Washington and Lee University - Calyx Yearbook (Lexington, VA)
- Class of 1984
Page 1 of 312
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
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Text from Pages 1 - 312 of the 1984 volume:
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CI- ETYMOLOGY Some say caLc ' s from calico And I suip p)ose ihey oiyighi io know The derivaiion; Bid l H{e girls wear calico, Don ' -tyou si ppose ihai mt si be so In Every Nation? Now I ' ve a iheory of my own You mighi noi gviess, so I ' ll m ke ii known, Bid keep ii uiei Calyx, a cup, musi be ihe source, Jusi hear my words and you ' ll indorse My novel fiat Cups are pladHed and girls are, ho. And painied girls are nothing new In decoration. Too ynuch cup and too much girl Boih throw our heads into a whirl and cause gyration. A cup, you know, goes to the Ops. And sometimes m.akes frecjuent trips In that direction. A cup has dregs, however sweet, And we a calic rarely meet That ' s aU perfection. Charles J. Boppel Calyx Vol One, U35 X _l u 00 LU I Copyright 1984 by Peter Cronin and the Washington and Lee IniversiK Publications Board. All rights reserved. No part of this publication mav be reproduced in w hole or in part without the written permission of the editor or the Washington and Lee I ' niversits Publications Board. |— TABLE OF CONTENTS n The World Around Us 4 The Year 34 sports 46 features 58 Seniors 150 Underclassmen 206 Fraternities 234 Advertisements 282 12 14 15 18 19 ' P ' vj 22 ?  R fc5? 26 28 29 30 31 32 33 M i- ' ,. Openings ' -v ' i ' ii -ji k.V i For this year ' s freshman class. Orientation seemed, at It-ast on the surface, a little different. Dean Huntley described Orientation as ragged . The social dinner that served as the first introduction between freshman and their advisors was moved so that the first meeting was on an academic basis. A new air of seriousness sur- rounded Orientation. Despite this, meetings seemed poorly plan- ned and the whole program ran a little rough. And what of this year ' s freshman? How did they differ from years gone by? Academically, they were well prepared; 12 Nation- al Merit Scholars, 14 valedictorians or salutatorians. Impressive statistics, to say the least. They seem to be more mature than last year ' s class, said Chris Cartmill of the class ' s overall behavior, in an interview with the Ring-Tum-Phi. The worries that Washington and Lee was attract- ing book worms rather than well rounded individuals, always a pressing question at this time of year, seemed once again to be unfounded. And what did the freshman think of Washington and Lee after a week of meetings, tests, and more meetings? Freshman Craig Spear, again in an interview with the Phi, complained that the information about Rush was sparse at best. Any upperclassmen can recall those earl - days of their college career and the accompanying confusion. The words — We gotcha comin ' back? ring like bells. This Rush, of course, had its own uniqueness. The IFC decided ] that it would make Rush dry this ear. This turned out to be ! good planning on their part, for shortly thereafter the ABC saw fit i to change the drinking age, again, making it illegal for most | 36 Far Left: The matriculation line along The Colonnade, complete with money changers; Middle Left: The new Sigma Nu ' s answer to dr Rush. Above: Senior Rand McLain in .mother rite of fall; Left: Freshman being welcomed at the beginning of freshmen orientation. freshman (an one under 19) to be served any alcoholic he eras e. Those shocking words rang out — NO BEER. An observant reporter might question the success of such a proposal at Washington and Lee. Consider the strong traditions. Other interesting notes on the 1983 Rush included the fact that a smaller number of freshmen actualh ' took part in the annual affair. An estimated 85 percent was what Dean Murph said, down 10 percent from years gone by. Only 47 percent of those who rushed joined a house. It appeared that the fraternit s stem might be in for a rough time. The fraternities became worried that President Wilson might have his own designs on the demise of the fraternitx s stem at Washington and Lee Wilson swore in a meeting with fraternit leaders and members that he didn t want to hght with the fraternities. et man still felt that he meant something different. John Cleghorn in a Phi news analysis of that same meeting wrote: While it is a touchy question and one that is defended fer entl b those who enjoy the benefits of fraternit) ' life. Presi- dent Wilson must be allowed the opportunity to simpK ' raise cjuestions. . nd. in turn, the fraternities must give ample time and stud - to the questions which affect 800 men at Washington and Lee. Wilson had a sensiti e situation on his hands, one that would subsist thrt)ugh the tall while other issues occupied the forefront of the minds of most Washington and Lee students. The 1983 academic year at Washington and Lee had begun. It was just like any other year? The Question The 1983 academic year at Washington and Lee will go down in history as the year THE QUESTION was raised once again. The question of course was coeducation. For many it was hard to believe that Washington and Lee was actually considering such a move. Crys of Better Dead than Coed. and Girls in the hay, not ever day! were heard from many corners of the old campus. The Executive Committee conducted an independent and un- advertised poll to find out what students felt about the issue. Their figures reported a 75 percent opposition to women on the col- onnade. Many questioned the validity of the poll. What with no advertising, many students didn ' t even know that the poll was being conducted. Professor David Novack announced a 1980 poll which suggested that, at that time, 50 percent of the student body wanted to see coeducation at Washington and Lee as well as 75 percent of the faculty. The Sociology Department and the Executive Committee weren ' t the onK ones with lots of numbers floating around. The administration had a demographics survey that showed a decline in the applicant pool over the next decade or more, if W L remained all-male. A flood of letters deluged the Ring-Tim-Phi. For many veterans of Washington Lee, such a display of enthusiasm had never been seen. Bob Jenevein felt that as President of the Student Body it was his duty to voice what he felt was the opinion of the student body. Advocating the uniqueness of W L he urged the student body to consider the effect of coeducation on its strong traditions. 38 Far Left: The sentiments of some students one morning on Washington Hall; Above Far Left: More vocalization from a Reagan supporter; Left: CBS News correspondent Lem Tucker speaks with John Wilson on the issue; Below: Seniors Todd Smith and Ted Fletcher defend coeducation in a debate against senior Markham Pyle and junior Mike Shelton. Opponents of coeducation, he wrote, question the abihty of a woman to react as enthusiastically as a man to the inspiration of Robert Lee, who spent his life as a leader of men, and in whom so much of our great tradition is founded. President Wilson, of course, came under the most heav criti- cism o er the issue. Many unfairK- assumed that Wilson wanted to see Washington and Lee coeducational. In a copyrighted inter- view with the Ring-Tum-Phi, Wilson answered the question Are you an advocate of coeducation?. b - responding: I am going to be an advocate for what I think is best for ' ashington and Lee and the board is then going to ha e to make ajudgment about that and they will then finalK ' make a decision based on what the think is collec- tively best for Washington Lee. I am not ideologue when it comes to coeducation. I didn ' t come here saying the first and foremost thing we must do is change this institution. Still the controversy raged. Unfortunately, man - disregarded Wilson ' s comments and tried to impose their own opinions on Wilson ' s views. Often it seems that regardless of what one savs. it can be twisted into something completeK different. The raging battle prompted an editorial b - Roanoke Times Columist Brian O ' Neill. I ' m not completely closed-minded to the alue of tradition, he wrote, or to traditional values. If W L guys are happy with their informal exchange programs with Hollins and the other womens ' colleges, that ' s fine. But Better Dead than Coed ' bumix r stickers being sold on campus? What are the - afraid of? The fall of 1983 at Washington and Lee certainK would not lead to any conclusive answers. Onh time would tell. Winter in Lexington t - ' H WASHINGTON AND LEE UNIVERSITY S ANNUAL MUSCULAR DYSTROPHY SUPERDANCE ™ DANCE FOR THOSE WHO CAN ' T J T JAW. 27.28.29,1984 ' Winter is not known as one of the more pleasant times in Lexington. The weather is less than perfect, roads become more hazardous and, hence, travel less of an option, and the term seems to drag on. One begins to think. Is this ever going to end? . This year things were not as quiet as they may have been in the past. Some of the biggest news of the term concerned the special Grand Jur - convened by Commonwealth ' s Attorney John Read to investigate drug trafficking in Lexington and Rockbridge County. Among those called to testify were Dean of Students, Lewis John; University President, John Wilson; and Student Body President, Bob Jenevein. Later in the term, 12 area lawyers questioned the purpose and intent of the panel and brought some heavy question- ing on to the Commonwealth ' s Attorney-. The lawyers, concerned about witness rights, created a Bill of Rights for those called before the grand jury. The questioning continued into the Spring term. January saw an announcement that the decision on coeducation would be delayed until the end of the ear. OriginalK ' . it has been assumed that a decision would be reached before the end of the academic year. In a special interview with the Ring-Tum-Phi, Chairman of the Board of Trustees James Ballengee said that, On a subject of this importance, it is clear to me that a special meeting will be needed. The battle over coeducation continued to rage, however, with the release of a poll showing that undergraduates were opposed to coeducation by nearly a t vo-to-one margin. Executive Committee President Bob Jenevein saw this as a boon to his fight against coeducation. Long ago, the EC came out unanimously against coeducation, Jenevein said. This gives us more credibility. We can now be responsive as well as responsible. The postponement of the decision did not calm the ongoing debate over the issue. The EC brought national attention to Washington and Lee Far Left: Workmen posting campus events; Upper Far Left: Bad weather and Lexington — they go together hke a hand and glove; Left: The faculty at ODK convocation;. Upper Left: The Unknown Fans at the Roanoke game; Below: Junior Da id Giese at WLUR in Lexington , when the) ' voted to ask the tacult ' on an indi idual basis to lequiic students to wear respectable clothes, including ties, to class. The motion brought attention from the Washington Post and columnist George Will, among others. After the Committee was presented with a petition signed by 383 students, they decided not to ask the faculty to enforce a dress code after all. This, however, did not seem to stem the tide of national attention that W L received. Jenevein, as President, had other problems to contend with. Citing distrust and disrespect within the Committee, EC Secre- tar ' Len Howard resigned on March 5. In his letter of resignation Howard wrote that the E.xecutive Committee is responsible for fairly representing student ' s attitudes and opinions, and taking action to meet the needs of the student bod ' . It has became increasingly evident to me o er the past few months that this committee has been unable to li e up to this responsibilit - ... I have been forced to work in an atmosphere of distrust tor ni abilities and disrespect for m opinions. I haw been forced to compromise m ' personal convictions for the sake of presenting a united front and no longer teel comfortable express- ing my own ideas, much less those of the students I ha e tried to represent. ' Howard ' s seat was filled by Senior representative Jim Messer and Senior class president Charlie Alcorn replaced Messer. Jene- vein spoke for the EC when he said that we support him and his decision to remo e himself His resignation will not pre ent this committee from striving to represent the students as well as possible in the ne.xt few months. . s all things seemed during the I983-S4 year, winter was not as boring as it might have been remembered in ears gone by. 1983-84 was a year dominated by a cooling off in United States Soviet Relations, an affirmation of American military strength in Grenada, a controversial intervention of U.S. troops in Lebanon, resignation of two of President Reagan ' s top Cabinet officials, and, as is the case every fourth year, a presidential election campaign. As Washington and Lee students returned to Lexington in early September, they still were shocked by the shooting down of Korean airlines Flight 007 on Sept. 1 by a Soviet fighter. Among the 269 killed were 61 Americans, including Rep. Larn, ' P. Mc- Donald, D-Ga. On the domestic front, the summer long drought continued into September, creating the worst conditions since the 1930 ' s, accord- ing to some agricultural authorities. In the Middle East, fighting in war-torn Lebanon intensified throughout the fall as U.S. troops, part of a multinational peace- keeping force, moved closer to a confrontation with Syrian troops. One of Reagan ' s most criticized Cabinet members. Secretary of the Interior James Watt, made his final mistake Sept. 21, when he said a five member commission had three Democrats, two Re- publicans, ever ' kind of mix you can have. I have a black, a woman, two jews, and a cripple. And we have talent. The uproar over the remark finally forced Watt ' s resignation Oct. 9. While the effectiveness of U.S. troops was being questioned in Lebanon, there was no doubt as to their abilities in the Carribean. Following the overthrow of Grenada ' s prime minister and his subsequent Oct. 19 assassination, U.S. Marines and Rangers were ordered to join with forces from six other Carribean nations to invade Grenada. The first wave of troops landed Oct. 25 before sunrise and quickly wiped out most resistance, most of which came fi-om Cubans on the island. The first of the 1,100 American citizens on the island were evacuated Oct. 26. On Nov. 2, the U.S. declared the Grenada hostilities over and began withdrawing its forces. Eighteen U.S. soldiers were killed and 91 injured, including First Lt. Syd Farrar, a W L graduate. Local elections broke into the news in the early part of Novem- ber as two incumbant republicans — Delegate Vance Wilkins and Commonwealth ' s Attorney Reverly C. John Read — won re- election. Just weeks before the election. Read had asked for, and re- ceived, permission to form a special grand jury to investigate drug trafficking in the Rockbridge County area. Ry mid-March, that grand jur ' had supoenaed over 130 witnesses, including W L students, faculty, and administrators. It had also received some criticism from local lauyers, who called it a witch-hunt. The already cold U.S.-U.S.S.R. relations deteriorated even further as the U.S. placed its first ground-launched cruise missiles in England on Nov. 14. Nine days later, the Soviets withdrew from the Geneva talks on reducing intermediate range nuclear missiles. 42 Thanksgiving touched off the beginning of the Christmas shop- ping season, which produced riots around the country as stores sold out of the infamous Cabbage Patch Dolls. Made by Coleco, the 18-inch dolls sold for about $25 apiece, but the feature of the dolls was their individuality. Each doll was slightly different, and each came with adoption papers. The Middle East situation heated up again after Christmas. On Dec. 27, President Reagan, anticipating a critical Defense Depart- ment report on the suicide bombing, accepted full responsii)ilit for the lack of security measures. The New Year marked the official divestiture of AT T into seven regional holding companies, creating worries about whether telephone rates would increase. As congress convened in mid-January of an election year, it was faced with several pressing issues, including the troops in Leba- non and the federal budget. Reagan at least partially solved the former issue b ' ordering the U.S. Marines to begin withdrawing to ships offshore This rede- ployment began Feb. 21. On Feb. 1, Reagan presented Congress with a $925.5 billion budget for fiscal year 1985. which begins Oct. 1 . The budget called for a defense authorization of $180.4 billion. Congress also faced a problem with the nomination of White House counselor Edwin Meese 111 to replace the resigning Wil- liam French Smith as attorney general. The Senate Judiciary Committee was questioning Meese carefully on his financial trans- actions. Rut above all, 1984 was an election year, and politics would dominate the news. On Jan. 25, in his State of the Union message, Reagan offered what would become his campaign slogan, America is back, and ended three years of speculation by announcing for re-election during a five-minute paid political broadcast Jan. 29. Former Vice president Walter F. Mondale solidified his front runner status with a strong showing in Iowa, where the only surprises were Sen. Gary Hart ' s second place finish and Sen. John Glenn s collapse to fifth. The Feb. 9 death of Yuri ' . Andropov, leader of the Soviet Union, ga e both countries an opportunity to once again strength- en ties. Andropov, who had been in office only 15 months and had not been seen in public since August 198.3, died of complications from a chronic kidney ailment. Konstantin U. Chernenko, 72, three years older than Andro- pov, was elected general secretary Feb. 13 by a unanimous vote in an emergency session of the full Central Committee. From Moscow ' s Red Square to W L s Red Square, people made the news and it affected everyone in between. 43 44 Rev. Jerry Falwell Fallon ' s Generals Finish No. 2 I ' m really sorry to see it end. That ' s how VV L grid coach Gary Fallon summed up his 1983 squad, who finished at 6-3 on the year, tied for second place in the ODAC race, had 11 players named to All- Conference squads, and rewrote the General history books in setting six new records during the campaign. Heading into the season Coach Fallon faced a trouble area at quarterback. Two standout performers from 1982, John Thompson and Al Paradise, whom he thought would be returning, suddenly didn ' t, leaving the Falcon with nothing but inexperience in the crucial position. Fortunately, Sophomore Bobby Wilson took up the slack and became, according to Fallon, the quarterbacks ' s quarterback. By game three Wilson had equalled the number of touchdown passes thrown by both quarterbacks last year. Wilson was just a warm-up act when compared with the feats of junior tailback Gene Girard. Girard personally broke four records this year: most points scored, most touchdowns, most rushing touchdowns, and most yards rushing. In setting the last mark, the junior became the first W L player since the end of subsidized athletics to rush for over 1,000 yards. Other record setting performances were turned in by sophomore placekicker James White, who set a mark for the most success- ful points-after-touchdown, and freshman Kevin Weaver, who returned the opening kickoff against Maryville 100 yards for a score, the longest return in W L ' s history. The Generals started the season on a down note with a tough loss at Emory Henry. Then senior tri-captain Bob Jene- vein was lost for the year after a touchdown saving tackle in the Centre College game. The Generals rebounded with three wins after that first defeat. Highlighting the season were two come- from-behind, late game victories. In both the Randolph-Macon win and the Catholic thriller, long drives and clutch plays proved the deciding factors for the Gener- als. Only a mid-season slump and the heart-breaking loss in the opener at Emory Henry kept the conference title out of reach. At season ' s end, W L had five All- ODAC first team selections: On defense, linebacker and senior tri-captain John Cole got the nod, while offensive honorees in- cluded senior center Glenn Kirschner, se- nior guard Danny Seal, junior tight end Ian Banwell, and Gene Girard at running back. Six more Generals garnered second-team status: On defense, senior defensive end Charlie Alcorn, junior lineman Craig Westbrook, and backfield members Barry Thompson, a junior, and Tim Janyska, a sophomore, earned kudos. On offense, two linemen were named to the second team, senior Craig Reilly and junior Pat O ' Con- nell. In the end Fallon, who guided the Generals to their fourth straight winning season (an accomplishment not matched since 1963), took none of the credit, prais- ing both his players and his coaching staff, When we started this season, there were plenty of question marks, but the coaches got our players to perform at their highest level. The record is a credit to the staff. A, i i m J] t i : nm. 46 McBryde Leads Harriers To Victory Angus McBryde, W L ' s runner extraor- dinaire wasn ' t satisfied with just one bril- liant performance. No, the senior harrier continually outdid his previous perfor- mance all season long, concluding with a tenth place finish at the NCAA Division III national championships. McBryde paced the Generals to a 14-1 season mark. VV L missed qualifying as a team for the national meet by a mere two points with a third place finish at the Re- gional Qualifying Meet. As defending Old Dominion Athletic Conference champions, the Generals fell short in this year s attempt to successfully defend that crown. W L finished second in the 1983 final standings. The conference title was claimed by perennial rival Roanoke College. McBryde started the season slowly and constantly improved his times and finishes. He led the Generals to a fifth place finish at the Virginia State Meet. Then, the team captain tied an 11-year old record on the Generals home course in a five team meet at mid season. Coach Dick Miller com- mented on how well McBryde was run- ning: The most impressive part of Angus ' run was that he did it all alone. It ' s one thing to post a time like that (26;25) when you are being pushed, but it ' s quite another to run that way when you ' re ahead of the field. Next stop for the Angus McBryde Show was the ODAC meet, where he set a course record and claimed Runner of the Year honors. McBryde then earned his berth to the Nationals with a first place effort at the Regional Qualifying Meet. There, the se- nior clocked in at 24:36 to achieve his pre- season goal of running a sub-25 minute race. McBryde went on to sha e another 17 seconds off that time with a finishing time of 24:19 at the Nationals one week later. McBryde was supported by junior Frank Pittman, who repeated as an ALL-ODAC selection with his seventh-place finish at the conference meet. Other team leaders were senior Paul Chapman, juniors Cameron Adams and Mark Pembroke, sophomore Eddie Goundry, and freshman Ted Myers. Coach Miller added another successful season to his 32-year career as the W L cross cou ntry boss, making it 23 winning slates overall, 12 in the last 14 ears. Lower Left: Freshman defensi e back Tim Jan ska during the Homecoming clash with Centre College; Left: Freshman running back Kevin Weaver on the run; Center: A cross countr meet about to start; Below: Senior star Angus McBryde all alone out in front. 47 Soccer: 8-4 On The Year After losing six starters to graduation from last ear ' s 8-3-2 team, a young 1983 Generals ' soccer team stormed to eight vic- tories against five defeats. We can certainly be proud of that record, especialK once you consider the number of questions what we had to an- swer going into the season, noted head coach Rolf Piranian. One of those questions concerned the position of goalkeeper. Junior Ja ' Werner quickh turned that question mark into an exclamation point, as the oft-season trans- fer from St. Louis Universit ' stepped in to notch five shutouts and allow just sixteen goals in thirteen games. Leading the team offensively were soph- omore Bill Holmes with five goals and seven assists and four year letterman Ro- land Simon with six goals and five assists. Simon finished his W L soccer career with 23 goals and 17 assists. Juniors Gai- - Clements ;uid Jefi ' Reicliert and sophomore Steve McGrath each added three goals for the season. The Generals finished 3-3 in the ODAC, good enough for a fourth place finish. Earn- ing all-ODAC first team honors were Simon and junior back Rob Coleman. Holmes and junior midfielder Can, ' Cle- ments were named to the second team. Two high points for the Generals were a 4-0 victor ' over ' MI in the third annual United Wa ' Collegiate Cup and a 2-1 upset over Messiah College, ranked fourth in the nation in Division III at the time. Still, the Generals missed receiving a bid to the NCAA playoffs. It came down to a game against Division II Radford, which W L lost, 3-2, in overtime after holding a 2-1 lead going into the final two minutes. We were not aware of it at the time, but if we had beaten Radford there was a ver ' good chance we woidd ha e gotten a bid to pla ' in the NCAA Division III tourna- ment, said Piranian, who completed his eighth season as head coach. Knowing how close we came to a berth is very dis- appointing, but it doesn t really take away from a fine season. Above: Coach Rolf Piranian confers with the team the during halftime; Below: Senior Forward Rolanc Simon on the attack: Right: Senior Tim Rock on the Defensive, Below Right: Senior ' Wbe Ravencraft looking for an open man 48 IPU  Water Polo — Champions! Setting the Southern League Champion- ship as their goal, a young W L water polo squad went out and claimed that goal as a 7-4 victory over rival Richmond in the final of the championships earned the Generals their third straight Southern League title and marked the high point of the 1983 cam- paign. Lacking the stars of last year ' s team, the 1983 edition compensated with excellent play as a unit, leading Coach Page Remil- lard to say, this year s starting lineup would beat last years. The Generals gave Remillard another successful season, finishing at 25-12. Re- millard reached a personal milestone in 1983, as an early season victory over Johns Hopkins at the W L Fall Classic gave him his 100th career victory as the General ' s polo mentor. Richmond became this year ' s great nemesis. The Spiders and Generals met five times during the year with W L pre- vailing only once. The two teams final con- frontation occurred at the NCAA Eastern Championships. A Spider goal with just 26 seconds remaining in the game gave Rich- mond the victory, 7-6. The Generals finished seventh overall in the East, drop- ping a tough contest against Slippery Rock (a team that qualified for the national tour- nament), and later rebounding for a 6-5 victory over the University of Mas- sachusetts. Senior tri-captains Tim Rock, Matt Abe Ravencraft, and Don Shark Smith led the Generals both on offense and de- fense. Fine play was also turned in by se- nior goaltender Kevin Kadesky and junior Bobby Pearson. Hope is high for 1984 due to a phe- nomenon known as the Killer B ' s , an ear- ly season invention of Coach Remillard and assistant coach Bob Newcomb. Instituted to help develop team depth, the Killer B ' s were composed primarily of freshman. They were very enthusiastic, even defeat- ing the team from George Washington. Their season-long improvement should hold good things for the future of Washing- ton and Lee water polo. 49 Canfield ' s Generals Overcome Injuries and Setbacks The 1983-84 basketball season was full of challenges for the Generals. Although the team was less successful than in previous years, it still managed a winning season. Senior forward John Lee Graves was nominated to All-. merican status, and a ver ' talented freshman class premiered. Head coach Verne Canfield, whose 20- year record at W L stands at 324-190, lost four starters from ' 82-83 ' s 17-10 season. He also noted that this season ' s team would face the toughest schedule of any W L team he had coached. To compound prob- lems, junior forward Le.x Fitzenhagen was lost halfrvay thro ugh the season. This came five days before the first game against the hated Roanoke Maroons, who finished the season ranked second in the nation in Di i- sion HI. The General ' s record before the Roanoke game was a respectable 8-5. Graves was leading the team in scoring, followed by Fitzenhagen. The Generals, starting Graves, senior guard Chris Baldwin, junior forward Scott Shannon, junior guard Kevin McClatchey and freshman forward Keith Brideweser, stayed with the Maroons throughout the game, spurred on by The Unknown Fans. Graves tied the score at 56 with an unbe- lievable turnaround jumper with 10 seconds left. Roanoke ' s Reggie Thomas re- sponded by cooly dribbling down the court and throwing in a 15-footer for the two- point victory. Graves led W L with 24 points and eight rebounds. The generals went an un- inspired 6-6 the rest of the season, lacking the spark that died when Fitzenhagen left. The season ended in the first round of the ODAC tournament with a 65-60 overtime loss to Lynchburg College. It was the last college basketball game for Baldwin and Graves, who finished his career seventh on the all-time W L scoring list with 1441 points. The brightest spot for the Generals was the freshman class. Five freshmen made the team: Brideweser, forward Rob Spencer, forward Jefferson Harralson, guard Fred Bissinger, and forward John Riordan. They combined for 249 points, including 131 by Brideweser. 50 Remillard ' s Swim Team On Top! Coach Page Remillard ' s 1983-84 Gener- als ' swim team was among his best ever, spending half the season ranked in the top 10 of the NCAA Division III swim stand- ings. W L qualified swimmers for the nation- al meet almost weekly as the season pro- gressed, having representatives in 1 0 events at the national championships held March 16-18. Pacing the Generals during the 83-84 campaign were seniors Gary Meyer, who qualified for nationals in the 50- and 100- yard freestyle, and Tim Rock in the 1650- yard freestyle, sophomore Tim Stanford in the 100- and 200-yard butterfly, and fresh- man Jay ReVille in the 200- and 400- individual medle s and the 200-yard back- stroke. Remillard looks forward to a strong Washington and Lee swim program next year. With Stanford and Re ' ille among those returning, he sees nothing but bright hopes ahead for W L aquatics. Grapplers Have Best Season in 10 Years The W L wrestlers had their best season in ten years, and Coach Gary Franke became the winningest wres- tling coach in the school ' s history as the 1983-84 General grapplers posted a 12-2 dual meet season that featured many individual highlights. Junior tri-captain Jeff Di.xon led the way, becoming the first W L wrestler to go undefeated throughout a regular season, finishing the year at 19-0. Dixon also claimed top individual honors at the W L in itational and the W L college inxitational tournaments. Said Franke, Dixon is an obvious standout for us, but he is just one of man ' indi iduals who contributed to the team effort. In addition to Dixon, the Generals had five others who posted winning rec- ords and were sent to compete in the Eastern Regionals: Senior tri-captains Tim X ' alliere and Carlton Peebles, ju- nior Joe O Neill and sophomores Larrv ' Anker and Brian Lifsted. The seasons highlights included the team ' s best ever finish at the W L In- vitational (fourth), a first-place finish at the W L College Invitational, an aver- age margin of victory in dual meets of 20 points and a No. 10 ranking in the state ' s poll, which included all college divi- sions. Far Left: Junior Guard Dave Wilkinson drives for the basket; Above Left: Senior Guard Chris Baldwin looks for an open man: Left: The Crowd at Warner Center; . bove and Below: Junior Tri-Captain Jeff Dixon on the attack. 1 fe 51 Murdock Looks Toward Baseball Generals Success With six of eight starters and the top three pitchers from last year returning, head baseball coach Jim Murdock believes that this year could be a turning point for Generals ' baseball. We have the talent and the attitude to be competetive this year, he said . We are deep in a number of positions, including pitching, and we should be very strong defensively. We also have some talented hitters throughout the lineup. The top three returning pitchers are ju- nior Bill White, sophomore Kirk Breen and sophomore Peter Detlefs. Murdock also sees three freshman pitchers as contribut- ing: Randy Brown, John Thornton and Bill Schoettelkotte. Murdock says there is an intangible aspect to the Generals. We have de- veloped a great attitude this year. Every- one has been working hard and everyone is primed and ready to contribute. Murdock sees perennial ODAC power Lynchburg as tough again this year. I think we ' re as good as they are, he added. We have to make our own breaks this vear. Net Men Hope For ODAC Title Coming off its fifth ODAC tennis crown in seven years, the W L net men show great promise as they look for number six in 1984. Last year ' s squad captured the confer- ence tournament by a single point over rival Lynchburg, taking two singles flights and sweeping all three doubles titles. The 1984 tennis team features four re- turnees among the top six singles pla ers. Craig Cannon (captain), Andy Haring (who will be traveling abroad during the spring term and thus will miss the latter half of the season), Scott Adams and Jim Irwin return from the top six of last year ' s ODAC cham- pionship team. Charlie Kalocsay and Jim Culnane also are returning from last year s squad, while sophomore John Meloy and freshmen Roby Mize and Randy Johns are new addi- tions to the varsitv ' program. Cannon and Mize, playing at number one and two singles and number one dou- bles, portend good things for 1984 for the Generals. The Intercollegiate Tennis Coaches Association preseason division III rankings have Mize ranked .3.5th, Cannon 21st and the Cannon Mize doubles pair 12th in the countr ' . Depth wise we are stronger than we were last year, ' head coach Gary Franke said. Franke believes that this year s team has the potential to improve last year ' s dual match record of 17-4 and also acquire a bid to the NCAA Division III tournament. Golfers Search for Third Straight Crown Coach Buck Leslie ' s golfers are coming off their second straight undefeated season and third ODAC championship; as they begin 1984 they look for more of the same. In 1983, the Generals dominated the rest of the ODAC field en route to a 31- stroke victory over second-place Roanoke and third-place Randolph-Macon at the ODAC Championship. Tim Webb fought the winds and nailed down the individual title with a two-day total of 150. Leslie, who takes a 93-11 won-lost mark into this season, has standout performers seniors Bruce Blythe and Whit Kelly re- turning as co-captains. Another team lead- er should be sophomore Turner Friedman, who finished 10th in September ' s W L VMI Invitational, which featured 17 Vir- ginia college teams. The Generals finished in fifth place at the Invitational. Senior Steve Jones, junior Bob Sloan and freshman Greg Turley round out the sup- porting cast for Leslie ' s 1984 squad. Far Leit, Jiiiiidr Bill White pitcliine a in incr Emon and Henr , Alxne Far Left. Soplionmre Hugh Fiiikleiteiii slides iiilii second, .Above Left Freslimaii Rob Mize shows his strong forehand. .Above: Senior Ste e Jones putting at the Lexington Countr Club. 53 Track Team Optimistic If the Generals track and field group can run, jump and throw outdoors as well as they did indoors this season. Coach Norris Aldridge will be a happy man. The Generals enter the 1984 outdoor season coming off their first-place per- formance at the ODAC Indoor Cham- pionships in late Februarx ' . W L took the title by five points over second-place L nchburg, getting strong showings from Ron Moody, Mark Pembroke, Paul Champman, and Conrad Boyle in the 3,200-meter relay, Pembroke again in the SOO-meters, John Carder in the pole vault and Billy Rhinehart in the triple jump. Coach Norris Aldridge was named Coach of the Year for his efforts on the season. Captaining the 1984 squad will be se- nior distance man Angus McBryde, se- nior weight man Charlie Alcorn and ju- nior sprinter-hurdler Chris Ives. Aldridge looks for the success to con- tinue, but does so with caution. This was a good starting point for us, but if we ' re to do well outdoors, we must con- tinue to work hard and improve. 54 Below Far Left: Junior Chris hes running the hurdles. Below Left: Junior Mark Pembroke strains with effort; Left: Rich Taz Schoenberg, Junior face-off man, bears off against Navy; Above: Tim Finnerty, Freshman mid-fielder, defends against a Delaware attackman. Daley Begins First Season as Head Lacrosse Coach Dennis Daly, the new director of W L lacrosse, will not be the only thing different about this year ' s team, which seeks to avenge last season ' s 5-7 mark, the first los- ing record in 10 years of play. Daly, who came to W L after Jack Emmer resigned in June to take a similar position at Army, will rely on an aggressive defense to start a fast-paced transition for the offense. This contrasts to Emmer ' s teams, which preferred to attack the goal from settled situations. We ' ve got to be aggressive, Daly said of the defense, which will be led by senior team captain Tim Schurr and sophomore Chris John. We ' re best when the ball is on the ground, so we have to be more con- scious of taking the ball away. It will set the mood for the rest of the team, he added. Along with Schurr and John, the other starters on defense will be senior Roland Simon and junior Marshall Bowden. Soph- omore Pete Braden, who pla ed junior var- sity last vear, and freshman-Bob Berlin are expected to round out the defense. In goal, which was expected to be a posi- tion with three strong stoppers, the situa- tion has changed. John DiDuro, who was to be the starter, was injured in practice. The exact length of his absence was not deter- mined. Senior Phil Aiken, who played the first half of the scrimage in Buena Vista against North Carolina, will start while DiDuro is out. Freshman John Church, who finished against UNC will be the backup. I feel the most crucial position is the goalie and our goaltenders are more than capable of playing that role, Daly said. We ' re looking for everyone to carry the load, Daly said, not just a couple of peo- ple. Junior Jeff Mason (11 goals last season), senior Lee Heimert (9 goals), and junior Mark Knobloch (7 goals) are the top return- ers. Daly expects Mason and sophomore CauUey Deringer, who along with junior Rod Santomassimo had two goals against North Carolina, to work around the crease. Heimert and sophomore Bill Holmes are expected to provide the hard attacks to the goal, while Santomassimo and sophomore Todd Breithaupt will use the dodge to attack. Among midfielders, junior Rick Schoen- berg will take the majority of face-offs. Juniors Dave Johnson, Sandy Brown, and Barry Waterman will handle the rest. Se- nior Kevin Walakovits and three freshmen, Jeff Sindler, Joe Krastel and Tim Finnerty, and three sophomores up from junior varsi- ty Mike McAlaine, Steve McGrath and Scott Keith complete the group that will run the transition game. I get the feeling that there was a nega- tive feeling about lacrosse here the last cou- ple of years, ' Daly said. But everyone has worked hard in getting to learn each other ' s style, and at this point there is a lot of enthusiasm. We will have fim playing and our fans will enjoy watching us play, he said. 55 FOOTB. LL: 6-3 Emon- and Henn ' L 14-21 Centre VV 28- 7 Randolph-Macon W 28-21 lan■•ille W 44- 7 Hampden-Svdney L 8-20 U. of the South L 10-16 Bridgewater W 42- 7 Cathohc W 22-21 Lebanon ' alle ' W 41-15 CROSS COUNTRY: 14-1 Marv Washington W 28- 40 Washington College W 28- 97 Newport News Apprentice W 28- 76 Roanoke L 30- 26 Norfolk St. W 30- 72 Catholic W 27- 37 American W 27- 73 Eastern Mennonite W 27-111 Bridgewater w 17- 66 Newport News Apprentice w 17- 69 West Virginia Tech. w 17- 86 Hampden-Svdnev w 24- 51 Lynchburg w 24- 65 Eastern Mennonite w 24-109 Newport News Apprentice w 24-127 SOCCER: 7-4 Eastern Mennonite L 0-1 Averett W 2-0 Mar - Washington W 2-0 .Mar ' ville W 2-0 Roanoke L 1-3 Messiah W 2-1 VMI W 4-0 Gettysburg L 0-1 Lynchburg L 1-2 Hampden-Sydney W 3-1 Catholic W 3-0 SCORE X-J Xri A 1 i A 1 1 I PWIIIP v HiTT ni WATER POLO: 17-7 Davton W Davton W Davton w Arkansas-Little Rock w Johns Hopkins w Bucknell L Navy L Richmond L Slipperv Rock L MIT W Navy L UNC-Wilmington W George Washington W Dayton W VMI W Lynchburg W George Washington W James Madison W Virginia Commonwealth W Hampden-Sydney W Richmond L UNC-Wilmington W UVA W Richmond L 13- 9 14- 6 9- 7 12- 6 12-11 3-15 5- 6 6-13 3-15 10- 7 3-15 17- 4 16- 6 11- 5 13- 3 12- 5 14- 2 16- 5 15- 4 11- 3 8-10 7- 4 13- 6 4- 9 56 BOARD BASKETBALL: 14-12 Old Westlnin- L 51-55 Eastern L 45-47 UNC-Greensboro W 43-42 Hampden-Svdnev W 63-52 Ithaca L 57-70 Lehman W 68-52 CathoHc W 86-70 Notre Dame W 58-46 Stanislaus St. L 88-79 Dickinson W 64-48 Salisbury St. W 66-60 Enior ' Henr W 9L49 Bridgewater L 64-53 Roanoke L 58-56 L nchburg W 46-45 Eastern Mennonite VV 76-56 Catholic L 70-67 Maryville W 75-56 Emorv Henry W 74-62 Lvnchburg L 67-59 Bridgewater W 84-71 Roanoke L 66-62 Eastern Mennonite L 71-70 Marwille L 72-64 Hampden-Svdney W 55-48 Lynchburg L 65-60 SWIMMING: 7-3 VMI W 67-45 Johns Hopkins L 56-57 Shippensburg State L 55-58 JMU L 52-61 Towson State W 64-47 Lovolla W 91-20 Georgetown W 67-41 Frostburg State W 66-45 William and Marv W 66-47 VCU W 63-49 WRESTLING: 8-2 Lvnchburg W 36-14 Hampden-Sydney W 45-11 Duke L 7-35 Johns Hopkins W 26-20 Lovola W 44- 9 Davidson W 34-13 Pfeiffer W 47-12 Washington Jefferson W 22-21 Hiram L 12-38 Va-State W 44- 6 SPRING SPORTS — Lacrosse, Baseball, Track, Tennis, Golf 57 IMPRESSIONS OF W L — RUPERT LATTURE By G. Bruce Potter K upert Nelson Latture has been with Washington and Lee for 73 years. One finds it difficult to imagine W L without Latture, student, professor, assitant to the president and co-founder of Omicron Delta Kappa. In 19n, though, Latture, from Bristol, Tenn. , was preparing to attend the Univer- sity of Tennessee until one of his high school teachers visited Washington and Lee. The teacher told Latture that Dr. George Denny, president of the university at the time, had encouraged Latture to attend W L. Dr. Denny said he would look after me, Latture recalls. Tuition was $85, and Latture was offered a $.50 scholarship, so he decided to attend Washington and Lee. President Denny left that December to accept the position of president at the Uni- versity of Alabama. So he didn ' t look after me as much as he thought he would, ' Lat- ture said. The loss was President Dennv ' s. With the exception of the years 1916-1920, Lat- ture has been part of Washington and Lee ever since. Latture graduated Phi Beta Kappa from W L with a political science major in 1915 and earned his master ' s degree in 1916. He taught at the Miller School in Albemarle County, Va. , for one year before tlie United States entered World War I in 1917. After beginning officer ' s training camp in Georgia, Latture, who had taken several French courses while at W L, was asked to go immediately to France to help boost the morale of the French army. I was married on my way over to France in Washington, D.C., on a Tuesday night, and I sailed from New York for France on Saturday ' morning, said Latture, who dem- onstrates a remarkable recall of names, places and events. His wife, Roberta Fulton Latture, died in 1968. The Germans were trying to convince the F rench that the Americans would be of no help; Latture s role was to travel among the French troops to try to get them to hold on until the Americans could get there. he said, and to explain that America could not send all its troops at once because of the time required for training. Latture returned to the United States in 1919 and was principal of Central Academy in Stuart, Va., when another unusual set of circumstances resulted in his return to Washington and Lee. John Graham, a W L French professor, was going to Princeton for two years, Lat- ture said. The head of the French depart- ment asked me if I would fill in for two years, and they haven ' t been able to get rid of me yet. After teaching French for four years, Latture switched to the political science department, where he taught until 1962. From 1962 to 1982, he served as an assis- tant in the president ' s office, and he still has a desk in the alumni house, where he goes occasionally to write articles for the alumni magazine and help with alumni cor- respondence. Washington and Lee has, of course, ex- perienced many changes since Latture ' s student days. Included among these are a rise in the number of students from 636 during his freshman year to the 1,300 today and a consequent rise in the academic reputation of the university. Students today are better prepared than they were in those days, Latture said. A good many students did not stay until graduation because they could not afford it. Because of the necessity of attracting stu- dents, admissions requirements were not difficult. We didn ' t turn away many stu- dents, Latture recalled. In those days, students wore conven- tional dress and were regarded as one of the best-dressed student bodies in the country, Latture said. The speaking tradition was strictly adhered to, and a freshman who didn ' t speak to another student on campus was dealt with, Latture said. Athletics were subsidized and one of the biggest events was a race between the two boat crews on campus. Because students didn ' t have cars, social events also were different. Trains were chartered for students to travel to away athletic contests, Latture said, and Fancy Dress was a costumed ball. Classes were held on Saturdays and the major events on Saturday evenings were the debates and orations of the two campus hterary societies. It was in those surroundings of the pre- World War I Washington and Lee that Lat- ture and 11 other students founded Omi- cron Delta Kappa in 1913. Latture and his roomate, both of whom were student instructors (upperclassmen who taught introductory classes), de- veloped the idea one night as they were talking. Originally, the two were going to limit membership to student instructors but decided that wouldn ' t be popular and extended membership to include student leaders. Chapters of Omicron Delta Kappa, de- scribed as a national leadership fraternity, today exist on 180 college campuses. When the organization was founded, Latture said, he had no idea it would grow like it did. ' It never occurred to us, he added. It was designed for the Washington and Lee campus. Latture designed the ODK ke on the back of a postcard during a philosophy class. He used coins to draw the circles, and the design was accepted at the groups next meeting. To commemorate W L ' s bicentennial in 1949, Latture designed the ODK circle of benches next to the Commerce School. Latture is the only living member of the 12 ODK founders. Latture remembers some of W L ' s well-known alumni, including Supreme Court Justice Lewis Powell, whose father came with him to Lexington to be sure that Lewis didn ' t get any contaminated ideas about business or religion, Latture said. When Latture served as director of admissions, a student who had been accepted to the university received the usual flood of mail from fraternities. The student ' s father wrote Latture to ask, Does a boy have to be a member of a fraternity to come to the school? Latture, who turned 92 on Januarv 18, lives today in a small bungalow about eight blocks away from campus. He frequently dressed in a three-piece suit with a W L tie. His house is sparsely furnished; books, magazines and newspapers seem to be the main elements, although Latture said he can ' t read as much as he used to because his vision is not as good as it once was. Pictures of his five grand children and two great-grandchildren adorn the mantel above his fireplace. While Latture is proud of his descen- dents, he perhaps is even more proud of his school — Washington and Lee. I think this is a wonderful school, he said. I ' ve always had plenty to do here. I ' ve done a lot of different things and have enjoyed doing them. Latture also praised the honor systen. I think the honor system is one thing W L men can be most proud of, he said, ' If you can ' t trust a man to tell the truth, we can get along without him. Asked how he would advise students to ... a freshman who didn ' t speak to another student was dealt with walks to the alumni house and regularK cuts his own grass. That exercise, along v ith not smoking, drinking liquor, overeating or associating with bad women, has contributed to Lat- ture s relatively good health, he said. Although he enjoys painting and garden- ing, most of my hobbies have been connected with the school, said Latture, succeed at school and in lite, Latture re- plied, My general recommendation is don t go to bed at night without finishing up the work for the next day. Prepare our work on time. Do it the best you can and do it on time. IMPRESSIONS OF Wi L — CAROLYN BROGAN By Mark H . Eastham W, It ' ll I was in si th or seventh grade, W ' L students rented the field next to our house for a Fanc ' Dress part ' . It was a big party with all of the students wearing their costumes. All this had a real impact on me. This is the earliest remembrance of Washington and Lee University for Carol) n Brogan, director of research and office manager for the campus develop- ment office. Little did Carolyn know at that tender age that the alma mater of those partying students would become her place of employment from high school until the present. CaroKn, a lifelong native of Rockbridge County, came to work at W L in March of 1967, after studying in Stauntonat the Eliz- abeth Brant .School, where she studied per- sonally with Mr. and Mrs. Brant. When Carolyn came to W L to work, the facnlt and facilities were much smaller. The enrollment is up a little, but not much. The Law School was on the main campus when I first came, said Carolyn. I came at a growing stage. The develop- ment office was being reformed, due to a self-study that had just been completed. Things were going from old and out-of-date to new and improved, said CaroKn with a grin. Since she has been here, the new li- brar ' , the Warner Center and Lewis Hall have been built as well as renovations to the Commerce school and the houses on the front campus. Carolyn attributes these improvements to former President Robert E.R. Huntley, who she affectionately refers to as the bricks and mortar man. She also contributes this growth to the development program, which was started in 1971 and successfully completed in 198L The program raised money for endow- ments and scholarships as well as money for the material or visible part, said Carolyn. Relating Huntley to the development program, Carolyn said, He did a fantastic job with the development campaign as well as running a very smooth university. Yet, there are so many people behind the scenes that really deserve lots of credit also. Great pride radiates from Carolyn as she reflects on how she views W L today. The university is rich in history and tradition. It is unique because of its size, beauty and the relationship between stu- dents and faculty members. The university is lucky to have a faculty, staff, administra- tion and board of trustees who want prog- ress and want to maintain a fine level of academic excellence through grants and a constant upgrading of the curriculum. CaroKn also feels that there is something special about the university that cannot be put into words. It ' s just something that is felt. It seems like at every level of the school there are people doing something to make it a better place. This includes everyone from the highest officials to the custodial staff. It ' s more than a place to work. Carolyn also cites the benefits of VV L and ' MI to the community. Without the schools, what would the community be? The educational and sports activities at W L and VMI are end- less. Also, without W L. the historical aspects of the community would probably never have been developed. Without the schools, industry may have been allowed to come in, providing more jobs, but as it is, the schools provide many jobs for local peo- ple. Carolyn is realistic in her perceptions of the university, stating there are some prob- lems with the W L community. Problems at W L are not easy to single out. I think the gap beKveen the law school and the undergraduate school is a big prob- lem, stated Carolyn. Carolyn also cites a lack of together- ness on the undergraduate campus as a part of the problem. Although the community life at W L is not strong, I feel it is stronger than it was five years ago. Living off campus and out in the country now is more have to, than want to. Housing is limited. More university housing is definitely needed, said Carolyn. Addressing fraternity issues, CaroKn said, I feel frats could do more. When there used to be house mothers, there was more of a home type environment. Carolyn pointed out that when she was a teenager, the fi-aternities used to decorate the fronts of their houses for homecoming. We would drive around and look at them. Problems at W L are not easy to single out picking out the best decorating job. Carolyn feels that civic involvement would help relations between students and townpeople. I think it would really change feelings. With civic activities ou re helping the area, you ' re not tearing it down. The prob- lem is that what is bad tends to travel, stated Carolyn, referring to W L commu- nity relations with the town. The majorits ' of students are interested andean be Mr. Average Guy. You just have to break down barriers and stereotypes. By working here, I ' ve had to break down bar- riers. When asked about the all-male aspect of W L, CaroKn said, I don t feel that the all-male aspect is as prominent as it was before the law school went co-ed and be- fore the exchange students came here from the surrounding girls schools. When I was a teenager, when you thought of W L, you thought of all the men there. They were always nice looking because of the dress code. There were wild weekends and all of the guys had their dates. The weekends were the only time girls were around. Second to men, Carolyn stated that edu- cation always came into one ' s mind when one thought of W L during her teenage years. Since my mom was a teacher, I think we had a different feeling about the university. We put value on the educational standards of the university. W L was very hard to get into. The people that were turned out were highly educated. I don ' t feel the edu- cational standards have been lowered. E.xcept for a brief period during the 70 ' s, CaroKn feels the universitN ' s student bod has sta ed er) stable and much the same. In the early 70 s the students went through the peace movement. Long hair was rampant. There was actually only a small group like this at the time, but they were very visual and very vocal. There were signs, demonstrations, and sit-ins. There was something very scary about the whole thing. This was a very radical action in what was normally a very peaceful envi- ronment. I don ' t see where it served an ' purpose at W L, said Carolyn. She stated that students now seem very reserved in comparison. With all of her knowledge of W L ' s past, Carolyn predicts a bright future lor the 234-year old institution. I think W L will continue to improve its facilities. Educational goals will become higher. There will be an upward move- ment. said Carolyn. I can ' t see W L standing still. E er thing changes, even W L IMPRESSIONS OF Wi L — L.O. SUTTON By Richard C . Swagler, Jr. W, lien he speaks to oii, Lexington s Chief ot Fohce L.O. Sutton leans forvvaixl over his desk and sa s exactly what is on his mind. His speech is slow and deliberate; his eyes look at you unflinchingly. His bearing commands you to listen. Some people find my straightforward- ness even a little bit abrasive at times. I don ' t mean it to be that way, but I ' m a tell-it-like-it-is man. If the shoe fits, wear it. When ou re right, you ' re right — but when you ' re wrong, you wear it. ' Sutton lives his life by the book — his own book. ' I never tr ' to second guess too much what the future is. I generalK- accept each day for what it is and try to make the best of it. If today gives me some insight into to- morrow, and it ' s to m ' advantage, then I ' ll certainly use it. Sutton has a degree in criminolog - from a di ision of St. Leo College in Florida and has attended many training schools, in- cluding the Federal Bureau of Narcotics Training School and schools on bombs, terrorism and hostage negotiations. He served in the Army for four years as an investigator in security and intelligence. From 1954 to 1965 he worked as a police officer in Norfolk and from 1965 to his com- ing to Lexington in May 1983 he was a police officer in Virginia Beach. I ' ve worked and specialized in just about every field of police investigation. ' Sutton was hired following the resigna- tion of the former chief, James Kirb ' . The rapport between the students and the department has been much better than in the past. ' My first impression was that there might be a problem, but I generally take a wait-and-see attitude. I prepare for the worst and then when everything doesn ' t happen, lui ahead of the game — no mat- ter what its pertaining to. I try to evaluate a situation from the two extremes: the very best that can happen and the worst that can happen. I prepare for the worst and hope for the best. Anything in between is accept- able or I can live with it. Sutton s philosoph ' seems as crisp as the creases running down the sleeves of the white shirt of his uniform. Im more comfortable in the areas of black and white, but I can function in gray. Sutton says that communication and cooperation have prevented problems be- tween the police and the students. ... I ' m a tell-it-like-it- is man. If the shoe fits, wear it. ' I would like to think that that can be attributed to the communication that I feel I ve had from the fraternities and the Inter- fraternity Council. Upon his arrival in May, Sutton ' s first impressions were of the physical beauty of the campus, hut as he has h ed among tlie townspeople and the students, he lias formed impressions that go far below the surface. I m not sure that those close to (W L) appreciate it. I have a problem separating the University from the townspeople be- cause to me they re all citizens — they re all my responsibility. There is always that 10 percent of the townspeople and students who would throw rocks at each other. The townspeople say that the students come here and clutter up their streets with debris and this, that, and the other. The students on the other hand say the people here just want to rip them off. It is just 10 percent that have that attitude. I realK don t perceive it as a problem. I think that possibK it may er - well be that the students are beginning to accept the fact that the ' are part of the communi- ty- They have a responsibilit)- to each other and they rely on one another to a certain degree. I really don ' t view them as separate entities at all. In the past ear he has also realized some of the weaknesses of the students. I think some of the weaknesses are something you can ' t do anything about and one of them is their outh. . nd I certainK don t mean it disrespectfully. It s a prob- lem of youth that the ' re — to a degree — immature. That s not to say that Washing- ton and Lee students are immature for their age and time frame. They re more acti e, more impressionable. They will quickly pin on a badge or a cause and charge ofiF somewhere without ma be gi - ing it the sober reflections an older, more experienced indi idual might. But that s a problem of all outh and certainh not unique to Washington and Lee. Compared to the sailors I was accus- tomed to handling, (the W L students) are a bunch of teddy bears, really. ' Before he became accjuainted with W L students, he once said that if he could tiandle drunken sailors in ' irginia Beach, :hen he could handle durnken W6cL stu- dents. The difference between dnmkeii sailors and W :L students is as different as night and day. I haven t seen any W L students who got nearly as drunk as most of the sailors that I handled. The sailors ' onl ' con- cern was how much the ' could drink and who they could fight with. That certainK hasn t been the connotation I e seen from the Washington and Lee students. Compared to the sailors I was accus- tomed to handling, (the W L students) are a bunch of tedd ' bears, realh ' . Not having to deal with drunken sailors is just one of the changes from his job in I think that the stu- dents are beginning to accept the fact that they are part of the community. Virginia Beach, though. Even though I ha e responsibilit) now for the entire department, there s far less pressure than I had in ' irginia Beach by being responsible for one squad, although that one squad was as big or larger than the entire department here in Lexington. I ha e not found the pressures here that I had anticipated. His philosoph) ' of straightforwardness is inescapable. It is a fact, the buck stops here and I am responsible — good, bad or indif- ferent. I make no excuses for what I do, I don ' t try to hide or cover any- thing. Although Sutton hasn ' t had the prob- lems with students that he thought he might have, the possibility for con- flict is still present. As more students are arrested, the W L Honor System, which protects the confidentialit ' of stu- dents expelled for lying, cheating and steal- ing, ma ' clash with the administration of justice. If for example, the Executi e Commit- tee wants to cover up a crime and the have evidence or information or what ha e ' ou ... I have wa s of getting it, if it ' s proper. ' If there s any problem, it well be in the Honor System or in the administrators of the Honor System — their inabilit to draw a line as to what is administrative Honor System responsibilit) and what is responsi- bility as a citizen towards criminal activit ' . Separating the two, I understand, can be ver ' trv ' ing. I am all for honor and the system and all of that. But I think that sometimes a system ... a system may be very good but the administrators of the system may stray or overextend them- selves in that administration and step out- side of the realms of authority and responsi- bility that the - ha e to the system. We must remember that there is a dif- ference betw-een an administrative s stem and the law. Therein may lie some difler- ences of opinion. I don t see a real problem there because the truth of the matter is if — as an example — the Executive Committee goes outside their area of responsibilit) and sets themselves up as a judicial s) stem and the) should do something which is improp- er according to the criminal judicial s)s- tem, then I have ways of getting it. Howev- er, I will not abuse that right. I m not going to ask for an)thing Ini not entitled to. There s a lot more to be gained from cooperation than confrontation. As long as two people can talk and dis- cuss a prolilem, it beats the hell out of fighting about it. IMPRESSIONS OF WirL — JOHN D. WILSON by Peter Cronin An his first year as president of Washing- ton Lee University, John D. Wilson has made as man) ' waves as the average hurri- cane. Misunderstood and openly criticized by many, Wilson has taken it all in stride and speaks openly of his lo e for Washington Lee. When I think about Washington Lee, the first thing that I think about is courtesy and civility- of the students and the faculty, Wilson said. Most people treat most other people with courtesy. That ' s ver ' important to me. I think that it is a distinguishing mark of Washington Lee. There are many other distinguishing characteristics which Wilson cites as im- portant. Wilson speaks with reverence and distinction when he says, I think of the care and attention to teaching when I think of Washington Lee. I ' m not so naive to suppose that there aren ' t breaks in that, but again I think that most people most of the time, on both sides of the podium, take what we are doing here seriouslv. There are high e.xpectations from the faculty and a reasonable response from most of the students. I see as a consequ- ence of that a pretty close student-faculty relationship, informally as well as for- mally. Many have criticized Wilson for wanting to change the face of Washington Lee, to change the character, do away with the traditions. No one speaks of tradition in as high terms as John Wilson. ' When I think of Washington Lee I think of historv ' , architecture and style. The venerable char- acter of the institution is always there for us to take strength from and call upon. It ' s reflected in the landmark portion of our front campus. I don ' t think you can be here for very long without knowing you ' re part of a long procession of people who ' ve been here at some moment. I think often of alumni who are achiev- ing men and women in our society. I am vastly impressed by the quality of people we ve managed to touch, what they ' re dniuu, in the world, and how much the ' care about this place. One does not speak with John Wilson for long without realizing that he epitomizes the definitions of scholar and educator. He articulates ideas on many things besides Washington Lee. Not least among these is the role of higher education in this coun- try and the way that Washington Lee fits into that scheme. We are all circumscribed by the condi tions of our birth. We share a common set | of cultural presuppositions that comes out I of our Western experience. It is part of the genius of the human kind to want to break out of the womb we are born into, to enlarge our sense of human kind by invading other times, places and cultures. This is ultimately a quest for self- understanding and is absolutely essential to any achievement of fi-eedom and inde- pendence. We are prisoners in the real sense of the word if we go through life with clouded lenses, myopic, and don ' t reach out to understand others better. 64 Breaking individuals out of their stereotypical views of themselves, leading to understanding of our human nature — that is what the university at its best is trying to do. Wilson states unequivocally that this is the root of his commitment to the liberal arts and sciences, but freely admits, It ' s a grand, grand mission, the whole idea of generational progress. When I think about Washington Lee, the first thing I think about is courtesy and civility ... To do that as well and with as high a sense of purpose is the ultimate goal. One might assume that Wilson ' s grand words and his sense of meaning cloud his reality, that he does not recognize prob- lems or downfalls. He is quick to bridle his philosophical renderings by saying, I think we have a fair measure of success with this, but I would never want to say that I thought that we had the right to be compla- cent. Wilson admits that his expectations are high, but not too high, he feels for the Washington Lee student or alumnus to live up to. I hope no one leaves here content to have just one book in his house, the tele- phone book. How many households in this country are like that? I hope that would never be true of a Washington Lee al um- nus. I hope that he continues to read and to understand the world events around him. I hope too that he occasionally rereads Hamlet. It isn ' t the same play at 40 and at 50; it keeps deepening for you as your e.vpe- rience deepens. That is what the liberal experience is and what we are striving for here. Wilson is no stranger to the halls of high- er education. He was president of Wells College and provost of Virginia Tech before coming to Washington Lee in January of 198.3. Wilson sees no basic differences in the principles and goals that are being attempted at Washington Lee and the other institutions at which he served. ' The goals are basically the same here. I don ' t ha e an doubt about what Washuig- ton Lee is. It is the quintessential univer- sity college that has as its students a very high percentage of those who want to get a professional degree and enter the business or professional world. There is a very high percentage of the freshmen who come here who say ' the bachelor ' s degree is not my final degree intention. Wilson, objectively, sees problems with Washington Lee on a variety of fronts. Wilson sees problems with what he terms the co-curricular program. I wish there were more to say about it. I ' d like to see more students involved. This, Wilson feels, is the mere tip of an iceberg with regard to the nature and char- acter of Washington Lee ' s residential community. An ideal residential community, which this one ought to be, is constantly surpris- ing its young people with new experiences, new ideas, new stimuli. What does this mean? It means that there are places where students congregate to discuss things that matter. Where do you sit around and read The New York Times and say This is full of baloney! ' ? Where is the place that The Manchester Guardian can be picked up or where you can play darts — have a junior common room? I don ' t think that we have enough of that. We can improve on this. I think that freshmen are di- vided up too soon. Certainly, there are some gains and some losses. I think that the sense of the university tends to be part of the losses. ' The unique social pattern of Washing- ton Lee is a point of concern for Wil- son. I don ' t know of another quite like it, he says. I don t know of another place where the fraterni- ties have such a monopoly on the so- cial life. The young women come here so avidly during the first two years of their collegiate life to be a part of it. They don ' t stay af- ter that though, I don t think. Finally, what does Wilson think the Washington Lee student thinks of him? He laughs heartily as he states that he doesn ' t feel that the question is fair at all. It is, certainly, something that concerns him, yet he does not seem to worry over it. I think the fraternity fellas distrust me. I think they really believe that I ' d like to see them fail. That is simply not true. I do want to see them better, but I think they believe that I wake up every morning saying — When and how can we get rid of Wednesday night parties? he says, wring- ing his hands in mock vengeance. He continues, I think that many stu- dents worry about what they see as my advocacy of the coeducation issue. I think that most people who know me realize that the only objective that I have is to make this a better university. Wilson recalls a quote from Abraham Lincoln that he feels fits the whole situation well. He admits that he is paraphrasing it broadly: I will do the best that I can do every day with all my energy and such talent as I have. If I do that, what people say about me won ' t matter very much. If I ' m wrong, 10 angels singing to the contrary won ' t change that; I ' ll still come out wrong. If I ' m right, I won ' t need any apologies. ... I would J«lf f ' never want to say that I thought that we had the right to be complacent. L . : - rr S ... ' Z ... - 65 IMPRESSIONS OF W L — CHARLES CAUDILL by B . Scott Tilley kjtill youthful-looking and vibrant, Chap- lain Charles Caudill looks at home in his office at the Virginia Military Institute. But the sparkle in his eyes defies the stoic tradi- tion one oft:en associates with the militaris- tic mindset of VMI, and his attitude bridges the chasm that many still picture existing between W L and VMI. I love Washington and Lee to death . . . I am ver ' proud to be associated with a school that is located next to W L. Those words are even more interesting in the light that only five years ago, his familiarity with W L extended only as far as the red door on the Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity house. I was a Sigma Phi Epsilon at High Point College and Duke University in North Carolina, and I knew about the red door on the fraternity house here in Lexington. I had also heard of W L from the same aca- demic standpoint as Davidson when I was looking for schools. Similarly, I had heard of ' MI mentioned with the Citadel, hut I knew little more of either of the schools when I came to Lexington. But how times have changed. I ' ve got some tar on my heels still, but I have come to feel as an adopted son, be- cause of my relationship with W L and VMI. I ' m proud now to be a Virginian, and what makes me the proudest is a town like this where two brother schools can exist side by side. I ' m as proud of W L as I am of VMI Chaplain Caudill, likewise, has come to be loved by W L students as much as by VMI students, which doesn ' t surprise him since he sees the two schools as very simi- lar: Cadets are merely minks in military garb. The only difference between the two student bodies that I ' ve seen from the stu- dents I ' ve dealt with are the dress codes and haircuts. Predominately, both schools are made up of young men with goals. I can look at it as an outsider from North Carolina. [listoricalJN , these two schools have provided the strongest leadership in the state. In civilian life, he continued, W L and VMI graduates have always worked side by side, and have always provided the state ' s leadership. Boy, wouldn t it be powerful to get the two student bodies together here, while they are still on the collegiate level. It could only add to the Virginia powerbase. Caudill ' s pride in the two schools is mag- nified in his pride in the state. I have no hesitation to say that Virginia is the best stat e in the country. It has al- ways been the leader in culture, history, and academics. If only we would realize that the students between these two schools are the future of this state. The major difference between Washing- ton and Lee and VMI is the military pres- ence, but even Chaplain Caudill sees this as reconcilable. We both have the same desires to be citizens, said the (Chaplain. .Although they don ' t volunteer for service like the cadets here, I have never known a VV L student who wouldn ' t say, ' If the nation needs me, I ' ll do it. ' The influence of the two schools in ' Vir- ginia has become apparent in all aspects of Chaplain Caudill ' s duties and life. I recently went to a wedding in Virgin- ia, he continued. The people there were the core leadership of Virginia, including former Gov. John Dalton. And what amazed me was the number of W L and It is time to carry a piece of pie over and say, Velcome, neighbor. ' VMI alumni there. What we produce for this state is outstanding. And now the schools are attracting students from within families — brothers going to W L and VMI. The only regret of Caudill ' s is the fact that the two schools have not grown closer. He still perceives W L and VMI as stran- gers it some ways. ' Tt is a shame to have next-door neigh- bors that we don ' t even know. Let ' s get back to that Southern hospitality: it is time to carry a piece of pie over and say ' Wel- come, neighbor. ' The two schools are coming closer though, feels Caudill, beginning with a spiritual base. I have never refused an opportunity to speak at W L, and I ' ve never been greeted by anything less than warmth and acceptance. My uniform has never inter- fered with my relationships at W L. ' Likewise, those from W L who come to worship service at VMI feel welcomed — it is almost a church home away from home. We recently had a religious encounter weekend here. Before, the students of W L and VMI had rejoiced together — joyful tears. It was a real break-through. My only regret is the few opportunities for interfacing between the two schools. I hope the religious communities will be the bridge between the two schools. Maybe that bridge will open up doors in classes and competition, as well. Let ' s get to know each other academically, athleti- cally, and spiritualK- — though not neces- 1 love Washington and Lee to death. sarily in that order, he said with a chuckle. The words of Chaplain Caudill seem to come from one associated with Washington and Lee all of his life, not from one who first saw tlie Colonnade onK fi e eiirs ago. . ik those same feelings have grown strong within him. When I sa ' I ' m from Lexington, I men- tion both schools with the same pride, said Caudill. IMPRESSIONS OF Wi l - NORMAN LORD by C . Michael Stachura Xf anybody over at Warner Center would know Washington and Lee, it would have to be Norm Lord. He ' s only been here longer than half the coaching staff has been alive! Norman F. Lord has been teaching physical education at W L for 38 years. Born June 26, 1919, in Lincoln, Delaware, Lord was raised strongly in a family that had si. girls. After high school in Lincoln, it was off to college, attending the University of Delaware. He graduated in 1942 with a bachelor ' s degree in education, and then served in World War II. Lord was a mem- ber of the 11th Airborne Division, and the military ' discipline and gung-ho attitude al- ways have been part of the man. Lord ' s militan,- experience also included service in the Korean War, at the Far East Command Headquarters, as well as a 26-year affliation with the Army Reserve. He is presently a retired colonel with the Reserve. After his discharge from the Army, Lord was offered a job teaching physical educa- tion and coaching track at W L. There was another offer from his alma mater, asking him to be the end coach for the football team . They (his University of Delaware associates) would always know me as Norm ' , as one of the bo ' s, so I figured it ' d be better to make a break and come to a new place, ' says Lord, a man who is dedi- cated to life ' s challenges. The Lord began teaching at W L in September of 1946. In those days, we had fewer physical education instructors. The classes were very large, he says with a characteristic chuckle, seventy-five in a class. We had to improvise because we had very few facilities. We made everybody do the same thing. There wasn ' t any elective program, sa s Lord. He thinks fondly of those early days, when he was given full reign over the one-dimensional physical education pro- gram, emphasizing hard work for a sound bod . He says, We just gave them a lot of grunt and groan, and emphasized fitness. Of course, then we brought in the fun and friendship, and ever since then I ' ve had as my objectives Fun, Fitness, and Friendship. In those first years. Lord worked as Di- rector of Intra-Mural Sports and developed intramural program that, he feels, was second to none. But it was physical edu- cation — the emphasis is on the first word — that Lord savored and advocated then as he does now. Everybody had to wrestle. Everybody had to climb the rope. Every- body had to stand on his head, he says, his eyes showing a look of excitement. Lord grew with the university. Gaining his master s degree in physical education from Springfield College in 1955. In 1956, he took on the duties as business manager for the athletic department. In addition, he ' s coached four teams at W L over the years: track and field, cross country, soc- cer, and freshman wrestling. Officiating, however, has been the greatest extracur- ricular activitv for Lord. 68 He has served as an acti e official for o er 40 years, and active is an under- statement. Lord has judged every sport, with the exception of ice hockey and polo, on the local, regional and national le els. He also has received awards for his oflkiat- ing on all levels. Sports have been prominent in every- thing he does. NFL , a favorite nickname, has been a contributing author to two books on fitness and sports. Also, he has served an administrative role in many organizations, ranging from the Department of the Army to the National Intercollegiate Soccer Off i- cials ' Association. In 38 years with the university. Lord has seen many changes. One he finds some- what disagreeable, although working with- in it, is the ph ' sical education depart- ment ' s elective system. There are advantages to requirements versus electives, and it relates to needs and interests. A guy can need something, but not be interested in it. He needs to get stronger biceps, or he needs, as that sly smile conies through again, to have more strength. He needs combati ' e experience, like wrestling. Now, of course, they don ' t get that. They take what they ' re interested in, and that doesn ' t necessarily mean they ' re getting what they need. I ' m from the Old School. I believe that people should be recjuired to meet a stan- dard in different things. he sa s. I ' m from the Old School. I believe that I people should be re- ' quired to meet a stan- dard in different things. Lord works within the present system to bring about his Old School philosophy, a philosoph ' that wins over anyone who has gone the distance for one of his classes. A great part of his thinking is concerned with that ideal of Fun, Fitness and Friendship. ' That objective is present in every class NFL teaches. The three F ' s are instilled in his students from Day One, I ' ve alwa ' s known, since I was a kid, that unless it ' s fun you ' re not going to do it. I make m - classes fun, but I also make them tough, he assures those listening. Examples of the philosoph - are his coed requirement where the student teaches his date the acti ity that he is being taught, fitness self-tests done with a fellow student, and the running requirement, the most preminent feature of anv FL course. ■1 make all ni gu s run because I know it ' s good for them, says Lord, who himself continues to run, do situps, and do pushups. I tell them that what the ' are like while the ' re here in school is what the ' re going to be like when they ' re age 60. If they want to be a slob now, they ' re going to be a slob at age 60. If they want to meet certain standards and respond to dis- cipline, that ' s what life is a series of achievements. His classes are not always enjoyable, but the Lord quickly passes that off, saying, You don ' t enjo ' everything ou do in life, but there are some things you have to do. I don ' t like to take the garbage out every Thursday night, but I do it. Lord has made his home here in Lexing- ton, raising a boy and two girls with his wife, Ethel. It ' s a surrounding he is quite comfortable with. I love the water here. I love the people. I love the school. He ' s had offi?rs to leave almost even ' vear he ' s been at ' L. I love House Mountain. I love Goshen Pass. I just love the community, he says. Lord misses some of the tradition at W L that has gone by the wayside. When I first came here, everybody ' wore a coat and tie. I really liked that. Another tradi- tion that I really hat ed to see go was the speaking tradition. Now, you speak and they 11 speak back, but there ' s no juice there. They seem to have larger problems. Life is much more complicated now, says Lord. Coaching, everyone knows you ' re nev- er going to die, but are you going to retire? For the 65 year-old man that is probably as healthy as someone half his age, the state- ment, made by one of his students, seems funn ' . Lord laughs, ' T hope not. I hope I live on in spirit. I have no plans for retirement. I might slow down a little bit, but I think I ' d like to go with m ' boots on. I ' ve always known, since I was a kid, that unless it ' s fun you ' re not going to do it. I make my classes fun ... IMPRESSIONS OF Wi L — WENDELL BAKER, JR. by JOHN M. CLEGHORN H. .e is among the last of a dying breed; the traditional American barber who makes his trade with a comb, scissors and talc. In an age when men prefer the blown dry, layered look, barbers like Wendell Baker, Jr. are a threatened species. But Wendell is not worried about the future of his business because there is Washington and Lee, a source of about 60 percent of his business clientele. And to many W L students, a visit to Wendell is a rite of passage. In a town the size of Lexington, tliere are limits on the number of merchants in any trade. Over the years Wendell has capital- ized on the small number of barbers and hairstylists to attract W L students. So since he began his business 25 years ago, Wendell has been the unofficial barber of Washington and Lee. .Although Wendell, 46, follows avidly the happenings at W L and VMI and his busi- ness thrives because of the two schools, his own college experience did not last long. I went to the University of Toledo for two years, Wendell said, but I got tired, you know. I had an uncle that was a barber in Philadelphia. So I said, ' Hey, I want to make something out of myself ' So I went to go to barber school in Washington, D.C., and really enjoyed it. After moving back to Lexington, where he was born and has lived all his live, Wen- dell worked for several years in a barber shop in the then Robert E. Lee Hotel (now Lee Manor). But after building a clientele for himself there, he decided to go into business for himself. When I was working (at R. E. Lee) I thought. The heck with that, I could be doing the same thing somewhere else. So why not do it for myself I made him a lot of money up there. In 1969, Wendell moved to his present location on South Jefferson Street, a one- chair shop with an old Coke machine and a few chairs for his extra customers, and launched his dream of owning his own busi- ness. Like any independent businessman. Wendell derives genuine satisfaction out of his work. You meet a lot of nice people, Wendell said. It really makes the day go by fast. Some people will come in and talk about sports and somebody else will come in and talk about politics or cars or, you know, whatever. His customers seem to come to Wendell just as much for the chat as the haircuts. I like to talk to him and I like his hair- cuts, said Seth Goodhart, 10, who only remembers that he has been coming to Wendell ' s for a long time. He just does a good job, said Kevin Sanders, 15, who has been a faithful cus- tomer for eight years. Although he faces competition from two hairstyling shops and a total of 10 other barbers, Wendell is more than satisfied with his share of the market. He is nothing short of humble when he describes his business. I hold my own, he says. I do all right. Despite the competition, Wendell says tlie hair ciittinti merchants liave a rt-laxed relationship. Oli eah, all the Iiarhers in town are good friends. I ' ve seen a lot of students go to hair stv ' hsts, but tliat hasn t hurt me at all. But see where (some students) would pay $6 to have their hair st led, they can come to me for $4.50 and get the same thing. Wendell attributes part of his success to the fact that his clients are all regulars. I ' ve got a lot of people who are bench- warmers. But Wendell doesn t take for granted the role of Wasiiington and Lee in his business of the community. I think W L plays a very important role in Le. ington. It does in my life, and it supports a lot of families here. There isn t an industry in this town and a lot of people depend on W L and ' MI. If those schools were to close then everyone would be hurting. As for his W L clientele, Wendell is equally approving. I find W L students ver - courteous, delightful, you know, he said. But by the time I get to know them, they ' re read ' to graduate. In a year which has highlightened the tradition of W L men, their dress, their civilit ' , their character, man ' W L stu- dents have been reminded of how it used to be, ' and Wendell has seen those changes through a barber s eyes. I ' ve seen a lot of changes at W L. When I started cutting hair, all the fresh- men used to wear beanies, you know. And all the students used to dress up. Digni- fiedly dressed. That was in the sixties. ' And then in the seventies it went to pot. Those guys all looked like construction I think W L plays a very important role in Lexington. It does in my life, and it supports a lot of families here. workers, torn jeans, hair all down to their shoulders. The - realK looked rough. When they came here and asked for a ■hair cut, they would ask me to just take a tiny bit off and so I would cut a tiny bit off. ! They were afraid to go to other barber shops because the would cut too much off. The had their hair down to their shoul- ders and half-wa down their back. It was terrible. Back in the fifties they seemed more ma- ture. The carried themselves as adults, more business-like. They were all business then. A lot of students got shampoos, sha ' es, facial massages. I ' ve seen a lot of changes at W L ... all the freshmen used to wear beanies, you know. And all the stu- dents used to dress up. Dignifiedly dressed. And then, like now, the took a lot of pride in themselves. Although times have changed, like many W L students, Wendell casts a strong NO vote when it comes to co- education. No coed, he says, It would hurt my business too much. Nope, no coed, as far as busi- ness is concerned. Wendell takes pride in being W L President John Wilson ' s bar- ber and while most W L men cannot help associating him with the coeducation mo e- ment, Wendell thinks of President Wilson much dif- ferentK ' . He likes to talk about sports, about fishing. I like him. He ' s just a regular guy. I didn ' t e en know who he was at first. I had heard he was just another professor. I ve been his barber since he has been here. He came in here just last week. In addition to coeducation, Wendell has kept abreast of the multitude of other deci- sions that came before the University this year. He prides liis knowledtje on reading the school newspaper, the Ring-turn Phi, and keeping up by just talking to students. A lot of times, I ' ll know what ' s gonna be in the Ring-turn Phi before it gets out just by talking to students. So after 25 ears of keeping W L mcii ' s hair high and tight, does Wendell see re- tirement any time soon? No, he chuckles at the idea, Heck no. No way. I ' ll cut hair until Gabriel blows. I just like cutting hair. All right, Wendell says as he finishes L5-year-old Kevin Sanders hair with an adept swipe across the neck with a talc- covered brush. That ' ll do it. Thank you, now. Next, he calls as 10-year-old Seth Goodhart climbs in the chair. How much do ou want off? ' Oh, just a little, is the classic repK . IMPRESSIONS OF Wi L — MISS EMILY PENICK by B . Scott Tilley n ' ay in and day out, Miss Emily Penick can be found working as the hostess in Lee Chapel. She gets to spend much of the day reading. But when a tourist en ters, her vast love and knowledge of the Chapel brings its, and even General Lee ' s, spirit to life. At 82, over seven decades of Miss Emily ' s life have been centered around Washing- ton and Lee. Of course, it is all part of my life. I was here, until 1931, ever ' day for many, many years. After my husband died, I returned to Lexington, remembered Miss Emily, quickly adding the word home as a synonym for Lexington. I ' ve put people through the chapel since I was eight or ten years old, back when there was no heat, light, or tourists in the chapel. My father, Paul M. Penick, who was treasurer here and whose portrait hangs in Washington Hall, would call when there were visitors who wanted to see the chapel. I would ride my pony down here, tie it to a tree outside, go up to Washington Hall to get the keys, and then show the visitor the chapel. I can ' t remember when I haven ' t been putting people through the chapel. And her knowledge of the chapel, its furnishings and its history are probably ex- ceeded bv no one. There is more to get here than the reading, writing, and rithmatie ... Her memories of Lee Chapel also in- clude close association with members of the Lee family. Alter I was grown up, I worked for Miss Mildred Lee Francis, the custodian of the Chapel and the General ' s niece. I use to run her errands. Miss Mildred was elderly then, so I used to do everything for her. I also remember two of Lee ' s children — Miss Mary Custis and Rob Jr. — I ' m one of the few still in town who still do, she continued. Her niece lived next door to our house on White Street. Our house was built in 1867, and no one has ever lived in it but my family, she said with great pride. At that time, one of her ancestors. Judge Edmondson, was treasurer of Washington College under General Lee. Her father en- tered Washington and Lee as a freshman at 13 years of age, and got two degrees right here in the Chapel from Gen. Custis Lee. He stayed here his whole life. In fact, he was in Washington Hall in his office two hours before he died, at 72. Miss Emily, of course, married a Washington and Lee graduate, Frederic M.P. Pearse, Jr., and moved with him to 72 the Washington area. Their son, Frederic III, was sent back to W L to be educated. When her husband died. Miss Emily took her maiden name and returned to Lexing- ton. One of Miss Emily ' s gifts is music, and I ' m fast getting to be the oldest and orneriest person in town. the Chapel has provided the opportunity to exercise this talent. I ' ve been playing the organ in the Chapel since I was ten. I could barely reach the pedals — which had to be pumped. That was before there was a motor. But, as the passersby who have been attracted by its haunting chords or those who have been lucky enough to pass through while she belted out its lively tunes on the piano can attest, her specialty is the Washington and Lee Swing. Oh, I ' d like to have a nickel for every time I have played it. For years, while I was growing up in Lexington, I played it for the Glee Club. Why, I remember the three boys who wrote it while I was a child. Cajoling Miss Emily into playing the Swing now is to catch a glimpse of her personality. T ' m fast getting to be the oldest and orneriest person in town, she says. When a potential audience asks her if she plays the Swing, her answer is invariably, When I feel like it. But when asked if she feels like it, her answer is just as consistent- ly Yes. And though she maintains a solemn rev- erence while concentrating on every note of her vivacious rendition, her real spirit is revealed in the finale as she sweeps her fingers down the keys and then up into the air, a wide smile breaking onto her face. I can ' t help the size of my feet or my age — I ' m just thankful I can play every day and come to the Chapel. And in her 70-plus years at Washington and Lee, Miss EmiK ' s perspective of the school has continually been strengthened. The tradition and values and atmo- sphere here should not be changed. There is more to get here than the reading, writing, and rithmatic — the intangible values are here. If you want to get them, they are here for the getting. ' I pray that they will be left the same. About the coeducation thing, I trust that the trustees will arrive at the best solution for the continuance of what we have — the finest. Washington and Lee is unique — that ' s one of its great strengths. And, Miss Emi- ly concluded, as if one needed to be told, I am extraordinarily loyal to it. IMPRESSIONS OF WirL — TIM EDDY by W. Patrick Hinely ' 73 X im Eddy came to Lexington in 1979 and has spent a lot of his time since then out in the woodshed. For Tim, woodshedding has nothing to do with splitting logs, but it does involve working on his chops. He ha.s a veritable arsenal of a.xes: clarinet, piano, and sa.xophones. In the language of Jazz, to woodshed means to practice one ' s music away from the public ear. Chops are tech- nical skills. And, chances are, if you hear Tim talking about a Bird, he means Char- lie Parker, the legendary bebop saxophon- ist, and not a winged creature with a beak. Tim arrived in town, as he puts it, ' Tuz- zy-cheeked and well dosed with naivete, as a W L freshman. He discounts his SAT score (in the high 1300s) because it says nothing about writing ability, which is the greatest thing a college can teach, even though he was much closer to the top of the Class of 1983 than its bottom. Midway through his sophomore year, when, as he describes it, My love affair with the sax- ophone got hot, Tim dropped out of W L, carrv ' ing a GPA of about 2.6, follow- ing enough soul-searching to reach the de- cision that jazz music would be his life ' s work. There is no music major at W L. Soon after giving up poring over books, Tim took up pouring drinks at Spanky s, one of Lexington ' s more genteel watering holes, where he can be found more than once in any given week, usually garbed in a tuxedo shirt and black tie, armed only with his considerable wits and the fastest Zippo lighter in the hemisphere. Unlike many who part ways with W L prior to attaining a degree (most of whom tend to be on thinner academic ice than Tim was), he is not bitter about his experi- ences at W L, though he is very ambiva- lent about how priorities are determined by both the students and the institution itself Tim feels that many of his classmates were more concerned with making good grades than with actually learning any- thing. Sliding by was the norm, it was hip. To me, intellectual honesty dictates against this. The endeavor of learning is to uncover something you had no previous conception about, not to play those nice little academic games. The goal should be to assimilate and synthesize, not to simply regurgitate, and regurgitate only the minimum needed to get by. There was a real bottom line ' men- tality. The contradiction between this scheme of things and W L ' s honor system sets off Tim ' s ethical alarm system. It was like beating the system meant subverting the system to one ' s own ends, a much less no- ble definition than dodging the draft to keep out of an immoral war (but aren ' t they all?) in Vietnam. It was a matter of max- imum aggrandizement with a minimum of effort, not even efficient, just expedient. Due to the very essence of business in most any society, cheating and commerce go hand in hand, or not necessarily cheating, but dealing on a less than totally honest level. Its almost like a study in calculus, to find that infinitesimal asymptotic line that approaches but never quite reaches the statutory taboos, and it ' s totally in opposi- tion to Lee ' s ideals of the liberal arts educa- I remember being first indoctrinated into the honor system by a bunch of guys who came on hke evangehcal ministers. There was an awful lot of talk about plagia- rism, lots of sample situations explained. This is okay, that isn ' t, ' and like that. A lot of guys from my class got tossed that first year, but a lot who got through got smarter. They learned to paraphrase. I know ethics can ' t be taught. They onl exist for each individual, but there is one distinction that savs a lot. It all comes down ' W L isn ' t a micro- cosm of the world; it ' s a microcosm of country clubs. to how you look at life, either as an T proposal or as a ' we ' proposal, and the prevailing attitude among my peers was decidedly an ' T ' proposition. Sure, that has its time and place, but if that is the domi- nating factor, it is unnatural to the thinking and harmonious survival of our species. Tim teeters on the border between sad- ness and disgust when he says that he still senses a lot of that mindset among the stu- dents who patronize his bar, but owns that they are, for the most part, nice enough people while there. These guys have a pretty clever smokescreen to a certain ex- tent, and seldom do they lose it in a public place. A lot of them are good old boys. ' The first thing Tim mentions when asked to characterize the average ' VV L stu- dent ' s approach to life is their strong feel- ing of self-assertion. They have definite, rigidly defined perceptions about them- selves, about what happens and how it affects them, and it ' s pretty consistently positive, like saying I ' m on top of it. ' Their thing is to go through school, with a mini- mum of effort, to learn some specialized talent which will enable them to make a lot of money, to have people work for them, not with them, and to have a good time all along the vva -. They are used to having what they want when they want it. Across the bar, this comes out as ' Hi. I m fine, I m here to spend money for your goods and services, so you re going to treat me right, right?, old buddy? ' It ' s not an entirely arrogant viewpoint, but the coexistence is strained. According to guidelines set by the U.S. Department of Labor, Tim ' s job is unskilled. W ' hicli heads to a real irony, he says. The color of my skin doesn t matter. To the typical W L student, my being white makes it that much funnier, since they ' re being waited on by a white boy. Its like nigger is anybocK ' whose pocket isn t green rather than anybody whose skin isn t white. Tim tells a telling tale about a recent soiree in his bar. A W L professor accepted several offers of drinks from a stu- dent who then, along with some friends, insisted on bending the ear of the some- what inebriated teacher uith opinions about W L. It ' s great that facult ' get out and socialize with students, but they pro- ceeded to rail him with things like We ' re the kind of guys who were here before Lee. We want this place to go back to what it was. We don t want to be challenged in the classroom. Sure, we want to learn a few things but we re primarily here for a little insularity. For once, I heard them spit it out. This is a dangerous trend for a school touting the ideals of Robert E. Lee, accord- ing to Tim, who feels Lee was truK ' vision- ary in his later years. I bet if you polled the average W L student, he would say he is smarter, better looking, more republican than the next person, but he 11 say the whole jeremiad about being throun out into the world after graduation doesn ' t stem from inadequacy. He ' ll say he ' s just not ready to deal with the real world. I wonder: is he really saying that he ' s not uilling to deal with the real world? ' I hear a lot of them saying This is what made America great: blood, sweat, tears, rah rah rah, ' and meanwhile, they ' re just tippling their next one. People only have a right to say that if they ' ve lived like that, have done without a little bit. That ' s one thing that sets the VMI students apart. Their disciplinary s stem isn ' t really mili- tary, but it ' s strict enough to make them think twice. The result is usually just to make them crazier when they get off post, poor guys. At least socializing is a possibili- ty for W L students, to meet someone of the opposite sex — or these days even of the same sex — in a completely copasetic atmosphere and to just hang out. It s part of the weekly routine, though too often sub- ject to gross abuses of a manipulative na- ture with females. I am glad to report that there are still a few students around W L I can chat with and not get this weird animal magnetism fixation about ' Bring on the wenches ' and all that. But, Tim laments, such people are few and far between. W L isn ' t a microcosm of the world; it ' s a microcosm of countn, ' clubs, a special little slice of life for the beautiful people, as it were. You ' ve got to be wearing $300 worth of clothes all the time, and Lexington ' s neo-Georgetown nightspots are perfect for this routine: ev- erything ' s fine, everything ' s cool, since it ' s all being paid for by signing on the line with Daddy s plastic. Fraternities fit into this quite nicely, Tim says: They are the testing ground for learning to deal with cocktail parties. And the role of alcohol in the W L experience still baffles him somewhat. I don ' t know why it ' s there, but I could venture a few guesses. To forget? To decrease one ' s self- consciousness? As a crutch? When asked about coeducation, Tim laughs at the irony of it all. W L can ' t claim to prepare people for dealing with the real world until it goes coed, simply because of the artificial stratification cre- ated by being all-male, but I would wager most of those cats wouldn ' t want it any other way. They don ' t want to give up this atmosphere where they meet women in controlled situations, where it s easiest to score with them. Let s face it: a ' rack date is a status symbol. Most of the student talk Tim ' s heard late- ly about coeducation has been decidedly against it. They sa ' W L is the last fron- tier: ' We need to keep our system, an body else better go elsewhere, ' but I heard that as a student, too, when I was being dis- missed as a foggy-headed idealist for saving ' Gee, this would be a great place if there were women here constantly, in the classrooms, in liv- ing situations, not just as a controlled event. But there are a few students I hear who favor the idea, and a lot of fac- ulty. Most of these students are gentle- men who have re- jected the fraternity the ' available for a limited time only situa- tion. Social considerations aside, Tim also sees W L students spending a lot of time and energy on trivial issues. I mean, real- ly, what is the ultimate significance of wearing or not wearing a necktie? The pri- mary goal over there seems to be a dedica- tion to keeping their social stratum intact. These people don ' t see the world closing in (Fraternities) are the testing ground for learning to deal with cocktail parties. system. Queried about the effects coeduca- tion would have on W L, Tim posits that it would Cut out most of this meat-market nonsense, or at least diffuse it into its proper ' Animal House ' perspective. The status quo social scene is very forced, but there is blood on the hands of both sexes. Walk into a frat house on a Friday night and you ' ll get hit with a cloud of perfijme as thick as rush- hour traffic. There are a lot of sexual games going on, made more ludicrous by on them. There are a lot of starving people in the world — in this country — more and more of them, and they will have to be directly dealt with in our own lifetimes. As an institution, Tim sees W L at a crossroads now, in a state of transition. W L has to decide whether or not to use its riches to deepen its quality as an aca- demic watering hole. There ' s a lot of intel- 76 . .. it ' s all being paid for by signing on the line with Daddy ' s plas- tic. lectual shallowness over there garbed in the robes of terminal degree holders, but just as much among the students. The place has everything it needs to be first-class: facilities, faculty, bright students — though no women — but there ' s a lot of complacency. It ' s basically a benevolent in- stitution. It ' s certainly been good to me, in terms of allowing me to use its facilities. There are lots of schools which employ reg- iments of security forces to keep non- graduate alumni off the scene. What ' s missing is that no- body has put all this together into the BIG picture. W L ' s future? I am basically opti- mistic. John Wilson seems to be the right man at the right time. He is a man with vision, a vision that incorpo- rates a future in which things that are less than pleasant are likely to happen . He senses that growth and change are healthy things when done respon- sibly, that they are essential to prospering, and that merely surviv- ing intact isn ' t enough. And the future for Tim Eddy? He ' s figuring on some more time out in that woodshed, and maybe some formal studies at a music school. I ' d like to record, not neces- sarily as a bandlead- er, though that would be nice. I don ' t expect it, if it doesn ' t happen I won ' t feel as though my manifest destiny has been denied. There ' s no big thing about ' being an artist, ' the important thing is making a living and I don ' t mean just having jobs. Jobs pay the r ent, but the music has a mortgage on my soul. Jazz is the 20th centur ' s most radically changing and growing musical form, not the only one, but the most consistently challenging and unpredictable. I ' ve got a lot to learn. Rome wasn t built in a day. There are a lot of polyester gigs to be played, but there are also innumerable opportunities for creative expression. Lots offish not fried yet. There ' s no doubt Tim Eddy has paid a lot of dues with his horn. I ' ve heard him in plenty of playing situations where the mu- sic wasn ' t supposed to stand out any farther than the wallpaper, one of which was my wedding reception. Tim does manage to the gradual nature of his profession. ' I can t say exactly where it ' s going, he says, shak- ing his head, then snapping his chin up like he just got a $5 tip on a $2 check, raising dem brows and flashing a brief but genuine grin of delight, But if I don ' t get there, it won ' t be for not working at it. front his own trio or quartet on area stages from time to time, despite the fact that Lexington isn t numbered among the top 10 markets for jazz. He was part of the trio Quasi-Modal, virtually the house jazz band in the heyday of the late lamented Le Cel- lier, without a doubt in its era Lexington s most genteel watering hole. For a jazz musician of onl ' 23 years of age. Tim is surprisingly comfortable with FRESHMEN ARRIVALS 79 MATRICULATION 80 81 RUSH 82 1 Hj 0 M « ( !• ' ; F H — THE SNAG — Pi Kappa Alpha 22 Phi Delta Theta 21 Pi Kappa Phi 21 Kappa Alpha 20 Kappa Sigma 17 Sigma Alpha Epsilon 17 Sigma Phi Epsilon 15 Sigma Nu 13 Lambda Chi Alpha 13 Phi Gamma Delta 11 Beta Theta Pi 10 Sigma Chi 9 Chi Psi 9 Phi Kappa Psi 8 Delta Tau Delta 5 Zeta Beta Tau 2 Pi Pi Pi 1 214 83 HOMECOMING 84 FALL WEEKEND ' ' ■' ' ' ' i4m P t... . •-- -SS-; IL ' - ' 1 87 ELECTION NIGHT November 8, 1983 90 92 RASHOMON l,y Fax and Micliat-l K anin IDirc-ctor and Cliorcojiraplu ' r Josc ' pli Martinez Scttinji and Lijilitiny Dfsis ncr Tom Ziei lei CAST Priest . . . . (Willis ( arnioMclic Woodcutter Cliris l.illj; Wifiniakcr Deputy Tom Mmplu I arrx Bntlei Ned Hieliardsoi llusl)and Wife . . . . k ■if ■■• ' PCi ■■■■1 ' I!!! r w «■■■■( . 1 l sJ¥ m ' j Z- ' AN ART OPENING 96 EXTENSIONS IN TIME AND SPAC by Edith Frohock 97 PARENTS ' WEEKEND 98 SY ood 4vTrot 4 74- IT ' S THt oup ' WHOu£ SW P STIU- r3.UNJS OrM C|EAIM FC 2. THE AOST PA (2.7 - H CAPT VIM S H ' - ' NT LEV, (p E«... uM... HUNTUBy. Ere... ►Mt STILI. U K6 Hi -i +o- 7 JA Ar4T To pre-iMC, SSoAl2L.o. . . ODK CONVOCATION January 19, 1984 1 1 ' ' a ■; - 1 H l 1 - . 1 SUPERDANCE ' 84 JACK TO FRONT (left right): Jim Murpln. John DicliiiRei, He iii Dtuiiit; Da id Iuose Sam S ilma. Paul Lew. John Roue, Parker Schenecker, like Marr, Sandy Whann, Tom Hnrdman, Cliris WilHams, Chiiks Stem t.eotl C ire W une Johnson. Greg Turle , Gordon Ogden, Darin Brower, Dave Vogt, Jet Taylor, Ken Ansager, Markham PKe, Mark Weuei Duid killenbei.k RiLk de- lessindrini. Jim Wood, Jack Benjamin, Tim Mulreamy, Curt Schreiner, Bill Joel. 107 The Great Tie Controversy Ti : Vo : « ? C O ' O c 0-o e ■' O 0 0- -) O r - ' . . ' ' %,,- VI LOST CITIES OF COLD Via t ■' ' ' Wi ' ' - - ' ' - CAT ON A HOT TIN ROOF In Tv nessee W ' illia lis Director Drew Perkins Set Dcsi,u;n . (;eor j;e eallierlx Lii ht Dc ' simi .... Braiulon lDa is PnKluctioii Sta.m ' Ma iiager . .( liris Carmoiielu IVtlmical Director. . CAST .... Skip l ' i)pers()ii Brick . . . Robert I ' erjiiisoi Terrx ' McW ' hortei Ijac ' cy Margaret Villi Koriis Mae Li . S])iMiec Clooper Hi r l:.ni:i . . . . Cliiick Kieliard. . . . Ciiniier McNeesc Somu ' Dixie . Blister Tri.xie Bi« Da(lcl HeM-rencI Tooker Dr. Baiigli Keid Spiee CONTACT 1984 116 1984 Contact Committee Tuesdays in the Cockpit 13 The Deal JAN. 10 The Cruisomatics 20 The Bopcats 17 The States 27 The Dads 24 Sunfire 4 The Nerve 31 The X-Raves 11 The White Animals FEB. 7 Tremendous Richard 18 and The Jets 21 Liquid Pleasure 25 The Rev. Bill) Wurtz 28 The Ready Teds 1 The Voltage Brothers MARCH 6 The White Animals 8 Channel One 13 The Good Guys 15 Memphis Rockabilly 20 The Convertibles 29 Oh Boy wm f f 8 11-- Lacrosse ' 84 -. ' ' . -tr ? ' ■X •■r- ' i ock Democratic - onvention ft 76 Years of Authenticity 124 Steering Committee (L to R) Standing: Leighton Stradlman, Cf w Woiid, BriKt- Pottfr. Marc Moinek. TiTcsa Ktongh, Mikr Alk ii. Duuf; Mnller, Fen Little, Rick deAlessandri, Scott Tilley, Pat Hayden; Sittint;: Kent Ihrig, Mike Slielton, C;unnai Jordan, Peter, Lee Feldnian, Jack Dent, Bnriord Smitli; Absent: Steve Lewis, Matt Thompson, Chris Lykes. State Chairmen Alabama Billy Read Alaska Stuart Walsh and Sloan Shoemaker Arizona Chris Bradley Arkansas Berry Trimble and Scott Stockberger California Ty Seidule Colorado Cam Philpott Connecticut Foster Friedman Delaware Tom Cover Florida Gray Sanders Georgia George Yeomans Hawaii Brad Beutel Idaho John Howard Illinois Paid Ziebert Indiana Greg Flentje Iowa John Dell Mixon Kansas Alex and Alfred Brxant Kentucky Tom Sackfield and Bruce BKthe Louisiana Malcolm Kendall and James Davis Maine Chip Hutchins Maryland .... Roger McDonougli and Chuck Difl ' enderfer Massachusetts Jeff Boal Michigan Rob Ca e Minnesota George Kinkead Mississippi Gerald Shepherd Missouri Bill Thau Montana Chad Plumly Nebraska John Miles Nevada Murry Titterington New Hampshire Hiram Maxim New Jersey Bob Buchanan New Mexico Mike Bearup New York Mike Killea and Ted McQuiston North Carolina Todd Barstow North Dakota David Oskam Ohio JeflFHirsh Oklahoma Jeff Shaffer Oregon Paul Casey Pennsylvania Tom Fellin and Hugh Finkelstein Rhode Island Ned Abbe South Carolina Dave Schroeder and Bill Metzger South Dakota Mac Gibson Tennessee Forest Jenkins Texas Parker Schenecker and Mike Singer Utah Mike McAlevey Vermont Ronald Fenstermacher Virginia Steve Lemon Washington Charles Baker West Virginia Bob Spatig Wisconsin Jim Stoeffel and Payton Craighill Wyoming Matt Anthony District of Columbia D.J. Emanuelson Guam Charlie Alcorn Puerto Rico Jon Knans Virgin Islands Jim Fay ' t i -M Military Science — With Todd Smith Supply lines jftAizerlie Scum Stxjdjn JAeopRyte Pieces? n ?i4{b o Lumping ESTABUISHING- THE E.EACH-H AD N IN MEMORIAM JAMES TUCKER COOK, JR. FEBRUARY 16, 1932 — JULY 5, 1983 MARJORIE R. POINDEXTER JANUARY 29, 1933 — NOVEMBER 20, 1983 THOMAS JOHN FELLIN JANUARY 30, 1965 — APRIL 11, 1984 REUBEN RAY HUDSON, JR. FEBRUARY 15, 1963 — APRIL 14, 1984 YOUTH CALLS TO AGE You too have seen the sun a bird of fire Stepping on clouds across the golden sky, Have known man ' s envy and his weak desire. Have loved and lost. You, who are old, have loved and lost as I All that is beautifid but born to die, Have traced your patterns in the hastening fi-ost. And you have walked upon the hills at night. And bared your head beneath the living sky, When it was noon have walked into the light, Knowing such joy as I. Though there are years between us, they are naught; Youth calls to age across the tired years: ' What have you found, ' he cries, ' what have you soug,ht? ' ' What have you found, ' age answers through his tears, ' What have you sought. ' Dvlan Thomas S.A.B.U. Seniors: Ronald Mauee, Ira Pui tar. Todd Howe. Juniors: Kim Brinson, Bnan Johnson, Ore;; Kf ndricks, Vesle - Pa ne, Terr ' McW ' horter. Sophomores: Kelvin Newsome, Mark Sampson, Michael Early, Derrick Freeman, Wayne Johnson, William Rhinehart. Freshmen: Walter Hopkins, Elliott Lambert, Everett Hamilton, Fulton May, Chris Reavis, Randy Baptiste, Calvin Rankin, Michael ehli, . ndre Bouie William Wilson, Car) Duncan, David Perdue, .Matt Thompson, Emor Ellumer, Da id Webber EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Front; Charlie Alcorn, Dave Judge, Bob Jene eiii, Jim Messer, Jim Green, Back: Darby Bnnver. Ste e Christ. Kt ii LiiKlt-man, lames White, .Andrew Caruthers, George Youmans. Not Pictured: Cole Dawson, Editor ' s note: This photo represents the E.C. after the resignation of Leonard Howard, Secretary. DORM COUNSELORS Head Counselor: Timothy Schurr; Assistant Head Counselors: James Clark, Tori Richardson, Mark Lukes, Ron Traxers, , nd MacLellan, Counselors: -hris Cartmill, Bill O Brien, Andy Cooney . Bob Toniaso, Joe Morelos, John McCants, Roland Simon, Andy Asimos, Ken Moles, Marty Bechtold. Greg Viles, Bill Foster, Tom Schurr, David Judge, David Sizeniore, Kevin Kelley. Mike Walsh, Mike Killea, Mork Weaver, Joseph Mamo, WLUR C. Michael Bradley — Station Manager, Brian J. Oliger — Program Director, Rick Pierce — Operations Director, Peter Wright — News Director, Tim McCune — News Director, K. Bartholomew Smith — Classics Director. Thomas P. Maguire — Classics Director, Bob Bryant — Rock Director, Steve Keros — Rock Director, David F. Connor — Jazz Direcotr, Steven Packrass — Asst. Jazz Director, Kenneth Jacoby — Sports Director, David Ciese — Third Ear Director, James Strader — Production Director. News staff: Everett Hamilton, Mike Wacht, Jay Werner, Rick Morales, Chris Carmouche, Mike Stachura, Lance Yonkos, Ted Petrides, Mike Allen, Scott Mason, Tim McMahon, Mike Hassinger, Kurt Shreiner. Classics staff: Rob Merritt, Paul Smith, Nick Leitch, Frank King, Chris Fure. Rock Staff: Martin Gutowski, Jamie Berger, Chris Komosa, Max Maxim, John Riley, David Arnold, Mel Cote, Tom Turk, George Seavy, Cotton Puryear, Charles R. DePoy, Gray Sanders, Rob Schlegel, Robert Miller, Steve Carey, Paul Foutch, David W. Johnston, Guy Caldwell, Steve Hartigan, Jim Foley, Bob Halloran, Taylor Hathaway. Jazz staff: John Vita, Emory Edwards, Richard Rosser, John Palatella, Mark Mitschow, M. Shaw Pyle, Kevin Harris, Tommy Imeson. Folk Bluegrass staff: Chris Leva, Win Phillips, Tom Murphy. CABLE NINE Chief Editors Business Manager Rick Swagkr , . John Cleghorn Managing Editor jim Laurie AuisUnt Managing Editor David W. Johnston News Editor g. Bruce Potter Sports Editor Milie SUchua Editorial Cartoonist MarUum S. Pyle Reporters CharUe Alcorn, Mike Allen. Edwin Ben. Mart Eastham, Andrew Hoppes. Scott Kennedy, Dave Nave, Nelson Patterson, Rick Pierce. Tori Richardson, B. ScoU Tilley. Peter Wright Head PtaoMgrapher Eric Campbell CircuUUoB Manager Todd Barstow Advertising Manager aI Bryant Ad Salesmen uhUs Jehl, Chris Alvezados. Alex Bryant The Ring-tum Phi is pubUsbed every Thursday during the undergraduate school year at Washington and Lee University, Lexington, Virginia. Funding for the Ring-tum Phi comes primarily from advertising and from a portion of the student activities fee. Ilie PuMications Board elects the Chief E:dilars and Business Manager, hut the Ring-tum Phi is otherwise independent. Letters to tlie Editor and submissions must be in the Ring-tum Phi office, room 206 of the Student Center, by S p.m. Monday of the week they are to be run. This newspaper observes current court definitions of libel and obscenity. S.A.B. S.A.B. Chairmen: Alan Pritcharcl, John MavAvood, Burf Smith, AuiK C.. ..m , Chail I ' limiK. Iiu l 1... PUBLICATIONS BOARD [Jc • • • • Back: John t- ' k-tihorn, Tom O ' Brien. Mike Singer (siibstitutel, Scott Fitzgerald. Front; D.im k BRASS AND PERCUSSION ENSEMBLE GLEE CLUB II '  i ' ' ' r INTER-VARSITY CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP FACULTY 141 142 John D. Wilson, President David W. Sprunt, Religion George F. Drake, Romance Lan- guages John H. Wise, Chemistry Edward C. Atwood, Jr., Econo- mics C. Westbrook Barritt, Romance Languages Jay D. Cook, Jr., Accounting Severn P. C. Duvall, English Edgar W. Spencer, Geology Robert Stewert, Music J. Keith Shillington, Chemistry Edward B. Hamer, Romance Lan- guages WiUiam J. Watt, Chemistry Sidney M.B. 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Rindge, Art 143 ■■nsKsa 144 145 146 147 148 1 ? r A ri jCifS . • «ID(« P 5)01 ? 1 j il '  ' ' VB 149 msisseissimi sams M m-m iamf si -iiii ' 6 ■' Hip ' . J Back Row: Jeffrey Cawson Nutt. Patrick Joseph Buttarazzi, Jr., Roger Dermott McDonough, Kenneth John Andsager; Front Row; Robert Davin PhiUips. 85, Edward Vincent Buttarazzi, ' 85, James EHiott Noble, ' 85, Christopher Alleyn Phaneuf, 85 152 -ll OA t II ps.Mi, Jr., Ju tll St,-plu ' ii HoM, D.)iuikl V,lli,,i)i Richards 153 Robert NeLii Wahri kh.i| ii, (.uhiiai Kai Jurdan, I)a id HuHfiif Crt-en, ' 85 154 Lee Holmes Heiniert, Rciliert Munro Ferguson. Marsliall Lee Slieariii, Jr Patrick Haik Moone 155 Elbert Todd Ford. James Morrison Smith David Hale Denbyjr., Kathy Denby, Pilot Marvin Henr Dukes III, Robert Smithuitk 156 George Morgan LupUm III, Jim Bi)ueu, UcilRit Aka Pntiliard, dome l,slii mimaici Ji.. llrilicrt U nt KiMiitni 111. James Alexander, Christopher Pa ne Robinson, Thomas Lawrence H. Cocke effrex V, Maddiw, Willard hitne KelK, Thomas Ga in O ' Brien, Ja Kingsle Stratton, Panl Martin Kiixeke 111, Edinnnd Bruce BKthe 111 157 David Forrester Connor, ' 85. Christopher Michael Bradley, Timothy Steven McCune, ' 85, Robert Denton Bryant, ' 85, Charles Russell Depoy, ' 85, Frederick Golden Jones, 85 James Ward Davis, David K. Salsbury David Cameron Short 158 itephen Thomas Cure , 5. Jace Atlee Goodling, Thomas Maynard Turk, Phillip Carl Aiken, James W ' lckliam Irwin, Holiert Munro Ferguson Front Ho klelville Peter Cote, Jr., Edwin Darracott Vaughn III, Einstein, Joshua M Heltzer lartin Joseph Bechtold, James Robert Spatig, ' 8.5 159 Timothv Maze Hartlev, Warren Bvers Watkins III Thomas Garic Moran, Wesley Patterson Hollins ' 84, Marshall Lei Shearin Jr., David John Bamonte, Michael Spencer Craig | Thomas Ward Pritchard, Louis {;. Jehl, Jr , Kdwiii an Ness Hell, Kdwiii Jcromf Curran 111, Knu-ry KllniKcr HI, John Michael C ' leshorn 160 A HiraTii Hamilton Maxim 111, David Brian Arnold, Hoiiald John Travers, Paul Edgar Levy Daniel Harrison Thomas 111 James Layton Koeiiig, Glenn L. Kirschiier, Paul Frederick C:liapman 161 Willard ' hitne Kelly. Jeffrex W. Macklox, Thomas Claxton Johnston Ho Back Row: Barrington Darb Brower So. Da id Lindsax Tatinn 8.5. Charles Maillat Martin Jr. 8.5 Robert Michael Dees, Richad Allen Haight. John incent Howard Jr Andrew James MacLellan. Andrew E. Clark. Edward James O ' Br 162 C. David Schroeder Christopher Maron Murphy Stephen James Aiithoin Smith, Andrew Madison Patrick Smith, Ml ' .S5 163 Standing ' I. t. W ' : ■rlicddiHc DciiKtricis Pi-triil,-s, Stephen Watson Mc(;ra; - ' 86. John Douglas T.-niplclon 86, WiMiam Taylor Hohnes II ' 86, Keith George Scott ' 86, Todd Oregon ' Hermann ' 85. Kneeling. Mark E. Sullivan ' 85, Roland James Simon, Gary Robert Clements ' 85 164 Robert James Wlianii 1 ' ' 86, Paul Martin Kiiveke 111. ( .eDrge Jonathan Les H. Clarke, Jnlm ]U m, Ji Renner 111 ' 85 Michael Stednian Wyatt Enrico A de lessantlrnii John W aUtit Id Ruthn S6 Michael Thomas Marr ' 86 165 Bi V : - ijiii . ' ii S - ' •± • Grant David Hamrick, James Miles Faulkner III. Daniel Lawrence Murphy Theodore G. Fletcher Wilham Deforest Thompson. Jr., Raymond Angelo Ceresa, Joseph Edward Mamo III !Edward Sloan Shoemaker. G.L. Buist Riv 167 TliDTiias Jeffrey Wells with his Sunday School Class Thomas Crimmins Ewing. James Darrell Higgason, Jr. 168 ' jt : f I '  d: i««f To5v • !( «ip ,11 : n ' «r ' 4 ' ' ' v ifcZ- Emery Ellinger III, James L. Fay Jr., John M. Cleghorn, Chip Skinner, Jeff Shaffer, Charlie Alcorn, Peannt, Lonis Jehl Edwin Bell Thomas Pritchard, Robert Tucker, Jeff Maddox, Parker Schenecker Eric Joseph Campbell, Mark Alan Lukes, Sean Joseph McNulty 169 John Michael Clegler, Richard (Charles Swaghorn, Jr. 170 Pern ' Alan Llo d William David Woolfolk, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Woolfolk lohn Lucms McCants Samuel Fenn Little [r Forrest Norton Jenknis II, George Leighton Stradtman 171 Edward James OBrien, Thomas Clrny Connors. Donald Eldridge Jeflrey III. David Robert Hanna, Todd Woodniff Barstow, Billy Franklin Andrews Jr. 172 I ♦ David Ruhl Harcus, Robert Boone Cave ohn William Miller III, Michael Francis Killea. Justus Stephen Hoyt 173 Peter Cronin, Stephen Bernhardt Brooks. Charles Walter Mason, Julie Rnssell Roy Rosier, Barry Paul Waterman Houghton-Mason. Barrv Paul Waterman, Russel Roy Rosier 174 Andrew E. Clark, jolm Carlton I ' cfhles John Robert Cross Jr., Carole Chappell, Scott John Fitzgerald cott Waterman ' 85, Mark Uobert Carduner, Theodore Denietrios Petrides, Michael Z. Jacobs N5, Charles Cieorije Kalocsai 175 William Dre«- Perkins Jr.. Jack Robert Dent. Robert Graham Buchanan J KneeliiiK; James Miles Faulkner III Ross S. L nde Charles Rene Jenninns, Stephen Bernhardt Brooks 176 I ,A 1—1 1 I Villiam Leonard Howard Jr., Nita Crump-Howard Chris Emerson Bakl lark Hampton Easthani, Tori Clifion A. Richardson, Grfgor L. Fleiitje, Peter Cronin 177 Bi)l) Jenevein, Ron Travers 178 Back Row: Craig Reilly, Marty Manasco, Glenn Kirschner, Jim Koenig, Dan Seal, Charlie Akmn I r.mi [{nw Umi Travers, Bob Jenevein, Bill Foster, John Cole Wilson FielC Marty Manasco, Bob Jenevein 179 David A. Eustis ' 85, Keith D. MacDougall ' 85. Joel Breckenridge Bassett 180 Richard Ron Rosser, W. Landon Banfield ' 85 Richard Bivins Jones, Jr. , Eric George Store ' , Roland James 181 James Ra Carawaii Lee Russell Feldman Barthe Arlan V ' andoorn, Henry Woods Dewing ' 85, John Anthony Di Duro ' 85, Skip Epperson ' 83, Andrew John Dewing 182 Charles Carroll Sherrill Jr., Spencer Knauer Dickinson, Herbert Oliver Funsten III, Cgraig Hunter McArn, Scott Carter Mason Jr Robert Blythe Tncker Jr., John Michael Cleghorn, Todd V oodruff Barsto Charles Kendnck Baker, Ralph W illard Baiicum III 183 Jeffrey Hazen Boal, Breese Mark Dickinson. Steven Edward Lewis 184 1B ■1 Pi ' iU m [ s — 1 — _ George Richard GrainRer Jr., James Abbe Lance Cooper Ca« ' le , Mark Charles Mitschow 185 Karl Frederick (iiienthcr iiiniiiinir iiiiiiiii iir I James Alfred Halprin, Miirra R. Titterington, John Alan Saiuli 187 William Parke Randall 85, James Dimald Griffin. Scott Slade ' 83, Macke Gimble ' 83 188 Michael Stedman Wyatt, Dwinlit Hillis Emaiuielsoii Jr. John Paul Vita Christopher Chainliii L kes Ceorne Arden FinK, Donald Burton I ' alnu-r ' 8.5, Francis Morris Piiickne III Front Row: James Charles Kephart ' 85, Thomas V. 8ai.klield Thomas Garic Moran, Thomas Logan Co cr, Andrew Sean Coone 189 John Thomas Wilkinson Gregory Michael Lee 190 Hideki Su .viki C. Reid Flinn Francis Morris FiiickiK III. GcmKc Ardcu FniK . Thomas Logan Co er. IVtor Maniinii; Mnllo 191 Richard Charles Swagler J Pat O ' Connell 85, WilHam Guy Foster, Tom Wiser ' 85 M ' Kevin Joseph Walakovits, Jeff Robert Shaffer, Andrew William Asimos, Douglas Woodcock Teague, Charles William Alcorn III, John Doughty Cole Barry Allen Mason, Olin Benjamin St. Clair Robert Blytlie Tucker Jr.. Seott Stuart Pr si ont Row: John Richard Ogden ' 86. John Robert Slawik ' 85, Douglas David Kuhn, Samuel S. Stand Jr., Ceorge Ellis McDowell SH, Stephen . ndr iest ' 86 Back Row: Robert Hauck English ' 87, Jonathan Scott Miles ' 87, Bruce Calder Rothenberger ' 87, Matthew Joseph Caudert ' 87, William iildebrandt Surgner Jr. ' 87, Russell Stewart Peck, Neil Rankin ' 87 193 David Martin Weber Slalior, Michael Stedman Wyatt, Martin Edward Manasco Markham Shaw Pvle William Albert Thau III, David Lewis ' 86 Michael Martin Shelton, Gunnar Kai Jordan, Lee Russell Feldnian Seated: iSteven Edward Lewis, Peter Manning Muller 195 Charks Maulti.n PlumK 111. Matthew Gilniaur Tlumipson Jr., Rodne Kiluar.l lavk.r, James Benx liiinl.l... Dduglas Woodcock league David Warren Killenbeck John EdwMi Tayk)r, Anthony John Interrante, Lewis McDonald Allen 196 r iM-w%. f( . Timothy S. White, CraiK ■rhiiiiias Ut-illy, Jed Lee Goad, Patrick Thomas Mc(;uiie ' Robert Cameron Woods Melville Peter Cote Jr,, Edwin Darraoitt Naiighan III. Thomas . la nard T. Turk 197 James Clement Clark, David Christopher Judge James Wickham Irvin, Melville Peter Cote Jr., Jace Atlee Goodling James Price Staeffel. Charles Kobert bpencer HI, George L. Fisher, Stuart L. Wash, David C. Adams, Wade H. Brannon Jr., George P. Craighill 198 Andrew Darnel Farle . Ronald Mattlieu GaLlii-, James C. Rikliufi ' . Jack Landman OBrien. John Scott Do le, Kneeling: JeflVey Burrill Gv ynn 199 Douglas Manning Muller. Dwiglit Hillis Emamielsiin Jr. Kevin Edward Brown, Michael Patrick Conwa . Linda Shannon Raymond Darsey Houlihan III and Hotlip Stewart Thomas Shettle, Glen Owens Jackson ' 85 200 Robert W, Massie I ' . John Wilson Dindinger Stephen W ' eldon Lemon Christopher Hale Williams ' 85, Olin Benjanun St. Clan-. Kenneth Greg Niles ' 85 Ednuind Brnce BKthe III. William . Iackall Wilson. Wirvd Stales Br ant ' 85. Wade MaGlenn Meadous. |a Kingsle Straiten, . ngus Murdoch McBr de 201 Stephen Andrew Jones Back: Bourke Cartwright Harve - ' 86, Jeffrey W. Maddox Middle: Da id Lindsay Tatum ' 85, David Rohrer Herr Jr. Front: Parker Boswell Schenecker, Willard ' hitne Kellv James Matthew Anthony ' 85, James Lester Fay, Charles Carpenter Pitts ' 85, James Adolph Skinner III, Thomas Scott Shults ' 85, William Lawrence Reed ' 85, Charles Reynolds Thompson ' 85 202 Michael Anthon ' Stockle Thomas Laidlaw Hyde, John Patrick Coleman 85, Murra R. Titterington. William Francis Zola ' 86 David Cameron Short. Richard . llen Haislit, William Earl Btiison Jr , Christopher Campbell Craii;, Nhithew Da id Ra encraft, Richard Ron Rosser, Donald Brian Smith ThoniiLS R. Scluirr ' 85. Da icl Jolm W .iiniiUlt .. Jr.. Ta Stiii Schurr ru Ho. D.u.ifl JflliTson Seal. Miiha.-I Wal.sli. Midiael Francis Killca, Tiniotln Cerard 204 John Lee Graves, Frederick Beckel MiiinKli, Ji, So, K.H111 Join McClatchv . iith..ii I ' rauLii kua Gary John Meyer, Keith Troy Kadesk , (Front); Jefierey Scott Gee, K;e in Max Kadesk . Thomas John Frankfurth, Timothy Patrick Rock |g : ' - ' m wa ' V:i;msa5jjaSjaaa3£ ' Wf ' ' Class of 1985 H. Christopher Alexander IV Stewart T. Anderson Jas. M. Anthony Gregory S. Avdt GabrielB. Balazs Robert B. Barnes III Michael S. Bearup M. Andrew Berisford James T. Berry, Jr. W ' m. Andrew Best i.lii iij iii Jefifrey P. Blount Henry M. Bond James W. Bradner I ' B. Darby Brower Todd D. Brown It Robert D. Brvant David M. Butler Edward ' . Buttarazzi C. Joseph Cadle Guv A. Caldwell James R. Cantrall Banks Randall Chamberlain James Tillman Cobb. Jr. Allen B. Coe Andrew B. Cole John P. Coleman Robert W. Coleman Donald O. Collins, Jr Roger T. Ua John Coleman Dawson III ikMik 208 John J, Delaney, III Cliiirles R. Depoy Penny Woods Dewing Jeffrey D. Dixon Christopher C. Donahue Robert P. Dorais Paul A. DriscoU Andrew D. Farley Ronald W. Fensterniacher Richard S. Gatti David B. Giese Harrv W. Golliday Greg W. Hair David R. Hanna Stephen C. Hartigan Brainard Judd Hartmann Todd G. Hermann Nathan S. Hines Jeffrev T. Hirsch David Nr Hollis Andrew P. Hoppes Charles M- Hutchins Thomas C. Imeson, III iiiibi 209 David N. Johnston Thomas C. Johnston David H. Jones Frederick G. Jones Landon H.R. Jones Das id N. Jonson John C. Kalitka Joseph W. Kearse Stexen Keros Charles S. Kerr Everett G. Kerr Thomas Kerr Carr L. Kinder III Charles T. King George B. Kinkead Jonathan C. Knaus Robert A. Kurek Lance B. Kyle Fred A. Lacke - David F. Langiulli y 210 Mitliuel J. Lehman StanleN P. Lewis Claude B. Lipscomli John D. Long Michael C. Lord I 4 Gregorx ' A. Lukanuski Keith D. MacDougall Paul D. Maraciullo Kevin P. Marrie Charles M. Martin Jr. Win M Massiejr. John L McAllister Richard E. McCann Thomas N. McKinstn John D. Mixon, Jr. iiktfljiiik Marc F. Monyek Joseph C. Morelos Clarke H. Morledge Ken L. Moles Timothy J Mulreany Jason K. Murphy Thomas M. Nlurphv Scott G. Nagley Kenneth S. Nankin Kenneth G. Niles James E. Noble Donald B Palmer Jr. Thomas M. Pearce Robert B. Piter Frank S. Pitman I ' Charles C. Pitts Duane C. Presten II Dougkis -• . Raines Vm L. Reed. Jr. . llen C. Reese iA iii Thomas R. Schurr George N. Seavy Michael M. Shelton Kurt A. Shreiner Thomas S. ShuUz Da id Alan Sizemore John R. Slowik C. Taber Smith HI W ' ilham Burford Smith Jr. James Robert Spatig Michael J. Spellman Jr. David W. Sprunt Jr. Charles VV. Sterns Daniel L. Tatum George J. W J Tl F . HP H John E. Roberts Jr. J AW W . Marsh Robertson William R. Sanderson L. Gray Sanders Robert Schlegel i A B William H. SchoeSler W _ | ■H 212 Warren T. Taylor Ronald Thornton Brian Scott Tillev Robert J. Tomaso William R. Tommins Roy F. Unger Jr. Gregg Clive Van Orden Craig N. Waddell Ja ' Marshall Wallace Ke in A. Welch ft- James J. Werner Harold B. Wetherhee II William E. White III Peter T. Wilbanks Da id M. Wilkinson Christopher H. Williams E. Wacle Williams III James R. Wingert III Ricliard A. Wmstead James L. Wood Charles F. Wreaks Peter Wright Marshall R. Young Jon E. Zargrodzk 213 Class of 1986 David S. Adams Michael W. Adams Christen A. Ale izatos Wavne Alexander Michael P. Allen Robert C. Ammott Tro E Andrade Kellev H. Armitage David T. Arthur Lawrence S. Anker Steven D. Barben Edwin L Barnes, Jr William W. Barnes K. Bartholomew Smith Michael K Baver Jack C. Benjamin Richard A. D. Bennett C. Nicholas Berents Michael AG. Berg James M. Berger Mark A. Bertolini Stephen A. Best Gerard F. Biedronski Michael J. Black Christopher A. Bleggi William G. Bloom Scott B. Bo d Shane A. Braganza Jeffrey S Britton Joseph ( ampbell, Jr. 214 Cliristoplier L. Carmouche Jolin P. Chase, III Alexander F. Castelli Joseph C. N. Chan Harn M. Chapman James M. Chfton. Jr. George T. Corrigan Gerard J. Costello John A. Crawford Paul M. Davev John D. Deholl James C. Deringer Peter G. Detlei ' s Charles R. Diftenderfler Joseph D Dulanev, Jr. David N. Eckardt ' Jonathan L. Elder Daxid U. Elliot A. Judson Ellis, Jr. Randolph L. Ellis Byron T. Epple Henr Exall, l John M. Falk James D. Farthing Paul L. Fearey Thomas J. Fellin Richard P. Fereuson Hugh A. Finkelstein Mark N. Fishman Robert L. Fitts Jr. Lawrence R. FHnt Evan M. Foulke Paul R. Foutch Ernest Franklin III John M. Fritsche Edward M. George III Robert G. Glenn Jr. Frederick Goundn. Duane B. Graddy Jr. Apostolos G. Grekos Robert K. Gresham Gregon E. Hager Elmer L. Hall Jr. J. Lesslie Hall III James F. Hamblen D. Shawn Har%e 216 ii H iitkM Patrick L. Ihuden James L. Haviu- Jr. William R. Hemphill Jr. Julian Henning III John F. Hcnschel Patrick R. HiKgins Timothy D. Higgins Lee Maxwell Mollis William T. Holmes Christopher R. Hope Jeffre M. Hiibhard Chrisjakuhek John J. James HI Paul M. James Jr. John S. Jamier Timothy A. Jainska Christopher D. John Ga lora Johnson HI David W. Johnston Scott B. Johnstone Anthoin U. Jones William F. Jones Jr. Robert J. Kelly James V. Kerr H Jeffrey W, Knnhell William H, King HI Christopher J. Komosa Richarcl E, Lail David D. Lewis Brian ] Lilsted Kenneth Lindciiiai Chris Lion Michael T. Marr Daxid B .Marsh 217 Michael P. Marshall William D. Martien Courtne R. Mauzv III Michael R. McAlevev John D. McCiiffe i MJii George E. McDowell Christopher McGowan Francis B. McQuillen Da id v. Messner Andrew M. Midkiff Brian H. Miles William Z. Monroe Richard H. Morris John M. Moody II Ron L. Moodv Douglas S. Moxham James O. Nave John C. Nelson David F. Nichols Robert L. Nichols William L. Nichols Daniel J. O ' Connor John R.G. Ogden P 218 Brian Oliger Rav J. Overstreet John V. Palattella Nelson R. Patterson Ian M Perkins Charles A. Pfaffjr. Derrick G. Pitard William P. Pollard Townes G. Pressler Jr. Cotton Pur ear Jlitt James G. Renfro Jr. William C. Rhinehart Bruin S. Richardson Tinioth M. Richardson John R. Riley 219 Matson L. Roberts Jeff Roper Mark T. Sampson John S. Sanders John S. Schreider Gerald D. Shepard John M. Slack IN D. Van Smith Jr. John C. Spear Stewart R. Speed Thomas G. Spilsoury C. Michael Stachura Timothy U. Stanford Gregory J. Stites J. Scott Stockburger Janmes J. Strader Robert N. Strickland J. Frank Surface Samuel S. Svalina John D. Templeton Uavid F. Thomas Timothy D. Thomas James C. Thompson i 220 , 5 Robert E. Treat Jr. Patrick L. alder Joseph E. Xidunas EtKviii J ' illamater Stephen E, N ' ogt jK t: Michael A, ' ea er Andrew S. Weinberg Roliert J. Whann IV Joseph G, Whelan III Chnton R. Whitaker ikdm ik mMdk C, Harris White Carl F. White James J. White I ' Donald M. Wilkinson III Jackson Willett III tka mi ' Mixk Cranston R. Williams Christopher A. Wilson Robert E. Wilson Jr. Class of 1987 Paul T. Abbott Clifton M. Abies Glvnn M. Alexander Jr. Alan S. Alford David A. Andrews Gregor L. Andrus Jason A. Agustiis Gar ' P. Appel Joseph E. Aronhinie John E. Atkins David Auld William W. Baber III Thomas V. Baker Randolph I. Baptiste James H. Barker John M Barlingame Jr. David N. Barnes J. Gregorv Barron Michael P. Beattv Andrew F. Bell Kenneth R. Bendheim Peter E. Bennorth Robert Q. Berlin Fred Bissinger Robert D. Blackburn Michael S. Black-wood George N. Bonis Christopher B. Bowring Thomas J. Boyd Charles W. Bracken n Ml 1 I ill 222 Thomas J. Brickmaii II Glen Porter Brock III Sliiart K Brown William A. Brown a-r KA ii C ' liarles W. Browne IV Victor A. Brvanl mkim Patrick H, Bnrndorf Ted L. B rd tkm k John R. Carder Tyler S. Carr Christopher R. Carte Michael D. Carter Andrew R. Carnther; Rodolfo A. Catahan Jr. Charles B.B. Chaffe Alexander A. Chambers James G. Chantilas Charles L. Chassaignac John H. Church Joseph P Clark Bradley C. Cleek Peter P. Crane Cooper C. Crawford l iiik Mm John B. Cummings III Erik D. Curren Ronald R. Curn II William L. Curtis David H. Daub TF ?i l ' «J( :f)fRt ' mk Jldk M Kevin J. Davidson Philip A. Da idson William D. Deep Richard A. Deforest Christopher J. Deighan w Joseph W. Democko Peter F. Denneh Charles D. Dickev Jr. Robert P. Diethrich Matthew T. Di ito f m A Joseph K. Dono an Ste en R. Doran Louis S. Dubque Robert S. Duguay Geoffrev R. Duke W. David Dunn Jr. Kurt W. Eglseder Robert H. English 224 William E. Esham III Marshall M. Eubank James Farquhar Scott J. Ferrell Timothv J. Finnertv Wilber Clinton Fisher III Jason C. Fole Samuel J. Foley I ' Dennis M Francis Michael S. Friedman Chris Fure Robert J. Georgi Steven Giacobbe Andrew Gibson William Barritt Gilbert Jason H. Godfrey Jr. Da id H. Gordon Harr C. Gottwalds Jr. Richard B. Graves Henr B. Greenberg Jr. William R Greer Jr mMtiih im Daniel E. GrofF David J. Grogan Charles M. Groh Phillip E.M. Grooker E erett E Hamilton Jr I 225 Jason T. Hamlin IV James P. Hansen William R. Harbison Douglas E. Haney Todd D. Har e Michael T. Hassinger Jonathan W. Hedgepeth Paul E. Henson HI Mark S. Hermann Richard J. Hobson John K. Hudson Jr. Mark F. B. Hurdle Thomas E. Hurlbut Richard W Hurle - III Timothy T.B. Jennings Thomas J. Keating Gerard R. Kehoe ir 226 H and 1 IT HI V H m H J l Sm 1 IHRL ' i . f iri James F. Kellv Charles J ICettler III Timothy Kibler Francis L. King William R. Kinson Eric C. Knight Thomas O. Knight John G. Koedel III Nicholas M. Komas Joseph B. Krastel William R. Kublv Gilbert R. Ladd IV Robert T. Lafargue Vincent LaManna Mark F. Lauinger Richard Lear Christopher J. Ledrer Kevm W. Ledrer H. Baltzer Lejune Matthew S. Lewis Alex Lopez-Dnke liiMJ 227 Jeffrey S. Mandak Jeffrey L. Marks George T. Massie Craig A. Matzdorf Thomas E. Maurer Charles P. Mays, III Jeffrey P. Mazza Michael R. ' McAllister Donald L. McCoy Michael E. McGarry Ravmond M. McGrew J. ' Walker McKay, Jr. S. David McLean, Jr. Timothy G. McMahan Sha K. Menon Ilk i te liii 228 Keeble C. Mercier Kdlit-rt F: Mt-rritt, III Jonathan S. Miles m f V I h Barry G. Miller Roby D. Mize John E. Mohr Craig T. Monroe Rick J. Morales Michael F. Morris Steven W. Morris James J. Murphy, I ' Thomas R. Murray, III Jason M. New K 4 J: I a gkim Scott M. Newman Bradley B. Newsome Charles G. Nusbaum, Jr. Brent M. O ' Bovle John M. Oliver James F. Owen Cooper N- Park Edwin W, Parknison. Ill Bruce D, Partington Russell S. Peck 229 Thomas H. Pee John F. Pensec Thomas B. Peters Richard J. Pierce Steven F. Pockgrass John C. Pouhon Charles G. Purdy Andrew R. Putnam Martin G. Radvany I P Kenneth J. Raichle Kenneth E. Ranby J f; ' Bruce A. Reed Andrew M. Reibacn Frank O ' Reilly Frank M. Rembert Tracland F. Reville, Jr. John P. Riordan John D. Roe, Jr. Robert V. Rorrer. Jr. Bruce C. Rothenherger John Rowe Laurence K. Ryan Luis Sa 230 Abbas W. Samii Dennis C. Samuel, Jr. Steven D. Sandler Chris B. Saxman Jason R. Savage John M. Scannapieco Alan G. Scarisbrick Paul G. Schlimm William L. Schoettelkotte Jonathan J. Schuh r ■David D. Seifert Christopher M. Sherlock David A. Shugart Carlton Simons, Jr. Sam P. Simpson Jeffrey P. Sindler Philip M. Skillman Robert Zachen, ' Slappey Jason B. Sloan, Jr. Craig S. Smith Marquis M.E. Smith, III Paul J. Smith Craig S. Spear John C. Spellman Robert Spencer, Jr Paul R Strange 2.31 Christopher H. SuUivan Anthonv N. Sylvester Davi d G. Tombling Eugene V. Tanski Andrew J. Tartaghone Thomas W. Thagard Robert H. Tolleson, Jr. Clement C. Torbert, III Harper B. Trammell Phillip J. Triebes R Holder Trumbo, Jr. James G. Tucker Gregory E. Turley W. Milan Turner, III Peter E. VanSon 232 Michael F, Wacht Frank W. Wagner, III Peter B. VValther Matthew J. Waterbury Kevin W. Weaver Michael D. Webb Alex E. Weidner Peter C. Wergens John D, Wheeler John M. Wheeler John M. Wheeler Lee R. Wheichel Robert S. White, Jr. Russel W. Whitman Michael W. Wiesbrock Gavin S, Wilkinson Timoth H. Williamson John T. Wiltse Juhus C.P. Winhekl G. Paige Wingert Charles E. Wisell Jason W. Worthington Joel S. Yancey Adam R. Yanez Mark A. Zaratsk ' 233 BETA THETA PI Alpha Rho Chapter Established 1876 President Barry Trimble Vice-President Doug Teague Treasurer John Cole 1. Mark Machonis 2. Earl Glazier 3. Win Phillips 4. Chris Leva 5. Joe Vidunas 6. Andy Cole 7. Michael Black 8. William Monroe 9. Carter Kannapell 10. Jim Bradner 11. Win Vaughn 12. George Seavy 13. Chad Plumly 14. Berr - Trimble 15. Robert Ferguson 16. Dave Butler 17. Doug Teague 18. Dave Cole 19. Lee Cummings 20. Steve McGrath 21. Rodney Taylor 22. Matthevi ' Thompson 23. John Cole 24. Kreg Kurtz 25. Andy Weinberg 26. Bob Vrooman 27. Bill Curtis 28. Pat BergdofF 29. Chris Lederer 30. Andy Putman 31. Tim Williamson 32. Bill Garrett 33. Keeble Mercier 34. Chris Lvnch 35. William Rice 36. Peter Winfield 37. Clay Burns 38. Mike Friedman Not Pictured Eddie Villamater Bryan Farrell Steve Carey Bill White ' Jace Goodling John Lee Graves Andy Asimos James Chantilas Jim Godfrey Kevin Walakovits Richard Minnick Hunter Benes 236 237 CHI PSI . lpha Omicron Delta Chapter Established 1977 President Paul Farquharson Vice-President Henry Dewing Treasurer George Kinkead kmSi ' fS - i ' 1. Tim Jennings 17. Chris Sullivan 33. Dave Nichols 2. Bruce Irvin 18. Tom Maurer 34. Joe Whelan 3. Dave Thomas 19. Andy Dewing Not Pictured: 4. Brian Maloney 20. George Kinkead Tim Kibler 5. Tim Considine 21. Dave Andrews Brian Fagan 6. Lars Keeley 22. Jeff Mazza Dan Groff 7. Ron Moody 23. Jeff Dixon Will Greer 8. Andy Haring 24. Paul Farquharson Rich Hamed 9. Robert Miller 25. Sam Svahna Todd Ford 10. Chris Jakubek 26. Dave Green George Weatherly 11. Rob Schlegel 27. John Roberts John Wilkinson 12. Jeff Knapp 28. Rob Woods Gene Wood 13. Jake Squiers 29. Paul Ziebert Whitney Gadsby 14. Henry Dewing 30. Jimmy Humphreys Gunner Jordan 15. Dave Jones 31. Perry Lloyd 16. Steve Doran 32. George Boras 238 1 239 DELTA TAU DELTA Phi Chapter Established 1896 «• President Richard Rosser Vice-President John Merchant Treasurer Kirk Rorrer 1. Michael Blackwood 14. Brad Mac Cachran 24. Tom Hvde 2. Fred Driscoll 15. Ned Richardson 25. Blake O ' Neill 3. Brvan Chaffe 16. Bill Michaud 26. David Comer 4. John Sanders 17. Rich Gatti 27. Garv Duncan 5. Richard Rosser 18. Jim Culnane 28. Rob Lutz 6. Jamie Halprin 19. Mike Marshall 29. Rob Vienneau 7. Paul Fearey 20. Anton Bullman 30. Ted Byrd 8. Dave Johnston 21. Kevin Kurtz 31. Tom Baker 9. Jerrv Costello 22. Bill Martien 32. Joe Donovan 10. David Hagigh 23. Sam Riley 33. Lawdon Banfield 11. Ned Rugeley Not Pictured: 34. Harry Bond 12. Conrad Boyle Jim Cook 35. John Coleman 13. Bill Zola Murray T. Herington 36. Nick Berents 240 i KAPPA ALPHA Alpha Chapter Established 1865 President Rick deAlessandrini Vice-Presidnet Bob Buchannan Treasurer David Webber 1. Harper Trammel 2. Mike Guerriero 3. Trey Cashion 4. Jainie Hayne 5. Pat Ferguson 6. David Hamrick 7. Johnny Maclay 8. Brad Beutel 9. Rick deAlessandrini 10. Gib Kerr 11. Jack Dent 12. Jeff Hubbard 13. Eric Hancock 14. Bob Buchanan 15. Taylor Hathaway 16. Brad Thompson 17. Gordon Gooch 18. Jim Strader 19. Jay Faulkner 20. Paul Davey 21. Townes Pressler 22. Ru.sty Johnson 23. Harold Wetherbee 24. Jack Ruffin 25. Jeff Boswell 26. Judd Ellis 27. John Herndon 28. Sam Dalton 29. David Webber 30. Charles Davidson 31. Craig Chambers 32. Matson Roberts 33. Jim Murphy 34. Matt Hansard 35. Steve Smith 36. Parkhill Mays 37. Alex Weidner 38. Bo Wagner 39. Johnny Hudson 40. Paul Youngman 41. Jimmy Tucker 42. Steve Morris 43. Phillip Hodges 44. Phillip Davidson 45. Chip Davis 46. Mike Wyatt Not Pictured: David Deholl Tom Hurdman Bob Jenevein Marty Manasco Mike Marr Mike McAlevey Jim Messer Dan Murphy Drew Perkins Taber Smith Powell Smith Roby Mize Chris Bieck Adam Yanez B.J. Sturgill Jim Barker Jon Thornton 242 KAPPA SIGMA Mu Chapter Established 1873 President Bob Dees Vice President Roger Day Treasurer Bill Sanderson 1. Kurt Eglseder 17. John Rowe 33. Charles Groh 2. Steve Holmes 81. Mike Hutcherson 34. Patty 3. Fletcher Hamblen 19. Scott Kennedy 35. Steve Lemon 4. Roger Day 20. Jim White 36. Mike Grow 5. Alan Scarisbrick 21. Larry Ryan 37. Robert White 6. Ted Crusher Goebel 22. Frank Pittman 38. Harris White 7. John Mohr 23. Scott Yancey 39. Ken Raichle 8. J.R. Ewing 24. Forrest Jenkins 40. David Ebert 9. Bill Hemphill 25. Rick Swagler 41. Victoria 10. Charles Elmer 26. John T.B. Ha ' wood 42. Cotton Puryear 11. Joel James 27. Brian Miles Not Pictured 12. Peter Partee 28. Chris Cartmill Bob Dees 13. Henn, ' Exall 29. John Maxwell Steve Brooks 14. John Hedgepeth 30. Jim Farthing John Howard 15. Michael Carter 31. Rick Grainger John McAlhster 16. Paul Schlimm 32. Bill Sanderson LAMBDA CHI ALPHA Gamma Phi Chapter Established 1921 President Timothy Hartley- Vice-President Chris Lion Treasurer Jim Berry 1. John Cumniings 11. Britt Courtney 21. Peter Detlefs 2. Jim Bern.- 12. Paul Grike 22. Warren Watkins 3. Tom Kerr 13. Dave Salsbury 23. Bruce Dean 4. Matt Steilberg 14. Jim Davis 24. Tim Hartley 5. Greg Hager 15. Mike Adams 25. Dabney Overton 6. Dave Harcus 16. Chris Spear Not Pictured: 7. Jim Renfro 17. Chris Lion Nate Hines 8. Tom Hurlbiirt 18. Adam Reinstein Paul Kastner 9. Rob Cave 19. Fred Bentley John Zebreski 10. Rick DeForest 20. Charles Nausbaum Rusty Hartley 246 247 PHI DELTA THETA ' irginia Zeta Chapter Established 1887 President Emery Ellinger Vice-President Charlie Alcorn Treasurer Bill Brown 1. Whit Kelly 19. Charlie Martin 1 37. Frank Surface 2. Charlie Alcorn 20. Paul James 38. Gowin Patrick 3. Charlie Pitts 21. Randy Ellis 39. Chaz Poer 4. Marshall Young 22. Price Pollard 40. John Case 5. William King 23. Darby Brower 41. Clayton Johnson 6. Gil Dukes 24. Rob McCullough 42. John Atkins 7. James White 25. Stewart Speed 43. Jim Clifton 8. Bourke Harvey 26. Eddie Curran 44. Tom Thagard 9. Louis Jehl 27. Peter Wright 45. Lawrence Sims 10. Kenneth Lindeman 28. Tommy Pritchard 46. Mike Hassinger 11. John Crawford 29. Matt Anthony 47. Milam Turner 12. John Cleghorn 30. Chip Skinner 48. Todd Lefargue 1.3. Parker Scheneker 31. JefF Maddox 49. Mac Gibson 14. Lee Robinson 32. Bubba Shaffer 50. Joseph Opie Kettler 15. Dan Tatum 33. Edwin Bell 51. Alex Chambers 16. Jim Fay 34. Jonathan Barlow 52. Charlie Conway 17. Reynolds Thompson 35. Emery Ellinger 53. Lloyd Willcox 18. Billy Reed .36. Joe Phoenix 248 249 PHI GAMMA DELTA Zeta Deuteron Chapter Established 1868 President Alex Castelli Vice-President Tom Fellin Treasurer Michael Berg 1. Michael Killea 13. James Foley 1 I 25. Arthur Kandarian j 2. John Lougherv ' 14. Gary Appel Not Pictured j 3. Tony McCann 15. Ricky Friend Tim White 4. Jefferson Harralson 16. Alex Castelli Andrew MacLel lan 5. Mark McDonough 17. Louis Mondello Ed O ' Brien 6. Duane Graddy 18. Bill Samii Stewart Kerr 7. Michael Holbrook 19. Andrew Clark Vincent Lamanna Vincent Connors 8. Michael Berg 20. Jed Goad 9. Carlton Peebles 21. James Kelly Hugh Finkelstein Robert Duguay David Doub 10. Craig Reilly 22. Tom Murray 11. Tom Fellin 23. Michael McAllister 12. James Lyall 24. Jerry Biedronski 250 PHI KAPPA PSI Virginia Beta Chapter Established 1885 President John Lewis Vice-Presidnet Pat O ' Connell Treasurer Tom Spilsbury 1. Bob Berlin 23. Joe O ' Neil j 45, Greg Barrow 1 2. John Benford 24. Storm 46. Craig Monroe ; 3. Dave Langivilli 25. Bruin Richardson Not Pictured 4. Jim Koenig 26. Sean McNulty Bill Thompson 5. Dave Harrar 27, Walter Devine Ray Ceresa 6. Paul Chapman 28. Bob Hughes Mark Lukes 7. Bill Maroney 29. Tom Spilsbury Ray Houlihan S. Tyler Carr 30. Jamie Berger Trey Mamo 9. Mike Lord 31. Pat O ' Connell Bill Foster j 10. K. Scott Van Meter 32. Kurt Sprecht Don Richardson IL Paul Marasciullo 33. Evan Foulke Marc Martinez 12. Jim Vesper 34. John Long Tom Wiser 13. Doug Moxham 35. John Lewis JefF Reichert 14. Mike Beatty 36. Chris Komosa Gary Clements 15. Jamie Auch 37, Dan DuPre Al Vespoli 16. Eric Turner .38, Brooke Loenig Steve Connett 17. John Rowe 39, Mark Herman Steve Losquardo 18. Steve Giacobbe 40, Jim Clarke Chris Saxman ! 19. Bob Calabretta 41, Eric Campbell Jack Mitchell 20. Shayam Menon 42, Bill Bloom Joe Krastell 21. BillBrown 43, Criag Westbrook 1 22. Albert Paul Knight 44. Peter lerardi I 252 wn w PHI KAPPA SIGMA Alpha . lpha Chapter Established 1894 President Angus McBryde Vice-President William Wilson Treasurer Tom Cover 1. James Kephart 25. Dain Dulaney George Finley 2. Marty Harmon 26. Joe Jefferis Pete Muller 3. Al Br ant 27. Scott Adams Dankv ' Pinckney 4. Angus McBryde 28. Alex Brv ' ant Sandy Brown 5. Andy Cooney 29. Ken Randby Judd Hartman 6. Tom Sackfield 30. Tom Myers Buf Merrill 7. William Wilson 31. Jim Kerr Billy Rush 8. Watson Barnes 32. Marquis Smith Caulley Deringer 9. Joe Luter 33. David Dunn BilK Holmes 10. Bruce Doub 34. Rob Coleman Garic Moran 11. Rob Hawkins 35. Tom Peters Chris Hope 12. Corky Parkinson 36. Mike McAlaine Sand - Whann 13. Christopher Lykes 37. Tem Meyers William Lykes 14. Jimmy Sloan Not Pictured Brent Matthews 15. La ton Register Tom O ' Brien Bob Tomaso 16. Ed Barnes Bruce Blythe Chris Davis 17. Chris Alevizatos Eddie Smith Ross L ndc 18. Dave Eckardt Paul Kuveke John Renner 19. NS ' illiam Schoeffler Bert Palmer Randy Johns 20. Courtney Mauzy Wade Meadows John Church 21. Jim Cobb Bill DeCamp Will Brown 22. John Henschel Jay Stratton Hank Greenberg 23. Mark Sullivan Kirk Mancer Roger Dunnavin 24. John Templeton Tom Cover 254 255 PI KAPPA ALPHA PI Chaptei- Established 1892 President Wade Brannon Vice-President Tripp Spencer Treasurer Jim Stoeffel 1. skip Sandler 24. Higgy Moody 47. John Sutton 2. John Poulton 25. Tom Fitzgerald 48. Ted Wilkerson 3. Brad Johnson 26. Clark Lewis 49. Duncan Stone 4. Foster 27. Chachi WiUett Not Pictured: 5. Frank Rembert 28. Greg Hair Mark Slack 6. David IQ Gordon 29. Dogbone Kerr Brad Newsome 7. John Feyrer 30. Robert Barnes Tom Knight 8. Alex Benedetto 31. Gregg Van Orden Jeff Cohen 9. John Oliver 32. Leighton Stradtman Kevin Lederer 10. Jay Reville 33. Jim Williams Walker McKay 11. George Binger 34. Dave Jonson Clint Fisher 12. Scott Alford 35. Dave Adams Denny Samuel 13. Jack Kelly 36. Scott Boyd Tim McMahon 14. Billy Deep 37. D.J. Emanelson Gene Tanski 15. Bruce Partington 38. Tim Stanford Peyton Craighill 16. Marty Radvany 39. Sammy Wash Tripp Spencer 17. Mike Lehman 40. Ibbs Chris Gilman 18. Bob Kelly 41. Greg Wheeler Matt Vanter 19. Jim Patterson 42. Kevin Marrie Keith Kadesky 20. Jay Hennig 43. Wade Brannon Kevin Kadesky 21. Bob Pearson 44. Scott Jonstone Fenn Little 22. Mule Metzger 45. Jim Stoeffel Stuart Adams 23. Ghip Temple 46. Steve Best Marsh Robertson 256 Til- I ' i1 1 - II n 257 PI KAPPA PHI Rho Chapter Established 1920 President Duane Miller Vice-President Roger McDonough Treasurer Paul Driscoll 1. Tim Higgins 23. Steven Lewis Ted Petrides 2. Chase Chassaignac 24. Chip Hutchins Mark Dickinson 3. Jeft ' Marks 25. Duane Miller Chad Woodburn 4. Mark Millar 26. Jeff Sapp John DiDuro 5. Jack Benjamin 27. Pat Buttarazzi Paul Driscoll 6. Jim New 28. Ken Andsaeger Craig Frascati 7. John Koedel 29. Mark Canon Anthony Interrante 8. John Schuh 30. Jim Hamlin Chris Phaneuf 9. John McCafFery 31. Tucker Mike Spellman 10. Pat Higgins 32. Chris Ives Bob Glenn 11. Jack Moore 33. Scott Waterman John Scannapieco 12. Jim Nobles 34. Roger McDonough John Spellman 13. Bob Phillips 35. Dave Oskam Roth Kehoe 14. John Moor e 36. Robert Young Mike Buttarazzi 15. Mark Carduner 37, Rich Hobson Baltzer Lejune 16. Rich Leaiy 38. Jimmy Holmes Dave Dickey 17. Ed Buttarazzi Not Pictured Cooper Parks 18. Dave Judge Charlie Kalocsay Charhe Wissel 19. Rod Ltindy Mike Singer Craig Matzdorf 20. Mike Jacoby Ted McQuiston Andy Reibach 21. Jackson MacFarlane Jet Taylor Pete Walther 22. Jefl Boal Bennett Ross 258 SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON Sigma Chapter Established 1867 President David Perdue Vice-President George Yeomans Treasurer Charlie Sherill, Will Massie 1. Scott Shanon 22. David Perdue 43. Turner Simkins 2. Tom Pearce 23. John Roberts 44. Graham Loomis 3. Jay Kendall 24. Chris Hunter 45. Eyud Henson 4. Jensie Teague 25. Jim Higginson Not Pictured: 5. Scotty Mason 26. Robin Smithwick Ted LeQuerg 6. Eddie Griffin 27. Laws Bouldin Hugh Black 7. Spencer Dickenson 28. Buist Rivers Ricky Lail 8. Sir Mat hew Laws 29. Grits Gresham Bob Pitts 9. Brewser Brown 30. Jabba Kelly Cooper Crawford 10. Bruce Reed 31. Steve Bendheim Johnny Buchanan 11. Gray Sanders 32. Will Massie Thornton Brooksbank 12. E. Jay Josey 33. Tom Cocke G.Q. Anderson 13. Herb Funsten 34. Barrit Gilbert Crint Shelton 14. Charlie V. King 35. Blynn Alexander Kenry Bendheim 15. Alan Pritchard 36. Sigmund Harbison Gene Girard 16. Chris Robinson 37. Mike Morris Bill Schoettelkotte 17. George Yeomans 38. Tommy Pee David Woodham 18. Marvin Dukes 39. Will Pearsal Chico Alexander 19. Craig McArn 40. Holmes Stahel John Carder 20. Charlie Sherril 41. Lee Hollis Chris Talley 21. Carl Lupton 42. Van Smith ■ik_ a i dB m mmmm tmmm i 261 SIGMA CHI Zeta Chapter Established 1866 iBSS p S«««B«S «! President John Miller Vice President Chris Murphy Treasurer Jeff Gwynn 1. Wil Kubely 16. Jim RikhofiF 31. Woof 2. Danny Jayne 17. Bill Tommins Not Pictured: 3. Rob Crosby 18. Kevin Davidson Bill Wreaks 4. Park Randall 19. Stu Roundtree Bobby Pipher 5. Trey Baucum 20. John Miller Ben Hale 6. John Faulk 21. Wil Esham Peter Hunt 7. Teke 22. Ty Seidule Peter Braden 8. Charles Baker 23. Bob Clarke Steven Jones 9. Jon Del Mixon 24. Ron Cache Dave Short 10. Peter VanSohn 25. Don Wilkinson James Griffin 11. Gordon Ogden 26. Mark Monyek Scott Doyle 12. Billy Manor 27. Jack O ' Brien Andrew Farley 13. Jim Owens 28. Jabba Stites Ken Moles 14. Steve Logan 29. Wil Piersall Kevin Kelly 15. Bill Jones 30. Nat May Jeff Gwynn 262 SIGMA NU Lambda Chapter Established 1882 iyM, President Chris John Vice-President Ernest FrankUn Treasurer Trov Andrade 1. Greg Lee 11. John-Paul Bouffard 21. Jim Augustus 2. Jim Hansen 12. Jim Murphy 22. Bill Lyons 3. James Farquhar 13. Bob Strickland 23. Carlton Simons 4. Chff Wargelin 14. Edgar Hill 24. Cliff Gottwalls 5. Mark Fishman 15. Lance Yonkos 25. Paul Smith 6. Scott Newman 16. Ernest Franklin 26. Dave Tambling 7. Troy Andrade 17. Scott Stockburger 27. Andrew Midkiff 8. Chris John 18. Lou Dubuque 28. Tony Pfaff 9. Michael Bearup 19. David Barnes Not Pictured: 10. Kelley Armitage 20. Everett Hamilton Jeff Mandak 264 SIGMA PHI EPSILON Virginia Sigma Chapter Established 1906 President Sam Stroud Vice-President Tom Todd Treasurer Cam Philpott v.- ] 1. Warren Wilson 20. Tom Todd 1 2. Jeff Hirsch 21. Bob Spatig 39. Bruce Rothenberg 3. Mike Allen 22. Tom McKinstry 40. Marty Bechtold 4. Ken Natkin 23. Matt Coudert 41. Greg Andrus 5. Steve Matrazzo 24. Larry Boyd 42. Neil Rankin 6. John Ogden 25. Sam Stroud 43. Scott Jung 7. Jeff Kimbell 26. Chuck Fox 44. Russ Peck 8. Tony Jones 27. Ned George 45. Mike Carron 9. Karl Guenther 28. Jon Knaus 46. Russ Whitman 10. Doug Kuhn 29. Andy Best Not Pictured: 11. Shawn Harvey 30. Dave Nave Kevin Brown 12. Dave Schroeder 31. Greg Niles Mike Conway j 13. Jeff Britton 32. Dave Ford Billy O ' Brien 14. Cam Philpott 33. Erik Curren Russ Rosier 15. Chris McGowan 34, Bob English Josh Slowik 16. Wes Boatwright 35. Brandt Surgner Mike Tollison 17. Mike Brooks 36. Joe Aronhime Phil Triebes 18. George McDowell 37. Jake Amsbary Jay Wallace 19. Jeff Blount 38. Jon Miles Barry Waterman 266 ZETA BETA TAU Alpha Epsilon Chapter Established 1920 President Jay Boggs Vice President John Riley Treasurer Kirk TenEyck 1. David Auld 11. Tim York Not Pictured 2. Dave Marsh 12. William VanDeventer Phil Aiken 3. Miles 13. Jay Boggs Paul Clark 4. Chris Carmouche 14. Andy St. John David Connor 5. FT. 15. Brandon Davis Bob Diethrich 6. Brian O ' Riordan 16. Doug Turrell Dave Eustis 7. Mata McGuire 17. Chris Lillja Chuck Housner 8. Clint Whitaker 18. John Riley Keith MacDougall 9. Todd Harvey 19. Kirk TenEyck Tim McCune 10. Bill McGee 20, Will Baber  Frank McQuillan 268 FOOTBALL — FRONT ROW (left-to-right): Coach Boyd Williams, Craig Reilly. Bill Foster, Ron Travers, Jim Koenig, Dan Seal, Glenn Kirschner, John Cole, Bob Jenevein, Barry Thompson, Marty Manasco, Charlie .Mcorn, Coach Gary Fallon. SECOND ROW: Coach Joe Freeland, Harry Golliday, Mark ea er, Jim L all, David Sizemore, Kurt Shreiner, lam Banwell, Pat O ' Connell, Tom Wiser, Craig Westbrook, Paul Marasciullo, Coach Jeff Stickley. THIRD ROW: Coach Chuck O ' Connell, Greg Lukanuski. Kurt Specht, Gene Girard, Frank Surface, James White, Rob Brown, Chris Bleggi, Alex Castelli, Tim Jan ska, Lee Cummings, Craig Waddell, Coach Norris Aldridge. FOURTH ROW: Trainer Tom Jones, Tim Richardson, Chris Wilson, John Sanders, Rick-y Friend, Bobby Wilson, Dan Reeder, Ricky Zahn, Danny Jayne, Earl Glazier, Kelvin Newsome, Craig Frascati, Trainer Jim Murdock. FIFTH ROW: Paul Strange, John Roe, Joe Krastel, Mark Hurdle, John Atkins, Kurt Giesler, Randy Brown, Tom Murray, Tom Baker, Bill Samii, Chris Sherlock, Ke in Cope. SLXTH ROW: Andrew Putman, Rick Pierce, Rob Duguay, Jon Thornton, Paul Youngman, B.J. Sturgill, Jack Mitchell, Bob Berlin, Eric Turner, Jim Murphy, Jim Barker. SEVENTH ROW: Equipment Manager Tom Bane, Trainer Joan Meikleham, Mark Herman, Kevin Weaver, Andy Reibach, John Lockley, Bill Brown, Manager Burford Smith, Manager Ted Goebel. CROSS f. ' Ol ' NTRY: FRONT ROW (l cll-to-righli: ( ,o.Kh iJick .Miller. .Mark I ' enihrokc. Jon Klder, Ste ' e Fockrass. tdgar Hill, Ki-u .Moles. Angus McBryde, John Palattella. Jim Foley, Paul Chapman. BACK ROW: Tim Higgins, Frank Pittman, Ted Myers, Bob Glenn, Doug Turrell, Ron Moody, David Andrews, Eddie Goundry, Perry Lloyd, Cameron Adams. 270 SOCCER — FRONT ROW (left-to-rislit): Coach Piranian, Randall Ray, Gary Clements, Jeft Reichert, Roland Simon, Rob Coleman, Rill Holmes, Ted Petrides, Steve McGrath, Coach Fowler. MIDDLE ROW: Trainer Murdock, Jay Werner, Mark Sullivan, Todd Hermann, Peter Van Son, Tern Meyers, Keith Scott, Mark Millar, Hank Greenberg, Mark McDonough, Manager Egleseder. BACK ROW: Coach Mancer, Jimmy Tucker, Tommy Pee, John Roberts, Jimmy Sloan, Pat Valder, Chris Spear, Mack Gibson, Watson Barnes, Tom Peters, Eric Obeck, Ken Randy. Cork Parkinson, Michael Blackwood, George Berger, Rob Lutz, Alan Scarisbrick, Coach Lyles. Absent: John Templeton. AQUATICS — BACK ROW (left-to-right): Gary Meyer, Charlie Groh, Tim Stanford, Martin Rad an , Will Brown, Gns Walton, Jeff Cohen, Lance Kyle, Don ' Shark Smith, Tom Knight, Jim Vesper. Chris Hope. .NUDDLE ROW John Feyrer, Bill Benson, Kevin Davidson, Kevin Kadesk , Jiike Re ille. Jnn Sa age. Dan Trice, John Nkiody, Taber Smith. Dave Ford, Matt De ito, Kevin Lederer, Coach Page Reniillard FRONT ROW (standing): Asst Coach Bob Newcomb, Jeff Britton. Gene Tanski, Tim Rock, Bobby Pearson, Roth Kehoc FRONT ROW (sitting): Jeff Gee, Bryan Chafie, Scott Johnstone, Matt . be Goldstein Ra encr;iit. 271 BASKETBALL — KNEELING: (left-to-right): Mike Hudson, Lex Fitzenhagen, Fred Bissiiiger. Chris Baldwin, Da id Wilkinson, Kevin McClatchey, John Riordan. Manager Dick Morris. STANDING: Head Coach Verne Canheld, Jefi Harralson, John Lee Graves, Scott Shannon, Keith Brideweser, Rob Spencer, Jim Kerr, Mike Hutcherson, Assistant Coach Tim McDonald. 9 A E MATHIS WRESTLING R.OOM MADE POSMILE C THOMAS FULLEU 42 i ■WRESTLING — KNEELING: (left-to-rightj: Todd Barstovv, Stexen Pockrass, Jeff Miizza. Brian Lifsted, Larn Anker, John Lowe, Donald McCoy, Tin White. STANDING: Assistant Coach Rolf Piranian, Tyler Carr, John Spellnian, Jeff Di.xon. Tim alliere. Carlton Peebles, Joe O ' Neill, Dave Nichols, Trainer Tom Jones, Head Coach Gary Franke. 272 LACROSSE — FRONT ROW (left-to-right): Sam Carpenter (ass ' t. coach), Phil Aiken, Kevni Walakovits, Barn, ' Waterman, Tim Schurr (captain), Roland Simon. Don Richardson, Dennis Dalv (head coach). SECOND ROW: Jeff Long (ass ' t coach), .Mike Mc. laine, Rich Schoenberg, Rod Santomassimo, John DiDuro, David Johnston, Marshall Bovvden, .Mark Lukes (student coach). THIRD ROW: Tom Jones (trainer), Pete Braden, Chris John, G.T. Corrigan, Bill Holmes, Caullev Derringer. John Church, Todd Breithaupt, Steve McGrath. Jeff Sindler. Jim Herbert (student coach). TOP ROW: Tom Schurr, Timmothy Finnerty, Joe Krastel. Bob Berlin. Keith Scott. Jeff Mason. Tommy Bane (equipment manager). 273 TRACK — BACK ROW: (left-to-right): Coach Norris Aldridge, Chris Phaneuf, Ron Moody, Pete Whitehead, Mat Steilberg, Townes Pressler, Todd Howe, Jim McLaughhn. Derrick Freeman, Mike Marshall, Frank Pittman, Dave Andrews, Joe Freeland. MIDDLE ROW: (left-to-right): Mark Martinez, Dave Comer, Dave Dickey, Kurt Eglseder, Tim McMahon, Pat Valder, Ken Moles, John Carder, Scott Doyle, Mike McAlevey, Bob Glenn, Chris McGowan, Mark Pembroke. FRONT ROW: (left-to-right): Bill Rhinehart, Fred Driscoll, Conrad Boyle, Chris Ives, Angus McGryde, Charlie Alcorn, Paul Chapman, John Burlingame, Jon Elder. Not Pictured: Doug Harvey, Tom Murray, Gordon Ogden. TENNIS — BACK ROW: (left-to-right): Coach John Winfrey, Craig Cannon (captaii FRONT ROW: Jim Irwin, John Meloy, Charlie Kalocsay, Roby Mize. Andy Haring, Randy Johns, Scott Adams, Coach Gary Franke. 274 GOLF — (left-to-right): Bob Sloan, Bruce Blythe, Coach Buck Leslie, Whit Kelly, Turner Friedman. Not Pictured: Mike Friedman, Steve Jone.s BASEBALL — BACK ROW: (left-to-right): Coach Jett Sticklev, cJir.s S.imirui, IHaiitK Bi., m,, h.ni Mack, Bill White, John Thornton, Kirk Breen, Bill Schoettelkotte, Chris Jakubek, Chris Militello, Tom Fellin. MIDDLE ROW: Coach Doug Smith, Hugh Finkelstein, Rick Zahn, Pete Detlefs, Mike Jacobs , Bill Curtiss, Chip Hutchins. Milam Turner, Chuck Nelson, Elliot Lambert, Head Coach Jim Murdock, Ted Goebel (manager). FRONT ROW: Dave Howard, Adam Yanez, Neil Rankin, Kevin Golden, Dave Warrenfeltz, Mike Walsh, Eric Campbell, Rob Georgi, Bill O ' Brien. 275 Sigma Society: Chares Alcorn, John Cole, Tom Cover, Emer lllin . i (.lorge Finly, Christopher Lykes, Francis Pinckney (President), Alan Pritchard ( ice-President). Tom Sackfield, Sloan Shoemaker, Dung Teague, Matt Thompson, Kevin Walakovits, Andy Cooney, Burt Palmer, Laws Bouldin, William Wilson, James Kephart, Reynolds Thompson, Marshall Young, Jeff Shaffer, Dave Butler, Barry Trimble, Chad Plumly, George Youmans, Bob Coleman. James Colib. Ian Banwell. David Perdue ■V XT MONGOLUN MINKS: (left to right) Stott Gordon, Ed Vilameter, Bubba Shafer, Barr ' Trimble, Dave Butler, Kreg Kurtz, Brian Farrell, George Lupton, Turner Simpkins, Tom Cocke, Jensey Teague, Edward Griffin, David Perdue, Laws Bouldin, Joe Phoenix, Thornton Brooksbank, Rob McCulough, Bourke Harvey, William King, Not Pictured: George Youmans, Alan Pritchard, Emery Ellinger, Chris Hunter, Matt Thompson, Kevin Walakovitz, Smooth Robinson, Doug Teague, Dikk Minnich, Marshall Y ' oung, Charlie Pitts, Reynolds Thompson, Tom Shults, Charlie Martin, Kirk Breen, Peter Wright. 276 The Sigma Societ). Tlie McmKoliaa Minks, and The Cadaver Society — Patrons of The Calyx OTHER ORGANIZATIONS YOUNG DEMOCRATS James K. Murphy, Pn ,;; ;-7-. ' Greg Lukanuski i David Hanna ■- •,• ' , Lee Whelchel Sf Chris Bradley 1 Robert Bryant J. Robert Cantrall Theodore F ' letcher Everett Hamilton E. Edgar Hill Wayne Johnson Robert Kurek William Rhinchart John S. Sanders James Sarle Martin Bechtold W. Leonard Howard WHO ' S WHO Charles W. Alcorn HI Marty Bechtold Christopher J. Cartmill John M. Cleghorn Andrew S. Cooney Emory Ellinger HI Lee Feldman Robert C. Jenevein Gunnar Kai Jordan David C. Judge Mark A. Lukes Alan E. McQuiston, Jr. Ronald R. Magee Peter M. MuUer Jack L. O ' Brien William Drew Perkins Tori C.A. Richardson Parker B. Schenecker Timothy G. Schurr Roland Simon Michael E. Singer G. Leighton Stradtman Richard C. Swagler, Jr. Timothy A. Valliere T. Jeffrey Wells David John Warrenfeltz OMICRON DELTA KAPPA Class of 1984 Andrew W. Asimos John D. Cole Enrico A. de Alessanrini J. Scott Doyle Lee R. Feldman William G. Foster Jeffrey G. Gee Gunnar K. Jordan Michael F. Killea Andrew J. McLellan Drew Perkins, Jr. Tori C.A. Richardson Timothy G. Schurr Micheal E. Singer T. Jeffrey Wells Class of 1985 J. Coleman Dawson, 111 Ben C. Hale David A. Sizemore B. Scott Tilley Robert J. Tomaso Christopher H. Williams COLLEGE REPUBLICANS B. Scott Tilley, Chairman Michael Shelton Patrick Hayden Michael Bearup Erik Curren Nelson Patterson Reade Williams Gerald Shepherd Peter Dennehey John Pensec Ron Fenstermacher PUBLICATIONS BOARD John Cleghorn Peter Cronin Scott Fitzgerald Dave Killenbeck Tom O Brien Rick Swagler UNIVERSITY COUNCIL Pat Biittaiazzi Ken Andsager Paiil Ziehert Ed Biittaiazzi Mark Moiiyek Kevin Anderson Steven Loscfuardo Bol) Jenevein Kmory Ellinj er Charles Aleorn STUDENT CONTROL COMMITTEE Charles Alcorn Wade Meadows Roliert Tncker Jr. Ian Banwell Robert Tomaso Townes Pressler Jr. John Ilensehel R. Maxwell MeCrew Roh Tolle.son STUDENT AFFAIRS COMMITTEE Dean Lewis G. John, Chairman Dean Dan N. Mnrphy Prof. Howard L. Boetseh, Jr. Prof. John M. Evans Mr. Marshall K. Folio Robert C. Jenevein Emery Ellin er Timothy G. Sehnrr Kelly M. Wrenn Charles W. Alcorn MU BETA PSI James C. Hudson RoKcr T. Day David M. Ilollis Whitney H. Gadsby Landon II. Jones Adam R. Heinstein J. Robert Spatig PHI BETA KAPPA Class of 1984 Stephen B. Brooks Roger L. B it!er Paul F. (Chapman John J. Dclan ' Jack R. Dent Paul N. Fanjnharson Herbert O. Funsten III John L. Graves Richard A. Ilai.nht Stephan A. Jones Keith T. Kadesky Andrew J. MaeLellan Charles W. Mason Alan E. MeQniston Jr. Jerome C. Philpott Scott S. Pry si Russell R. Rosier Thomas W. Sackfield James M. Smith John P. Sutton III Thomas J. Wells Marion E. Wood III Class of 1985 Gabriel B. Balazs Michael S. Bearnp David L. Ilanar II Ken L. Moles Clarke H. Moreledge Robert J. Tomaso Christopher II. Williams Class of 1983 Karl S. Keller James C. McCabe THE CALYX r f ; ' XX 1 ' juC M 1 ■Z fiM $ 2y N? 1 ' ' Ba ' k. 1 H L 1 ' ll |. 1 I 1 1 : ' ? 1- in 1 £ f l k jKk. H ■■w LI f - f _.__ i3 1 1 J wiser man than I once said that anything worthwhile was worth working for. Those may have not been his exact words, but I think that I have captured the general sentiment. The 1984 Calyx is no exception to that idea. Hopefully, the many long hours, shortened tempers and bruised grade point averages have paid off in the final product. As is alwavs the case the Calyx have many thanks to give for all the help in completing this year ' s Calyx. Thanks go to our old and dear ally Andre ' s Studios for the underclassmen ' s portraits, not to mention Patrick Hinely ' 7.3 and Charles Mason ' 84 for senior portraits. Thanks also to Sally Mann for the Calyx staff photo and Ken Ries and Mark Mandel, past and present directors of W L Sports Information respectively, for sports photos and data. A special thanks goes to Richard Kopelman and company. The fruit of their monetary contribution appears between pages 192 and 193. More thanks must go to Jim Ellis, of Hunter Publishing, who helped with our le, and most importantlv Charlie Carri- ed above and be ond the call cover design and made the confusing simple, and son, our representati e with Hunter, who nas perff of duty on more than one occasion (and always has a good story to tell). I would like to extend my personal thanks to the entire Calyx staff for sticking with me and seeing this project through, especially Managing Editor David Sprunt and Chief Editorial Assistant Karen Betts for spending many a dark and stormy night in the Calyx office. Finally, I would like to thank all those people of Washington and Lee who believe in progress, improvement and creativity. At an institution that sometimes seems shy to the twentieth centur ' , such beliefs are not always met with the kindest reception. It is to those individuals who stand up for what they believe in despite ridicule and chastisement that my respect is given. It is to them and the idea of progress that this book is dedicated. Without progress, man s existence is meaningless. J£ utf David Killenbeck 280 Photo Credits: CWM Charles Walter Mason DWS David Worth Sprunt, Jr. PzC Peter Cronin RDB Robert Denton Bryant SI Sports Information SJF Scott Joseph Ferrell WPH W. Patrick Hinely ' 73 Technical Data: Pubhsher: Hunter Pubhshing Company, Winston Salem, N.C. Press run: 1400 copies Press Stock: Hunter Dull Black ink Spot Colors on dividers: Panatone 201C Cover Material: Buckram Cloth nos. 61048 and 61080 Cover type style: Eurostile 158 Body copy type: Caledonia 10 pt. leaded Other copy styles: Venture Script, Times Roman Headline copy types: Caledonia Bold and Italic Other Headline copy styles: Eurostile Bold, Times Italic Supphes and Equipment Ilford films and papers (for the Better look) Nikon, Leica, Olympus, and Minolta cameras and lenses Kodak and Ilford chemicals Bessler and Omega enlargers Various supplies and facilities of the Ring-tum Phi (aka Calyx annex) Chairs and desk space of the Student Activities Board Costs: Approximate total cost of publishing book $40,000 Amount of money received from Student Tax .$10,500 Approximate cost per student $7.50 Approximate value per book $28.57 All other revenues come through Benefactors, Pa- trons, Advertisers, Fraternities, and Portraits Staff: Editor-in-Chief Peter Cronin Business Manager David Killenbeck Managing Editor David Sprunt Photograph ' Editor Charles Mason Chief Editorial Assistant Karen Betts Contributing Writers: John Cleghorn Features Mark Eastham Features Paul Foutch Sports John Harrison Sports W. Patrick Hinely ' 73 Features David Nave Sports G. Bruce Potter Features Mike Stachura Sports Features Rick Swagler Features Scott Tilley Features Contributing Photographers: Bob Br ant Scott Ferrell Rick Swagler Contributing Illustrators: Doug Hutton ' 74 Todd Smith Markham P le David Sprunt Staff Members: Ceoff Carey Nita Crump-Howard Marty Chapman Laura Josephthal Lee Feldman Jim Laurie Scott Fitzgerald Tori Richardson Ted Goebel Burf Smith Len Howard W Palntk Mill. The Howards, Burf Smith and lid Goebel 281 (oa j a well oA ' mucfi Itme, S MaSOM TB:. 282 Compliments of NATURAL BRIDGE OF VIRGINIA One of the Seven Natural Wonders of the World 283 106 WEST WASHINGTON STREET LEXINGTON. VIRGINIA 703-46M065 IMPORTED CAR and TRUCK PARTS Barterbrook Square Staunton. 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Ask your retailer about our kegs, picnic pumps, cold plates and other party equipment H uqer DISTRIBUTING COMPANY 290 On the Campus At Dance Weekends Or Parties at Goshen Whatever the occasion may be O af iJ yc-u n c A 111 West Nelson Strfeet Lexington, Virginia 24450 A r FLORIST 165 South Main Street Lexington, Virginia 24450 (703)463-9152 FRAZIER ' S EXXON SERVICENTER E]|)QPN| Tires Batteries State Inspection E3 0N East Nelson Street, Rt. 60 East Dial 463-4214 Lexington, Va. 24450 291 WASHINGTON AND LEE UNIVERSITY FOOD SERVICES 292 r Old vain Street LEXINGTON. Va. 24450 (703) 463-4062 HELEN DUKE TED DUKE Hienandoan Oj ice Q ' upplu XEROX FREE DELIVER EaSLE COmPUTER -tELP FOR ALL YOUR OFFICE NEEDS Best Wishes For Continued. Success To Our 1984 CALYX Advertisers Your support is appreciated Pres Brown ' s, Inc. 115 West Nelson Street Lexington, Va. Phone 463-3521 Headquarters For Active Wear And Sports IVIerchandise r. J K 293 BENEFACTORS Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Alcorn, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Glenn E. Anderson, Jr. William J. Atkins Mr. and Mrs. Norman J. Benford Mr. and Mrs. William J. Blackburn Adrian F. Bom, MD T. Talbott Bond Dr. and Mrs. Charles H. Brooks Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Brown James M. Burlingame Peter M. and Sandra K. Butler Mrs. Edward J. Crawford, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph R. Crosby, Jr. Ralph A. Davidson John C. Dawson, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Richard S. Doyle Richard N. Dubin Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Duguay Mr. and Mrs. William Ewing Jim Fay Mr. and Mrs. Samuel J. Foley, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. James H. Godfrey Mr. and Mrs. J. Donald Griffin Mr. and Mrs. G. Lee Harralson Dr. and Mrs. John Hassinger Mr. and Mrs. Ross I. Interrante Mr. and Mrs. T.H. Irwin Dr. and Mrs. M.C. Kadesky Mr. and Mrs. Paul Knight Gene Lail Sales Agency Mr. and Mrs. William J. Lemon A.C. Alevizatos, MD Dr. and Mrs. H.C. Alexander, III Dr. and Mrs. Bobby R. Alford Ronald and Louise Andsager Mr. and Mrs. James E. Anthony Mr. and Mrs. William A. Asimos CDR and Mrs. Roger D. Aydt Mrs. Marlyin B. Barlow Robert B. Barnes, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Watson Barnes Mr. and Mrs. Sam Bendheim, III Victor Benedetto Mr. and Mrs. Cesare Bertolini Mr. and Mrs. Austin Boyd Dr. and Mrs. Earl J. Brewer RADM. and Mrs. Earl Brown, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Daniel C. Brown Dr. and Mrs. S.K. Brown Mr. and Mrs. Roger Butler Dr. and Mrs. Thomas W. Butler Dr. and Mrs. Patrick J. Buttarazzi Susan M. Canon PATRONS William H. Carder Betty and Lyles Carr Florence and Bob Carter Katherine R. Caruthers Mr. and Mrs. John F.C. Chaffe Mr. and Mrs. Peter F. Chapman Mrs. T.R. Cleek Reese Cleghorn James M. Clifton, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Norman B. Cobb Dr. and Mrs. Edmund Conway Mr. and Mrs. George Corrigan Victor R. Courdert, Jr. Roy A. Craig, Jr. Mrs. Mary L. Cronin Thomas W. and Judith M. Crooker Dr. and Mrs. J. David deHoll Mr. and Mrs. Francis T. Deighan Mr. and Mrs. Walter Democko and Family C. David Dickey Mr. and Mrs. Richard E. Di, on Harry J, Donahue Joseph and Patricia Donovan Joseph D. Dulaney Mr. and Mrs. Paul A. Dupre LTC and Mrs. R. Erickson William E. Esham, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. J. Thomas Eubank Henry Exall, Jr. William R. Fagan William R. and Joan Farquharson Mr. and Mrs. C.L. Farrand, Jr. Robert A. Fearey Mr. and Mrs. Raymond G. Feldman Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Fellin Mr. and Mrs. T.J. Ferrell George C. Finly Norton and Madeline Fishman Mr. and Mrs. Elmer A. Fitzgerald Mr. and Mrs. Lee S. Fountain, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest B. Franklin, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. E.a. Gadsby Mr. and Mrs. Richard S. Gatti, Jr. Donald R. Calvin 294 — MORE PATRONS — Anthony J. Gerike Dr. and Mrs. Peter Gilbert Mr. Earl VV. Glazier Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Goodling Mr. and Mrs. Harry C. Gottwals, Sr. Bonnie and Fred Goundrey Mr. and Mrs. Henry Greenherg, Sr. Capt. and Mrs. James B. Groff Mr. and Mrs. John J. Grogan Howard S. Groh Mr. and Mrs. Channing M. Hall, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. J.S. Hamblen Mr. and Mrs. Grant Hamrick R.W. Hancock Dr. and Mrs. Frederick N. Haring Mr. and Mrs. John J. Hartigan Mr. and Mrs. L. Hartman, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. James L. Hayne Frances Watt Haynes Dr. and Mrs. Albert E. Heimert Mr. and Mrs. Herbert L. Heltzer Mrs. William R. Hemphill Margaret Henry Thomas and Teresa Higgins Mr. and Mrs. Carl H. Hirsch Marlin and Margaret Holbrook Mr. and Mrs. Walter W. Hollis Mr. and Mrs. B.C. Holmes James F. Holmes Mr. and Mrs. Frederick W. Hope, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Y. Hoppes Mr. and Mrs. Raymond D. Houlihan, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Edwin E. Howard Mr. and Mrs. John K. Hudson Mr. and Mrs. John K. Hudson Mr. and Mrs. Elwood T. Hughes Dr. John A. Hunt Ra mond E. Hutchinson Paul and Bernadette Janyska Daniel V. Jennings Dr. and Mrs. Fred F. Johnson David H. Jones Mr. and Mrs. J.C. Jones Capt. and Mrs. R. Clifton Jones, Jr., USN (Ret.) Dr. and Mrs. Richard B. Jones Mr. and Mrs. Charles M. Judge Mr. and Mrs. James F. Kelly Mrs. Jane K. KelK ' Mr. and Mrs. Ra niond B. KelK, Jr. EIJ. Kendall. Jr. Mr. and Mrs. James R. Kennedy J.L. Kephart Ted Kerr William J. Killea Mr. and Mrs. Da id F. Killenbeck Mr. and Mrs. William W. Knobloch Mr. and Mrs. John G. Koedel, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Krastel Col. and Mrs. R.A. Kurek Russell Ladd HI Dr. and Mrs. Todd Lafargue Mr. and Mrs. William Leary Dr. and Mrs. Donald R. Lewis Mr. and Mrs. Harry V. Lewis J.E. Lipscomb HI Hon. and Mrs. Thos. H. Lowe Lucille C. Lundy Richard E. and Sally P. McCann Clarke W. McCants, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Alan McQuiston Mr. and Mrs. Ronald MacCIellan Mrs. Fred E. Manasco Mr. and Mrs. Wm. P. Maroney, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Marrie Mr. and Mrs. Chuck Mason Mr. and Mrs. Earl F. Matthews Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Mausser Mr. and Mrs. Hiram P. Ma. im, H Mr. and Mrs. C. Irvin Messner Mr. and Mrs. William E. Mohr Mr. and Mrs. Wm. L. Monroe, Jr. Mrs. Robert H. Monyek James E. Murphy Mr. and Mrs. Thomas R. Murray Dr. and Mrs. Oakie G. Newsome Mr. and Mrs. Alexander G. O ' Brien Mr. and Mrs. John D. O ' Neill Mr. and Mrs. Raymond S. Oliger Mr. and Mrs. James Paone Mr. and Mrs. B.L. Partee McGowin L Patrick ' 60 R. Dean and Mary S. Patterson Betty J. Pee Mr. and Mrs. A. Winniett Peters Eve S. Phoeni.x O.S. Philpott, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Francis M. Pinckney Mr. and Mrs. David Pitard Louis P. Poulton Mr. and Mrs. Henry F. Prysi Mr. and Mrs. Anthony E. Puleo Mr. and Mrs. William P. Raines Mr. and Mrs. Alfred A. Reed James R. Reichert Frank M. Rembert, M.D. Mrs. Margaret and Mr. Charles Richardson Mrs. Rosemary A. Richardson Capt. and Mrs. G. Donald Riley Mr. and Mrs. John D. Row, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Martin B. Roth Mr. and Mrs. D. Sam Samuel L. Gray Sanders Mr. and Mrs. William Sapp George J. Sawyer HI Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth E. Scarisl)n)ok Dr. and Mrs. Richard D. Schulz Mr. and Mrs. John S. Shannon Mr. and Mrs. Barrett Shelton, Jr. Martin R. Shelton L. H. Simkins, Jr. Christine Simon Mr. and Mrs. Carlton Simons Dr. and Mrs. Richard R. Sindler Ben and Mancy Skillman Mr. and Mrs. John M. Slack, HI William B. Smith, Sr. Leland R. Speed Mr. and Mrs. John F. Stachura Mr. and Mrs. John C. Stockburger Mr. and Mrs. Richard J. Stoeff ' el Mr. and Mrs. Earl Stradtman Dr. and Mrs. Robert E. Strange Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Strickland Mr. and Mrs. Anthony J. Sylvester, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. T. Eugene Temple, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Reynolds Thompson, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Peter A. Trice Captain and Mrs. C.J. Triebes, Jr., USN (Ret) Mr. and Mrs. Edward W. Turley, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Robert Van Son Mr. and Mrs. James E. Vesper Mr. and Mrs. K.E. Vogt Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth H. Walther The Waterman ' s Rev. and Mrs. Ercel F. Webb Frank P. Wetherbee Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Whann, HI Mr. and Mrs. CM. Whitaker, Jr. C. Cody White Dr. and Mrs. Headley S. White, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Russell W. Whitman Mrs. Henrietta W. Willcox Victoria C. Willett Mr. and Mrs. Cranston Williams, Jr. Joy and Harry Williams Mrs. M.E. Wood, Jr. Charles F. Wreaks, HI Samuel M. Zavatsky Dr. and Mrs. Gerald J. Ziebert More Benefactors and Patrons: Mr. and Mrs. Andrew N. Farle Bruin S. Jr. and Doroth Richardson Stanley White, M.D. Mr. and Mrs. Frederick G. Allen Mr. and Mrs. Richard J. Clark Dr. and Mrs. Paul Henson, Jr. Charles M. Ives, Jr. Don and Nancv Richardson . ABBE. JAMES EDWARD I — Economics — Ring Turn Phi staff photographer. Cal T[ contributing photographer. Mock Convention (Rhode Island Delegation Chairman . ALLEN, LEWIS McDONALD — Art — Deans List, Honor Roll. W L Political Re iew — (Illustrator), DuPont Gal!er Security Guard. Lambda Chi . lpha Fraternity, La-Mink, . rt Patron. . NDS. GER. KENNETH J. — .Accounting, Business — Dean ' s List, Superdance (Finance Chairman 3,41, GolfTeam (2,3,4). University Council (4), .Mock Con en- tion (Finance Committee 3.4. Maryland Float Chairman (4). Pi Kappa Phi Frater- nity (Pledge Trainer 2, Secretan, 4), Randolph Manor Historic Preservation Soci- ety. ARNOLD, DA TD BRIAN — Business Administration, .Accounting — Robert E Lee Scholarship, Phi Eta Sigma, 1982 .Accounting Departmental .Award. Com- merce Fraternity. Dean ' s List. Honor Roll, WLl ' R, Outing Club, Mock Conven- tion (State treasurer. New Hampshire Delegation), Delta Iota semi-social Fraterni- ty. ASIMOS, ANDREW WILLIAM — Chemistry — Dean ' s List, Honor Roll, Phi Eta Sigma, .Alpha Epsilon Delta (Secretary 4 ' . Omicron Delta Kappa. Robert E Lee Research Scholarship i2.3.4i, Student Recruitment Committee. Dormitory Counselor (3.4i. Fellowship of Christian .Athletes, Beta Theta Pi Fraternit , BAKER, CHARLES KEND ICK — English — Circle P; Numerous other activi- ties of moderate significance, available upon request. BALDWIN, CHRIS EMERSON — Business .Administration, .Accounting— Bas- ketball. Student Intramurals Director. BARSTOW. TODD WOODRUFF — History — Dean ' s List, 3-year ROTC Scholarship, Ring Turn Phi, Wrestling Team Manager, .Mock Convention iN.C. State Chairmant, College Republicans BAUCUM. RALPH WILLARD III — Interdepartmental Natural Science — .Alpha Epsilon Delta, Circle P. BECHTOLD. MARTIN JOSEPH — Politics — Dean ' s List. Honor Roll, Pi Sigma Alpha. Who ' s Who Dorm Counselor. Sigma Phi Epsilon Fraternity. University Athletic Committee, University Federation, Student Handbook Editor, Young Democrats (Secretary), Mock Convention State Delegate, Superdance, Student Telephone Union, WLUR-FM. BERGER. KEVIN YOUNG — Biolog — Honor Roll, Dean ' s List, .Alpha Epsilon Delta. Mu Beta Psi, Robert E. Lee Scholarship. Pi Kappa Phi. Student Recruit- ment, Photographer for Ariel, Ring Turn Phi, University Federation. BERRY, JOEL, HALBERT III — Spanish — Soccer, Beta Theta Pi Fraternit . Study in Spain, US Marine Corps OCS. University Theater. University Center Committee • BLITHE, EDMUND BRUCE III — Political Science — GolfTeam 1,2,3,4 (Captain 3.4), Contact Committee (3,4), College Repu blicans (1,2,3,4), Mock Convention (KY State Chairman 4), Phi Kappa Sigma Fraternity (Scholastic Chair- man, Second ' ice President 3,4). BOAL. JEFFREY H.AZEN — Psychology — Contact (3). Mock Convention (MA State Chairman). Student Recruitment (4), WLUR (.Afternoon Rock D.J. I, Ski Team BRADLEY. CHRISTOPHER MICHAEL — Politics — Dean ' s List, Honor Roll, Station Manager, WLUR-FM, .Mock Convention (AZ State Chairman 4), Young Democrats. BR-ANNON, WADE HAMPTON JR. — Economics — Robert E. Lee Research Scholarship, Pi Kappa Alpha Fraternity (President 4), Contact (1). Mock Conven- tion (AK State Secretary 4), Chairman IFC Fraternity Self Improvement Commit- tee. BUCHANAN, ROBERT GRAHAM JR. — Business Administration — Commerce School Fraternity. Honor Roll. Dean ' s List, Kappa Alpha Order, Mock Conven- tion (NJ Delegation Chairman), personal friend of G.P.A. Dent. BUTLER. ROGER LAWRENCE — Economics — Phi Beta Kappa. Phi Eta Sigma. Elirabeth Garrett Scholar in Economics. University Theater, Glee Club. CAMPBELL. ERIC JOSEPH —Journalism, Communications — JV Soccer (I), Phi Kappa Psi Fraternity ( Vice President 2, Corr, Secretary 3), Baseball (2,3,4), Ring Tum Phi (3,4 Head Photographer 4), Cable Nine, WLUR. CAR.AWN. JAMES R,AY — Business Administration — CAREY. GEOFFREYR.B— Politics— Dean ' s List, Honor Roll. Mock Conven- tion Parade and PR Committees), Superdance (Publicit Committee ). Calyx Business Staff, Intercollegiate Lacrosse (3), Squash Club CAWLEY, LANCE COOPER — Business Administration — CERESA, RAY A. — Accounting, Bisiness Administration — Dean ' s List, Mock Convention (Finance Committee 4). Phi Kappa Psi ( ' ice President). CHAPMAN, PAUL FREDERICK — Psychology — Robert E. Lee Research Scholar, Psycholog - Departmental Scholarship, Phi Beta Kappa, Cross Country, Track, Phi Kappa Psi (Treasurer). CHAPPELL, CAROLE RICHARD MRS. — Mears and Fowler (ROTC) — .Almost married Rick Swagler one cool autumn, but not quite! .A ailable upon request to those who care. Im too busy handing out these stupid Senior Inde.x forms to do an -thing. CLARK, ANDREW ELLIOTT — Accounting— Dean ' s List. Phi Gamma Delta Fraternity (President), IFC Rush Chairman, JV. Lacrosse. CL.ARK, J.AMES C. — Politics — Dean s List, Student Financial Relations Com- mittee (1,2,3), Student Recruitment (4), Dormitor)- Counselor (3), .Assistant Head Dormiton. Counselor (4), Student Health Committee (4), Phi Kappa Psi Fraterni- ty ■CLEGHORN, JOHN MICHAEL — Journalism — Dean s List, Ring Tum Phi, Sigma Delta Chi. Calyx, Phi Delta Theta, Publications Board, .NoDK. COCKE, THOMAS LAWRENCE HUNT — Architectural Histon — Sigma .Alpha Epsilon. Mongolian Monks. CONNORS. THOMAS G. — Histop, — George C. Marshall Research Scholar- ship, Excelsior, Ariel, W L Politcal Review, Ring Tum Phi. COONEY, ANDREW SEAN — Business Administration — Dean ' s List. Who ' s Who, SAB (Chairman. Treasurer). Student Recruitment Committee. Dormitorv ' Counselor. Phi Kappa Sigma. Sigma Society. COTE. MELVILLE PETER JR. — Journalism. Communications — Deans List, Varsity F ootball (2), Varsity Baseball (1), Ultimate Frisbee Club, WLUR, 3rd Ear, Cable Nine, Old Snu. CR.AIGHILL, G. PETER — Journalism — JV. Soccer (2), Pi Kappa .Alpha Fraternity. WLUR (3,4 , Cable 9 (4), Mock Convention (WI Delegation co- chairman). CRONIN. PETER — Art, Geology — Dean ' s List, Calyx Editor-in-Chief (4), WLUR, NoDK, Pi Pi Pi President (4). CROSS. J. ROBERT JR. — Economics, Politics — Pi Sigma Alpha Honoran,- Politics Fraternity, Elizabeth B. Garrett Scholarship in Economics, 1984 Emor ' University Business Team, Dean ' s List, Honor Roll, SAB, Calyx. DEAN. BRUCE NICHOLS — European Histor - — Dean ' s List, Honor Roll, Lambda Chi Alpha Fraternity (Ritualist, Intramural Chairman), Mock Conven- tion. DEES. ROBERT .MICHAEL — Business Administration, .Accounting — The Mills. Kappa Sigma Fraternity (President). Y ' oung Bohemians. DERBY, D.AVID H. JR. — European Histop. — Kappa Sigma Fraternity, Big Brother. DENT. JACK ROBERT — United States Histon,- — Ruth S. Widener Scholar- ship, Honor Roll, Dean s List, Phi Beta Kappa, Kappa .Alpha Order (Vice Presi- dent), .Mock Convention (Political director 4), Chairman of Credentials Commit- tee, Steering Committee DEWING, ANDREW JOHN — Physics-Engineering Mathematics — Dean ' s List, Delta Del Delta Honorar - Engineering Society, Mock Democratic Conven- tion (Technical Advisor 4), Computing Team Club, Mathematics Team Club, Game Wizard, Red Cross Campus Activities Coordinator. Bike-.A-Thon Coordina- tor, Chi Psi Fratemit -, IFC, Lad Guru. DICKENSON, BREESE MARK — Business .Administration — Dean ' s List. Honor Roll. Student Representative Committee. Pi Kappa Phi, Mock Convention Parade Committee, oting Regulation Board, Superdance Committee. DINDINGER. JOHN WILSON III — Business Administration — Mock Conven- tion (VA Delegation Finance Chairman 4). Superdance Steering Committee, Voting Regulations Board, JV. Basketball. Fellowship of Christian .Atheletes, College Republicans. DOMEIKA. JOHN PETER — Politics — Dean ' s List, Pi Sigma.Alpha, Indoor and Outdoor Track, College Republicans, Mock Convention, Intramural Sports. DUNN, RICHARD M. Ill — History — Rugby Club (Match Secretan. ), College Republicans. EASTHA.M, MARK HA.MPTON I — Journalism — Dean ' s List, Honor Roll, Journalism Scholarship, Cum Laude, WLUR (1,2,3), Calyx (3,4), Sigma Delta Chi (3,4 Treasurer 4) Retrospect (3), Student Teacher Lexington High School, Stu- dent Phon-A-Thon Chairman (2,3,4), Pi Pi Pi. EDWARDS. EMORY ASBURY — Politics — Dean ' s List. Mu Beta Psi National Honorary Music Fraternity President. Pi Sigma Alpha National Honorary Politics Fraternity Vice President, SAB. Student Recruitment Committee, College Re- 296 publicans, ' Brass Ensemble, International Club, WLUR-FM. EMANUELSON, DWIGHT HILLIS JR. — Economics, French — Dean ' s List, Honor Roll, Commerce School Academic Honor Fraternity, Mock Convention, Superdance Steering Committee, J.V. Tennis (1,2), W L Law School Moot Count, Pi Kappa Alpha Fraternity. FARQUHARSON, PAUL NEWMAN N. — Philos ophy, English — Phi Beta Kappa, Dean ' s List, Honor Roll, American Legion Award, DAR Award, Rush Book Editor (2,3), Dorm Counselor, Chi Psi Fraternity (National Executive Counselor, Regional Representative, President), IFC Newsletter (Editor). FAULKNER, JAMES M. HI — American Hisotry — Honor Roll, Dean ' s List, Kappa Alpha Fraternity, Mock Convention (TX Delegation). FAY, JAMES LESTER JR. — Politics — Deans List, Mock Convention (V. L State Chairman), Superdance (3), University Federation (1), Phi Delta Theta Fraternity, Mongolian Minks. FELDM AN, LEE RUSSELL — Public Policy — ODK, Pi Sigma Alpha (Treasur- er 4), Delta Sigma Rho — Tau Kappa Alpha, Who ' s Who, Dean ' s List, Mock Convention (Executive Director 3,4), Calendar Committee (4), College Republi- cans, College Republican Federation of Virginia (Treasurer 3, 2nd Vice Chairman 4), Student Telephone Union (Chairman 3), Calyx (3,4), Debate Team (L2), Computer Club (2,3), International City Management Association, Center for the Study of the Presidenty. FITZGERALD, SCOTT JOHN — Business Admistration— Calyx Business Man- ager (2,3), Copy editor (1), Pub Board (Vice-President, 3), Pub Board Capital Expansion Procurement Subcommittee (4), Mock Convention New Jersey dele- gate and memorabiha committee (4), driver for Board of Trustees (3,4), Interna- tional Club, College Republican, NoDK, Hey Lama , generally swell guy. Pi Pi Pi. FLENTJE, GREGORY LAURANCE — Biology — Honor Roll, Deans List, AED, Robert E. Lee Research Scholar, Indiana State Chairman 1984 Mock Convention, Cantebury Club. FLINN, CLAIBORNE REID — Classics — Phi Eta Sigma, Latin Scholarship (L2), Robert E. Lee Scholarship (1), George Washington Scholarship (2,3,4), Robert E. Lee Research Scholar (2,3,4), Dean ' s List (1,2.3), Honor Roll (1,2), Lambda Chi Alpha IFC. Rep. (1). FOSTER, WILLIAM GUY JR. — Business Administration — Honor Roll, Dean ' s List, ODK, Commerce Honor Fraternity, L.K. Johnson Scholarship, Phi Eta Sigma, Frances P. Gaines Scholar, Who ' s Who, Phi Kappa Psi Social Fraternity (President), Varsity Football (1,2,3,4), Dormitory Counselor (4). FRANKFURTH, THOMAS JOHN — Biology — Alpha Epsilon Delta, honor roll, dean ' s list. Golf team (1,2,3,4). College Republicans, 1984 Mock Convention (Ohio State delegate). FUNSTEN, HERBERT OLIVER III — Physics — Sigma Pi Sigma, Magna Cum Laude, Phi Beta Kappa, SAB (secretary), Rugby Club (coach. Captain), Mock Convention (Ga. Float Chairman), Sy E social fraternity. CACHE, RONALD MATTHEW — European History — Dean ' s List, Honor Roll, Candidate for Daughter ' s of the American Confederacy Scholarship in Histo- ry, Sigma Chi Social Fraternity, Student Recruitment Committee (2,3,4), Ring Tum Phi (Sports writer 3), Washington State Delegation 1984 Mock Convention (treasurer, 4). GOLDEN, KEVIN DWAYNE — Business Administration — Deans List, Base- ball (Varsity), EGA. GANONG, JACK — Business — Editor of ' 47 Calyx, divorced, married a local girl from Buena Vista, living in California. GOODLING, JACE .-VTLEE — U.S. and Latin American History — Dean ' s List, 1980 use. YAZOOS (3,4), Spyder Hill Crew, W L Mock Convention. GIL INGER, GEORGE RICHARD JR. — Politics — Dean ' s List, Kappa Sigma Social Fraternity (Social Committee, Rush Chairman 3), Big Brothers Program, 1984 Mock Convention (Tennessee Delegate). GUENTHER, KARL FREDERICK — Business Administration — Outing Club (Pres. 1,2). Mock Convention State Parade Co-Chairman. HAIGHT. RICHARD .ALLEN — Business Administration and European Histor — Phi Beta Kappa. Phi Eta Sigma. Y ' oung Bohemians. Idaho Delegate for 1984 Mock Convention. HAMRICK. GR. NT DA ID — English — 1983 Wornom .Award Nominee. Robert E. Lee Research Fellow. Kappa , lpha Social Fraternity. Intramural Sports, 1984 Mock Convention (New Jersey Delegate), Climb High Climbers Club, Friend of G.P.A. Dent. HARRISON, JOHN EDWARD III — Journalism — Ring-Turn Phi(l,2,3), Can- terbup.- Club (3,4). HAYNES, GREGORY HOWARD — Business Administration — Glee Club, Southern Comfort. HOWARD, JOHN VINCENT JR. — History — Phi Eta Sigma, House I, The Mills, Young Bohemians. HOWE, TODD ANTHONY — Sociology, Anthropology — Dean ' s List, Track (1,2,3,4), Fencing Team (1), IM Basketball, Skylark Conference (3), SABU (Parlia- mentarian 2, Vice-President 3). HOYT, JUSTUS STEPHEN — Business Administration — Phi Kappa Psi Social Fraternity, Junior Representative University Council, Manager of Cockpit. HUDSON, JAMES CONDRON — Interdepartmental — Natural Sciences and Mathematics (Physics) — Mu Beta Psi, Pres. Lexington s Organization for Reli- gious Development, Brass Ensemble, Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship. HURDMAN, THOMAS FREDERIC — Spanish — Dean ' s List, Kappa Alpha Social Fraternity, Co-Chairman of Publicity for Muscular Dystrophy Superdance Steering Committee (3,4), M.D. Superdance (KA Rep), KA Pledge Training Committee (3), Hockey Club, J.V. Lacrosse, Squash Club, Climb High Rock Climbing Club, Mock Convention Delegate for New Jersey. INTERRANTE, ANTHONY JOHN — English — Dean ' s List, Honor Roll, Mock Convention (Secretary — Texas Delegation), Calyx (Advertising, Washington and Lee Political Review, Pi Kappa Phi Social Fraternity. JENEVEIN, ROBERT CROFFORD — Politics — Dean ' s List, Student Body President, Junior Class President, IFC Judicial Board, Football (captain). Track, Superdance, Kappa Alpha Social Fraternity. JONES, STEPHEN ANDREW — German and English — Phi Beta Kappa, Jim Stump Award in German (1,2), R.E. Lee Scholarship Assistant (3,4), Golf Team (1,2,3,4), All-ODAC Golf Team (3), Sigma Chi Social Fraternity (1,2,3), WLUR- FM (I). JORDAN, GUNNAR KIA — English — Dean ' s List, Honor Roll, Who ' s Who, ODK, Student Recruitment Committee (2,3,4), University Federation (1,2,3,4), Tutor, Big Brother, Chi Psi Social Fraternity, Emergency Loan Committee (3). JUDGE, DAVID CHRISTOPHER — Economics — Executive Committee (Vice- Pres.), Dormitory Counselor (3,4), Two Year Letterman and All Conference in Football, Who ' s Who, University Federation (I), University Barbell Club, Lee Massey McLaughlin Memorial Scholarship, Pi Kappa Phi Social Fraternity, Young Republican Club (1), Student Financial Committee (Chairperson). KADESKY, KEITH TROY — Chemistry, Biology — Phi Beta Kappa, Alph a Epsilon Delta, Dean ' s List, Honor Roll, Robert E. Lee Research Scholar, Pi Kappa Alpha Social Fraternity, W L Lab Jazz Band (3,4), 1984 Mock Convention Texas State Delegate, Varsity Track (1,2), Varsity Water Polo (1,2,3). KADESKY, KEVIN MAX — Biology — AED, Sigma Pi Sigma, Phi Beta Kappa, Dean ' s List, Honor Roll, Pi Kappa Alpha, Water Polo, W L Jazz Band, Sports Information Photography. KALOCSAY, CHARLES GEORGE — Economics — Deans List, Tennis (Letter- man 1,2,3,4), Pi Kappa Phi (Kitchen Manager). KEAST, ANTHONY FRANCIS — Politics, French — Deans List (1,2,3,4), WLUR, Mock Convention Social Fraternity (Social Chairman). KENDALL, MALCOLM COOPER — Psychology — ROTC, Rangers, 1980 Mock Convention, Co-Chairman Louisiana Delegation, 1984 Mock Convention, Lambda Chi Alpha (Social Chairman 3), Founding Member of Sunday Club. KILLENBECK, DAVID WARREN — Business Administration, Accounting, French — Phi Beta Kappa, Beta Gamma Sigma, Phi Eta Sigma, Calyx Business Manager, Inter- Varsity Christian Fellowship — Large Group Coordinator, MD Superdance Registration Chairman, Lutheran Church Youth Director, Old Dominion Square Dance Club. KIRSCHNER, GLENN LOUIS —Journalism — National-Army ROTC Scholar- ship, Football (Captain 3), First Team All-Conference, All-American (3), Director of Cockpit Security, Director of Security 1984 Mock Convention, Phi Kappa Psi Social Fraternity (1,2,3,4), W L Barbell Club (1,2,3), Imperial Quarters Club (1,2,3,4), Annex Legion of Merit, Third Floor Club (1,2,3,4). KOENIG, JAMES LAYTON — Journalism — Dean ' s List, Honor Roll. Sigma Delta Chi, ' arsity Football, Cable IX, WLUR-FM, Phi Kappa Psi Social Fraterni- ty (Chaplain and Chief Confessor), International Club, Imperial Quarter Club (1,2,3,4), Annex Legion of Merit, Third Floor Club (1.2,3,4). KOPELM AN, RICHARD — Politics — Honor Roll, Deans List, Pi Sigma . lpha, ' arsity Wrestling, Mock Convention Speakers Committee, Retrospect , Tutor. LAURIE, JAMES PRINGLE III — English — Hollins College Alumnus ' 82, Layout Editor and Reporter (1,2) and Managing Editor (3.4) for the Ring-Turn Phi, Student Teacher For Special Education (1,2), Social-Cultural Chairman for Inter- national Club. Model United Nations Founder and Princeton Delegate. Layout 297 Editor, Mock Convention Journal. Hollins Columns Production and Composition, Open E. am Committee. English Club, MDC Massachusetts Delegate, Pre-Law Society, MD. Superdance. W L Theatre Productions. LEE. GREGORY MICH. EL — Business .administration, . cconnting — Deans List, Fulbright Scholar, Glee Club (2,3,4 ' . International Club (President!, Mu Beta Psi, Sigma Nu, LEE. RUSSELL L CK JR. — Economics — Deans List, SAB (L2,3,4), S.AB (Film Co-Chairman 2, Fancy Dress Director 4). ' oting Regulations Board, Sigma Chi Social Fraternity, 1984 Mock Con ention Steering Committee (. ccommoda- tions Chairman). LEITCH.POWELLMURRYIII — English — Cum Laude. College Republicans, Glee Club. LEMON, STEPHEN WELDON — Economics — Deans List, Kapp Sigma Social Fraternit) (Vice President 3), IFC (4), 1984 Mock Con ention (Chairman ' irginia Delegation). LE T, P. UL EDGAR — Psycholog , Economics — Honor Roll, Dean ' s List, Departmental Scholarship (Psychology 4), .administrative Assistant — New Hampshire Delegation — 1984 Mock Conxention (4), Faculty Financial Aide Committee (Student Representative 4), Superdance Steering Committee (4). Not- ing Regulations Board (3,4), Volunteer at Waddell Elementar School, Tutor (2), Volunteer at Yellow Brick Road Nurser - School (2). LITTLE. SAMUAL FENN JR. — Economics — Pi Kappa Alpha Social Fraternity. College Republics. LUKES, M. RK . LAN — Business Administration — Who ' s Who, , ssistant Head Dormiton. ' Counselor. ' arsity Lacrosse Player (Goalie 1,2,3), Assistant Lacrosse Coach (4), Phi Psi Social Fraternity (1,2,3,4). NL MO. JOSEPH EDWARD II — Business .administration. Accounting — Deans List. Honor Roll. Commerce Honor Fraternity, ODK (4), Emory Business Games Team (4), Varsity Football, Fellowship of Christian Athletes (President), Dormiton. Counselor, Finance Chairman 1984 Mock Convention, Phi Kappa Psi Social Fraternity. MD.- Superdance, Flipper ' s Trainer. MARTINEZ. HOWARD MARCUS II — Psychology — Dean ' s List. Food .Manag- er, Phi Kappa Psi Social Fraternity (Vice President, President), USMC Platoon Leaders Class, Cpt. Ja Stull Memorial PLC Award, Track. MASON. CHARLES WALTER ESQ. — Natural Science and Mathematics — Phi Beta Kappa (7). Robert E. Lee Scholar (5), NoDK (7), Honor Roll, Dean ' s List, Calyx (5,6,7), Outing Club (5), Band Boosters (7), Pi Pi Pi Fraternit ( ice- President 7), Turtle ' s . Anonymous Club (Mario 7). MASON. SCOTT CARTER JR. — Journalism. Enghsh — E.C. Junior Rep.. Ring-Tum Phi (reporter and Columnist), WLUR D.J., Cable 9 (news writer and anchor). Mock Convention (M.A Delgation Secretary), Wrestling (I). M.WIM. HIR N HANHLTON II — German, Economics — Honor Roll, Dean ' s List. 1982 James S. Wood prize in German, Jim Stump prize in German, tutor at Waddell Elementary school (2,3,4), Mock Convention (NH State Chairman). WLUR, Superdance Finance Committee, Robert E. Lee Research Scholar. Delta Iota Fraternity. McARN, CRAIG HUNTER — Economics — Sigma Alpha Epsilon (House Manag- er 2), Mock Convention (FL Delegation Float Chairman). .McBRlDE, ANGUS MURDOCH III — Economics — Dean ' s List, Phi Kappa Sigma (President), Track (Captain and letterman), Cross-Country (Captain and letterman). McNULT ' . SEAN JOSEPH — Business Administration — Phi Kappa Psi Frater- nity (Corr, Secretary 2. Rush Chairman 2,3), J.V. Larcrosse (1), Assistant Lacrosse Coach ofVMI (2,3,4). MEADOWS, WADE MAGLENN — Business .administration — Intercollegiate Soccer, Vice Pres. senior class — Commerce School, Student Manager College Town Shop, Student Control Committee, Phi Kappa Sigma Fraternity (Social Chairman). MESSER, JAMES ELLIOTJR. — Economics — Sr. EC. Representative, Kappa Alpha Fraternity, W L Army ROTC, Who ' s Who, Friend of G.P.A. Dent, Gamma Nu Fraternity, Potemkin Club. MEYER. GARY JOHN — Economics — Dean ' s List. ' arsity Swim Team (co- captain 4). twice N.C.A.A. Div. Ill All American. 1982-83 Memorial SwiEUTuing Award. MOONEY, PATRICK HAIK — Business Administration, Accounting— Dean ' s List. Sigma Chi (Administrator 1. Secretary 2), IFC Secretar ' (4), Mock Conven- tion (Meda Coordinator, NJ Delegate). CTS. i.e. Clown Shop sur i or and salesman. .MOORE. ERIC KEVIN — Business Administration — MOR. N. THOMAS GARIC — Economics — Phi Kappa Sigma Fraternity. MULLER. DOUGLASMANNING — Enghsh — Dean ' s List, Honor Roll, Mock Convention (PR. Chairman). Pi Kappa .Mpha Fraternity (Social Chairman), J. ' . Tennis. College Republicans. MULLER, PETER MANNING — Politics — Dean ' s List, Co-Chairman Mock Democratic Convention (2,3,4), Student Recruitment Committee (2,3 Co- Chairman 4), Ice Hockey Club (President 2,3,4). Who ' s Who, Phi Kappa Sigma Fraternity. MURPHY. CHRISTOPHER MARON — English — Sigma Chi Fraternity (Nice President). MURPHY, DANIEL LAWRENCE JR. — Histor — Dean ' s List. Kappa Alpha Fraternity, Mock Democratic Convention (FL Delegation), Climb High Climber sClub, next-door neighbor ofG. P. A. Dent, part-time member Delta Tan Delta Fraternity (with highly questionable and ever- changing status). NU1T. JEFFREY C. — Business .administration — Commerce Fraternity, Dean ' s List. Honor Roll. Student Telephone Union. Superdance Finance Com- mittee, Student Financial Relations Committee. Mock Convention (MD Delega- tion P.R. .Analyst). O ' BRIEN THOMAS GAVIN — Economics — Student Financial Relation Com- mittee (4), Publications Board ( ' ice President 4), Ring-turn Phi (Business Mgr. 4), Mock Democratic Con ention (KY Delegate), College Republicans, Kappa Sigme Fraternity, Kentucky Derby Infield (1,2,3,4). PEEBLES, JOHN CARTON — Business Administration — Dean ' s List, Football Wrestling (tri-captain). Phi Gamma Delta (House-Food Manager, Treasurer). PERKINS, WILLIAM DREW JR. — Histon. , Drama — William F. Hirshman .Award. Dean ' s List, Honor Roll, ODK, Who ' s Who, Kappa .■Mpha Order (Rush Chairman), Faculty E.C. Secretary. Mock Convention (Steering Committee), performed 7 productions of University Theater, Student Homecoming Chairman PETRIDES, THEODORE DEMETRIOS — Drama — Deans List, Varsity Soccer, Indoor Soccer, Glee Club, Ring-turn Phi (assistant c irculation manager), CAST. (President. Advisor), Pi Kappa Phi Fraternity, WLUR, Cable 9. PLUMLY, CHARLES M. II — American Histon, — Dean ' s List, SAB (Vice Chairman 4), U.C.C. (2,3,4), Mock Convention (MT State Chairman), BetaTheta Pi Fraternity (Rush Chairman 4, Social Chairman 3), Sigma Society, Squash Club. PHILPOTT, JERO.ME CHAMBERS — Economics — Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Eta Sigma, Omicron Delta Epsilon, Sigma Phi Epsilon Fraternity, Mock Convention (Co State Chairman). PRITCHARD. ROBERT ALAN JR. — American Histor — Dean ' s List. Sigma Alpha Epsilon Fraternity, U.C.C. Chairman (4), SAB (3,4), J.V. Soccer(l), WLUR D.J. (2.3), Mongolian Minks (2,3,4), Mock Convention (GA Delegate), Sigma Society (V.P. 4). PRITCHARD, THOMAS W. — Geolog — Dean ' s List. Phi Delta Theta Frater- nity, Senior Class Vice President, Student Control Committee, arsity Soccer, Geolog - Club, Mock Convention (AL Delegation treasurer). PYLE, MARKHAM SHAW — Philosophy, Politics — National Merit Scholar, Francis P. Gaines Scholar. Dean ' s List, Commerce Fraternity, Pi Sigma Alpha, Ring-turn Phi (Editorial Columnist, Editorial Cartoonist), Co-Chairman, Super- dance Steering Committee. Houston Shakespere Festival Festival Angels , Ariel. RAMPONE, WILLIAM REGINALD JR. — English. American Literature — Dean ' s List, SAB Movie Projectionist (3). RAVENCR FT, MATHEW DAVID — English — Honor Roll, Dean ' s List, Varsity Swimming (1), Varsity Water Polo (1,2,3,4), Hockey Club, 1984 Mock Con ention ' irginia Delegation. RICHARDSON. TORI CLIFFON ANTHONY — East Asian Studies, Journalism — Who ' s Who, ODK, G Holbrook Barber Scholarship Fund, Gannett Newspaper Foundation Scholarship, Honor Roll, Dean ' s List, . ssistant Head Dorm Counsel- or (4), Dorm Counselor (3), News Director (WLUR-F.M 4), Student Recruitment Committee (3,4), Sigma Delta Chi (Secretary 4), SAB (2), Calyx (3,4i, Ring Turn Phi (1,2,3,4), International Club (2,3,4), WLUR-FM (1,2,3,4). RIVERS, GEORGE LAMB BUIST III — History — Varsity Soccer, Rugby Club, Indoor Soccer, SAE Social Fraternitx ' , 1980 Mock Convention Delegate, 1984 Mock Convention (Treasurer, Alaska Delegation), ROTC. ROCK. TIMOTHY PATRICK — Biology — Robert E. Lee Research Scliolar. Dean ' s List, ROTC Scholarship Winner (2,3,4), Distinguished Militar Student, Varsity Swimming (1,2,3,4), ' arsity Water Polo (1,2,3,4), Team Captain for Swim- ming (3,4), Team Captain for Water Polo (2,3,4), All-American Swimming and Water Polo, 1984 Mock Convention for .New Hampshire State Delegation. ROSLER, RUSSELL ROY — Philosophy — Dean ' s List, Honor Roll, Phi Eta 298 Sigma, Phi Beta Kappa, Sigma Phi Epsilon Social Fraternity, Water Polo, Rugby. ROSSER, RICHARD RON — Business Administration — Dean ' s List, An Oscar, Pledge Educator and President Delta Tau Delta Social Fraternity, SAB, W L Film Society, WLUR, Varsity Diving Team, JV Soccer Team, Rugby Club, Ulti- mate Frisbee Club, Cosmic Euphony. RUNNER, ERIK WOLFGANG — French — Dean ' s List, Honor Roll ST. CLAIR, OLIN BENJAMIN — Psychology — Dean ' s List, SuperDance Steer- ing Committee, Student Recruitment Committee, Voting Regulations Commit- tee, 1984 Mock Convention Treasurer, Colorado Delegation, Intramural Athletics. SALSBURY. DA ID KEITH SALZ — American Histon, — Dean ' s List, Brass Ensemble (1.2), Sound Technician (3), Jazz Radio Show WLUR (1), Genrals of Jazz (1,2), University Theatre, Lambda Chi Alpha Social Fraternity, Facilities Chair- man for LA Delegation 1984 Mock Convention. SCHRODEDER, CARL DAVID — Business Administration — Student Activi- ties Board, South Carolina Delegation Chairman 1984 Mock Convention, Sigma Phi Epsilon Fraternity. SCHURR, TIMOTHY G. TIM — Pohtics — ODK. Politics Fraternity, Dean ' s List, Varsity Lacrosse (1,2,3,4), Lacrosse (Captain 4), SAB. FCA (1,2,3,4), MD Superdance Steering Committee (2,3,4), Dorm Counselor (3), Head Dorm Coun- selor (4). SEAL, DANIEL JEFFERSON — History — Honorary Physical Education Schol- arship, ' arsity Football (Letterman 1,2,3,4), Director of Security 1984 Mock Convention, Voting Regulations Board. SHERRILL, CHARLES CARROLL JR. — Economics — Chairman Student EmergencN ' Loan Committee, Sigma Alpha Epsilon Social Fraternity (Treasurer), 984 Mock Convention Treasurer (FL Delegation), Steering Committee for Super- Dance. SHETTLE STEWART THOMAS — Business Administration — Dean ' s List. SINGER, MICHAEL ELLIOT — Politics -- Deans List, ODK, Pi Sigma Alpha Politics HonoraPi Society, Who ' s Who, George C. Marshall Research Scholarship, EC (Secretar ), Washington and Lee Political Review (Editor), University Fed- eration (President), Student Recruitment Committee, Co-Chairman. 1984 Mock Convention Texas Delegation, Sophomore Class U.C. Rep., Freshman Class Vice-President. SIMON, ROLAND JAMES — Physics-Engineering, German — Who ' s Who, Dean ' s List, Varsity Soccer, Varsity Lacrosse, Dorm Counselor. Beta Theta Pi Fraternity. SKINNER, JAMES ADOLPH III — Economics — Dean ' s List, Mock Convention (V.I. Co-Chairnian), Phi Delta Theta Fraternity (House manager, judicial board), Superdance. SLAHOR, DA ID M.W. — Political Science — Dean ' s List, cum laude. W L Political Review (Contact Chairman), Intercollegiate Tennis Team. SMITH, DONALD BRUN — East Asian Studies — Honor Roll, Dean ' s List, Water Polo (1,2,3,4 All American 1,3, Captain 4), ROTC, Swimming, Mock Convention, Zeta Beta Tau (1,2,3), Spring in Japan, International Club. SMITH, STEPHAN JAMES ANTHONY — Biolog — Varsity Soccer, Pi Kappa Phi fraternity (food manager, president), Robert E. Lee Research, Superdance, Mock Convention (VA Delegation). STR. DTMAN, GEORGE LEIGHTON — English — Dean ' s List, Honor Roll. Who ' s Who, Omicron Delta Kappa (president). Mock Convention steering com- mittee. Mock Convention Journal Editor-in-Chief Student Recruitment Commit- tee, Pi Kappa .Alpha Fraternity (. lumni Secretary). Student Financial Relations Committee ( ' ice-Chairman), Student Emergency Loan Committee (Vice- Chairman), Voting Regulations Board, Superdance, Ariel staff STR. ' MTON, JAY K. — Business Administration — Dean ' s List, J ' . Basketball (1), J.V. Tennis (1), Varsitv- Golf (4), U.C.C, Mock Convention (KY Delegation treasurer). College Republicans, Phi Kappa Sigma Fraternity (intramural director (2), Everett Di.xon Fan Club (1-4). SUZUKI, HIDEKI — Business .Administratio n, Economics — Dean s List. Rik- k o University International Scholarship (4), Washington and Lee University E.vchange Program (4), Robert E. Lee Research Assistant, Language .Assistant, International Club. SWAGLER, RICHARD CHARLES JR. — Journalism — Deans List, Fencing (Captain 3, Epee Squad Captain 3,4), Kappa Sigma Fraternity, Ring-turn Phi (news editor 3, Editor 4), Calyx (3,4), Ariel (Editor 3,4), George Mahon Award for poetry. Publications Board (secretar ' 3, President 4), ' Society of Professional Journalists Sigma Delta Chi (Vice-President 4), Who ' s Who, NoDK. TAYLOR. JOHN EDWIN III — Business Administration — L. K. Johnson Schol- ar, Honor Roll, Dean ' s List, Commerce Fraternity, Pi Kappa Phi (Treasurer), Student Recruitment (co-chairman). University Council, SAB, Superdance Re- cruitment Committee, College Republicans. THAU, WILLIAM ALBERT III — Economics — Dean ' s List, Mock Convention, Newspaper Photographer, University. Federation, College Republicans, Kappa Sigma Fraternity. THOMAS, DANIEL HARRISON III — Business Administration, Accounting — Dean ' s List Honor Roll, Young Democrats, Baptist Student Union, Mock Conven- tion. THOMPSON, MATTHEW GILMOUR JR. — History — Dean ' s List, IFC Vice President, SAB, Contact, Beta Theta Pi, Squash Club, Mock Convention, (Parade Chairman), Sigma Society, Mongolian minks (Executive Advisor). Pi Sigma Alpha, Dorm Counselor, TRAVERS, RONALD JOHN — Politics Football. Barbell Club, Delta Iota. TURK, THOMAS MAYNARD TUCKER — Biology — Dean ' s List, Robert E. Lee Research Assistant. Sigma Nu Fraternity, Ultimate Frisbee Team, Galapagos. VALIERE, TIMOTHY ALFRED — French, History — Rhodes Scholar Finalist, Phi Beta Kappa, ODK, Phi Eta Sigma, Ehzabeth Garrett Award in French and in History, Robert E. Lee Research Scholar, ODK-Outstanding Sophomore Award, Varsity Wrestling (Captain), D.C. Montgomery Outstanding Freshman Award (Wrestling). A.E. Mathis Outstanding Wrestler, W L Soccer Comminnioner of Linesman. van DOORN, BARTHE ARLAN — Physics, Engineering— Dean ' s List, Mu Beta Psi Honorary Music Fraternity, Delta Del Delta Honorary Engineering Society founding member. Mock Convention (Asst. Technical Advisor), W L Delegation to the 1983 ACM Capitol Region Scholastic Programming Contest, College Repub- licans (secretary), Superdance Publicity Committee, Total Action Against Povert, Red Cross Blood Drive, Bike-.A-Thon, Chi Psi Fraternity, Rockbridge County Orchestra, Who ' s Buy ' in Jazz Quintet, Jazz Lab, Lad Master. VAUGHN, EDWIN DARRACOTT III — Psychology — Beta Theta Pi, Hockey Club, SAB, U.C.C, Mock Convention Political Research. VITA, JOHN PAUL — American Latin American History — Dean ' s List, Honor Roll, Robert E. Lee Research Scholar. WLUR-FM, International Club, Indepen- dent Union, Intramural Athletics. WALAKOVITS, KEVIN JOSEPH — Business Administration — Dean ' s List, Varsity Lacrosse, Mock Convention (N.J. Delegation). Robert E. Lacrosse Schol- ar, Beta Theta Pi. W.ATERMAN, BARRY PAUL — Politics — Dean ' s List, Varsity Lacrosse, Sigma Phi Epsilon. WELLS, THOMAS JEFFREY — Enghsh — Washington Honor Scholarship, Dean ' s List, Honor Roll, James S. Wood Prize in German, Jim Stump Prize in German. Who ' s Who, ODK, Phi Beta Kappa, Glee Club (Historian, Business Manager), Southern Comfort , Concert Guild, Mu Beta Psi, Inter-X ' arsity Chris- tian Fellowship (President), English Department Writing Center Tutor, Sunday School Teacher, Lampost (Treasurer). WHITEHEAD, NELSON PETE — French, Interdepartmental Sciences — Robert E. Lee Research, Dean ' s List, Track, Football (1), Glee Club, Founder of Ballroom Dancing at Washington and Lee (4). WOOD, MARION EUGENE III — Economics — Phi Beta Kappa, Omicron Delta Epsilon, Phi Eta Sigma, Honor Roll, Dean ' s List, Intercollegiate Soccer (1). Mock Convention Regional Coordinator. Chi Psi Fraternity (Treasurer, .Alumni Relations), Commerce Fraternity. WOODS. ROBERT CAMERON — Chemistry — Hii Eta Sigma, Alpha Epsilon Delta. Phi Beta Kappa. Robert E. Lee Research Scholar, University Federation, .Alpha Epsilon Delta (vice-President), Comittee on Courses and Degrees, Calen- dar Committee. WT.ATT. MICHAEL STEDMAN — European History — Dean ' s List. Honor Roll. Cum Laude Society, Rugby Club (1), Hockey Club (2), Tennis Team (1,2), Oral History Program (2,3,4), Squash Club (President), Kappa .Alpha Fraternity (Pledge Ed., Intramural Chairman), four time winner of W L MD Award lor outstanding fund raising. Mock Convention (N.J. Delegation). YOUMANS GEORGE ESTUS JR. — Economics — Sigma Alpha Espilon Frater- nity (Treasurer, Vice President), Sigma Society, Mongolian Minks, EC. Senior Representative. Mock Convention (G.A Delagation). ZIEBERT. PAUL CHRISTOPHER — English— Deans List, Honor Roll, Who ' s Who, Student Recruitment (2,3,4), University Council Student Chairman (4), University Library Staff (2,3,4), Mock Democratic Convention (IL State Chair- man), Superdance Finance Committee, Chi Psi Fraternity (Rush Chairman 4). 299 Index of Seniors, Organizations and Events Adams, D.C. 198 Aiken. PC. 159 Alcorn, C.W. 169. 179, 192 Allen. L.M. 194, 196 Andrews, B.F. 172 Andsager, K.J. 152 Ariel 137 Arnold, D.B. 161 Art Opening 96-97 . simos, A.VV. 192 Baker, C.K. 183 Baldwin C.E. 177 Bamonte, D.J. 160 Barstow, T.W. 172. 183 Baseball 52, 275 Basketball 50, 272 Bassett, J.B. 180 Baucuni, R.W. 183 Bechtold, M.J. 159 Bell, E.V. 160, 169 Benefactors 294 Benson, W.E. 293 Berger, K.Y. 199 Beta Theta Pi 236-237 Blythe. E.B. 157, 201 Boal, J.H. 184 Bradley, CM. 158 Brannon, W.H. 198 Brass Percussion Ensemble 138 Brooks, SB. 174, 176 Brown, K.E. 200 Buchanan, K.E. 176 Buttarazzi, P.J. 152 Cable 9 135 Calyx 280-281 Campbell, E.J. 169 Cannon, C.J. 174 Carawan, J.R. 182 Carduner. M.R. 175 Carey, G.R. 192 Cartmill, C.J. 164 Cave, R.B. 173 Cawley, L.C. 185 Ceresa, R.A. 167 Chapman, P.P. 161 Chi Psi 238-239 Chivas 279 Clark, A.E. 162, 175 Clark, J.C. 154, 198 Clark, L.H. 165 Cleghom, J.M. 160, 167, 170, 183 Cleder, J.M. 170 Cocke. T.L. 157 Cole, j.D. 179. 192 Connors, T.G. 172 Contact 116-117 Conway, MP. 200 Cooney, A.S. 189 Cote, M.P. 159, 197, 198 Cover, T.L. 189, 191 Craig, C.C. 203 Craig. M.S. 160 Craighill, G.P. 198 Cronin, P. 174, 177 Cross Country 47, 270 Cross, JR. 175 Curran, E.J. 160 Darkwah, G.A. 192 Davis, C.K. 190 Davis. J.W. 158 deAlessandrini. E.A. 165 Dean, B.N. 155 Dees. R.M. 162 Delta Tau Delta 240-241 Denbv. D.H. 156 Dent, ' JR. 176 Dewing, A.J. 182 Dickenson. B.M. 184 Dickenson, S.K. 183 Dindinger, J.W. 201 Dorm Counselors 133 Doyle, J.S. 199 Dubin, L.M. 187 Dukes, M.H. 156 Dunn, R.M. 153 Eastham, M.H. 177 Edwards, E.A. 153 Elder, T.D. 186 Election Night 88-89 EUinger, E. 160, 169 Emanuelson, D.H. 189, 200 Ewing, T.C. 168 Executive Committee 133 Faculty 140-149 Fall Weekend 86-87 Fancy Dress 110-113 Faulkner, J.M. 166, 176 Fay, J.L. 169, 202 Feldman, L.R. 182, 195 Ferguson, R.M. 155, 159 Finley, G.A. 189, 191 Fisher. G.L. 198 Fitzgerald, S.J. 175 Flaesch, C.C. 187 Flentje, G.L. 177 Fletcher, T.G. 167 Flinn, C.R. 191 Football 46, 270 Ford, E.T. 155, 156 Foster, W.G. 154, 179, 192 Founder ' s Day 102-103 Fox, C.J. 186 Frankfurth, T.J. 205 Fraternities 234-269 Funsten, H.O. 157, 183 Cache, R.M. 164, 199 Gee, J.S. 205 Glee Club 138 Goad, J.L. 197 Golf 53-275 Goodling, J. A. 159, 198 Grainger, G.R. 185 Graves, J.L. 205 Griffin, J.D. 188 Guenther, K.F. 186 Gwynn, J.B. 199 Haight, R.A. 162, 203 Halprin, J. A. 187 Hamrick, CD. 166 Harcus, D.R. 173 Hartley, T.M. 160 Haynes, G.H. 170 Heimert, L.H. 155 Heltzer, J.M. 159 Herr, DR. 202 Higgason, J.D. 168 Homecoming 84-85 Houlihan, R.D. 200 Howard, J.V. 162 Howard, W.L. 177 Howe, T.A. 166, 192 Hoyt, J.S. 153, 173 Hudson, J.C. 159 Humphreys, J.N.L. 188 Hurdman, T.F. 192 Hyde, T.L. 203 Impressions of W L 58-77 In Memoriam 130-131 Interfratemity Council 132 Interrante, A.J. 196 Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship 139 Irwin, J.W. 159-198 Jackson, L.R. 153 Jeffrey, D.E. 172 Jehl, L.C. 160, 169 Jenevein, R.C. 178-179 Jenkins, F.N. 171 Jennings, C.R. 176 Jones, S.A. 202 Jones, R.B, 181 Jordan, G.K. 154, 188, 195 Judge, DC. 154, 198 Kadesky, K.T. 205 Kadesky, K.M. 205 Kalocksay, C.G. 175 Kappa Alpha 252-243 Kappa Sigma 244-245 Keast, A.F. 205 Kelly, WW. 157, 162, 202 Killea, M.F. 173, 204 Killenbeck, D.W. 196 Kirschner, G.L. 161, 179 Knapp, J.W, 154 Koenig, J.L. 161, 179 Kopelman, R. 192 Kuhn, D.D. 193 Kuveke, P.M. 157, 165 Lacrosse 55, 122-123, 273 Lambda Chi Alpha 246-247 Uurie, J. P. 187 Lee, G.M. 190 Lee, R.M. 204 Leitch, P.M. 170 Lemon, S.W. 201 Levy, P.E. 161, 187 Lewis, S.E. 184, 195 Little, S.F. 171 Lloyd, P.A. 171 Lukes, MA. 169 Lupton. G.M. 156 Lykes, C.C. 189 Lynde, R.S. 176, 190 MacLellan, A.J. 162 Maddox, J.W. 157, 162, 169, 202 Mamo, J.E. 167 Manasco, M.E. 179, 194 Mancer, K.R. 190 Mason, B.A. 193 Mason, C.W. 174 Mason, S.C. 183 Massie, R.W. 201 Matriculation 80-81 Maxim, H.H. 161, 187 Mayson, B.H. 205 McArn, C.H. 183 McBryde, A.M. 201 McCants, J.L. 171 McDonough, R.D. 152, 181 McGuire, P.T. 197 McNulty, S.J. 169 McQuiston, A.E. 188 Meadows, W.M. 201 Messer, J.E. 181 Meyer, G.J. 205 Miller, David L. 170 Miller, Duane L. 184 MiUer, J.W. 173 Mitchow, M.C. 185 Mock Convention 124-125 Mooney, PH. 155 Moore, E.K. 199 Moran, T.G. 160, 189 Muller, D.M. 200 Muller, P.M. 191, 195 Murphy, CM. 163 Murphy, D.L. 166 Nutt, J.C. 152 O ' Brien, E.J. 162, 172, 173 O ' Brien, J.L. 164, 199 O ' Brien, T.G. 157 Organizations 278-279 Oskam, D.J. 184 Parents ' Weekend 98-99 Patrons 294-295 Peebles, J.C. 175 Perkins, WD. 176 Petrides, T.D. 164, 175 Phi Delta Theta 248-249 Phi Gamma Delta 250-251 Phi Kappa Psi 252-253 Phi Kappa Sigma 254-255 Philpott, J.C 186 Pi Kappa Alpha 256-257 Pi Kappa Phi 258-259 Pinkney, F.M. 189, 191 Plays 94-95, 114-115 Plumly, CM. 186, 196 Pritchard, R.A. 157 Pritchard, T.W. 160, 169 Prysi, S.S. 193 Pyle, M.S. 195 ROTC 118-119 Rampone, W.R. 194 Ravencraft, M.D. 203 Reilly, CT. 179, 197 Richardson, D.W. 153 Richardson, T.C. 177 Rikhoff, J.C. 174, 199 Ring-turn Phi 136 Rivers, G,L.B. 167 Robinson, CP. 157 Rock, T.P. 205 Rosier, R.R. 174 Rosser, R.R. 181, 203 Rush 82-83 Sackfield, T.W. 189 Salsbury, D.K. 158 Sanders, J. A. 187 Schenecker, PR. 169, 181, 202 Schroeder, CD. 163 Schurr, T.G. 204 Scoreboard 56-57 Seal, D.J. 179-204 Seidule, J.T. 204 Seniors 150-205 Shaffer, J.R. 169, 192 Shearin, ML. 155, 160 Sherrill, C.C 183 Shettle, S.T. 200 Shoemaker, E.S. 167 Short, DC, 158, 203 Sigma Alpha Epsilon 260-261 Sigma Chi 262-263 Sigma Nu 264-265 Sigma Phi Epsilon 266-267 Simon, R.J. 164, 181 Singer, ME. 184 Skinner, J. A. 169, 202 Skyers, E.V. 192 Slahor, D.M.W. 194 Smith, D.B. 203 Smith, J.M. 156 Smith, S.I. A. 163, 199 Smithwick, R. 156 Soccer 49, 271 Spencer, C.R. 198 St. Clair, OB. 193, 201 Stockley, M.A. 203 Stoeffel, J. P. 198 Storey, E.G. 181 Stadtman, G.L. 171 Stratton, J.K. 157, 201 Stroud, S.S. 193 Student Association for Black Unity 132 Sutton, J. P. 170 Superdance 104-107 Suzuki, H. 191 Swaghora, R.C. 170 Swagler, R.C 170, 192 Swimming 51, 271 Taylor, J.E. 196 Teague, D.W, 192, 196 Temple, T.E. 170 Tennis 53, 274 Thau, W.A. 195 Thomas, D.H. 161 Thompson, M.G. 196 Thompson, W.D. 153, 167, 192 Titterington, MR. 187, 203 Track 54, 274 Travers, R.J. 161, 178, 179 Trimble, J.B. 196 Tucker, R.B. 169, 183, 193 Tuesdays in the Pit 120-121 Turk, T.M.T. 159, 197 Underclassmen 206-233 Valliere, T.A. 192 Vandoom, B.A. 182 Vaughn, E.D. 159, 197 Vita, 189 WLUR-FM 134 Walakovits, K.J. 192 Walsh, M. 204 Warrenfeltz, D.J. 204 Wash, S.L. 198 Water Polo 48. 271 Waterman, B.P. 174 Watkins, W.B. 160 Wells, T.J. 168 White, T.S. 197 Whitehead, N.P. 184 Wilkinson, J.T. 190 Wilson, W.M. 201 Wood, ME. 155 Woodbum, CB. 174 Woods, R.C 199 Woolfolk, W.D. 171 World at Large 4 Wresthng 51, 272 Wyatt, M.S. 165, 189, 194 Year in Review 34 Youmans, G.E. 157 Zeta Beta Tau 268-269 Ziebert, PC. 187 i
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