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Page 11 text:
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74 Yrs. of Past Editors Dedication The changes in the University of Virginia from l888, when the first Corks and Curls was presented to the student body, to the present seventy-fifth anniversary edition have been marked by' the University's growing participa- tion in the highest levels of Americal education. From a small University, suf- fering with the South in general from the ravages of wars and reconstruction, the University has grown into the outstanding school in the South, and one which can look forward to an important role in the future of education in this nation. To the editors of Corks and Curls for these seventy-four years has fallen the task of recording these changes, of recognizing the events and individuals who yearly have contributed to the growth of the University. It is an arduous task, one which grows to full importance only in retrospect, when a year in the history of the University has become solely a date, and we must turn to Corks and Curls for an understanding and a vision into the character of the University's growth. They must capture the social atmosphere, the customs of each genera- tion which modify all that has gone before and shape what is to come. And they must honor men such as William Faulkner, and Professor Shepparson, whose deaths bring an awareness of their contributions to the University. ln presenting this issue of Corks and Curls we must gratefully acknowledge the work of these seventy-four editors who have established a tradition for us to fulfill, a tradition of excellence true to the best that the University has, and will produce. From the modest preface to the first issue, which states, Be it successful nor unsuccessful, let us hope that it will at least be permanent, and serve as a foundation on which to base successful and creditable productions in years to come, through the years to the present, each of these editors has contributed not only to the continued success of the annual, but also to the very growth of the University. We are deeply indebted to them. Then, as now, they encountered the fears of entering a world threatened by destructive forces, their fears are our fears, and their hopes are our hopes, and the reso- lutions of these fears and hopes lie within the students of seventy-five years in the University of Virginia. To these seventy-four editors, then, who have faithfully gathered, recorded and presented the events which mark the growing achievements of the Univer- sity of Virginia, this seventy-fifth anniversary issue is dedicated. 5 J. H. C. Bagby Albert St. J. Latady R. Colston Blackford W. H. Randolph Jason H. Paxton Harry U. Sims Hampson Gary Randolph H. Laughlin Gordon Wilson Rockwell S. Brank Robert B. Tunstall Lawrence C. Leadbeater Joseph A. Burdeau Albert L. Roper Lewis P. Chamberlayne James Hay, Jr. Charles S. Brent Charles S. McVeigh Samuel B. Woods, Jr. Lewis D. Crenshaw John M. Blackford Oscar L. Shewmake James R. McConnell Walter H. Kelly Robert B. Albertson Oscar W. Underwood, Jr. Frank W. Rogers Robert B. Jackson William A. Stuart William J. Parrish Allison E. Palmer Walter J. Bergstrom George R. Martin Frank R. Reade Russell Parrish Harry J. Taylor Walter B. Stabler Charles C. Wertenbaker Ambler H. Moss David R. Groome Thomas A. McEachern, J Hunter H. Moss Edmund F. Broun, Jr. George Cooper, Jr. William J. Oven, Jr. Ross V. Cauthorne Frederick E. Nolting, Jr. David R. Owen Paschal D. Fowlkes Thomas Marshall James O. Putnam, Jr. Edward R. Dyer, Jr. A. Jackson Brent Frank H. Balsey Edward N. Cheek, Jr. George G. Shackelford Martin T. Williams Lewis M. Allen T. Evans Wyckoff J. Thomas Priddy Fielding L. Bowman Jay W. Cheek Malcolm S. Underwood George N. McMath Walter H. Horsley John A. Carter Thomas O. Trotter Joseph W..Twinan W. Tabb Moore Harold J, Williams, Jr. Charles M. Riddle, Ill R. Spencer Hines, Jr. J. Gilbert Haus, Jr. Martin S. Brown Peyton A. Eggleston Kenneth S. White I'
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