University of the South - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Sewanee, TN)

 - Class of 1950

Page 1 of 164

 

University of the South - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Sewanee, TN) online collection, 1950 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1950 Edition, University of the South - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Sewanee, TN) online collectionPage 7, 1950 Edition, University of the South - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Sewanee, TN) online collection
Pages 6 - 7

Page 10, 1950 Edition, University of the South - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Sewanee, TN) online collectionPage 11, 1950 Edition, University of the South - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Sewanee, TN) online collection
Pages 10 - 11

Page 14, 1950 Edition, University of the South - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Sewanee, TN) online collectionPage 15, 1950 Edition, University of the South - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Sewanee, TN) online collection
Pages 14 - 15

Page 8, 1950 Edition, University of the South - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Sewanee, TN) online collectionPage 9, 1950 Edition, University of the South - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Sewanee, TN) online collection
Pages 8 - 9
Page 12, 1950 Edition, University of the South - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Sewanee, TN) online collectionPage 13, 1950 Edition, University of the South - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Sewanee, TN) online collection
Pages 12 - 13
Page 16, 1950 Edition, University of the South - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Sewanee, TN) online collectionPage 17, 1950 Edition, University of the South - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Sewanee, TN) online collection
Pages 16 - 17

Text from Pages 1 - 164 of the 1950 volume:

Fropeny 01 tne i i rar of the j TWversfty of the Smith jaw ibess PAST AND PRESENT • CHARLES P. GARRISON, EDITOR • CHARLES WILLIAM HUNT, BUSINESS MANAGER l£6 LCAP AND GOWN Published by the Students of THE UNIVERSITY OF THE SOUTH « YESTERDAY C fM M The University Library and Cannon Hall dormitory Emerald-Hodgson Hospital Johnson Hall, a modern dormitory AW i TODAY f , v j$f 5 : ,r«r Cornet Band, 1878 ....OUT DF THE The old Vice-Chancellor ' s home The Vice-Chancellor ' s home IIVTD THE D A class in Walsh Hall 11 J T I m L II 1 A COMMENCEMENT PROCESSION OF THE PAST Showing Bishops Reese, Guerry, Hornen, Woodcock, Bratton, Cheshire, Weed, and Gray. COMMENCEMENT The head of the Commencement procession, 1950, shown entering the chapel. The start of the long-remembered service Some honor students ready — Part oi the faculty and the clergy in academic procession The incoming and the retiring Chancellors THE RT. REV. R. BLAND MITCHELL Bishop of Arkansas New Chancellor of the University of the South My Commencement is one of the fondest dreams of the undergraduate. It is certainly an event to be cherished. We hope that these pictures capture the spirit of this occasion, and that alumni, young and old, shall always remember their place in the line, and shall grow to become like the gentlemen at the right — Alumni Exornati — distinguished in life, hon- ored by the University, and always cherishing Se- wanee. George L. Reynolds, Jr., speaking lor the Class of 1950 at the Alumni banquet IN MEMDRIAM JOHN MAXWELL STOWELL McDONALD A.B., Harvard University; Ph.D., Columbia University. PROFESSOR OF PHILOSOPHY PAUL HAMILTON WARING WEBB B.S., University of South Carolina; M.A., George Washington University. ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF BIOLOGY DEDICATION Do ABBOTT GOTTEN MABTIM Associate Professor of English Superintendent of the Sewanee Ravine Gardens One of the best-known and most-loved of the Sewanee family. And hoping for his continuing crusading for the strengthening of the traditions of the Old South, and for the beautification of the Moun- tain, we affectionately dedicate this ' 1950 CAP AND GOWN to Abbo. ADMINISTRATION AMD FACULTY BOARD OF REGENTS FRANK M. GILLESPIE Chairman San Antonio, Texas RT. REV. FRANK A. JUHAN, D.D. Chancellor Jacksonville, Florida BOYLSTON GREEN Vice-Chancellor Sewanee, Tennessee RT. REV. CHARLES CLINGMAN, D.D. Louisville, Kentucky RT. REV. THOS. N. CARRUTHERS, D.D. Charleston, South Carolina RT. REV. JOHN E. HINES, D.D. Austin, Texas REV. JAMES McD. DICK Raleigh. North Carolina VERY REV. JOHN B. WALTHOUR Atlanta, Georgia REV. GEORGE M. ALEXANDER Secretary Columbia, South Carolina J. ALBERT WOODS Jacksonville, Florida W. DUDLEY GALE Nashville, Tennessee EDMUND ORGILL Memphis, Tennessee BRIG. GEN. L. KEMPER WILLIAMS New Orleans, Louisiana HERBERT E. SMITH, JR. Birmingham, Alabama CHANCELLOR THE HT. HEV. FRANK ALEXANDER JUHAN, D. D. Chancellor of the Univer- sity oi the South and Bishop of Florida The Right Reverend Frank A. Juhan, Bishop of the Diocese of Florida, has served in the ca- pacity of Chancellor of the University for six of Sewanee ' s most crucial years. During this period he has earned a high place on the roll of distinguished churchmen who have served as the University ' s titular head. UAJc BOYLSTON GREEN B.A., M.A., University of South Caro- lina; Ph.D., Yale University. Vice-Chancellor and President of the Corporation Dr. and Mrs. Green, with son, Halcott Pride Waiting for the ceremonies to begin NEW VICE-CHANCELLOR The past term has seen the first year of Dr. Boylston Green ' s tenure of the University ' s most important office, that of Vice-Chancellor and President. The year has been a difficult one, affording every trial to the new Vice- Chancellor, but Dr. Green has demonstrated throughout his abilities and capacity. Al- though much of his time has necessarily been spent away from the Mountain, these travels have been of the greatest service to the University in disseminating Sewanee ' s unique message throughout the country, and meanwhile Mrs. Green has carried on here at the University as his unofficial representative in many respects. Dr. and Mrs. Green have endeared themselves to the student body during the comparatively brief time they have been at Sewanee, and they and Se- wanee men everywhere look forward with confidence to the future, knowing that the University is in safe and reliable hands. The formal recessional The new Vice-Chancellor is invested Mji deans and administrative GEORGE M. BAKER B.A.. Ph.D. Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences HENRY MARKLEY GASS B.A., M.A., D.LITT. Dean of Men OFFICERS JAMES MONROE AVENT Comptroller DOUGLAS LOUGHMILLER VAUGHAN, JR., B.S. Treasurer IREL HALL HODGES, M.A., B.S. in L.S. Librarian MRS. RA1NSFORD GLASS DUDNEY Registrar CHARLES EDWARD THOMAS, B.A. Director of Admissions ARTHUR BENJAMIN CHITTY, B.A. Director of Public Relations and Alumni Secretary WALTER RICHARD BEYER Business Manager Mjc faculty Top: THE REV. RICHARD HOOKER WILMER B.A., Yale University; S.T.B., General Theological Seminary; D.Phil., Oxford University. Chaplain and Professor of English Bible THE REV. FREDERICK QUENTIN SHAFER l. A., Columbia University; S.T.B., General Theological Semi- nary. Associate Professor of Religion KURT A. SULGER Ph.D., University of Zurich. Assistant Professor of German and Latin GEORGE MERRICK BAKER BA., Ph.D., Yale University Professor of Germanic Languages Above: JOHN SEDBERRY MARSHALL B.A., Pomona College; Ph.D., Boston University Professor of Philosophy PAUL SCOF1ELD McCONNELL B.A., University of Southern California; A.M., Princeton University; AAGO Professor of Music 22 MJL FACULTY Top: HSNRY MARKLEY GASS B.A., M.A., D.Litt., University of the South; M.A., University. Professor of Greek and Latin JOHN WALDROP CALDWELL B.A., University of the South. Instructor in Public Speaking KENNETH EARL CROMER B.S., University of Missouri. Instructor in Spanish WILLIAM WATERS LEWIS C.E., University of the South. Professor of Spanish DAVID ETHAN FRIERSON B.A., M.A., University of South Carolina; Ph.D., University of North Carolina. Professor of French STRATTON BUCK A.B., University of Michigan; A.M., Columbia University; Ph.D., University of Chicago. Professor of French CHARLES EDWARD CHESTON B.S., Syracuse University; M.F , Yale School of Forestry. Professor of Forestry 23 Top: ROBERT LOWELL PETRY B.A., Earlham College; B.S., Haverford College; Princeton University. Professor of Physics DAN ANDERSON THOMAS B.S., University of Chattanooga. Assistant Professor of Physics EUGENE MARK KAYDEN B.A., University of Colorado; M.A., Harvard University. Professor of Economics JAMES EDWARD THOROGOOD Professor of Economics ROBERT SAMUEL LANCASTER B.A., Hampden-Sydney; M.A., University of the South. Assistant Professor of Political Science ARTHUR BUTLER DUGAN A.B., A.M., Princeton University, B.Litt., Diploma in Eco- nomics and Political Science. Oxford University. Professor of Political Science Above: ROBERT K. SHERWOOD B.S., Yale University; Licencie en sciences politigues. Uni- versity of Geneva. Assistant Professor of Economics GASTON SWINDELL BRUTON I. A., M.A., University of North Carolina; Ph.D., University of Wisconsin. Professor of Mathematics ROBERT HOOKE I. A., M.A., University of North Carolina; Ph.D., Princeton University. Associate Professor of Mathematics CLIFTON EARLE SHOTWELL B.S., Tusculum College; M.A., University of Missouri. Instructor in Mathematics THE FACULTY 24 Top: FRANK HERBERT DOWELL B.A., Birmingham-Southern College; M.S., University of Tennessee. Instructor in Biology BEN EDWARD WATSON B.S., University of the South. Instructor in Biology WILLIAM CLARK GORHAM B.A., University of Illinois; M.A., Columbia University; Ph.D., University of Michigan. Associate Professor of Biology BENJAMIN FRANKLIN CAMERON. Ill B.S., University of the South; M.S., Sc.D., University of Cincinnati Assistant Professor of Chemistry MISS MARGARET NORVELL Assistant in Chemistry Laboratory MISS GERTRUDE VAN ZANDT B.S., Texas Christian University; M.S., Tulane University. Associate Professor of Chemistry ROY BENTON DAVIS B.A., Earlham College; M.A., University of Missouri. Professor of Chemistry Above: BRINLEY JOHN RHYS B.A., George Peabody College for Teachers. Instructor in English (not pictured) MISS CHARLOTTE GAILOR B.A., Vassar College. Instructor in Botany TUDOR SEYMOUR LONG B.A., Cornell University. Professor of English Literature MAURICE AUGUSTUS MOORE, JR. B.S., University of the South; M.A., University of North Carolina. Associate Professor of English GRANVILLE CECIL WOODS. JR. B.A., Vanderbilt University. Instructor in English ABBOTT COTTEN MARTIN B.A., M.A., University of Mississippi. Associate Professor of English CHARLES TRAWICK HARRISON A.B., University of Alabama; A.M., Ph.D., Harvard Univer- sity. Professor of English THOMAS PAYNE GOVAN B.S., Georgia School of Technology; M.A., Emory University; Ph.D., Vanderbilt University. Professor of History JOHN RISON JONES, JR. B.A., University of the South. Instructor in History JOHN MAURICE WEBB B.A., Duke University; M.A., Yale University. Assistant Professor of History JAMES MILLER GRIMES A.B., M.A., Ph.D., University of North Carolina. Associate Professor of History THE FACULTY 25 PUBLICATIONS BOARD JOHN JAMES ELLIS PALMER B.A., Louisiana Polytechnic Institute; A.B., Louisiana State University; B.Litt., Oxford University. Assistant Professor of English, Editor of The Sewanee Re- view, and Chairman of the Publications Board. The College Publications Board consists of three faculty members appointed by the Vice-Chancellor, and one senior gownsman and one junior gownsman, elected by the Order of Gownsmen. The Publica- tions Board has direct charge over all student publications, and also supervises the nomination and elec- tions of the editors and business managers. 26 S 6 n I R JOHN MATTHEWS ABERNATHY, JR. B.A., English Aymett Road PULASKI, TENNESSEE Gownsman; Purple staff. JOHN FRANK ALFORD B.A., English 1107 E. Main Street ALBERTVILLE. ALABAMA Choir; Gownsman; S Club; Varsity Football, 1948, 1949; Varsity Basketball, 1948, 1949. CHARLES ARNOLD, JR. B.A., Economics P. O. Box 147 GRANTVILLE, GEORGIA Blue Key; Fraternity President; Gownsman; O.D.K.; Pres., Pan-Hellenic Council; Phi Beta Kappa; Pres., Pi Gamma Mu. DONALD MORRIS AXLEROAD B.A., History 3 Sixth Avenue WINCHESTER, TENNESSEE Gownsman; Sopherim. WALTER ALAN BABIN B.A.. Spanish 628 N. Trezevant Street MEMPHIS 12, TENNESSEE Acolyte Guild; Gownsman. FERRISS CLAY BAILEY, JR. B.A., History Hillwood Drive NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE Blue Key; CAP AND GOWN staff; Gownsman; Pi Gamma Mu; Purple staff; Red Ribbon Society; Wellington Club. JOHN PERIN BARKER B.A., History BROOKLINE, NEW HAMPSHIRE Gownsman. GEORGE CHESTER BEDELL B.A., English 3660 St. Johns Avenue JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA Vice-Pres., Blue Key; Editor-in-Chief, CAP AND GOWN; Head Cheerleader; Choir; English Speaking Union; Frater- nity President; Pres., Treas. German Club; Executive Com- mittee, Order of Gownsmen; Green Ribbon Society Assoc Editor, Helikon ; O.D.K.; Pan-Hellenic Council; Proctor- Purple staff; S Club; Sopherim; Student Vestry; WHO ' S WHO. V - Vfc 28 C L WILLIAM WARREN BELSER, JR. B.A., Economics 11 West Fairview Avenue MONTGOMERY, ALABAMA CAP AND GOWN staff; Gownsman; Pan-Hellenic Council; Pi Gamma Mu; Red Ribbon Society; S Club- Varsity Golf, 1947, ' 48, ' 49, ' 50; Wellington Club JACK MARION BENNETT B.A., English 825 Piedmont Avenue WINSTON-SALEM, NORTH CAROLINA Purple Acolyte Guild; Gownsman; Helikon , Sopherim. WILLARD HALL BENNETT B.S., Biology 527 Washington Avenue TITUSVILLE, FLORIDA Vice-Pres., Acolyte Guild; Billings Group; Choir; Gownsman; Music Club. CHARLES JONES BETTY B.A., Spanish 514 S. McDonough MONTGOMERY, ALABAMA Purple staff. CHARLES MATHEWS BINNICKER, JR. B.A., Greek 2020 Golf Terrace TALLAHASSEE, FLORIDA Acolyte Guild; Alpha Psi Omega; CAP AND GOWN staff; Choir; Gownsman; Purple Masque; Pres., Music Club; Phi Beta Kappa. WYATT HEFLIN BLAKE. Ill B.S., Biology 615 River Bluff SHEFFIELD, ALABAMA Gownsman; Choir; O.H.G. EDWARD HERBERT BROOKS B.A., History 96 Main Street NORTH EAST, PENNSYLVANIA Gownsman. JAMES LEIGHTON BUNNELL B.A., History 3619 Ivy Road, N.E. ATLANTA, GEORGIA Blue Key; Fraternity President; Gownsman; Green Ribbon Society; Chairman, Honor Council; O.D.K.; Pi Gamma Mu; Proctor; Purple staff. 29 S E n I R LAWRENCE EVERETT CANTRELL B.A., Political Science 1155 Elm Street EL PASO, TEXAS Choir; German Club; Gownsman; Purple Masque. WINBOURN STOCKTON CATHERWOOD B.A., French JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA Alpha Psi Omega; Billings Group; Choir; English Speaking Union; Gownsman; Vice-Pres., Purple Masque. ELBERT PETE CHARLET, JR. B.A., Political Science 202 Carden Avenue NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE Blue Key; CAP AND GOWN staff; Executive Committee, Order of Gownsmen; Business Manager, SEWANEE PUR- PLE ; Track, 1947. ROBERT FULTON CHERRY, HI B.A., English Tyne Lane NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE Gownsman; Purple staff. EDWARD DUDLEY COLHOUN, JR. B.A., Mathematics 3214 Brightwood Place ROANOKE, VIRGINIA Blue Key; Vice-Pres., Order of Gownsmen; O.D.K.; Proctor; Red Ribbon Society; S Club; Varsity Football, 1946,47,- ' 48, ' 49; Basketball, 1946, ' 47, ' 48, ' 49; Tennis, 1949, ' 50; Athletic Board of Control; WHO ' S WHO. BENJAMIN RAYE COLLIER B.A., Economics 350 Boulevard Street SHREVEPORT, LOUISIANA DAVID HAMILTON COREY B.A., English 1041 10th Avenue HONOLULU, HAWAII CAP AND GOWN staff; Choir; Gownsman; Purple staff; Purple Masque. JOHN DAVID CREWS B.A., English 602 Farmer Street VICKSBURG, MISSISSIPPI Gownsman; Pan-Hellenic Council; Purple staff; Discipline Committee. 30 C L JOEL THOMAS DAVES. Ill B.A., Political Science 3323 S. Flagler Drive WEST PALM BEACH, FLORIDA Blue Key; Debate Council; Chairman, Discipline Commit- tee; Gownsman; Green Ribbon Society; Honor Council- O.D.K.; Pi Gamma Mu; Proctor; Purple staff; Football ' , 1946; Intramural Council. ALEXANDER RHODOLPHUS DEARBORN. Ill B.A.. Spanish 4 Sul Ross Ct., East, Wilshire Village HOUSTON, TEXAS Green Ribbon Society; S Club. Club; Wellington WILLIAM GREEN de ROSSET B.A., Economics SEWANEE, TENNESSEE Gownsman. CHARLES JOSEPH DOBBINS B.A., Philosophy 301 N. First Street TEMPLE, TEXAS Acolyte Guild; Blue Key; Fraternity President; Gownsman; Pan-Hellenic Council; Purple staff; Intramural Council. RICHARD BURKE DOSS B.A., History CRESCENT CITY, FLORIDA Blue Key; Fraternity President; Gownsman; Vice-Pres O.D.K.; Pan-Hellenic Council; Phi Beta Kappa; Pi Gamma Mu; Proctor; Red Ribbon Society; S Club- Varsity Basketball, 1948; WHO ' S WHO; O.H.G WILLIAM EUGENE DUFF B.A., Political Science 902 James Boulevard SIGNAL MOUNTAIN, TENNESSEE Gownsman. STANLEY TASKER EDDISON B.A., History 60 N. Pine Street ALBANY, NEW YORK Gownsman. RICHARD EDWIN ELLIOTT B.S., Chemistry 639 N. Lombard Avenue OAK PARK, ILLINOIS Gownsman; Phi Beta Kappa. S £ n I R LEROY JOHNSTON ELLIS, III B.A., Political Science 400 Allaire Avenue LEONIA, NEW JERSEY Alpha Psi Omega; CAP AND GOWN; Sec, Debate Coun- cil; English Speaking Union; Fraternity President; Gowns- man; O.D.K.; Pan-Hellenic Council; Purple Masque; Welling- ton Club; O.H.G. PARKER FRANCIS ENWRIGHT B.A., English 415 Cherokee Drive ORLANDO, FLORIDA Blue Key; CAP AND GOWN staff; Choir; Sec, Debate Council; English Speaking Union; Gownsman; Assoc. Editor, Helikon ; Purple staff; Purple Masque; Sopherim. CHESTER EDWIN FLAVIN B.A., English 634 Armory Street SPRINGFIELD, MASSACHUSETTS Gownsman. CLARENCE JAMES GARLAND, JR. B.A., Spanish 694 Monroe Street EAGLE PASS, TEXAS CAP AND GOWN staff; English Speaking Union; Gownsman; Pres., Sopherim. CHARLES PENDLETON GARRJSON B.A., Economics 3212 San Nicholas Street TAMPA 9, FLORIDA Sec, Blue Key; Business Manager, Editor-in-Chief, CAP AND GOWN; English Speaking Union; Fraternity President; Sec, Order of Gownsmen; Sec, Green Ribbon Society; O.D.K.; Pan-Hellenic Council; Phi Beta Kappa; Pi Gamma Mu; Purple staff; WHO ' S WHO; O.H.G. JAMES WALTER GENTRY B.A., History McMINNVILLE, TENNESSEE Green Ribbon Society; Proctor; Varity Foot- CHARLES BEALL GRINNELL B.A., English 5308 Stonewall LITTLE ROCK, ARKANSAS WILLIAM DAVID HAGGARD, III B.A., Economics 3800 Woodlawn NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE 32 C L MARION WENDALL HAINLIN B.A., Philosophy 635 N.W. 44th Street MIAMI, FLORIDA Pres., Acolyte Guild; Music Club; Art GEORGE HOOVER HAMLER B.A., Philosophy 3533 Ernest Street JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA S Club; Football Manager, 1946, ' 47; Track, 1947. HOWARD MALCOLM HANNAH B.A., Political Science 65 S. Jefferson Street WINCHESTER, TENNESSEE Gownsman; Varsity Football. 1946, ' 47. ' 48, ' 49. HUGH GARLAND HEAD, III B.A., English 3650 Habersham Road ATLANTA, GEORGIA Gownsman. SMITH HEMPSTONE, JR. B.A., History 5415 Moorland Lane BETHESDA, MARYLAND Blue Key; Fraternity President; German Club; Pan-Hellenic Council; Red Ribbon Society; Wellington Club; Executive Committee, Student Activities Committee, Order ol Gowns- men; Intramural Athletic Council. GEORGE SELDEN HENRY, JR. B.A., History 1507 E. 14th TULSA, OKLAHOMA Gownsman; Sec, Pan-Hellenic Council; Pi Gamma Mu; Purple staff. LEWIS HAMILTON HILL, III B.A., Economics White Trout Lake TAMPA, FLORIDA Blue Key; CAP AND GOWN staff; Sec. and Treas., German Club; Gownsman; Red Ribbon Society; Ring Committee, Churn.; Pres., O.H.G. DAVE RAMSEY HOOVER B.A., Economics VIOLA, TENNESSEE Gownsman. 33 S E n I R HOMER PETTIE HOPKINS. JR. B.S., Biology WINCHESTER, TENNESSEE Gownsman; Declamation Medal, 19 ' ROBERT JAMES HUFFMAN B.A., Political Science 1021 16th Avenue HICKORY, NORTH CAROLINA Sports Editor, CAP AND GOWN; Gownsman; Purple staff; Wellington Club. CHARLES WILLIAM HUNT B.A., Political Science Moss Rose Drive NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE Business Manager, CAP AND GOWN; Gownsman; Ring Committee; Football Manager, 1946. HENRY CRITCHFIELD HUTSON B.A., Spanish 11 Gibbs Street CHARLESTON, SOUTH CAROLINA JAMES ADDISON INGLE. JR. B.A., English 75 Tradd Street CHARLESTON, SOUTH CAROLINA Purple staff; Track, HARLAND MacMILLAN IRVIN. JR. B.A., Economics 1520 Mier Street LAREDO, TEXAS Billings Group; Vice-Pres., Blue Key; Choir; Fraternity President; Pres., Order of Gownsmen; Great Greeks; Green Ribbon Society; Honor Council; O.D.K.; Pan-Hellenic Coun- cil; Proctor; S Club; Varsity Tennis, 1947, ' 48, ' 49; WHO ' S WHO; Student Activities Committee. WAYNE TALMADGE JERVIS. JR. B.A., History Western Avenue FLOSSMOOR, ILLINOIS Gownsman. WILLIAM RICE JOHNSON B.A., Mathematics 1306 E. Lakeview PENSACOLA, FLORIDA Gownsman. 34 C L EGBERT MALONE JONES B.S., Mathematics CRAWFORDSVILLE, ARKANSAS townsman. WALTER WALLACE KENNEDY, JR. B.A., Economics 114 Gilmer Avenue MONTGOMERY, ALABAMA Acolyte Guild; CAP AND GOWN staff; Debate Council; Gownsman; Pi Gamma Mu; Purple staff. THOMAS ANDREW LEAR B.S., Chemistry 345 S. 4th Street COSHOCTON, OHIO Gownsman; Pan-Hellenic Council. DAVID GILBERT LEE B.A., Spanish 1846 Elizabeth Place JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA Choir; Purple Masque. JOHN HENRY LEMBCKE, JR. B.A., Philosophhy 1122 E. Loren SPRINGFIELD, MISSOURI English Speaking Union; Fraternity President; Gownsman; Pan-Hellenic Council; Music Club. EDWIN GILLILAND LEWIS B.A., English PONTE VEDRA BEACH, FLORIDA Gownsman; Purple Masque; Wellington Club. JOHN HAROLD MARCHAND, JR. B.S., Chemistry 400 Crockett Street GREENWOOD, MISSISSIPPI Gownsman; Phi Beta Kappa. EDWARD CLARK MARSHALL. JR. B.S., Forestry 6326 Ridge Avenue CINCINNATI, OHIO CAP AND GOWN staff; Gownsman. 35 S E n I R LYLE THORNTON McCONNELL B.A., Political Science SEWANEE, TENNESSEE Gownsman. ERNEST CANNON McCREARY B.A., English 915 Greenville Street AIKEN, SOUTH CAROLINA Choir; Gownsman. DAVID WALKER McCULLOUGH B.A., Political Science Route 3 HONEA PATH, SOUTH CAROLINA Blue Key; Gownsman; Phi Beta Kappa; Pi Gamma Mu; Pub- lications Board; Discipline Committee. PRINCE McDAVID B.A., Economics 2049 20th Avenue, South BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Gownsman; S Club; Varsity Football, 19 MICHAEL VAN HOOK McGEE B.A., Political Science Coleman Road RALEIGH, TENNESSEE Acolyte Guild; Choir; Gownsman. WALTER SHANDS McKEITHEN, JR. B.S., Mathematics 3694 Pine Street JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA Gownsman; Phi Beta Kappa; Vice-Pres., O.H.G. CHARLES HARRISON McNUTT B.S., Mathematics 155 Madison Street MEMPHIS, TENNESSEE Acolyte Guild; Corr. Sec, Blue Key; Debate Council; Gowns- man; Green Ribbon Society; Honor Council; O.D.K.; Phi Beta Kappa. FREDERICK MENZ B.A., German WASHINGTON, D. C. Gownsman. 36 C 1 NEIL ROBERT METEVIA B.A., English 1004 Ostrander Place SCHENECTADY, NEW YORK Gownsman. JACOB ROBERT MOON, JR. B.A., English 458 South Beach Street ORMOND, FLORIDA Head Cheerleader; Gownsman; Green Ribbon Society; As- sociate Editor, Helikon ; Purple start; Purple Masque; S Club; Sopherim; Varsity Track, 1947, 1948, Co-Capt., 1947; Wellington Club. WILLIAM BALDWIN MOORE B.S., Biology 717 3rd Street, S.E. MOULTRIE, GEORGIA Gownsman. LYNN CRAWFORD MOREHOUSE B.A., Economics 1480 N.W. 20th Street MIAMI, FLORIDA Blue Key; Fraternity President; Gownsman; O.D.K.; Pan- Hellenic Council; Proctor; Purple Masque; S Club; Varsity Football, 1946, ' 47, Basketball, 1946; Executive Committee, O.H.G. ROBERT CHAPMAN MULLINS B.A., Economics 815 Linwood Road BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA CAP AND GOWN staff; Gownsman, Sec; Los Peones; Pres., Pi Gamma Mu; Purple staff; Red Ribbon Society; Phi Beta Kappa. LEONARD BREWSTER MURPHY B.A., History 35 Meador Drive TUSCALOOSA, ALABAMA Acolyte Guild; CAP AND GOWN staff; Choir; Gownsman; Phi Beta Kappa. JOHN HARMON NICHOLS B.A., English 135 Grove Lane GRIFFIN, GEORGIA Gownsman; Purple staff. ALFRED KILLEBREW ORR. JR. B.S., Mathematics North Swinton Avenue DELRAY BEACH, FLORIDA 37 S E n I R WAITER BURR PARKER B.A., Spanish 924 Moss Street NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA Gownsman. THOMAS FRANCIS PICKARD B.A., Mathematics 117 N. LaPeer Drive BEVERLY HILLS, CALIFORNIA Vice-Pres., Acolyte Guild; Billings Group; Blue Key; CAP AND GOWN staff; Choir; Gownsman; O.D.K.; Assoc. Editor, Purple ; Sopherim; Student Vestry; Music Club. HAROLD MARQUETTE PROWSE B.A., Spanish 2220 Short Street NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA Acolyte Guild; Pres., Blue Key; Pres., German Club; Gowns- man; Green Ribbon Society; Helikon staff; O.D.K.; Phi Beta Kappa; Purple staff; S Club; Sopherim; Student Vestry; Varsity Track, 1947, ' 48; Cross-Country, co-capt., 1948; WHO ' S WHO. GEORGE LAEENBY REYNOLDS, JR. B.A., English SEWANEE, TENNESSEE Blue Key; Pres., Debate Council; Gownsman; Green Rib- bon Society; Sec, Honor Council; Pres., O.D.K.; Phi Beta Kappa; Pi Gamma Mu; Editor-in-Chief, Purple ; WHO ' S WHO; Winner of the Algernon Sydney Sullivan Medallion for Character. HORACE LISLE RHORER, JR. B.A„ Political Science 651 East Paces Ferry Rd., N.E. ATLANTA, GEORGIA Gownsman; Wellington Club. LOUIS WOOD RICE, JR. B.A., Economics 1200 North Roan Street JOHNSON CITY, TENNESSEE Gownsman; Pres., Los Peones; Purple. ALBERT ROBERTS, III B.A., Politcal Science 422 Disston Blvd.,. N. ST. PETERSBURG, FLORIDA CAP AND GOWN staff; Gownsman; Helikon staff; Los Peones; Purple staff; S Club; Varsity Basketball, 1949. HERBERT PAUL ROSCHER B.A., English 121 West Forest WHEATON, ILLINOIS Gownsman; Purple staff; Purple Masque. 38 C L RALPH MEHLMAN HOSCHER, JR. B.A., English 121 West Forest WHEATON, ILLINOIS Gownsman; Varsity Basketball, 1946; Fraternity President. HAROLD FRANKLIN SHAFFER B.A., Philosophy 1207 Elson Place, Hillwood Manor TAKOMA PARK, MARYLAND Choir; Gownsman; Purple Masque. CHARLES JAMES SHELL, JR. B.A., Philosophy Shelmor Farm WASHINGTON COLLEGE, TENNESSEE Gownsman; Acolyte Guild. RICHARD EARL SIMMONS, JR. B.A., Economics 4102 Clairmont Avenue BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA Blue Key; Fraternity President; Vice-President, Order of Gownsmen; Honor Council; O.D.K.; Pan-Hellenic Council; Pi Gamma Mu; Proctor; Red Ribbon Society; S Club; Varsity Football, 1947, ' 48, ' 49; Wellington Club; WHO ' S WHO. SEDGWICK LEWIS SIMONS B.A., English 15 Trumbo Street CHARLESTON, SOUTH CAROLINA Fraternity President; Gownsman; Pan-Hellenic GEORGE FAISON SMITH B.S., Biology Rt. 1, Box 42 OCEAN SPRINGS, MISSISSIPPI Blue Key; German Club; Gownsman. HOWARD MORGAN SMITH, III B.A., English 300 East Brow Road LOOKOUT MOUNTAIN, TENNESSEE CAP AND GOWN staff; Purple staff. RICHARD CLENDENIN SMITH B.A., Spanish Rt. 1, Box 42 OCEAN SPRINGS, MISSISSIPPI Gownsman; Purple Masque; Wellington Club. 39 S £ n I R JOHN DAVID SPANGLER B.A., Political Science 494 N. McNeil MEMPHIS, TENNESSEE Gownsman. JOSEPH AUSTIN SPERRY, III B.A., Philosophy 1004 New Orleans Avenue TAMPA 5, FLORIDA Sec, Acolyte Guild; German Club; Gownsman; Pres., Purple Masque. GLADSTONE HUDSON STEVENS. JR. B.A., English 151 Aberdeen Street ROCHESTER, NEW YORK CAP AND GOWN staff; German Club; Choir. WILLIAM SHANNON STONEY. JR. B.S., Chemistry 1023 Quintard Avenue ANNISTON, ALABAMA Pres., Order of Gownsmen; Pres., Green Ribbon Society; O.D.K.; Proctor; S Club; Student Vestry; Varsity Football, 1946, ' 47, ' 48; WHO ' S WHO; O.H.G.; Student Activities Com- mittee. GORDON ROBERT TYLER B.A., Spanish 2322 Manoa Road HONOLULU 54, T. H. Acolyte Guild; CAP AND GOWN staff; Gownsman; Purple Masque. PAUL KEIL UHRIG B.A., History 216 N. Sugar Street CHILLICOTHE, OHIO Gownsman; S Club; JAMES HERBERT VAUGHAN. JR. B.A., Mathematics 1332 Lafayette Boulevard NORFOLK, VIRGINIA Acolyte Guild; Choir; German Club; Gownsman; staff. FRANCIS BRYAN WAKEFIELD. Ill B.S., Chemistry 276 Woodlands Avenue MOBILE, ALABAMA CAP AND GOWN staff; Choir; Gownsman. ' Purple 40 C L dll d JOHN PATRICK WALKER B.A., French 6420 Roselawn Road RICHMOND, VIRGINIA Alpha Psi Omega; CAP AND GOWN staff; English Speaking Union; Treas., German Club; Gownsman; Purple staff; Purple Masque; Discipline Committee. PAUL SHIELDS WALKER B.A., Economics 403 North Avenue NEWPORT, TENNESSEE Alpha Psi Omega; Purple staff; Music Club; Gownsman. ROBERT WALLIS WARD B.A., Economics 520 East Main Street GEORGETOWN, KENTUCKY Gownsman. WILLIAM BREESE WATSON B.A., History Bardstown Road BUECHEL, KENTUCKY WILLIAM GATEWOOD WEBB B.S. Chemistry 102V2 Church Street CHARLESTON, SOUTH CAROLINA Blue Key; Gownsman, Executive Committee., Discipline Committee; Pan-Hellenic Council; Phi Beta Kappa; Pres., O.H.G. FRED MYERLE WHITE. JR. B.S., Forestry 330 Hawthorne Street ME..IPHIS, TEM ESStE Gownsman; S Club; Varsity Track, 1948, EMERSON CLARENCE WINSTEAD, JR. B.A., French Box 1308 WILSON, NORTH CAROLINA Choir; Gownsman; Music Club. MATTHEW WINTERS. JR. B.A., English 4044 Carrollton INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA Gownsman. S E n I R C L DAVID GREENE WISEMAN. JR. B.A.. English Route 4 WINCHESTER, TENNESSEE Gownsman; Varsity Football. JOHN CALVIN WORRELL B.A., History 808 Lytel Street WEST PALM BEACH, FLORIDA Acolyte Guild; Phi Beta Kappa; Gownsman. WILLIAM LEAVITT WORRELL B.A., History 404 Waldburg Street, E. SAVANNAH, GEORGIA Gownsman; Phi Beta Kappa; Purple staff. DOUGLAS MASSEY WRIGHT, JR. c o W. H. Dyer Tyne Boulevard NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE Billings Group; Choir; Gownsman; Purple staff; Senior Not Pictured: PERRY COOPER BURTON B.A., Latin 1224 N.W. 38th Street OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLAHOMA Gownsman; Phi Beta Kappa. Post Graduates: HIRAM G. HAYNIE, JR. 880 Highland Avenue ABILENE, TEXAS LARCHE HARRIS MICHAUX, JR. 505 Henry Street GREENWOOD, MISSISSIPPI BEN EDWARD MILES WATSON 1010 Palmetto BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA 42 Top Row: WILLIAM BAYLOR ADAMS Cedar Bluff. Va. Bottom Row: ALLEN LYMAN BARTLETT. JR. Birmingham, Ala. 4024 10th Avenue. South CHARLES RICHARD ALFRED .... Corey, Pa. JAMES BURT BELL, JR. Birmingham. Ala. 28 W. Park Place 1601 Sterling Place ROY HUSTON BABCOCK Sanford. Fla. GEORGE P. MELLICK BELSHAW New Haven. Conn. Ill E. 21st Street 421 Humphrey Street CHARLES BACON BAILEY, JR. Livingston. Ala. RICHARD DORSEY BOULT, JR. . . . Belzoni, Miss. Box 116 217 Cohn Street GLENN DICKSON BARNES . Birmingham, Ala. EDWIN AIKEN BOWMAN Greenwood, Miss. 2924 Fairway Drive 512 Parsons JUNIO RS 43 DC Top Row: JOIDRS Bottom Row: LAWRENCE STOBO BRADHAM Anderson. S. C. JESS BAILEY CHEATHAM, JR Rome. Ga. 411 Westview Avenue 214 E. 11th Street WILLIAM SIMONS BRADHAM Anderson. S. C. OWEN McPHERSON CHEESMAN. JR. CoHeyville. Kan. 411 Westview Avenue 1503 Willow IRVING HALSEY BRAIN. JR. Springfield. Ohio WILLIAM TOMPHSON COCKE, III Columbus. Ga. 1911 East High Street 1412 Virginia Street JOSEPH AMBROSE BRICKER Wheaton. III. JAMES MILTON CUNNINGHAM. Ill Greensboro, N. C. Hawthorne Lane 508 W. Washington Street STEPHEN S. CHANDLER. JR. Oklahoma City, Okla. JOSEPH CAMPBELL DONALDSON 312 NW 18th Street Spring Street 44 Decherd. Tenn. Top Row: Bottom Row: JOHN LESLIE DOSS, JR Decatur. Ala. JOHN HOLMAN HAGGARD Nashville. Term. 512 Jackson Street 3800 Woodlawn GEORGE BONDURANT ELLIOTT . Birmingham, Ala. CHARLES WASHINGTON HALL . Dallas, Tex. 3000 Southwood Road 3916 Gillion Avenue WESLEY THOMAS S. ENGRAM . Roxbury, Mass. 188 Highland Street WALLACE HOWARD HALL, JR. Montgomery, Ala. 116 Sayre Street ROBERT ELMER FINLEY, JR. . . Nashville, Tenn. 2906 Woodlawn Drive ROGERS SANDERS HARRIS Anderson, S. C. 2203 W. North Avenue ANGUS WOODWARD GRAHAM. JR. Miami, Fla. LACY RANKIN HARWELL .... Florenec, S. C. 560 N. W. 44th Street Route 1 J U IV I D R S 45 pp| fi JUNIORS Top Row: MAURICE K. HEARTFIELD. JR. Washington. D. C. 3609 Edmunds Street, N.W. Bottom Row: JOHN LIVINGSTON JEFFRIES . Selma. Ala. 713 McLeod Avenue THAD HOLT. JR. Birmingham. Ala. GEORGE LAURIE JOHNSON Montgomery. Ala. 3211 C1H Road 6 Frederick Street GEORGE WILLIAM HOPPER Henderson, Ky. THEODORE BLISS JONES Florence. Ala. 35 S. Green Street 110 S. Cypress Street CHARLES KETTLER HORN Bessemer, Ala. CHARLES LOVETT KEYSER ... Pensacola, Fla. 1426 Clarendon Avenue 1812 Magnolia Avenue JAMES DUCKWORTH IRWIN 1 Manor Hill Road Summit. N. J. JAMES ARTHUR KING Norfolk. Va. Holland Apts., 204 Drummond Place 46 Top Row: Bottom Row: THOMAS KELSEY LAMB. JR. Beaumont. Tex. OLIVER PERRY LUTHER. JR Yslela. Tex. 2636 North Street Rt. I, Box 792 RICHARD WEBSTER LECHE. IR. . Lacombe. La. Bayou Gardens MARION ST. PIERRE MacDOWELL Gaftney. S. C. 324 E. Montgomery JOHN TRUMBULL LEE, JR. . Deliay Beach. Fla. Box 1102 GUSTAVE JONES McFARLAND Corpus Christi. Tex. 1122 Florida Avenue JACK WESLEY LITTLE Nashville. Tenn. Franklin Road THOMAS MOTT McKEITHEN Jacksonville. Fla. 3694 Pine Street ROBERT NOEL LOCKARD . . St. Petersburg, Fla. 119 87th Avenue ROBERT MILROY McKEY, JR. . Miami, Fla. 2331 S. W. 6th Street JOIDHS 47 JUIIDHS Top Row: Bottom Row: FRANK EDWARD McMURRY, JR. Nashville. Tenn. LESTER LEAMON MOORE EstiU Springs. Term. 2512 Fairfax Avenue DAVID LIPSCOMB McQUIDDY. JR. Nashville, Tenn. WILLIAM CLYDE NICHOLS Griffin. Ga. Harding Place 135 Grove Lane LOREN BENJAMIN MEAD Florence. S. C. HENRY LEE HOBART MYERS Sewanee. Tenn. Cherokee Road JOHN ALBERT MESSINGER New York. N. Y. HERBERT ALEXANDER PHILLIPS Norfolk 6. Va. 1111 Havemeyer Avenue 725 Sparrow Road MERRILL CUSHING MILLER. JR. Raleigh. N. C. WYNNE RAGLAND Birmingham. Ala. Wake Forest Road 32S2 Overbrook Road 48 Top Row: WILLIAM HENRY RALSTON, JR. . . Middlesboro, Ky. 2825 W. Cumberland Avenue Bottom Row: ROY LYNN SMITHERMAN Route 2 Centreville. Ala. RALPH WILSON REED Albertville. Ala. CYRUS FIELD SMYTHE. JR. . Caldwell, N. J. Box 64 14 Bowers Road RICHARD LAIDLEY RUFFNER, JR. Alexandria, Va. JOHN CHARLES STEWART . . . New York, N. Y. Marlboro. Box 388 175 9th Avenue CHARLES CARTER SMITH, JR. Spring Hill Mobile. Ala. ROBERT IRVIN SMITH Nashville, Tenn. Valley Brook Road FURMAN CHARLES STOUGH Montgomery, Ala. 14 Florida Avenue ALLAN HEFLER SWASEY Pasadena, Tex. 514 Wafer JUNIDHS 49 tt w k JUNIORS Top Row: Bottom Row: HENRY JACKSON THOMPSON . . . AlbertviUe, Ala. GORDON EDWARD WARDEN, JR. . . Hunlsville. Ala. Baltimore Avenue 411 Newman Street JOHN LEVI TIPTON Swannanoa, N. C. FRANK GETTYS WATKINS .... Athens, Tenn. 60 Edwards Ingleside Farm AUGUSTINE W. TUCKER . . Charleston. W. Va. DAVID DEADRICK WENDEL. JR. . Birmingham. Ala. Ell S. George Street 1901 May fair Drive BAYARD SHIELDS TYNES .... Birmingham. Ala. ARTHUR ALEXANDER WEST . Tallahassee. Ha. 2429 Park Lane 1101 Old Fort Drive FRANCIS HARMON LEWIS VARINO . . Monroe, La. GEORGE FRANKLIN WHARTON, III Lake Charles, La. 101 Richmond Avenue 822 N. Division Street 50 «J I) JUNIORS JAMES MACINTOSH WHITE Jacksonville. Fla. LUKE ELDRIDGE WRIGHT .... Memphis, Tenn. Rt. 1, Box 272- W 1516 Union Avenue NICHOLAS BIDDLE WILLARD St. James, N. Y. MELVIN CARL WYLER Elyria, Ohio Highland Avenue 319 Sth Street STUDENTS NOT PICTURED JUNIORS R. E. BRIGGS Memphis, Tenn. E. L. BROWNING Corpus Christi, Tex. W. R. COX Monroe, Ga. 0. L. KELLER, JR Atlanta, Ga. A. G. LACHMAN San Francisco, Calif. F. W. LEONARD Henderson, N. C. 1. C. MORRIS Birmingham, Ala. SOPHOMORES W. F. BELL Nashville, Tenn. D. M. BONHAM Winchester, Tenn. R. M. CARROLL Winchester, Tenn. W. J. CRAWFORD Fort Payne, Ala. R. D. FOWLER Marietta, Ga. T. F. GRIFFIN Atlanta, Ga. I. B. HALL Cynthiana, Ky. W. E. HUNTER Decatur, Ala. S. G. JONES Bonne Terre, Mo. S. P. LACHMAN San Francisco, Calif. J. E. D. MURDAUGH Baltimore, Md. J. G. SCOTT Winchester, Tenn. W. H. TRUESDALE Park Ridge, III. FRESHMEN S. BONEY Nashville, Tenn. J. R. CARROLL Lawrenceburg, Tenn. W. R. CLARK Winchester, Tenn. J. A. ELAM Croydon, Ind. C. E. GRAHAM Gurley, Ala. D. H. HAWKINS Dallas, Tex. R. L. HAYES Tampa, Fla. W. L. HUTCHINSON Dallas, Tex. S. D. JOHNSTON Deland, Fla. R. K. JONES Chattanooga, Tenn. W. B. KARLSON Decatur, Ga. C. C. KELLER Plain View, Tex. E. C. LAMAR Florence, Ala. A. F. MOSELY Winchester, Tenn. C. W. PEPPER Dallas, Tex. D. P. PLATTER Milwaukee, Wis. P. ROCKFORD Nashville, Tenn. J. C. ROX Birmingham, Ala. C. P. SAN SEVERINO New York, N. Y. J. R. SHEFFIELD Selma, Ala. R. E. SHAW Dalton, Ga. R. L. STEAKLEY Durant, Okla. I. L. THOMAS, III Baton Rouge, La. D. P. WILSON Jackson, Tenn. SOPHOMORES First Row RICHARD ALLIN. Ill Helena, Ark. 515 Columbia Street GEORGE PATTERSON APPERSON, JR. Greenville. S. C. Parker Road WLLIAM DENEEN AUSTIN Bainbridge. Ga. 116 Evans Street Second Row JOHN BACHELLER. JR Atlanta, Ga. 639 Cooledge Avenue WILLIAM WINSTON BAILEY Nashville, Tenn. Hillwood Drive GEORGE YOUNG BALLENTINE, JR. Hilton Village, Va. 211 Palen Avenue JAMES GOODWIN BEVAN Eagle Pass, Tex. 628 Madison Street ALAN PAUL BELL Glen Ridge, N. J. 163 Linden Avenue WILLIAM THOMPSON BERESFORD Birmingham, Mich. 885 Westwood Fourth Row SCHUYLER BISSELL 555 Sixth Avenue Laurel, Miss. WILLIAM MORGAN BOMAR Bessemer, Ala. 3617 Huntsville Avenue ELBERT CLAYTON BRADDOCK, JR. Route 4, Box 310 JAMES HENRY BRATTON, JR. College Street JOHN GASS BRATTON . . . . DONALD REDWAY BROWN . . 2739 Drexal Drive Lakeland, Fla. Decherd, Tenn. Sewanee, Tenn. Houston, Tex. Sixth Row HUGH CRAWFORD BROWN, JR. Asheville, N. C. 20 Gritting Boulevard WILLIAM KIRKLAND BRUCE Houston, Tex. 2302 Ella Lee Lane BRUCE LAMAR BURCH, JR. Fort McPherson, Ga. Officers ' Lodge . r .- ) 4 ± First Row LOWNDES McCAN BUTLER 1025 Fairmont Anniston, Ala. WALTER LOUIS CAIN . . . Bessemer. Ala. 1303 Second Avenue FRANK PENDLETON CLARK, JR. Alexandria, La. 2612 Marye Street Second Row HORACE WILDER COLEMAN, III . Norfolk, Va. 1449 Westover Avenue WILLIAM PORTER COOPER, JR. Gale Lane Nashville, Tenn. RICHARD EUGENE M. COSTNER Coral Gables, Fla. 633 Altara Avenue WILLIAM PHILIP CUMMINS Fayetteville, Tenn. 225 S. Main Street HARTZ ELL LINCOLN DAKE Washington, D. C. 1380 Peabody Street, N.W. JOHN BANKHEAD DAVIS Birmingham, Ala. 2201 Henrietta Road PAUL WHITMAN DAVIS, JR. Lexington, Ky. 404 Kenilworth Court NORMAN TOLLIVER DILL, JR. 64 Hillwood RHONNIE ANDREW DUNCAN 2517 Maryland Avenue Fifth Row Spring Hill, Ala. Tampa, Fla. ROBERT BRUCE DYER Bessemer. Ala. 2312 Arlington Avenue CHARLES RAYMOND ERNST, JR. New Orleans, La. 1334 State Street FRED WILLIAM ERSCHELL. JR. Fort Thomas, Ky. 155 N. Fort Thomas Avenue Sixth Row JOHN CHARLES EYSTER . . . Sherman Street JOHN RADNEY FOSTER . . 117 Hudson Drive Del Rio, Tex. BEWLEY DOUGLASS FRIERSON. JR. Anderson, S. C. Box 472 SOPHOMORES 53 SDFHDMDHES First Row PRENTICE GRADY FULTON, JR. Memphis, Tenn. 764 West Drive STUART FRANKLIN GAST, JR. Washington, D. C. 3519 Lowell Street, N.W. RICHARD WALKER GILLETT 4771 Cumberland Second Row El Paso, Tex. JOHN ROBERT GOAD Little Rock, Ark. 1918V2 Scott Street JACK GILLIAM GOODMAN Nashville, Tenn. 208 Lauderdale Road JACK GAYLORD GOODWIN Lake City, Fla Division Street ADELOS GORTON, JR. P. O. Box 443 Lakeland, Fla WALTER GUSTAV GRAHN, JR. Tampa, Fla. 2913 Hawthorne Road WILLIAM PRUNKARD HALE Birmingham, Ala. 2615 South Lane ) k -m - V V  Fourth Rov ARTHUR RAYMOND HALL, JR. Sewanee, Tenn. GEORGE WILLIAM HAMILTON, III Greenwood, Miss. 601 Grand Boulevard PETER BRYCE HAMILTON, JR. . Montgomery, Ala. 1201 S. Court Street HENRY MOSS HARRIS .... 3 Pinetree Road Asheville. N. C. JOHN HALL HASELTON ... Nashville, Tenn. 403 Wilson Boulevard CARSTON HITCH, III Hot Springs, Ark. Sixth Row JAMES HOWELL HOLMES Mobile, Ala. 1351 Springhill Avenue HARTWELL DEE HOOPER STANTON ENNES HUEY, JR. . 1910 Island Drive White Bluff, Tenn. Monroe, La. 3P r o- e First Row CHARLES JOSEPH HUGHES Winchester, Tenn. 37 S. High Street BENJAMIN IVEY JACKSON Birmingham. Ala. 3211 Pine Ridge Road MARK THOMAS JOHNSON Fort Thomas, Ky. 25 Linden Court Second Row RICHARD GERALD JOHNSON. JR. 895 21st Street Beaumont, Tex. BEVERLY BARKER S. KARSTEN Dobbs Ferry. N. Y. 18 Oak Street DON LEE KIRKPATRICK South Pittsburg, Tenn. Elm Avenue WALTER THOMAS LEA, JR. RFD 1 GEORGE BOAL LEYDEN. JR. Baton Rouge, La. 2806 Monroe Avenue JOHN FAIR LUCAS, IR Greenwood, Miss. 1211 River Road JIMMY HOWARD McCLAIN Winchester. Tenn. 24 Peach Street CHARLES DEBARDELEBEN McDAVID Birmingham, Ala. 2049 20th Avenue, S. JAMES LEWIS C. McFADDIN, JR. . 880 Fifth Street Fifth Row ROBERT WILLIAMS McFAIL Texas Hotel JOHN REARDON McGRORY . . 168 Park Avenue Beaumont. Tex. Fort Worth, Tex. Leonia, N. J. RICHARD McKEE Fort Worth, Tex. 2300 Avalon Court Sixth Row PAUL CURTISS MILES ALBERT NEELY MINOR 415 W. Solomon Street Jackson, Tenn. Griffin, Ga. EDWARD HUMPHREY MONROE. JR. Jacksonville. Fla. 2828 Eldorado Avenue SDPHDMDRES 55 First Row JAMES FORD MONROE, II Tampa, Fla. 2904 Villa Rosa Park JAMES EDWARD MULKIN Bessemer, Ala. 1704 Exeter Avenue ROBERT GORGON MULLEN 410 N. Pine Florence, Ala. Second Row JULIAN FORT NEILL North Carrollton, Miss. EDWARD GAGE NELSON Nashville, Tenn. Lynnwood Boulevard GEORGE CONSTANTINE NICHOPOULOS Anniston, Ala. 1313 Christine Avenue FRANK ALBERT NORTH Corpus Christi. Tex. 253 Melrose JOSEPH LACKLAND ORR Fort Worth, Tex. 1209 Virginia Place FRANK SAWFORD OTWAY, III Wilton, Conn. Fourth Row ALTON BROOKS PARKER, JR. San Antonio, Tex. 107 West Agarita WILLIAM BROWN PATTERSON, JR. Greensboro, N. C. 309 N. Ridgeway Drive ARTHUR WILSON PERKINS, JR. Kingsport, Tenn. 1662 Woodside Avenue WILLIAM EDWARD PILCHER, III Louisville, Ky. 209 Pleasantview Avenue MICHAEL HOKE POE Birmingham, Ala. 2540 Aberdeen Road LELAND TEMPLETON POWELL Winchester, Te 28 N. Jefferson Street Sixth Row STEPHEN P. PRESSEY Lawrence, Long Island, N. Y. 304 Ocean Avenue WINDSOR MORRIS PRICE Baldwinsville, N. Y. 6 W. Oneida ALBERT BARNETT REYNOLDS Sewanee, Tenn. SOPHOMORES £% .o ■ iJ f i y First Row JAMES JACKSON RICHARDSON Tallahassee, Fla. 1812 Bellevue Way OGDEN ROBERTSON Beaumont, Tex. 253S Ashley Street JAMES ANTHONY ROBIDA Jacksonville, Fla. 1525 Azalea Terrace Second Row PETER MICHAEL RUDOLPH Marlboro, Box 388 Gurdon, Ark. HARRY RUNYON, JR Belvidere, N. J. 323 Front Street JAMES DEXTER RUSS, III Pensacola, Fla. 1321 E. Lakeview Avenue JAMIE BURRELL SAHL 821 Carroll Street KENNETH BRILEY SCOTT Nashville, Tenn. Woodlawn Drive JEFFERSON McBRIDE SHARP. Ill 206 Lincoln Street Oil City, Pa. EDWARD SALMOND SHIRLEY Thomasville, Ga. 204 Remington Avenue CLEMENT BLOUNT SLEDGE Ada. Okla. 110 W. 17th Street PHILIP HARDY SMITH Talladega, Ala. 200 Johnson Avenue RICHARD AIKEN SMITH Rockville Centre, L. I., N. Y. 234 Harvard Avenue JEROME WADE STALLINGS Chattanooga, Tenn. 714 Dartmouth DANIEL DOUGLAS STEWART, JR. Durant, Okla. 517 N. Fifth Street ? Pf ■ RAYMOND WILSON STORIE . . 453 N.W. 68th Street Miami, Fla. y HUDSON WHITAKER STUART Montgomery, Ala. 20 Thorn Place GEORGE MURAT THURMOND 310 Pecan Street Del Rio, Tex. SDPHDMDRES 57 SOPHOMORES First Row BARRIE KING TREBOR-MacCONNELL Flushing, N. Y. 147 Cherry Avenue THOMAS TUDOR TUCKER, JR. . . 3619 Ivy Road HENRY MANDEVILLE UFFORD Montgomery, Ala. Apt. 8, 100 Ridge Avenue Second How JOHN PENDLETON VINEYARD, JR. 910 Louisiana JOHN VERNON WADDY . . . 203 Blakemore Helena, Ark. Paris, Tenn. ROBERT DUGUE WALKER Birmingham, Ala. 1429 10th Place, S. Third How JOHNSON BRANSFORD WALLACE Nashville, Tenn. Evelyn Avenue WILLIAM GOMEZ WARD, JR. Montgomery, Ala. 1 Thorn Place CHARLES EARL WARWICK . . 225 S. Prentiss Jackson, Miss. LAWRENCE CHRISTOPHER WEST Tallahassee, Fla. 1101 Old Fort Drive KYLE WHEELUS, JR Beaumont, Tex. 2535 South Street JAMES WINN WHITAKER Chattanooga, Tenn. 1511 Lexington Road Filth Row JONAS EWING WHITE, JR. Balboa, Canal Zone WILLIAM LOTHARD WHITE . . . Sewanee, Tenn. THOMAS CLOWER WILKINS Jesup, Ga. 362 Orange Street ROBERT JENNINGS WOODSON Birmingham, Ala. 1125 S. 22nd Street HARRY PAYTON WRIGHT Port Neches, Tex. 730 Block Street JOHN HARRISON WRIGHT. JR. 1134 Montauk c ri f % ; f - v KT 4 FRESHMEN First Row ROBERT ALLYN BERRY Scarsdale, N. Y. JOHN VINCENT ADAMS 3910 Estes Road Nashville, Tenn. 1251 Post Road WALTER RICHARD BEYER, JR. Sewanee, Tenn. CHARLES TYRONE ALLEN 3847 10th Avenue. S. Birmingham, Ala. BROOKS SIMMONS BOYD . . . 3117 Avalon Houston, Tex. MORTIMER PARKER AMES Tremont Street Selma . Ala. ROBERT JUDSON BOYLSTON 432 W. 22nd Street - Sarasota, Fla. CLIFFORD VINTON ANDERSON 18 S. Vine Street Winchester, Tenn. Third Row DONALD DOUGHERTY ARTHUR 3129 Windsor Drive Charlotte, N. C. JOHN STERLING BRANSFORD., JR. Brook Hollow Road Nashville, Tenn. HARRISON WAINWRIGHT BARNES 1 Georgian Road Morristown, N. J. ALBERT SIDNEY BRIGGS. JR. . . 3323 Mockingbird Lane Dallas, Tex. HENRY GRADY BARRETT. JR. . San Antonio , Tex. GENE ALEXANDER BROMBERG Birmingham, Ala. 611 Kampmann Boulevard 85 Fairway Drive JOHN JEFFERSON BROWN Memphis, Tenn. Second Row 3750 Central Avenue ANDREW HARTIN BAYES . . . Route 2 Germantown, Ohio JOHNNY BUCKNER 705 Magnolia Avenue Shelbyville, Ky. SAMUEL HOLDING BENNETT . . . Louisville •, Ky. FRANCIS RICHARD BUSTER Selma. Ala. Goldsmith Lane 312 King Street EDWIN EUGENE BENOIST, JR. Natchez, Miss. JACKSON BURNS CAMPBELL. JR. . Glen Mills, Pa. 600 S. Union RFD 1 60 First Row JOHN JAMES CAMPBELL. JR. Shelbyville, Tenn. 407 White Street JOHN AUSTIN CATER, JR Anniston, Ala. 1701 E. 10th Street EUGENE PETERSON CHAMBERS. JR. Ft. Gaines. Ga. CLEMENT HSUAN-YUAN CHEN Knoxville. Tenn. 3081 12th Street GEORGE WAYNE CHUMBLEY Manchester. Tenn. 238 E. Fort Street GENE ALAN CIMELEY Chicago, 111. 3230 New England Avenue DONALD SIGLER CLICQUENNOI Birmingham, Ala. 2610 Aberdeen Road Second Row WARREN WILLIAM CLIFTON Birmingham, Ala. 824 S. 57th Street ALBERT LESLIE CLUTE Aruba. N. W. I. c o Lago Oil and Transport Co. TRENT CORNELL Seattle, Wash. 3922 47th Avenue, N.E. WILTIE AUSTIN CRESWELL. JR. Fort Worth, Tex. 4429 Birchman Street DAVID GUNN CRITCHLOW Union City, Tenn. 310 S. Home Street GEORGE WALTER DEXHEIMER Columbia. Mo. 107 S. Glenwood WILLIAM BUFORD DICKERSON Nashville, Tenn. 900 Clearview Drive Third Row RICHARD TAURICE DOZIER, JR. Montgomery, Ala. 525 S. Perry Street ROBERT EDWIN MANN DUBOSE Washington, D. C. 2014 Hilly er Place, N.W. ROBERT LEE DURNING, JR. Louisville 6, Ky. 306 Claremont Avenue RICHARD ROSWELL ELDRIDGE Kansas City. Mo. 231 W. 66 Terrace WILLIAM CHARLWOOD ELLIS, JR. Kingsport, Tenn. 1601 Crescent Drive JOHN POSTON FIGH, JR. Montgomery, Ala. 8 Agnew Street JAMES NEWTON FINLEY . . . Nashville, Tenn. 2906 Woodlawn Drive FRESHMEN r , • ' % Six % ' mm i ± m Lf i I Mi 1 A. M X P J r -2 £ 0 t . -■ i . 4. 4. FRESHMEN First Row WALTER ANTRIM GRESH. JR. . Smyrna , Ga. JOHN CALDWELL FLETCHER ... Birmingham, Ala. 129 Spring Street 1138 S. 13th Street JOHN SHELDON GIRER, JR. . . . . Larchmont, N. Y. VICTOR ELMER FLODIN . Miami, Fla. 54 Holly Place 390 N.E. 101st Street STANTON CAYWOOD GUNBY . . Deland, Fla. 422 E. Pennsylvania Avenue FRANK CORDES FORD, JR. ... Charleston, S. C. Murray Boulevard JOHN COX HALL, JR 3411 Montevallo Road Birmingham, Ala. JOSEPH WOODS FOSTER . . Nashville, Tenn. RFD 5, Old Hickory Boulevard Third Row RALPH HOOVER FRANKENBERG, JR. Fort Worth, Tex. ROBERT EMMETT SEIBELS HALL . . Montgomery, Ala. 3144 McCort 116 Syare Street ERNEST BABER FRANKLIN, JR. . Nashville, Tenn. GERALD BRITTON HARPER . Hartsville, Tenn. 126 Ellsworth Avenue 124 River Street ROBERT MORRIS FRASER Nashville, Tenn. CECIL DUNCAN HARPER. JR. . . . Hartsville, Tenn. Washington Apartments 124 River Street ALBERT HUNTINGTON HATCH Augusta, Ga. Second Row 2804 Belleview Avenue NORMAN LANGFORD GEORGE, JR. Wilmington, N. C. JACK WATSON HATFIELD .... . Macon, Ga. 8 Country Club Boulevai ■d 1273 Hillyer Avenue CHARLES PACKHAM GILDEHAUS Little Rock, Ark. THOMAS POWELL HAYNIE . . . Hearne, Tex. 519 N. Cedar Street 1003 Magnolia Street DAVID WHITNEY GRAY. JR. Louisville, Ky. EDWARD WYMAN HEATH .... . Dallas, Tex. 4021 St. Ives Court 4040 Hanover Street 62 First Row GEORGE NELSON HUNT, III . Upper River Road . Louisville, Ky. EDWARD PHELPS HELVESTON . . . Dallas, Te 3213 Drexel DONALD MOORE IRVIN .... Laredo, Tex. FRANK YOUNG HILL, JR. . . . . Laredo, Tex. 1520 Mier Street 1701 Market Street PETER STODDARD IRVING . . 1452 Cherokee Road Louisville, Ky. PAUL CAASE HINES, JR. ... Wilmington, N. C. Route 3 CHARLES LEITNER JENNINGS . . . 306 Bratton Street Winnsboro, S. C. GILBERT KENNETH HINSHAW Winchester, Tenn. High Street Third Row RICHARD HOLT HOGAN ... . Knoxville, Tenn. CAROL HYDE JOHNSON .... Brevard, N. C. Magazine Road 315 E. Main WILLIAM CHIPMAN HONEY . . . Kirkwood ., Mo. ROBERT LAURENT JOHNSON . Marietta, Ga. 211 E. Jefferson 2113 Claymore Drive . Nashville, Tenn. DAVID GEORGE JONES .... Nashville, Tenn. Chickering Lane 2405 Sterling Road JAMES IRVIN JONES Bonne Terre, Mo. Second Row 226 Church Street GEORGE WILLIAM HOPKINS Cowan, Tenn. ALBERT ALLAN KELLY, JR. South Pittsburg, Tenn. Poplar Street 410 Holly Avenue GEORGE THEODORE HOUSTON Memphis, Tenn. KENNETH HODGSON KERR . . . Dunedin, Fla. 695 S. McLean Edgewater Court CHARLES ANDREW HOWELL, III Nashville, Tenn. JOSEPH BENEDICT KILBRIDE, JR. . . 1607 Greenhills Drive 2255 Woodward Way FRESHMEN 4 W sac . ■— • ■ cWC ' ' W 63 1 - R fl V Z y  -■ w £l C5 - a . -«- ™ w 1 S3 £ - i 4Tk • J2 FRESHMEN First Row WESLEY DOUGLAS MAYNARD Boston, Mass. CARLETON RICHARD KIMBERLY, JR. 3400 Hamilton Street Hapeville, Ga. 110 Prospect Street CLYDE HOWARD McDOWELL. JR. . . Winchester, Tenn. DAVID MICHAEL KIPPENBROCK P. 0. Box 623 Aiken. S. C. JAMES HENRY McINTOSH. JR. . . 834 Riverview Drive Florence, Ala. ROBERT HART LAKE. JR 448 S. Washington Greenville. Miss. HOWELL ANGUS McKAY . . . 705 S. Newport Tampa, Fla. WILLIAM HENRY LANGHORNE, JR. Uniontown. Ala. Third Row BREVARD DAVIDSON MILLER MORTON HAMPTON LANGSTAFF 327 S. Sth Street Paducah, Ky. Birmingham, Ala. WILLIAM ROSS LAURIE Box 380 Dade City, Fla. Route 3, Box 198 F ROBESON SECREST MOISE . . Memphis. Tenn. IOHN PHILIP LIGHT Seaiord, Del. 1019 Terry Circle Nanticoke Acres JOHN THOMAS MOORE, JR. . . . 814 Rosemere Road Tampa, Fla. Second Row SHELDON ALEXANDER MORRIS Jacksonville, Fla. ROBERT DEAN LOGAN . . . 701 Magnolia Avenue Shelbyville, Ky. 3248 Riverside Drive ROBERT FRANKLIN MORRISON, JR. Miami, Fla. GILBERT LEWIS MARTEL, JR. .. . Hartiord, Conn. 531 N.W. 73 Terrace 32 Yale Street ELVIS LUCAS MYERS . . . Sewanee, Tenn. GEORGE JOHNSON MAUST, JR. . . . St. Augustine, Fla. CHARLTON PHILLIPS NASH, JR. Shelbyville, Ky. Hotel Buckingham Route 5 64 First Row CYRUS EUGENE REID. JR 1430 Andrew Drive Kirkwood, Mo. DAVID CHENAULT NASH ... Baltimore, Md. 836 Park Avenue WILLIAM CLEMENS RHINEHART, JR. Chattanooga, Tenn. 2504 McCallie Avenue FRANK CONSTANT NELMS Houston, Tex. WILLIAM ADDISON ROGERS. Ill . . Chevy Chase, Md. 6 Shadow Lawn 31 E. Bradley Lane JACK FLOYD NICHOLAS . . Sarasota , Fla. JAMES DEAN RUSSELL New Orleans , La. 4416 Mormandy 2224 State Street CAMERON O ' DONNELL .... . Dallas. Tex. 319 Loma Linda Avenue Third Row ANDREW MICHAEL PARDUE Nashville, ' renn. CHARLES MAYNARD SAMPLE . . Clinton, Tenn. 816 Gwynn Drive Eagle Bend Road JAMES WILLIAMS PERKINS, JR. . Nashville, ' Tenn. CHARLES REED SAYLES .... Abilene, Tex. Saratoga Drive 934 Grand GEORGE HIERONYMUS SCHROETER Mobile, Ala. ROBERT OGDEN PERSONS. JR. . . Forsyth, . Ga. 105 Houston Street Indian Springs Drive EDWARD POLLARD SEAGRAM Birmingham, Ala. Second Row 4304 Clairmont Avenue DON JOHN DELLAS Tampa, Fla. OLIN GLEASON PINKSTON. JR. . . Montgomery, Ala. 6010 S. Elkins Street 1916 Perry Street THOMAS HAZLEHURST SETZE Augusta, Ga. WILLIAM BLANE PORTER Birmingham, Ala. 2625 Raymond Avenue 1624 29th Street EDWARD CARLYLE SHARP. JR. . . Birmingham, Ala. STEPHEN ELLIOTT PUCKETTE, JR. Edisto Island, S. C. 2515 15th Avenue. S. FRESHMEN - -.. P) £}■ fi V % f3 H ' ' r l . 2 sy - - 65 A v i 7Zw !«► i- f  n J FRESHMEN First Row WILSON WATTERS STEARLY, JR. . . South Orange, N. J. 317 Glenside Road BENHAM JONES SIMS, JR. . . . Lexington, Ky. 236 Woodspoinl Road FREDERICK SILL STRADLEY ... 4313 Gilbert Dallas. Tex. JOHN PIGOTT SLOAN Wilmington, N. C. 1806 Nun Street SAM PRYOR STROTHER, JR. . . Deepwood Drive . Lexington, Ky. ALBERT LEE SMITH, JR Birmingham , Ala. 2175 Crest Road THOBURN TAGGART, JR 2125 Bellemeade Road Houston, Tex. JAMES PRYOR SMITH Montgomery , Ala. 310 Graham Street Third Row THOMAS OLSEN HARTLEY SMITH, JR. . Nashville, Tenn. RICHARD PUTNEY TAYLOR ... DaUas, Tex. 3709 Richland 4915 Abbott WALLACE BRYANT SMITH West Springfield, Mass. CLINTON CHRISTOPHER TERRELL, III Cairo , 111. 37 Beauview Terrace 2837 Park Place, W. JOHN ESTES SOLLER Missoula, Mont. 115 E. Central JOSEPH MICAJAH THOMAS ... 644 Macon Road GriHin, Ga. Second Row WILLIAM McGEE TOWERS, III . . 1004 E. 2nd Avenue . Rome, Ga. KARL EUGENE SPATZ Sherman, Tex. 900 S. Crockett WILLIAM ANDRE TREVATHAN . . . Route I Buckner Lane . Paducah, Ky. PETER ENGMAN SPOWART Buffalo, N. Y. 800 W. Ferry Street WILLIAM HENRY TUCKER, JR. . . . Laiayette, Ala. WILLIAM ARTHUR SPRUILL, JR. , Fla. DONALD HENRY VAN LENTEN . . . Clilton. N. J. 584 N.E. 102nd Street 19 Athenia Avenue 66 First Row GEORGE JACOB WAGNER. JR Louisville. Ky. 555 Sunnyside JOHN PHILIP WAHLE, JR DeLand, Fla. 420 E. Rich JOHN SLOAN WARNER Nashville, Tenn. 204 Hillwood Drive ELIOT CHAMBERS WELLS, JR Alexandria. Va. 311 Park Road THOMAS HENRY WHITCROFT Washington. D. C. 3411 Brown Street, N.W. GILMER WHITE. JR Wilmington. N. C. 213 Borden Avenue LEONARD NEWTON WHITE, JR. Little Rock, Ark. 33 Beverly Place Second Row HOMER WILLIAM WHITMAN, JR. 367 Loma Linda Sarasota, Fla. GEORGE ALBERT WILLICH Leonia, N. J. 113 Glen wood Avenue JOHN ALEXANDER WITHERSPOON, JR. Lookout Mt.. Tenn. 703 Fleetwood Drive ROBERT LOUIS WOOD Nashville, Tenn. 3108 Bellwood Avenue WILLIAM SMITH WRIGLEY . . 417 Bigelow BERTRAM WYATT-BROWN Sewanee, Tenn. ARTHUR JUN-SHEN YU Brooklyn, N. Y. 719 Flatbush Avenue Third Row WILLIAM POTTS ZION Knoxville. Tenn. 2905 Magnolia Avenue FRESHMEN ft mm 2m . . 67 •V • . I t -■■ The Very Rev. FRANCIS CRAIGHILL BROWN B.D., Virginia Theological Semi- nary, University of Nanking. Bishop Mitchell and Dean Brown at his installation 47 DEAN AND FACULTY Left to Right: THE REV. GEORGE BOGGAN MYERS B.D., University of the South; LL.B., University of Mississippi; D.D., Philadelphia Divinity School. Professor of Philosophy of Religion, Ethics, and Practical Theology. THE REV. ROBERT McQUEEN GRANT B.D., Union Theological Seminary; S.T.M., Th.D., Harvard University. Professor of New Testament Language and Interpretation THE REV. BAYARD HALE JONES M.A., University of California; B.D., General Theological Seminary; D.D., Church Divinity School of the Pacific. Professor of Ecclesiastical History THE REV. HOWARD ALBERT JOHNSON I.D., Virginia Theological Seminary; University of Copenhagen; S.T.M., Union Theological Seminary. Assistant Professor of Theology THE REV. ROBERT LANSING HICKS B.D., University of the South; Union Theological Seminary; University of Basel. Assistant Professor of Old Testament Language and Interpretation THEOLOGICAL STUDENTS First Row ALBERT CONE ADAMS Senior 3100 10th St. Wichita Falls, Texas ELMER LAZONE ALLEN Middler 4302 Pearl St. Jacksonville, Florida JAMES BILLY ANDERSON Junior 1617 Thacker Ave. Jacksonville, Florida JOHN GREENING ARTHUR Junior 1693 Lockette Place Memphis, Tennessee EDWIN DALE BAKER Senior 2515 S. Broadway Oklahoma City, Okla, Second Row JOHN MACREADIE BARR Middler 111 N. Torrence St. Charlotte, North Carolina WILLIAM MILES BAYLE Junior St. Andrew ' s, Tennessee FREDERICK LEROY BEARD Junior 84 Silver St. Dover, New Hampshire URBIN ALBERT BROWN Junior 791 Watson St. Memphis, Tennessee JAMES REMLEY BRUMBY, III Middler 806 N. Osceola Clearwater, Florida 72 First Row JOHN HAMILTON BULL Senior Sewanee, Tennessee FREDERICK JUDSON BUSH Senior Sewanee, Tennessee WALTER WALLACE CAWTHORNE . . Middler Rt. 1, Box 135 Warrenton, North Carolina CHARLES THOMAS CHAMBERS. JR Senior 110 Crystal Court Little Rock, Arkansas ROBERT OTIS CLEMENT Middler 7 Westfield St. Nashua, New Hampshire Second Row JACK WALLACE COLE Middler 6 BayTe Ave. Greenville, South Carolina ROBERT RAY COOK Junior 5909 Goliard Dallas, Texas ROBERT FINLEY COWLING Senior 1166 Holmesdale Read Jacksonville, Florida MATLACK CHEESMAN CRANE Senior 7 Temple St. Stonington, Connecticut GEORGE MILTON CRUM. JR Middler 160 Elliott Orangeburg, South Carolina THEOLOGICAL STUDENTS 73 THEOLOGICAL STUDENTS First Row MAX WRIGHT DAMRON Senior 5017 South Side Drive Louisville, Kentucky LAVAN BALTZELL DAVIS Junior 103 S. 10th St. Fernandina, Florida HARRY BELL DOUGLAS. JR Junior P. O. Box 432 Atlantic Beach, Florida JAMES POWELL EATON Middler 825 Linden Ave. Portsmouth, Virginia HUNLEY AGEE ELEBASH Senior 19 S. Palafax St. Pensacola, Florida Second Row GEORGE COLQUITT ESTES. JR. Middler 2401 Parrott Waco, Texas GEORGE NACLE FORZLY Junior 223 Warren St. Brooklyn 2, New York CHARLES ERNEST FREDERICK Junior 3428 St. Rene New Orleans, Louisiana MARTIN DEWEY GABLE Junior 202 Alexander St. Marietta, Georgia SANFORD GARNER. JR. Junior Richland Apts., Richland Ave. Nashville, Tennessee 74 Second Row YATES CALVERT GREER Middler 901 S. 30th St. Birmingham, Alabama LEWIS HODGKINS Junior 305 N. May St. Southern Pines, North Carolina CLAUDE EDWARD GUTHRIE Special Box 72 Sewanee, Tennessee DAVID HOLMES IRVING. JR. Middler 1416 S. 17th St. Birmingham, Alabama MARION J. HATCHETT Middler 141 Advent St. Spartanburg, South Carolina ALBAN EMILE JOFFRION Middler 1032 Euclid Ave. Laurel, Mississippi CLIFTON MORTON HENDERSON, JR. Farwell, Texas LUCIAN THOMAS JONES Middler Rt. 5, Box 351 San Antonio, Texas CHARLES LEONARD HENRY Junior Sewanee, Tennessee EDWARD CARRINGTON JORDAN 3100 10th St. Wichita Falls, Texas Special THEOLOGICAL STUDENTS 75 ' a mm .,£?■ V i : iM ' l THEOLOGICAL STUDENTS First Row JOHN EDWARD JUDD Middler 431 W. King St. Kingsville, Texas DOUGLAS MATTHEW KIERSTEAD Junior 315 Shady Ave. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania FRED WILLIAM KNEIPP. JR. Senior 619 College St. Shreveport, Louisiana RALPH CAMIL KUTAIT Junior 715 S. 23rd St. Fort Smith, Arkansas JOHN RICHARD LODGE Junior South Pittsburg, Tennessee Second Row SAMUEL SMITH MONK. JR Senior Box 183 Sewanee, Tennessee CHARLES INGLESBY PENICK Middler 802 Hillsboro St. Raleigh, North Carolina WILLIAM WALLACE PHILLIPS Junior 4010 Dellwood Ave. Jacksonville, Florida FRANK GRACEY RICE, JR Middler 2007 Brown Wichita Falls, Texas FRANCIS MILLER RICHARDSON Junior 38 N. Avondale Drive Greenville, South Carolina MILTON ALAN ROHANE Junior 303 E. Main St. North Adams, Massachusetts 76 First Row FRANK MASON ROSS Middler 107 S. Fourth St. Wilmington, North Carolina ROBERT LEE SAUL Junior 508 E. Main Starkville, Mississippi JOHN HARRISON SIVLEY Middler 2626 Can- Chattanooga, Tennessee ARTHUR ALLEN SMITH Junior 226 Rogers Ave. Greenville, South Carolina ROBERT SIDNEY SNELL Junior 317 S. Magnolia Warrington, Florida MERRILL A. STEVENS Senior 1307 Main St. Newington, Connecticut Second Row HAROLD SOMERSET STRICKLAND Senior Lake Quivira, Rt. 2 Kansas City, Kansas ALLEN THEODORE SYKES Junior Sewanee, Tennessee DAKER JONES TURNER, JR Senior 516 Dallas Selma, Alabama WILLIAM ARTHUR WILLCOX, JR Senior 63 1 Robinson Place Shreveport, Louisiana ROBERT WILLIAM WITHINGTON Junior 210 Sherman St. Watertown, New York FRED CARL WOLF, JR Middler 2255 Jefferson Memphis, Tennessee THEOLOGICAL STUDENTS 77 S T. L U K E S S D C I E T Y Seniors The St. Lukes Society was first organized in 1946, growing out of the old St. Luke ' s Missionary Society. Made up of the entire Theological School student body, the society has as its aims the integration of all activities, and a closer connection of the alumni to the school. To accomplish these successfully the society has an organization of six major com- mittees and an executive council, which co- operate to carry out the most important activ- ities including missionary aids, lectures, so- cial functions, intra-mural athletics, griev- ances between students and faculty, and pub- lication of the Theolog, school and alumni newspaper. The outstanding social events of the year were a banquet on St. Luke ' s Day and a picnic held in the spring. Middlers Juniors 78 79 ORDEH DF GDWNSMEIV OFFICERS. SECOND SEMESTER Left to Right: Dudley Colhoun, Vice-President; Bill Stoney, President; and Charles Garrison, Secretary. First semester officers ■were H. M. Irvin, President, Dick Simmons, Vice-President, and Robert Mullins, Secretary. The Order of Gownsmen was founded in 1873 and has since evolved into the governing body of the students in the College of Arts and Sciences. Members of the Order include Juniors and Seniors in the College who have met certain scholastic requirements and all of the students in the School of Theology. The gown, symbolic of high and pure learning which is the ideal of the University, is worn to all classes and in Chapel. Definite privileges and responsibilities are extended to mem- bers; to them is entrusted the maintenance of student tradi- tions and time-honored customs of Sewanee. The Executive Committee of the Order of Gownsmen is com- posed of the President, Vice-President, and Secretary of the Order, one representative from each fraternity and one non- fraternity representative. It has the power to authorize presiden- tial action, to schedule full meetings of the Order, and prepare the agenda for them. It hears all reports of standing committees and serves as a commission for general election. It confers with the officers in an advisory capacity. EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE HENRY HUTSON Alpha Tau Omega LACY HARWELL Beta Theta Pi LYNN MOREHOUSE Delta Tau Delta PETE CHARLET Kappa Alpha HARRY LEMBCKE Kappa Sigma SMITH HEMPSTONE Phi Gamma Delta GEORGE BEDELL Phi Delta Theta CHUCK CHEATHAM Sigma Alpha Epsilon BILL BENNETT Sigma Nu Left to Right: Charlet, Bennett, Lembcke, Harwell, Morehouse, Bedell, Hutson, Cheatham. PHI BETA KAPPA Left to Right: Arnold, McNutt, McCullough, Gar- rison, Marchand, Prowse, R, B. Doss, Reynolds. TENNESSEE BETA CHAPTER Phi Beta Kappa, national honorary- scholastic society, is the oldest frater- nity in the country, having been founded at the College of William and Mary in 1776. Its purpose is that of promoting scholarship among col- lege students, and the prestige of Phi Beta Kappa is so great that its golden key is the most coveted award in American universities. The Chapter at Sewanee, known as Tennessee Beta, was established in 1926. An undergraduate who has completed five semesters with an average of 92, or six semesters with an average of 90, is eligible for election to member- ship. Omicron Delta Kappa was founded December 3, 1914, at Washington and Lee University in the tradition of the idealism and leadership of George Washington and Robert E. Lee. The Alpha Alpha Circle at Sewanee was in- stalled during 1929. Omicron Delta Kappa holds the place in extra-curricular activities which Phi Beta Kappa holds in scholastic achievement and membership in this fraternity is one of the highest honors attainable by a Sewanee student. Only three percent of the student body can be elected to membership, and these are chosen exclusively from the Order of Gownsmen. Left to Right, First Row: McNutt, Garrison, R. B. Doss, Reynolds, Arnold, Simmons, Col- houn. Second Row: Prowse, Ellis, Morehouse, Pickard, Stoney, Bedell. DMICHDIV DELTA KAPPA 82 Left to Right, First Row: Holt, Hempstone, Colhoun, McCullough, Bedell, Prowse, Garrison, McNutt, Heart- field, R. B. Doss. Second Row: Webb, Arnold, Bartlett, Bunnell, G. F. Smith, Hill, F. C. Bailey, Ellis. Third Row: Charlet, Morehouse, H. L. Myers, Lembcke, Dobbins, Harwell, Bowman, Pickard, Hopper Blue Key is both an honorary leadership fraternity and a service group with chapters on seventy-eight college campuses throughout the country. It elects men of good character and personality who are recognized as leaders in scholarship and college activities and who show potentiality of further achieve- ment. The Sewanee chapter selects its membership from the Order of Gownsmen, tapping twice a year at the Thanksgiving and Spring Germans. As a service group, Blue Key undertakes projects every year with the purpose of furthering the interests of the University and community. It entertains guest speakers, visitors from other colleges, and teams coming to debate tourna- ments and varsity athletic events on the Mountain. It sponsors the inter-fraternity singing contest held each spring, awarding a cup to the winning organization, and maintains a calendar of campus activities. It furnishes ushers for concerts, lectures, and Purple Masque productions. Through its biennial convention and its quarterly publication, Blue Key performs a valuable service, creating good will and exchanging ideas on problems common among American colleges and universities. BLUE KEY THE PROCTORS Left to Right, First Row: Colhoun, Gentry, R. B. Doss, R. E. Simmons, Bedell, Leonard. Second Row: Engram, Stoney, Belshaw, Morehouse, Bunnell, Reid. The position of Proctor is one of the highest positions a student at Se- wanee can attain. These men are elected each year by the proctors of the preceding year with the approval cf the Vice-Chancellor, the Dean of the College, and the Dean of Men, and they are chosen for their leader- ship ability. Proctors form the neces- sary link between the Administration and the student body in maintaining order and discipline in the dormi- tories and the dining halls. Each year Who ' s Who Among Students in American Universities and Colleges recognizes students from approximately six hundred colleges and universities in the United States and Canada. In se- lecting students to be recommend- ed, the campus nominating com- mittee considers outstanding effort and accomplishment in academic work, extracurricular activities, and service to the University. Inclusion in the publication is a national honor and serves as an incentive to scholarship and service. Left to Right, First Row: Bedell, G. L. Rey- nolds, R. E. Simmons, Colhoun, Garrison. Second Row: R. B. Doss, Prowse, Stoney. W H W H 84 H D IV D H COUNCIL Left to Right: Bowman, Cheatham, R. E. Simmons, Bunnell. Not Pictured: Cowling, Fraser, Patterson. Early in the life of the University, the student body was given the authority to regulate the conduct of its members. An honor system was adopted and has continued, with some modifica- tions, to the present day. Upon entering the University, every student accepts the Honor Code, which says in part, ' ' That any adequate con- ception of Honor demands that a man shall not lie or cheat or steal ... Enforcement of the Code is the responsibility of the entire student body, and infractions are referred to the Honor Council, which is composed of two seniors, two juniors, one sophomore, one freshman, and one theological student, all elected annually by their respective classes. This committee is empowered to secure withdrawal of any student from the University found guilty of violating the Honor Code. The trust placed in the men elected to the Honor Council can hardly be exaggerated, for of all Sewanee ' s customs and traditions, none is more vital than our Honor System. Without it, Sewanee would not be Sewanee, and it is a credit to the University that the Honor Council ' s powers so seldom need be invoked. The Pan-Hellenic Council pro- motes better feeling among, and bind together the nine national social fraternities on the Mountain. This inter-fraternity council gov- erns, to a great extent, the activ- ities of each house, and establishes rushing rules and policies for each season. Each fraternity is rep- resented by two members: its pres- ident and a member elected for a term of one year. Left to Right, First Row: Bedell, Hempstone, Arnold, G. S. Henry, Ellis, Garrison. Second Row: Belshaw, J. M. White, Holt, Bunnell, Bacheller, Crews. Third Row: G. L. Johnson, Sperry, Harwell, Dobbins, S. P. Lachman. PAN-HELLEBfl C COUNCIL 85 Left to Right, First Row: Binnicker, Horn, Woodson, A. Bell, Miles, Blake, P. Smith, Morrison, Dill. Second Row: Pilcher, Minor, Cantrell, Alfred J. Wright, J. Bratton, Ballentine, J. Stewart, Murphy, Third Row: Sledge, W. Bennett, Irvin, Ralston, Karsten, Duncan, Allin, McCreary. Fourth Row: Price, McGrory, Mr. McConnell, F. Hill, J. Thomas, Warwick, Pickard, H. Brown. The service of the University Choir is es- sential to the traditional beauty and dignity of the daily and Sunday devotions in All Saints ' Chapel. Under the expert direction of Mr. Paul S. McConnell it has attained an ex- cellence seldom equalled by college groups. Each year the choir presents special pro- grams at Christmas, Easter, and Commence- ment. This year the choir presented programs in Chattanooga and Atlanta. UNIVERSITY CHOIR 86 STUDENT VESTHY Left to Right, Front Row: Elebash, Belshaw, Ston- ey. Bedell, Wyatt-Brown. Second Row: Chaplain Wilmer, Price, Pickard. The Student Vestry is a representa- tive body of students elected from the classes, whose aim is the de- velopment of the religious life of the University by: acting as an advisory council to the Chaplain in expressing the wishes and needs of the students and in aiding the Chaplain in his work; initiating and fostering such local plans and organizations as will further the cause of the Christian religion at Sewanee; and affiliating with religious organizations and movements in other colleges and universities. The Acolyte Guild, along with serving its ultimate purpose of adding dignity and beauty to the services in All Saints ' Chapel sponsors a drive to purchase milk for the negro school children of Sewanee. The Guild meets reg- ularly for discussion of religious topics and instruction in the art of serving at the altar. Through their service to the Chapel the members of the Acolyte Guild make an es- sential contribution to the life of the campus. Lett to Right, Front Row: Moore, Hopper, Sahl, Sperry, I. C Worrell, Moise, Grier. Second Row: Engram, Kerr, Spowart, Leyden, Mc- Grory, M. C. Miller, Spruill. Third Row: Brown, D. G. Jones, Burch, Vineyard, Zion, King, J. B. Campbell, Messinger. ACDLYTES GUILD 87 GREEIV RIBBOIV Adams, A. C. Bedell, G. C. Bell, I. B. Brumby, J. R. Bunnell, J. L. Chambers, C. T. Dearborn, A. R. Douglas, H. B. Elebash, H. A. IN ACADEMIA Garrison, C. P. Gentry, J. W. Harwell, L. R. Heartfield, M. K. Hutson. H. C. Ingle, J. A Joffrion, A. E. Jones, L. T. McNutt, C. H. Moon, ]. R Penick, C. I. Prowse, H. M. Reynolds, G. L. Richardson, F. M. Smell, R. S. Stoney, W. S. Watkins, F. G. Hodges, I. H. IN OFFICIO Foster, T, J. Grant, R. M. Woods, C. G. Wilmer, R. H. Hooke. R. IN FACULTATE Frierson, D. E. Govan. T. P. Harrison, C. T. Cheston, C. E. Grimes, J. M. Thorogood, J. E. HED RIBBOIV J, B. Anderson F. C. Bailey E. A. Bowman E. D. Colhoun, Jr. L. B. Davis W. W. Belser IN ACADEMIA R. B. Doss G. C. Estes S. Hempstone, Jr. L. H. Hill, III T. Holt, Jr. H. L. H. Myers F. G. Ross, Jr. R. E. Simmons, Jr. F. C. Stough B. J. Turner, Jr. J. C. Eyster S. Garner R. C. Mullins T. Hodgson G. Y. Campbell D. Cravens H. Kirby-Smith IN OFFICIO R. M. Kirby-Smith G. Clark H. E. Clark R. W. B. Elliott D. Vaughan F. A. Juhan H. Wyatt-Brown H. M. Gass J. J. E. Palmer A. C. Martin IN FACULTATE B. J. Rhys G. B. Myers W. W Lewis T. S. Long E. McCrady R. C. Thweatt 88 H H I M Left to Right, Front Row: Prowse, Garland, Bedell, J. M. Bennett, Second Row: C. C. Smith, Holt, Pickard, Hinshaw. Sopherim is the mother chapter of the na- tional honorary literary fraternity, Sigma Up- silon. Founded here in 1903 as Sopherim Lit- erary Society, it took the lead the following year at a meeting of similar societies from six other Southern colleges in establishing the national fraternity. Members are elected to the local chapter from the student body in im- partial competition solely on the literary merit of original papers submitted to the group. Submissions are not limited as to subject and may be in the forms of poetry, fictional and non-fictional prose, translation and drama. Sopherim meets to review and criticize papers submitted to it by members and by those seeking membership. Discussion on topics of literary interest are led by eiiher members or one of the ' faculty. Sopherim sponsors the literary magazine Helikon. The Helikon staff, elected by Sopherim, publishes the undergraduate literary maga- zine at the University. This publication is designed to encourage the more serious and capable writers of the student body to display their talents in the field of literary endeavor and to give to the entire Mountain an idea of what is being accom- plished in this field. A membership in Sopherim is not required and submission may be of poetry, prose, translation, short stories, essays, criticisms, plays, sonnets, or satire. Left to Right: Moon (Associate Editor), Ruffner (Editor), Bedell (Associate Editor). II E L I K D N STAFF BILL HUNT Business Manager CHARLIE GARRISON Editor-in-Chief BOB HUFFMAN Sports Editor THE CAP AND GDWIV This year the CAP AND GOWN staff has tried to present all the year ' s activ- ities, including especially the Commencement events, which are the high point in the life of every Senior. The staff hopes that you have enjoyed these pages, appreciating the attempt to capture both the life and the spirit of Sewanee. EDITORIAL STAFF Left to Plight, First Row: Holt, G. W. Hamilton, Garland, Duncan, D. D. Stewart, Haynie. Second Row: Tynes, Bartlett, H. L. Myers, Pickard, Murphy. BUSINESS STAFF Left to Right, Front Row: Leyden, M. T. Johnson, Hughes, McMurry, McKay, Orr, Holmes. 159 !• m m . M GEORGE REYNOLDS Editor-in-Chief PETE CHARLET Business Manager THAD HOLT Feature Editor SEWOEE PURPLE THE SEWANEE PURPLE is the official organ of the students of the University of the South. In setting forth the purposes of the staff, Editor George Reynolds wrote, First, the PURPLE can give a comprehensive picture of current events on the Sewanee campus at intervals of two weeks; second, it can provide a medium of ex- pression, a means of development, and a great deal of fun for those students who wish to avail themselves of the opportunity which membership on the staff affords; third, a critically minded PURPLE can render service by recognizing the good and pointing out the defects and imperfections which we find in current projects and events . . . Editorially, our real hope is to be construc- tive. We believe in Sewanee, we like things around here, and the criticism we have to offer will be based upon the relation of a particular subject to the goal set for us by Dr. Green, ' the Sewanee that must be. ' Al- though we do not admire ' yes ' men, the naively satis- fied, the indolently uncritical, we have a particular aver- sion to, and hereby declare editorial war upon the ' no ' men, the destroyers, the cynics, the aimless rebels. With the issue of January 10, 1950, THE SEWANEE PURPLE became a weekly publication. EDITORIAL STAFF Left to Right, Front Row: L. E. Myers, Smythe, Duncan, E. G. Nelson, Miles, D. D. Stewart, Hatch, Langhorne, Jen- nings. Second Row: H. L. Myers, Ingle, McKay, Fowler, Erschell, Hogan, Mead, Fraser. Third Row: Bunnell, Stall- ings, Bartlett, E. H. Monroe, Cox, Corey, Messinger, Haynie. Fourth Row: Lembcke, Holt, Pickard, C. C. Smith, Tynes, Price, Dobbins. BUSINESS STAFF Left to Right, Front Row: G. W. Hamilton, Hopper, Towers, C. F. Bailey. Second Row: Holmes, Storie, Orr, Henry. DEBATE COUNCIL First Row: Mead, McNuti. Second Row: A. B. Reynolds. Ellis, Harwell, Bartlett. The Debate Council sponsors the intercol- legiate and intramural forensic activities of the University, including all single debates, tourna- ments and University contests. Reactivated two years ago after several years of wartime in- activity, the Debate Council ' s teams parti- cipated in state, regional, and national tourna- ments. The Council reinstated the University Forensic contests, placing them on an intra- mural basis. It, also, sponsored an eight col- lege Sewanee Pr.e-Season Debate Tournament. Teams were again sent to various other de- bating and speaking contests. In the spring of 1948 a number of under graduates formed the Sewanee Music Club the purpose of which is to further the mu sical education and appreciation of its mem bers by exchange of knowledge and talent and also to stimulate a deeper understand ing of music among Sewanee students and residents. Program-meetings are held twice each month, at which time students and members of the faculty have presented illustrated talks on a variety of subjects ranging from the harpsichord to the modern jazz idiom. This year they have presented the tenor, Robert Rounseville, and the Julliard String Quartet in concert. Front: McConnell (Faculty Advisor). Left to Right, First Row: D. M. Wright, Dill, Patterson, Pilcher, Shell, Karsten, P. S. Walker, Miles. Second Row: Ralston, Price, Pickard, Lem- bcke, I. H. Wright, L. E. Myers. Bratton. MUSIC CLUB PURPLE M A S U E Left to Right, First Row: J. E. White, Binnicker, Cantrell, P. S. Walker, Sperry, Corey, Dill, Camp- bell, Hale, Second Row: Little, Patterson, Alfred, McGrory, J. H. Wright. Third Row: Morehouse, Ellis, Luther, H. P. Roscher, Caldwell (Director), Harwell, Allen, J. P. Walker, Honey, Membership in Purple Masque, the dramatic society of the University, is attained through the accruement of twenty-five points earned by backstage and acting participation in the plays. The 1949- ' 50 season included the usual variety of productions ranging from the clas- sic drama to the modern farce. The first pres- entation, Christopher Marlowe ' s Dr. Faustus, played a major part in Sewanee ' s Goethe Festival. The Playboy of the Western World, Synge ' s comedy, was the next production. The annual workshop one-act plays were presented ably in the Ormond-Simkins Gymnasium. In - observance of the Lenten Season, Purple Mas- que cooperated with the English-Speaking Union to produce Everyman, the classic moral- ity play. The last presentation was Shakes- peare ' s Henry IV, Part I. Alpha Psi Omega, largest of the national honorary collegiate dramatic fraternities, selects its members in recognition of meri- torious work in college dramatics. It is the custom of the Sewanee cast, Beta Tau, to undertake one project each year: the pres- entation of three one-act plays in conjunc- tion with Purple Masque. These plays ar.e directed by members of Alpha Psi Omega. Beta Tau limits its membership to fifteen students, all selected from Purple Masque, and eligibility is determined by a point system, based on both acting and back- stage work. Left to Right: Ellis, Binnicker, P. S. Walker, Caldwell (Director), Harwell, Luther, Speiry, J. P. Walker. ALPHA PSI DMEGA 93 OFFICERS Left to Right: J. Walker, Treasurer; L. Bradham, Secretary; M. Heartfield, President; and L. Harwell, Vice-President; and dates. GERMAN CLUB The Sewanee German Club is composed of two members from each frater- nity, two from the non-fraternity group, four officers elected by the Club, and a faculty member appointed by the Administration. Through the capability of its president, Maurice Heartfield, and hard work of its members, the Club has proved its efficiency even more this year. Since its reorganization three years ago the Club has been able to bring such big name entertainers as Sonny Dunham, Francis Craig, Owen Bradley and Snooky Lanson, Clyde Trask, Dean Hudson, and Criss Cross to the mountain. More elaborate decorations have also been noticeable. As for its purpose, the German Club is directly responsible for the production of the University dances, and it thereby sets the tone of Sewanee ' s social life. The Club engages the orchestras, manages equipment, finances, decorations, and refreshments for each function. WELLINGTON CLUB Left to Right, First Row: R. C. Smith, Cocke, Belser, R. E. Simmons, Rhorer. Second Row: Ellis, C. F. Bailey, Holt, Lamb. Third Row: Eyster, Lewis, Huffman. The Wellington Club was first conceived in the summer of 1948 by a group of twelve free-thinking individuals who had gained a full realization of our great Anglo-Saxon heritage and wished to perpetuate these ideals. Membership in the Wellingtonians is restricted to eighteen and invitations are ex- tended once each year. These invitations are followed by an elaborate initiation featuring trumpet fanfares and bewigged peers. The Wellingtonians flatly renounce beer as a beverage and drink mead instead. A Welling- tonian may be recognized by the cane he often carries, his enthusiasm for the English ideals and customs, and his willingness to chip in on a keg. Mr. Martin and Professor Dugan are the faculty advisers. Los Peones, a purely academic organiza- tion, was founded in November of 1948, for the dual purpose of increasing proficiency in conversational Spanish and of promoting amiability among the students on the cam- pus. The organization has a maximum membership of fifteen, who must either have already completed two semesters of Spanish, or be in the process of completing them at the time of election. Senores Lewis and Cromer serve as faculty advisers, but the major portion of the operations are carried out by the members. Their badge of distinction is the serape and sombrero which are worn at the various social func- tions held throughout the year. Although they call beer beer, they profess a distinct preference for tequila. Left to Right, First Row: Chandler, Whitaker, McDavid, Roberts, Nichols. Second Row: Morris, Cheatham, Davis, Mullins, Apperson. Third Row: Bomar, McKeithen, Stough, Bricker, Heartfield. D D IV 95 THE t S ' ' CLUB Left to Right, First Row: Boult, Smythe. Colhoun, Lamb, Perkins, Cheatham, Mulkin, R. B. Doss. Second Row: Prowse, Elliott, Pilcher, Ragland, Seagram, Robertson, F. M. Richardson, Stewart. Third Row: R. D. Walker, Fulton, Hogan. Miller, Orr, Warwick, Keyser. Fourth Row: Anderson, Whitaker, Gentry, Stoney, Heath, Hannah. Fifth Row: Morehouse, Burch, W. H. Hall, T. M. Mc- Keithen, McDavid, Nichols, Tynes. The membership of the S Club is com- posed of the men who have earned a letter in a varsity sport. Their chief activity this year has been the operation of a snack bar at all of the football and basketball games. The proceeds from the snack bar are used to pur- chase equipment for the smoother running of athletic events, such as a basketball score- board. The varsity participation trophy, which the S Club first sponsored two years ago, is, perhaps, the award most coveted by the fraternities. The cup is awarded to the frater- nity which can boast the greatest number of lettermen and squad members participating in the varsity sports. The Intramural Athletic Council, under the leadership of Athletic Director Gordon M. Clark, supervises Sewanee ' s intramural sports program, consisting of five major sports and various competitions. The Coun- cil is composed of members from each fraternity, the Outlaws, and the Theologs. It draws up the schedule and rules gov- erning each sport and awards points to- ward the Intramural Cup to the winning teams. The Cup is won by the organiza- tion having the greatest number of points at the end of the school year. The interest shown in these sports and its guidance make Sewanee ' s one of the outstanding intramural systems. Left to Right: Goodwin, Kappa Alpha: C. W. Hall, Alpha Tau Omega; Corey, Kappa Sigma; Ragland, Sigma Nu; Lucas, Phi Delta Theta. INTRAMURAL COUNCIL 96 97 Athletic Director, Gordon Clark Football Coach, Bill White Looking back over the Tigers ' 1949 football season we find several outstanding things that will long be re- membered in Sewanee football history. Along with having another successful season, (4-2-1), Coach Bill Buckwheat White ' s Tiger men stood out in almost every department. To begin with there were two Theologs on the squad, namely, tackle and Captain, Bob Snell, and guard, Cotton Richardson. Snell has the distinction of being the first Theolog to Captain a Sewanee football team in two decades. These two men consistently turned in good performances, and Cot- ton ' s kicking was one of the greatest assets the team could have. On defense there were two performers that could not be replaced under any conditions. Center Frank Watkins backed up the line with tremendous skill and as Mississippi College gridmen will testify, he can also ruin an opponent ' s passing attack. The other defensive standout was little 140 lb. Jim Ed Mulkin who thrilled football fans throughout the season with his outstand- ing kick returns. He made four kick returns for touch- downs, the runs, ranging anywhere from 35 to 95 yards, were a brilliant display of broken field running. By doing this, he saved Sewanee from a shutout defeat at the hands of Southwestern, and also made our trip to St. Louis well worth while by ruining the possibilities of our not scoring against a powerful Washington Uni- versity combine. Throughout the season the Sewanee Tigers displayed that spirit for which her teams have been noted since the early days of football on the mountain. Captain Bob Snell, Tackle, Cotton Richardson, Guard, Line Coach, J. D. Bridgers. v, to V THE VARSITY TIGERS 1949 FOOTBALL SQUAD B Team Coach Lon Varnell gives a few pointers to trainer John Ken- nerly. John has ably filled the posi- tion of trainer of the Sewanee ath- letic teams since the retirement of the late Willie Six. Captain Snell, Tackle 19S0 Captain-Elect Reed, Tackle Lamb, End GRADUATING SENIORS Every year an athletic team has to expect the loss of some of its most valuable players. This year eight men played their last game for Sewanee. These men, who are pictured below, played outstanding ball throughout their stay at Sewanee, and Coach White will have a difficult time finding replacements who will show as much fight, ability, and school spirit as these men did. Senior members of the 1949 squad. Left to Right, Front Row: Gentry, Colhoun, Snell, Collier, Simmons. Back Row: Alford, Hannah, C. McDavid. Colhoun. Back Hannah, End The Tiger and the Lynx met on foreign ground in Decatur, Alabama, in the season opener for both teams, and fought to a 7-7 tie. The game was uneventful throughout most of the f irst three quarters, until Crumby pass- ed to end Doyle for the Lynx ' s first touch- down. The extra point was added by Sparks, who together with Crumby and Jack Dune- rant, shared the spotlight for the boys from Memphis. The Tigers came right back with a touch- down scored by diminutive Jim Ed Mulkin on an 81 yard kickoff return. Freshman end Bill Porter added the extra point that tied up the game. Richardson was a standout in the line for the Purple Tigers. Sewanee outgain- ed Southwestern 1 1 1 yards to 80 yards, but the Lynxs piled up the most first downs, 12 to the Tiger ' s 9. With the exception of the late third and the early fourth quarter action, the only other important thrust of the game was made by Sewanee, who went to the Lynx ' s one yard line just before the half ended. Sewanee ' s break had come on a pass interception, but time had run out before the Tigers had had a chance to capitalize upon it. SEWANEE....7 SOUTHWESTERN 7 Watkins, Center McDavid. C, Back SEWMEE .... 21 MILLSAPS COLLEGE 12 By scoring twice early in the game, the Tigers of Sewanee ruined any hope en- tertained by the Majors of Millsaps of vic- tory. The Mississippians, playing before a home crowd in Jackson, were stunned into inaction by the swiftness of the Tiger attack. The first score came on a pass from Frank Alford to Cotton Miller, good for twenty yards and the marker. Porter boot- ed the first of three extra points. Soon after, little Jim Ed Mulkin, Tiger safety man, returned a punt 85 yards for a second Sewanee score. Just before the half, freshman back T. W. Lewis of the Majors scored his team ' s first touchdown on a 23 yard jaunt. The try for point was bad, making the score at half time 14 to 6, with the Tigers holding down the larger end of the tally. In the third period, Dud Colhoun scored from the 6 yard stripe, and Porter kicked his third extra marker to bring the Se- wanee scoring to an end. Late in the fourth quarter, Billy Melton of the Majors scored from the four to add six points Millsaps ' total. The try for extra point was not good, and the game ended, favoring the boys from the by a 21 to 12 score. Mountain 102 Whitaker, Tackle The purple and white of Sewanee went after an- other scalp for their victory belt, and managed to bring in a 21 to win over the Mississippi College Choctaws in a game played on Hardee Field. The Tigers scored in the first quarter after Hannah had fallen on a Mississippi fumble on the visitors ' 18 yard line. Dudley Colhoun went over from here and Porter converted to make the count 7 to 0. Later in the third period, the men from the Moun- tain fought their way down to the Choctaw two, but could not score and a kicking duel ensued. Early in the fourth quarter, Frank Watkins intercepted a pass and scampered 53 yards to a score. Porter again converted making the score 14 to 0. It was Watkins again on a second interception that set up the third Sewanee score, after he carried the ball to the 32 from the 50. Quarterback Sonny Hall flipped a pass to Porter for the final score of the game. Porter made the third of his extra points for the afternoon, another perfect day ' s work, and the Tigers had their second straight victory. Nichols, End SEWANEE.. .21 MISS. COLLEGE SE WANEE...D FLORIDA STATE . . 6 The Seminoles of F.S.U. went on the warpath and hacked their way through the fog on Hardee Field, to emerge 6 to victors over the Tigers of Sewanee. The Mountain men put up a game fight against the team that out- weighed them nearly 20 pounds to the man, and it was not until late in the fourth quarter that the single score of the game was made. The Tigers made their strongest bid for glory in the first quarter, driving deep into the Florid- ians ' territory on two separate occasions. The Seminoles dominated play throughout the sec- ond and third quarters. The break came in the fourth quarter, when speedy Red Parrish raced over from 18 yards out for the score. During the F.S.U. drives, Par- rish, Walter Foy and Buddy Strauss formed the head of the Seminole battering ram. Cotton Richardson ' s kicking for the Tigers was out- standing, as was Nick Willard ' s play in the line. The boys from sunny Florida outgained the Tigers 179 yards to 57 and made nine first downs to Sewanee ' s six. The loss was Sewanee ' s first of the season, while it left the Seminoles undefeated. Richardson, Guard Top: McKeithen, T., Back Above: Aliord, Back Mulkin, Back Heath. Center Collier, Back The Praying Colonels of Centre College didn ' t pray hard enough, and lost a 26 to 7 football de- cision to the Tigers from Sewanee before a home crowd in Danville, Kentucky. A pair of Tiger touchdowns came in the second quarter, the first by Alford from 7 yards out, after he had passed first to Porter and then to McDavid to set up the score, and the second on a freak pass by Colhoun into the end zone, finally being caught by Billy Nichols. Colhoun passed to Lamb from the 47, the play carrying to the 24. Another pass from Colhoun to Lamb put the ball on the 4 yard stripe, and when the pass went to Lamb in the end zone, it was deflected into Nichols ' arms. Porter converted for the extra point. The Kentuckians scored in the third quarter on a pass from Vince Donnelly to Hower Rice, good for 42 yards and six points. Joe Brummett split the uprights for the extra point. Another pair of Sewanee scores came in the fourth quarter. Jim Ed Mulkin set up the first by intercepting a pass on the Sewanee 25. Colhoun heaved one to Miller, the latter going all the way to the Centre 8. Zeke McDavid later plunged over from the one. Porter kicked the point. The last Tiger score came on a kick runback by Mulkin, the little back going all the way from the 46 to score. SEWANEE.. .26 C E IV T R E . . . 7 Austin. Guard 1C5 Willard, Guard Hall, S.. Back Sellas, Tackle SEWMEE . ... 12 HAMPDEN-SYDIVEY Z Tiger met Tiger on Hardee Field, and claw- ed away at one another until the Purple one of Sewanee won out over the Silver and Red one of Hampden-Sydney by a 12 to 2 score. A Sewanee drive carried all the way down to the Virginians ' 15 yard line, but bogged down during the first quarter and refused to move on. During the second phase of the half, a wild pass from center went over Col- houn ' s head into the end zone, and when he recovered it, he was smothered by Hamp- den-Sydney men, causing a two point safety. No more scoring came until the fourth quarter. Mullein sparked a Sewanee drive to the Virginians ' 35 yard stripe, but a pass thrown by Alford was intercepted. In the final five minutes, Alford intercepted a pass and then flipped one to Porter, who went 22 yards to the one, from which Alford lugged it across. A Chapman pass was intercepted by Se- wanee ' s Chuck Cheatham on the 42. Cheat- ham went all the way to the one, where Zeke McDavid cracked over for the final counter. Richardson and Chapman engaged in sev- eral punting duels during the game, these being responsible for the absence of earlier Anderson. Guard Gentry, Back A raring Purple Tiger aggregation journeyed to St. Louis for their final game of the season, only to be pawed into submission by a Washington Bear who found Tiger meat to his liking. He didn ' t find it easy going though, and was foiled in his attempt to score his fifth consecutive shut-out, for the score was 19-7. Bob Clodfelter swashed over from the Sewanee 11 during the second quarter. Neither team had threatened during the first stanza of the battle. The Bears were resting on the Tiger one yard line at the half. Simmons, Guard Porter, End Washington began to move again in the fourth quarter, Ralph Stocker heaving to Bob Lynn for a first down on the Purple 19. Stocker later scored from the one and then booted the extra point. On the ensuing kickoff, Mulkin electrified the crowd by racing 90 yards for the lone Sewanee score. Porter converted to make it 13-7. Washington came back for a final six pointer, with Charley Stephens going over from the six inch line to add to the Bear total. The Missourians made 18 first downs to the Ten- nessean ' s 7, and gained 365 yards to the Tiger ' s 138. SEWANEE...7 WASHINGTON U. . 19 B-leam coach Lon Varnell instructs his players in a skull practice session. • . T| J « B ' TEAM The men who work just as hard as the varsity and get little credit or praise for their effort are the members of the B-team. This year B-team coach Varnell led about thirty Tiger Cubs through their drills in an attempt to give them the know-how and ability to help them make the varsity next year. All of the hard work that Coach Varnell and his men have done this season will be evident in the next few years when most of these men will become regulars on the Tiger football team. 1949 B-team squad SCHEDULE FDR 1950 Place September 30 Trinity College Hartford, Conn. October 7 Southwestern Memphis, Tenn. (night) October 14 Millsaps Winchester, Tenn. (night) October 21 Miss. College Clinton, Miss, (night) October 28 Fla. State Univ Tallahassee, Fla. (night) November 4 Wabash College Sewanee, Tenn. November 1 1 Centre College Sewanee, Tenn. November 1 8 Hampden-Sydney .... Hampden-Sydney, Va. November 25 Washington Univ Sewanee, Tenn. R. WALKER and T. SMITH Football Managers 1C9 HEAD BASKETBALL C OACH Lon S. Varnell The 1949-50 Sewanee basketball season ended with a better than average record al- though it did not quite measure up to last year ' s all-time record for Tiger hoopsters. Early in the season the team ' s high hopes were shaken by the loss of guard Joe Hall, who was one of the most outstanding play- ers ever to wear the purple and white. Hall holds the all-time record for points scored in one game by a Tiger player, a mark which he reached last season. In the opening game Coach Varnell ' s men surprised everyone by handing favored Mid- dle Tennessee State a 54-41 defeat. But things did not look quite as bright when Centre College downed the Sewanee five in two straight games, although the scores were close. A turn for the better came during Christmas holidays when the team toured Florida, beat- ing Florida Southern and dropping a ha rd- fought game to powerful Tampa University. By the end of the first semester the Purple Tigers were rolling along with a good start behind the sharpshooting of Vernon Waddy and newcomer Buck Cain. But when the new semester started the team had lost some of its most valuable players, and Coach Varnell had to form practically a new team from a handful of regulars, some improved reserves, and several men who entered the University in February. From there on out Sewanee had an on and off season, with the team being sparked in each game by first one player and then an- other. Buck Cain was probably the most consis- tent player in the second half of the season, and as captain he led the team through most of the remainder of the season by chalking up high scoring in almost every game. Cotton Miller surprised everyone with his tremendous improvement in both guard- ing and hitting the basket from the sidelines. Dudley Colhoun hit the peak of his four year career on the team and showed much fight and spirit. Newcomer Jim Rox had to fill the gap at center, and turned in fine work for his first year in college ball. He did good work on the backboards and piled up a large num- ber of points. Two other newcomers, Hayes and Craw- ford, added much to the balancing of the team, as did freshman Johny Buckner, who showed much ability and much promise for future seasons. One of the better points of the season was the success that Billy Bomar had in coaching the B team. Many of his charges showed steady improvement during the season, and two of them were moved up to the varsity during the year. Captain Buck Cain Guard VARSITY BASKETBALL Left to Right, First Row: W. Hall, Roberts. Second Row: Coach Varnell, Waddy, Logan, Cain, Porter, Russell, Lockard, Dyer, Miller, Buckner, J. Hall, Colhoun, Alford, Manager R. Smith. SCHEDULE Home Gaines Games Away Sewanee . 54; Middle Tenn. State 41 Sewanee . . 57; Centre College . 60 Sewanee . 69; Berry College 62 Sewanee Sewanee 51; 54; Centre College Fla. Southern . 57 38 Sewanee . 61; Bethel College 69 Sewanee . . 57; Tampa U. . 68 Sewanee . 54; B ' ham Southern 59 Sewanee 54; B ' ham Southern 63 Sewanee . 59; Lambuth College 74 Sewanee . 62; Lambuth College 71 Sewanee . 59; F.S.U. . . . 80 Sewanee . 61; Bethel College 69 Sewanee 65; F.S.U 85 Sewanee 56; Millsaps College 49 Sewanee . . 43; Miss. College 55 Sewanee . 63; Miss. College 58 Sewanee 61; Southwestern 80 Sewanee - 68; Millsaps College 52 Sewanee 66; Southwestern 95 111 Hall, J., Guard Colhoun, Guard Logan, Forward Miller, Forward Alford, Guard Dyer, Center Buckner, Forward Waddy, Guard Crawford, Forward Hayes, Forward Lockard. Forward Rox, Center Russell, Forward Roberts, Center Wagner, Guard Johnson, R., Guard Porter, Guard Thomas, Center Top: COACH BRIDGERS Above: PERKINS. CAPTAIN R A fi Led by such stalwarts as Captain Tommy Lamb, Art Perkins, Wynn Ragland, Ed Seagram, and Bill Austin, Sewanee ' s thinly clads of last year had a successful sea- son, winning three meets and losing only one, and that to Vanderbilt. The Tracksters defeated such teams as Mid- dle Tennessee State College, Tennessee Tech, Emory, Southwestern, and Mississippi College. Under the capable direction of Coach Bridgers, this years team, already in practice, promises to be one of the best ever. Thirteen returning lettermen, including this year ' s Captain, Art Perkins, will be depended upon to materially aid the cinder team ' s chances. Both track and field events will be bolstered by the addition of several freshmen to the squad. The distances and sprints are well taken care of, as well as most of the field events, and the Tigers should field a team of which everyone will be just- ly proud. Front Row, Left to Right: Laurie, lories, Wendell, Burch, Perkins, Warwick, Willard, Erschell, Seagram, Hutchinson, Fulton. Second Row: Yu, Cornell, Bromberg, Truesdell, Puckette, Howell, Moise, Horn, Keller, Hawkins. Third Row: Manager Whee- lus. Heath, White, Boult, Critchlow, Clicguennoi, Smythe, Hogan, Ragland, Thurmond, Foster, Coach Bridgers. j j w ■ SI W M yj I 1 M m HSE, if I f fbmt ;£Yi ' j mt ' ' ■ ibf MEitJir ' xCmf wMSbh m iv iU : - .Jr... GDLF VARSITY TENNIS SQUAD Front Row: Lee, J., Colhoun, Jackson, I.. Dr. Bruton, Coach. Back Row: Holt, Manager, Wagner, Hooker, Keyser, Gibson. Not in picture: Warden. TENNIS Last year ' s net team was one of Sewanee ' s more success- ful sports aggregations. Under Dr. Bruton ' s competent direction, the racquet men turned in a record of seven wins and three losses. They won over such teams as Louisiana State University, Tennessee, Southwestern and Birmingham- Southern, while losing to a strong Kalamazoo team, and to Vandy. Rain cancelled a match in which the Tiger netters were leading the Commodores. The Brutonmen climaxed a successful season by winning the team title in the T.I.A.C. tournament, though none, of the players reached the final round. Last year ' s top three — John Guerry, Hunley Elebash, and Scott Irvin, were instru- mental in taking the crown. Five returning lettermen, Ivey Jackson, John Lee, Charlie Keyser, Dud Colhoun, and Gordon Warden, will bolster the squad ' s chances of repeating with another good season. Last year ' s B squad will be looked to for support; some of them probably will be slated to see action in varsity matches. The squads, both A and B, made several trips last year, and should both follow well-filled schedules this year. The 1950 golfers will begin their season with only two returning lettermen. Captain Warren Belser will be playing his fourth and last season with the team. His steady seventy golf should be a definite asset to the comparatively green 1950 squad. Bayard Tynes, playing his third year with Sewanee should also be steady. Although there are several talented prospects on the Mountain who will qualify for the team, Belser and Tynes are the only ones with much inter-collegiate experience. Reed Sayles, Bobby Briggs, Ros- well Eldridge, Buck Barnes, and Bill Bomar will round out the team into what Coach Cheston hopes will be a suc- cessful season. The team will miss Bryan Rust, last year ' s captain and T.I.A.C. champion. The ' 49 golfers won 8 and lost 5 nassau matches. Losses were to Washington U. and Emory, two to Vandy, and a split with Georgia. Wins included Southwestern, Tennessee, T.P.I. (2), and Murfreesboro (2). If the spring is mild, the team should shape up fast for the tough matches ahead. Auburn, Vanderbilt, and Tennes- see should be real tests of golf. VARSITY GOLF TEAM Sayles, Belser, Tynes, Eldridge. Coach Cheston not in picture. It V -3 UAM V 9 6 ' 3 J 7 E4M ' fiEWANEt ft Ac team V ftp TEA eam TEAM 7 CAM I E AM SEWANEE, TEAM V 1 A m ft Left to Right, Front Row: Pilcher, Harris, Ragland, Perkins, Puckette. Back Row: C. Johnson, Arthur, Hogan, Kippenbrock, Stewart, Towers. CHDSS COUNTRY This fall ushered in the second season of cross-country at Sewanee. The team ' was aided by the skill and experience of three lettermen returning from last year ' s squad. Under the competent coaching of Hunley Elebash the Sewanee harriers show- ed steady improvement throughout the season. Captain Art Perkins consistently broke the time records for each course upon which the Tiger team competed. The first meet was run against an able and experienced Maryville team, and the Purple and White was defeated. The next meet resulted in an easy win for Sewanee over Oglethorpe, but another loss was then suffered at the hands of the Maryville Highlanders. The team finished the season with a decisive victory over T.P.f. Sewanee was represented at the Birmingham Road Race by two members of the cross-country team, and Capt. Perkins came through with third place in this major Southern race. At the end of the season seven runners received letters, those being Art Perkins, Henry Harris, Wynne Ragland, John Stewart, Holt Hogan, Elliott Puckette, and Bill Pilcher. Henry Harris, KA, is shown driving home to victory in the annual Cake Race. CAKE RACE Every fall the freshmen are required to run in what is called the Cake Race but this race is not restricted from the rest of the school. This year Henry Harris, KA, was the first man to cross the finish line but was not followed closely enough by his teammates to place as a team. The ATO team took first honors and was led by Puckette. Also sharing the winning points were the Out- laws and the Phi Gamma Deltas. SIGMA NU FOOTBALL INTRAMURAL CHAMPIONS Front Row: Little, Sloan, Warden, Langstafi, Willich. Back Row: Eiadham, J... Lachman, S., Haselton, Bradham, W., Sledge, Monroe, I. INTRAMURAL FOOTBALL The 1949 intramural football race was one of the closest and most hectic seasons ever played on the Mountain, and again the Sigma Nus were champions. The SAEs, the Phi Gams and the Sigma Nus all finished with an 8-2 record. The Fijis drew a bye, and the SAEs drew the SNs in the first pairing of the playoff. In one of the closest games of the season. Warden and Monroe sparked the Sigma Nus over Apperson ' s Minerva men 7-6. The Snakes advanced to the finals against the Phi Gamma Deltas. Warden and Company scored first, but the Fijis came back to score twice; once on an inter- cepted pass by Waddy, and again on a Waddy to Harper touchdown throw. The Sigma Nus scored in the final minutes by another Warden to Monroe pass, there- by winning their third straight intramural football crown. The score: 14-13. The ATOs, KAs, Phis, and Delts all showed brilliant streaks during the season, but were not consistent enough to keep ahead of the pack. The ATOs got off to a slow start, but finished by snatching the football crown from the SAEs. Boult and Hall were outstanding in the 13-0 win. Bob Logan spearheaded the KAs hot and cold team to an upset win over the then undefeated Phis 12-0. A tie with the Delts and a loss to the SAEs put the KAs in fifth place with the Phis. Ralph Roscher and the Delts were a constant threat, but finished in seventh place. The Phis were tied for first at midseason, but folded badly and finished behind the ATOs. The SAEs deserve special praise for their never-say-die spirit, generally called horse shoe. Led by Apperson, Lockard, and Dyer, they tied or won four games in the last minute of play. The Theologs and Kappa Sigs both played several close games, and made a better showing than last year. The Betas and Outlaws were both hampered by a lack of players. The league Leading Sigma Nus were defeated by the intramural All-Stars 34-25 in the annual Blue Key spon- sored game. Making use of Logan ' s and Waddy ' s back- field speed plus some sticky fingered ends, the All- Stars scored in the .early stages of the contest, building up a lead too high for the Snakes to overcome. The All-Stars, picked by the sports staff of the Sewanee Purple together with the coaches of the fraternity teams, boasted 13 men from 8 fraternities. INTRAMURAL FOOTBALL ALL-STAR TEAM Front Row: Monroe, J., Waddy, Dyer, Apperson, Warden, Lockard. Back Row: Hall, C, Logan, Boult, Harper, Tynes, Roscher, R., Davis, L. B. KAPPA ALPHA, INTRAMURAL VOLLEYBALL CHAMPIONS Left to Right, Front Row: A. Graham, Crews, Captain Garrison, Ames, R. Ward. Back Row: Goodwin, A. West, Leyden, Hainlin, Babcock. INTRAMURAL VOLLEY HALL For the second straight year the Volley Ball trophy was captured by the Kappa Alphas. John Lee (not pictured above) took over the leadership of the team on the court and almost developed the skill shown in previous years by Fred Dickman. Chuck Garrison coached the KA men who had their best record, losing only one game in their seasons play. Also in the running for points were the Theologs and the Phi Delta Thetas. WINTER -SPRING INTRAMURAL SPORTS Three major sports take place on the mountain in the latter half of the year, basket- ball, track, and softball. A great deal of in- terest is shown in these because the outcome determines the winner of the intramural trophy which goes to the teams which build up the most points in the years play. The point totals also greatly depend on the win- ners of the minor sports which are handball, badminton, swimming, golf, and tennis. 119 Tennessee Omega of A.T.O. has shown itself to be strong in all phases of campus activity. The present chapter, which has one of the highest scholastic averages of any A.T.O. chapter in the nation, has had possession of the intramural scholar- ship cup since 1946. Tennessee Omega holds the varsity participation cup in ad- dition to placing high in the intramural sports program this year. The A.T.O. ' s are well represented in all of the cam- pus organizations, honorary and other- wise. Traditional highlights of the Se- wanee social calendar are the A. T. O. Spring Tea and the Christmas Open House. In addition to these affairs, the Chapter has had several dances during the year. MEMBERS First Row: J. M. Abernathy, W. B. Adams, C. Arnold, D. D. Arthur, A. L. Bartlett, R. D. Boult, B. S. Boyd, J. G. Bratton, J. J. Brown. Second Row: E. D. Colhoun, J. T. Daves, C. R. Ernst, F. C. Ford, S. C. Gunby, C. W. Hall, R. E. S. Hall, W. H. Hall, M. K. Heartfield. Third Row: G. S. Henry, C. K. Horn, H. C. Hutson, J. A. Ingle, C. H. John- son, D. G. Jones, E. M. Jones, W. W. Kennedy, T. K. Lamb. Fourth Row: L. T. McConnell, D. W. McCullough, G. J. McFarland, C. H. McNutt, L. B. Mead, R. S. Moise, E. L. Myers, H. L. H. Myers, G. C. Nicho- poulos. Fifth Row: A. M. Pardue, R. O. Per- sons, H. M. Prowse, S. E. Puckette, A. B. Reynolds, G. L. Reynolds, H. L. Rhorer, E. P. Seagram, D. J. Sellas. Sixth Row: C. F. Smythe, F. C. Stough, A. W. Tucker, J. H. Vaughan, C. E. Warwick F. G. Watkins, W. L. White, H. W. Whitman, R. J. Wood- son. TENNESSEE OMEGA EHAPTER ft ft Clffl ■.-- Mil r, s o c ft ft IT: %taftt%r. ft ft n (Q a f e oee ft j i c n £ o a ft e . H ALPHA T A U OMEGA Founded: V.M.I., 1865 Colors: Old Gold and Sky Blue Installed: 1872 121 The Sewctnee chapter of Beta Theta Pi has successfully finished its first year as a chapter in the national fraternity. When Sewanee ' s expanding enrollment made the addition of a ninth fraternity desirable, the University Administration and Pan-Hellenic Council extended Beta Theta Pi an invitation to colonize. This invitation was in turn considered by Beat ' s national representatives and was given their enthusiastic endorsement; the Vanderbilt chapter was selected to sponsor the new colony; and from the close of the fall rush season of 1948, the Colony began its full operation so that it might obtain a charter. The chartering ceremony took place on October 27, 1949. Having completely redecorated their house last year, concentration was put on strengthening campus position. They have been represented in most of the University organizations. MEMBERS First Row: J. L. Bunnell, G. W. Chumbley, G. W. Dexheimer, W. C. Ellis, R. M. Fraser, S. F. Gast. Second Row: J. R. Goad, J. H. Hag- gard, L. R. Harwell, W. C. Honey, H. D. Hooper, F. C. Nelms. Third Row: W. B. Patterson, J. D. Rus- sell, R. I. Smith, J. E. Soller, K. E. Spatz, T. Taggart. Fourth Row: J. S. Warner, L. N. White, T. C. Wilkins, J. H. Wright. SEWANEE EOLDNY i £ £ f C3 f} HI IM BB ■ Jnnl AL t i . Founded: Miami University, 1839 Installed: 1948 BETA T H E T P I 123 Beta Theta of Delta Tau Delta opened the 1949-50 season with a successful rush week, which was highlighted by several dances. The pledges sponsored the an- nual Open House early in the Fall semes- ter. These functions were followed by a formal dance at the Shelter in Novem- ber, and the week-end was well attended by members and alumni. Later in the semester, debris and sand was brought in for a ship-wreck party, which turned out very well. Turning from the indoor to the outdoor, Beta Theta participated actively in intramural athletics. Football and basketball seasons closed with the Delta battling it out for points. During the Spring season, the chapter captured points in softball and swimming. MEMBERS First Row: C. R. Alfred, C. B. Bailey, A. P. Bell, G. P. M. Belshaw, S. Bis- sell, J. A. Bricker, H. C. Brown, L. E. Cantrell. Second Row: R. E. Elliott, F. W. Erschell, C. E. Flavin, J. S. Grier, G. H. Hamler, H. M. Hannah, J. D. Irwin, M. T. Johnson. Third Row: D. M. Kippenbrock, T. A. Lear, O. P. Luther, E. C. McCreary, C. H. McDowell, R. McKee, L. C. Morehouse, W. B. Parker. Fourth Row: A. Roberts, H. P. Rosch- er, R. M. Roscher, W. B. Smith, W. W. Stearly, J. L. Tipton, B. K. Trebor- MacConnell, W. A. Trevathan. Fifth Row: W. H. Tucker, P. K. Uhrig, W. G. Webb, G. F. Wharton, G. White, J. M. White, J. C. Worrell, W. S. Wrigley. Not Pictured: P. C. Burton, W. A. Loder. BETA THETA CHAPTER IS P IS ff) fi w ™ If • '  • • IS % ' T c% r is IS |S o o fc j £l 3 IS IS !! IS IS O- IS fS p H D E L T A T A U Founded: Bethany College, 1858 Colors: Purple, Gold, White Installed: 1883 D E L T A 125 The scholastic year 1949-50 was an eventful and a successful year for Alpha Alpha Chapter of the Kappa Alpha Order. On the campus, her members were to be found in all activities, and in many important positions. In athletics, al- though winning only one major sport, she was a threat in all, and finished well up in the intramural race. In scholarship her members did well, placing only a short distance behind the brains. The social side of the fraternity was especial- ly bright, with the sixty-eighth annual Robert E. Lee Tea highlighting the more serious side, and a rip-roaring pajama party in December being typical of the fun that she enjoyed. And finally, many improvements were made in the house, with the construction of a new room and a new bar being most prominent. MEMBERS First Row: M. P. Ames, R. H. Bab- cock, I. H. Brain, J. Buckner, F. C. Buster, E. P. Charlet, O. M. Chees- man, W. P. Cooper. Second Row: J. D. Crews, J. L. Doss, R. A. Duncan, J. P. Figh, C. P. Garri- son, C. P. Gildehaus, J. G. Goodman, J. G. Goodwin, W. W. Graham. Third Row: C. B. Grinnell, M. W. Hainlin, H. M. Harris, J. W. Hatfield, G. W. Hopper, R. J. Huffman, C. J. Hughes, C. W. Hunt. Fourth Row: J. I. Jones, J. B. Kil- bridge, J. T. Lee, G B. Leyden, R. D. Logan, H. A. McKay. Filth Row: F. E. McMurry, D. L. Mc- Quiddy, C. P. Nash, J. F. Nicholas, J. J. Richardson, J. D. Spangler, R. W. Storie, G. R. Tyler, R. W. Ward, A. A. West, L. C. West, F. M. White. Not Pictured: W. F. Bell, R. D. Fowler, S. G. Jones, I. L. Thomas. ALPHA ALPHA CHAPTER ♦ . K w V a g j m i }  c i I? ' ( rt Founded: Washington and Lee, i Colors: Crimson and Gold Installed: 1883 KAPPA ALPHA H D E 127 Tennessee Omega of Kappa Sigma began the school year with a formal dance in their house. After Thanksgiving, they celebrated their Founder ' s Day with a banquet, followed the next day by a formal, their annual Christmas Ball. The Kappa Sigs kept a full social calendar with many informal picnics and hayrides during the year. Their last big party of the year was an informal dance in the late spring. Tennessee Omega again gave a winter open house and one at Commencement. The pledges took as their project for the year the completion of the landscaping in the back of the house, buying shrubs and flowers. The chapter as a whole is taking the huge project of a complete redecoration of the house, including completely new furni- ture, a new kitchen, large picture win- dows and many other improvements. MEMBERS First Row: R. Allin, W. A. Babin, E. E. Benoist, W. T. Beresford, A. S. Briggs, D. H. Corey, W. A. Creswell, W. G. de Rosset. Second Row: R. T. Dozier, W. T. S. Engram, J. N. Finley, R. E. Finley, A. Gorton, A. R. Hall, R. S. Harris, J. H. Holmes. Third Row: C. A. Howell, S. E. Huey, G. L. Johnson, W. R. Johnson, B. B. S. Karsten, A. A. Kelly, W. R. Laurie, R. W. Leche. Fourth Row: J. H. Lembcke, G. L. Martel, G. J. Maust, M. V. H. McGee, L. H. Michaux, J. L. Orr, B. Parker, S. L. Simmons, J. A. Sperry. Fifih Row: P. E. Spowart, D. D. Stew- art, J. C. Stewart, F. S. Stradley, R. P. Taylor, J. P. Vineyard, J. P. Walker, E. C. Winstead, W. L. Worrell. Not Pictured: H. G. Haynie, W. H. Truesdell. TENNESSEE DMEGA CHAPTER ■■Ml v ' J •■ ft ft f 8 ft ft . ft 1 t 3C •X ' I 1 A f Ul?l Founded: University of Virginia, 1869 Colors: Scarlet, Green, and White Installed: 1882 KAPPA SIGMA 129 This year has been one of the most suc- cessful since Phi Gamma Delta has been on the mountain. They held their annual Homecoming Open House, given by the pledges, and at Commencement their annual Smorgasborg was a highlight of the year ' s functions. As has been the cus- tom, the Pig Dinner was held in Mont- eagle. The most outstanding of the many parties they gave was the Fiji Week-end in the spring, which featured a Fiji Island costume party and their spring formal. They continued their program of house improvement begun last year. In ath- letics, they were ably represented in var- sity sports and were always threats in intramurals. The cups they won were the Forensics Cup, Home Decorations Cup, and the Blue Key Song Cup. MEMBERS First Row: J. V. Adams, J. F. Alford, J. Bacheller, H. W. Barnes, J. G. Beavan, J. M. Bennett, H. L. Dake, P. W. Davis, W. E. Duff, V. E. Flocin. Second Row: J. R. Foster, C. J. Gar- land, R. W. Gillett, W. A. Gresh, C. D. Harper, G. B. Harper, T. P. Hay- nie, E. P. Helveston, S. Hempsione, F. Y. Hill. Third Row: D. R. Hoover, G. N. Hunt, D. M. Irvin, H. M. Irvin, R. G. John- son, D. L. Kilpatrick, W. D. Maynard, J. L. C. McFaddin, R. M. McKey, F. Menz. Fourth Row: J. A. Messinger, P. C. Miles, M. C. Miller, W. B. Mccre, T. F. Neill, F. A. North, A. K. On, A. W. Perkins, T. F. Pickerd, 7. E. Pilcher. FHih Row: W. M. Price, R. W. Reed, O. Robertson, J. B. Sahl, C. M. Sam- ple, E. C. Sharp, R. A. Smith, R. L. Smitherman, J. W. Stallings, G. H. Stevens. Sixth Row: H. J. Thompson, G. M. Thurmond, D. H. Van Lenten, F. H. L. Varino, J. V. Waddy, G. J. Wagner, P. S. Walker, K. Wheelus. Not Pictured: E. L. Browning, W. J. Crawford, C. E. Graham, O. L. Keller, J. E. D. Murdaugh, R. E. Shaw. GAMMA SIGMA CHAPTER Q Dj ft £% £% Q C f? • - I ft £j ffi c. iti f (R 3 ft ft • i j d %Js ' ' j wlti: ♦ Founded: Washington and Jefferson College, 1£ Colors: Royal Purple Installed: 1919 P H I GAMMA DELTA 131 Tennessee Beta Of Phi Delta Theta has concluded one of its most successful sea- sons in years, which began with rush week and ended with Commencement. Representing the chapter on most varsity athletic teams of this year was a large contingent of Phis, and many honors were conferred members in the field of scholasticism and school service. In the Intramural Athletic race, they were strong contenders all year, tying for the cup. Parties have definitely not been in the background this year. One of the first social functions was a formal in the fall. The dance week-ends found the chapter with many functions and this spring the annual Spring Formal was held at the House with a large number of young ladies from near and far. MEMBERS First Row: C. T. Allen, W. D. Austin, F. C. Bailey, W. W. Bailey, G. C. Bedell, J. B. Bell, W. W. Belser, E. A. Bowman, J. S. Bransford, G. A. Bromberg. Second Row: W. K. Bruce, R. F. Cherry, W. T. Cocke, B. R. Collier, T. Cornell, J. B. Davis, A. R. Dear- born, W. B. Dickerson, R. E. M. Du- Bose, R. R. Eldridge. Third Row: G. B. Elliott, J. C. Eyster, J. C. Fletcher, J. W. Foster, E. B. Franklin, J. C. Hall, G. W. Hamilton, H. G. Head, T. Holt, J. J. Hooker. Fourth Row: G. T. Houston, B. I. Jackson, W. T. Jervis, R. H. Lake, W. H. Langhorne, D. G. Lee, E. G. Lewis, J. F. Lucas, J. H. Marchand, E. C. Marshall. Fifth Row: J. H. Mcintosh, T. M. Mc- Keithen, W. S. McKeithen, D. C. Nash, E. G. Nelson, J. H. Nichols, W. C. Nichols, C. O ' Donnell, M. H. Poe, J. D. Russ. Sixth Row: C. R. Sayles, R. E. Sim- mons, A. L. Smith, C. C. Smith, G. F. Smith, R. C. Smith, T. O. H. Smith, J. M. Thomas, T. T. Tucker, B. S. Tynes. Seventh Row: J. B. Wallace, E. C. Wells, J. A. Witherspoon, D. M. Wright, L. E. Wright, B. Wyatt-Brown. Not Pictured: S. A. Boney, W. R. Cox, J. W. Gibson, T. F. Griffin, R. F. Hayes, D. P. Platter. TENNESSEE BETA EHAPTEH n q o a p C; p ei£j iH p n c a a ft B £1 r: v. . ., ( % . ' S ( i « 4 Founded: Miami University, 1848 Colors: Argent and Azure Installed: 1883 D P H I E L T A H E T A 133 Tennessee Omega of Sigma Alpha Epsilon has completed another year ac- centuated by active and complete parti- cipation in every sphere of student life, and the Sons of Minerva continue to hold several primary positions of leader- ship. To begin the series of Sig Alpha so- cial functions the pledge class of last fall sponsored the annual open house, fol- lowed by an informal dance in Decem- ber. In March, Founders ' Day was cele- brated at a banquet in Monteagle. A week-end party in March was highlight- ed by a Bowery Ball. The chapter had participants in most of the varsity ath- letics, and in the intramural league was a strong contender in all of the sports. After the opening of the basement room, the S. A. E. ' s have concentrated on build- ing a patio in the back of their house. They finished the Sewanee season with an open house immediately following Commencement. MEMBERS First Row: G. P. Anderson, H. G. Barrett, C. M. Binnicker, W. M. Bomar, E. C. Braddock, J. A. Cater, S. S. Chandler, J. B. Cheatham, F. P. Clark. Second Row: W. W. Clifton, D. G. Critchlow, C. J. Dobbins, R. B. Doss, R. B. Dyer, P. G. Fulton, J. W. Gen- try, N. L. George, D. W. Gray. Third Row: W. D. Haggard, E. W. Heath, L. H. Hill, C. Hitch, J. L. Jef- fries, R. L. Johnson, T. B. Jones, R. N. Lockard, C. D. McDavid. Fourth Row: P. McDavid, R. W. Mc- Fail, B. D. Miller, A. N. Minor, J. R. Moon, J. T. Moore, J. E. Mulkin, R. C. Mullins, L. B. Murphy. Fifih Row: F. S. Otway, J. W. Perkins, O. G. Pinkston, W. B. Porter, L. W. Rice, B. J. Sims, H. M. Smith, W. S. Stoney, S. P. Strother. Sixth Row: H. W. Stuart, H. M. Ufford, F. B. Wakefield, R. D. Walk- er, W. G. Ward, J. W. Whitaker, R. L. Wood. Not Pictured: J. A. Elam, W. L. Hutchinson, R. K. Jones, J. C. Morris, C. W. Pepper, J. D. Rox, D. P. Wilson. TEXNESSEE OMEGA E H A P T E R _ ; i g O c £ ff lEj O O f . £ ff| !!5 C C Founded: University of Alabama, 1856 Colors: Royal Purple and Gold Installed: 1881 SIGMA ALPHA E P S I L D Bf 135 The Sigma Nus returned in September and found a newly decorated house — new furniture, drapes and paint. Soon after an open house given by the pledges, the fall formal was held. Va- rious other parties were given to make the year ' s social calendar complete; however, the most outstanding was the costume party and the White Rose For- mal given in the Spring on the same week-end. Sigma Nu was well represent- ed in almost every sport, won several in- dividual sport trophies, and tied for the Intramural Cup. As the year drew to a close, attention was focused on sports, dances, yard improvements, and the in- terfraternity sing. The Sigma Nus round- ed out a successful year in campus activ- ities, sports and social events. MEMBERS First Row: G. D. Barnes, A. H. Bayes, S. H. Bennett, W. H. Bennett, C. J. Betty, W. R. Beyer, W. H. Blake, R. ]. Boylston. Second Row: L. S. Bradham, W. S. Bradham, J. J. Campbell, W. S. Catherwood, E. P. Chambers, W. P. Cummins, L. J. Ellis, P. F. Enwright. Third Row: B. D. Frierson, W. G. Grahn, W. P. Hale, J. H. Haselton, A. H. Hatch, P. C. Hines, R. H. Hcgan, P. S. Irving. Fourth Row: C. L. Jennings, C. L. Keyser, M. H. Langstaff, J. H. Little, E. H. Monroe, J. F. Monroe, S. A. Moris, R. G. Mullen. Fifth Row: W. Ragland, C. E. Reid, S. A. Robida, R. L. Ruffner, K. B. Scott, T. H. Setze, C. B. Sledge, J. P. Sloan. Sixth Row: J. P. Wahle, G. E. War- den, W. B. Watson, D. D. Wendel, N. B. Willard, G. A. Willich, H. P. Wright. Not Pictured: R. E. Briggs, A. G. Lach- man, S. P. Lachman. B ETil , M i c n . CHAPTER 1 R 4 p 1 7 ft f J a Q C T: ! V %% ■ i irk Q - -St.- 2 - v w •4 ,1 .,i W m m ' L .4 h y ' 9« o ' 1 Q ft 1 js -A -. ... V V is . ' a Founded: V.M.I., 1869 Colors: White and Gold Installed: 1889 SIGMA N U 137 m 139 Snddky Lan son . AM ftldUwtu Mai A - t X u 140 MISS SEWAMEE ALPHA Choic e OMEGA Choice of BETA THETA PI Choice of DELTA TAU DELTA aw i n uEL Choice oi KAPPA ALPHA ORDER Choice of KAPPA SIGMA Choice of PHI GAMMA DELTA Choice of PHI DELTA THETA 04 bu£A vatArtwA. Choice oi SIGMA NU Choice of SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON Jl jy A Favorite with Sewanee students is our special steak supper. The social center in Monteagle for Sewanee Students. Fraternity banquets and private parties by arrangement. CLARA ' S RESTAURANT Owned and Operated by JETT M. FISHER MONTEAGLE, TENNESSEE COMPLIMENTS OF BLUE SKY RESTAURANT THE MOTOR MART ALBERT GREEN COMPLETE BUMPER TO BUMPER SERVICE SEWANEE, TENNESSEE 4051 TWENTY YEARS OF SERVICE TO THE UNIVERSITY AND ITS STUDENTS MONTEAGLE HOTEL MONTEAGLE, TENNESSEE FOR EXCELLENT ACCOMMODATIONS AND DELICIOUS MEALS P. S. BROOKS CO. Dry Goods, Groceries, Shoes Men ' s Furnishings SEWANEE, TENNESSEE PITTSBURGH PAINT AND GLASS V. R. WILLIAMS CO. The Home of Insurance Service Special Attention to Sewanee Lines Winchester 2249 WINCHESTER, TENNESSEE V. R. WILLIAMS W. M. CRAVENS COMPLIMENTS OF COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. TRACY CITY, TENNESSEE SEWANEE DRY CLEANERS Service Our Motto DYEING — ALTERATIONS Waterproofing — Mothproofing ENJOY DUTCH-MAID BREAD AND CAKES Full Flavored and Fresh Always BAGGENSTOSS BAKERY PATRONIZE CHATTANOOGA MERCHANTS WHO SUPPORT YOUR ANNUAL Chattanooga ' s Fashion Specialists Compliments of TEMPLETON ' S Jewelers CH or3ie . (oucHc The House of Kuppenheimer Good Clothes Market St. 810 Broad St. T. H. PAYNE CO. Stationers and Office Outfitters Chattanooga, Tenn. KOBLENTZ Hickey Freeman Clothes 812 Market Compliments of THE FISCHER CO. Jewelers LOVEMANS, INC. Chattanooga ' s O ' ity Department Store ARCHER PAPER CO. Wholesale Products WITH OUR COMPLIMENTS aCVlRI, ND WINCHESTER, TENNESSEE TOM ' S €at TOASTED PEANUTS and PEANUT BUTTER SANDWICHES Distributed By WARREN L WAITE 1421 Church St. NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE BANK OF SEWANEE Member F.D.I.C. TELFAIR HODGSON President H. E. CLARK J. F. MERRITT, JR. Vice-President Cashi COMPLIMENTS OF VAUGHAN HARDWARE COMPANY WINCHESTER, TENNESSEE COMPLIMENTS OF COLONIAL COFFEE COMPANY AND C. B. RAGLAND CO. NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE COMPLIMENTS OF GOREE-TOMUNSON CHATTANOOGA, TENNESSEE ALL GOOD WISHES FROM THE CHATTANOOGA MEDICINE CO COMPLIMENTS OF THE VOLUNTEER STATE LIFE INSURANCE CO. A Tennessee Institution Serving the South from Virginia to Texas Home Office CHATTANOOGA, TENNESSEE Founded 1903 CECIL WOODS, President ' Ith Lyuf v ompiinrentd ipi unci best wishes 71 SEWANEE UNION SANDWICH SHOP O GENE WINN, MANAGER THIS BOOK DESIGNED AND PRINTED BY BENSON PRINTING CO. NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE ENGRAVINGS IN THIS BOOK WERE MADE BY SOUTHERN ENGRAVING CO. + NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE


Suggestions in the University of the South - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Sewanee, TN) collection:

University of the South - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Sewanee, TN) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 1

1947

University of the South - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Sewanee, TN) online collection, 1948 Edition, Page 1

1948

University of the South - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Sewanee, TN) online collection, 1949 Edition, Page 1

1949

University of the South - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Sewanee, TN) online collection, 1951 Edition, Page 1

1951

University of the South - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Sewanee, TN) online collection, 1952 Edition, Page 1

1952

University of the South - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Sewanee, TN) online collection, 1953 Edition, Page 1

1953


Searching for more yearbooks in Tennessee?
Try looking in the e-Yearbook.com online Tennessee yearbook catalog.



1985 Edition online 1970 Edition online 1972 Edition online 1965 Edition online 1983 Edition online 1983 Edition online
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES GENEALOGY ARCHIVE REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today! Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly! Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.