DUNN .................................................................. Center Field JOHN K. SLOAN ............................................................... Left Field RECORD, x928 Virginia ................................ I Maryland ............................. 3 Virginia ................................ 5 Pennsylvania .......................... I 2 Virginia ................................ I3 CoIgale ............................... 7 Virginia ................................ 8 Cornell ............................... I Virginia ................................ 4 Princeton ............................. 2 Virginia ................................ 5 Harvard .............................. I I Virginia ................................ '3 V. M. I ............................... 8 Virginia ................................ 4 North Carolina ........................ 6 Virginia ................................ 2' V. P. I. .............................. 3 Virginia ................................ 6 V. P. I. .............................. 0 Virginia ................................ 0 Duke ................................. I I Virginia ................................ 3 N. C. Slate ............................ 2 Virginia ................................ 6 Quanlico Marines ...................... 9 Virginia ................................ 8 Maryland ............................. 3 Virginia ................................ 6 Navy ................................. 7 Virginia ................................ 4 N. C. Slate ............................ 6 Virginia ................................ 5 North Carolina ......................... 3 Virginia ................................ 4 North Carolina ........................ 8 Virginia ................................ I University of Richmond .................. 6 Virginia ................................ 3 Washington and Lee .................... l I391 l CORKS 6 CU RLS Baseball ., .- .HE baseball season for the year of I928 started with .. lg, no bang of success, and for some time while the potential strength of the team was materializing there was a decided veil of skepticism hanging about the University as to how favorable a termination of the season the team would have. Losing the hrst two games. with an evident lack of batting strength, a bit of sloppy fielding, and no brains on the bases, Coach Neale became frantic. He put his men through such severe batting and fielding practice that when the club met the Colgate aggregation. there was no question as to the outcome and thus Virginia found its winning stride ., k on the late date of April 4th. CAPTAIN Snvzns Virginia Gets Even Break and Wins Championship Before the interest in the diamond and the horse-hide covered sphere had completely worn off, Virginia had won eleven and lost eleven and their stand- ing in the Tri-State Southern Conference gave them the championship. The Cavaliers had an average of .666 for the season in the final rating against North Carolina and Maryland who tied for the runner-up position with .555 each. Washington and Lee followed closely with an even .500. The Old Dominion team by beating W. and L. 3 to l on the l9th of May, put itself in the first place of this standing and thus took the Conference rating in the first year of its existence. The team built around a nucleus of veterans and further strengthened by a number of men from the preceding year's fine yearling squad, received con- siderable experience and practice in pre-season tilts with the ineligibles. Coach Neale kept a large squad at work throughout the winter, so by the latter part of March he was ready to take them outdoors for the strenuous and conscien- tious early season work. The infield line-up for these early practice tilts remained practically intact throughout the season except for Byrd coming up and taking the short stop. Randolph at second base and Cardwell at third were consistent in knocking down the ball in the infield and playing close to I3nzl corms a cums KOM I929 i , K .III: 1- II II I j :7 u n I J Jll M v' F L-LLLse A $3.3 4x'-;W-;:' i.-x. L ,i errorless ball, while Close at first base played great ball throughout the season. Battery Strong Captain Stephens playing his last year in Virginia colors contributed greatly to the teams success through his fine pitching and was ably backed up behind the plate by April. This battery worked exceedingly well, and was capably helped out by Melrose, who had come up from the yearling squad, and started right in at the beginning of the season to .win ball games. Atkinson pitching his last year for the University had a fine season on the mound. In the outfield, Virginia had some really exceptional Helders in Bowen, Dunn. Gammon, Lewey and Sloan. They could always be counted on to pull the unexpected and spec- tacular when necessary. The regular line-up went into the first game. with Captain Stephens on the mound, Holland at short-stop and Bowen, Gammon and Sloan in the garden positions. Demarco, visiting southpaw pitcher of the University of Maryland, however, proved the Cav- aliers undoing, and held them to 4 hits with his slow ; delivery. The infield work of Close, Randolph and LEFTY CLOSE. ' ', Cardwell was of note. though the batting and base tttwmfa running of the team as a whole was very weak. snr- ,v Going into the second game of the year with three .. ' ,2 days of practice behind them since their first defeat, the d , J x t M Cavaliers again came out on the short end of the score, ; when Penn. State took 16 hits for '2 runs from three of t! the University pitchers. Costello. Mielziner and Mel- 1' rose all had a hand in the holding down of the mound ' position. Penn had an exceptionally smooth fielding , team for so early in the season and played close to error- ! less ball, while the Orange and Blue were more than Ame, c. ragged, and gave their pitchers little support. I3931 RANDOLPH. 23. Trounce Northemers After suffering defeat at the hands of Penn and Mary- land. the Cavaliers finally found themselves and took Colgate into camp 13 to 7. Captain Stephens pitched beautiful ball the whole way, and ragged support gave the Northern nine their chalks, as he only allowed three hits and one free ticket. The University nine collected eleven hits including home runs by Close and Sloan and a three bagger by Cardwell. Byrd made his initial appearance at the short-stop position and played well. Then without halting their pace the Virginia nine took the first of the two scheduled games with Princeton 4 to 2, by taking advantage of free passes from Layton, Tiger pitcher. and bunching their hits. Melrose held the Princetonians down to eight scattered hits, and pitched his best ball of the season to date. Close covered himself with glory when he got a perfect tally from his three trips to bat, and drove in all four runs. The game was put on ice in the third stanza, when three runs were brought in. April and Melrose each collected a hit. The second game scheduled with Princeton was called off on account of rain. Journeying clear from the bitter winds of Boston, and bringing with them plenty of fire-works in the form of base hits and extras, Harvard took the long edge of the score on April I lth and trounced the Virginia team. The Cambridge fire-works were exceedingly bright in the first two innings when they collected four runs the frame, Captain Stephens finding the cold-penetrating wind a bit upsetting, regardless of the heat of Hares of the Northerners. Randolph at second and Byrd at short-stop played well in the field, while April,s home-run in the ninth with two men on featured the swatting for the day. As a part of the Easter week festivities, V. M. I. was trounced approvingly to the tune of 13 to 8. By scoring eight runs in the first two innings. as the Harvard lads had tutored, the Cavaliers found it easy to retain the lead and were never again headed. Entertain F air Dancing Partners SLOAN. Oulficld r3941 CORKS 5 cums rrmm l929 i '4 - A R IIII qull jglly u I '- v- p - l. n I E .- El April, when Captain Stephens and Melrose were rapped for I5 bingles. and the outfielders were of no avail. The Caro- lina boys thus took off the bacon to a 6 to 4 score for the first of the annual three-game series. Cardwell featured the day's play by driving out a homer in his second trip to the plate with two men on in the fifth inning. Then followed North Carolina,s win on the l4th of 9 Cavaliers Have F ield Day The following Friday on Lambeth Field V. P. I. fur- nished opposition to Neale's protegees in an one-sided slug-fest which the Cavaliers won Zl to 3. Then the Washington and Lee batters were somewhat mystified by the delivery of Mel- rose, who blanked them out of the scoring column and allowed his team to come in with 3 runs to the good, and only gave Mruxoszm. away three hits in the bargain. After journeying down to Lexington, the Old Dominioners hit a tangent over Blacksburg way, and dropped the second game of the season with the Virginia Tech men, 6 to 0. The Cavaliers could not fathom the Tech's moundsman, and the Blacksburg Sluggers found Captain Ste- phen's offerings greatly to their taste. Returning to the stamping grounds, Duke gave the Orange and Blue something to think of when they administered an H to 0 licking. Captain Stephens $GW4. again pitched nice ball against North Carolina State and with T excellent support downed the visitors here 3 to 2. The University made the runs which put the game on ice in the first inning, and the Tar Heels accounted for their two in the second and third. Revenged The early season Terrapin win was squared when Captain Stephens allowed only seven scattered hits and two free trips down the right base line and took an 8 to 3 win at College Park. Maryland. The U. Va. players in the batting box were excep- DUNN.Ouu$eId tionally strong in this game and continued so the next day at I3951 CORKS 6 CURLS Annapolis, when they out hit the Middies completely; yet the game went to the sailor boys 7 to 6. F our of the seven tallies scored by the midshipmen came via the error route. the Cavaliers not seeming to function in the field. South in North Carolina In the first game of the Southern trip. the North Carolina State won 6 to 4, but the University team retaliated by catching the University of North Carolina off its guard, and slipping in a 5 to 3 win at Chapel Hill the next day. Captain Stephens and Melrose held the Tar Heels to 3 hits. The Blue and White ball Chasers made up for their defeat by annexing the rubber game of the three-game series however, at Greensboro, when they took eight counters to the Orange and Blue's four. Reach Apex of Season's Playing Ability The contest with Washington and Lee. in the deciding game of the tri- state championship, was taken by the Cavaliers three runs to one. This game was probably one of the best exhibitions ever witnessed on Lambeth Field. producing some pretty Hashes of fielding. and fine bat work. Captain Stephens on the mound pitched brilliantly and was given superb support. He allowed but four safeties, fanned eight and gave but a single walk. Randolph played ball like a big leaguer. He pulled a sensational catch. when he hooked in a hard liner in the fourth inning, and again in the sixth he caught a deep Hy in right Field. He climaxed a perfect day in the field when he knocked down and robbed a Mink of a hit in the eighth throwing the batter out on a quick snap-throw to Close. Virginia drew first blood and held the lead throughout the game. Lewey featured at bat. when he collected two hits out of as many trips to the plate. In winding up the season, Virginia lost to the Quantico Marines and then bowed to the University of Richmond 6 to l. The game with the Rich- mond aggregation gave the victors an undisputed claim for the State Champion- ship, and an undefeated season. April, while starring consistently in the back-stop position, took the honors for the individual team batting average, while Close and Sloan closely followed in second and third positions. IBMEI mmmmmmmmmmmma Qua? .E u... GZSAOD CORKS 6 CURLS KOM l929 I ' K III I y l II I I , I I l l J ll I Boxmg, l 929 ALEXANDER H. BRYAN ........................................................ Caplain JOHN S. LAROWE ................................................................. Coach JOHN s. POlNDEXTER ................................... '. ..................... Manager CHARLES P. GATES .................................................... Am'slanl Manager OSBORN F. BRUCE ..................................................... A zislanl Manager JAMFS D. FULLER ...................................................... Assislani Manager TEAM JOHN W. FISHBURNE. JR.. . .Bantamweighl FRANK R. CAPPS ............ Wellerveighl EDWIN E. HART ............ Featherweight WILLIAM CLAY ............ Mr'ddlewcighl CHARLES H. RHETT ....... Featherweight DANIEL L. WILLIAMS ........ Lighl-heavy ROBERT M. RAINEY .......... Lightweight HUNTER C. MOTLEY ........ Heavyweight JULIAN B. FITE ............. Heavyweight RECORD Virginia ................................ 3 Duke ................................. 4 Virginia ................................ 2 V. M. I. .............................. 5 Virginia ................................ 3 Florida ............................... 4 Virginia ................................ 5 V. P. I. .............................. 2 Virginia ................................ I North Carolina ......................... 6 Virginia ................................ 2 Nuvy ................................. 5 FIRST YEAR TEAM CORRIN .................... Banlamwcighl VAN ZANDT ............. .WeIlcrweighl BALLARD .................. Banlammcighl MYERS ................. Middleweight COCKE ..................... Fcalherweighl CENTRY ................ Lrgnl-heavyweighl SKINNER ..................... Lightweight DEBUTTS ............... Lighl-heavywcighl NEISON ...................... Lightweight FULLER ..................... Heavyweight MCCULLOUGH .............. Welterweight PEYTON .................... Heavymeight RECORD Virginia ................................ 4 V. P. l ................................ 3 Virginia ................................ Z S. M. A ............................... 5 Virginia ................................ 5 Fishburnc ............................. 2 I3991 1929 boxing team was not as satisfactory as those of former years. The one outstanding handicap was lack of experience for which of course no one can be blamed. The fact a that Captain-efect Weed, Southern Conference champion, did not A return to school and the fact that Bryan, elected to fill his place, . was unable to fight because of high blood pressure were both un- fortunate circumstances. The fighting spirit and remarkable im- provement revealed by the members of the team under the skilled tutelage of Coach Johnny LaRowe evoke high praise and bode no good to Virginia's opponents in the squared circle next year. FISHBURNE Virginia, 3; Duke, 4 In their first match of the season. the Virginia boxers, fighting Duke University, were forced to take the short end of a four to three count. Bushefl. Cavalier bantamweight. put up a good exhibition but was outpointed by Stamned of Duke. after the judges had ordered a fourth round. Rhett, in the lZS-pound class, also making his debut for Virginia, floored Martin in the first round, but the Duke scrapper showed great recuperative power to come back and win by a technical knockout just before the final period ended. The Carolinians raised their lead to three points in the lightweight event. Smith gained a decision over Myers after an exciting three rounds in which the Cavalier entry was twice sent to his knees. Carper, Duke middleweight representative, was credited with a knockout over Clay, Virginia, when the latter was knocked down and misunderstood referee Miller's count, failing to rise from his knee before the full count had elapsed. Virginia's first win came when Capps in the welterweight berth out- pointed Wise in the first round and scored a knockout over the Blue Devil in the second. In the feature event of the evening, Kinchloe, making his return to the ring after a year's absence, turned in a technical knockout for Virginia over Hottenstein, when the referee stopped the bout after a grulling two rounds. In the heavyweight division, Motley, in three rounds of fighting, overcame Matthews of Duke with little trouble. l 400 I corms a cums KOM K ' i f nu: l ' D U H J i: K, lrl'u II Ill -' e Virginia, 5; V. P. 1., 2 The Old Dominion mittmen won their first victory when they took five out of the seven bouts in a match with V. P. I. The visitors were successful only in the featherweight and light-heavy divisions. The Orange and Blue chalked up a knockout in the bantam- weight class when Fishburne, after Hooring his man four times, put Trenis out of the running early in the second round. Fishburne's aggressiveness featured by a deadly left jab easily overcame the Cobbler entry. The Techmen tied the score when Kamerer of V. P. I. won the decision over Thompson in three hard-fought rounds. This bout was outstanding for the remarkable display of stamina and recuperative powers on the part of the Virginian in the face of Kamerefs gruelling assault. Rainey made the count two to one for Virginia with his victory in the l45-pound class at the expense iii Jo I RAINEY of Welker. The Cavaliefs driving left was a constant source of worry to the V. P. I. fighter who failed to do much damage in return. The Old Dominion scored their second knockout for the evening when Capps. after rushing Shannon for two rounds, ended the affair in a decisive manner by a squarely landed haymaker. In the light heavy section, Captain Pattie, won the second and last bout for V. P. I. by gaining a decision over Fite. The closing event latter's advantage in height, weight, and reach. Motley's re- peated blows to the face and body had the V. P. 1. man groggy by the end of the fight. by on the card was between Motley and Chapman. The Cavalier ,A heavyweight had little trouble in beating the Gobbler. deSpite the a -1 Virginia, 2; V. M. 1., 5 i i The Cavalier mittmen made their first invasion of foreign h i territory when they met the strong V. M. 1. team in Lexington, 1 January 26. The Cadets showed their superiority by winning five out of seven closely contested bouts. Virginia started off with HART a win when Fishburne, fighting bantamweight, won a judges' Hon decision over Rogers after three rounds of clever punching and ring generalship. Rhett's chances looked good in the first round of the featherweight event, the Cavalier administering a severe drubbing to the V. M. I. entry. However, Mallory came back strong in the second round and managed to land a hard blow which resulted in a technical knockout. In a hotly contested lightweight affair. featured by brilliant boxing on the part of both contestants, Gordon, captain of the Cadet aggregation. won a judges' decision over Rainey. Chapman took another decision for V. M. I. when he outfought Capps in the welterweight event. The Cavalier mittman was unable to connect with his right which had won him two knockouts in the first two meets of the season and was outpointed by the last- minute attack of the Cadet scrapper. After an extra round had been ordered, Kahout, of V. M. 1., was handed a decision over Clay in the middleweight event. In a slow uninteresting bout, CApps McCray. Cadet light-heavy, won a decision over Fite who, with rare exceptions. was unable to pierce his antagonist's defense. With the score five to one. Motley knocked out Cravatt. V. M. I. heavy- weight, in one of the greatest battles ever seen in Virginia intercollegiate boxing circles. Motley. knocked down for a count of eight early in the first round. came back strong to do the same for his opponent in the second. Finally, after both fighters had hit the canvas several times, the Virginia battler put Gravatt to sleep in the course of the extra round which the judges had decreed. Virginia, 3; Florida, 4 Florida's experienced boxing team accounted for another loss on the Orange and Blue's record when it won a close and colorful meet by four matches to three. Miller. holder of the Southern Conference bantam crown, won a decision over Fishburne in three close rounds. The Catofs dogged aggressiveness throughout the bout won him the decision of the iudges. In the featherweight class. Hart made his debut for Virginia in fine style by defeating Mitchell in a handy manner. Both fighters were aggressive but the Cavalier managed to outpunch his opponent. Rainey made the count two to one in favor of the Old Dominion when. after two slow rounds. he opened up with a number of left iabs in the third session which took the wind out of O'Connel's sails and gained the verdict for Virginia. Captain Curry. runner up in the Conference finals last year. was forced to the limit to defeat Martin in three fast and furious rounds. The latter. making his first appearance IMJEZI comcs a cums KAM l929 v ...: 111 man I! I Ill! l I III ' 61E: wag for the Orange and Blue, won universal approbation by his gameness and ability. Virginia took their third bout when Clay ' outfought Allen in a close setto in the middleweight division. The visitors knotted the count at three all with Crews, victory over Williams, Virginia light-heavyweight. Williams, out-weighed and participating in his first varsity encounter, put up a good fight r against his experienced foe. Motley, regular Virginia heavy- weight, was inactive because of an injured shoulder, and Fite, who had been shifted from the light-heavy class to take his place. fell before the furious assault of Marsales in the first round. Virginia, 1; North Carolina, 6 The Tar Heels accounted for the Cavaliers' third consecutive loss when they took six of the seven bouts in the match at Chapel Hill. Jack Fishburne. bantamweight, was the only Virginia leatherpusher to win a decision. By good generalship and an CLAY ability to land his blows, he downed Coley in one of the fastest bouts on the card. Carolina won the feather and lightweight events on judges, decisions. Rhett was outclassed by Cumming in the first round of their scrap but came back strong in the last two only to see the decision go to his opponent. Kessler, Virginia lightweight, was unable to keep up with the fast pace that Goodridge set. In the welter- weight class, Archie Allen had too much speed for Capps who, unable to get within hitting range of the Carolinian. was outpointed. Johnny Martin was unable to cope with the skill and experience of Brown, the Tar Heel captain and middleweight. The latter opening up with everything he had in the third round, won by a technical knockout. The light-heavy attraction found Ivey, for Virginia. and Sapp, for North Carolina. in an exceedingly close bout that was undecided until the final gong. Ivey. 1n his first Varsity fight, showed up well but was downed by the superior experience of his adversary. The heavy- weight battle came to an untimely end as the result of the recurrence of an old injury of Motley's when he slipped and twisted his knee in the first round. He continued however, but a blow from Warren jarred two vertebrae, pre- viously injured in football; the Cavalier fighter was temporarily paralyzed and was forced to give up half-way through the second round. Virginia, 2; U. S. Naval Academy, 5 Proving to be no match for the Naval Academy boxers in the heavier weights. the Cavalier leatherpushers won two and barely lost the other two of MOTLEY the lightweight events. F ishburne, Virginia bantamweight, took all three rounds from Fry in the opening fight of the evening. The initial period was closely contested, but the precision of the Cava- lier lighter was too much for the midshipman and easily gained a verdict for the Old Dominion in the other two rounds. In the featherweight event, Long, of the Navy, won a slug-fest from Hart. The fight was featured by clever in-hghting from start to finish; the blow for blow count went in the end to the well- conditioned Tar. The feature bout of the evening was Rainey,s brilliant victory over Williams. Navy's undefeated intercol- legiate lightweight champion. Rainey was sent to his knees by a terrific blow in the hrst thirty seconds of the fight and was outboxed for the rest of the round. However. he staged a strong comeback, using powerful body blows with telling effect, and by the end of the extra round decreed by the judges. the Cavalier had the champion at his mercy. Kessler fighting his first bout in the welterweight division, lost to the experienced Hall. The latter won the decision after four hotly contested rounds. In the three remaining'bouts the Virginians were clearly outclassed. Williams put up a splendid defensive fight against Captain Ricketts of the Navy. but was unable to retaliate against the Midshipmank attack. Ivey in the next class absorbed blow after blow from the powerful Swan, while in the final event Moret easily scored a technical knockout over Fite, Cavalier lightvheavy hlling the shoes of the injured Motley. Top Rlaht: Capps. of Vlralnll. knock: out Ramsden, of 80th Carolina In wolurmlaht dlvlllon. Top Loft: Allen, an Heal lightweight, defeats Rllnay of Vlralnla. Conter: Miller, Florida bantamweioht, outpolnu Fllhburno, of Vlralnia. Bottom: Williams. Vlrglnla llght-huvy. defeats Koef of South Carolina. 3 .: were attracted to Memorial Gymnasium. the scene of the fray. Under the guidance of Graduate Manager Brown, this tournament is assuming greater proportions each time it is held; instead of five schools as in I928. nine were represented this year, including North Carolina. South Carolina. Georgia. Florida. Tulane, Clemson, Duke, and V. P. I. The University of North Carolina by annexing one first, three seconds. one third and splitting a third place with Florida, piled up fifteen and a half points to win the tournament for the second consecutive time. Florida with two first places and one third was close on the Champion's heels with a thirteen .and a half total. In the seven divisions, seven new individual champions were crowned, Miller of Florida. the only title defender, being defeated by Martin of Duke in the bantamweight. O,Connel, Florida, defeated Russel, Georgia. for the featherweight title; Allen. North Carolina, defeating Carter, Florida. won the lightweight title; Curry, Florida, beat Capps, Virginia, for the welter- weight; Haas, Tulane, annexed the middleweight honors, winning from Car- per. Duke; Pattie, V. P. 1., beat Sapp, North Carolina, in the light-heavy hnals, while Wolfe, South Carolina, overcame Warren, North Carolina. for the heavyweight crown. Florida, with two titles to their credit, was the only team to have more than one champion. Rainey. by taking second place in the lightweight division, accounted for Virginia's lone three points. The final score was as follows: North Carolina. 15V2; Florida, I3VZ; Tulane. 8; Duke. 5; V. P. 1., 5; South Carolina, 5; Georgia, 4; Virginia. 3; Clemson. 3. I-lllGl g. i: w 'i 1 OFFICERS MIDDLETON ELLIOTT RANDOLPH .......................................... President WILLIAM CLIFFORD LUKE...: ........................................... Vice-Presiden! PAUL EDMUNDS SACKETT ................................................... Secretary ACTIVE MEMBERS v. w. w P w A D R. G. CABELL o. T. CLOSE c. E. CUDDY R. w. DAY 0. T. DANIEL. 1n. c. c. FLAKE P. H. FAULCONER H. F. FLIPPEN F. B.GILMER E. s. CROSECLOSE c. L. GILBERT w. H GAMMON J. c. HUTCHESON J. H. HARRISON F. M. HARRIS J. H. IRVINE A w G.A AKAMINER M. LEBAUER S. LEBAUER W. C. LUKE IMJTI PHILLIPS ..C PINKERTON ..C POWELL W RAWLES .E. RANDOLPH ..C STEPHENSON .W. STEPHENS ..K SLOAN .W. SYMINGTON .WHITE WILLIAMS QIIIwgzogghhgngwH I ..1 I r' m :u r-F'ro-I' w C. O 7: g D O I m x 03 W N. T. TURNER w. A. HALLOWES. lll TAYLOR VINSON 1. POINDEXTER R. B. LOBBAN PAUL SACKETT w. C. WILLS H. L. MARSTON H. ROBINSON J. GOLDSMITH J. LEITCH w. w. DUNN Tennis, I 928 TEAM CARY B. WILMER. Captain HUGH C. WHITEHEAD WALTER H. TAYLOR. IV E. C. WRIGHT FRED JOHNS FRED DODGE A. A. JONES RECORD 6 1 .HE tennis team was somewhat handicapped by bad weather which 6 prevented the courts from being conditioned until just before the : opening match. This took place with Johns Hopkins on April 5. the visitors taking all the doubles and half the singles to win by a 6 to 3 score. The Cavaliers won their second match from Hampden-Sydney. 5 to 2; Virginia took four out of the Eve singles matches. The Virginia courtmen left on April 24 for a hve-day northern trip in which they suffered a 6 to 2 defeat at the hands of the Baltimore Country Club. but avenged an early season defeat by overcoming Hopkins 6 to 3. Matches with Penn and and Penn A. C. were called off on account of rain. The last home match was won from Washington and Lee by a 6 to 3 score. but the season was ended by an overwhelming defeat at the hands of the Norfolk Country Club team. I 00M .CORKS 5 cums KOM I929 1 Ma 1E3? N It 1-: u 11 IMMELI 5Ngiz;wa i -51.3 Lacrosse FOR 1929 iTo be electecD ..................... Captain EUGENE A. DIETRICH .......... Manager DR. ALLEN F. VOSHELL.. ....................................................... Coach TEAM, 1928 R F. DEBUTTS ............... Firs! Defense W. R. ROBBINS ............... Firs! Atlack E- C- CA6RRINGTEORN -------- gawk, DEIEME W. E. JONES .................... Al Home A. G. H FHEIM ......... econd Defense R. L. HOLCOMB ............ Third Defense v.55. 533351;! A' HEW C. D. McKENRlCK ........... Third Defense 1- - ----------------------- 0,01 C T. BROADDUS IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Came, W. T. BOWEN ...................... Pom! J. H. HARRISON ............. Third Allack G. K. CROWTHER ........... Counter Pain! H. HARDEEN ............... Second Attack L. E. VIELBIG .................. Out Home RECORD. 1928 Virginia ............................ . . . . . 2 Randolph-Macon ....................... 9 Virginia ................................. I Johns Hopkins ......................... I2 Virginia ................................. l Maryland .............................. '4 Virginia ................................. 4 Georgia Tech .......................... 8 Virginia ................................. 0 Navy ................................. I9 NW Lacrosse, l 928 . HE fact that lacrosse is still an infant sport at the University somewhat accounts for the disastrous I928 season in which the Virginia team lost all of its five games; it obviously takes some time to establish such a new and little known sport as this. Facing, as they did. three of the country's best teams. the Cavaliers must be given credit for their fighting spirit and Hashes of real play. although as a rule smoothness and consistency were lacking 1n their performances. The Virginia suiciders opened the season at Ashland by bowing to Randolph-Macon 9 to Z. a result due to more speed and better stickwork on the part of the Tigers. The second game. also played away. was lost to Johns Hopkins. the intercollegiate champions. The Old Dominion team was clearly outclassed to the tune of l2 to I. The first home game with Ceorgia-Tech was more encouraging. It was fast and hard-fought and although Virginia began with a rush which netted them two goals, they lost the lead and finally went down on an eight to four count. On April 18, Maryland. led by Linkus and Snyder. contenders for All-American honors, swamped the Orange and Blue 14 to l. The game was a runaway in the first period but in the second half the Cavaliers checked the Marylanders' scoring machine due largely to the fine work of Bowen. substitute goal keeper. The last game of the season was played with Navy. It was more or less of a cross-country meet for the Midshipmen who made numerous substitutions and came out on the long end of a '9 to 0 score. I4091 Cross-Country, I 928 JOSEPH COLLIER HUTCHESON ................................................ Caplal'n TAYLOR VINSON .............................................................. Manager HENRY HADEN LANNICAN ..................................................... Coach TEAM 1. C. HUTCHESON JACOB OCHS L. W. McILHANEY BROOKE MAURY D. W. THORNTON G. B. THAYER M. D. MCBRIDE I410! CORKS e cums KOM I929 I t: IIII till I, U n l. l O I ll N K IIH' n e : l-LK ' :2 Cross-Country, I 928 ' HILE the I928 season is not especially impressive. the team did . V make a very creditable showing. Hutcheson and McIlhaney 7ti'a,k3 , were the only veterans to report this fall so Coach Lannigan had very little experienced material on hand. It was practically a new team that ran in the four meets against unusually strong opponents. Although three of these meets were lost. the margins that separated Virginia and her conquerors were very small. Ochs of last year's fresh- men proved to be one of the outstanding performers of the team. The opening of the season was run against V. M. I. The Cadets were downed by a twenty-six to twenty-nine score. The slender margin of victory shows how evenly matched the teams were. Hamilton Smith, of the Cadets, nosed out Ochs for first place by twelve yards, covering the distance of five and a half miles in lwenty-nine minutes and fifty seconds. Following Ochs, Bond. Mcllhaney and Hutcheson of the Virginia harriers finished in the order named. Thornton and Thayer captured seventh and eighth places for Virginia. On November the third. the Cavalier cross-country team journeyed to Annapolis to test their strength against the Navy harriers. The same twenty-nine to twenty-six score was repeated but this time the Cavaliers were forced to take the long end. Rouse. of the Navy. ran the flve-mile course in twenty-seven minutes. thirty-hve seconds. thereby besting the previous Navy record. Ochs and Hutcheson hnished second and third respectively. Fourth and fifth places went to the Navy while McIlhaney. Thornton. and Thayer took sixth. eighth, and ninth for the Old Dominion. Second place was captured by the Cavaliers in a triangular meet with Washington and Lee and V. P. I. furnishing the opposition. The Cobblers had little trouble in winning the meet while the Minks had to be content with last place. Penn of V. P. I. led the held. followed by Hutcheson and Ochs for second and third places. The University of North Carolina arrived in Charlottesville on November the twenty-first and succeeded in downing the Virginia harriers by a twenty to thirty-five count in the last meet of the season. Henderson. Carolina star. established a new record for the local course when he traveled the distance in twenty-seven minutes. forty-eight seconds. Ochs and Hutcheson were the outstanding performers for the Virginia team. capturing third and hfth places. McIIhaney finished in eighth place. CAPTAIN H UTCHESON '4111 1'- Gigi Juan? .3' 1 H: v-ur; 3 .J ' .1-56'3 aa ' u .. - Wrestling, I 929 HARRY GRAVES ................................................................ Caplal'rl LOUIS GRAVES ................................................................... Coach STERLING CLAIBORNE ........................................................ Manager TEAM E. M. PRYOR .................. H5-lb.clm F. ODENHEIMER ............. l55-Ib.clau G. A. FRASER ................. l25-Ib.clau D. S. FRENCH ................. lGS-lb.clau H. R. GRAVES ................ I35-lb.clau A. LEWEY .................... l75-lb.clau S. R. BAKER .................. I45-Ib.clm E. O. N. WILLIAMS ............. Unlimited B. DAVENPORT ................... Unlimited RECORD Virginia .............................. 21 N. C. Slate .......................... '3 Virginia .............................. 6 V. P. I .............................. 26 Virginia .............................. I4 W. and L ............................ I6 Virginia .............................. ll North Carolina ...................... 2l Virginia .............................. 9 Duke ............................... I 7 Virginil .............................. IOVZ V. M. I ............................. I9V2 I412I comcs 5 cums KOM l929 V I k III : ' n U I 11 I I I I I II I ,II l,iri' Wrestling, I 929 , LTHOUGH the Orange and Blue grapplers captured but one meet of the six 7 in which they participated. the season can not be regarded as entirely unsuccess- ful. Without exception. the meets were closely contested and Virginia's op- ' ponents had their hands full downing the Cavalier matmen. Captain Graves and Pryor made the outstanding records of the team. The Cavalier captain has the distinction of fighting twice in one meet and winning both matches. Pryor. wrestling in the l I5'class. suffered only one defeat throughout the season. The Cavalier wrestlers made their first appearance on January list when the North Carolina State team invaded the Memorial Gymnasium. The Old Dominion captain. Graves. clearly demonstrated his ability by defeating Berry in the l35-pound class and then returning to the mat to best Stout in the unlimited division. Pryor and Fraser. both of Virginia. won in the I15 and 125 classes by time advantage over their N. C. State opponents. Moore, visiting captain. threw McEwen after an eight-and-a-haIf-minute struggle. The Carolinians also came out ahead in the l58-pound division when Choplin secured a time advantage on Baker. In the following match. French. Orange and Blue representative in the l65-pound class, threw Day in one minute and fifteen seconds. Crowson retaliated for N. C. State by throwing Lewey. Cavalier l75-pounder. On the following Saturday. the Cavalier matmen engaged the V. P. 1. team at Blacksburg. Although the Cobblers won by a rather overwhelming score, 26 to 6. all the matches were close and exciting. Captain Graves scored his third consecutive victory in two meets when he gained a time advantage over Narcl in a hard-fought bout. Pryor was again successful in the I I5-pound class. Smith overcame Meade. Virginia's entry in the next division. in the most exciting match of the evening. The remaining bouts. two of which were won by falls, went to the Cobblers. In the next meet. the Washington and Lee wrestlers took a l6 to 14 decision from the University grapplers. Pryor continued undefeated in the HS division. In a battle between captains. Graves won from the Mink leader. Rule. F rench and Lewey captured their matches for the Orange and Blue while the W. and L. grapplers were successful in the remaining battles. The next engagement took place at Chapel Hill where the Virginia wrestlers were forced to take the short end of a 2' to l I score. Pryor, Fraser. and French were victorious in their respective classes. Two nights later. the team met the matmen of Duke University at Durham. The Blue Dogs emerged victorious after a hard struggle. I7 to 9. The count was tied twice during the evening and only one fall was obtained by either side. Baker. Fraser. and Lewey accounted for the Orange and Blue total. On February 23rd, the team journeyed to Lexington to engage the V. M. I. wrestlers. The result was a victory for the Cadets. 19V; to IOVZ. Captain Graves. Pryor. and French were the successful members of the Virginia team. l4l31 Sw1mm1ng JAMES MAY ................................................................. Captain ALVIN PATTERSON ...................................................... Manager TEAM G. E. PEYTON JAMES MAY R. H. SWINDELL jAMES HALL E. S. CWATHMEY F. O. HATCH T, B. MAURY XV. N. CHACE C. ROBERTSON F. A. JOHNS RECORD Virginia ................................ 43 Calholic U ............................. '7 Virginia ................................ I5 WK and L .............................. 45 Virginia ................................ 30 Delaware ............................. 30 Virginia ................................ 43 William and Mary ...................... '7 Virginia ................................ 39 Duke ................................ 2! AA. M; CORKS s cums KOM l929 s IIII eill Email? j 1'! I NIMKUMUJ HH- Swimming ??lTH only two letter men, Peyton and Maury, answering the call ., issued by Captain May for the swimming season of I929 and other ...: candidates slow in coming out, the prospects of a successful season in this sport looked exceedingly gloomy for awhile, and in no way propheciecl the final outcome wherein the University team dropped only one meet. This ultra-successful season is no doubt due somewhat to the earnest and genuine efforts of Coach and Captain May and his assistant Peyton. Among the members of the last year team that turned up and showed up so well in pre- liminary practice were: Hall, Robertson, Swindell, Johns. Hatch and Chase. This group showed up particularly well. and the line-up of fast natators for the first meet with Catholic University at Washington proved successful, when the contest was won 36-24. Trailing the Washington aggregation for the first part of the meet. a series of First places were taken by May, Maury, Hatch, and Johns which soon guaranteed a win. Captain May won his diving event, while Maury lived up to his last year's reputation and took the 440-yard free style event, and Hatch the l50-yarcl back-stroke. The ZOO-yard breast-stroke went to Johns, with Hatch taking second place. On journeying to W. and L. the University mermen were completely outclassed and were white-washed of hrst places when the meet went to the Lexingtonians 45 to '5. The only noteworthy event of the meet came in the 220-yard free-style when Maury extended his opponent to a new pool record. In winning the relay, the 200-yard breast-stroke. which Hatch swam, taking the IOO-yard back-stroke by Maury, and the first two places in the 220-yard free style by Peyton and Chase, the Cavaliers had little trouble in defeating the William and Mary natators. This meet was void of new records. The closest meet of the season went to the Delaware University tankmen on a technicality after the evening's contesting had ended in a draw. The outstanding event of the evening came when Peyton took a fine lead on the Delaware natator in the l50-yard back-stroke only to lose it on the final lap. I4151 the whole, the record for First Year athletics during the past year j may by regarded with some degree of satisfaction. Good teams were produced in most of the branches of sport and, what is more note- worthy, much material of future Varsity calibre was revealed. The I928 yearling track team were consistently victorious to gain for themselves an enviable record. In the winter session they showed up well at the South Atlantic meet in Richmond and won the Freshman division of Virginia's Annual Invitation Meet. Outdoors they overwhelmingly defeated Staunton Military Academy, V. M. 1., and Washington and Lee. In baseball the young Cavaliers were less effective but came away with fair success in their six-game schedule. Football proved to be a rather up-and-down affair with the F irst Year men. Although they won impressive victories over Maryland and V. M. I. and tied V. P. 1., they lost to Washington and Lee and North Carolina. The yearling basket-ball squad, containing remarkably brilliant material, succeeded, under Holland's able coaching, in establishing a record of twelve wins and one defeat. They defeated John Marshall, A. M. A., W. and L., V. M. 1., Fork Union, Davidson, Episcopal, and Fishburne. The only defeat came in a return game with V. M. I. The First Year boxing team won two of its three meets, defeating F ish- burne and V. M. 1., and losing to Staunton Military Academy. Several promising fighters were developed during the course of the season. IHGJ ' ORKs a cums ran I92 e f y M 9 ' ' K inn: D I n 114 n l n t I J I a First Year Baseball, I928 WILLIAM BRISTOW ............ Manager HOWARD HOLLAND ............. Coach TEAM DENT .................................................. . ...................... ZShorlsfop MCCUE ........................................................................ First Base ROE. ........................................................................... First Base MOSELEY .................................................................. Second Base GOODMAN ................................................................... Third Base WILKINSON ..................................................................... Fielder HALEY .......................................................................... Fielder DAVENPORT .................................................................... Fielder BENJAMIN ...................................................................... Fielder ', HEN the call for followers of the horse-hide spheroid was issued by Coach Hol- 'i land last March for the First Year team there was no evidence of a great deal of experience in the material that showed up. but there was the old ugrim determination and work was begun on the formation of a team. Coach Holland found that he had a reliable hurler in Ellis and some mediocre infielders. Sending his charges into their first fray with Maryland Frosh. it was only the extra base hit of one of the visitors that spelled defeat. Ellis pitched a two-hit game, while the visiting hurler granted no safeties at all. Woodberry Forest. Washington and Lee Yearlings. and F ishburne succeeded in vanquishing the Young Cavaliers, and it wasn't till the McGuire game that the First Year Men gained a victory. In this contest Ellis again pitched brilliant ball and held the visitors to three hits and a tally while his team ran in five runs. Ellis and Goodman each connected for three safeties out of four trips. The line up in this game proved most successful throughout the season with Goodloe. Lewis and Haley in the garden positions. Roe at first. Mosely second. Goodman at third and Dent on the short stop position. Benjamin played the back-stop and held them up for Ellis most creditably. The one real whitewash that the First Year team received was at the hands of the V. M. 1. rats when 22 runs were brought across the rubber by the Lexingtonians. The rest of the games were lost in the majority of cases by one run. and in the Staunton Military Academy contest another home-run by the visiting team in the last inning featured the win. Other members of the squad that found service throughout the season included Daven- port. Weaver, Pace. Harkhouse. Harrell. and Porter the last four helping out on the mound. I417J First Year Football, I928 J. C. MCCONNELL ................. Coach H. L. BUCK ..................... Manager Ci E. CUDDY .............. Assistant Coach H. H. LANNICAN ................ Trainer TEAM LEE ................................. End CENTRY .......................... Center PEYTON ............................ End WEAVER .................... Quarterback ST CLAIR ........................... End NELSON ..................... Quarlerback FULLER .......................... Tackle COLDENBURC ................. Fullback WEED .......................... Tackle THOMAS .................. . . .Halfback WILLIAMS. W. R. . ........... Tackle WILKINS .................. Hallback Dr. BUTTS ........................ Cuard MYERS ......................... Halfback MCCULLOUCH .................... Cuard BRYANT ....................... Halfback ROBINSON ....................... Cuard CRAVATT ..................... Hallback SCHINBERGER ................... Ccnlcr RECORD Virginia ................................. l4 Maryland .............................. 0 Virginia ................................. '9 Virginia Military Institute ................ 6 Virginia ................................. 6 North Carolina ......................... 2' Virginia ................................. 0 Wuhinglon and Lee .................... 9 Virginia ................................. l3 Virginia Polytechnic Institute .............. '3 Virginia ............................. 52 Opponents ......................... 33 school stars with much experience. The hopes for an ultra-successful season seemed veritably fulfilled when 10. the cruel and severe hand of eligibility descended and many valuable players were lost. This exasperating rule had its effect hardly ten days prior to the first contest scheduled with the Maryland Freshmen and the work of the coaches was doubled. However. after considerable shifting of players and positions. a still formidable line- up went on the field to defeat the Maryland team by two touchdowns. Virginia took the lead in the first quarter and had no difficulty in retaining it. Following this win. the Cavaliers quickly took the rats from V. M. 1. into camp 19 to 6 with Thomas displaying fine form and presenting a mOst elusive target for the visiting tacklers. The trip to the Southland found a heavy and fast moving team in the form of North Carolina Freshmen and the Yearlings came off on the short end of the line 21 to 6. Still in the rut of the former Saturday. the Washington and Lee first year team found the Virginians vulnerable and scored a touchdown and a dropkick to pave their way to their win. while the Yearlings could not penetrate the Ceneralsi defense. Winding up the season against V. P. 1., Thomas performed most creditably for Virginia while Weaver and Meyers also played well in the backfield. Peyton. Schin- berger. Weed and De Butts continued their line work in the line and aided in holding the strong V. P. 1. team to a tie I3 to 13. With several star performers on the team and a vast amount of other good material the squad should prove itself in varsity mole-skins and show up well from the capable coaching of McConnell and Cuddy. Illel CORKS a cums KOM l929 N. III: i HUEIJJT'i I I I' I J Jl I; W hi: . - Rh; . Li-a- J; ,h First Year'lTrack, I 928 WILLIAMS HUTCHINGS OVERBY ............................................. Manager HENRY HADEN LANNIGAN ..................................................... Coach TEAM, 1928 SMITH. W. H. WISNER OCHS AUSTIN, A. SHULSEN AUSTIN, J. A. COOK. E. T. CHAPMAN COOK. W. E. GOLDBERG COOPER SMITH. L. T. FISHBURNE WHITE. L. M. MOTLEY TAYLOR DAY PENNIMAN PAXTON WALKER MERLE . HE First Year track team made its first appearance indoors at the South Atlantic meet in Richmond. F ebruary 18. The Cavalier cubs were fairly successful. acquiring three second and two third places. They succeeded in winning their other indoor contest at Virginiak F ourth Invitation track games. With forty- six points they easily led in a victory over William and Mary. N. C. State. and Richmond. On April 18th. the yearlings. winning nine out of the twelve first places. opened the outdoor season by downing S. M. A. seventy-two to forty-flve. This was the first defeat for the visitors. who had previously beaten Washington and Lee and V. M. I. Against the Virginia team. the Cadets won only three events. the mile. the half-mile, and the 220. The First year men won their second meet three days later by an even more overwhelm- ing score. This time they again took nine first places and garnered enough seconds and thirds to defeat the V. M. 1. rats eighty to thirty-seven. The season was brought to a close on May 5. by a victory over the Washington and Lee First year team. thus giving the I928 Virginia Freshmen a record unblemished by a single defeat. This enviable accom- plishment and the large scores accompanying it were made possible by the presence of unusual talent in the squad, the outstanding members of which were Goldberg. Taylor. L. Smith. and Penniman in the running events. and Paxton, Motley. Wisner. and Day in the field events. I4191 F irst Year Basket-Ball, I929 HOWARD A. HOLLAND .......................................................... Coach WILLIAM HALLOWES, m ...................................................... Manager TEAM LEM MAYO ...................... Forward WILLIAM THOMAS ............... Cuard HERBERT BRYANT ............. Forward ROBERT MANLY .................. Cuard HARRY STEINBURG ............ Forward COOPER DAWSON ................ Cuard COWELL ........................ Forward JOHNSON .............. . .......... Cuard JACK WEAVER .................. Forward JAMES DELAFIELD ............... Center I420J III: till First Year Basket-Ball, 1929 i ITH a world of experience in the line of basket-ball technique handed to him in the form of Mays. Thomas. Bryant. Delaflelcl, and Manley. Mul Holland. coach of this year,s young Cavalier team. had little trouble in rounding together a quintet that could go on a court and not only cope with some other fast scoring aggregation, but consistently outscore all opponents, and in the end turn in one of the most enviable records ever set up by a University team. Twelve wins and a single defeat, the winner here being a team already once beaten in an earlier season game. is indeed a record. Mayo. Thomas and Bryant were indeed hnds. They alternated in turning in high-score honors throughout the season. though Mayo took the season's honors with over 165 points. Delafield. playing a strange position. as his former laurels had been won as forward, turned in a very creditable game at center, contributing considerable to the scoring as lwell as dropping back on the defense to help Manley who played his guard unalterably we 1. Starting the fire-works. which were to shine so brilliantly before the schedule was completed. the Yearlings ran off with an easy win over John Marshall High School 28-16. From then on they hit a rapid stride and quickly left A. M. A. in the wake in two games with leads of ten to twenty points. In the latter game Coach Holland ran in his entire squad. but in spite of substitution Bryant. Thomas and Mayo hooked in 14. 12 and 11 points respectively and could have been responsible for the win without the other 12 points of their team mates. The young Generals from W. and L. were outclassed 40-36. while the HBig Three were too much for the V. M. I. uratsn who took a 32-24 reversal. The scoring trio had their best day against Fork Union, when after playing through the first quarter on even terms, the Yearlings ran off and left them with a final count of 57-32. Mayo caught in 16 points and was closely followed by Thomas with 15 and Bryant with 12. Without faltering from the hard and narrow path of the victory column. the U. Va. youngsters gained their second victory over W. and L. The same sensational passing under the hoop to the scorers was the medium with Thomas roping in 1 7 counters. The inevitable slump hit the squad with customary drastic measures. and hopes for a clean slate were somewhat smudged when the V. M. 1. rats took the return match in the biggest upset of any season. and won after trailing 6-22 in the third quarter. The team again assumed its former brand of ball. and with Mayo playing a stellar floor game with his eye on and the rest of the trio hitting the ring with great accuracy, the young Cavaliers won from Davidson 27-22. Episcopal 34-23 and Fishburne 35-26. In the latter game Mayo equalled Thomas' individual game honors with 17 points. Winding up the season on the home court. Mayo again collected 17 pointers in helping his team turn back the Fork Union aggregation 55-43. Other players who aided in the ultra-successful season include men of fine ability. among them being: Steinberg. Johnston. Shipley, Weaver. Dawson and Goldman. 1421 J Fantastica I made a song for you. and snared lhc wonder of a dream lo sing of beauty. There was a sheen of moonlight over a pool of fade. Apple blossoms fell one by one from gnarled black branches. I made a song for you. Now I have largollcn the words. Only the lune remains like while blossoms falling upon still green waler. The Raven Society OFFICERS WILLIAM MINOR LILE ROGERS ............................................... Pruidenl WILLIAM COW'ELL STEPHENSON. JR ...................................... Vice-Pruident DONALD GRANT MACDONALD ................................................ Treasurer ARMISTEAD LLOYD BOOTHE ................................................ Secrelary HONORARY MEMBERS HON. ARMISTEAD CHURCHILL GORDON HON. JOHN BASSETT MOORE HON. JOHN SHARPE WILLIAMS MR. DUNCAN CURRY MILJUSTICE JAMES CLARKE MCREYNOLDS MR. PHILLIP ALEXANDER BRUCE RT. REV. ARTHUR SELDEN LLOYD REV. BEVERLEY DANDRIDGE TUCKER DR. EDWARD REINHOLD ROGERS INITIATES, 1928 Alumni Rev. NOBLE. C. POWELL R. C. TAYLOR Graduate ' ROBERT L. ECHOLS College H. L. BUCK T. S. CLAIBORNE W. S. WEEDON P. E. SACKETT J. H. HARRISON A. S. B. NOLTING E. A. DELARUE. 111. Law W. W. BOHANNON L. A. BUCK G. P. C. YOUNG R. B. TYLER A. R. HUSSEY F. L. TAYLOR J. P. HART. JR. Engineering L. R. QUARLES C. D. HARMON C. E. McMURDO Medicine D. O. HAMBLIN W. C. HUTCHESON W. C. STEPHENSON R. T. PlERCE. JR. R. W. C. McCLANAHAN COLLEGE AT LARGE P. P. BURKS L. H. EDMONDS D. G. MACDONALD PATRICK WU PUBLICATIONS C. H. COCHRAN ..................................................... Virginia Law Review 14241 Beta of Virginia Chapter of Phi Beta Kappa Founded al the College of William and Mary. December 5. I776 Established. I908 EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE JOHN CALVIN METCALF. Preside ! HARRY TAYLOR MARSHALL. V icc-Presidenl WALTER SELDON RODMAN. Secretary CHARLIE PATTERSON NASH. Trcalurcr JAMES SOUTHALL WILSON. Librarian INITIATES, 1928 College GEORGE MURPHY ARMlSTEAD CHARLES DORSEY HARMON EARL SAUNDERS BELOTE WINFIELD SCOTT MACGILL. JR. ISAAC SEYBERT BEVERAGE JOSEPH MUIR MERCER ARMISTEAD LLOYD BOOTHE CHARLES ROLLIN LORAIN ODOR RALPH COMER MICHAEL FLYNT ALBERT RHETT STUART PATRICK ARMISTEAD GIBSON ROBERT CATESBY TALIAFERRO LEWIS MACHEN HAMMOND ROBERT EDWARD WESTMORELAND Graduates JAMES BAKER BOWERS, JR. IRVING LINDSEY FRANCES ELIZABETH HARSHBARGER FANNY HARRISON MILLS EDMUND RUFFIN JONES. JR. ISAAC TAYLOR MUSSER. JR. FLOYD FRANK SWERTFEGER Law ALTON INGRAM CROWELL CARTER THOMAS LOUTHAN T. FRANKLIN DANIEL JOHN CORNELIUS STENNlS JULIAN HARRIS JOHN LUTHER WALKER THOMAS LEE HUTTON MCDONALD EDWARD WRENN Medicine PAUL DOUGLAS CAMP. JR. CARSON LEE FIFER ELIZABETH COCKE. COLE VALENTINE LAWRENCE PUIG. JR. LOUIS HENRY EDMUNDS JAMES WINSTON WATTS. ll Alumni NATHAN LYNN BACHMAN. LL.B., I903 MILTON COURTRIGHT ELLIOTT. 1902 WILLIAM ELLIOTT DOLD. M.D.. l879 LEWIS CATLETT WILLIAMS. B.A., M.A.. IB98 I4261 DR. JAMES CARROLL FLIPPEN DR. HARVEY ERNEST JORDAN DR DR DR DR DR DR DR DR DR DR DR JA .CORKS 6 CU RLS The Alpha of Virginia Chapter of Alpha Omega Alpha Founded al the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Chicago, I902 Eslablished. 19,9 FRATRES IN FACULTATE . jOHN HENRY NEFF . JOHN STAIGE DAVIS . HALSTEAD SHIPMAN HEDGES . THELMA FLOURNOY BRUMFIELD . CHARLES BRUCE. MORTON . HARRY TAYLOR MARSHALL . JAMES ROBERT ADAMS . JOE WILSON BAKER . JOHN ALFRED CALHOUN . ELIZABETH COCKE COLE. . LOUIS HENRY EDMUNDS MES PORTER BAKER. JR. WILBUR ALLEN BARKER AUBREY RICHARDSON CARTER DONALD OSBORNE HAMBLIN DR. WILLIAM HALL GOODWIN DR. LAWRENCE THOMAS ROYESTER DR. WILLIAM EDWARD BRAY DR. DUDLEY CRAWFORD SMITH DR. DR DR DR JAMES EDWIN WOOD. JR. . JAMES ALEXANDER WADDELL . JOHN DAVIS BLACKFORD . OSCAR SWINEFORD, JR. FRATRES lN URBE . PAUL BRANDON BARRINGER DR. STEPHEN HURT WATTS DR MEMBERS Class of 1928 DR DR DR DR DR Class of 1929 JED HOTCHKISS IRVINE ROBERT W. C. McCLANAHAN PAUL OTTO FREDERICK PILCHER, jn. WILLIAM COW'ELL STEPHENSON. JR. I427! . WILLIAM DOUGLAS MACON . CARSON LEE FIFER . WILLIAM RILEY JORDAN . ROBERT LEONARD KING . WILLIAM LOUIS LACY . WALTER JACKSON LACKEY Alpha of Virginia Chapter of Tau Beta Pi Founded at Lehigh University, I885 Established. I92! FRATRES IN FACULTATE WILLIAM MYNN THORNTON. B.A.. LL.D. WILLIAM HOLDlNC. ECHOLS, 8.5.. C.E. JOHN LLOYD NEWCOMB, B.A.. C.E. WALTER SHELDON RODMAN. 35., S.M. EDWARD WATTS SAUNDERS. C.E. JAMES SHANNON MILLER. B.A.. 35., CE. SAMUEL ALFRED MITCHELL. M.A.. PHD. ARTHUR FRANCIS MACCONOCHIE. B.SC. CHARLES HENDERSON, E.E. ACTIVE MEMBERS EDWIN EADS ANDREWS. JR. ROBERT TURNER BROWNING JAMES MONTROSE GRAHAM CHARLES DORSEY HARMON EDWARD FRUTH JOACHIM CHARLES EDWARD McMURDO DONALD GRANT MACDONALD I4281 GARNETT VIRGIL MOORE OVID STEPHEN PETRESCU CILFORD GODFREY QUARLES LAWRENCE REGINALD QUARLES WILLIAM MINOR LILE. ROGERS EDWARD CARL STEVENSON JOHN ALFRED WOTTEN, JR. CORKS 8 CU RLS The Omicron Delta Kappa Fraternity FACULTY MEMBERS DR. EDWIN ANDERSON ALDERMAN DR. ELBERT ALVIS KINCAID DR. JOHN CALVIN METCALF MR. ARMISTEAD MASON DOBIE DR. WILLIAM MYNN THORNTON Mn. JOHN LLOYD NEWCOMB DR. ROBERT KENT GOOCH MR. FREDERICK DEANE G. RIBBLE DR. DUDLEY CROFFORD SMITH DR. ALLEN F ISKE VOSHELL DR. ALBERT LEFEVRE. STUDENT MEMBERS JAMES PORTER BAKER WILLIAM MEADE. KELLER ARMISTEAD LLOYD BOOTHE. ROBERT W. C. McCLANAHAN ROBERT GAMBLE CABELL. Ill THOMAS ATKINSON McEACHERN. JR. CURTIS EMERY CUDDY THEODORE PHILLIPS WILLIAM MILLER GAMMON MORTON MORRIS PINCKNEY ALEXANDER GORDON GILLIAM FRED HUNDLEY QUARLES. JR. FRANK BOSTICK GILMER MIDDLETON ELLIOTT RANDOLPH GEORGE TAYLOE GWATHMEY. JR. WILLIAM MINOR LILE ROGERS JED HOTCHKISS IRVINE WAT HENRY TYLER LEWIS FIELDING WILLIAMS INITIATES JAMES RILEY AYRES HARRY FITZGERALD FLIPPEN EDMUND FONTAINE BROUN, JR. LEWIS MACHEN HAMMOND OSCAR THOMAS CLOSE JOHN KIRKPATRICK SLOAN FREEMAN JUNIOR DANIELS ROBERT BENJAMIN TYLER EUGENE BEVERLY FERRIS PEYTON RANDOLPH WILLIAMS I4291 Iota Sigma Honarary MedicaU Founded al the University of Virginia. I927 FRATRES IN FACULTATE DR. jAMES CARROLL FLIPPEN DR. WILLIAM HALL GOODWIN DR. HARVEY ERNEST JORDAN DR. LAWRENCE THOMAS ROYSTER FRATRES IN URBE DR. RAYMOND ALFRED CANDY DR. ROBERT LEONARD KING Class of 1929 JAMES PORTER BAKER. JR. PAUL OTTO WILBUR ALLEN BARKER ROBERT TUNSTALL PIERCE. JR. DONALD OSBORNE. HAMBLIN WILLIAM COWELL STEPHENSON. JR. WILLIAM CHILDS HUTCHESON HARRISON RAWLINGS WESSON BASCOM BROKENBROUGH YOUNG HMH H11 ES $000 Founded February. I889 MOTI'O: Superslilio :qum in animo inscii habitat MEMBERS ROBERT GAMBLE CABELL. lll THEODORE PHILIPS WILLIAM MILLER GAMMON FRANK BOSTICK GILMER WILLIAM CLIFFORD LUKE MIDDLETON ELLIOT RANDOLPH WILLIAM COWELL STEPHENSON. JR. WILLIAM EYRE TAYLOR WAT HENRY TYLER I4321 MEMBERS CHARLES PATTERSON NASH. JR. NATHANIEL LEWIS BOSWORTH. JR. JOHN JENNINGS LUCK WAT HENRY TYLER ROBERT W. C. McCLANAHAN JOHN KIRKPATRICK SLOAN HARDY CROSS DILLARD HARRISON FITZGERALD FLIPPEN ROBERT GAMBLE CABELL. Ill HUNTER PERCIVAL FAULCONER MORTON MORRIS PINCKNEY DANIEL BROWN PIERSON. Jn. WILLIAM EYRE TAYLOR PERCY HOUSTON BROWN MIDDLETON ELLIOT RANDOLPH jOHN FULTON McGAVOCK WILLIAM CHALMERS WILLS OSCAR THOMAS CLOSE PAUL EDMUNDS SACKETT HONORARY MEMBER JAMES ANDERSON CHlSHOLM I4341 JOHN HENRY NEFF DAVID JOSEPH XVOOD ADDENELL HEWSON NIICHIE GEORGE BOARDMAN EACER HUGH THOMPSON NELSON THOMAS MUNFORD BOYD STEPHEN HURT W'ATTS DAVID ELLIS BROWN STAIGE DAVIS BLACKFORD OSCAR SWINEFORD. JR. WILLIAM COWELL STEPHENSON. JR. XVILLIAM NIILLER CAMMON XVILLIAM Hoot; WOOD, jR. W'ILLIAM MORGAN CHEW SAMUEL HODGES MCCHEE THEODORE PHILLIPS WILLLIAM MEADE KELLER HARRISON LEIGH BUCK FRANK BOSTICK CIILMER HUNTER HOLMES Moss FlELmNG LEWIS WILLIAMS WILLIAM WALLACE SYMINCTON. 111. JOHN HARTWELL HARRISON ALEXANDER HAMILTON BRYAN HARRISON CARTER MYERS. JR. l435l FRATRES IN FACULTATE WILLIAM HOLDING ECHOLs. 35.. CE. RICHARD HEATH DAaNEv. M.A.. PHD. JAMES Momus PAGE. M.A.. PHD. THOMAS DUCKET JONES. B.A.. M. D. FRATRES IN URBE THOMAS L. ROSSER ALBERT STEWART BOLLING. M.A.. B.L. CHARLES COLVILLE TENNANT. M.D. LEE H. WILLIAMSON THOMAS MUNFORD BOYD, B.A.. B.L. DAVID JOSEPH Woon. B.L. Enwm HENRY COPENHAVER W. STEPHENSON J. T. BUXTON. JR. W. E. TAYLOR C. WILLS A. G. GIUJAM W. TYLER R. L. ECHOLS N. L. Boswon'rH, JR. E. C. CARRINGTON F. L. WILLIAMS ACTIVE MEMBERS J. F. MCGAVOCK F. G. DAVIDSON E. N, PAYNE W. H. W000. JR- J. Pomoaxrak E. B. Fzmus. JR- F. C. WILLIAMS 5. B. CRIMES R. R. BEASLEY T. E. MASSIE , j. Moxronn W. P. McGumE C. B. TAYLOR W. M.VWHITEHEAD T. R. DANIEL. JR. J. H. SCHERER W. CHEW W. W. SYMINGTON j. W. HOPE W. C. LUKE C. BATTERY E. C. ORGAIN H. L. MARSTON M. E. RANDOLPH W. H, HAITON J- H- FARROW L M. HAMMOND D. B. PIERSON. JR. F.SACKE'IT A. H. BRYAN P. BROWN C. C. CANADA A. B. CHINN W. L. CLAY G. GRATI'AN H . FLIPFEN W. HOLLAND l4361 FRATRES IN FACULTATE WILLIAM MINOR LILE. B.L., LL.D. ARMISTEAD MASON D0315, M.A.. B.L. 'WILLIAM HARRISON FAULKNER. M.A.. PHD. JOHN HENRY Narr. B.A., M.D. WILLIAM HULL Goonwm. B.A., MD. STEPHEN HURT WATI'S. M.A., MD. JOHN LLOYD NEWCOMB. B,A.. C.E. HENRY BEARDEN MULHOLLAND. M.D. F REDERICK DEANE RIBBLE, B.A., M.A.. LL.D. ALLEN FISKE VOSHELL, MD. ADOLPHUs BLAIR Scan. B.A., B.L. Gus KAMINER WILLIAM ATKINSON WILLIAM Bum WILLIAM HALLOWES EDWARD Monms HARTWELL HARRISON ARCHER JONES ARMISTEAD BOOTHE HUGH WHITEHEAD BILL GAMMON MULLIE FORSYTHE WILLIAM MoNcum-z OSCAR CLOSE FLOYD HARRIS LESLIE GRAY WALTER JOHNSON Doccn: MARCHANT LOUIS GILBERT BUTSY HEATH WILLIAM ROPER FRED MORRISON MOREY BOOTHE CARTER MYERS PEYTON WILLIAMS ALEX BROWN JOHN GowsMITH PAUL REVERCOMB RICHARD DEBUTTS CHUNKY BROWN HARRISON BUCK ROBERT CABELL BUCK CUDDY CHARLES FROST CARLYLE FLAKE FLOYD GARETT FRANK GILMER MEAD KELLER MAURICE LONG HUNTER Moss SAM MCGHEE THEODORE PHILLIPS MIKE PINCKNEY NELSON TURNER WILLIAM CAMMON FRATRES IN URBE LEWIS TROTMAN HANCKEL. B.L. EDWIN VALENTINE WALKER. B.L. CLAUDE CAROLL. C.E. CHARLES EDWARD MORAN, B.L. PA'ITON K. PIERCE, MD. HOLus RHINEHART, JIL, B.L. D. C. SMITH. B.A., M.D. RAY JACKSON NEFF, B.A., MD. ROBERT B. HIDDEN, B.A., M.D. DAVID ELLls BROWN, BS. EDWARD MCPEAKE. MD. ACTIVE MEMBERS HILL CARTER WILLIAM BRISTOW CHARLES KINCHELOE JOSEPH HUTCHINSON THOMAS MCEACHERN Bstoa PINKERTON MINOR Rooms TAYLOR VINCENT RICHARD Tumum WILLIAM Moss HUNTER FAULCONER NED WRIGHT JOHN CARTER IOHN SLOAN I437J W. O. BRISTOW ............ Vice-Prc:idenl S. H. MCGHEE ................... President F. L. WILLIAMS ................................................ Secretary T. ATKINSON Jim FORD Charlie GATES Stubby AUSTIN Luke WHITE John HENDERSON Bill BRISTOW Lnylon PLATT Ned WRIGHT Bobby CABELL Rut CLEMENT Hunter FAULCONER Charles CANADA Bill LEVERING Bob MARTIN Bill CHEW George COOPER Aunin CHINN Ed CARRINGTON Tiny JOHNSON uDelmidge TRIMBLE Cy COPPS Jim MCCREADY Bud FITE Dan DANIELS Eddie MCCEORGE Jim HALL Johnny SLOAN Byrd DAVENPORT Joe TURNER Dick HINES Carter MYERS George MONCURE Hutch OVERLY Mully FORSYTHE Bobby ECHOLS Vic EVANS Joe FARROW Bob MCCLANAHAN uTom MCEACHERN Samn MCGHEE Dog FRAY Ed ORGAIN John CARTER Carlyle FLAKE Doc FITZHUGH Bill GAMMON uD. RUNK Sid CARRET Mac MCCORMICK Frank GILMER Billy HOLLAND Bill HALLOWES Clarence HOLLAND Skeeter HINTON Horace DURSTON Jack HYDE Bev WHITE Jed IRVINE Mal DANIEIS 'Charlie KINCHELOE Dean QUARLES Bill LUKE Payne QUARLES uMaury BOOTHE Peyton WILLIAMS Bev RANDOLPH Shorly ELDRIDGE Tom HUMRICKHOUSE Buck HUMRICKHOUSE gohn READ ill WILKINSON Dick DAY Bev HOLLADAY uTip MOORE Bunny MACKALL Dave MAULSLEY Ted PHILLIPS Pink PINKERTON Fred QUARLES Paul REVERCOMB Jimmie ROBERTS Jack SEBRELL Herbie ROBERTSON Bob PIERCE Ned PAYNE Jack CORETTE Charlie CONLEY Charlie HAMILTON Bob RAINEY Frank EVENIER Mac VAN-VOORIES Joe BRYANT George TAYLOR JoeH HUTCHINSON Dick WHEAT Johnny WABH LeeH BOATWRICHT Ed LE Raves SHAFFER .J P. WILLIAMS uJim SLEMP Bill STEVENSON Alphonso SMITH Bevo MIDDLETON Sy SYMINGTON Font BROUN Ralph MCKITTRICK Chaunce BATTEY Dan WILLIAMS Coley JOHNSTON Billy TAYLOR Johnny WHITE. Billy HAM Poyntz TYLER Charlie MCCOY Oscar PARRISH Archie WILLIAMS Jimmy LUTCH Johnny CWALTNEY Sam BAKER Prince SEBRELL Sonny POST Jim AYERS Fielding WILLIAMS Bill WOOD I 4331 OFFICERS W7. P. MCGUIRE ................. President G. E. W. BROWN ........... Vicc-Prcsidcnl 15 HAM KEITH ............... . ......................... Sccrclary-Treasurcr MEMBERS J. E. BROWN J. H. SCHERER P. H. BROWN E. E. WALKER H. C WHITEHEAD E. C. CARRINCTON E. H. EVERY W. W. DUNN A.C.CILL1AM W. M. WHITEHEAD C. T. CWATHMEY R. W. C. MCCLANAHAN H. PICOT A. E. WALKER B. W. RAWLES A. BROWN C. W. HORSLEY M. LONG H. BUCK P. R. BEASLEY D. PIERSON W. P. MCGUIRE D. 1. WHITE L. BOSWORTH T. E. MASSEY E. FISHBURNE D. MCDONALD J. E. HEATH. JR. R. MORRISON C. M. NELSON C. L. COCKE N. ORRICK B. CRIMES J. MORFORD W. S. JOHNSTONE A. L. CRAY M. W. LUPTON R. LANCASTER A. BOOTHE A. H. BRYAN E. DAVIS C. E. CUDDY A. S. B. NOLTINC R. F. MASON D. R. CROOME E. W. MORRIS GRAHAM HURST A. CENTILE J. V. MCCAVOCK H. T. HADEN R. B. MEMMINCER W. S. CRANDY H. H. COCKRILL J. H. IRVINE 1. KEITH, JR. C. C. DOUCHERTY W. M. KELLER R. W. DEBUTTS E. CLENDEN P. D. CAMP, JR. C. C. WALKER S. CWATHMEY TAYLOR VINSON W. L. SIBLEY S. MCCRUDER P. H. HICKSON O. T. CLOSE D. FULLER W. L. CLAY. JR. H. L. MARSTON A. w. PINKERTON L. E. HAMMOND H. H. MOSS E. B. FERRIS, JR. E. RANDOLPH s. C. WILLIAMS 5. LEIGH J. w. GOLDSMITH H. c. HUDNALL w. POWER. JR. F. MORRISON J. w. THOMAS L. w. McILHANY s. COOKE J. 5. POINDEXTER w. E. BYRD A. B. PINKERTON W. w. MOSS. JR. H. C. MARCHANT H. F. FLIPPEN w. H. ROPER H. L. SMITH J. w. RAWLES f4891 H. PATTERSON c PENNIMAN v SHANKLIN R. SHANKLIN JOSEPH NOEL H B. HAWES B. R KENNON JOPH HN MOYLER R. E. R. w. H. FLANNIGAN A. N R. J J.P .HART J. w. FISHBURNE E o N. WILLIAMS w. CARROLL LATTIMER A Long Time Ago V . ' 'in6? '3 'Si'f iwir gnv' - IPIUIBILIMDAJHI D'N Dmt Om mUEOF NGNJJOO IIIIHIHEIE WINE EDITORIAL BOARD EDGAR D. BROOKE ....................................................... Editor-l'n-Chief R. D. TRIMBLE. JR ........................................................ Managing Editor E. A. DELARUE. JR ........................................................... News Editor P. R. WILLIAMS ............................................................. News Editor B. H. RANDOLPH ........................................................... New: Editor A. S. B. NOLTINC ....................................................... Assignment Editor C. K. CROWTHER .......................................................... Sports Editor D. V. ANDERSON H. B. BLOOMER, JR. W. D. CABELL ASSOCIATE EDITORS A. L. COOKE E. S. CUTCHIN DEXTER FRENCH FEATURE WRITERS G. B. THAYER R. T. WIISON GEORGE COOPER G. B. WEBB P. R. CROWE B. M. MIDDLETON ........................................................ Book Reviewer A. H. GERHARD. JR ......... I ..................................... Dramatic and Music Critic S. B. CUNST ........................................................... .4551. Sports Editor REPORTORIAL STAFF E. V. BENJAMIN J. P. WILLIAMS A. KOLTUN GAINES McMILLAN. II F. ODENHEIMER VICTOR HARRIS ALVIN FRIEDBERG IRWIN BERNSTEIN A. S. HOOPER S. R. TYLER DELMAR ROBINS BUSINESS STAFF M. C. GREEN .................................................................... Manager I. P. PERKINS ........................................................... Assistant Manager H. L. PRICE .......................................................... Advcrll'u'ng Manager E. A. MARKS. JR ....................................................... Circulalfon Manager J. F. ADLER A. C. WOOD G. F. SPRACUE I4431 LAW REVIEW BOARD FRED H. QUARLES. JR ...................... ROBERT B. TYLER ......................... W. MEADE KELLER ........... . ............ LUClUS A. BUCK ........................... WILLIS W. BOHANNAN .................... JAMES R. AYERS. JR. HORACE G. BASS H. LEE BOATWRIGHT ARMISTEAD L. BOOTHE WILLIAM L. CLAY. JR. JOHN E. CORETTE. JR. FREEMAN J. DANIELS FRANK G. DAVIDSON WILLIAM M. FERGUSON FRANK H. COODRICH LOUIS L. GUY ROBERT v. HALSEY JAMES P. HART. JR. RICHARD K. HINES. JR. FIELDING L. WILLIAMS EDITORIAL BOARD EDITORIAL STAFF BUSINESS STAFF GEORGE P. YOUNG ........................ CLAUDE H. PIPER ......................... LOUIS L. GUY ............................. .................................... President ................................. Notes Edilor .............................. Decisions Editor .......................... Book Review Editor ............................... Virginia Editor HOMER W. LYNCH THOMAS E. MASSIE HERBERT W. MILLER WILLIAM E. MILLER ELDRIDGE H. MOORE HUNTER H. MOSS FRANK B. MCDONALD THOMAS A. McEACHERN. JR. RUSSELL L. POST JAMES H. SIMMONDS JOHN E. SMITH FRANK L. TAYLOR HORACE A. TEASS LAWRENCE S. THORNE ............................ Business Manager ................... Assislanl Business Manager .......................... Advertising Manager VIRGINIA REEL BOARD RIB. NA REEL MANAGING BOARD EDGAR DUFFIELD BROOKE .............................................. Edilar-in-Chief HUGH DEWITT MCCORMICK ........................................... Business Manager ISHAM KEITH. JR ......................................................... Managing Editor E. W. RECTOR WOOTTEN .................................................... Art Editor RICHARD C. DEANE ................................................. Advertising Manager GEORGE W. WOOD .................................................. Circulalion Manager ASSOCIATE MANAGERS F. H. ALLEN LEWIS MATTISON R. K. HINES SOUTHGATE LEIGH F. M. BURNETT. JR. WILLIAM FORD GIBSON ................................................ Service Manager LITERARY STAFF L. A. MOTLEY. JR. DEXTER FRENCH GEORGE LECKXE ROBERT RUFFIN ARCHER JONES. JR. ' ART STAFF RAND TAYLOR TRUEHART POSTON W. T. WILLIAMS BUSINESS STAFF PAYNE D. QUARLES W. W. WHARTON ROBERT E. TAYLOR 5AM BICGS LORIN NUSBAUM ADVISORY BOARD LAWRENCE B. ANDERSON HARRY ROGERS PRATT ARMISTEAD DOBIE ATCHESON L. HENCH STRINGFELLOW BARR I4471 ngxom KOFdhromlw .2.0::, The Virginia SPECTATOR BOARD HOWARD BRADLEY BLOOMER. JR ...................................... Edifor-in-Chicf DAYTON M. KOHLER ................................................... Managing Editor HOWARD H. HACKLEY ............................................... Business Manager STAFF E. W. RECTOR WOOTTEN HUBERT D. BENNETT A. L. COOKE. L. L. PHILLIPS ALVIN J. WOOD ANDREW SHAPIRO E. A. MARKS. JR. JOSEPH WADSWORTH R. P. BUTTER I4491 kudrrm m-EDO 02 mxxoo hf J ,- m fff L JINIENDORH- Founded During the Session 1887-1888 FORTY-SECOND VOLUME THE EXECUTIVE BOARD HUNTER HOLMES MOSS ................................................. Editor-in-Chicf EDMUND FONTAINE BROUN. JR .................................. Assislanl Edilor-in-Chief JOHN TAYLOR ..................................... . ................... Business Manager BOARD OF EDITORS E. W. RECTOR WOOTTEN .......... Ar! JOHN HENDERSON ......... Organizations GENE. DE BULLET ................ Features WILLIAM C. TALLEY .............. Clubs jOSEPH A. TURNER .......... Photographs GEORGE COOPER, JR ............. Facully DUNCAN FULLER ............ Departments JACK MCDOWELL ............... Slalislics EDWARD W. MORRIS ......... Fraternities NORWOOD ORRICK ............. Athletics ASSISTANT BUSINESS MANAGERS EARL N. EVANS C. H. MANN. JR. WILLIAM W. MOSS L. E. VIELBIC ASSOCIATE EDITORS W. W. DICKSON .................... Clubs D. L. WILLIAMS ............... Fralernilics jACK HOCCAN .................... Clubs J. W. KIRKSEY. JR ............. Dcparlmcnls R. W. TALLEY ............... Organizations J. J. BOND .................... Deparlmcnls W. S. ROBERTSON ............ Photographs W. J. OVEN. JR ................. Dcparlmenls ERIC TWACHTMAN .............. Faculty T. O. DUNLAP ................ Dcparlmcnls NATHANIEL HILDRETH ......... Faculty R. D. MORRISON ................. Athletics E. H. CLARKE. ........................ Ar! C. B. WEBB. JR .................... Athletics W. T. WILLIAMS ..................... Ar! C. C. BROUN ..................... Slalislics H. T. POSTON ........................ Art M. E. COCKE. jR .................. Slalish'cs F. F. FERGUSON ..................... Ari L. 5. TOWINSEND. JR .............. Slalislics I 4:111 F irst Snow ...... and soon the stars erased and in that dark will come white silence fumbling at the pane etched with a sudden chill the winds remark roving the frozen wheeleruts in the lane. And where Ive lie alone and coldly making this feathered silence sleeps at the bales of trees whose branches stand as quiet as a heart breaking, burying hope grown silent and bare as these. GENE DE BULLET. I4521 MWH-K 1EIL1JIB$93$ A N ID W 1202300 ....Zmu.r mu mmkz. x . . '. f III iNTER FRATERNSTY COUNCfL X OFFICERS T. A. MCEACHERN ............................................................. Presidenl F. L. WILLIAMS ............................................................ Vice-Prcsidcnl F. J. DANIELS .................................................................. Secretary W. E. JOHNSON ................................................................ Treasurer EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE A. L. BOOTHE N. T. TURNER F. L. WILLIAMS T. A. MCEACHERN W. H. TYLER REPRESENTATIVES W. H. TYLER ..................... A K E F. J. DANIELS ..................... q; A e T. A. McEACHERN ............... 4, K xv E. M. PAYNE. JR ................... A T A H. H. MOSS ....................... 4; K 2 F. L. TAYLOR ....................... A x T. E. MASSIE. ..................... B 9 II c. A. PAXSON .................... q: 2: K R. T. SOLLENBERCER ............ e A x J. E. w. BROWN ..................... A :1: w. o. BRISTOW .................. :1: r A w. E. JOHNSON ................... 2 cp E N.T.TURNER....................EAE D.A.SALE ......................... 2x xp H. L. BUCK .......................... A x1, c. H. MANN, JR ...................... e x 1.0. HENDERSON ................... x .1, E. v. BENJAMIN, JR ................ z B T w. M. WHITEHEAD ................ 2 x W. s. MIELZINER ................. q, E n D. v. ANDERSON ................. b K A j. E. WARD. JR ..................... A 2 4, B. F. RUNK .......................... z q, R. E. LEE. JR ......................... A T C. L. GILBERT ...................... K A A. SHAPIRO ......................... 4, A H. N. DURSTON ................... A T 9 s. B. SCHULHOFER ............... A E n J. R. WALSH, JR ...................... K E A. A. GULKlS ..................... A M 2 C. KlNCHELOE. JR ................... 2 N H. H. HACKLEY ..................... B K Y. M. C. A. Cabinet OFFICERS W. K. LEVERING. JR ............................................................ President HARRY FLIPPEN .......................................................... Vicc-Prcsl'denl JAMES E. WARD ...................................................... Recording Secrefary E. I. CARRUTHERS ............................................................. Treasurer O. J. ANDRE .............................................................. Acting Secretary MRS. A. E. WALKER .............................................................. Hoslcss COMMITTEE CHAIRMEN A. B. CROMWELL ............................................................ Boys' Work TILCHMAN EARL and PEYTON WILLIAMS ...................................... Chapel W. PERRY MOORE. JR ........................................................ Depulall'ons A. L. COOK ...................................................................... Publicily FLOYD HOBES ............................................. T. C. Dulancy Memorial Library F. J. DANIELS .......................................................... Employment Bureau BILLY MCGUIRE ............................................................... Financial FRED BURNET .................................................................... Social WILLIAM ROBINS ................................................................ Bullclin I4561 Junior Y. M. C. A. Cabinet COMMITTEE CHAIRMEN JAMES F. ANDERSON ........................................................ Boys' Work QHBN EEBAAGGRUDER; ...................................................... Depulalions THOMAS LESTER DIXON ...................................................... Publicity RICHARD K. VANZANT .......................................... . ............... Social CARROLL PAYNE JONES ........................................................ Finance SEDDON NELSON .......................................................... ' . GEORGE TEASS g Exlenslom ........................................................ Lectures F. LEIGHTON MAYERS l R. F . WATSON j f457l 6:. .meDO 024x mxmoo OFFICERS HUNTER HOLMES MOSS ...................................................... President EDMUND FONTAINE BROUN. JR .......................................... Vicc-Presidenl JOHN TAYLOR ........................................................ Sccrclary-Trcasurcr BOARD OF DIRECTORS HUNTER HOLMES MOSS ...................................................... Chairman JOHN TAYLOR ................................................................. Secretary E. F. BROUN 1.1. LUCK E. I. CARRUTHERS REPRESENTATIVES FRANK WISNER .................. A K E E V. BENJAMIN .................. H B T MALCOLM EASTERLINE ......... E A E PENN VICKERS..................A X P A. H. SANDS ...................... B 9 U C. C. MATTHEWS ................ H K A JOHN MOYLER. JR .................. Z AI' W. L. DAVIS ...................... A '23 Kb JOHN T. WHITE .................. 4, 1A A JOHN R. NVALSH, JR ................. K 22 N. T. HILDRETH .................. 4, K 3 E. P. AVALMSLEY ................ 4A 2 K ALEX. MAYERS ................... H A X ROBERT WOMBLE .................. 9 X E. C. FISHER. JR .................... A T A L. E. VIELBIC ....................... A f BENJAMIN APRIL ................... 4A A F. J. AARON ......................... A T LUKE WHITE.....................A TS? HARRY FRIEDEN ................. - X E II JACK FISHBURNF. .................. A 4' HOWARD HACKLEY ............... B K C. E. MORCROFT ................. Ab A H SIDNEY LUTIN ................... .. X M E MARCELLUS GREEN ............... K A HERBERT ROBINSON .............. I X JACK SEBRELL. JR.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .X 4A ROBERT MORRISON ............. 4A K 4' JIM SHANKLIN ..................... A 4' SAMUEL CUNST ................. AP E II DON STAFFORD....................2I N CHARLES MILLER ................ 23 $13 T4591 GLEE CLUB Q wvgpxxvxongwi w 3f E1 03,5 5g . V4954? ?:f 90 - RA x$:r'fA-304AboV-otcl 'F OFFICERS PROFESSOR ARTHUR FICKENSCHER, Director E. D. BROOKE. ............................................... President and Business Manager PERSONNEL First Tenors H. P. AYRES J. J. O'DONNEL FREYHAN ODENHEIMER H. B. PRICE, JR. w. E. LLOYD J. R. TREGANZA E. A. POWELL, JR. F irst Bass E. V. BENJAMIN. JR. W. D. CABELL B. S. DAVIS GERALD FLAUM J. R. LEATHERBURY C. G. HARRIS C. E. FOCG P. R. McMAHON H. L. MORGANROTH HARRY BARSKY F. W. SMITH I461J Second Tenors E. D. BROOKE J. L. ELLIS L. C. MATTISON RODGERS MEYER E. E. BEACHLEY R. A. NEWMAN E. M. STRUHAN Second Bass F. s. HILDER w. R. HOLMES D. R. CREECY, JR. 5. R. TYLER. JR. WINSTON PHELPS J. F. ANDERSON w. w. CLEM C. w. DOWDEN c. A. PENICK, JR. 0. P. WERTENBAKER M. P. WILLIAMS Fm.0Om 1 $954 20m.n.mn.u.m.i ? he... II... . . v. 1 . 2 XI 1 Q. .I, . . A 'u .. ; ggm..$?:ekctn. . . . .. A . u. ..nse..nmwmxkt I'. J EFF Ell OFFICERS Spring Term, 1927-28 C. F. WILLIAMSON ............................................................. President E. A. BROOKE. ............................................................. Vicc-Presidcnl H. D. MCCORMICK .............................................................. Sccrclary M. T. EARLE .................................................................... Treasurer Fall Term, 1928-29 R. XV. CHURCH .................................................................. President W. S. WEEDON ............................................................. Vicc-Prcsidenl C. B. THAYER .................................................................. Secretary 1. P. PERKINS ................................................................... Treasurer Winter Term, 1 928-29 W. S. WEEDON ................................................................. President C. B. THAYER ............................................................. Vice- Presidcnl E. S. CXVATHMEY .............................................................. Sccrclary l P. PERKINS ................................................................... Treasurer MEMBERS E A. BAIRD. III E. S. CWATHMEY M. N. SMITH H. E. BICCS D. A. KELSEY. jR. C. S. A. TEASS E. A. BROOKE H. S. MCCORMICK W. S. TENNY W. F. BURKS L. A. MOTLEY S. R. TAYLOR A F. CANNADAY J. T. PENROSE. JR. C. B. THAYER A. L. COOKE I. P. PERKINS W. S. WEEDON M. T. EARLF. F. H. QUARLES F. P. WHITNEY E. N. EVANS P. D. QUARLES A S. WOOD V1,. GREEN C. XV. F. SMITH C. P W'ERTENBAKER f4631 OFFICERS ANDREWS ...................................... DICKINSON ............................. . ...... REED ........................................... CABANISS ...................................... MEMBERS J. s. ANDREWS H. H. BUTLER H.BENNETT J. L. CABANISS R. R. COLEMAN R. L. DICKINSON R. H. DUNN H. H. HACKLEY J. F. HODNETT E. L. HOLEMAN J. H. JOHNSON R. KING T. J. WADE IMHI ........................... President ...................... Vicc-Prcsidcnl ........................... Sccrclary .......................... Treasurer c. w. LLOYD R. F. MARTIN c. s. McHORNEY w. H. MOOMAW L. c. MAY J. F. PHILLIPS s. F. QUARLES H. M. QUARLES A. J. REED H. w. SWERTFEGER H. s. SINGLETARY L. c. WELLER OFFICERS w. E. jOHNSON ..................................... s. L. LEE ..................... . ......... , ............ W. D. CABELL ...................................... MEMBERS .BEASLEY .BOXVMAN .D. CABELL .P CARROLL CHAPMAN .mmrn'n c: E! H FORSYTH ILDERSLEEVE. .W. GORDON .R. GRAVES .HOLLIDAY .G. HUDNALL .HUMRICKHOUSE .HUTCHESON R. .B. G. .K. .G. DUNN ..L .T. .G Hazwzwwgwngzgghgwx;y 09-: W. S. WILKINSON I4651 ........................... President ....................... Vicc-Prcsidenl ................... Sccrclary- Treasurer W. E. JOHNSON I. KEITH s. L. LEE ..1 LEWIS ..E A MARSHALL F. MASON .MOYLER. JR. ..B PEYTON B. PINKERTON ..D QUARLES .M. C. QUIMBY .D. READ .B. RHE'IT QRISHER MROBESON .M. L. ROGERS .RUSSELL OLD LOVER'S LANE 55$ Afterward ...,.,ng.,. Q5211 gears 152nm: This Book, that ends, will open and Life will bloom again. And the Round Table of Youth, tilting down the Forests of Hope through the Dragons of Doubt, will continue to dream dim auroras for the next installment and the next. 3211 gears 392nm: Youth will sense the Fear of Age, but tremble not. For Age is but the Epitasis of Youth. ten years 19mm: You will look back on your College Days and, in your minds eye, step again along the Way of Honor, be gmted again and buffalo, follow galloping domir noes to the Carolina TryaOuts, quartet the Good Old Song to Lexington and tenor Agmy in the day coach home, ford to Shiflettls Hollow, watch April suns wane behind the Ragged Mountains, beg first kisses in the shadows of Cabell Hall, sneak across the Railroad Tracks, brush brains over dopes at The Comer, cork Latin and curl English Ail, cringe at the coming of cThe Yellow journal, curse College Topics. yell Eli and salaam, sleep again in the Charlottesville jail, damn gummers, dance to jazz and laugh in laughing eyes, soar before bronze McConnell, hear Tom'ls gilded statistics, go pledge to Father jim, find new gods with Little Doc, blue stars with Mitchell, and strange origins with Kepner, gaze with corned eyes at Phi Delta Phiis Law Faculty, flirt at Fryis Sp'ing, thrill to sixty yards 0 i Lambeth Field, train under kindly Prep, burn orbs with midenight oileever gleaming through Lawnian nights and days the dear noth' ings of movement that seem such sweet steps in the Dance of Life! Cm 39am: meme: You will look back and, as Edith, your youth will stand as a pillar of salt against the glow of your glad Gomorrahs. And. like Lot, you will sigh- then piss on. 03211 19mm .392th In passing, pause on these pages, with this thought: Grains of salt are smallebut, 0, how dear to the mouth and memory! CHAS. EDGAR GILLIAM. Acknowledgment 1: HE Editorial Board of Corks and Curls wishes to express its appreciation to .1 the following contributors who have made possible this volume of Corks and . Curls: QFOR PROSE. Mr. Frank R. Reade, Mr. Charles Edgar Gilliam. ' 'V' ? Mr. 0. Arthur Kirkman. Jr.. Mr. Carl Zeisberg. Dr. James Southall Wilson. Dr. Heath Dabney, Mr. Lambert Davis. Mr. Hamilton Scherer, Mr. Malcolm MacLeod. Mr. Deimege Trimble. Dr. John Staige Davis. Mr. John S. Patton; QFOR POETRY. Mr. Chas. Edgar Gilliam, Mr. Lawrence Lee. Mr. Isham Keith. Jr.. Mr. C. P. Wertenbaker. Mr. Robert Martin; QIFOR ART. Mr. Carl Zeisberg. Mr. Richard Rathbone. Mr. Findlay Ferguson. Mr. Southgate Leigh; QFOR PHOTOGRAPHY. Mr. W. H. Wranek. Holsinger's Studio. and Citchell's Studio. by whom are most of the photographs used in this book; GIFOR ASSISTANCE IN OBTAINING MATERIAL. the Editor of the I928 Caries and Curls. Mr. Thomas Atkinson McEarchern; Dr. Paul Barringer, Mr. McLane Tilton. Miss Mary Bernice Proffit. Miss Virginia E. Moran and her assistants. Miss Mary Dinwiddie, Mr. D. Ellis Brown. and Mr. W. H. Wranek; QFOR GENERAL ASSISTANCE TO THE BOARD. College Topics. The Alumni News. Madison Hall. Jamison's Book Store. and the Stevens-Shepherd Company. QThe Editor wishes to sincerely thank the J. P. Bell Company for timely advice and hearty co-operation. those members of the Board who did more than their share of work on this book. and also all members of the Corks and Curls Staff for their faithful co-operation. CONTENTS 3g Q7 1 331' b $35,ng -. b Ram w AL Man..,' PACE Foreword ............................................ hver frontispiecey Dedication .................................................... 4 Feature Section ................................................. 5 Finals ........................................................ 3' Board of Visitors ............................................... 35 The Honor Men ................................................ 36 F acuity ...................................................... 37 Charles Alfred Graves. by Armislead M. Dobie .......................... 66 Milton Wylie Humphreys. by Robert Henning Webb ...................... 68 Dr. Albert Lefcvre. by Albert G. A. Ball .............................. 70 Dr. Francis Henry Smith. by Francis H. Abbot .......................... 72 John Eager Codman, II, by C. A. P. and E. P. W ....................... 74 Thomas Horsfield Peters. Jr.. by A. M. W .............................. 75 Walter Bonamy Power. ft. by W. S. C.. I. K.. Jr.. R. L. H.. J. H. H.. W. T. H.. Jr. 76 James Keith Symmcrs. In. by S. H. Van K.. Jr .......................... 77 Harrison Williams. Jr ............................................. 73 A Letter lo Albemarle 6poemy ...................................... 79 The Rotunda Fire ............................................... 8i Academic Department ............................................ 83 Department of Education .......................................... l23 Recipients of Intermediate Honors ................................... 127 Reminiscences .................................................. I 28 Department of Law ............................................. '3' Law Clubs .................................................... 147 The Honor System .............................................. I49 Department of Medicine .......................................... I55 Love in the Simpering Sixties ........................................ I 7' Wolves 0n lhe Fold bpoemy ....................................... I74 I 47 1 CONTENTs-1C0ntinued1 PAGE Department of Engineering ......................................... I 75 Graduate Department ............................................ 187 Virginia's Heritage 4poem1 ........................................ 196 Woodrow Wilson's Student Days .................................... 197 Recipients of Degrees ............................................ 201 Chests About the Lawn 4poem1 ..................................... 212 Poe and the University of Virginia ................................... 213 Statistical Studies in Scholarship ..................................... 218 Memories 4poem1 ............................................... 220 Soiree Songs ................................................... 221 L'Envoi 1poem1 ................................................ 237 Fraternities .................................................... 239 Farelvell in Two Manners 4poem3 ................................... 302 Professional and Academic F ratemities ................................ 303 University of Virginia 1poem1 ...................................... 332 Tinker Song 4poem1 ............................................. 336 Editoria1 ...................................................... 337 Relrospeci 1poem1 .............................................. 346 Athletics ...................................................... 347 3-3-3 Council .............................................. 348 General Athletic Association ................................... 349 Wearers of the V ......................................... 350 Athletics at Virginia ......................................... 351 F ootba11 .................................................. 357 Basket-Ball ............................................... 37 1 Track ................................................... 379 Baseball .................................................. 389 Boxing ................................................... 397 Southern Conference Boxing Tournament .......................... 405 Vafsity Club ............................................... 407 Minor Sports .............................................. 408 First Year Athletics ......................................... 416 Fantastica 4poem1 .............................................. 422 Honorary Societies .............................................. 423 Societies ...................................................... 431 Publications ................................................... 441 The First Snow 1poem1 ........................................... 452 Clubs and Organizations .......................................... 453 Afterward .................................................... 467 Acknowledgments ................. 5 .............................. 469 1-1711 IOTAILISHID I .1 . $4M :CA L 0TH l N 6 ?milth turnitihiug 11M, 'ADISOI AVIIUI 00R. IOITY-IOUITH 31 . I VOIK 0 u-aons nowur Clothes for Sport and General Wear Prompt and Careful Attention is Given to Orders or Inquiries by Mail 8 end for New Illmtraled Catalogue BOSTON Nawaunv comma or BERKELEY STREET NEWPORT PALM BEACH s2' n03: STEVEN$- SHEPHERD CO Incorporated Gentlemerfs Dress, Lounge 8: Sport Clothing University Vilginia Sack Suits In Domestic and Foreign VVoolens; lTopcoats in'Real Harms Homespun, some w1th Tartan megs; Camel Halr Coats London Made Hat: W2: FAVORITE F OOTWEAR for COLLEGE MEN -. 41+ Hg - OUR SHOP IS HEADQUARTERS FOR JOHNSTON 6: MURPHY FINE SHOES. AND WE ARE. PREPARED TO FIT YOU IN CORRECT MODELS FOR STREET. SPORT. AND DRESS OCCASIONS Your Inspection Soliciled CASSELUS, Inc. Footwear - Luggage - Hosiery UNIVERSITY, VIRGINIA r0593: Qn 73M Peopleqs National Bank 9W? TShe National Bank and Trust Company of C harlottesville $12 0 . m- T. C. Conlon T. C. CONLON fl?cm'lors CHARLOTTESVILLE E99 Co. A. Z. Snmans VIRGINIA SUPERIOR TO MANY EQUAL TO ANY INFERIOR TO NONE :9 ti, :zL. 75he Coll ege Man. should remember that Life In surance is the ideal form of thrift. To the consistent practice of thrift every great forr tune may be traced. The profession of Life Insurance also pre' sents to the college'trained youth a pleas, ant and profitable field for the exercise of 's . THE urn msumwc: his talents. COMMNYy vmcmm Splendid opportunities are open with this Company. THE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF VIRGINIA Established l871-RICHMOND, VIRGINIA JOHN G. WALKER, Chairman of the Board BRADFORD H. WALKER, President QUALITY CLEANLINESS SERVICE STONEWALL JACKSON CAFE ES mThe Place of Satisfaction MAI N STREET CHARLOTTESVILLE, VIRGINIA W 01 lb Augusta Military Academy -. 4+3 - Country location. in the famous Shenandoah Valley. 300 acres. Faculty is composed of college trained men. Fire-proof barracks and modern equipment. Beautiful gymnasium containing three basket-ball Hoors. drill hall, indoor target range. lockers. etc., has recently been added to the plant. An indoor swimming pool, heated during the winter is open the entire session. Small classes and supervised study hall. Cadet band of 30 pieces. In September. I928. the Academy sent 54 of its students to the various colleges and universities of the country. Ample military equipment is supplied by the War Department without cost to the cadets. Every boy is encouraged to become a member of some athletic organization for physical development. Physical drills are held in the open air when the weather permits. Enrollment is limited to 275 boys. The Academy has been under its present ownership for more than 60 years. Catalog on appli- cation. Address Col. T. J. Roller or Maj. C. 5. Roller. Jr.. Fort Defiance, Va. w PRINTERS w We Specialize in College Printing m.ggHEQJ- Catalogues, Programs, Announcements, and Fraternity Stationery -. nth- Surber Publishing Co., Inc. 208-210 EAST MAIN STREET, CHARLOTTESVILLE, VIRGINIA :63: IQ? J. B. E; w. H. WOOD INCORPORATED Clothiers CHARLOTTESVILLE VIRGINIA Powers and Anderson Surgical Instruments Hospital Supplies. etc. NORFOLK, VA. RICHMOND, VA. yx Agents at the University.- BEN RAWLES 15 WEST RANGE l832-j BOB McCLANAHAN 41 WEST LAWN 628R w Highest Quality Lomesl Prices EDGEWORTH w The Aristocrat of Smoking Tobacco w ITS QUALITY NEVER CHANGES University Book Store Over l00 Years 0! lhc Corner w College Tcxl Books. Fell and Leather Goods. Seal Slalionery and College Jew- elry, Reminglon, Royal. Corona and Underwood Portable Typewriters A- .L ?-?, ,,,, rixnxirr 7rrr7-V JOH N SON ,3 UNIVERSITY. VA. Established 1395 w Thirty-lwo Years of Service to Uni- versity of Virginia Students and Community an $5 tier. -$3i Chancellofs Drug Store At The Comer -. imp, AGENTSfm Whitmank Candy -. .34 +3. - STUDENT HEADQUARTERS ..4L KELLER Ea? GEORGE Jewelers and Silversmiths $.- .. 9+R$ .- Established 1875 -. QZII'J'RD- CHARLOTTESVILLE, VIRGINIA 3 395 I RQFINEMENT is an ever prevailing Charactcristic in 6170wa 4y oezzllgmci. Hand tailoring, imported exclu- sive woolcns and correct styling make them so. UNIVERSITY SHOP, Inc. Esta blished 1915 COMPLETE OUTFITTERS UNIVERSITY, VIRGINIA At The ComerH 2: . m C? $5 .4 s: Bette1 Flowers At All Hours,' w WE SPECIALIZE IN FLOWERS FOR ALL UNIVERSITY OCCASIONS w CORSAGES, CUT FLOWERS w PHONE: 660 The Floristf Telegraph Delivery Association Memba for Charlottesville 1 fPersonality IN SERVICE A and IN MERCHANDISE K O R STORE WI H H Clothes for Sport quxip 8F DISTINCTlel-ENESSE and General Wear $ It is constantly our aim, to make that personality productive of a happy relation, w ship in our dealings with University of Virginia Men An Excellent Selection of We invite your suggestions HABERDASHERY The student's store since 1876 Anderson Bros. Book Store, Inc. UNIVERSITY, VA. 3 A:The Comer HATS and SHOES w For better service than ever before ' ' come to Unlversny , o J ones Samtary Drug Store Barber Shop INCORPORATED Under the Virginian Just above the Corner Phone: 577 JESS JONES w 4-: no Prescription Specialists U;Drive;It Phone 1300 Stationery, Toilet Articles, Cigars, Cigarettes, and Pipes yx Agents for Huyler's, Maillardk, 3 and HollingswortHs Candies Model Steam Laundry Where Service is Paramount $11113; PHONE: 250 401409 WEST MAIN STREET 39 5 25W WW Em . .om ' J. 3 O The CV ' E M - 11 .5. ontlce o x L19; 5' CHARLOTTESVILLE,VA. ' 239: 55 5 5 w E V 13' I Er, cg; :5 ? E NEW AND MODERN : i E; 1: E g HOTEL EH 35': 5 , 165 ROOMS E .EEE' :? 130 WITH BATH l if?! One of the Most Complete and Perfect Hotels in the South w W. A. BACON, Manager GITCHELDS STUDIO Portrait and Commercial Photographers w FLASHLIGHT PHOTOGRAPHS OF BANQUETS, CONVENTIONS, AND DANCES w OFFICIAL PHOTOGRAPHERS CORKS AND CURLS ALUMNI ASSOCIATION UNIVERSITY NEWS SERVICE w 402 EAST MAIN STREET x 3: um: - 9 q Sack Suits. Top Coats. Exclusive fabrics, pep feet tailoring. Made to individual requixe- ments and meanne- xnents. Satisfaction as- sured. $50 and more. If u I: The home folks want a new portrait of you. Iths a gift they will treasure because ifs the next best thing to having you With them. HOLSINGERhS STUDIO l6 non Q? BALTIMORE WIZAND . EWVING caragg ' v W ijmverg FALCONER BLDG. BALTIMOREMD. j - 1h , w i Jameson Book E9p Athletic Store INCORPORATED 6 cover for WW New Comer this annual w was created by The DAVID J. Fine College and Fraternity MOLLOY CO. Stationery 2857 N. Western Avenue College Jewelry. Leather and Text Books for All Departments Chicago, Illinois Felt GOOdS w A3211 :5: w A. G. SFALDING E99 Bnos., Sporting Goods CORONA TYPEWRITERS E'ZGJH THE IMPRINT OF PRIDE RINTING is the great con' structive force of the modern civilized world. It plays the indispensable part in the dissemination of i news, in the expression and progression of political ideals, in the records and exchange of commerce and industry. It democratizes education, science, art, music -and broadens the scope of everything 1 it touches. ClTo appreciate its high place ' in the esteem of an enlightened world, PRINTING MUST BE WELL DONE. Our offer! ing to the cause of Barren PRINTING 1's . REPRESENTED IN THIS ANNUAL I J. P. BELL COMPANY, INC. h 816 MAIN STREET r LYNCHBURG, VIRGINIA .94 . .. 1. ya ,7 L o ,,o o 4 . . O 0 i. A .y!i t OQOI V 9 L.- s f. I! , . ! .. hr . D . Ito. - v.. .. 0100- A I. I 0 ll I O Ill-.l ,f4 a I .; I;.lb-!.. w . 40A J - 1!- V ell . k 4 a n 1 . I tn . . . V Pl. lvvb . A ,AV r V 9 .d1: L3. ! t K .-!AIII 34'. . 1. II I ' II?! 5 OH I p. i! .170 rNOataQ'q ' :5 r v O .1 . u r .J .. I n I b . . -- 2...... .--r. L W, I?! A Q l! A J . .34. -z a. .. - . 4 .5. -s . ' II - . ' '.l a. .. r I I I',I III cl 0 'II ' . . Pt Iv. . . ITL'O 1 ' tin. g; .. 4 n . J1 -011 s v - . r - u 9 I J- .v :5 , ' fl ., v .V OO. .;. . I a W. a . 3-; l .1; I 1': 1, 0 t -1 3 I.' ALDERMAN LIBRARY The return of this book is due on the date indicated below Usually books are lent out for two weeks. but there are excepuons and the borrower should note carefully the date 51am ed above. Fines are charged for over-due boo s at the rate of five cents a day: for reserved books there are special rates and regulations. Books must be presented at the desk 1f renewal is desired.


Suggestions in the University of Virginia - Corks and Curls Yearbook (Charlottesville, VA) collection:

University of Virginia - Corks and Curls Yearbook (Charlottesville, VA) online collection, 1926 Edition, Page 1

1926

University of Virginia - Corks and Curls Yearbook (Charlottesville, VA) online collection, 1927 Edition, Page 1

1927

University of Virginia - Corks and Curls Yearbook (Charlottesville, VA) online collection, 1928 Edition, Page 1

1928

University of Virginia - Corks and Curls Yearbook (Charlottesville, VA) online collection, 1930 Edition, Page 1

1930

University of Virginia - Corks and Curls Yearbook (Charlottesville, VA) online collection, 1931 Edition, Page 1

1931

University of Virginia - Corks and Curls Yearbook (Charlottesville, VA) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 1

1932


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