Washington and Lee University - Calyx Yearbook (Lexington, VA)

 - Class of 1986

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Washington and Lee University - Calyx Yearbook (Lexington, VA) online collection, 1986 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 308 of the 1986 volume:

THE UNIVERSITY L ' ERARY WASh:. C ' CM i LEΒ£ U β€’!V:i 3(TY LtXiiNGTON, VA 24450 The Calyx 1986 volume eighty-nine Contents Around Campus 2 W 8c L Events 16 Throughout the Year 34 Student Life 62 The World Around Us 70 Faces of the Future 80 Administration, Faculty, and Staff 156 Remember . . . 180 Organizations 190 Fraternities 212 Sports 250 Benefactors, Patrons, and Ads 280 THE UNIVERSITY LIBRARY WASHINGTON LEE UNIVERSITY LEXINGTON. VA 24450 Around Campus Jt ' i- Uisi mf. β– - ij f ' ' β–  . W L Events 16 Matriculation Orientation Week 4.Β !i β€’k M In addition to the usual events ot Orientation β€” meeting with advisors, attending meetings in Lee Chapel and Hon(K System seminars, freshmen were treated to an outdoor concert cookout, a mocktail party, and an afternoon of wacky games on the front campus. Each event enabled the men and women of the class of ' 89 to get to know each other within different settings typical to W L social life. On hand for many of the activities were numerous reporters from across the country trying to get a tlrst-hand impression of W L s transition to coeducation. 21 Homecoming - : t ' . Jf VwJ β–  - ' k 25 Superdance 28 29 Fancy Dress A Β©r Warner Center a Night in Rhio. Entertainment included The Count Basie Orchestra, Junior Walker and the All Stars, The Skip Castro Band, The Charlotte Steel Symphonette, and Tim Eddy and his band. Special attractions such as the llama, fire eaters, and mime artists added splendor to the festival of bright lights and colors. A NIGHT ,N 00000000 Let ' s Active The dB ' s 33 Throughout the Year Wl? M .. nf Sf ' T ' ! ' ' Β ' AΒ£ %Jti ii 34 35 Arrivals 37 Rush 3S 39 Parents ' Weekend 40 Hundreds of parents were on hand to visit professors, listen to the President, and check out student hfe in Lexington over the weekend of November 1-3, 1985. 41 The Flood Flooded houses, destroyed property, and drinking water shortages characterized the damage caused by The Flood of 85 which affected many W L students in addition to numerous people in West Virginia and Virginia. Many W L students and VMl cadet contributed manhours to the Flood Relief effort. 42 43 Wednesdays in the Pit ' Sept. 18 Covacus Sept. 25 Targetz Oct. 2 Liquid Pleasure Oct 9 Sparkplugs Oct. 16 Locals Only Oct. 23 AAE Oct. 30 Picture This Nov. 6 Johnny Sportcoat and the Casuals Nov. 13 Minus Zero Nov. 20 Bricestreet Dec. 4 Xenon Jan. 8 AAE Jan. 15 Speidel. Goodnch Lille Jan. 22 Covacus Jan. 29 Doug Clark the Hotnuts Feb. 5 Wild Kingdom Feb. 12 Liquid Pleasure Feb. 26 Sparkplugs March 5 Little Saints March 12 Johnny Sportcoat and the Casuals March 19 Heinsohn Day March 26 The Stains April 23 The Deal Apnl 30 Wild Kingdom May 7 Covacus May 14 Push May 21 Wildgrass 44 ll β– rii. JH H I ' -Jl i fli K k m ' 1 ' 1 bU V . m β– β–  ' : y ) 1 i ' ' U- h ' β€’ Wi . ' 4 ' I k Drama ciT niversit y β€’Theatre Washington and Lee ear of Celebrat ion CELEBRATE our 5()lh annixcrsary with a re i al ( f ihc production thai pcned the Linixersily Theatre in 1935 The (glcrchant of Venice b illiaiii Sliakcspcaic Llirctlcd b innxUm October 25 - November 2 CELEBRATE the actor Macready! written and performed l y t ' rank Barrie November 15-16 CELEBRATE Christmas in Lexington with ere Come the Clouins with guest artists Circus Ridiculus December 6-8 alter 265 years CELEBRATE the arrival of ( men % by Aristophanes i sistrata February 7-12 directed b Al Gordon 46 CELEBRATE originalit and gotiiic horror ig wΒ - ?. 5 ailapleil anei diieelet tl)c Diiirico o| I p 1 ' IMf tPivVraiifciK tciii May 23 28 CELEBRATE student creativity with Bleacher BumsΒ Organic Theatre Company December 10-12 Festival of ONE ACTS March 28 April 2 That Championship Season by Jason Miller May 8-10 I 1. 1 Ikkcl lll|.i|IH,llh.|l L.lll 4( -S(l; 47 49 Class Elections 50 Contact Washington and Lee University ' s CONTACT ' 86 presents c c Changing Values in America Wednesday y March 5 Frank DEFORD senior writer. Sports Illustrated Tuesday, March 11 Candy LIGHTNER founder. Mothers Against Drunk Driving Tuesday, March 18 James WATT former Secretary of the Interior i Tuesday, March 25 Dr. M. Pinson NEAL, Jr. former president. Southern Medical Society All l i(i!;r.ims Hc in at 7:,i() p in, in !.(β–  β–  ni.ipcl Sponsdicd l) llir liilri li .ncinilN (louiuil ,111.1 the Exccnlivr ( m iininilUc Alumni Weekend 54 ?7iie ' ,.,vv ' uvstota6ndDujmenf , 0000 Subfofal 22,625-1 OlherSfts i APtDD Inmsed Annual Fund Sq I ' ' -t , il- : β–  Baccalaureate 56 57 itr L| :.W - ' ' , β–  i r: i M t r -r. s fe Sciimrs and some uppcaiassnicn who decided to stay tor graduation enjoyed the music ot Hemsohn Day at oilman ' s Pavilion Tuesday, June 3. 1986 This year ' s Senior Party was catered by the Suhwciw - 58 Senior Party Commencement June 3th Coniiiiciiccment Hxcrclscs iiwrked the last all-male graduating class m Washingti)n and Lee history. In addition to the 277 undergraduate degrees awarded were four honorary degrees for Joseph Goldstein (above) Charles Robb, Lynda Robb. and Willami Spong. Jr. Middle: JctT Britton received his 2nd Lt. commission prior to graduation Left; Charles and Lynda Robb spoke with reporters after receiving their Doctor of Laws and Doctor of Humane Letters degrees respectively. student Life (S2 63 65 β–  ' . r J .. ; β–  j 67 68 69 The World Around Us Above: A Trans World Airlines jet with 145 passengers and eight crew members was hijacked in Athens, Greece, in June. The Sheite hijackers took the plane to Beirut, then to Algeria and then back to Beirut. Most of the hostages were released within days but the remaining 39 hostages were held for 17 days. One Americon hostage was killed. Right; The Kansas City Royals won the World Series. I oyals pitcher Bret Saberhagen embraces third baseman George Brett after pitching a five-hitter to give the Royals the World Series crown over the St. Louis Cardinals. Saberhagen, the winner of two series games, was named as the Most Valuable Player In the series. (Copy within this section reprinted with permission of Wide World Photos, Inc. WP). 70 β– β€’ ' sK f ri v tjkJ .ias S ' ' ' 71 Cincinatti Reds player-manager Pete Rose broke Ty Cobb ' s career hit record in September. The historic 4.192 hit was a single to left field on a 2-1 pitch from San Diego Padres right hander Eric Show with one out in the bottom of the first inning. President Regan, with his wife Nancy, gives the A-Okay sign from his hospital window in July after undergoing surgery to remove a cancerous tumor from his lower intestine. The 74-year old president was back on the job within weeks after the operation. The war in the Mid-East continued In 1985. A distraught Moslem man hugs his son moments after they survived a car bomb explosion outside a West Beirut restaurant in late August. They are shown being hurried away from the carnage by another man as cars burn In the rubble-strewn street. A series of devastating earthquakes rumbled through Mexico City in September. Few in the metropolitan area of 18 million escaped the effects of the first quake, which registered 8.1 on the Richter scale; or the second quake, which measured 7.5. -f .--is Two eruptions on November 13 of the volcano Nevado del Ruiz in Columbia triggered avalanches of mud and water that engulfed 14 towns and villages, including Armero, which was buried. The volcano, which had been dormant for 400 years, spewed lava and debris that combined with melting snow and Ice to form a river of destruction that crested at 50 feet. 73 In Geneva (Nov. ' 85) President Reagan and USSR. General Secretary Mikhail S. Gorbachev rest up tor their first summit talks on regional and global issues, reportedly including theater and strategic nuclear arms control, terrorism, human rights, and support for wars in Afganistan and Central America. Riots were almost a daily occurrence in South Africa as blacks protested Apartheid. In this photo, a white man runs from a jeering group of stone-throwing blacks In downtown Johannesburg as widespread violence continued to break out throughout the country. 74 (dor Rock Hudson died after a battle with AIDS. Orson Welles died of a heart attack. Blue-collar troubadour Bruce Springsteen was the undis- puted Boss of rock n ' roll. His songs about Vietnam veterans, steelworkers and factory workers hit many responsive chords with all ages of Americans. 75 Terrorist attacks around the world were the locus ot attention from late 1985 into early 1986. Above is a view of the Bar lounge alter the terrorist attack at the International Terminal ol Rome ' s Lepnardo airport shortly alter Christmas. Chicago Bears Jim McMahon and kicker Kevin Butler celebrate on the sidelines at Super Bowl XX where they defeated the New England Patriots 46-10. Philippine President Corazon Aquino addressed her nation, announcing in March she vould reduce prices on gasoline and other petroleum products. Eilled Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos addressed a group of family members and triends after leading them In prayer following a private Easter Sunday Mass at his Honolulu home. Lee A. lacocca. chairman of the Statue of Liberty-Ellis Island Foundation announced the 12 winners of the Medal of Liberty at a news conference in New York. The awards are given to naturalized American citizens who have made a substantial contribution to his or her chosen country. 77 vi TS?-. 4 Β±S. ' vf ' innminilliii!?Β ;:;β€ž.;. aiHiliili SSsMiiiuiS HfirTBea ' in mmiiiiiiim iiriΒ Β r y. Four Palestinian terrorists hijacked the Italian cruise liner Achille Lauro while on a Mediterranean cruise. One American was killed. After the ship was released the Egyptian government agreed to return the hijackers to the PLO. However, the hijackers were intercepted by American jets as they were flown out of Egypt and returned to Italy to stand trial. In April U.S. warplanes struck the headquarters and terrorist facilities ' of Libya ' s Moammar Khadafy. Reagan said the United States had direct, precise and irrefutable evidence that Khadafy had ordered recent Anti-American attacks, including the bombing of a discotheque In West Berlin. 78 B j w Actors Lloyd Nolan and Yul Brynner both died following long bouts with cancer. On January 28lli the Space Shuttle Challenger exploded killing all seven crew members. The explosion was the first in-flight disaster In 56 manned U.S. space missions. Christa McAuliffe of New Hampshire was to be the first schoolteacher in space. 79 Faces of the Future % 80 81 UNDERCLASSMEN Aarstol. Michael P ' 89 Adamsini, Michael Robert ' 89 Alby. Steven M. ' 88 Alexander. Glynn Murray. Jr. ' 87 Alford, Alan Scott ' 87 Allen. Everette G.. ill 88 AnibroMni. James C, ' 89 Anderson, Lucille ' 89 Andrews, David Ashley ' 87 Anstine. Dana Suzanna 89 Appel. Gary Philip 87 Appelvvhite. Hunter A. 88 Abrogast. Carolyn J. ' 89 Aronhime, Joseph Emanuel ' 87 Atkms. John Edward ' 87 Aucustus, James Anthonv ' 87 Baehr. John P. 88 Baggett, Knsta K. 89 Balfour, Amy Coleman ' 89 Barker, James H. 89 82 Barnes, David Nevins ' 87 Barnes. Kristin L. Barry, Dean C. ' 88 Barth, David R. Jr. ' 89 Barton, Todd Stuart 88 Batte. Lauren E. ' 89 Bayton. J Richard ' 89 Bean, Brenton S. ' S ; Beck, Jonathan A. ' i Bell, Gretchen L. ' 8 ' Bellamy, Thomas L. Benedict, Charles C. 88 Benford, John Yates 87 Bennorth, Peter Ericson 87 Bercaw, Jeffrey David 89 83 β€’ β€’5;sΒ« pt.- ' Bevill, Emily Constance ' X ' -) Bevin. Matthew G. ' JS ' Jieck. Christopher Edward ' S7 Birchtield. WiHiam Olto ' Β«9 Bledsoe. James W., Ill ' 89 Blessey. E Christian 89 Blok, Anton T. 88 Blomster, Jeffery Paul ' 87 loodsworth. David M., Jr. ' 89 BIyden. Daphne Louise ' 89 Boardman. Catherine M. ' 89 Bolden, Dana Jon ' 89 Boiler, J.ihn D. ' 89 Boiling, Timothy A. ' 88 kinilla, Manuel Emilio ' 88 Boone, Caroline E. ' 89 Boozer. Sandra K. 89 Bosweli, James Marshall. Jr. ' 88 Bottoms, W Thomas ' 89 Boudreau, Daniel P. ' 88 Boyd. Keith Douglas ' 89 Bovd, Thomas Jordan ' 87 Bracken, Douglas Clark 89 Brady. Matthew P. ' 89 Brand. Chnstopher C. 8 Bray. Jennifer M. 89 Brewer, Karl W. ' 88 Bnnkman. Thomas John, II ' 87 iHMl .v r iiiii Brock. Glen Porter, III 87 Brock, Richard Goodwin ' 89 Brockman, Jane Michelle ' 89 Brooks, Philip Schoen. Jr. 88 Brown. Eli abeth F. ' 89 Brown. Randall Steven 87 Browne. Charles Willing IV ' 87 Brvant. Mark G. 89 Bpvant. Matthew S. 89 Bugg. W Sean 89 Bullotta, Thomas A. 89 Bunch. Daniel W. 89 Buquet. James J., Ill 88 Burch, Robert F. 89 Burgdorf, Patrick Hugh 87 Burhnsame. Martm R. 89 Bums. S David 89 Burton, Jeffrey L. 89 Butler, M Warren 89 Buttarazzi. Michael J. 87 85 Byington. Barbra Ann 89 Caccamo, Joseph F. 89 Callas. Christopher L. ' 89 Cantey. William H. 89 Cantor. Andrew D. 88 Caragol. William J.. Jr. ' 89 Carberrv. John C. ' 89 Carroll, Michael D. ' 89 Carter, Christopher Richards ' 87 Cartv, Laura S. 89 Caruthers, Andrew Rollins 87 Casey, Christopher D. 89 Casker, Gregory T. ' 88 Castronuovi). Greeorv J. ' 89 Catron, John C R 89 f Chance, Stephen R. ' 89 0 : Chase, Breton CM. ' 89 Cheney, Craig Evan 87 SB Chnstian, A. Catherine ' 89 Christian. Martha D, ' 89 Church, John Hamerslv ' 87 Churchill. Mark G. ' 88 H l l ' Clark. Joseph Paul ' 87 Clawson. Richard T. ' 8 ; Cleek, Bradley Carlvle ' 87 β–  Cobb, Jim E. ' 88 Coe. Lester V. ' 88 Cole, Greaorv A. ' 88 Coleman, eter J.. Jr. ' 89 Coleman. Stephanie M. ' 89 Conner. Stephen Michael ' 87 Cooper. Enk S. ' 88 Copper. Charles D. ' 88 Corev, James M. ' 89 Cosby. Erin Cleuhom ' 89 Couch. Carol A, ' 89 CounciU. Cathenne Winslow ' 89 Cousland. Beth A. ' 89 Cover. Edward Bond ' 89 Coyle, Courtnev Ann ' 89 Covie, William ' Sean ' 88 Crabill. William E, ' 89 A L. II Cranford. Elizabeth P. ' 89 Crawford Shaun A. 89 Crosby, William Chnstopher 89 Crouse, Susan Marie ' 89 Crutcher, H Dodd ' 89 Cummings, Jeffrey P. ' 89 Cummins, Elizabeth A. ' 89 Cunningham, Christopher H. ' 89 Curren, Erik David ' 87 Curry, Ronald Lee. II ' 87 Dale, T Gregory ' 89 Davis, Christine L. ' 89 Davis, Porter M. ' 88 Davis, Steven R. ' 89 Deal, Clifford L., Ill ' 89 Deaton, Bradford Jason ' 89 De Bonte. Donna ' 87 De Bonte. Neal M ' 88 Deighan, Chnstopher John ' 87 DeMarco, James R. ' 89 DeMartino. Anthony Gerard ' 89 deMovellan, Christopher S. ' 89 deMovellan, Pedro John ' 89 Denny, Darrin ' 88 liMM 88 Jl Dick. Allen Randolph ' S7 Dietz. David W. ' 89 Donahoo, Thomas M., Jr. Doumar. Charles C. 89 Drawdy. Vance E. ' 89 Driscoll. Charles Katholinc. Jr. β€’89 Driscoll, Sean Francis ' 89 Dubuque. Louis Theodore ' 87 Duke. Alex ' 87 Dunn. William David. Jr. ' 88 Dupont. Phihp A. ' 89 Eadie, Kimberly M. ' 89 Early. Georce G., Ill ' 88 Eisineer. S Ward ' 89 Elhou. Douglas F.. 11 ' 88 Emrich. John David ' 89 Eubank. Marshall Moore 87 Eyerly, Paul R., IV ' 89 Faber, Erich J. ' 88 Fahrinaer. Lee F. ' 89 Fainter, Kimberly S. Farley, Mark L. ' 88 Fanner, Mark N. 88 Faust, Jason E. 88 i i Fayrer, John David ' 87 Finnegan. G Thomas ' M Flagler, R Stephen SS) Flood, Leeann M. Floumoy, Thomas F., IV ' 89 Foley. James Curtiss ' 87 Forbes, Robert A. ' 88 Ford. Delia D. ' 89 Forrester, Michael Andrew ' 89 Francis, Dennis Michael ' 87 Franzese, Douglas R . ' 89 Freeman, Peter Lawrence ' 89 Freimuth, Douglas A. 89 Freund, Elizabeth B. ' 89 Friednchs, J. M. Gore ' 89 Fulwiler, Guy C. ' H8 Gallauher, Edward John. Jr. ' 84 Garcis, Christopher R. 88 Garneau. Craia O. ' 88 Gaston. Elise P. 87 Gaucher. Jamie O. ' 89 Gay, Chales Taylor ' 89 Geary. Anne E. ' 89 Gentry. John B . Jr. 88 Gibson. Andrew McCainpbell ' 87 Gilbert. Wilham Bamtt ' 87 Giles. Paul Earl ' 87 Goins. Jace H. ' 89 Gordon. Mare L. ' 88 Gorman. Christopher D. ' 89 Gorry. Scott B ' 89 Gottsecen. G Bradley ' 89 Gottwals. J Philip ' 89 Gray. David B. ' 88 Greenberg. Henry Bernard. Jr. ' 87 m%ttk Greeter, J Alan ' 89 Grosso, Rocco Raymond ' 89 Grove. David S. ' 89 Gunkel, John J. ' 89 ik 91 Guvton, Robert P. ' 89 Hagnertv. Brian S. 88 Haines. Dale P 89 Hair. Bradford M, ' 88 L tti iii Hall. Stanley C. ' 89 Hamilton. John P. ' 89 Hamlin. James Turner ' 87 Hampton, Anna Mae ' 89 i kMtm r Hampton. Wade M. ' 88 Han lik. R Nichols ' 89 Hardee. August M., II ' 89 Harpold. Courtney Hays ' 89 Harnnuton, Matthew T. ' 88 Harrison. K Bradley ' 89 Han. Andrew Nicholas ' 88 Hartley. Charles D. ' 89 Hatrman. Vanessa ' 89 Harvey. Douglas Edward ' 87 Harvey. John M. ' 89 Harwood, Jeffrey W. ' 88 Hassinuer. Michael Thomas ' 88 Hatfield. Donald J.W ' 89 Hattes, Deborah ' 89 Head. Stephen J. ' 88 iriiil l-7i:k 92 Hellhere, David A. ' 88 Henr ' , Michael R. ' 88 Hemier. Andrew Clark ' 89 Hemdon, Thomas K. ' 89 mk Hemn. Michael G. ' 88 Hemng, Marion M. 89 Hickman, Andrea D. ' 89 Hinkle. D Allen ' 89 Hmrichs, Ken D. ' 89 Hohson. Richard James ' 87 - Hodges. Phihp Nalty ' 87 Hoffman, Danatha Jeanne ' 89 Hkik lijtt Houan. Richard J, II 88 Hohfield, Michael C. ' 89 Holmes. James Aristide 87 Hoopes, Laura A. 89 Hopper, Carolvn D. 89 Honridce, Mathew J. ' 88 Householder, Richard F., Jr. ' 89 Howell. Andrew L. 89 Hudson. David A. 89 Huffman, Esther M. 89 Hughes, Rhona M. 89 Hurlbut, Thomas Edward 87 93 Hurley, Richard Wilton, III ' 87 Hurtt, Debra B. 89 Hyatt, Henry H. ' 88 Ingram. Stephen ' 89 Islev. Philip R. ' 89 James. Richard P., Jr. 89 Jefteris, Joseph Craig ' 87 Jennings. Timothy Theodore-Barton ' 88 Jensen, Melanie A. ' 89 Johnson. James M.. Ill 89 jj Jones. Albert W.. Jr. ' 89 ' Jones, Michael C. ' 89 Jones, Patience L. ' 89 β– : Jordan, David W. ' 88 Joseph. Jeffrey Eric ' 88 KalUka, John Christian ' 87 Kapp, M Copeland ' 89 Kavanagh, Joseph C. ' 89 Kaye, Clare Monica ' 89 Keanna, Crait; M. ' 88 Keating. Thomas James, V 87 Kehoe, Gerard Roth. II ' 87 Kellam. Thomas R. ' 88 Kelsev. R Jeffery ' 89 94 V f i r 1 k Kelso. Katherine Ann 89 Kennedy, Todd W. ' 88 Kidd. Michael Bnnton ' 89 Kilmon. Charles E. ' 89 Kirshner, John S. ' 88 Kirk. Julia Womall 89 Klabo, David Nelvin ' 89 Klank. C Edward 89 Klump. D Emmanuel ' 89 Knapp. Gregory S. Kni ' jhl. Thomas Gordon 87 Koch. Thomas M. ' 89 i iiiuT .Li Kochev. Valerie Ann ' 87 Koedel. John Gilbert, III ' 87 Kopet, Jeffrey B. ' 88 Kothman. Marie E. ' 89 Krastei, Joseph Benedict ' 87 Kubly. William Raymond ' 87 95 Ladd. Banks Christian 89 Lake, Fredenck William. Ill 89 Lam. Wai Ping E Lancaster. James R. SS Laney. LeRov F. ' 88 Langheim. Thomas F. ' 88 Lanier. John Reese. Jr ' 88 LaPrane. C Brett ' 89 Laree. Anne W, 89 Lasseigne. William R-. Ill 89 Lastinger. R Lane ' 89 Lavton. Andrew J. 89 Ledbetter. E Wright ' 89 Lee. Dudley Weaver ' 84 Lee. June-Ho Jonathan ' 89 Leitner. William AiiU. Ill ' 89 Lewis. Andrew J. 89 Lewis. .Susan Charlotte ' 89 Lisi. Jason P. ' 88 Litvak. Kramer Allen ' 88 Lo. ' ' uk ' ' ing E Loltin. Marv Anne ' 89 Londrey. Willuim G, ' 88 Lomishore. Michael J. ' 88 9(S iM Loupassie, George M. ' 89 Love. Craig Don ' 89 Lowe, John Vincent ' 87 Lunst ' ord, Gregory Alan ' 87 Lyie, Charles L. ' 88 Lynch. Christopher Shields 87 Lyons. Bayard E. ' 88 Lyons. William Francis. Jr. ' 87 Mackenzie. Andrew R. ' 89 MacPherson, Robert A. ' 89 Magoiine. Michael Robert ' 89 Manan. Mierwhaan ' 87 Mandak. Jcftrey Scott ' 87 Manrique ,. Lorena A. ' 89 Manson. Robert H. ' 89 March. Edward Russell. Ill ' 84 Markley. John D,. Jr. ' 88 Marks. Jet ' t ' rey Laurence ' 87 Marthinson. Sydney Elizabeth ' 87 Martin. Christopher M. ' 88 Martin. L Edward III ' 89 Martin. William P.. II ' 89 Massie. Georee Taliaferro ' 87 Matthews. Robert E. ' 89 97 Mattson. Laurel Virsinia ' 89 Maxwell. John D. ' 89 Maver, Henr ' H.. HI ' 89 Mc Bride. Thomas .1. ' 88 McClung. Michael Lee ' 89 McConnell. T Allen ' 89 McCormick. Hugh B.. Ill ' 89 McCormick. W Fray 89 MeCubbin, Catherine A. ' 89 McCullough. John W. ' 88 McDowell. David ' Whittincton ' 89 McFadden. Hunter B. Jr. ' 89 McGarrv. Michael Edward ' 87 McGee, Edwin C. Jr. ' 89 McGraw. Christopher F, ' 88 McGrew. Raymond Maxwell 87 McKay, Carl John 88 McKay. Julius Walker. Jr. ' 87 McKinstry, Paul ' 89 McLane. Samuel H. ' 89 1l McLean. Samuel David. Jr. 87 McMains. Andrew T. 88 Meadows, John W. ' 89 Melton. S Hughes 89 98 Mercer. Ron W. ' 88 Merritt. Robert Kenneth. II 87 Messerlv, John P. 88 Metcalfe. James M. 88 Miles, Elizabeth S. 89 Miller. Joel E. ' 89 Mills. Dorothy L. Missert. Jon D. ' 88 Mitchell. Anthonv P. 89 Mitchell. John Galloway 111 ' 87 Miyakuni. Kaoruko E Monroe. Craig Thomas ' 87 Moore, Christopher F. 89 Moore. John Kelly, Jr. ' 87 Moore, Mark T. ' 88 itti iiik 99 Moore. Ralph B. 88 Moore. Richard B. ' 88 Moms. Michael Fields ' 87 Moseley, George GaiTCll ' 88 Murdoch. John Foster ' 89 Murphy, Harry M ' 89 Murray. Thomas Robert, III ' 87 Myers, Thomas Edgar, Jr. ' 87 Nelhuan. Kalherine W. ' 89 Nelson. Fleanor C. ' 89 Newman, Mark Tilden ' 89 Newman, Scott Michael ' 87 Newmark, Jenniter S. ' 89 Newsome, Bradley Brian ' 87 Newton. William Weston Jones ' 89 Nichols. David C. ' 88 Nielson. Katrina Pitt E Nimey. Donald P.. 11 ' 88 Nobel. Samuel Maverick ' 88 Noms. Jeftrev H. ' 89 Norton, W. Lee 89 Nuckols, Joseph D. ' 88 Nusbaum, Charles G., Jr. ' 87 O ' Boyle, Brent Michael ' 87 O ' Bnan, Thomas P.. Ill ' 88 Oliver. John Michael 87 Owen, Robert J. ' 88 Parker. Alston P. 89 Parker. Peter 89 Parkhurst. Richard G.. Jr. 88 Parkins. Elizabeth J. 89 Parsons. Ashley K. ' 89 Partington, Bnjce Douglas ' 87 Patterson. David B. ' 89 Payne, H. Richard ' 89 Payne, William G. Pensec. John Francis ' 87 Perez, J. Simon ' 88 Peters. Thomas Battle 87 Peterson. Clark A. 89 Petino. Pietro Michael. Jr. 89 Pcttus. Thomas R. R. 89 Petzold, Ma. W 89 Phillips. Julian P.. Jr. 89 Phoa. Cynthia A. ' 89 Pickett. Amy H. ' 89 Pier, Eduardo G. ' 88 Pierce, Richard James 87 101 Pierpan. Christopher Goodwin 89 r - Pierson, Valerie A. ' 89 Pillow. James Keith ' 87 Pimhk-tl. Muruaret M, ' 89 Pipkin, John G. 89 Piz .o. Peter J., Ill ' 88 Plante, Kathleen Alda ' 87 Piatt, Drew W. 88 Pollock, Randolph Coalter ' 88 Poullon, John Cullen ' 87 Powley, Robert L. 88 Preston, James Bradley ' 88 Pruner. John K. 89 Purdy. Charles Grant ' 87 Putnam, Andrew Russell ' 87 Putnam. Kelly Sue ' 89 Rateliff, Todd M. ' 89 Rawls. Thomas F. ' 89 102 Read. Heidi Lea 89 Reavy. David J. 89 Redtem, Ncill M. ' 89 Redtoot. Richard S ' 89 Reed. Bruce Alan S7 Reichard. Mark S 89 ReVille. Jaeland Frank, Jr. 87 Reynolds, Jessica Claire 89 Ringland, Judith Masters 87 Rippeon, Scott D. 88 Roach, John C 89 Roberts, Christopher B. 89 Roberts, John Leece 87 Robertson, Mark Alan 89 Robins, Richard Bailey. Jr. 88 Robinson, E Luckelt, II 89 Rodgers, Steven E. ' 89 Rosenthal, Ellynn Madlyn ' 8 Rouney, Francis, Jr. 88 Rowe, ' john Prescott 88 Runzer, William Joseph, 111 Russo, Jason J. 89 Ryan, Laurence Kosin ' 87 Ryan, Robert S. ' 88 103 Rvan. Thomas B. ' W Sacketl. Peter C. 89 Sadler. Steven M SS Saleniu. Julie ' W Sal man. Ale a A. ' 84 Sands. Frank M.. Jr. ' W Sarber. L. Johnson. Ill ' H9 Savage, Kennon Mary 89 Scarisbrick. Alan Glenn 87 Schaeter. Patrick E. 88 Schaetter. Donald C. 89 Schieke. Herman E., Ill 89 Schoot. Gary W. 88 Sehultz, Jeffrey P. 89 Sears. Stephen Truston 88 Shadv. Michael Alan 89 Sharp. James Baxter. Ill 88 Sheehan. Eileen Mary 89 Sheldon, Stuart H. 89 Sheppard, Julia C. 89 Sharlock. Christopher Michael 87 Shemll. Phihp M. 88 Sherwin. Peter J. 89 Shissias, Charles G. 89 iMikiM 104 Shugart. David Adams ' 87 Sigler, Norman Z. ' 88 Simons, Carlton, Jr. 87 Smgletar ' . W. Ross ' 89 f Skeen, Charles Thomas, II ' 89 Sklenar, Stephen A. ' 89 Slappy, Bradford A. ' 89 Slappy, Robert Zaehery ' 87 Sloan, James Bovkm, Jr. ' 87 Sloal, James M. ' ' 89 Smith, Amy Rebecca ' 89 Smith, Brooksy L. ' 89 Smith, Crai2 M. ' 88 Smith, Glenn B. ' 88 Smith, M. Elizabeth Camp ' 89 Smith, Stephanie Leigh ' 89 Smith. Marquis McElory, ill ' 87 Snowdon, Julia Jefferis ' 89 Solomon, Jon D. ' 88 Sparacio, George G. ' 89 Sparago, Merrill T. ' 89 Spencer, Edward Glenn Scott ' 89 Spiessl, Mark O. ' 89 Stephenson, Eugene F. ' 88 I ! i]M 105 Struthers, Kevin A. ' 89 Stuart. E. Page. Jr. 88 Surface, David King 89 Suruner, William Hildebrandt, Jr. ' 87 Suttle. Michael B. ' 88 Sydnor. Edsiar Starke. Jr. ' 89 Symonds. David I. ' 89 Taylor. Rowan Gregory Paxton ' 89 Teager. Kevin ' 89 Thoniasson. Burgess A.. Jr. ' 89 Thompson, David E. ' 89 Thompson, Ian P. ' 89 Thompson, Kevin C. ' 88 Thompson, Robert S. ' 89 Thompson, Rosalyn Denise ' 89 Thornton, William K. ' 88 Thrasher, M, Melissa ' 89 Tieman. Cathleen M. ' 89 Tiilleson, Robert Henry, Jr. ' 87 Tompkins, Robert K. ' 89 Tortorelli. Donald N. ' 88 Trainer. Mark ' 87 Travis, Camille D. ' 89 Treanor. Scott Charles 89 l555SSSS!F ' SKS iS5SS !W .Β«? ! iiwik Mii .-- h i .jfj 4 lUi.m iy| Tnmble, D. Scott ' 89 Tucker, James Garrett ' 87 Tucker, Wallace Gary, Jr. Tuggle. Michael D. ' 89 Turiev, GreuoPv ' Edward ' 87 Tumau, C. Brian ' 89 Tunrell, Douulas Wolte 87 Ueland, Leif 88 Upchurch, Charles W. ' 88 Urso. James A. ' 89 Vail, Paul James ' 87 Van Assendelft, Diedenk A. A. ' 89 Van Son, Peter Enc ' 87 Van Williamson, Robert ' 89 Vaughan, David M. 88 Veatch, John E. ' 88 Vegso. Betsy Anne ' 89 Vesper, James Edward, Jr. ' 87 107 Waaner, Frank Wanner, III 87 Walker, Brian W. 88 Walker, Meredith F. 80 Walker, Scott Dunmire 89 Washington, Michael L ' 84 Waskiewicz, Anthony Stanley 8 Waterburv. Matthew Jude 87 Watkins, Bradford L. ' 88 Watson, Michael Warren ' 84 Weaver. Kevin Wayne 87 Webb, John ' W. 89 Webb, Kevin S. 88 Weiss, James Russell ' 88 Wessel, Ken M. ' 89 West. Thomas B., II 89 Whalen, Nancv K. ' 89 White, H Hunter ' 89 Whiteford, Mark Huntineton 87 Wiener, Donald Russel 84 Wiesbrock, Michael Wavne 87 Wilev, Floyd M , 111 ' SN Willard, Christopher Lacv ' 84 Willard, Edward Jay ' 88 Williams. Gregory D. lOS Williams, Holly Beth 89 Williams, James S. 88 Williams. Scott A. 88 Williams, Scott Douglas ' 89 Williams, Tracy A. ' 89 Winuert, Gravson Paise ' 87 Winufield. Thomas Whetsell ' 89 Wood, William B. ' 88 Wood, William Chnstopher ' 89 Wniiht, John M. 89 Yancey, Joel Scott 87 Yanez. Adam Ramon ' 87 Yates, Scott M. 89 Younii. Todd James ' 89 Yu, Edward C. C. ' 89 Zahn. Steven R. 89 Zamorano, Joseph W. ' 88 Zavatskv, Mark Alan ' 87 MiMMfkt ! 109 SENIORS David Scott Ail.ir R.mws, Jr J,,si-pli C;.UMt;t.rtK.|(l i:).il.nR , Jolin Frcilrnck Ihiistlul, EiKvm LaiKini B.inu-s, Jr.. Kcln-rt .-1s, ti Laiifflord. Jaiiu-. YaTR-. Kirr.Il, Wilhani Watson, 110 Paul Rolnrtsuii Foiitcli, C;. Michat-l Stacliiira :.V ' ' . ' Robert Stephen Hughes, Albert Beniaiiiiii rspiili, Evan M Fonlke. William Ci ' orgc ISlooin. Steven Boliln Connett. Douglas Scott Moxliain, Thomas C.vbbon Spilsbur James M Aueh, III, Steven Edward Losc|ua(lro. Christopher John Koinosa, James Marshman Berger, Peter Joseph brardi, Jr, 111 W , K 4 4 ir.Β ?β€’ i Β« .! ! Β« , 4feΒ«.i% ' ♦♦■,. ' β€’ ' fcV. ' radlord Jenkins MacCachran ' HI, Cliarlt-s Nichi)la Bt-rents. Ill, Eduard W iKim DaMs III David Thomas Arthur, Michael Paul Marsha John Willianis PaLittrlla, Frid.rKk William Coundr Jack Ch.ulrs licni 112 |effer Ward Kinihrll, Liinrancf C.illouav Bosd. Clnrstciplu-r Miller ML ;invan, J.-fl.T Scott Britti. David Worth Spnint. Jr . Scott Jolin Pitzi;i-rald.S4;87L 113 1 Hll Michatl Brady McAlaine, Stephen Watson McGrath, William Taylor Holmes, II. Conrad Conu-lnis Boyle Barrett Cliiitini Slitltnn, III, Lf - Maxwell Mollis, Kevin Tvler Aiulersoii, Thornton Warren Brooksbank. Robert Lee Fitts, ' .S ' 1 John Fredenck Henschel, Kobert James VVhann.IV. John ,Atkms Crawford 115 M.ittli, ' V Slicriclaii Lrwis, ' SO, RaVTimnil M.l w,11 MrCrrw.HV. I.nuis Aiitlicmv CAh. Janus Frank Snrfa.v, 111, McHimvn IvtTMMi Patrick. Jr.. |ulin H,rv l.anicr, Ir , ' 88 ' i I, Ualknis.SS ' ) ' s: - George Thomas Corn an, Jr. Brian Joseph Uhger ChriMoph,.] Kml Lion, Carl Krederiek White, l,,sler Sknli, 1,1 IoIium,,, 117 ChristDplicr Hoss llopt IIS Clinton Robert V hitake Bnan Jus. ph l.ilsl, ,1, I iwri-iut ' Scott Anker 119 n VVilluiin KvtTctt Esh.Lm, III, W. Jdlm Mansfield K.ilk, I ' .lri Aulliuns llmil. Urshv ( :,,iii|il..ll Itn.ilun lil 120 ChristopluT I ' uiil Jakulifk, Jason KchIiu ' V Squirts, Hani . KkIkirI Ha Stanton S alina Hon I..WIS Moody, Joseph Gibson VVhelan, 111, Uavid Folk Thomas. W. Samuel 121 RchtTt Nc-alf SlrKklami 122 keniH-th Neal Jatohv, C. Michael Stachin I ' .iliuk K S.lhi. ' l Belliiim-r Li-wis, Bradlcv B. Boot, W, Daniel Francis DiiPre 123 124 C:linstiipli,r U Hope, IXiMcl 11.., % ' 7 β–  Paul Gerard Sclilinini, SV, CliarKs Aiilli,.n I ' lall, MKliatI l)arr l Cartrr, ST 125 Janifs Frank Suriacc. Ill, JaiiH-s I rink Siiilu. II W) I) im.I Kiiii; Siirl ik V) Jaim β€’ liaiun ll.iilni, Ji . Pi-ti-r Gt-.iiw Drtlfl 12B Hacl(l.-ii C ' liristcipluT Ak- .iii lfr. I . Cut l.anici kiiiil.r 111. 1 f β–  David aughan Messner _ β€ž ___ ___. iig:ww- jiTii ' - William Ciforge Bloom, Christen A, AlcM atcis 127 MrIu.I Hiili.ml MiAl. β– ,|,aiβ€ž- AntI ltrai;aii .i, |.iin.s l ' l.l,li,i ll.unl.l.n, ll -nn Kx.ill, 1 , William li.ish.im I l.uiplllll 128 β–  I 11 I II r 1 II II r 1 II S ' mm : C ' -z II B ?H-. Back row: Jdliii F, Kiordaii ' S7, JaiiRs Sar iii Williams Nb. C:ivi;ur Allan LiunLiid ST, Bniiii Sett KRliaiclMiii. Kul.rrt Allen i.niR-aii Β«7 Steoiul Kou Charks W illiiiu Browβ„’-. IV ' 87, Andrew John Bowu- S7. ]aine-s Kobert Spatis ' 85, Christoplur John Dnulian 87, (;eorur Ellis McDowell Front How John-Paul BoiiHaril, Kot;er Dav .So. Fodd Jones ' 85. Bill Reed ' 85. John Wvatt Henidon ' 85, David Christian Elliot John Stewart Sanders. John (.hnstopher Spear. Michael W ' anvick Adams 129 Murkham Sliau IM. s| SMβ€ž U iIIkuii Mill, i ( :i.,,p,M. l . Dr.m Eilwanl : Alu.Β«β€žl, |r . (;rial.l D.unrI Mirpliiril. Cliailis Bi.iaior.l SI, im, V v Andrew Ardon St. John. John Raymond Riley, Kirk Fariss TenEyck 130 David VV ' .i I 1 I 131 - % β– M)y ' s-oli CirfKOPi EiKvaril H.intr Ross Diffenderfif VVesli ' V Cimplirll li.utΒ«rmlil. Muli.ul Ji.s, pi, IlLcrk. Uilli.uii K i(tt IMuin, ST. J.,lin Mansfield Falk, WillKini M. Cossiii.ui. M.irk TiaiiuT. S ' 132 S.!!, β€” . V ?B-β€” β€” 1 5t._, , Timothy Aiulrt-w Jan ska, (.hnst.iplur Arithoiiv Blfi;i;i, Roln-rt F,iis;i-m- U iKon, Jr Kdwn James -illamatfr, David Michael BiitUr, Lee Hunter Beiies. Andrew Stexen UeniherR, L. Andrew Farrell Kirk Breen, Patriek llnah Bursdi.ri: Br%a 133 W ' ' Kenneth Lee Lindeman, A ( atherine Chnstian, ' 89, M. Elizabeth Camp Smith, 89, James S. Wilhams, 88, Alex A. Salzman Patrick bniis H.ucL 134 Crc.unn Jnhi, Sllt.sl)..n,il,l l WilknisM,, III W illi,,,,, K |,β€ž,.s |i , .,||miii.I S I.,v ill.,i.lll l ' ,,,rs,,ll J Robert Jaim-s Brown, Daiiirl N.iriii.u, Hrr.lcr, Knc SU-vcri Ohi-ck St.pluM Aminu Bist, J.iliii MoiKurt- Fntsclu- 135 Ki ' llv lldiiur Aninlam- Rciluit Kritli t;ri-,liain. Kcm.i IM.t AiHl.rs.i.i. Iliiuli H,.Ulil,.nl BI.k k Tunothv L ' ptesrovf Stanford. James Chnstopher Gilman, Scott Bowen Jolinstorii-, Brutt- Douglas FartiiiKtoij ST, Mattlii-w Repp Vawter, Dreadlocks, Samuel Fruit Simpson. V87 137 4 f - ' β€’ ' fj . ' .4- - Β« β€’ .4 Β Β β€’ β€’ ♦ β€’ β€’ β€’ Β Β Kaliard Harrtll Murriv Br aii ludd Kppley V, ,i.β€žuii W.itsijii Barn.-s, Jr , Daxid Fdlk Thcinas, W illiaiii Ccujur Hloorii, (,linslo|ili,r Ji.liij Konidsa, David Sliawii llarvr , Jain.-s M Audi, III. Muha.! Kcrlli HaWT, John McKav Mrlov, David N.civ F.ikaidl. VValt.-r Kiplrv D.-Miir DaiiK-l KraiKls Diil ' .c, MrIucI Joseph BUk ChHoid Frank War ihl 138 Scott Burton Boytl. Robert Clay Amott, Julian Henniu. 111. John Lfsslie Hall, 111 TimotJiv Liam York Joseph Edgar Vidunas, Christopher Kreg Kurtz 139 Siiriacf. III. Will Mc(;ee Junu-s, Jr I ' atruk Jr St.u,,rl Hlniii.-, Sp, ril, U illi.nii II. hn kiim 111 H,.lβ€žrt Cur.lt Mil iilh.imli, Ji , |nliM Atkiiis ( r.mlunl, Kaii.lolpli Lri- Ellis, Jaiiirs Frank am Pruf Fi.llaid, K.niictli L r lamlcinan, H.mrk, ( ai txM lulil llan. . Jaiiirs MiCinir Clillon, ji J,,m pli Tliciiias I ' lionin, Juliii P,,rtrl Cast ' , 111, IVll Earl Wiiili.ld Cla irrlll, Jcnnv, llcrn.r Shim U intluop llioni I ' liillips. ( linsloplur l.fva 140 David Bollon l.iisli I ' rti-r MKh.iil ' .tii Drr Mi-iii John VVakfiWld Kiiffin. Michufl rlioni.is Marr, Urum Jost-ph kfiulall.lll 141 Williain Taylor Holmes, II, James Yancey Kei.. 11, Joliii Doughs Templetoii, Davnl Neely Eekardt. Scott Burton licyd, Joscpli DaHiScrlukl Dnlan. Barnes, Jr., Michael Bradv McAlaine, John Frederick llenschel. Christen A. Alevizatos, William Speed Wyinon Kiish, Ko er Lee Dniinavan, |r , Ja IX-rinner. David Scott Adams, William Watson Barnes. Jr., Courtney Roller Mauzy, III, Rohert James Whanii, IV, Everett Dixon .Kduni i,adson 142 Bruce Edward Iniii, Joseph Gil)s,)ii W ' heK.n, 111 Michael Andrew Weaver. Margie Smith Stahel. Jr , D.Aid Vannoy Smith. Jr 143 144 I ' .itnck l,(c Cuiiiiiiiims, I ' .ml I Lauriruf Ka Ni iii l Flint EnusI li.ilHi Fr.iiikliii, III I, lUiia.ilpl, I,,, i:ll,s Jul,,, 1kI,.uI M,,.aK, II. I ' .uuil K(.ic J..lms, Jr 145 I ' arktT Bfimt ' tt Plaisli-d Jaim-s Andrew NULnmhlin, Kiclnnl William Zalin, Thomas Raymond Mack, Keith Ceorne Seott, Christopher John Mihtello, John ( :harle,s NeK.Mi 146 Erii llt ' insohn, John-Paul BoiiffartI, Koger Day, Jeffrey Scott Mandak Robert Eastwood Glenn. Jr. John David MeCaffery Craig Bntton Courtney 147 TiEiuitliv Mc-jilf KaliaraMm. Cl,n ,tβ€ž|)hii Alc .,iiai ' i U ilsβ€ži ChnstDphtT John Koniosa. Thomas Gyhhon Spilshiirv 149 )avid Sliawii ll,.n. , Aritlinnv Davul Karl Bartlii.lniiH ' ii Sniilli Mark AiitlicMiv Ik-rtcilini. Alillidiiv IXivid McArin, Sli-plirii KAkvaril om. niiaii, Hiirrirtt CraiMv. |r . Ccrard FraiKis Birdniiiski, Arll.ur All.., I Kaiidanai,, Mark John MiDon,Hii;li, JiiliTi Joseph Louphen, Jani.s Kduard I ' ..I.a. San.... I limo IXmsoii. Ilimli Alan Kn.kj.sl.iii, Mi.l.a.l Arlliur-CK-orse i HtTK. Kichard B. Sessuiiis. l.oiiis MoTidcll.i Alexander Fraiieis Cast.lli I Jamt-s Kdward Culnaiu-, William Taslor lliilin.s. II, Ccuur Tll(.Ina C.irrman, Jr . MkIkuI Bradv McAlain,-, Hnl.iiul lain. Si ,, Strnl,,,, Uats,,ii McGrath. William Francis Zola, Wiliaiii Spet-d Wvincuul Husli, U illiaiii Allen Midiaiid. Jiihn Scott Schrcili. r, (:,.nr.. l C.i n.lnis B,) lr H.ili, rl Oiiuiii Berlin - 5. r Guy Alexander Caldwell, John Paul Vita Nelson Hadclifle Fatt 151 JoliH Curtis M -li(irtf 1 - , i J ..-β–  β€’ ' . :Β«t-v -r- ' .f ' iΒ«%v. ._β€” l « i ! J [f . β–  .. | .llli W.ik.l,, Id HmIIii lil.s Hill.l,,inl Laiidois. Jr. RalKtrd I ' .driek Krn;uMβ€ži, J.flri- Unlxil l,rr I ' llls |i , rlβ€žiinl,.i, W.ui.ii H, , ,, ,k-.l ...I ik [.,;β–  M.ixu.ll II, .Ills, li.in.tl ( iinlon SImIImi, III 111, l,,H,l Isiiu.n. ' I.iil H.il.crl Keith ( ii .β– slijii, K.Alli I l.l ii(lrls,m, N.ilh. 1 β– linnr, Sim, kills β– Β James Marshman Berger. Stfv. ' ii Bohliv C:(mnett. StcMii Kiluaid LoMiuadn., W.ilt.r Hiplrx IXmm.-. Douglas Siult l,. liani 11m rt hciiiainiii , sp,,li Christopher K Hope. David duBrut lawis. Jake Aubrey JndMiii Klhs. Jr., Michael Frederick Giierrie 153 William Henn- King, 111, John Porter Cisf, 111, McUouin hereon PatriLk, Jr , Jos-eph Thomas I hoi ' iiix, Bourkf Lartu right Har .-v, Robert Garrett McCullough, ]r-, James Frank Surface, 111 Tom Pearce, Gene Girard, Roger Le Dunnavan, Jr. Christopher Paul Jakubek Ion S alina, Joseph Gibson VVhelan, III 154 Jennifer M. Bray, ' S4, Frederic Shumann LeClerci,] pW.Mi. vi Cranston Reade William; Charles Grant McClellan Groh, ' 87, Michael Darryl Carter, ' 87, Robert Stanley White, Jr., ' 87, William Michael Hanna, Alfred Anderson ' Cotton ' Puryear, Alan Glenn Scarisbrick, ' 87, Paul Gerard Schlimm, ' 87 155 Administration, Faculty, and Staff 156 β–  iL ill I iiii il W ii lMilii l ilΒ r tftfii1ftt ' 157 THE PRESIDENT Dr lohn Delane Wilson 158 THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES Standing: James W Whitehead. Ross R. Miiihiser, Guy T Steuan. II, Frank G. Young, |erry G. South. Charles S. Rowe, S.L. Kopald, Joseph S Keelty, Catvert Thomas. W Hayne Hipp, Christoph Keller, |r,. Seated; F Fox Benton, |r , Beverly M. Dubose, III, C Royce Hough, III, |. Thomas Touchton, John D. Wilson, Frances A Lewis, James M Ballengee, Virginia R. Holton, W Buckner Ogilvre, Jr , A Christian Compton, James F Galltvan, Issac N Smith, Jr. 159 THE DEANS John W. EIrod Dmn of the College Lewis G. John Deufi of Students H Robert Huntlev Afi ocuile Peiui of S(ni i ' ii ,s aihi Pciiii of Freshmen β– 7 Edward C. Atwood, Jr. Dfiiii of tlw School of Coiniucrct ' , Econorutcs, ami Pohlici Trrrrrrr Pamela H. Simpson Asfocuite Dam of the ColUyc Not pictured: Anne C.P. Schroer Afsooiatc Pcan of Sfm i ' ufs, Anece F. McCloud .β– l.-s.vMd- Pcin of SdiJi ' iKs lor Minority Affair Dan N. Murphy Associate Denn of Students for Fraternity Affairs ACCOUNTING Arthur Gumenik. Lyn Wheeler. Kevin Green, ay D Cook ADMINISTRATION S. Todd Lowry, Joseph Godsten. |ohn DeVoght. Roger Dean, Lawrence Umont. Not Pictured: Philip Cline 162 BIOLOGY Cleve Hickman, Peter Bergstrom. Thomas Nye. Randy Emmons. |ack WIelgus. |ohn Knox CHEMISTRY Thomas Imeson. Michael Pleva. |ohn Goehring. Keith Shillington. |ohn H. Wise. George Whitney, William Watt 163 CLASSICS Mario Pellicciaro. Herman Taylor COMPUTER SCIENCE Theodore Sjoerdsma. Kenneth A, Lambert 1H4 ECONOMICS S. Todd Lowry. Bruce Herrick. Carl Kaiser. Edward Atwood. )ohn Winfrey. |ohn Gunn. Charles Thilllps Not Pictured Philip Cline ENGLISH H. Robert Huntley. Sidney Coulllng. Edwin Craun. George Ray. Dabney Stuart. Severn Duvail. |ohn M Evans. |ames Warren 165 FINE ARTS Back row standing: Thomas Zlegler. Robert Stewart. I-Hsiung |u. Skip Epperson. Gordon Spice (front row seated): Gerard Doyon. Larry Stene. Deborah Rindge. Pamela Simpson, Albert Gordon. Timothy Gaylord GEOLOGY Samuel Kozak. Frederic Schwab. Edgar Spencer. Odell McCuIre 166 GERMAN Harold Hill. William Pusey, David Dickens. Henriette McCaughrin. M K. Folio. Shizuka Saka gami. Robert Youngblood. Buford Stephenson HISTORY Barry Machado. Robert McAhren, Taylor Sanders, |,D Futch. David Parker. Roger leans. H Marshall |arrett. Henry Porter. Not Pictured: Lamar Cecil. 1. Holt Merchant 167 JOURNALISM AND COMMUNICATIONS Ronald H. MacDonald. Elizabeth O Geimef. Robert DeMaria. Clark Mollenhoff. |ohn [ennlngs Not Pictured Hampden Smith. Louis Hodges (Society and the Professions) MATHEMATICS Robert lohnson. Wayne Dymacek, |anet Melville. Thomas Vinson. Vernon Eagle. Eung Chun Cho. Henry Sharp |r.. William K. Smith MILITARY SCIENCE MA| |ohn D. Smith. CPT Randall R. Hill. LTC Luke B Ferguson. MSG Raymon L Kuper, Kathleen H Dunlap. SCM Cecil Ames. |r., MSG Nelson L Twyman. Nellie M Rice, AAA| Michael T Cullen. MA| |an E, Gabrielson PHILOSOPHY standing: Matk N Packer. Charles Boggs. seated: Harrison Pemberton. Joseph Martin 169 PHYSICAL EDUCATION Β rf%.l4i a Front row George O Connell, William McHenry. Cynda Rankin. Richard Miller. Mark Mandel Sports IntormMion Director. Second row: |oe Lyies. Bob Shaps. |oe Freeland. |im Murdock, Third row; Tim McDonald. Verne Canfield. Norman Lord. Page Remillard. Gary Franke. Fourth row: Boyde Williams, Dennis Daly. Rolt Pirinian. Norris Aldridge. Back row: Richard Yeakel. Emett Leslie. Samuel Carpenter, Gary Fallon. Tom Jones PHYSICS ENGINEERING H Thomas Williams. Robert Akins, Ronald Reese, lames Donaghy. William Newbolt 170 PSYCHOLOGY Henry King, loseph Tompson. David Elmes. Leonard |arrard. Nancy Margand PUBLIC SPEAKING Halford Ryan 171 POLITICS Craig McCaughrin. Lewis |ohn, Delos D Hughes. Milton Colvin. |ohn Handelman. William Buchanan RELIGION Richard Marks. Louis Hodges. Harlan Beckley, Minor Rogers. Not Pictured; David Sprunt 172 ROMANCE LANGUAGES C Westbrook Barritt. Adoracion Campis, Sidney Williams. Kathy |o Koberstien. Russell Knudson, tdward Hamer SOCIOLOGY AND ANTHROPOLOGY Emory Kimborough, David Novacl Not Pictured O Kendall White. |ohn McDaniel 173 UNIVERSITY CENTER PLACEMENT Michael Capnetto Asfocuilc Dcivi ot Stiidfiit-. Carul Calkins Ihiiin-itu Cciitci Sxicl.iiv Pr James W Worth i i ie .iXJsf renn - G Henneman Pltia-mciil Satctiirv. Stephen Bredin riaccincnt Confultanl. ' Koi Pictured Anne C P Schrcier A Oiiiilc Doiii ol Shulnil- SECRETARY OF THE UNIVERSITY UNIVERSITY SERVICES lames Whitehead William Mohler Diicctor ot lhiiivri.itu Sfrvict ' ScrviLCi Secretary Bonnie Walker Universiti 174 LIBRARY STAFF Barbara Broun, Annt ' tto |ohn, |o Ann Wilson, Dick Crete, Bob LXintold, i olanda Warren, Tonv Murray, Tern ' Ferquar, Jimmie Leach, Elaine Mears, Oat Mohler, Heline Harnson, Carol Blair, David Bnttigan, Mar ' Lvn Brittigan, Lisa McCown, Peggv Havs, Erin Foley, Betsy Bnttigan SECURITY UNIVERSITY DINING Burr Datz-Assistant Proctor, Bob Murph ' Murrav-Proctor Gerald J, Darrell 175 TREASURER ' S OFFICE ASSISTANT TO THE PRESIDENT X ' crnon Sn der .4ss;s(i?Β ( Tica iin ' r Saictary, J.im.- Smith l -r oiiih-l A i taiit. Mvrna Zvbco Asiishiiif to the Trca iircr E. Stewart Epiov Trt-murci [β€’ ' rank Parsons BUSINESS OFFICE (β€’ront Row Piano lolmson Cnwral A i-.l:iiil Martha Rowsov .β– Vri iint Kr tiiiit, Sue Bryant Uc i Kivei ils, Dina Alhortoli l n ntll Clerk β– ivni ' le. Martv Sensabaugh At, omit:, rai al ' lc. Back Row: lanico Boll Sl.Ht ' li ' 176 FINANCIAL AID Anne Elmes, |ohn DeCourcv Diralor ol Fumihial Ani, Lvnn Straub DEVELOPMENT OFFICE Farriss Hotchkiss Director of University Relations Dci ' clopment , Anne Farrar, Becky Catlett, Dana Franklin, Dora Lynch, Carol Franklin, Carol Brogan Office Mana ' er Director of Research, Diana Warren, Charlene Whiteside, Bookkecfier, William Washburn Associate Director ol Development , Carter McNeese Associate Director 0 Development 177 ADMISSIONS OFFICE William M. Hartog Dnaior ot .β– Wnm. ioii-.. Van H. Pate Anocmtc Din-ttor of Atlmifnom. Dan N. Murphy Assistant Dircdor of Aiinussioii-, Julia M. Kozak Assistiint Director of Ailniissioiis. Robert J. Tomaso Admissions Counselor, James D. Farrar Coordinator of Ahiiniu β€” Admission Pro ;ram. Vicki B. Rhodenizer, Paula B Rhodenizer, Paula A. Tatar, Kimberlv L. Campbell, McClain Stradtner REGISTRAR ' S OFFICE D. Scott Dittman, Rc islr, Donna Hall, leaiietto |arvi . Assistant Kiyistiar, Susan Robinson 178 PRINT SHOP Sithng: Hunter McCov Offset Comcramiiu. Judy Davis, Standing: Anna clavtor Typesetter. Wanda Hall, Diana Wade, Htontanne Bostic Busmess Miina ;er, Ed Walker PrOituetwn Superinsor , Don Tabbut, Larry Mason BUILDINGS AND GROUNDS Sitting: Lee Dudley Techmeal Assistant to the Superintendent, Linda Agnor Office Manager, Herman Huffman, Standing: Scott Beebe Assistant Superintendent , James Brown Associate Superintendent , James Arthur Superinteiident 179 Remember . . . 180 181 Seeing . . . 1.S2 183 Eating . . . Lloyd ' s of lEXINGTON fine fast food 184 185 Hearing Violent Femmes iΒ«fi R. E. M. Suspects Heinsohn Day 187 Celebrating . . . ISS 189 Organizations 190 191 β€” i iW β€” W tE ..--i. Β _ ' . - β€” WC J H v H K fj .t |K% ' s β–  K I m B d ' 5 β–  .n f f i Fraternities β€’.- ' ' β€’ ' β–  Β , V iΒ . ( 1 . ' v ' 212 MR Wh !Β« Β« MB! Β«f!!; i)l ..-., .-A,: ' 3,, ♦ r: β€’β–  ' β– - ' -β€’ If ' A ' 213 BETA THETA PI Alpho Rho Chapter Established 1876 101 North Jefferson President L. Kirk Breen Vice President Michael Black Treasurer Dave Butler Secretary Carter Cannapell Rush Chairman Andrew Weinberg Acra. Eric R Femandes, Marcelo McGrath, Stephen W Aleman, John M Flagler, R.S Monroe, III, William L Benes, Lee H Floumoy IV, Thomas F Putnam, Andrew R Black. Michael J Friedman. Michael S Rice, William T Bracken, Douglas C Garrett, III, William A Root, Bradley B Breen, Lawrence K Geisel, Gregory S Schwartz, Jeffrey R Burgdorf. Patrick H Gist III, George W Stanton, Robert M Bums, Clayton T Godfrey, Jr., James H Vidunas, Joseph E Butler, David M Harrison, Jr., William S Villamater, Edwin J Casey, Christopher D Hutter, Robert P Vrooman, Jr., Robert P Cummings, Patrick L Johnston, John P Waters, Theodore C Curtiss, William L Kannapell, Frank F Weinberg, Andrew S Doumar, Charles C Kannapell, Jr., Charles C Williams, Scott A DuBose, n, William G Kopet, Jeffrey B Wmfield, Jr., Julius C Durica, Mark D Kurtz, Christopher K Winton, Ralph S i Farrell, Bryan A Lederer, Christopher J Zahn, Steven R Farrell, Sloan W Lynch, Christopher S 214 CHI PSI Alpha Omicron Delta Established 1977 5 Lee Avenue President Joseph G. Whelan, III Vice President Tom Maurer Treasurer Will Geer Secretary Sam Svalina Rush Chairmen, Sam Svalina, Chris Jakubek Beckert, Christopher H Hinkle, D. A Meienhofer, Peter E Bercaw, Jeffrey D Humphreys, James N Missert, Jon D Boras, George N h in, Bruce E Moody, Ron L Brewer, Karl W Jakubek, Christopher P Moore, Christopher F Bullotta, Thomas A Jennings, Timothy T Parks, Bertrand B Castronuovo, Greogry J Keanna, Craig M Reichard, Mark S Cleek. Bradley C Knapp, Gregory S Robertson, Mark A Coleman. Jr., Peter J Langheim, Thomas F Rooney, Jr., Francis P Doran, Steven R Manson, Robert H Sparacio, George G Garavente, William J March III, Edward R Squiers, Jason R Gameau, Craig O Martin, Christopher M Sutton, Alexander J Greer, Jr., William R Maurer, Thomas E Svalina, Samuel S Groff, Daniel E Mazza, Jeffrey P Thomas, David F Hamed, Jr., Parviz R McColl. W. L Whelan, III, Joseph G ' Harrington, Matthew T McKinney, Michael A Williamson, Robert V Head, Stephen J McNamara, Kevin D 216 DELTA TAU DELTA Phi Chapter Established 1896 106 Lee Avenue President Michael P. Marshall Vice President Paul Fearey Treasurer Todd Storch Secretary Ted Byrd Rush Chairman Paul Fearey, Alex Reeves, Carter Steuart Barry, Dean C Coins. Jace H Richardson. Edward A Berents, 111. Charles N Haines, Dale P Rugeley III, Edward W Bernstein, Richard K Harden, Hamion S Stewart, Brad Blackwood, Michael S Hildreth, Roger W Steuart, Carter M Boyle, Conrad C MacCachran, Bradford J Steuart, Hugh T Byrd. Ted L Marshall, Michael P Stinger, Kenneth C Costello, Gerard J Martien, William D Storch, Jr., Regis T Culnane, James E Michaud. William A Thompson, Ian P Driscoll. Frederick P Murdoch, John F Webb, John W Edmondson. Frazor T Peterson, Clark A Webb, Kevin S Fearey, Paul L Reeves, Jr, Alexander G Zola, William F 218 Mm iiiiii wAnm Jim r - liMiiiJ: m !!(|i|iii|! j K! j jii mmm k A J β–  I k I β–  I a - - a I - i .. _2r ' β€’β€’p - i β– β€’ KAPPA ALPHA Alpha Chapter Estabhshed 1865 301 East Nelson Street President James L. Hayne Vice President Jack RufTin Treasurer Matson L. Roberts Secretary Jeff Hubbard Rush Chairmen John Hudson, Philip Davidson Anderson. John R Harvey, John M Pressler, Townes G Barker, James H Hayne. Jr.. James L Rawls, Thomas F Bassett. Wyatt P Hodges. Philip N Robbins. Jeffrey P Bieck, Christopher E Hubbard. Jeffrey M Roberts. Matson L Bottomley. Ian P Hudson. Jr.. John K Ruffin, John W Campbell. Gary H Johnson. III. Gaylord Sands, Jr.. Frank M Cole. Gregory A Jordan. David W Smith. Craig S Coyle. William S Jung. Scott H Smith, Powell H Crabill. William E Klump, D. E Strader. James J Davey, Paul M Lancaster, James R Sturgill, Jr., Barkley J Davidson. Philip A Lee, Dudley W Thompson, Bradley G Davis. IV. Charles L Magoline, Michael R Thompson. David E Deaton, Bradford J Markley, Jr., John D Thompson. Nicholas R DeHoU. John D Marr, Michael T Thornton. Jonathan L Devereux, Townsend W Martin, III. L. E Trammell. Harper B Ellis, Jr.. Aubrey J Mays. Ill, Charles P Tucker. James G Ferguson, Richard P McCormick. III. Hugh B Tucker. Jr., Wallace G Guerriero. Michael F McNair. Jr., William H Upchurch, Charles W Gulley, Shawn P Morris. Steven W Wagner, III. Frank W Hansard, Matthew R Murphy, James J Yanez, Adam R Hart, Paul E Payne. William G Youngman, Paul A i i .i 1 IfnifflT ' lp ' KAPPA SIGMA Mu Chapter Established 1873 203 East Washington Street President William R. Hemphill, Jr. Vice President Robert White Treasurer Harris While Secretary Bill Ewing Rush Chairman Jim White Applewhite, Hunter A Hamblen, James F O ' Brien, Terence G Benedict, Charles C Hamilton, John P O ' Brien, UL Thomas P Birchfield, Wilham Hampton, Wade M Partee, Peter S Bledsoe, 111. James W Hanna, William M Prindle, Stephen H Branflick, Jeffrey A Hedgepeth, Jonathan W Puryear, Alfred A Brennan, Timothy C Hemphill, William R Roach, John C Bums, S. D Hemdon, Thomas K Rowe, John P Carter, Michael D Herubin, Scott J Rowe III, Joseph F Colleram, David V Hickey, Sean L Ryan, Laurence K Denny, Darrin 1 Holmes, Stephen C Ryan, Robert S Elder, Jonathan L Isley, Philip R Scarisbrick, Alan G Elmer, Charles M Krivor, Casey S Schlimm, Paul G Ewing, William P Lee, June-Ho J Treanor, Scott C Exall, IV, Henry Lewis, David D Tyler III, J. A. J Eyerly, IV, Paul R Lilly, William H White, Christopher H Farthing, James D McDowell, David W White, IV, James J Fason, Sam D Metz, John D White. Jr. Robert S Goebel, Frank E Miles, Brian H Yancey, Joel S Gray, David B Mohr, John E Groh. Charles G Newman, Mark T LAMBDA CHI ALPHA Gamma Phi Chapter Established 1922 225 East Nelson Street President Tom Hurlbut Vice President Chris Spear Treasurers Fred Bentley, Britt Courtney Secretary Mark Farmer Rush Chairman Chris Lion, Renfro Adams. Michael W Hartley. Jr., John F Pipkin. John G Bentlev, III. Charles F Hoffmann. Arthur A Renfro. Jr. , James G Callas. Christopher L Hurlbut. Thomas E Sanders, John S Courtney, Craig B James. Jr., Richard P Schultz, Jeffrey P - Cummings, HI. John B Lion, Christopher P Spear. John C i Darling. Ross P McClung. Michael L Steilberg. Matthew H i Davis. Steven R McLane, Samuel H Struthers. Kevin A Detlefs. Peter G Mehorter, John C Thompson III. DuBois S Drawdy. Vance E Miller, Joel E Upton, Matthew B Fanner, Mark N Nusbaum. Jr.. Charles G Van Assendelft, Diederik A Hager. Gregory E Parker, Peter . Hartley. Timothy M Percival, Lawrence F ' 224 6 ii ' 1 ' ' !JE % % l f r- rAfMf ' iBi y - . m β€” PHI DELTA THETA Virginia Zeta Chapter Established 1887 5 Henry Street President Bourke C. Harvey Vice President William King Treasurer John Case Secretary Stewart Speed Rush Chairmen Louis Cella, Stewart Speed Atkins, John E Johnson, IIL James M Phillips. Jr., Julian P Barker. James H Kettler, 01. Charles J Phoenix, Joseph T Bean, Brenton S King, III, William H Plaisted. Parker B Brock. Richard G Lackey, Gilbert H Poer. Charles S Brown, Randall S Ladd, Banks C Pollard. William P Butler, M. W Lafargue, Jr., Robert T Robinson 11. E L Case. III. John P Lanier, Jr., John R Robinson. III. Emerson B Cella. Louis A Ledbetter. E. W Smith. Brooksy L Clifton, Jr.. James M Leitner III, William A Smith. Glenn B Conway. IIL Charles M Lewis, Matthew S Speed. Stewart R Cope. Kevin P Lindeman, Kenneth L Surface. David K Crawford. John A Lyle. Charles L Temple. Michael D Crutcher. H. D Lynch, Jr, Hugh M Thagard, III. Thomas W Donahoo, Jr.. Thomas M Matthews, Robert E Thomasson. Jr. Burgess A Elliott. II, Douglas F McCullough, John W Thompson. Robert S Ellis. Randolph ' L McCullough, Jr., Robert G Tolleson, Jr.. Robert H Fulwiler. Guy C McDonough, John Torbert. III. Clement C Gentry, Jr., John B McGee, Jr.. Edwin C Turner. III. William M -:: Gibson, Andrew M McKay, Carl J Watkins, Bradford L Greeter. J. A McLeod, David G White. Jr.. James A Guyton, Jr., Robert P Mize, Roby D Wiley 111. Floyd M Hartmann, Gregory P Murphy, Harry M Willcox. Edgar L Harvey, Bourke C Newton, Jr.. James E Williams. James S Hassinger, Michael T Patnck. Jr.. McGowin I Young. Todd J Husting, Charles Payne, H. R James, Jr.. Paul M Pettus, Thomas R 226 β€’ β– sS !?;,. i t-illl vj ir tiiii l:iUimiΒ«iii ;β–  ' 1 S -.A. ' -. y β– V. AiuJi lUltUikftk k ..... tfir Β«β€’ y s fsss - z S Jf β– w- ' :;! PHI GAMMA DELTA Zeta Deuteron Chapter Established 1868 108 Henry Street President Gary P. Appel Treasurer Secretary Paul Abbott Rush Chairmen Mike McAllister. Jim Cockey Abbot, Paul T Franzese, Douglas R McDonough, Mark J Ambrosini, James C Funkhouser, Stewart M Mondello, Louis Appel. Gary P Gammage, Jr., John C Murray, 111, Thomas R Berg, Michael A Gaucher, Jamie Petino, Jr., Pietro M Bertolini, Mark A Graddy, Jr., Duane B Pollock, Randolph C Biedronski, Gerard F Hall, Stanley C Powley, Robert L Boyd. Keith D Harralson, Jefferson L Preston. James B Castelli, Alexander F Hamier, Andrew C Quagliata. R. S Cockey, James D Kandarian. Arthur A Russo, Jason J Coll 111, John P Kelly, James F Sherlock, Christopher M Cotter. James P LaManna, Vincent S Skeen 11, Charles T Dawson. Samuel R Legters, John N Vienneau, Robert A DeMartino. Anthony G Loughery, John J Vogt, Stephen E Dupont, Philip A MacPherson, Robert A Waskiewicz, Anthony S Finkelstein. Hugh A McAllister, Michael R Zamorano, Joseph W Foley, James E McCann, Anthony D 22S PHI KAPPA PSI Virginia Beta Chapter Established 1885 301 East Washington Street President Peter lerardi Vice President Joe Krastel Treasurer Tom Keating Secretary Rick Pierce Rush Chairman Bill Bloom, Marshall Eubank Barrow. James G Finnegan, G. T Melton, S. H Barth. Jr.. David R Finnerty. Timothy J Menon. Shayam K Beatty. Michael P Forrester. Michael A Mitchell, in. John G Berger. James M Friedrichs, J. M. G Moxham. Douglas S . ' : Bissmgcr. Frednck J Gallagher. Jr.. Edward J Nozemack. II. John D BleggK Chnstopher A Giacobbe. Steven J Oluvic, Mark S Bloom, William G Golian. Timothy Packett, John E Brading, Lee D Gottwals. J. P Pierce. Richard J Brown. William A Gunkel. John J Rallo. James M Bryant, Matthew S Hancock. Steven M Redfoot. Richard S Burke. Paul A Harper. Frampton L Richardson III, Bruin S Calabretta, Robert E Harrison. K. B Roe Jr. . John D Cambon IV, Etienne D Herman. Mark S Saxman. Christopher B Caragol, Jr., William J Holifield. Michael C Skinner, Jr.. Frederic P Carbcrry, John C Hudson, David A Sparago, Merrill T Carr. Tyler S Hughes, Robert S Spilsbury, Thomas G Castle, Stephen R lerardi , Jr.. Peter J Taylor. Rowan G Catron, John C Janyska. Timothy A Thompson. William D Chiappara, Edward M Kavanagh. Joseph C Tro.sch. Jr. Louis A Connett. Steven B Keating. V. Thomas J Tumau. C. B Daves. David S Komosa. Chnstopher J Turner, Enc R DeMarco. James R Krastel, Joseph B Vesper, Jr.. James E Devine. Waller R Lewis. John B Vespoli. Albert B Drake. Robert M Losquadro. Steven E Weaver. David W DuPre. Daniel F McCook. Peter J Williams, Greaorv D Eisinger. S. W McDonald. Jr.. John C Yu. Edward c Elergino. Thomas J McEvoy. Michael K Eubank. Marshall M McKinstry. Paul 230 PHI KAPPA SIGMA Alpha Alpha Chapter Established 1894 1 1 North Jefferson Street President Edwin L Barnes Jr. Vice President Scott Adams Treasurer Watson Barnes Secretary John Henschel Rush Chairmen Jim Kerr, Robert I.angford Adams, David S Greenberg, Jr., Henry B Parkhurst, Jr., Richard G Adamson. Michael R Halpert, Harry D Parkinson, III, Edwin W Alevizatos. Christen A Harwood, Jeffrey W Peters, Thomas B Bames, Jr., Edwin L Hawkins, Robert R Phelan, Timothy C Barnes, Jr., William W Henschel, John F Prebor III, Edward G Barton, III, Quinn R Holmes. 11, William T Randby, Kenneth E Boyd, Scott B Hope, Christopher R Reynolds, Jr., Roger J Browne, IV, Charles W Howell, Andrew L Roberts, Jr., Barksdale F Bryant, Victor A Johns, William R Rush, William S Burch, Robert F Kerr, 11, James Y Seifert, David D Burlingame, John M Langford, Robert N Singletary, W. R Burton, Jeffrey L Lawrence, David D Sloan, Jr., James B Caccamo, Joseph S Loupassi, George M Smith, III, Marquis M Campbell, James S Luter, IV, Joseph W Starks, Heni P Church, John H Makepeace, David S Templeton, John D Clark 111, Sheldon Mauzy, 111, Courtney R Udicious, Steven J Cover, Edward B McAlaine, Michael B Veliuona, Michael A Davenport, Jr., Huntley G McBride, Thomas J Ware, John W Deringer, James C McCormick, W F Watson, III, Frank L Dulaney, Joseph D Merrill 111, John B Whann, IV, Robert J Dunn, Jr., Wilham D Mitchell, Anthony P Williams, S. T Eckardt, David N Moore, Ralph B Wiman, Paul C Gorry, Scott B Mullenix, Douglas J Gottsegen, G. B Myers, Jr., Thomas E 232 β€’) PI KAPPA ALPHA Pi Chapter Established 1892 106 North Main Street President John MacGregor Wheeler Vice President Mark Slack Treasurer Jay Hennig Secretary Scott Johnstone Rush Chairman Steve Best Alby, Steven M Hartley, Charles D Radvany, Martin G Alford. Alan S Hennig, III, Julian Rembert, 111, Frank M Amott, Robert C Hyatt, Henry H ReVille, Jr., JaclandF Berger, 11, George A Johnstone, Scott B Roberts, Christpher B Best, Stephen A Kelly, Robert J Roth, Steven F Bottoms, W. T Knight, Thomas G Samuel, Jr., Dennis C Brady, Matthew P Lasseigne III, William R Sandler, Steven D Buquet, 111, James J Lederer, Kevin W Simpson, V, Samuel P Cannon, Jr., D F Mackenzie, Andrew R Slack, IV, John M Cantey, William H McDonald, Andrew G Smith, Jr., C. P Cohen, Jeffrey A McKay, Jr., Julius W Spencer, Edward G Cumniings, Jeffrey P McMahon, Timothy G Stanford. Timothy U Cunningham, Chnstopher H Miller, Douglas W Sullivan, Eric L Deep, Jr., William D Moody, 11, John M Vawter, Matthew R Feyrer, John D Newsome, Bradley B Walker, Scott D Fitler, III, Ralston B Norris, Richard C Wheeler, John M Oilman, James C Oliver, John M Wood. William B Hair, Bradford M Partington, Bruce D Hall. David D Poulton, John C 234 r S ' =1 β–  -I ' - fljiiiii|i|i!i|;iii AiJI- III iiil lllli Qi iiiiilli;iiilimi!nii}i|i|i|8n|i|i|i||i||ioiiiiiaiiieiiiiΒ£ II β– β– β–  PI KAPPA PHI Rho Chapter Established 1920 201 East Washington Street AIAZnAEEl p AS) President Jeffrey A. Sapp Vice President Roth Kehoe Treasurer Robert Glenn Secretary John Scannapieco Rush Chairman Roth Kehoe Allen. III. Everette G Hobson, Richard J Pizzo, m, Peter J Benjamin. Jack C Hodge, James E Reibach, Andrew M Boudreau. Daniel P Holmes, James A Sapp, Jeffrey A Brown. Ronald J Kehoe, II, Gerard R Scannapieco, John M Buttarazzi. Michael J Koedel, UI, John G Schott, Gary W Buttarazzi. Robert J Layton, Andrew J Shaw, J. B Canon. Mark M Leary, Richard G Shea, Timothy J Clawson. Richard T LeJeune, Horace B Spellman, John C Coe, Lester V Londrey, William G Strauch, Robert E Connolly, Sean E Marks, Jeffrey L Thayer lU, Donald O Dickey, Charles D Matzdorf, Craig A Tuggle, Michael D Dunmyer. Michael J McCaffery, John D Unger, Gregory S Faust. Jason E McFadden, Jr., Hunter B Urso, James A Glenn. Jr.. Robert E Millar, Mark L Veatch, John E Gordon. Marc L Moore, Jr.. John K Wood, William C Hamlin. James T New. James M 23fi r ' O ' S Β Lt A I MBt :%β€’ ' iSS iiP - ' HV n c - wM β– L wm Bi SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON Virginia Sigma Chapter Established 1867 205 East Washington Street President Lee Mollis Vice President Cooper Crawford Treasurer Trey Kinder Secretary Turner Simkins Rush Chairman Barritt Gilbert, Will Harbison Alexander, IV. Haddon C Harbison. William R Pee, Thomas H Alexander, Jr.. Glynn M Harrison. Jr.. Chason L Reed, Bruce A Anderson. Kevin T Hays, IV, James W Roberts, John L Arvin. Jr., William M Henry, Michael R Sackett, Peter C Baehr. John P Henson, III, Paul E Sackett IV, Henry M Barton. Todd S Hollis. Lee M Sarber III, L. J Bauhan. Hobart P James. Charles A Schaefer, Patrick E Black. Hugh R Josey. D. Jordan E Schaeffer, Donald C , Blessey. E. C Kelsey, R. J Schmidt, Frederick E Brand. Christopher C Kendall, III, Erion J Schoettelkotte. William W Brooks. Jr.. Philip S Kinder, III, Can L Schulz. Stephen G Brooksbank. Thornton W Klank. C. E Shelton. III. Barrett C Brown. Stuart K Lail, Richard E Sherrill. Philip M Carder. John R Lastinger. R. L Simkins, Nathaniel T Carroll. Michael D Laws. Mathew T Smith, Jr.. David V Crawford. Cooper C LeClercq. Frederic S Stahel. Jr.. Harry C Crosby. William C Litvak, Kramer A Suttle, Michael B Diemer. Matthew E Loomis. Madison G Szczecinski, Stephen C Early. III. George G McGarry, Michael E Talley. Minor C Faser. Peter G Morris. Michael F White, H. H Pitts. Jr.. Robert L Newton, William W Williams, Scott D Gilbert. William B Norton, W. L Woodham, John F Hall. III. John L Pearsall. Jr., Mack B 2.38 VP i SIGMA CHI Zeta Chapter Established 1866 2 Lee Avenue President John M. Meloy Vice President John Falk Treasurer John Kalitkd Secretary Will Ksham Rush Chairman Jim Rikhoff, (ireg Stites Baumgaertner, Peter A Jones, Jr., William F Pearsall, 111, Willard H Betcenstein, David M Joseph, Jeffrey E Piatt, Drew W Bennett, James S Kalitka, John C Rodgers, Steven E Boswell, Jr., James M Koch, Thomas M Sheldon, Stuart H Boyd, Thomas J Kubly, William R Stites. Gregory J Braden, Peter K Lake, III, Frederick W Tompkins, Robert K Davidson, Kevin J Lutz, Robert E Trainer, Mark Emrich, John D McMains, Andrew T Ueland, Leif Esham, 111, William E Meloy, John M Van Son, Peter E Falk, John M Messerly, John P Vines, James K Farley, Mark L Metcalfe, James M White, Andrew W Gossman, William M Moore, Richard B Wilkinson, 111, Donald M Graham, IV, William W Morgan 111, James H Willard, Christopher L Healey, Oliver M Moseley, George G Hodges, Jason R Owen, James F 240 :sii !!iif Iflsiliipslfi SMlpI ' jfs B ' Igiilikfe raaJ i!lΒ£lSlilsNl!i l ' ii| SIGMA NU Lambda Chapter Established 1882 4 Henrv Street President Ernest B. Franklin III Vice President Everett Hamilton Treasurer Jim Augustus Secretary Dick Morris Rush Chairman Kelly Armitage, Lance Konkos Aarstol, Michael P Hamilton, Jr., Everett E Mercer, Ronn W Andrade, Troy E Hill, Erthel E Morris, Richard H Augustus, James A Householder, Jr. , Richard F Newman. Scott M Barnes, David N Hutchinson, William E Parkey, Andrew B Bayton, J. R John, Christopher D Pfaff, Charles A Bloodsworth, Jr., David M Kidd, Michael B Ratcliff, Todd M Bouffard, John-Paul Kirchner, John S Schieke III. Herman E Bryant, Mark G Klabo. David N Schropp, James A Bugg, W. S LaPrairie, C. B Sharp, III, James B Clark, Jr, Williams G Lawson, John R Sherwin, Peter J Corey, James M Love, Craig D Simons, Jr.. Carlton Dubuque, Louis T Lyons, Jr., William F Slappey, Bradford A Farquhar, James Mandak, Jeffrey S Solomon, Jon D Fishman, Mark N Mayer, Scott J Strickland. Robert N Franklin, lU, Ernest B Mayer III, Henry H Wargelin, Clifford F Gay, Charles T McGraw, Jr.. D. D Yonkos, Lance T Gonzalez, James F Meadows, John W 242 - ' i:i.4?lili:i||i|l|! f ' SIGMA PHI EPSILON Virginia Sigma Chapter Established 1906 110 Preston Street President William H. Surgner. Jr. Vice President Russ Whitman Treasurer Ted Willard Secretary Chris McGowan Rush Chairman Ned George, Jon Miles Allen, Michael P Harvey, David S Preziosi, Jonathan M Andrus, Gregory L Hogan, II, Richard J Rankin, Neil Aronhime, Joseph E Hunt, Kevin T Robins, Jr., Richard B Atkinson, David M Jones, Anthony D Rooker, Barry C Boyd, Laurance C Jones, Robert B Rothenberger, Bruce C Britton, Jeffrey S Kimbell, Jeffrey W Severe, Blair G Butler, Sean M Lisi, Jason P Shearer, Charles R Cannon, Michael D McDowell, George E Stuart, Jr., E. P Cells, Christopher R McGowan, Christopher M Surgner, Jr. , William H Coudert, Matthew J Miles, Jonathan S Washington, Michael L Curren, Erik D Montgomery, David H Whitman, UI, Russell W Davis, Porter M Nave, James D Willard, Edward J Ford, David A Noble, Samuel M Zavatsky, Mark A George, ill. Edward M Ogden, John R Hager, Christian H Peck, Russell S 244 s m iΒ± ' i β€” - ti f j- M ? - f ' (. Β₯ i ' -C-A ' ( f i J m imsBMossmfi. ijS ii . Β© c β€’ --Β K Β d ' . 4 . I Β« -- ' Β« Β« --.Β«, Ck feBz flSu l V ZETA BETA TAU Alpha Epsilon Chapter Established 1920 220 East Nelson Street President David Auld, Jr. Vice President Paul Clark Treasurer Todd Harvey Secretary Doug Turrell Rush Chairman Paul Clark Auld. Jr., David Harvey, Todd D Riley, John R Baber, III, William W Kinson, William R Spiessl, Mark O Boiler, John D Lunsford, Gregory A St. John, Andrew A Bonn, Gregory B Marsh, David B Tartaglione, Andrew J Carmouche, Christopher L McThenia, III, Andrew W Thornton, William K Clark, Paul Plummer, William P Turrell, Douglas W Curry, II, Ronald L Pockrass, Steven F Waterson, Edward H Davis, Brandon D Randolph, Thomas J York, Timothy L Grimsley, James A Grosso, Rocco R 246 SSIitUiaSi. ' iifliSgii SIGMA SOCIETY Cooper Crawford, Barrett Gilbert, Willy King, Clay Torbert, Rob MeCullough, Caulley Derringer, Mae MeGrew, Will Harbison, Frank Surfaee, Thornton Brooksbank, Joseph Phoenix, Dave Butler, Chris Lynch. Andrew Putnam, Joe Luter, Randy Johns, JohnChureh, 0 i5V Β« -,v. Turner Simpkins, Billy Holmes. Billy Rush, Ed Barnes, John Case, Clint Shelton, Hunter Benes MONGOLIAN MINKS Hobart Bauhan, Hiad Kool. Buck Wiles , Kirk lirccn, Mike Henry, Seott Winlon, Peter Winfield, Kramer Litvak, Chris Lederer, Ed Villameter, Randy Johns, Matt Lewis, Frank Kannapell, Andy Putnam, Chip Gist, Hunter Benes, Chris Lynch, Pat Burgdort ' , Dave Butler, Ed Barnes, Mark Machonis, Cooper Crawford, Rob MeCullough, Turner Simpkins, Clint Shelton, Barrett Gilbert, Kevin Anderson, Willy King, Charlie Pitts, Joseph Phoenix, Thornton Brooksbank 24S CADAVER SOCIETY Secret Societies are benefactors of The Calyx 249 Sports Articles within section written by Calyx Sports Editor Mike Stachura. 250 251 When you start the season with a 30-0 loss, you have nowhere to go but up. The Washington and Lee football Generals followed that adage to its fullest extent in 1 9S5, winning seven of Its last eight games and tying for first place in the Old Dominion Athletic Conference. The Generals rose Co such heights on the wings of junior tailback Kevin Weaver, who rewrote the WG.L football record books and led the nation in scoring, piling up an average of 13.8 points pen game. Weaver ' s 1 45. 1 yards pen game average was also good enough for fourth in NCAA Division III. The season becanne a game of can-you-top-this for both the teann and Its star running back. Game 1 was a disappointment for both team and player. Weaver missed the entire game due to a knee injury and the team was held scoreless by the Wasps of Emory and Henry, who later shared the conference crown with WS.L. The Wasps scored 30 against 252 the Generals, who were plagued by four turnovers during the afternoon. Head coach Gary Fallon, who was looking to lead his troops to thein sixth straight winning season, said he was not discouraged by the shutout. He cited the play of the WSL defense, who allowed only one touchdown tthe rest coming via turnovers), as one of the bright spots. But the coach was In an even brighter mood when doctors okayed Weaver for WSL ' s next game. the home-opener against Centre. The Generals proceeded to go on a tear that would give them decisive victories in their next six straight games. Against Centre, it v as the defense standing tall to deny a Colonel touchdown in the waning seconds and preserve the 7-3 victory. The first win started a trend that would run through the next five games. The contests ' scripts must have come from the same writer as WSlL time and again fell behind early and roared back to get the victory. Roared is an understatement. In five games WSL put 1 43 points on the board. Weaver socred 1 4 touchdowns in the five-game run. The ODAC was set on its ear A hen on the first Saturday in October, the Generals knocked off pre-sesason conference favorite Randolph Macon. 31-19. The odds heading into the game weren ' t promising for WSL fans. Not only were the Generals 0-1 n the ODAC. they had only managed a Louchdown in two games, not enough offense when you ' re facing a squad that ' s averaging 27 points per outing. Weaver, classmate Jon Thornton and senior receiver Chris Bleggi lit up the scoreboard for WSL. Weaver rushed for two touchdowns. Thornton threw for tv o and Bleggi caught two in leading the Generals to the win that propelled the Generals back into contention for the conference lead. In addition to his two touchdowns. Weaver rushed for over 1 OO yards for the second straight time. His two-game performance put him atop the ODAC rushing statistics. The scoring continued when WSL returned to Lexington for Homecoming Weekend to play Maryville. The Generals throttled the Scots of Maryville. -42-1 7. for a pleasant Homecoming victory. The Maryville game marked a clash between the conference ' s best passing offense and its best passing defense. WSL hauled in six interceptions. Thornton threw four 253 touchdown passes [two each to Bleggi and senior Hugh Finkelstein) and Weaver added two more touchdowns to his growing total as the Generals scored 35 unanswered points in the second half. In Ganne 5. Weaver and the Generals spoiled Hampden-Sydney ' s Homecoming Weekend v ith a 32-20 defeat of the Tigers. The WSL passing attack fell silent and so it was up to the lunion tailback to take matters into his o A n hands. The Tigers didn ' t even have a chance to get the number of the truck that hit them. Weaver ' s 1 73 yards and β€” count ' em! β€” FIVE touchdowns led WSL to Its fourth win in a row. The junior ' s scoring effort set a new school record. Weaver and the WSL defense, who stopped the Tigers twice in the final five minutes of the first half, had the ODAC talking and even some others talking about a possible bid to the Division III national tournament. The Generals did little to end such talk when they spoiled another Homecoming, this one at the University of the South by a 3B-20 count. Another record went by the wayside as Weaver rushed for 225 years during the afternoon. For the fifth straight game, the Generals fell behind early as Sewanee took a 14-0 lead midway into the first period. But the defense again was tough when it had to be. shutting out the Tigers for the last 22 minutes of play, and Weaver scored four touchdowns and handed-off to Bleggi on a reverse for another to give WSL its fifth win of the season. The General ' s final ODAC game could have been ugly, what with WSL leading the conference and its opponent, Bridgevi ater, bringing up the rear. But the weather smiled on the Eagles and prevented a massacre. Torrential rains poured throughout the afternoon and the Generals could only manage one touchdown (scored by guess who ' ?]. The defense earned the shutout, foiling the Eagles ' greatest threat when senior Tim Janyska picked off a pass. The win propelled the Generals to No. B in Division Ill ' s South region, but the talk of a bid to the national tournament ceased A ' hen WSL faced defeat for the first time in two months at the hands of Pennsylvania ' s Ursinus College. Despite Weaver ' s seventh straight 1 OQ-yard performance, the Generals were upended by the Bears 2B-23. A late 2.54 .Li - ' β–  ' β– ..: . ' ' -β–  ' - ' ' .;s ?r. ' -β–  ' ,. ' ;β–  β–  ' β– Β ,β€’.β– ,;β–  ' β€’ Β Β«.: Β -s. v. . , -. -.β€’,-....-,-..-., .β€’β€’ ' j5 ; .vj ' ,v. rally that included a Thornton TD pass to junior Randy Brown and a Weaver touchdown came up short. Not overly dismayed, the Generals and Weaver came back to Lexington with two goals: to beat Washington University and to get Kevin Weaver one nnone record, the school single-season rushing record. No sweat. Saving their best stuff for the second half, Weaver and the Generals blew by the Bears with a 29-1 4 win and a 2G7-yard afternoon for the lunion running back Chat put him once again in the WSL record book. The Generals finished the season in a tie for first in the conference with Randolph-Macon and Emory and Henry. Weaver finished the season as the holder of four school records; single-ganne scoring, single-game rushing, single-season rushing. single-season scoring. But the lunior and some of his teammates weren ' t finished earning the honors. Weaver was named ODAC Player-of-the-Year and first team running back, while tw o other Generals, defensive back Janyska and sophomore offensive tackle John Packett, also were named to the first team. Named to the ODAC ' s second team were seniors Bleggi (tight end). Finkelstein (wide receiver], Alex Castelli (defensive tackleJ and John Sanders (offensive guardi Freshman Tom Skeen, who led the team in tackles, was named to the second team as a linebacker and a punter. In the final ODAC statistics. Weaver led in rushing and scoring, Finkelstein was fourth in receiving, Skeen was second in punting, and Skeen and Janyska tied for fourth in interceptions. The team was third in team defense and second in rushing offense. Weaver was also named the state ' s best college-level CNCAA Divisions II and III) football player by the Richmond Touchdown Club and was selected to the second team All-State (all divisions) by The Roanoke Times S World News, a fitting conclusion to a season that β€” for Weaver and the team β€” started down, but ended all the way up at the top. 255 V ATER POLO For the second year in a now, the Washington and Lee water polo Generals were stopped by one team all seasons: Richmond. The Spiders defeated WS.L five times in 1 9e5 β€” almost half of the Generals ' losses for the season β€” to take the Southern League Championship. But there were a goodly nunnben of positive things for WSL polo. Head coach Page Remilland earned his 200th career coaching victory with a late-season win over George Washington, and the Generals ' 19-1-4 record was the eighth straight winning season for water polo at WSL. The season started in exclamation-point fashion with a 3B-2 victory over Lynchburg at the WSL Fall Classic. After slipping against Johns Hopkins, the Generals fought them way back and earned a spot in the final against Richmond. The Spiders were too strong for WSL early in the season, xA inning 1 B-B. The Generals began a series of road tournaments (WSL was only home for two weekends in 1 SB5) with a trip to Providence, Rhode Island, where two of the best polo squads in the East, No. 1 y Bucknell and No. 1 5 lona, trounced the Generals. But WSL came back in the third game to defeat Army. 1 G-3. The next w eekend at the Virginia State Championships, WSL sailed into the finals with wins over Lynchburg and Virginia Commonwealth by a combined count of 53-1 O only to be washed out in the final by Richmond, 1 3-4. The WSL-Richmond rivalry road relocated to the nation ' s capital for Round One of the Southern League Tournament. WSL won four games, defeating Lynchburg, George Washington, North Carolina β€” Wilmington and VCU by an average margin of 1 3, but lost the fifth contest of the weekend to the Spiders by a 1 3-7 score. But this meeting of WSL and Richmond xA as the closest of the year up to this point and head coach Remillard saw the changes as a result of the Generals forcing the action getting Spiders to play WSL ' s game. 256 The Richmond loss touched off a bad weekend for the Generals at the Southeast Varsity Invitational where WSL lost three of four games. Navy. Brown and Harvard handed out the defeats, while WSL did get a win against MIT. The Harvard loss was marred by what Remillard called a lackadaisical attitude in both players and coach. Said the coach: The season hasn ' t panned out for them the way they thought it would, and they ' ve gone into remission. But the dormant period A as ended quickly the following weekend when WSL repeated its Hound One performance in Round Two of the Southern League by downing Lynchburg, CBeorge Washington, UNC-Wilmington and VCU but losing to Richmond. The fourth meeting was also the fourth time the two teams had met in the final day of a tournament. The team got a big crowd and its best effort of the year for the following weekend ' s Southern League Championship, but the Spiders were still too tough, turning the Generals aside in the final in the closest meeting of the two teams all year. Reaching the final with three 20-goal efforts over James Madison, George Washington and VCU, WSL played the Spiders even for the first period-and-a-half but fell behind B-5 at the half. WSL got no closer than two goals in the second half and lost for the second year in a row in the championship game. 1 1 -B. Senior co-captain Tim Stanford spoke for the team, saying, We were bummed that we lost, but we played good polo. We A ere psyched with the turnout. Being forced to coach itself as Remillard stayed in Lexington for the birth of his daughter, the Generals concluded the season with three losses β€” including the sixth to Richmond β€” at the Eastern Championships to finish as the eighth best team in the East. Although senior co-captains Stanford and Lewis will be lost to graduation, a fine corps of underclassmen will make the loss easier to bear. 257 Beware of those regarded lightly. The Washington and Lee soccer Generals were regarded lightly in the Old Dominon Athletic Conference to start the 1 9B5 season, but by its conclusion, the young squad β€” only three seniors β€” had earned the respect of the conference as well as giving their opponents much to think about for 1 3B6. The Generals opened the season on a new home field. Smith Field, and showed their liking for the friendly con fines by winning their first two contests. WSL recorded shutout victories over Shenandoah [7-01 and ODAC foe Eastern Mennonite tS-O) to give an early indication that youth would not be a handicap for the ' B5 Generals. Leading the youth movement was freshman Johnny Sarber. who tallied four goals in the two contests. Three tough opponents, a lack of offensive output and injuries to three starters left the Generals at 2-3 midway into their season. The season ' s first loss came at the feet of Mary Washinton. a 3-0 shutout on Smith Field. The Blue Wave came to Lexington as the nation ' s 1 7th-ranked Division III team. In loss No. 2. the Generals could muster only one goal, in a 4-1 defeat to eventual ODAC champion Lynchburg. Traditional Divison III power Messiah handed WSL its third straight loss, a 1 -O squeaker at home that undoubtedly had the Generals thinking it might not be better to take a road trip. Roadtrip was indeed the answer as WSL traveled to Tennessee and found a haven from defeat. Getting strong goaltending from sophomiore Chris Gareis. the Generals shut out the University of the South and ODAC rival Maryville during their weekend in the Volunteer State. Five different players scored WS.L ' s five goals in the two games: senior captain Billy Holmes, junior Corky Parkinson, sophomore Charles Lyie. freshmen Mike Veliuona and classmate Sarber w w Β fe - β– miU- ,yi. -JΒ - notched his fifth tally of the season. VVGlL retunned to Lexington and continued its winning A ay. coupled with Its growing defensive prowess. The CBenenals turned away the cross-town nival Keydets, 3-0, to raise their record to 5-3. Sarben scored his sixth and Veliuona his second in four- days to pace the WSL in. Gareis again was stubborn in goal, earning his fifth shutout of the season. Game No. 9 marked the toughest loss of the year for WSL, a 2-1 double-overtime loss on the road to Gettysburg. Sarben was again the offensive punch fon the Genenals. The season ' s final thnee games suffened offensively, as the Genenals sconed only once and lost twice, but the opposite was the case defensively as Chnis Ganeis added anothen shutout to his collection. WSL, countesy a goal fnom ;union Ken Randby, dumped Hannpden-Sydney, 1 -G, fon Its sixth and final win of the season. The nemaining two games sa A A S.L come up short against two strong opponents. Roanoke, battling Lynchburg fon the finst place in the ODAC, shutout the Genenals 2-0. The Manoons eventually finished second in the confenence. The Generals concluded their season with a 2-0 loss on the road to Liberty, a team that gave up only five goals in 1 B games. A final game with Avenett, a team that had eanlien defeated Eastenn Mennonite 1 -O, was cancelled. WSL ended the yean at B-B and 3-2 in the ODAC, good enough fon third place. Sarber led the team in sconing with seven goals and one assist. His sconing pnoficiency was thind best in the confenence. Netminden Gareis finished the year with a 1 . 2 goals against average, which was also third in the ODAC. Captain Holmes was named to the All-ODAC first team for the second year in a row. 259 WOMEN ' S A 1 -5 record may not seem all that significant at first glance, but then this 1 -5 record is worth a second look. The reason? That 1 in the win column was the first victory by the first women ' s team in the history of Washington and Lee, the A omen ' s cross country team. Freshman Carolyn Arbogast paced the women ' s team, representing WSL in the NCAA Division III Southeast Regional meet. No one said it would be easy, and the first season for women ' s sports at WS.L had a rocky start. The A omen runners even had trouble getting uniforms to fit. Not only that, the team ' s first meet was against Division I Virginia Commonwealth. Despite the early season losses, the xA omen, led by Arbogast, steadily imiproved and on October 1 3, 1 3B5, history was made. Arbogast ' s third-place finish in a three-team meet with West Virginia Tech and West Virginia State that morning was the difference, placing WSL in second place as a team. The A omen, supported by seventh β€” and eighth-place finishes by freshmen Stephanie Smith and Kim Eadie, outplaced West Virginia State. A3-AA, to earn their only win of the season. Arbogast ' s continuing improvement was rewarded when she qualified for the Division III regional meet where she finished 41st, an impressive accomplishment, given WSL ' s fledgling status, but all the same, perhaps an indication of what the future holds for women ' s cross country at WSL. r Β« i I S g ' P ' tuta y .Β«pr ' .- :; % ' f ' COUNTRY MEN ' S The one-two combination of senior Eddie Goundry and sophomore Scott Rippeon led the Washington and Lee men ' s cross country team in 1 9B5. a season that saw rough weather, two coaching awards for long-time head coach Dick Miller, and another winning season β€” the seventh in a roxA β€” for WSL cross country. Although the ' S5 harriers weren ' t able to match 1 9B4 ' s undefeated championship season, they were able to put together a solid B-4 record and finish third in the Old Dominion Athletic Conference championships. That third place merited the sixth straight seasons WSL has finished fourth or better in the conference. Rippeon was the season ' s individual standout, putting on a late-season surge and overconiing extremely hot and humid weather to qualify for the Division III national championships, where he finished 1 OBth out of a field of 1 B5. The team started where it had left off in 1 9B4 by winning its first four meets of the season to stretch its unbeaten string to 2B, dating back to the beginning of the 1 9B3 season. But eventual conference champion Roanoake defeated the Generals in an early-season meet at WS.L. Minus key performers Goundry and junior Ash Andrews, WSL placed lust one runner β€” Rippeon β€” in the top seven and aoK k finished 28 points behind the Maroons. WSL encountered some unforgiving weather along the way, including a rain-plagued, four-team meet at Eastern Mennonite that Miller described as probably one of the worst days I ' ve ever encountered for running. The Generals finished third, losing to Lynchburg and Hampden- Sydney. The following weekend the harriers raced for second place with Hampden-Sydney and Lynchburg while Roanoke waltzed off with the conference crown. The Generals claimed a third-place finish in the meet as |ust three points separated the three teams. Once again Goundry led the squad, finishing sixth. Rippeon, Andrews, freshman Michael Watson and senior Ron Moody and junior Ted Myers added the needed support to place the Generals one point ahead of rival Lynchburg. At the Division III Southeast Regionals in Atlanta, Rippeon was the star, leading the team to a third-place finish at the meet and qualifying for nationals on a day that saw many runners drop out of the race due to the humidity and BO-degree temperatures. Rippeon, again showing he was not averse to less than ideal running conditions finished fifth in the meet. Rippeon went back to Atlanta for the national championships where he was greeted once more by heat and humidity as temperatures climbed into the yOs, not ideal for running and certainly not expected for mid-November. But the sophomores wasn ' t slowed by the heat, actually dropping two minutes off his qualifying time on the same course. Rippeon was third among the qualifiers from his reigon and 1 OBth overall. The season was a successful one both the team and the coach. Miller ' s record as WSL cross country coach rose to 2 1 B- 1 26-3 with 1 9S5 marking his 23rd winning season in his 34-year career. WSL ' s dean of coaches v as honored with two service awards, the Walt Cormack Award, for his service to track and field in Virginia, and the NCAA Coaches ' Service Award for his 34 years of coaching cross country 261 SAA IMMING There ' s a regularity, a consistency to Washington and Lee swinnnning that makes winning seasons, national championships appearances and a few All-Amenicans seem like lust another one for the books. The 1 9Q5-SB season was proof positive of that rule, with a twist. The twist came in the person of Elizabeth Miles, the distance swimmer on WGL first women ' s swim team who also happened to earn All-Amencan honors in two events. The swimmers gave an early indication of things to come. on. rather, stars to shine with their first meet of the season. Senior Tim Stanford qualified for the NCAA Division III national championships in his very first race when he won the 1 OO-yard buttrf ly in the Generals ' season-opener, a BS-43 win over VMI. Following suit in the sneak preview of coming attractions vi as the three-member women ' s team A ho. despite losing 57-35 to Mary Baldwin, captured first places in five of the seven events it entered. Leading the A ay early and all season long for the women [who would not v j n a meet all season because of their insufficient number) was Miles, who met the national qualifying standard for the 500-yard freestyle in the women ' s second meet of the season. The swimmers prepared for the second half of their season in traditional fashion by returning early from Christmas break to spend a few extra days in the water. The practice over break included a lO.OOO-yard swim on New Year ' s Eve. The hard work paid off when the Generals resumed dual meet competition. After falling to Dvision I James Madison, the WSL men won a pair in a double dual meet with Frostburg State and Georgetown. The men got the win despite a number of injuries. Miles continued to shine for the women ' s team, taking two firsts and a second in her three reaces at the meet. WSL got the wins by building early leads and hanging on through the final events, a strategy that also worked very nicely in the men ' s over Towson State, a 65-47 victory that saw the Generals get off to a 3B-7 lead. 262 ' Β« Β L fjI.,SΒ j WS.L split Its final four meets as the season began to point to the conference and national championships. The back-to-back losses came at Shepherd in an upset and to Gettysburg in a meet that highlighted the talents of freshmen David Reavy and Moose Herring. Winners in the 200-yard breaststroke and the 500-yard freestyle, respectively. The season ending wins came in impressive fashion over Mary Washington, 6B-B, and William and Mary, VO-3B- The host Generals finished second Cmen) and 1 Oth CwomenJ in the Tri-State championships. (The women ' s performance vjas good enough for fourth in the Old Dominion Athletic Conference championships, which were determined via the teams ' performances in the Tir-State meet). Head coach Page Remillard called the meet beyond our expectations and beyond our dreams as six men qualified for the national championships in the three-day event. Stanford was pehnomenal the entire weekend, setting meet and pool records in the 1 OO-yard butterfly and a meet record in the 200-fly. Junior Jay ReVille qualified for nationals in three events at Tri-States, as well. Miles captured a first and two seconds at the meet to lead the WSL v omen to a finish that had Remillard looking toward the future. Said the WSL mentor; If we didn ' t finish last this year, we ' ll never finish last. He cited the performances of freshmen Nancy Whalen and Emily Bevill as crucial to that result. The Generals sent seven svA immers to the national championships: Stanford, ReVille, Miles, Herring, lunior Marty Radvany and freshman Matt Brady. Three β€” Stanford, ReVille and Miles β€” brought home All-American honors |ust like clockwork. Stanford continued his outstanding performances, finishing second in the 200-fly and third in the 20a-fly. All in all. It was another impressive finish for the Washington and Lee swimming program, a program that nosA includes succ essful A omen as well as successful men. 263 You should have kno A n something was up when Washington and Lee head basketball coach Verne Canfield talked in hushed tones during the Generals ' preseason, using phrases like there are some good things happening that might not show initially. You should have known that the conference coaches ' poll that picked WSL to finish seventh of eight teams A as going to serve more good than harm. You should have know that despite all of this and the fact that his 1 9B5-BB Generals had no seniors and only two players with any kind of past playing experience. Verne Canfield would produce nothing other than a winner. You should have known all of these things and then the 1 9B5-BB WSL basketball season would have been less surprising. The Generals had their best year conference-wise since 1 BB9 thanks to a late-season rush that took WSL all the way to the Old Dominion Athletic Conference tournament championship game. The season started with the Thanksgiving break WSL Pizza Hut Tip-Off Tournament, which featured three strong teams, all coming off winning records. In the opener, the Generals nearly knocked off Salisbury State, a top 1 O team a year ago. Bouncing off the two-point, overtime loss to the Sea Gulls. WSL went out and controlled the consolation matchup with NAIA powerhouse Castleton St. winning 7B-6S. The early stars β€” as they would be throughout the 1 9S5-86 campaign β€” were junior forward Jeff Iβ€” larralson. who averaged 1 5. 3 points per game and sophomore guard Steve Hancock, who tossed in 1 5 a game. Hancock led the team with 27 points in Game 1 . while Harralson paced the Generals ' in Game 2 with 21 . One or the other would be the leading scorer in 23 of the Generals ' 27 games. After an aberration loss at Emory. WSL stood the ODAC pollsters on their ears with a 65-57 defeat of Hampden-Sydney. the squad picked to finish first in the conference. The Generals were brought back to earth by one of the conference ' s hottest teams at the time. Lynchburg, with a 6B-5B loss on the road, but came back to close out the fall term v ith wins over Greensboro and Cortland State. Returning from Christmas break to host the WSL Invitational, the Generals kept the ball rolling by winning four of five games in the first two weeks of January. The only loss was in the championship game of the Invitational, B7-BB defeat at the hands of Nazareth. But the streak also included the season ' s biggest win. a 44-42 thriller over arch-rival Roanoke. In a game plagued by cold shooting, WSL led by a 1 9-4 count at half but fell behind by SIX before taking the lead for good in the final minute of play with a lay-in by Harralson off an excellent feed from playmaker Fred Bissinger. The four wins in the streak put the Generals in first place in the conference, but the celebrating was cut short in a big way when the team fell under a five-game losing spell that included four conference games and t A o one-point losses. WSL was not helped any by injuries to Hancock (shoulder) and sophomore center Harmen Harden. Hancock came back and eventually helped do away with the slump by H V9H L ' ' ' M H ' iK SV H IHIFm m i m M ., 1 Si i V K I 1 -i 1 ' ' H 2m hitting four free thirows in the final minute to upend Lynchburg 5B-56- The Generals followed that with them second defeat of Bnidge A ater, But It was back into another tailspin as WSkL lost two more in a now. including a 59-5B loss at Roanoke that put the Generals ' chances for a home-court advantage in the upcoming ODAC tournament in leopardy. Needing wins in its final two conference games to get to play at home in the tourney ' s first round, the Generals, buoyed by the play of freshman for A ard Steve Sklenar. who had fully recovered from an early season leg injury, fought tooth and nail against Eastern Mennomte before downing the Maroons on an overtime basket by Sklenar. WSL then reminded Emory that its early-season win over the Generals was a fluke by crushing the Eagles 73-37 in the return engagement, allowing them only nine points in the first half. The home-court advantage was not to be. however, as a road contest ith Maryville turned into a bad trip as the Scots handed WSL its second-worst defeat of the year, a B4-B7 loss that closed the regular season and put the Generals in Lynchburg for the conference tournament ' s quarterfinal game. Now. the Generals didn ' t have much going for them as the tournarnent began. WSL had not advanced past the quarterfinal since 1 383. entered the tourney with a losing record and without freshman Lee Brading. who had been averaging nearly nine points a night but had come down with mononucleosis and would not be able to play for the rest of the season. Add to all of that the Generals ' 1 -B road record and one A ould put their chances of advancing somewhere in the neighborhood of slim and none No matter. WS.L went to Lynchburg for the quarterfinal and played the part of rude visitor by holding the Hornets to only 23 points in the second half in a BB-B2 win to earn their way to the Salem Civic Center and a semifinal matchup with perennial pain-in-the-side Maryville. Ignoring the 1 7-point defeat at the hands of the Scots a A eek earlier, the WS.L cagers. led by Harralson ' s 22 points, played as if the conference semifinal vjas just another day at the office and subdued Maryville 59-56 to meet nemesis Roanoke in the final. The Maroons A ere on a tear of their own. dancing on Hampden-Sydney in the quarterfinal and defeating top seed Emory and Henry in the semifinal, and they did not stop against the Generals. WSlL could not get on track in the final and despite getting as close as two points by the half, were plagued by poor shooting (31 .9 percent from the field) in the 68-53 defeat. Canfield was pleased with the team ' s progress and sees next year as a possibility for more of the same. With everyone but student manager Dick Morris returning, the toughest challenge Canfield and his troops may face IS finding someone to keep track of all the scoring. 265 WRESTLING Quietly, but steadily, the Washington and Lee wrestlers had a great season in 1 9B5-BB. perhaps their best in at least a decade. WS,L sent two wrestlers β€” seniors Larry Anken and Win Phillips to the national championships, the first time that ' s happened to any General vA restler in 1 O years. Along the way. Anker, Phillips and Co. won nine of 1 1 dual meets. The 1 SB5-B6 campaign o pened with the pre-exam. eight-team W L Invitational where the untested Generals surprised themselves with a second-place finish. Anker took the crown at 1 42 lbs. , while sophomore Kevin McNamara was first at 1 50. Senior co-captain Brian Lifsted H 2B lbs.) added a second place to the Generals ' team total, as did Phillips (167). The dual-meet season got off to a raging start with a 35- 1 3 defeat of Newport News Apprentice. After falling behind early. WGL bolted to an 1 B-2 mid-match spurt to assume control in the wrestlers ' only meet before exams. The Christmas break lay-off didn ' t bother WSL all that much as it came back to Lexington to win its next three contests against Loyola. Hampden-Sydney and Johns Hopkins. The Generals again shutdown their opponents, allowing them an average of seven points a match. The season took a momentary step backward in a 43-12 loss to Division I Duke. The Blue Devils were the only team to dominate the Generals all season, winning the last six bouts of the match. But the setback indeed was not prolonged as the next time out on the mat, WSL handled the Wildcats of Davidson by a 42-9 count. It was once more A ith feeling the following Wednesday when the grapplers destroyed Virginia State, 44-12. Anker and Phillips led the team in the Virginia State victory, each recording a technical fall (where the bout is stopped when one wrestler takes a 1 5-point lead). Between them the two already had accounted for 1 2 falls. The team gave a strong indication of Its prowess in the WG.L Invitational when the Generals captured the team title on the strength of four first places, three seconds and two thirds. Phillips was named the tourney ' s Outstanding Wrestler with his win at 1 GV, while Lifsted and freshman Mark Robertson and Rich Hedfoot earned the three other WSL individual titles. WSL took off on another streak to close the regular season, winning three of its final four matches. Anker and Phillips recorded two falls in the three General wins. The regular season concluded on a dov n note with a 20- 1 S defeat at Washington and Jefferson. Anker, Redfoot, Robertson, sophomore Steve Castle and freshman George Loupassi turned in positive performances despite the loss, only the eighth in head coach Gary Franke ' s last four seasons. Nine WSL wrestlers made the trip β– im Co regionals and three tunned in exceptional penfonmances. Phillips sA as the surprise of the tournament. Unseeded, he went on to take the title at 1 B7. Both Castle and Anker took third places, but only Anker received one of the wild card bids to the national championships. Anker and Phillips suffered a tough road at nationals. Anker, who set a new team record for takedowns with SO during the season, was defeated by the eventual national champion in his first round bout, while Phillips injured his ribs and had to default his second round match to the eventual third-place finisher. All was not a loss, however, as Anker was named an Academic All-Amencan. The season was the last for Anker. Phillips and Lifsted. a group that had been a large part of the program ' s success Ca 42-8-1 record) over the last four years. But with seven returning starters, the future looks bright for more quiet, steady success for WSL wrestling. im f ' ' lS ' - ' if 267 The entire Washington and Lee lacrosse season β€” and perhaps the entire program β€” were typified on a sunny afternoon in Baltimore in May That day, WS.L lost to a middle-of-the-road Division I program in the Universisty of Maryland-Baltimore County But it was the way that game went that paralleled the 1 9S6 season. The Generals raced to a 5-2 lead against the Retreivers. playing what may have been their best half all season, but by the end of the third quarter WSL had been outscored 1 0-2 and went on to lose the game, 1 7-B. The scoring run and the Division I mismatch xA ere typical of the Generals ' 1 SS6 season, a season that started with hope of getting the Division l-Division III monkey off their backs but in the end only served as more fuel for the debate that A as resolved with the Board of Trustees ' decision to reclassify lacrosse as a Division III sport. But at the start of the season and through the first five games the talk A as of a bid to the Division I national tournament and not of relegation. After a tough, one-goal loss at Duke β€” a team that |ust missed a bid to the national tournament β€” to open the season, the Generals came home with guns a-blazing ' in a 2B-1 pistolwhipping of Virginia Tech. The 2B-1 count marked a school record for number of goals scored and was a showcase for WGlL ' s offensive talent. Senior attackman G.T. Corrigan scored a hat trick in the first period as WSL bolted to a V-O lead against the outclassed Hokies. Dartmouth was the next victim an the Generals ' early-season run. The 17-12 victory was important for the team as a confidence-building win over a name opponent. It was this week that lunior goalie John Church emerged as a force, stopping 22 Dartmouth shots and earning the game ' s Defensive MVP honors from his teammates. With a 2-1 record the team confidently made its way to Charlottesville for the annual brouhaha with the Wahoos. And not only did the Generals think and act confidently, they played confidently . . . for about three quarters. Then, the dam broke and the Cavaliers let loose for eight unanswered goals to hand WSL a 1 B-6 defeat. 2(i,S I think what happened was that we made one on two mental mistakes that allONA ed them to get a goal, said head coach Dennis Daly, and then, he continued, rather than |ust trying to keep the game close, we A ent for the win. By going for the win, it built up to 1 3 and 1 A and we missed some opportunities, but that happens. The Generals came back from the emotional drain of the U. Va. loss jUst in time to put a fourth-quarter surge together and defeat an upstart Notre Dame squad. Senior tri-captain Bill Holmes ' four goals paced the WSL effort. The Notre Dame win set the stage for a crucial test of where WSL was in the Division I scheme of things. The following Saturday the Generals faced Divsion I top tenner Towson State and the fourth quarter xA ent to Towson State as the fourth quarter the week before had gone to the Wahoos. WSL fell behind but tied the game at nine early in the final period, only to have Towson regain control and score the game ' s last three goals to win 12-3 The team went into the spring break on a positive note with a 20-2 destruction of cross-town lacrosse neophytes VMI that raised the Generals ' record to 4-3. But the curtain more or less came down on any tournament hopes and really any hopes for a winning season with a 2B-2 disaster at Cornell in the middle of spring break. The Big Red jumped out to an 1 S-O first-half lead and scored on nine of their first 1 1 shots, leaving WSL wishing they had stayed in Lexington for the break. The defeat was the worst in WSL lacrosse history, and may have had a lasting impact on the team for the rennainder of the season. After an easy 21-2 victory over Radford β€” the third time the Generals had scored over 20 goals and the third time they had won by at least 1 B goals β€” the wheels came off to the 1 3SB season as WSL lost its last four games. With a 5-4 record after the Radford win, Daly and his troops felt a winning season β€” the first since 1 332 β€” A as certainly within reach, given that t A o of the final four opponents were Division III and the other two were not in Division I ' s top 1 O. But It was not to be, the big demoralizing blow coming in Game 1 O, a back-and-forth affair with Division Ill ' s second-ranked squad,, Washington College. At game ' s end, the Generals had come up |ust one goal shy of the Shoremen. It was another loss whose effects went beyond the BO minutes of play as five days later the Generals traveled to Roanoke and A ere upset by the Division III Maroons 17-14. The game started harmlessly enough with WSL taking an early lead, but the second quarter saw a 1 G-goal run by eighth-ranked Roanoke from which the Generals never fully recovered. Senior Caulley Dennger scored five times β€” giving him eight in the last two games β€” and the front line of Dennger, Corrigan and Holmes had 1 B points bet A een them in the losing cause. The season concluded with back-to-back similar losses to Loyola and UMBC. In both games big scoring runs took the Generals out of the game. Loyola scored 1 4 times before the Generals ' first tally and UMBC ran off 1 6 of the game ' s last 1 3 scores to give WSL its fourth straight losing season, the first such slump for WSL lacrosse in 22 years. It was a season that A as all it shouldn ' t have been β€” losing to 269 almost every firsC-rate Division I program, losing to every Division III foe on the schedule, being outscored 1 1 9-67 by the first-rate Division I opponents, winning only once after exams β€” and some of what it might have been β€” the defensive play of senior captain and North-South selection Chris John, the three quarters against U, Va. that scared the you-know-what out of the Wahoos, the comebacks against Duke, Towson State, Washington College and Roanoke that fell |ust short, the fourth quarter against Notre Dame, the goaltending of Church. But given the Board of Trustees ' decision and the fact that two of the closest games of the year A ere with Division III opponents, the future may hold some championship play for Washington and Lee lacrosse. iiv β–  , ' ' - i : ' n««i%i ' -: 270 β– rv, gmmm-- At the beginning of the season, the outlook was not good for the 1 9B6 Washington and Lee baseball team. The team ' s pre-season trip to Florida set the tone for the nest of the cannpaign. In the Generals ' four games they were slaughtered once, came close twice and put it all together once, more or less mirroring WSL ' s 7-14-1 season. But the biggest loss of the crip may have been the dismissal of senior Hugh Finkelstein. Finkelstein was the team ' s leading hitter in 1 335. batting .AAO despite a nagging knee in|ury. His bat would be missed as the season wore on. The regular season opened with a sort-of-split doubleheader against West Virginia Tech. WSL lost the first but came back for a rare tie in the second game. A hich A as called because of darkness Head coach Jim Murdock called for more hitting and scoring if his team was to win games. Hitting, scoring and A inning all made an appearance in one of the Generals ' next five games. a 1 O-A thumping of Eastern Mennonite. to answer Murdock ' s request. Unfortunately, it was absent in Games 3, -4. B and 7. After getting 1 5 hits in the Menonite win. WSL could only muster a total of 21 hits and five runs in the four losses. Three of the defeats came at the hands of Old Dominion Athletic Conference foes. WSL then put on the hit parade for one more show, exploding for nine runs in the first game of a dooubleheader with Hampden-Sydney. Sophomore outfielder Carter Steuart went four-for-five and scored four times, junior catcher Bill Curtiss hit a t A o-run homer and drove in four runs and junior Milam Turner β€” who led the team at season ' s end in average. RBI. doubles and slugging percentage β€” drove in three to give the Generals ' their second win against five defeats. But again, it was only a brief appearance for WSL hitting, as the second game went to the Tigers 3-D. The ODAC ' s second-place team. Lynchburg, was next up for the Generals, and the Hornets stung WSL by a 2 1 -6 count. The crushing defeat must have done Sonne good, however, as the Generals swept a doubleheader with Emory and Henry in their next outing. The sweep moved WSL into fourth place in the topsy-turvey ODAC standings. A fourth-place finish in the regular season would give the Generals home-field advantage in the tournament, fifth place and they would be on the road. The chance at a home-field advantage disappeared shortly after exams, when WSL dropped three of five ODAC games. After losing to non-conference foe VMI in the ninth inning to end their winter term schedule, the Generals resumed conference play the Monday after exams with two tough games against the Nos. 2 and 1 teams in the ODAC. Lynchburg and Bridgewater. WSL played both foes even-up scorewise, losing 7-6 to Lynchburg and B-4 to Bridgewater. but nine WSL errors in the two games slowed down the upset-nninded Generals. WSL swept another doubleheader with Maryville β€” the first time a Murdock-coached team has swept two twinbills in a season. Steuart and junior Bill Schoettelkotte were big with the bat while Eric Acra stood tall on the mound in Game 1 ' s 4-3 victory, while Schoettelkotte switched gloves to pitch a shutout in Game 2. a 3-0 win. Turner and freshman shortstop Harpy Halpert had the hits in the second contest. But again the Generals coould not keep the ball rolling, losing three days later to Eastern Mennonite, 7-6, and virtually ending their shot at the home-field advantage. WSL stranded 1 5 baserunners in the disappointing defeat. After losing two of three non-conference games β€” including a Ma, the wind was really blowing out 23-1 7 loss to VMI β€” the Generals moved into the conference tournament where they faced Hampden-Sydney, a team they had split a doubleheader with earlier in the season. As justice would have it, WSL saved Its best effort for its final eight innings. Holding the Tigers to one run for most of the game, WSL had a fine defensive effort and got good pitching from Schoettelkotte, who led the team in strikeouts in 1 9BB, recording 58. Unfortunately, the ninth inning came and with it a three-run explosion that gave the Tigers the game. Needless to say. the 1 5 men WSL left on base didn ' t make the loss any easier to cake. So, the season ended as it begun, with a loss, a loss at the hands of perhaps the Generals ' toughest opponent all season, themselves. 273 With four starters returning to the 1 9SB Washington and Lee golf team, head coach Buck Leslie was pleased v ith what he had and with what the future held. He would be rewarded with success but he would have to wait |ust a little while for it. Despite the nur-nbens. however, success was not immediate for the WSL linkstens. but it did conne. The season started with sophomore Gary Campbell ' s team-leading low rounds at the James Madison Invitational where the Generals were able to finish 1 1 th out of 24 teams in the primarily Division I tournament. Campbell had a two-day total of 1 5B. The following week the golfers had a pair of off days. Unfortunately, they were at the same tournament. The 22nd-place performance at the Max Ward Invitational in North Carolina arose largely as a result of a lack of experience on the tourney ' s course. The first day figures β€” a team total of 4-45 for an average individual round of Q9 β€” v ere enough to knock the team out of contention. The less than adequate performances were through, however, after that trip to North Carolina. WGL rebounded a week later by downing Bridgewater and Longwood at the Lexington Country Club by having one of the best days a Buck Leslie team has ever had. The 3G7 total was 1 5 strokes better than Longwood and 2G strokes better Bridgewater. and averaged out to a VS for each man. Senior captain Greg Wheeler posted the team ' s low score for the afternoon xA ith a 73. After exams it was off to the Georgetown Hoya Open, the first tournament since the North Carolina disaster. WSL showed the past was a fluke by tying ODAC rival Randolph-Macon for second. Only Division 1 George Washington was better than the Generals. Sophomore John Gammage paced the Generals with a two-day total of 1 5B. The Generals recorded two more wins to conclude their dual-match schedule at 4-0. The victories over Shenandoah Cby 3B strokes) and Bridgewater tby two strokes) gave Buck Leslie his 1 2th straight winning season and his fourth untarnished mark in the last six years. The stage was set for the Old Dominion Athletic Conference championships. The Generals nearly stole the show with a conference-low second round of 31 B. but a superb second round from ODAC Player-of-the-Year Sam Wallace gave the Tigers the title by just three strokes. Two Generals β€” one expected and one not β€” earned all-conference honors: Wheeler (a two-day total of 1 5B) and senior Jeff Kimbell C1 B2). Wheeler was re A arded for his consistent performances in 1 9BB by being invited to the national championships where he became the fifth golfer to participate in the G . ' %- 274 TRACK AND FIELD national championships. The 1 3B6 Washington and Lee track and field team didn ' t improve on its 1 9B5 camapign. but then that wasn ' t so bad, seeing how its predecessor was conference indoor champion and runner-up for the conference outdoor title. The thinclads w ent once more with feeling in 1 SS6. claiming their third straight Old Dominion Athletic Conference indoor title on the last day of February. At the meet, the Generals outdistanced perennial nemesis Lynchburg by 25 points on the strength of seven first places in the 1 4-event championship. Senior sprinter Chris Bleggi was named Runner-of-the-Year and head coach Norris Aldridge was Coach-of-the-Year at the Generals ' indoor season triumph. Leading the team along with Bleggi were a number of other individuals that would pace the team in its outdoor season, as well. Those included junior Tom Murray in the shot put, junior John Burlingame in the long jump and sophomore Andy White in the 55-meter hurdles. The indoor season was an indication, as well as an excellent warm-up, for the outdoor season, which started two weeks after the indoor championship. And start it did, in impressive fashion. Coming off back-to-back undefeated seasons, the outdoor team had a number of tough acts to follow. But never mind the past, the track-men proceeded to pick up the outdoor season where the indoor left off. beating all three opponents at a quadrangular meet at Davidson. The Generals dominated the hosts 1 G5-34, downed Barber-Scotia S5-3B and outpointed the College of Wooster 71 -SB. Senior tri-captains Bleggi, Chris McGowan (-400 meters) and Jim McLaughlin CdiscusJ led the WSL effort. The same thing happened three days later at an ODAC quadranglular that gave WSL three more wins, WSL ' s B8-point performance was too much for Roanoke [5B], Bridgewater [39) and Eastern Mennomte CD), WS.L athletes won 1 2 of the 1 V events contested. Next up for the Generals was the Liberty Invitational, a chance for VJ L ' s. individuals to shine. Taking up the challenge was senior McLaughlin, who cranked out the longest discus throw in WSL history with his 1 -43-6 throw at the meet. The Generals concluded their dual meet season with two more wins at home in a tn-meet against Newport News Apprentice and Eastern Mennonite. Of the 1 V events, ' vVS.L captured first place in 1 3 of them and took either a second or a third in the remaining four events. In preparation for the upcoming conference championships, the Generals participated in three invitationals in four weekends. Turning in solid performances during the invitationals were McLaughlin and Murray in the throws. White in the hurdles, junior John Carder in the pole vault, and the -aGG. BOG and mile relay Injuries raised their ugly heaa as the conference meet approached Cmuch as they did at the 1 9B5 outdoor championships). The injuries combined with an outstanding performance from Lynchburg added up to a disappointment at the conference championships. Overshadowing the second-place finish in the team standings, however, were five firsts by General runners. Bleggi had a terrfic meet, winning the 1 OG and 200 meters and anchoring the winning 400-mete relay team, and just a step behind was White in the hurdles, taking top honors in the 1 1 G-meter and 4GO-meter events. Junior Matt Steilberg took first place in the pole vault. The team will lose the very valuable services of a number of seniors, including Bleggi, McGowan, McLaughlin, high jumper Townes Pressler, middle distance runner Conrad Boyle and distance man Ron Moody, but A ith a strong corps of proven athletes and still more waiting in the wings, the future looks just as bright as the past for WSL track and field. p ' - -M i j 3? M w .β€” SBl Liffli 275 MEN ' S TENNIS Forget about the first women ' s class. The big story in 1 9B5-SB was the Washington and Lee men ' s tennis team, a group that advanced all the A ay to national team championship finals, the highest finish ever for a Washington and Lee team. The Generals were coming off a fine 1 335 season (conference champions, team bid to the national championships and three All-Americans) and were forecast to do well again in 1 3BB as five starters and highly touted freshman in Bobby Matthews returned to pick up where the ' B5 team had left off. Ranked sixth in the nation by the preseason coaches ' poll, the netters faced a tough schedule that included 1 3 Division I opponents. And indeed, things started as tough as they looked with WSL losing its first three outings β€” all to Division I opponents. Things changed dramatically with match No. 4, a 5-4 defeat of William and Mary. The Generals shocked the Tribe by taking two of the three doubles contests. Sophomore No. 5 Jack Messerly A on a crucial three setter, and the doubles teams of sophomore Chris Wiman, senior Scott Adams and Matthews, junior Roby Mize clinched the victory. Matthews and Mize went on to dominate the No. 2 doubles position all year long, winning their next 26 of their last 27 matches. The Generals dove into their Division III schedule in a big way, downing Old Dominion Athletic Conference foe Hampden-Sydney as part of a 1 O-match pre-exam run that saw WGiL knock off five Division III opponents, one Division II team and two Division I squads. Included in the stretch was a weekend set vA ith Claremont-Mudd-Scripps and Swarthmiore, two of Division Ill ' s top-ranked teams. The Generals needed a big weekend and got one, crushing No. -ranked Claremont 8-1 and giving the third-ranked Little Quakers more than they bargained for before falling B-3. Mize, Matthews and Wiman recorded big wins in the Claremont win, while Swarthmore escaped with the win by taking four of the SIX nnatches that reached the ultimate set. The strong weekend firmly entrenched WSL as one of the top eight teams in the nation. The foliowing weekend fifth-ranked WSL locked itself into a sure tournament bid with a 5-4 win over the sixth-ranked Shoremen of Washington College. Mize, Matthews. Messerly, and Adams post singles wins in leading the WSL effort. After thrashing Virginia Military by a 9-0 count and taking exams, the Generals e mbark on their annual trip to Florida for five matches in the sun. The 1 SSB southern swing proved to be W L ' s best since 1 3eO as the netters took three of the five contests, do A ning Division I Stetson. Central Florida and the Florida Institute of Technology. The two losses on the trip were to Division M ' s second-ranked Tars of Rollins and NAIA ' s seventh-ranked Saints of Flagler. WSL loses only two games in the Central Florida match and nearly upsets Rollins, losing three three-setters that could have changed the outcome of the match. Back home in Lexington, the Generals ' continue to win over Division I teams, defeating George Mason and Radford by a combined total score of 17-1. The Radford win marks the seventh shutoff of the season for the Generals. In between the George Mason and Radford matches, the Wahoos of U.Va. were quite the jurprised bunch when WSL went the distance before being beaten. Mize. Adams, Wiman and Mize-Matthew came up with vA ins, and only a three-set defeat at No. 3 doubles foils the upset bid. Before the Generals moved into their national championships mode, they had the matter of defending their 1 935 ODAC championship to wrap up. Making handy work of the seven other teams, WSL won its second straight conference crown and its third in the last four years by sweeping eight of the nine singles and doubles flights. Mize, Matthews, Messerly, Wiman, and Adams win singles crowns, while Messerly and sophomore David McLeod, Mize-Matthews and Wiman-Adams claim doubles championships. WSL individual champions did not lose a set β€” a total of 43 sets in a row β€” in earning their titles. At nationals, the Generals surprised everyone but themselves by advancing to the final match of the team championships before losing to top-seeded Kalamazoo. The second-place is the highest for a WSL team since the team tournament format began in 1 9B3 and the highest of any kind since 1 97B. Along the way to the championship match, the fourth-seeded Generals knocked off eighth-ranked Washington University, and upset Whitman, the tournament ' s second seed, who was previously unbeaten in Division III. Matthews [23-B overall) and Messerly C24-4] go unbeaten in the tournament as does the Mize-Matthews doubles team [26-4). who defeats the Kalamazoo No. 2 doubles team of Alex Palladino-Jim Burda. the eventual national doubles champions. It could be Once more with feeling in 1 9B7 as once again the Generals return five starters and have some good recruits on the way. 277 WOMEN ' S TENNIS Things are tough for a first-year team. |ust ask the Washington and Lee women ' s tennis players. But ask those same players if tough means discouraging. and you can bet you ' ll get a flat out No! Facing some Cough competition, including one of the nations ' s best Division III teams in Old Dominion Athletic Conference champion Emory and Henry, the lady natters finished the year at 3-B and took ninth in the 1 O-team conference championships. The season opened less than auspiciously A ith two losses to Sweet Briar and Roanoke by 3-0 and B-1 scores. But the team bounced back with wins over Randolph-Macon CAshland) and Southern Seminary in Its next two matches. The Randolph-Macon win was the team ' s best match of the year, a 5-4 decision that wasn ' t decided until the last match was completed. Freshmen .t.lr: ' !lWJIi TH Iti Β u . r ' rH ' iJ-rlf- -ir th ' V ' fytint ' tr::::. ' ' T ' β–  ' ni ' ... m JTi? singles players Courtney Coyle. Dana Anstine. Martha Christian and Benny Savage recorded wins, while the No. 2 doubles teann of Christian and freshman Valerie Pierson clinched the match victory with a B-3. 7-5 win. The team ' s early leader was Coyle. who won her first six matches. WSL finished off the winter term with five straight losses to ODAC foes, but a spring break trip to Hilton Head geared the women up for the conference championships. After splitting Its final two regular season matches to set its record at 3-S. the week of intense training finally manifested itself, as the women finished ninth, ahead of Roanoke who had defeated them S- 1 earlier in the year. With everyone on the team returning for next year, the team has plenty of room for improvement, and as Savage puts it. We are juet: starting. SPORTS AV ARDS E. G. Leslie Pitching Award Captains S. Coaches Baseball Trophy Tommy Baker Batting A A ard Captain Dick Smith Baseball Award WS.L Basketball Award Coaches S Captains Basketball Award Alumni Basketball Award Leigh Williams Memorial Basketball Award Forest Fletcher Cross-Country Trophy Captains S. Coaches Cross-Country Trophy C. J. Harrington Memorial Football Award Clovis Mooma A Football Award Dan Ray Justice Memorial Football Award Lee McLaughlin Football Award Felix Smart Memorial Golf Award Cy Twombly Most Improved Golfer Award T. W. Martin Memorial Lacrosse Award Wheelwright Memorial Lacrosse Award Jay Stull Memorial Lacrosse Award C. W. Pacy, Jr. Memorial Lacrosse Award Jim Trundle Soccer Trophy Coaches S Captains Soccer Trophy D. D. Redmond Defensive Soccer Award R. G. Lathrop Offensive Soccer Award Memorial Swimming Award William J. Stearns Improved S A immer Twombly-Eastman Swimming Trophy Coaches Swimming Award Memorial Tennis Cup Washburn Outstanding Freshman Tennis Award Forest Fletcher Track S Field Trophy Memorial Track S Field Trophy Captains S Coaches Track S Field Trophy Burt Haaland Outstanding Offensive Water Polo Player Outstanding Defensive Water Polo Player D. C. Montgomery Memorial Wrestling Trophy A. E. Mathis War Memorial Wrestling Trophy J. C. Peebles Memorial Wrestling Award R. E. Chub Yeakel Service Award J. L. Lefty Newell Memorial Award Outstanding Freshman Athlete [Female] Outstanding Freshman Athlete [Male] Wink Glasgow Spirit S. Sportsmanship Award Preston R. Brown Memorial Award Overall Intramural Champions John S. Beagle Intramural Athletic Directors Award Scholar-Athlete A A ard ERIC R. ACRA FRANK E. GOEB L WILLIAM M. TURNER III A ILLIAM W. SCHOETTELKOTTE JEFFERSON L. HARRALSON STEVEN M. HANCOCK RICHARD H. MORRIS JEFFERSON L. HARRALSON RON L. MOODY SCOTT D. RIPPEON TIMOTHY A. JANYSKA ROBERT E. WILSON KEVIN W. WEAVER JAMES J. MURPHY JOHN M. WHEELER JEFFREY W. KIMBELL WILLIAM T. HOLMES II CHRISTOPHER D. JOHN WILLIAM S. HARRISON, JR. JOHN W. WARE WILLIAM T. HOLMES II DAVID N. ECKARDT JOHN D. TEMPELTON PETER E. VAN SON TIMOTHY U. STANFORD STUART H. SHELDON DAVID D. LEWIS NANCY K. WHALEN ROBERT E. MATTHEWS ROBERT E. MATTHEWS CHRISTOHER A. BLEGGI JAMES A. MCLAUGHLIN CHRISTOPHER W. MCGOWAN TIMOTHY U. STANFORD DAVID J. REAVY RICHARD S. REDFOOT LAWRENCE C. ANKER WINTHROP T. PHILLIPS C. MICHAEL STACHURA FRANK E. GOEBEL ELIZABETH S. MILES CHARLES T. SKEEN II WILLIAM T. HOLMES II CHRISTOPHER A. BLEGGI PHI KAPPA PS! EVERETTE G. ALLEN III LAWRENCE S. ANKER 279 GOLDEN BENEFACTORS Connie Bernstein Robert G. McCullough Mr. Mrs. Reuban E. Blyden Mr. Mrs . Charles G. Nusbaum Mr. Mrs. C. W. Cole Mrs. D. Williams Parker David L. Durica, MD Mr. Mrs . James Paone Mr. Mrs. Samuel J. Foley, Jr. Mr. Mrs . Max L. Petzold Mr. Mrs. William F. Ford Joyce Samuel Mr. Mrs. G. Lee Harralson Bob and Ann Sparacio Dr. Mrs. John E. Harvey Mr. Mrs . Guy T. Steuart II Mr. Mrs. William Y. Harvey Cathy Jerry Temple Al Kandarian, Jr. John Rosemary Tieman Dr. Mrs. E. Ross Kyger III Joseph C. Vawter Francis E. LeJeune, Jr., MD J. Allen White Ernest T. Love, Jr. BENEFACTORS Dr. Mrs. Bobby R. Alford Mr. Mrs. Sidney Finkelstein Mr. Mrs. Robert B. Roth Mr. Mrs. Glenn E. Anderson, J r. Lloyd H. Flood Mr. Mrs. Frank Sands William Watson Barnes Mr. Mrs. Richard A. Francis Mr. Mrs. Herman E. Schieke, Jr. Mr. Mrs. John D. Bassett III Mr. Mrs. Charles E. Gay. IV Burford Smith Dr. Mrs. Gerald L. Batte Mr. Mrs. Earl W. Glazier. Jr. Dr. Mrs. Lee Smith W. 0. Birchfield Rebecca Hemphill Samuel L. Svalina Charles H. Brooks. MD Sam Jane Mollis Burgess A. Thomasson Mr. Mrs. James Buquet. Jr. Mr. Mrs. Frederick W. Hope, Jr. Mr. Mrs. G. Lee Thomspon James M. Burlingame Paul M. James Mr. Mrs. Jere W. Thompson Dr. Mrs. Rudy Cells Mr. Mrs. John T. Langston Mrs. W. Bryan Trammell, Jr. Margaret Schultz Chesnut Dr. Mrs. Donald R. Lewis Mr. Mrs. Joseph T. Tuggle, Jr. Mr. Mrs. James D. Christian Mr. Mrs. Richard B. Lewis Dr. Mrs. R. H. Unger James M. Clifton Mr. Mrs. Gerard R. Lynch Dr. Mrs. Robert Van Son Charles N. Cooper Mr. Mrs. R. Hunter Manson Mr. Mrs. Albert G. Vespoli John Gretchen Coyle Mr. Mrs. Edward Martin Mr. Mrs. Frank W. Wagner Mr. Mrs. Edward C. Darling Mr. Mrs. Robert G. McGraw Dr. Mrs. William R. Walker Mr. Mrs. Ralph P. Davidson Mr. Mrs. John G. Mitchell. Jr. Mr. Mrs. Jerrold G. Weinberg Mr. Mrs. Aubrey J. Ellis Mr. Mrs. Charles H. Noble. Jr. Mr. Mrs. C. Cody White. Jr. Bill and Gloria Esham Dr. Mrs. George H. Pierson, Jr. Andrew N. and Marta P. Farley Mr. Mrs. Lacy Rice, Jr. PATRONS Mr. Mrs. Robert C. Adamson Dr. John A. Hunt Dr. Mrs. H. Chnstopher Alexander. Ill Paul Bemadette Janyska Dr. Mrs. Aristides C. Alevizatos Mr. Mrs. Jimmy C. Jones Mr. Mrs. Fredenck G. Allen Mr. Mrs. James F. Kelly Mr. Mrs. Frederick Amico Jane K. Kelly Fred and Phyllis Anker Mr. Mrs. E. J. Kendall, Jr. Mrs. Carolyn G. Anstine John Sandra Kerr. Ill Mr. Mrs. Thomas E. Arthur Diane Knapp Dr. Mrs. Onno W. Van Assendelft Mr. Mrs. John G. Koedel. Jr. Jim Christina Barry Mr. Mrs. Vaden Lackey. Jr. Mr. Mrs. James D. Bercaw Frederick Lake. Jr. Mr. Mrs. Bruce R. Boiler Mr. Mrs. John R. Lawson. Jr. Dr. Mrs. Richard Bottomley Mr. Mrs. Robert C. Martin Mr. Mrs. James Boyd Thomas J. Matthews Mr. Mrs. Robert H. Britton Dennis D. Maxwell Dr. Mrs. Patrick J. Buttarazzi Dr. Mrs. T.W. McDonald Mr. Mrs. Nicholi Callas Mr. Mrs. C. Irvin Messner William J. Caragol. MD David L. Metz W.H. Carder Mr. Mrs. Edward E. Mills Katharine Caruthers Mr. Mrs. Thomas R. Murray Mr. Mrs. John P. Case. Jr. Mr. Mrs. Raymond S. Oliger Mr. Mrs. Bryce Cobb Mr. Mrs. B.L. Partee Peter J. Coleman Mr. Mrs. A. Winnett Peters Gordon T. Couch. MD Mr. Mrs. David D. Pitard BG Mrs. Cousland Louis P. Poulton Mrs. Edward J. Crawford. Jr. Mr. Mrs. Alfred A. Reed Mrs. C. P. Cummings John N. Constance E. Sanders Mr. Mrs. Francis T. Deighan Mr. Mrs. William A. Shearer. Jr. C. David Dickey Mr. Mrs. Carlton Simons Mr. Mrs. F. R. Dowson John M. Slack Mr. Mrs. Paul A. DuPre Douglas Miki Smith Mr. Mrs. Fred Etergino Mr. Mrs. John Stachura Mr. Mrs. J. Thomas Eubank Eugene P. Stuart Robert A. Fearey Mr. Mrs. Gerard Swarthout. Jr. Mr. Mrs. Ernest B. Franklin. Jr. John Elaine Tartaglione Carl C. Ambler M. Fntsche Mr. Mrs. Donald Thayer. Jr. Donald R. Gauvin Alfred Thompson, Jr. Mr. Mrs. Harry C. Gottwals James Virginia Thompson William W. Graham Willie Mae Ewings Travis Mr. Mrs. James B. Groff Dr. Mrs. Robert Treat Howard S. Groh Mr. Mrs. Christopher G. Tumau Mr. Mrs. Daniel Grosso Mrs. Warren D. Turner Harry Halpert Mr. Mrs. Karl Vogt Lt. Col Mrs. Louis J. Hansen Theodore and Barbara White James Donna Hatfield Mr. Mrs. A. S. Williams. Ill Mr. Mrs. James L. Hayne Victoria C. Willett Mrs. Floylle Hunter Hemphill Mr. Mrs. Cranston Williams. Jr. Dr. Mrs. William A. Hemng. Jr. Mr. Mrs. Richard W. Zahn James F. Holmes Mr. Mrs. Jose Zamorano Dr. Mrs. N. Neil Howell 281 β€ž, ,, w ' Β ADVERTISEMENTS 282 Senior portraits, for the most part, by W. Patricl IHinely, class of 1973, whio never ttirows away negatives, and who can always be found via the W L Alumni Office. m HUNTER PUBLISHING COMPANY WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. 27103 Special Ihanks to our Hunter Publistiing l?epresentative Charlie Garrison for all his help and support throughout this year Dennis and Charles o Me a Nae ya y f if a e w ' - }fafh, as aie f a. ' i f r f f He, m€ ((; ' atloys sTroiΒ©,inc. 221 SOUTH MAIN STREEr ! LEXINGTON. VA 24450 ' 0 v a Hall CfiitniA .il Kxpfru-iit c Spec lali iiii; in iillciJc Ai al l1ii.t .Uiapli 283 Congratulations to Washington and Lee ' s Class of I4S6 TIst Xmerican FIRST AMERICAN BANK OF VIRGINIA !.2 Sdiilli M.iiii I .I ' Miinli III, HL;mi,i J44ri M.iin I )tli( f i7ll,il 4li,i-,tl71 l.rxmLjtnii-Hiirli.i Vist.i Slli i| 1 1 il [H,; I ' , irk ' l)U FLORIST 165 South Main Street Lexington, Virginia 24450 (703) 463-9152 GRAND PIANO AND FURNITURE CO. 1 South Mam Strecl 4M-3I21 Ciimplclc Bedding Lines. Bed Frames, , ss,ined Chairs. Desks, and Lamps TVs and VCRs Lree Deliver, k) 100 Miles TRAVEL SERVlfES INC ionUhl us tor all our iravt ' l ,l,sn hin,;is 41 South Main Street Lexington, Virginia 244SO 703-4(13-2147 CAPER S is . U ishini; ou Mi, , ,a. ; ihr tului,- AND CAPBRS DOES IT ALL - _ β€” L ' p lo date men ' s and women ' s hairst les β€” Haireuls 10 ' -; oft for W L AlΒ a s β€” Mameures β€” nail extensions ,ucrla s β€” Lvelusive to us. Splenia Cosm etiLs. I lira Hish fashion Makeup. Irom Milan. ltal - Tannini: - the onl tannin!: s Ion in LeMni;ton β€” Haircare β€” shampoos, loiidiii β–  ners, spra s, mousses, siels, ela es β€” Perms for men and women Hair Colouring - L.ar Pieremg Tuesday Lridav ' ) .s Thursday [: ening b . ppoinlnienl tf ♦ ' Saturday -2 pm dlsytr 5 SnL When Only the Best Will Do 25 N MAIN St LEXINGTON VA 24d50 17031 463-2566 2,S4 On the C ampus At Dance Weekends Or Parties at Goshen W halever the occasion nia he T- 1 1 1 West Nelson Street LeKimiton, Virginia 244 10 STREE T PHONE (703)461 2323 Scrvini xott since IS5I Specializing in monograming, fragrances (Shalimar, Chanel. Estee Lauder, etc.), Russell Stover candies, and of course prescriptions. ' e, 150 South Main Street Lexington, Virginia (703) 463-31 1 1 THE EAST LEXINGTON STORE ' ' Hasl Lex . . . A W L Tnulilioif Open ) am β€” midnigtil cvcr day Ll S 11 Nonh 46.V36I4 IMPORTED CAR and TRUCK PARTS Barterb rook Square Staunton Virginia 24401 (7031885-8191 | UPS Dell very Available 285 THE LADIES ' HABIT Come in luul acc iiirv our luihit _ -: X ' - l ' ' J, β– ;β– )β–  ' .β– β– - : Accessories Dresses Spitrtswear 22 West Nelson Street Lexinuton, Va. 463-4340 β– () .T .1 Mall rlillir ..I l-: p.Ti(ii Sp, ' , l.lh lllU III Cill. ' ir Viiiiiial l ' li,il,.m.,pli ( niiiiiici. lal liKlilslnal Wrddiim I ' diliaitiin- C.lor 221 Soiilli Main Slrrrt Lcxiimtdii imiiiia 2 It ' ll! (703 ' 4H3-2139 Alnin-Bcnnis, 3nc. 102 West Washinutun Siicet FINE MEN ' S APPAREL (703) 4h,V53S3 2.S6 the best universities produce the best business leaders Sydney Lewis Best Products Co , Inc Founder and chairman of the executive committee Washington and Lee University Class of 1940 Board of Trustees, 1972 to 1983 Robert E.R. Huntley Best Products Co , Inc President and chief operating officer Washington and Lee University Class of 1950 President, 1968 to 1983 Best Products, one of the nation ' s largest discount retailers, is headquartered in Rich- mond, Va Founded in 1957, it is now the largest retailer based in Virginia, with 18,000 employees nationwide and 1984 sales of $2 25 billion Best operates a coast-to- coast chain of 213 catalog showrooms under the Best, Dolgin ' s, Great Western, Jafco and LaBelle ' s names. Ashby ' s, a chain of women ' s apparel stores, and Best Jewelry a chain of fine lewelry and giftware stores, are also port of Best Through a yearly catalog, the company sells [ewelry and nationally advertised brand name merchandise in the housewores, sporting goods, toys, cameros and electronics, giftware and seasonal categories. Best will spend SlOO million over the next three years to remodel more than half of its catalog showrooms BEST 287 €m Ihttbcrsity CJ W L BOOKSTORE Campus Shop Wtst Nelson St. Lf .. a. Phone 463-4544 .Stereo Ktiuipment. Cassette Tapev .Vllninis and Musical Instruments H.ik.-.l With tlir lliiiiiriiKulf Tonch (, ' oiintr Kitiht ' ii All old K.isliioiKd Baker i:,it 111 ir Wikf Out 7(l.5-4(-i:V.i(Wl S N.iitli Main LexnmtDii, a, 244.50 INC. 8913 PATTERSON AVENUE RICHMOND VIRGINIA 23229 Bob Smith. President W L Class of 76 WHITE ' S TRUCK STOP Raphine, irfjinia (703) 377-2111 2S9 H ' : β–  f :2kΒ illifiΒ£ibJll!ti llNNlft eOllRTS r LOUNQ g fMTf l CWiPY tieiΒ« Β E . β€’ MKTmQ ft COMVEimON M yfiis . CML TOtl. RSE (nO) 33SΒ«27 (OuMddd (β€’IMrS3Β 1410 - Natural Bri ' 74 .At Mif Β«Mtf WΒ SHOP FOR PAPPACALLO 7,n Iccesorif ' s β€” Dnss Spin tsH i ' (ir 7(1,1 4(i.5- ' iMMS β– 2.] Main St Lfxiimtdii iruiiiia 244 i(l T=7 CLEANERS M. corner CZl I KXINCION Ndlth Ifttclsdll Siicci 7();l Iti -.SdL ' L ' I the Florist to the Homestead i.U.iiic Uou β€’ l ' ( I llrauci ' M l β€’ II.. I SpniiLiv a L. ' 444.= lo; . .lcHLis..n β€’ l.i iiim..n. a _ ' 44.=S() ( 7li;fi 4Β )a- ' IS41 SERVllhAR, LEXINGTON HARDWARE 2? SoLith M.un Street 4h3-2242 THE SOL ' IHKRN INN SeiMnt; Qualitv Food to Washingioti : Lee Students for 30 ' Wars β– A ci e i ' l S A Moat Uncommon Shop In Historic Lexington Bouttful FsniUlU Fo omi Hoi Gifts For All Occasions xorf i atn y7neeT [exj_naTbri Uinainia 24450 i703 463- 600t 291 Senior Index Aflains, D;nKl Scolt I ' ) B(. 522 ( nl,l Spriim llail.or 1 M724 Ad.nns. Micli.u-I U.invick 1(12 N..rlli W ill Si.irl.t l.aiir Willi.iTusl.um 23|S. 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Football Letterman β€” 1.2. Soccer β€” 3, ROTC β€” 1-4 Bulter. David Michael Box ISl, Gibson Island, Ml) 210.5(5 BETA β€” 1-4, Scholarship Chairman β€” 2, IM (Chairman β€” 3, Treasurer β€” 4, 5 Mongohan Minks β€” 3, President β€” 4,5, Sigma Socit - β€” 3.4,5. Contact 5, IFC; representatn ' e β€” 3,4. 84 Mock Convention Arkansas Float Chairman β€” 3 Caldwell, Cuy A. .5.S5 Bloomheld Ave 75, West Caldwell, NJ (17(H)(i Dean s List β€” 3,4, Honor Roll β€” 3,4, RE Lee Research Scholar β€” 3. Founder Editor The W ' iiL Jountal of Science β€” 3.4. Director of Biology ' Forum and Film Series β€” 3.4, W LI H -- l-l I ' I. In ol 1 I) Cniniiiitt.r 2 (β– .ill,..4r Hrpill.lK.ins β€” I 2 S4 M.nk ( ..IIMIltli. Campbell, Joseph C:lyde, Jr. Rt 1 I5u 131 Itiirn.i ista. 244lh I ' hi Kt.i Sigin.i 2 Mpli.i I psik.i Delta β€” 2, Fiailkllll Soelet Scliokiisliip - 2 Tin Hit.l k.ipp.l - .5 Llllll.l Sr.. rrs BllrK S, ll, .1.11 sliip 1 Rul.rrt L l,rr S.liokir β€” 2 5, t rirM.l.nl Clieiiiistrv Seiiini.u β€”4 ( ioiirses and l)e..;rees Colllllllltre β€” 1 Carmouchc, Christopher L mnie 7144 sli I ' l. (:,ii , IN t( io3 Case. John Porter 41115 ,.,.dlnll ( 11. le I..li,le l 3(i(i0.S Caslclli. Alcvander Francis IIIIKM ( iainsl.nroiml, 15,1 r,it, .111.1, Ml) 2lis5t D.Mii List 1-) Wlii.s Wli,. - 4 X.usitv K,.,.tl.all β€” 1-4, CipLiiii β€” -1 SiiiiLi Class P β€” 4, sill, lent C.iitrol C.iniiintte,. β€” I iljl β€” 1-4 Pr, si, lent β€” 2.3, ROTC β€” 1 S4 M.., k C,.li enli,.ii i ' ,.iiiis K.iiil,i (l. ' le.iite β€” 2 Calnni.i S,.eiit - ! 4 Senior M.nil.er ol St le II, .us,. β€” 1 H.irl., II ( liil. β€” 1,2,3 Chapman, Ilari- .Martin PO B,. 5 W ,.sl P,,inl 23IS1 Marshal S,lβ€ž.lar β€” 4, S Ji.ii iil.iim Seliol.irships 1 II, .iisl IS Senate Scholarship β€” l-4C,.iit.i,t i PiiMi,it Cluurman β€” 4, . lumni Phonathon β€” 14, ( liainiian β€” 3, Superdance β€” 1-4. ROTC: β€” 3,4 Clifton. James Mcfiuire. Jr. 123 Chmoe R,l L, iiii;toii k ' l 10,51)2 Connetl. SIcsen Bobby 55 Clark St , P.irt Station NV 11771. Corrigan, (ieorgc T. Jr. IhS o,.ded Lane, illano a. PA I9(),S5 Dean s List, arsit L.icross,. 2,.3,4. Gardening Clul. β€” 2,3, F.ittie Clul, β€” .5,4, Team Co-op β€” 3,4 Costello, (ierard Joseph 9 ller.itlge Court, C,.l,l Spring llarl,..r N 11724 C:oudert, Matthew Joseph 55 Indian Field Rd Crienwich, (T ()(i.S.50 Courtnes, Craig Britton .S47 Carroll Rd Charleston, W 2.5514 Crawford, John Atkins 142 tantenarN Cirel, ' , Shreveport, LA 71104 Deans List β€” 3,4. H.inor Roll β€” 4, SAB β€” 1-4. Entertainment Director β€” .5,4 MD.A Superdance β€” 3,4, Entertainment Chairman β€” 4, SiiiKish Club β€” 3.4 Culnane, James Edward S75 John Fitch Highu.i Fitchburg, MA 01420 Patrick l,cc S.33 F,,ilβ€žs R,l (,.,lll l, Dascs, Paul Mich.iel 5555 l),.ln, 1 lloiisl,.ii l 77l).5(. Dasis, Edu.ird Wilson III 50.5 ( ,,.411, Av.iii-li R, ( .is ( -,.1. ( 4 01.SI17 l)aΒ« son, Samuel Biggs 7(. K U .i Foil U.ishingtoii, NY 11050 l),.,n s List β€” 3 I I h, |iiii Sliiiiip Pri e in Cernian riin R( ) I ( β€” 34 N.ition.i (.Hard β€” 2,5,4, FIJI β€” I 4 iil.,.ni, ' dclloll, John D, Rl I Box ll.S l SI 291.21 ll,.ii.,i Roll - 1-4 D.Mii s List 1-1 R,.lβ€ž.rt F, I., ' , ' R.s.Moli S,li,il.ii i i:i) - 2, R.ingers β€” 1 KA - 1-1 ssist,,i,( S,., i.il ( iMiini.in 2 SI Mo.k C,.li . ' iitl,.n lt.,1, I ' .u.iil,. ( li.i .,11 2 S 15 )|.. ' i,ilions Ch.i an - i Ml) Siipiokm, ,. R,iβ€ž,| C,.niiiiitt,.e β€” 2 Siiperdam. I ' iiI,IkiI .i Riml. Clul. β€” 1-4 Deringer, James Caulles Rout,. 5 R,. 1 19, Chestertoun, MI) 2l(i20 Dean s List β€” ,5, arsiH Lacrosse β€” 1-4, Student Recriiitnieiit β€” 2, 5, 4, SAB β€” 2,3.4, Mock Convention deleg.ite β€” 2, Phi k.ippa Sigma β€” 1-4, Rush Chauinan β€” 3 U Ll R β€” 3. ( al.l,. 9β€”4 Rig Rrother β€” 4, Sigma Socletx β€” 3.4 Dcllcfs. Peter ;corge 7210 OKI Cat, H,l , R,.,kx Ml) 20S52 Des inc. Walter RiplcN 215 ( ..rinv.ill SI SW, L, . sl.iug, A 22975 Selected lor SΒ ,, tl.riar Jinuor 1, ai III Fr.mce β€” 3, Phi Kappa Fsi β€” 1-4 Pl.dge L,luc.it,.r β€” 2.4, Rngl.v Clul. β€” 1,2,4, W Ll R β€” 4, S4 Mock ( ,.ineiiti..,i Indiana D.K-gate β€” 2, MDA Siip.rdaiic,- β€” 1, Riigl.v F.K.tliall i:lub ,.l Institut dFtudier Pohtuiues, P,ms. France β€” 3. English Laiigu.igi. Assistant. Institut dAnglais Charles . P.uis Fr.iiic,. β€”3, ' P of Student Bod β€” SvMitl.ri.ir Foreign Exchange Program β€” 3 Diffcnderffer, C:harles Ross 24 Bardeen Ct , i ' owson. Ml) 21204 Francis P. Gaines Scholar. Deans List. Independent I ' nion President β€” 3.4. 84 Mock Convention State Chairnum β€” 2. W ' LUR β€” 1,2, Young l),i,io(iats β€” 1 Yellou Rnck Rd Da Care Ccaiter oliinteer β€” ,5, St,ill - 4, Lesnigton lligli Sel I Futor β€” 4 Dulaney, Joseph Daingerfield, Jr. 1437 Scotland Axe ( :h.irlotte. NC: 2,S207 Deans List β€” 1-4. 1 1, .nor R.ill β€” 3, SAB β€” 2, Fauc Director β€” 3. Director ol Weekends β€” 4, InnersitN Feder.itioii - 4 Pin kappa Sigma β€” 1-4, House M.m.iger β€” 2. S,.ci.il ( li.inni.in β€” 3, Mongolian Minks Dunnavan. Roger lee. Jr., 74S Rnerhend BKd l. .iigΒ«o,Hl. FL ,32779 DuPre. Daniel Francis SILS Chilteiuuig,. Rd M.mlins, NY 13104 29.3 Eckardt. David Nei-N 2111 Mr P.u.iii li.u.l Atlanta (..A .iC1327 H.I Kappa Sitma - 1-1 aTβ– ,lt Sot, n 2:3.4, SAB β€” 3,4 Eldt-r, Jonathan I.amar .idST Pine Hark Ciul. ' nuiiuiiniK, (.A : )3:;.s Elliclt. Da id Christian 12 ' ) Hi.. ist.i ( ml. ' , Di.i.iii.,;.. (() M )I)I li..l.,il K I,. ' . li.s.Mnli S. h..l,i β€” 2 i. Mil Bi-ta i i β€” :14 ( i.lil I h. ' . k ( :..! tt,-,- - 4, Scir.tan β€”4 .S4 M..ck ( :..i, .i,li,.i, .Β« l. i. .. TnMsurer β€” 2, Cli-.- Chil. β€” 1-4, ,S..iith.rii ( ..niL.it β€” 2,3,4 Elhs, Randolph Li-e 12, ) ..i tli I l,ill St S,..,l.,i.l |)K H).)7i s,- B _ 1-1, ( ,,-( I,., ,1, I,., 1|) Sup. r.laiR,- β€” 4 Scpiash ( lul. β€” 3 1 I ' lii D.lt.i lli.la β€” 1-1 liiiniii Pli..n,itl...ii β€” ,i (..β– 1111,11. (lul. β€” .3 Ml) Siip.r.Lim, ' M.uiil.. ' i β€” 1-4 I ),mii s lavl β€” .i jiiii St... nip I ' ll . ' I..1 r.i.l.uiiK Km. ' II.iu. ' in (..1111.111 Kllis, uhii JikKoii, J. . .1-1. .Ik 2: i. .(is Epplin. BnonTodd 32.Uaiβ€ž ..In St M, instil. l ' 17iri3 H..I..-TI 1-, !,.β– .β–  H.MMi. I. s,l,..l,i, 4 Wj.lH β€” 3 4, B.is.l.all β€” I Si.4in,i Nii-S.hmI M,nil..i 2,3, H..ikl.ruli;.- SMiipli,.i, - 2 ja Ban.l - 1-1 MDA Snp.-iil.iiii. H. ' . lstl.itl ..iiinnlt.. ' β€” 1 Ewing, Wilham Peeler 4,31S lx II, ill l)r ( ..liiinl.i SC: 29206 Exall. Henr , IV 344,3 ..rtli l).nlΒ« I, Dallas, l 732211 Pill B.t.i kapp.i β€” 3 (I111K1..11 D.lt.i l- ' ,psil,.ii β€” 3, Pill Eta Simii.i β€” 2 I ' lnllip Mill.. Β«,, 1.1 111 EriinoniRs β€” 3 Stiul.ait I-iii.iik i,il 11, Lit i...,s (ainimitti-i 2, Ch.imii.ui β€” 3, Slnil.-nt Hi niitni. iit β€” 3,4 SAB β€” 2,3,4, ..tiiiv; Bii;iilati..ii B.ianl β€” 2 MDA SiipirdaiKf Cniiiiiiitttr β€” : , C-hv Cliil. β€” 2,3,4, C.iKfit Ciiil.l β€” .3 S4 M..ik ( ,,iiv,-iiti..ii l.kili.. StiM-niii;C..inniitt,-. ' β€” 2, k.ipp.i Simii.i - II Ealk. John Mansfield ' 14311 ( u.ll laiiii H.I Ci.Mt P.ills 22lii.(. Di-.uis List β€” 1,3 1 1 1. .11... H..II β€” V I ' l Simii.i lpli.i - 4 St M,,ik ( ..in. nil. .11 Sp.MkiTs (:..iiiiiiilt. ' . ' - 2 SAB β€” ,! t Sin. I, -lit H. ' ..initiii.-iil β€” 4 ' .. . I., i.M.n (β– ..iitiil.iit.ii - 2 I Ciill.-m ' Hrpiil.lR.iiis - 2β€žj, 1, B1.4 Bi.itliiis β€” 4, Sii;iiia Clii β€” 2,3 4 Karrell. BrNan Andrew 277 |..n,illi.,ii H.I .Β« CiiKLin, CP OhS40 Earthini;, James ):n 12 Hiitl.nM. k PI Dnili.iin C 27703 D.Miis l.isl β€” 1,2,3 S H - - 1-1, SI M...k (..n , -1111. .11 .l.l.r.il. ' β€” 2 k.ipp.i Sii;iii.i - I- I, S..,i,il Cliaiini.in β€” 2 Eeares, Panl l,aΒ«renee 31III ( .,,11111,1. k D, B.th.s.laMD 20SI0 D.ll,, i.,11 D.ll.i 11 i Pl.sul.nt β€” 1, H.isl, ( h.nini.in β€” 3 1, Mnniiii Hrl.iti. ns (,:h.nriiiaii β€” 2 Fcreiison, Kiehard Patrick 11.3 l..iii.J..r,l I ' l 204 Charl.itt. ' sville. a 22901 D.iriii (3,iinsel..i , K.ippa lplia. 34 M..,.k (aβ€žiMlitl..n Del.-tf.ite β€” 2, ( ..lil.i.t Einkelstein, Hugh , lan 14 llillsi,!,. H.l , ( ..iiMih. PA IS2I9 Eishinan, Mark Nathan .3(1(1 ( ;reuor , U iliii.ttr, IP fi0(l9[ lloM.ir H.,ll, Dean s List, Sigma Nn β€” 1-4, Si.eial Cli.urmaii β€” 2, Blisli Chairman β€” 3, I K( β€” 4, MDA Superaanee β€” 2,4. Piililuitv Chairm.m β€” 2, lnl,ilr.it.Tnit Ciiminittte β€” 4, Cnllig,- H.-piil.lu ,ins β€” 12, S4 Moek C,,nM ' iitin,i a,h-gat, ' β€” 2 Pnsl.,-, Cliil. β€” 1, Big Bn.tlur, liit.riiati..ii.il Cinl, β€” 2 Flint, Lawrence Raymond 700 Chiiicli St Clilt... Forge, ' A 24422 Deans List β€” 1-4, II011..1 H,,ll 3, D.nul C Bl It Seholarship β€” 4, liiteR..ll.m.it. Business Cames β€” 4, Indepellilellt I in. .11 I 1, .isni. Fole . James Edward 109 U ils.,11 D, P..1I l.ll.is.Mi, V 11777 FIJI β€” 1-4, Wnstliiig β€” 1,2 1 Cross ( oiintrx β€” 1-4, Ollu. ' ClnH β€” 4 Ford, Da id , llen 90 MilPreek Kd , , l..iel,ui,l Mil (III 11022 Fouike, Evan M. B.. 797 Aiil.nin, NV I 5021 l-outeh. Paul Roherlson 913 ( a.iss St oKinpia W 93,300 Dean s List β€” 2, W LLH β€” 2,3, Sigma D.lt.i ( :|,| _ 1-,L rriasiner β€” ,3,4, Cri i i Cnp F.lll.n β€” 3, HiH ' -lum rin ChlelCopv Editor β€” 2, ,-us F.I1I..1 - 3, F.lil.,1 β€” 4 Franklin. Ernest Baher, 111 120 i:iisu,,rtli , .islnill,r ,57203 D.MIIS Listβ€” 1 HOK S,li,,l,,iship β€” 2 Sigma il β€” 1-4 H()4( Cham ..I (...mniaiid β€” 4 Freeman, Derrick W.M. 13PS 1.3fh Avenin- North Birmingh.mi. AL .3.3204 Frilsehe. John Moiicure 4.309 Sk-.tliiid Hd iii.lal,. , 22003 Funkhouser. Barrv Lee Hoiit,. 1 H,.x 144- L. nigtoii, , 244.30 (;adsln, Whitnev Hulsim 3110 1 1,i|il. Sli,i.l.- L. llinlli.,;t..li dp: I9SI0 George, Edward MeteaM, III 10 Sli,,un.. Hills, Mi.iliiig W2(S003 Cames Sehol.ir, IMil Et.i Sigiii D. an s List, Honor Boll, Sigma Phi Epsiloii β€” 1-4, Hush ( hannian β€” 4, Pledge Tr.mier β€” 3, Heeordiinj S.-,r,t.iix β€” 2, J V Tennisβ€” I, SI Mo. k C..iiMiiti. .I.l.gat, ' β€” 2 SAB β€” 3,4 (iihnan, James Christopher Ht 5 Spi ingin. ,i.l..u (d.-n Allen, A 2.3000 Deans List - 4 Ski 1 . .11 2,3,4, CltniKite Cliili β€” 2,3,4, .S4 Moek C..iim- .I.l.g.it,-, PIkA β€” 1-4 Cla ier. Earl Winfield. Ill e o First National Bank of ( huag.i, Coiinailght Center, 1,3th Floor, II.Mig Kong, Hong Kcmg (;len, Rohert Eashvood, Jr., 3101 Allendale St S , H,,an..k.- 24014 (; K-hel, Frank Edward Ho.ite 2, Box UP CooK Oil 4.3723 ; mndr , Frederick William, III 003 S.aitli M.un St Mt Ain,MD 21711 D.an s Pist ILmor H.ill. Br.iss ,md Peienssion Fnsemhl. ' β€” 1,2, ( i.iss C.untrv β€” 1-4, AllODAC β€” 3,4 Distiiit ..I C.ilnnil.ia Marathon β€” 2.3,4 (;radd . Duane Burnett, Jr,, S,32 Forest Hills Dr Nasi, Mil. ' 4N 572211 (iresham. Rohert Keith a ne Street S . Borne, (;a 30101 C.rimsley, James , lexander 510 IIerit.,ge Drne 1,34, NLidison, TN 37115 De.m s List β€” 1, Hon.. Boll β€” 1, NatioiKil Dean s List β€” 3, H E Lee Beseareli Seholar β€” 3, ZBT Soeial Member β€” 4 Ciuerriero, Michael Frederick 73 Saildlehrook, Houston, T 77024 Who ' s Who β€” 4, SAB β€” 1-4, I ' Aeeiitive Director β€” 3. Chairnum β€” 4, kappa . lpha (iutowski, Martin Joseph MOO North Bouiida H..,id Balliin,.,. ' , MD 21222 llager, (iregon Edward 0731 4 ' angleu,.od Di , Vonngstown, OH 41312 Honor H.,11 β€” 1,3, l),.m List β€”3,4 LainPda (In Aliiha β€” 1-4 Hall. John Lesslie, III 133 Indian Springs Bd , W illiaii,slβ€ž,ig A 23PS5 D.ans List β€” 4, 34 Moek C.nx. iitL.ii r,nii,-ss,.,- ,lele.g.it,- β€” 2, SAE β€” 2,3,4 Hall, Elmer Lester, Jr. Hoiite 4, Box 120, Bassett, 240.55 llamhlen, James Fletcher 75,30 ( liatlinglon. Da l 7.524S kappa Sngiiia β€” 1-4, SAB, Big Bn.th.i Ilamed. Parvi Richard, Jr,, 147 li,.pk,,iit..,n H. Pplo,,,, M 01.50S Hanna, William Michael ,54 Parker Hd , Wcllesle 1 A 02PSI k.ippa Sigma β€” 1-4. WIA ' B β€” 3. Kiirj, mil Fill β€” 3.4. Kappa Sigma Intramural Cli.inin.m β€” 3.4 llarlles. John F., Jr. 19 CardnuT St Darien. CT 0( S20 Departmental Scholarship m C;eolog β€” 3. IloiH.r Boll β€” 3.4, Deans List β€” 1,2, Contrihnted t.. ,. jiiurmil of Scifticr β€” 4, Gcolo.giciU Soeietx β€” 4, Lanil.a Chi Alpha β€” 1-4, WLl ' B β€” 3.4, S.piash Clul. β€” 4. 1 Year Kxcliail - Prosraiii at Cluint: i In ( ' (- , f . Clumsc InnrrsUy Haney. Bourkc C. :!9 .i k- hiilsr Hil , Fl Wortli TX TBKIT Pill Dtlta Tlirla β€” 1-4, Prrsiilcnt β€” 4. Simna Sdciftv β€” 4, M.mu.iliaii Minks β€” 2,3,4 Haney. David ShaΒ«ii 1:! Mi-ctnm ,St , Cc.irKrt.iuTi, Si: 2944(1 I ' lll Beta kap|ia β€” .5,4, I ' lii Kta Simiia β€” i. 2. Alpha Epsildii Di-lta β€” 3.4, S. E β€” 1-4. Mfal Plan Manager β€” 3,4, Stl)olar.sliip C;liairiiiaii. Gcnnaii Cliili β€” 4, β– .S4 Mock CoiivcntKiii West iri;inia il.-K-gati- β€” 2, IM oll, l all, 300 Cluli Hayden, Patrick Louis .Mi Pun- all. Dr Rochester, , Y 14ti2() Flu Kta Si.miia, Fi ,Sii;ma Alpha. Omicnin Delta Kappa, Who s Who. Assistant Secretar ' 84 Mock Camvention β€” 2, K.xeciitnc Committee β€” 3,4, Chairman Colleue HepiiMicans β€” 3, Faciiltv Eveentixe Coniinittec β€” 4 Hayne, James I.. Jr, 1 1(1 P.isro Kncinal, ,San Antonio, T 7.S212 1 F( : β€” 3,4, IV.asnrer β€” 3, President β€” 4, K.ippa Alpha β€” 1-4 Pnsid.iit β€” 4 Kalhckoii β€” 4, Stmleiil lieenntmeiil - 3,1 lβ€ž,s l,oβ€” 4 HayAv K)d, John Watson 11 (..ecu lleniii, lliltoi lle.ul IslaiKl, SC 2Β )2S Hemphill, William Rushing 4907 BcxcrK Hills I), Austin, TX 7.S731 National Dimi. s List β€” ,i, ll,.ii..i Roll. Deans List. SAB β€” 3.4, Bii; Brother β€” ,3, Kappa Simn.i β€” 1-4, President β€” 4, Seeret.ir β€” .), IFC β€” 4 Henderson. Scott Joseph (i74 I ark .L Dr Mar ' sville. OH 43040 Hennig, Julian. Ill Sll Woodland Dr , ( :oliiii SC 29205 Deans last β€” 1-4, Honor Boll β€” J Student Recriiitment β€” 2,3,4, PIKA β€” 14, li β€” 3,4, ' .S4 Mock Coinel n S C delcK.ltc β€” Henschel, John Frederick S900 ( :openli.,v.r Di Potoin.a, . n) 2(I.S. ' 4 Hill, Ethel Edgar 192,5 Hndsoii Ct , Oldinar, FL 3.3.5.57 Cross C;oiiiitri β€” 2.3, L BOIC β€” 1-4. Sim Nilβ€” 1-4 Hollis. Lee M. .59.55 Fainvood Ln , Memphis. lA .3S119 Omicnm Delta Kappa β€” 3, Dean s List β€” 1-4, Who s Who β€” 4, ICC Chairman ol ( nl.l ( li.ck β€” 2, Contact β€” 2,3, Ch.iirinaii β€” 4, Stmlirit Recruitment β€” 4, Kathekon β€” 3,4, Coed Sleerini; Committee β€” 3,4, SAE β€” 1-4. President β€” 4, P - 3, Fledge Educator β€” 2 Holmes, William Taylor, U 9.36 Ston Lane, Cl.idΒ«- ne, FA 190,35 Who ' s Who β€” 4, Dean s List β€” 1-4, Varsitv Soccer β€” 1-4. Captain β€” 3.4, ' ,irsit Liicrosse β€” 1-4. C ' aptam β€” 4, All Conlereiice Soccer β€” 2.3,4, All South Soccer β€” 4, Most Valuable Ollensivc Flayer β€” 2,3, Fnslnnen Athlite ol the Year, Phi Kappa Sigmaβ€” 1-4, Student Bccnnfmnil β€” 2.3.4, ' S4 Mock Convention delegate β€” 2, MDA Superdance β€” 1-4. Chairman ol Seciirit β€” 4 Hope, Christopher Ross fi423 Eleanor Ct . Norfolk, ' A 2.3.5(IS ' ,S4 Mock Camventioii Virginia dclegati- β€” 2, Big Brother β€” 2, J ' , Lacrosse β€” 1, Water Polo - ,3, Swiiniiimg β€” 2,4, Phi Kapp.i Sigin.i β€” 14 Hubbard, Jeffrey Miles 101 Hi 22, lnnil P.iwlii School, Pawhng, NY 12.5W Dens List, (liairinai I ' niversitv Council β€” 3, Kappa Alpha β€” 1-4, Si-cretar β€” 4, Co-Biish Ch.nrni.in β€” 2, S4 Mock CoiiM-ntion P.ij.ulc ( :oiiiiiiillrc β€” 2, SAB β€” :),4 Hughes, Robert Stephen 74S Somen illc Dr Mount Lehaiion.PA 1.5243 Hunt. Peter Anthonv 9 L.ik.u.i.id Bd lliinlingt.i 2.5701 Hutchinson. William Edward 51 Adclphi Av Pn.Milriuc. HI 0290(1 lerardi. Peter J.. 2727 Sonlli Siiicdl.v St , Pliil.Kl.lplii.i, PA 19115 (linKron Dcll.i K.ipp.i β€” 3,4, L K lohnson S, liol.ii β€” ,i I, Hnl g ( liih β€” 2,3,4, Coll β€” 1, Pin k.ipp.i Psi β€” 1-4, Dorm Connsc lor β€” 3 Irvin. Bruce Edvxard 3010 Cedar Hill Hil , F.ilk Cliinch , A 22042 Cln Psi β€” 1-4, Biil.g Cliil. Jacoby. Kenneth Neal 122 S.miiIi ll,i Mli,.nic Drr South Bend, IN 40(il7 Nation.il M.iit Srlu.l.ir β€” Rohert E Lee Scholar β€” 1-4. Pin Eta Simn.i β€” 2. Dean ' s Listβ€” 1,2,4, Honor Boll β€” 1-4. U LL H - 1-4, Sports Director β€” 2,.3,4, Ncus Director β€” 4, Sears Congressional Intern β€” .3 Jakubek, Christopher Paul 540-A Fanwood Lane, alle Cottage NY 109S9 Dean ' s List 1,2,4, Ilimor Boll β€” 1, Student Hecrintme nt β€” 2,3,4, Baseball β€” 1,2,3, Cln Psiβ€” 14 Bush Ch.urmaii β€” 3,4, MDA Snpcrd.incc Pul licil Coinniittce β€” ,3,4, Ch.iirman - 4 College Bepnlihc.nis β€” 1 Yomig Demo, i.its β€” 3. 1 11 J M A II F W β€” 3, I, Phillip Spenccl Circle - 1-4 James. Paul MeCee. Jr. hlS Dallas Ave , Selina, AL ,30701 Jauner. John Scott 1517 Hahwa Ave , Westheld, NJ 0709(1 Janyska. Timothy Andrew 2133 Arrmgtoii Hd M.irriottsvillcMd 21104 John, Christopher Donald S Edmondson Ave , LcMiigton, A 244.5(1 Dc.in s List β€” :),4, W lio s W h, 1, Omicron Delta Kappa β€” 4, ' arsit Lacrosse β€” 1-4, P.ic Award β€” I. Tri-Captain β€” 4. Sigma Nn β€” 1-4, President β€” 1,2, Aliiini Contact Officer β€” 3,4, MDA SnpiTd.mcc β€” 2, White Book Bo Coinmittee β€” 3, IFC β€” 1,2 Johnson, Bradford Allen SISl Pn k Di llainsonbiiig, PA 171 I I Johnson, Lester Skofield M.idison Cl PO Bo 252 North Berwick. ME 0.390(1 Best Prodii, ts S.liolar Bobert E Lee Scholar. Alpli.i Fpsilon Delta β€” 2, Robert E Lee Bese.uch Sdiol.ir β€” 3.4, Phi Beta K.ippa β€” 4, Glee Club - I 2. S4 Mock Convention Maine deleg.ite β€” 2. L.in,b.. ( hi Alph.i β€” 3 AED β€” 4, Micro-computer Assist.inl - 4, C.neial Biology and Zo,ilog L.ib Assista.il β€” 4 Inliainiual ping-pong β€” 3 Johnson, (iavhird. Ill 22.35 Janiaia. Houston, TX Johnston. David Wayne 52(i W.irrcii HKd , Card,- Cil NY 11.530 WLl B- 1-4, Music Director β€” King Ooii ;Vii β€” 1.2. Entertainment Editor β€” 1. Assistant Manager β€” 2. Cable 9 β€” 3,4 Johnstone, Scott Bowcn 1720 North Mam St Greenville. S( 29009 Jones. Anthonv David 39 Preston Di Kalispell. MT .59901 Dean s List β€” 2,3, Distinginshcd ,Militar Student β€” 4, SPE β€” 1-4, Ceinian Club β€” 3,4. Internation.d Club Tieasiinr β€” 2 3, B( ) TC Color Giiaiil β€” 3.4 Jones. William Fisher. Jr. c o General Tr.nel (vl.l Fill, nil Slieet, Sp.ul.insbing, SC 29.302 Kalitka. John Christian 2077 Anil.eii.ick Court, B sl.)ii, A 22091 Kandarian. Arthur Albert 95 fliomas Leighton Blvd., Cnmberland, HI 02S(i4 RGTC Scholar β€” 2.3.4. Distinguished Militan Student, FIJI β€” 1-4, Senior Member Style House β€” 4, Co-Fonnder ol Gamma Societv β€” 3,4, ROTC Battalion Commander β€” 4, Australian Rules Football Club β€” 3,4, Office (:|β€ž|,β€” 4, General Head,|iiarters Bartender ami Cook β€” 1-4 Kannapell. Charles Carter. Jr.. 5105 All.in Ro.id Bethesda, MD 20Sl(i Kearse, Joesph Weber 511 North .Main Street, AllrMd,llr SC 29S10 Kelly. David Andrew 20.) Wlie.lei SI S,i .inn.ili, GA 31405 Kendall. Erion Joseph. Ill 4490 Boatring ( t , Titiisvi lle. FI.,327.S(I Water Poloβ€” I Swimming - 1, SAE β€” 1-4 Kendrick. Gregory 32 West De.iii St , Fieeporl, NY 11.520 2?). ' Kfir. Jaini-s VaiHi- . II 2 ij Hi,Ii;,au.i, I l)r (β€ž.Msl.,.ro ( l-:r,Atl Dr.uisljsl l,,β€ž:cisr (..,111 II. ,11,. IS S,h,.).ir Onil.n.li D.lt.i k.ipp.i U1in W Im I ' . Sim:,., Alph., K.,lll.kui, I ' l.Mil.nt - i4 Hm Bi,,tlβ€ži - .3 ( :,,nt.u ( β€” i 1 ( ,.-( Ii.iiiiu.iii β€” 1 I ' lii k.ipp.i SliZiii.i β€” 1-1 Hiisli I, .111111. ,11 β€” -1 arMt liisk.-tl.. ll β€” 1 2 Stu.l.nl lu, iiiilrii. ' iit β€” ,5.4 S li -- 2 3 KinilH-ll, }Mrv W .iril .(ihb { ,.,,li.,l, lii.l,.,ii.,p.ilis 1 M.J2n D.Miis List - i, i 4 .,rsit (.,.11 β€” 1-4 linrd-hiiii rlti β€” 2 it ,l Sal, -s, 11. 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Brian Ji.si-pll ' llSh Hmisuii H,..i,I I ' l, ,1.1,1, Iplil.i I ' A 14114 Deans List β€” 1 2, Wristlii - 1-4 ( aptaiii β€” 4 l ' ,-,.1.1,s u.β€ž,l β€” 3, laiuk-inai,, ki-nnt-th Lee 3,74 L,ik, F,.ii,st Lam-, Mkint.i (. i(Li42 rill Lt.i Si.4111.1 β€” 2 I ' lii H,ta k.ipp.i - ! (..nns S,li,.l,irsliip β€” 1 l(( )43 ' S,lM,l.irsliip -- 2 W.iltia L, ' C,,nt, ' St,A,.ns S,lβ€ž.l.,i-sl,i| - 3 WIm.s WIm. β€” 1 l ' ll sKs-l ' ,li.41ii, β– ,111,1; S,.iii,,i S,Ims,,i LL ,aiitiM( nit,, ' β€” 2 (.l,...(liil. - 1-4 S,.i,lli,Ti, C.nih.rl -- 1-1 |),.iiii (β– ..iiiis,.l,.|- β€” 3 L Stniknt luaTintint i,l β€” . ,4. ( p,lt,.i (Ip.iat,,! -- 3 I Lion. CliristdphtT P. 7(12 F : i,l Sti,-,3 ( 1 F.ilk.i. II. (.221. ' ) H,.l..ltF L,-,- H.srai. Ii S, li,.lai I ' l Smma Mpli.i I), It., Si,.:nia Hli,.1aii k.ippa lpl,., II, .11, .is in I ' .illti, s L.,iiil.,l., (1,1 lpli,i - 1-4 l. ,β–  l ' nsi,l,.iil β€” 2 Hnsli ( lianniai, β€” ,3 4 1. ,β–  l ' i,si,l,.iit ,.l I ' l Sn in.i Mplia --- 1 K,lil,.r 111 ; ' β€ž l β€ž, i,M,K β€”4, l ' ivsi,l,ait ,il l),1.at. ' I ' .sim β€” 3 lx s(|iiadn). Steven Edward HH 2 (:.it,ua nnw ,i,liim Bnt-r. NY 11792 D, .nis List ll,,iβ€ž.r K,,ll I ' l.i H, ta k,ippa β€” 4. Liii eisit ( ,,inKil β€” 2, Plii k.ippa I ' s, _ 1-4 l, ,iiulier . Jnlin Josepll 47 Fl,,ts ( ,n,. I(,l lliiiitiii,i;t,.i,, V 11743 Mailionis. Mark (VNeil 4S0 Bi..nm, H,I Hii,lu,A .,i,.i | (issi)7 Maik. Thiimas R. 244 Cm, 11 Fan, l)i ( .imp Hill. I ' 17(11 1 l),aii s last β€” 2 .L4 alslt Has, l.all L,3t, 1111.11, β€” 12, 3, 4 ( aptalii β€” i I),. Mil ( ..iiiis,l,,r i 4 ll.ail Dorm C:miiis,l,.i t stial, nt ll.,n s ( ulinnlttcr β€” 4. Co-edlltallon Snl iiniilt,-, ' ,111 ll,.iisn,a β€” ,3.M,ick CoinnilH.n ,1, I,-.;.,!, ' - 2,M,-]iilβ€ža l),.a II, .lis,. Cli.irtiT M,aiil.,a β€” 4 Mamiire, rlimnas Patrick kiiitl. I ' ,.n,l Laii, , H,,ll,.i,l illa..;, ' ' |(l,3(lh Mil H, ta I ' si ll,,ii,,iarx Miisual Fr.it,nnt , t;!,-.- Cliil.β€” I 2 i, t Linv,isit (lβ€ž.riis β€” 4 ULFKβ€” L2,L4. H,k kl.ri.lu. ( ..m. it S,,,i,.s H,..,nl ..I M..iiai;frs β€” 4 H,.. kl.i i,lu, ( ' ..miiinnitv ( lβ€ž.iiis β€” ,5 4 Hlii ' -hnn Via β€” 4 Marr. Mil liael Tliomas 21132 H.ix Hi,,. , ( :,, , Xnmin.i H.M.I, 234,34 M D Slip,. I, I. in,, ' kill, It. ,111111, ait ( oninillt, ' ,- (li. ,11111. 111 2 k.ip] lplia ki.it, ii,it β€” 1.2.3,4 Marsli, DaNid B,.ll,m I ' d H,,xh|| I ' m, ilKill,. Marsliall, Miili.u-I P. Ht h H,,x Ii27, D,.l.iiil DriM-, Sallsl.iiiN, MD21S()1 D.lt.i Ian D, It., I ' kilo Filiiiatorβ€” 3. Hnsuk-nt - I li.ak ami L,tt,iiiiai, Marlieii, William Derrx 14114 l,,β€žiist x, H.,1 ,.,.β–  Ml) 212(14 Maii %, Camrtnex Roller. Ill SS|2 1. .is ( ,β€žirt H.,l n li, NC 27(ill4 D.an s List β€” 1.2. ,3, 4, Honor Roll β€” 4 ODk β€” 4. Xarsitx Fo,.tl..dl β€” 1. | lβ€žier,,ss,. β€” F F,.iiii,l, r Ski ( liil, .iii,l H.uiim Lam β€” 2 l ' r.si,l,iit .111,1 ( aptaiii β€” 3.4. Dorni ( ,,iiiis,l,,r β€” 3.4. I ' ol F ( A β€”4. Phi Kappa Si..;iiia β€” 1,2 5, 1 ( oir. spoil, lina Secretar β€” 4, Uiii ersit F,-,l,r.ition - I Ma Β ell, Jolm Patrick 174(1 II,, IK ,. M,. park, (3 4402. ) Ma . Nathaniel Sears 11:5 S Aiin.ra St , Faston, MD 2lh(U McAlaiiie. Michael B. 11,37 BrMill.iuii H,..ul, ill.,iβ€ž,v.i, P I4(IS.3 arsit Lai ross,- β€” 2.3.4. Phi k.ipa Simn.i β€” I 2,3 4 McAle c . Michael R. S41,3S l,3l,lli Str.a 1 Miami FL 33137 ll,.ii,,i H,,ll II11 H,ta k.ippa, Ma. lia ( iiiii Laiul, .,isiti kLiik. HluLl hnn VIn Stiul.nt XctiMtiis Ho.ird Student HiiTiiitim-iit McCaffer . John l)a id 4.5 5 H,.1Kai,.,.,1 Dm, Monro, Ml ts|l,l Francis P (,..in.s sdiolarsliip β€” 1. R K .vv H.s,.,,icli Scli,.l.irship I 2. 5 4 I ' lii Fta Sisnia β€” 2. (a ' oii;, ' A ldis,,n B.LVtcr Sdiolaislnp β€” 3. Phi Bi-t.i k.ipp.i - :5 Stmlcnl H,-criiitiii, ' i,t β€” 3 t, Stiidiait , tiMti.s 15,1.11,1 β€” .5 4 MD Siip,.rd.inc,- Rcmsti.itlon ( oninnlt,, ' β€” 2 5 I ' l k.ipp,. Pin β€” I 2 :5,4 Uliit,. H,.,.k C.miinttcc β€” 1 Mc(3nin. Anihonx D. 25 Scllo..| Lane. Hiintiimton N ' t 1171,; u, ( h.iirman Stmlcnt ( i.iilrol β€” 4. .P. j Sol l.il rts β€” 4, ( o-( .iptaiii U. llockiv β€”4. Ph: t:amiiia D,lt.i-( jOk .-r β€” 2,3, (.aiiiina SoclctN β€”2,3, H ( ) 4 ( 12 5 4 Distinmnshcd Mihtarx Stiuk ' nt - 1 I..1, loss,. I 2 s,.nior Mcmher ,il tlic Stvle I iloiis,. - I iisli,i,li,,ii Hull ' s Footh,dl Clnh β€” 1,2,5,4, Siino, H, ' p to th, ' k: cciiti c Comniittco β€” 4 McCi.ll, U. Lane 14 W W aslni,at,.ii Street. Lexiimton. A 244. ' i(l McCnIlimdi, Rohert Carrett. Jr. Idl W esto Dn , . N.isjmll,. | i72il.3 McDimoimh, Mark John L ( ;r.i ers .mil Floiirtown Am ' l ' liil,β€žl,.plii.i l ' 141 IS McDimell. (.eorue Fills 7(11 5 Berkle-. Axe . ( )klali a ( itx ( )k 7 51 Ih De.m s last β€” 1.2.3,4, Honor Roll β€” 2 5. .Mm Beta Psi β€” 3.4. Cdee i:liili β€” I 2 ,5 4 S.Hitherii ( ,,nil,,rt β€” 1.2.3,4. Concert Ciiild β€” 3.4. Mock ( ,.iix,iiti,.ii β€” 2. S|.,;ma Phi Fpsiloii β€” 1.2.3,4 Mc ;oΒ an, Christopher M. S40(l Aidmorc Axe , I ' lnki.l, Iplii,. P 141 IS Smnia Pin Fpsilon. Mock ( oio.ailion ( ok.r.ul,, β€” 2 arsit li.ick - -- 1 2,5,4 ( .i| t.m, 4, Sell,,,. I Hei.iril 111 4(KI M.ter Dash ,111,1 KKI M, t, I H, l.i I ' eaiii Mc(.rath. Stephen Watson 11,51 Norsain H.u.l, Cki,lu ii, ' l ' 14(15.3 arsiti Soccerβ€” 1,2 J UicrosM- β€” 1, ,irMt Lacnisst 2,3,4, arsity Soccer β€” 1.2, Dt-.m List β€” 4 McLauehlin, Jaiiu ' s Andrew I.. u.lt..n, H.Hkl.i B.itlis. A 24475 Mcyuillen, Francis Brian 311 47th Pl.ue. Se.i Me Citx NJ llS24i Mehorter, John Curtis 1 132 Tiee Place, Wrstlielcl NJ (Td ' -X) ss,M,iti.in ol C.ll.-uiate Entrepreneurs 4, l nilxlat In l|ilia β€” 3.4 Melo . John McKa 431 K Second Street, Perr shiEri;, OH 43.5.31 .Merrill. John BnllniKton 12.33 Oakinont H, Charlest,)n. W A 2. il4 Messner, Da id anghn 43S West !,iin Street. Kphr.lta. P 17,-.22 Pcui s l.ist (nil,-,;,. HrpuMie InterAarsitx ( hnsdan Fell.mslnp Mock ( nn eiiti. β€” 2. Intern.itienal ( lul, β€” 4. Independent I ni.m 2.3.4 Michaud. ilkliam Allen i(i2 Khrhardt li.i.ul, I ' .-. Ri er, NV llWh3 Miles. Brian Herndon Hn SMi7 WrmhtsMlle BckIi. NC 2S4S(I Dean s List β€” 1.2 .v L Honor Holl β€” 4 Mock Convention-Missonii β€” 2, Kappa Simiia β€” 1,2,3,4, Food NLuiaeer β€” 2, House M,uiam-r .uid Nice President β€” 3 Militello, Christopher John 7122 Nurtliuiooi St Louis, MO h31(l. ' 5 Mondcllo, Louis 57 Paula (oiut, loirislo M, | (179h(l Dean s List β€” 2.3,4. Honor Roll β€” .5. Phi Cainina Delta β€” 1.2. .5 4. Cockpit M.ui.mer β€” 4. Votnn; RemiUtions Bo.ird ( hauuiau Kencum Monroe. William Lntt. Ill lOS Fo crolt Hoad. Atlanta. CA 511327 Moody, Ron Louis 1 15 Ruseiuai A e Hreuton. AL .36426 Phi K.ta Simiia β€” 1, Alpha Fpsil,,u D.lta β€” 2. R O T C Award lor Academic Achiexement β€” 2. and . uard tor Acldemie E cellenc.- β€” 3. Distnmuished Mditan Student β€” 4. Dean s List β€” 1 2.5.4. Chi Psi β€” 1.2,3,4, Varsity Cross Coinitr β€” 1.2.3,4, Captain β€” 4. Varsit ' Trackβ€” 1,2,3,4. Lni ersit Federation Moody, John Michael, II .β– iS2(l Fosiott. IMer, IX 7.5703 Moose, David Lawrence Rt 1 Box 1431) Natii Bridge, VA 24.57.S Morris, Richard H. 13 Leslie Drixe. Jackson. TN .3S,3I1.5 John L C;hnst Meiuon.il Sji..larsliip Smuia Nu β€” 1,2.3,4, Officer β€” 3 . 4. ,irsit B.isk, tl.all NLuiaeer β€” 1.2.3.4. J L Newell Award lor Student Athletic S.-rMces. Youm; Hepul.lic.nis β€” 1,2 ,5 4, ic. President Ch.uiistrx Seniinar β€” 4 Moxham, Douglas Scott 1(1 I orucll W .i I pper Montclnr, NJ 1)7(143 Deans s List β€” I 2 Honor Boll β€” 4, C.olf Team β€” 1 2.3, Phi Kappa Psi 12 5,4 Social Chairman β€” 3 Nave, James David 147 Newport. Oak Ridge. TN 37S3(1 Dean ' s List. Honor Boll. Sigma Phi Fpsilon-Intramur.d Maii.iger β€” 3 1 F ( Bep β€” 4 J Tennisβ€” 1,2. arsitN Tunis- ,5 B. ' exes (β– ,.β€žt,.r β€” 2 ,5.4 Rin -linn Vlii St.ill Beporter β€” 2.5,4 Nelson. John Charles Post Olhc- Box 21. Nelson. A 24.3S(l Wusitx Baseh.ill l.etterniali β€” 1.2. .5. 4 Mock tonxention β€”2. M,-mlier Dog House. Ch.irte Member β€” 4 New some. Ke in Lax el 1 1(17 West x ,β–  ll.uupio 2 5(iOM Nichols, Daxid Francis 3 ( urtis Street Spnnghelil, ' l (13l,3(, Nichols, William L(mis lit 1 Box 2(il3 FoitXall.x CA .51(1.511 Dc.ms List β€” 2.5 B O T C S, li,)lai-slii| β€” 2.3.4. Tr.ick β€” 1 Mo k I oiixeut β€” PA β€” 2 OCimnell. Joseph Patrick 79(1(1 BiiuuMiic.id,- Ro.ul. Fn leri. k Ml) 217(11 ) ' C(mnm. Daniel Joseph, III 24 N..rlliw..,,d x N i; Atlaiit, I. (. 5(1.5(1 ' -) De.uis List β€” 3 11, .u. Boll β€” 4 lo,k Coii euti,Hi β€” 2. W l.LB β€” 4. C..llege BepuBlKalls β€” 3.4 Oheck. Flic Stexen .32(1 Fli aI.etli Lake Drixe. H.uiiptoii, 23669 Ogden, John R. 42(1 Pin, Dnxe LMKliliiiig A 24,302 Sigiii.i Phi Lpsiloii β€” 1.2.3.4. .Mock C.iuxentlou-WA β€” 2 Oliger. Brian Joseph .36S3 Kings Post B,β€žk Bixei OH 4412(v,5SM De.ins List β€” 1, Vlβ€ž Who β€” 4. B F Lee Besearch Assistant β€” 4. Sigma Delta t:lii β€” 2.3.4. Adluln P β€” 4, Senior J.Mirii.dlsiii . dxisor β€” 4 WLCB β€” 1 2.3.4, Stat Man.iger β€” 4, C.ilile Ch,uiiiel Nine β€” 2.3.4, Slii.leut . ctixities Board β€” 3.4. SAB Board ol Directors β€” 4 Osella. Thomas A. 61 Spicer Hill Bo.id, L.-dx.ird, ( T (16.5.59 D.Mus List β€” 1,2.:5 Oxerstreet. Raxmond Jackscm Rt 1 Box 561, Bedlord, A 24323 Overton. Dahnex PO B.ix 103, rapp.ih.mnock, 225(30 Palattella, John Williams S2 W est Maid, n Lane, Mnnro. (KvlhS Cross Ccuulrx β€” 2,4, ULCR β€” 1. luiiior ' leai Miro.id I iiix.rsilx ol St Andrexxsm Scotkuid Pankow, John Field On. Cedaielill B..a.l, Bil I ' orest, slnille N( β–  2SS(l,i Paone. James A, ,11 14 5 I edar Hill xe Bellexille, NJ 07109 De.in s List β€” ,5. Tleasuier lui Independent t luon β€” 3. P i L β€” 4 Patrick, McCioxxin Ixerson, Jr. 217 L ( .triiiel Dnxe, Mobile. AL 3600S Deans List. Inixersitx Council β€” 4, Phi Delta Thetaβ€” 1.2.3 4 Mo, k ( onxeiiti.iii β€” CA β€” 2, Organi ing Coniiuiltee lor Ducks I nlinuted. luc β€” 5. Sculptiinng β€” 2.3.4 Patterson, Nelson R. Bl 2 B..x 5S9 Molmton. PA 19,34(1 D.sm s List .Old Honor Boll β€” 1 2 3.4. Dora Lewis Scholar β€” 1 2 5 4, Plu Ft.i Sigma β€” 2, Mii Beta Psi β€” 5 Oiuinuii Dell.i Kapp,i β€” 5,4, C -org.- ( β–  Marslhill Scholar - 4 W h, -. W h., β€” 4, Rtmi-lum Fluβ€” 12 5 1 Fditurril Page Fdito, β€”3.4. Editor, 7m ,iJuu-l.m and l.n Vnhtual Hr, β€žh β€” 4. Inter-Narsitx β€” 1.2. .5 4. Ch-eClnh- 1 2 54 ( ..uLict β€” 3,4. Lnixersitx Fe(leiati..ii Big Brothers β€” 2.3.4. College Repnbhcuis β€” 1 2.3,4, Sludeut Lleplioue Union β€” 2.3. Chairman β€” 4 Pearsall. W illard Hall. Ill ,S()13 Fort Caroline Bo.id. J,.cks,,uxill,- FL 32211 Pfaff, t:harles Anthonx, Jr, 433 ,il|,ae PL.ce, Charleston SC 29412 N,ili..ii,il 1 )e,urs List H r Roll β€” 3 D.Mus Lisl β€” 1, 5 1 R O I ( 13, ui ,m Scholarship B,iuger ( ,. β€”12,5,4 β€” (,. ( .iniui,ui,l.a β€”4, F ,-, oHicer β€” 5 Supplx Serge.mt β€” 1, Cok.i (,n.irdβ€” 1 2,5,4 β€” ( ounuau.ler β€” 3. Sigm.i Nu β€” 1,2.5,4, β€” S,,iial Ch.iuiii.iu β€” 1 H.hisc Man.lger β€” 2. Chaplalii β€” 4. lul.l ,us,lx Christian F34lowshipβ€” 12 5 4 Biugbx t Inb - 1 PhiUips, VVinthrop Thorn W,sterii Marx land College, English Department W ,stiiimster l D 21 1.57 Phoenix, Joseph Tlunuas 1717 E 7tli Axe . De C(.) .S02LS Pilard. Derrick (.. 001 u,l,.v , i B,,.i,l N,wt,,wi S,|u.u-e. V 1907.5 . lph.i l ' ,psilon D.lt.i β€” 2, Mii Beta Psi β€” 5. Denis List iAv,- (lul, β€” 1 2,3,4, Lnixersitx I hoiusβ€” 4, Inter arsitx Christi.in Felk.wship β€” 1 Plaisted, Parker Bennett 9006 D.rbxsluie H.,a.l Richmond. A 2.3229 Deans List. Phi Delta Theta β€” 2.3.4. Delta Del Delta β€” 4 Plunimer, William Penn 913 P.nk Blxd . East Lixenio,,l, OH 4592(1 Pollard, William Price 7726 Sxveetbriar Road. Richmond. A 23229 Mock Conxention β€” 2. Phi Delta Theta β€” 1.2.3,4, M.D. Superdance-dancer - I. Fni.iiKf Uiiiiniitl,, M,iβ€žli.-i Preβ€’ llβ€’ . Towni-s (;. Jr. VIVI i K, Tl,n...k llonsl,,n. T 77027 Oniir 1 )rU.i k.ipp.i I ),aii s List ,ltic.ll..l DtMTls l.isl Wβ€ž.s Wll,: k,.p|l.l Mph.l β€” 1 2. 4, ( :l.lss I ' lrslilrllt β€” 1 2 ! t Stllil, Ht ( nlllinl oniTiuttrr β€” 12 1.4 β€” ( h. linn. Ill -- t k.illirk.in, Sli,,l,.|il H,-rniiti.i.Ml sin. I. Ill ll.iM-.( ' iiiillr, ' β€” I M.liol I ' lih, V li.M.AV ( i.llllllltl.-.- β€” i ll.lrk Ir.uil β€” 1,2.. .4 Purve:..-. Alfred AndfT-sun I ' d ,,sUh M.iilr Ri-i-der, Dank-I N. 1744 li..xΒ«.Kβ€žl L.uir, . oM.rtli CA 311101 Footlull β€” 1.2 lii ' iilro. Jame- (..ivciii, Jr. 2ur, .,llli.,ni Sli.-, I, LiMimlnn l 0217i llirrc SrIiol.Msliip β€” 2.:!.4, N..lβ€ž.| L.niiv.it, ' .pluMisi β€” ,5 Hr.iss KiimiiiI,!,. β€” 1,2. I,a.nli.l.i (III lpha β€” 1 2.5 (. Haiiu.rs β€” 2:!. li () 1( β€” 1,2 :5 4, F..iitl.all β€” 4 Rhiiifhart. William . .VIII Hak. , .Sh.,1 1 San KiMMUsio (A 04117 MiiioriK SIn.l.nl sm., lali.Mi β€” 1.2.,! 4 β€” TnaMiiri β€” 1 Spi.ik.i aii.l I ' lnmain Dir.itnr β€” .) In,l,|i,iid.-iil I 111..1, - i 1 Inlniiatlonal Inl. β€” 2. .4 4 lark I. ,1111 I 2 ! t, Slrrrilii;()l), ( (li.iinp β€”21 1 D Snp.nlaiKr ( ' .1111111111. β– .β–  β€” 2 4, S.MH li ( ' .1111111111. ..β–  1. 11 I ),..iii .il Sin. 1, -Ills β€” ,5 M.K-k ( ' ..in. nil. .11 β€” ( ' I ' kitl.iiin (β–  iiilt.-.- β€” 2 Kiihardson. Briiin Scoll 07,1,2 Lak, sli.ir H.uil. I ' .al Mill.. 11 Ml 4S0(,0 Ricliardsiiii. I-.dward Aiimistus S2 Uu , y I l)ii . ' 11. .1.1.11 1. l)l. ,20 RicliardMMl. Tiniotin NU-adi- 111 S. ,iil|,,i,iipl. .11 sti. ' .i i:iiip..ii.i A2:isl7 l,.iii.l..ii 11 lβ€žin. ' s. Ii.,ki, ..1 l..iiT.ihsiii β€” 4. II. 1 li.,11 - 1 l)..,iiis Lisl β€” 1 2 5 4. F..,,tl.all β€” I 2 5,4 Ixni luin Hi, β€” ,5,4, U l.l R β€” ,5,4, M... k ( ..in.iili,.ii - 2 n.-lla I, ,1a S... i.il Fral.iinU β€” 2 β€” 1 ' β€” ,5 β€” I ' ns β€” 4 Riilimaii. Barrv Stuarl 7 ,(ll 1 ). m... 1.,. UK, I 11,5 B.tli.Mla, Ml) 20SI7 Rilev, John Raxniond 2011 S.,iilli l.ai.i... H,β€žβ€žil,,ii | 07011.-, C.il.l.. 11,11.. β€” ,5 I 1,1 n 12 v I nniil-tu,n rin β€”.5 I ihx.imU Hi.i s Fn.iiihl. ' β€” 1.2. .3, 4 .-l.i H.-la 1an β€” 1 2 .3 I R.,lH-rts, Malson l.amar .32211 I ' .n iniiml.in hnr Mliiila CA , (),5,5y Dean ' s LisI β€” 1 2,3,4 M 1) Siip.r.lain. ' β€” C, litter β€” 2, F.i. iliti.s ( .,.( lianinaii β€” 3. Treasurer. Kappa lplia - ,3. F ' .,.,ll,all β€” I Roper, JelTer Alan HI! 2.3 H., HIS, I ' .ir,. Ijanle, 1 I7S02 Riimn. Jolin Wakefield 7000 N.β€žlli sli.,,,. H.,,,,) .,il.,lk. 2330.5 Stiulellt Reerintinellt β€” 2.3.4. K.i|,p,i lplia β€” 1.2.3.4 β€” 1 ' β€” 4 Hepresi-ntaliv t.. F.u.ilt C.iinniittee .in (.. ' .uirses and Deur,-,- β€” 3 Rush. William S.W. 4(HI9 Creell Clade H.,a,l. l ' h.β€ž ' ni . Ml) 21131 Stiuleut HeeriutliU ' lit β€” 4, Faeriiss, ' β€” 1,2,3.4, Ph] Kapjia Sii;nia β€” 1.2.3.4 β€” S... i.il ( liairniaii β€” .3. S|..;iiia S.,ei,t β€” .5.4. β€” P β€” I. M.nk ( .,ii ,nti,,n β€” 2 Sa, laiis Una Int. inlinl.- Ciinlia M.ii.v. ' s 20(i, Hi. .1.- laii.n.. 20720 Hra ll Sampson. Mark Terrell .3.509 H.tin llill 1!.. .,i-|.,lk, , 2, ' i502 Sanders, J,ihn Stewart 0705 Xm.s ( ..ml HalnlalKl..,M, Ml) 211.!! 1! (I 1 ( S, |,.,l,ii sliip 2,3.4. D.Miis l.isl M 1) Siip.i.lan..- SI. ' .Tiiii; (.iiiinimit,-. ' β€” 2. .5. M., k ( ..in. iil β€” 2 ,5 H ( ) 1 Plat.i,iu l,,-.i,l.r β€” 4, l,aiiil..la ( hi lpha - 2, ,5, I ai-sil F.,.,ll,all β€” 2, , ' 5 4 β€” Ml C.Mil.-n-ne,- 2ii.l I ' .mi - 4 Sapp, Jeffrey Alan ,301 Htgh Stn-et M.innl II. NJI llSOdO Sehreiher, J. Seott k.,Is.iii II..iis,, UilhalnsHiu. A 251S5 |,a.,,,sseβ€” 1.2 Seoll, Keith George 319 S,,iilh.l.,Β« n H...1.I l,l.β€ž.l ll.iil...r N ' l 11743 IX-an ' s l.isl I,.,, n.ss. ' 1,2 i I S,H,.i - 1,2.3. AC E β€” 4, Di.i; II., use β€” 4 Shaffer. Andrew F. Rt 2 H,, 304 l,,- ui.4t ,ii. . 211.50 Shellon, Barrett Clinton 2114 Strait., nl Pl.u,-. S F D.i.itni. 1, 5.5001 Shepherd, (ierald D 1.50 Plaiitati,,ii. F.Lin.l MS :5,S7.5(i D.aiis l.ist β€” ll.,ii.,r H..11 β€” 12 .5 4 .Ml.rnal. ' riiiinan Scholar β€” 2. Pin Fl.i S1.4111., β€” I H F I,..- l!.-s,.a,,li Seholai β€” 1.2 C.ll Lmiii β€” .5 4 Simkins, .Nathaniel Turner 7 lii.iian ( i,.k H..a.l Aiiunst.i C ,50909 Slack, John Mark, l 009 .,.,.l l!,,.β€žl ( :li,ii Lsl.,., ' ' 2.5:502 Hiisli H,β€ž,k Ph.,t.,mapln F.hl.ii β– - 1,2. ( ' Β« l Pli.,l.,m.,pli.a β€” ' 5, M.β€žk ( :.,in.iiti,β€ži - 2, Pi Kappa Alpha β€” 1.2. .5.4. β€” P β€” 4. Ski Irani 2.3.4 Smith, Karl Bartholomew 5.S(, I mil,. ( ,,..k Din. Hnnnimhani. Al :5.5220 D.aii s l.isl II. .n,,, |i,,l|. Phi Fl.i Simna Phi 15,-ta Kappa, W lA H β€” 1,2.3,4, ( l.issu.il MiisK Din-eforβ€” 1 2.3β€” Pi.β€ž,;i,ini Dii,,l.,i - 4 (:,.ii.,il (.iiil.l β€” 3.4 P β€”4, lnl,riiatl,,ii,il ClnHM.,.!.] I N β€” 3 (German Cliil, β€” 4 Smith, David anm. , Jr. ISlll Mavhank lli.4liwax ( :li,irl. ' sl..n SC 29412 Spear, John Christopher 171 Crepe M rtle Circle. W iiisl.,ii.S.il,ni. NC 27106 Two Year H (I T C S. Ii.,l.,rsliip β€” 3,4. Lambda Chi Alpha β€” 1.2 β€” Social Ch.urinan β€” 3 β€” P β€” 4. R ( ) T C β€”2.3,4. Rangers β€” 2.3.4 .Mock C.in eiiti,β€ži β€” 2. Jnni.ir arsil Soccer β€” 1 β€” Caplain Speed, Stewart Rh nies 4100 Kastoxir Drnc. |.i.ks,.i, MS .5921 1 Sparks. James Krnest Ht 1 Bo. .575. Natural BrRl, e, A 2457.S Spilsl.nrs. rhomas (Ahhon .5S Ha Cicsl, lliilillimt..ii Nl 1174,5 llisloix Papir Piililishcd β€” 2 (.!.β– ,β–  Cliil, β€” 1,2.3,4, l,incrsit ( horns β€” 4, Phi K.ipp.i Psi β€” 1 β€” I ,.Msiii.-i β€” 2.3.4. WIA H β€” 4. M 1) Snp,.|,|.β€žKf ( ' ..iiiinitlf. ' β€” 3 Sprnnt. David Worth. Jr. P (β€’ 15., 7.S2. Leviimton. 241,5(1 D.aii s list β€” 3. 1β€ž, Wlu, β€” 4. R F I,..- H.s,aicli Assistant β€” 3. iiHi;-(i Β i rill β€” 2.3. Cilin β€” Pli..l.,..;raph, ' i β€” 2.5. β€” M.uia..;iim Fditor β€” .3. β€” Fdil.,r-iii-(liRl β€” 4. Slndent Actnities Board β€” 3.5. β€” Direilor ..1 Films .md Special Exents β€” 4. W 1,1 R β€” 1 2.3.4. β€” Operations Manauer β€” 2 β€” rhinl Far β€” 4 Cal.le nine β€” 2.3. Puhlicatlons Bo.ird β€” 4 5, l 1) Siip.i.laiicc β€” 1. Set Desmner lor i ' liipl. ' I, l..rl..iis β€” 4 .nid The Cott.ice ' β€” 3 Si|uires. Jason Rodnev 301 Suit; Snm Road, ll.,is,h..i.ls NV 14345 SI. John. Andrew Ardnm 204 I iii.in Slicrt N . C.incoi.l, N( 2.S025 H F SchoKir β€” 4. Hon.ir Roll β€” .3.4. .I., H.t.i 1,111 β€” Pledne Father, ACM Promainiinim ' r.Mii, Staehura. C. Michael 472 Hull X.ill.x H...1.I. Carlisle P 17015 Scnpps.||.,ward J nalisin Sell, .larsliip β€” 1.2.3.4. D.ans l.ist β€” 1,2,5,4. (liiiicr.,11 D.lta K.ippa β€” 4, Kiiii;- ,β€žβ€ž rhi β€” Assisl.uil Sp.,rts Fdilor β€” 1 β€” Sp.irts Fdiio, β€” 2,3 4, ( ,i i β€” Sp.,its Fdil.ir β€” 2 5 I I rmiins β€” 2, W LFH β€” 1,2.3.4. Sisinia D.ll.i Chi β€” 2.5 Slahel, Harr Charles.Jr. 1424 Jefierson Ave , New Orle.uis. FA 70115 De.ui slast. Cum Laude, Honor Roll. M.ick Cβ€žnventi,,n β€” FL β€” 2, SiΒ«nia . lpha Fpslloii Stanford, limothv l pleurove 019 W hitirm A Iowa Cit , I A 5224(1 Slenfcl, Charles Bradford 14705 Spriie,; M.vidows Dm. ' D.iiii.sh.vMi MD20S7I 1 ),β– . ins Fist β€” 2.3,4, 11 Roll β€” 3.4. ( .,11,-uc R.-pnliluans β€” 1.2.3.4. M,β€žl,.l I N β€” 2.3,4. AC F β€” 4. M,,ck C.m ention Steuart. Bradlev Curtis (5005 Brookside Dri ( li, ( Ims, Ml) 20SI5 Stites. (;rei;or John. Jahba 7523 Trails Kiid. J.i.ks.iiiMll., FF 52211 De.ins last β€” 1. J So 1. Wirioiis TluMtrKvd PriKliiitKiris β€” 3,4. Simn.i t:hi Rush Cli.iirni.m β€” 3.4. β€” Snil.il ChairiiKiii β€” 3 Strader, James Jacob 2(12 M.iiii Kntraiut- Drive PitLslnirgh. P. 1522.S :u List β€” 1.2.3.4. Rtnfi-tum Phi β€” News Kilitor β€” 4. St.ifl Hcpurlrr β€” 3,4. WLUR β€” ProdiKtioii Clurl β€” 2.D J β€” 1, 2. .14 Kappa . lplia β€” 1.2.3.4 Strickland, Robt-rt Nealt- 21(1 Clnit.i .β– kntonin T 7S21 i Surfact. Janifs Frank. Ill 44(,1 l..rMii H,u,l Jacksonvillf, FL ,32210 Fo,,thall β€” 1,2,3. β€” ( aptain β€” 4. Pbi Delta Theta β€” 1.2.3.4. Sinnia Soei.-t β€” 2.3,4. Barbell Club β€” 3.4 Svalina, Samuel Staton 117 Stu.irt Idwiie D Spsh. Pnt., Beaufort. S( 299(12 Ib.iK.r Roll - Dean ' s List β€” 1.2.3.4. (.Iniierdii Delta kappa Distnigiiished Militan Student β€” 4, Reserve Scholarship β€” 3. Honor Graduate ol SS R () , d aiue Camp. Stuilriit eti itirs Board β€” Pubheations Cliainiian β€” 4. Iiit, ilraternitN Ci Rush C:hairinaii β€” 4. H U T ( β€” ,5 β€” CmU- Batalhon Lxeiutixe ( )flker β€” 4. ( In Psi β€” . Instructor β€” 2. Social Chairman β€” 3. Coll 1 r c lUlKll t I ' led.J Templeton, John Douglas 42 jS Dumhartom Plact Charlotte. NC 28211 TenEyck. Kirk Fariss S22.5 Brill Road. Cincinnati. OH 4.5243 Thomas. Timoths Duane 11(12 Mission Dri e. Costa Mesa. C. 9262(1 Thompson. James Cla . sKKKa xe Fraiiklort. KV 4(l(i(.ll Tollison. Boycc Michael 2(IS M.in . nne Street. Easlex. SC 29(v4(l Treat, Robert Edwin RFD 1 Box 1(.1.3(). .Mancheste Center. T H.52.5.5 Van Dcr Meid. Peter Michael 1227 W i Drive. Wchstir. V 14.5S(1 Vavvier. Matthew Rapp 514(1 Sunset Drixc, Kansas Cltx. MO 4112 Pi Kappa . lplia intramural Chairman β€” 1.2.3.4. WLIR β€” 1.2.3.4. Squash Club β€” 4. Fnsbee Club β€” President and Co-Founder β€” 1.2.3.4.fiing-(i m Wii β€” Photographer β€” 3. Junior Year in France espoli. . lbert Benjamin 5 Mont . e . Dix IlilK NY 1174fi M D Superdance InxoKcment Committe β€” 3.4, Student .advisor lor . ccounting Vidunas, Joseph Edgar 119 Commonwealth Carcle Charlottesxille. A 229(11 Departmental Schnl.usln m Ceologx β€” 1. | Lacrosse β€” 1.2. .Mock Conxentlon β€” 2. Lexington Big Brothers β€” 4 Beta Theta Pi β€” 1.2.3.4. WVVL Ceologlc Socletv β€” 4 Mllamater. Edwin James ,5 Clipping Tree Lan. Iluiil ,dl Ml) 21(1,3(1 Vogt. Stephen E. 2115 Drummond Ko.id Baltunure.MD 2122S l)e,in s Lis! llonoilv.ll 1)( M.irathoii β€” 2,4, C S Ar.m irl.onie School β€” 2 FIJI Fort l,aiiderd..le Team β€” 3 4 Fiaukic β€” i Senior Meml.,r ol the Stx Ic llous, β€” 4 Wargelin. ClilTord Frank (.2SS Hills Drive, Birmmgh.un Ml 4S(ll(l Phi Beta Kappa β€” 3, Phi Beta Kappa Sophomore Award β€” 2, Phi I ' .t.i Sigma 2, The Robert Alexander Scholarship β€” 2 llie Jam D Davidson Scli,.larship β€” 3,, Ilie Fli abetli B Cariett Scholarship in lllstorv β€” 3, The lames S W.iod Pri . ' Ill (.crin.m β€” I. The Jim Stump Prize Ccrinaii β€” 2. Dc.ni s List β€” 1.2.3.4. Honor Boll - 1.2.3.4, Clcc Club β€” 1.2.3.4 Weaver, Michael . .5(H1.S Crcen Acres court. Metane.LA 7(KI(I3 Admimstr.itloii Departmental Avcird β€” 4. Honor Roll β€” 2.3. Dean s List β€” 1.2β€ž Mock Convention β€” MD β€” 2 Weinberg, Andrew S. 1(191 Algompun Road Nortolk. A 23,5(15 Dean s List β€” 2,4, Cmve: Council β€” 4, Beta Theta Pi β€” 1,2,3, β€” Bush Chairman β€” 4, P Squash (.:hib β€” 3,4, C:art Sviiiposmni-4 Whann. Robert James. I 59(1(1 Prvtaiii.i Drive Nov Orleans, LA 7(1115 OlliKroli Delta K.ijipa, Student Recruitment β€” 2,3, β€” ( li.miiiau β€” 4, M S Superdance β€” 1,2,3, β€” ( o-Chairman β€” 4, Katliekon β€” 3,4, Drama, Dc.lth Knocks Phi Sigmaβ€” 1,2,3,4 Wheeler. John MacGregor ddl F.nr Anniston, AL 3(i2(ll Whelan, Joseph Gibson, HI 725 York v 1 Plac. Louisville, KY 4(1223 R F Rese.ircli Sdiol.u β€” 3 4 Honor Roll.Chi Psi β€” 1,2, β€” Sec β€” 3, β€” Pres β€” 4, College Republicans β€” 3, I FC Representative, Phillip Spencer Circle β€” 1.2.3.4 Whitaker. Clinton Robert 201 State Street, Bo..neville, MS 3SS29 National Merit Scholar, Hono Boll β€” 3,4, R F Lee Research Scholar β€” 4. Ho,β€ž,rs Cmdldate 111 Computer Science. Zeta Beta Tail β€” I. J Ofhcer. Student Computer Operator β€” 1.2.3.4. Microcomputer Consultant β€” 3. Student Member ol the . ssociation for Computing Machinen. β€” 3,4, MtK-k Convention β€” 2, Caimputer Programming Consultant β€” 4, Co-Captam of WM, Programinmg Team, International Club White. Carl F. 53 Kendall Hill Road, Sterling MA 01565 RE, Lee Research Scholar β€” 2.3, Alpha Epsilon Delta β€” 2. Paul Brovver. M D Scholarship i Biologx β€” 3. Honor Roll. Deans List. Published Article. Wi ' l.JtmnullofSiunn- β€”3 White. C:hristopher Harris .502 Sherxvood Bo.k1 .vcport. LA 7110(1 Deans List β€” 1.2.3 4 WM. Beprescntative, Fmorx Cmversitv Business Competition β€” 4. Stmlcnt itivitics Board β€”3.4. Mock C:onventioii β€” 2. K.ipp.i Sigma β€” 1 2. β€” rrcasiirer β€” ,5,4, Cold ( h.rk Coiiiuuttie S, ( rctap. - White. James Jones. 2924 St Aiulrews Lane, Charlotte, NC 244,5(1 Dean s List llonoi Roll β€” 1, Mock Convention β€” N(. Lreasurer β€” 2 White. James . llen. Jr. 4509 Alt.i ist.i Lane Dallas. TX 7.5229 Wilkinson. Donald McLean. Ill 20(1 Last 71st Street. N,w V.lk N ! 10021 Willett. Joseph Jackson. I 97(1 Park Av, , Ni loik. N ' t |0(12S W illiams. Cranston Reade .3407 West Bulge Circle, Ho.iunke A 24014 Phi Beta K.ippa β€” 3, Omicron Delta K.ippa β€” 4, Phi Ft.i Sigma β€” 2, Pi Sigma Alpha β€” 3, N..tional De.m s List M.magmg Editor of Rina-tuni rhi β€” 2,3,4. Man.iging Editor ,4 U i-L ,hluull IW, ,ru β€” 3.4. Tre.isurer ol ( ollege licpublicins β€” 1.2.3,4, Mock tamventioii β€” 2, Stutleiit Advisor lor Politics Departmcnl Wilson. Christopher , lc ander 3(i2 ( aspariis av Flkton, NH) 21921 Honor Boll, De.m s List β€” 1.2,3.4, Phvsics Dep.Β rtineiital Scholarslu| β€” 44. L, McClaughlni Schohrrship β€” 4, Fo.itb.ill β€” 1,2,3,4, Delta Del Delta β€” 4, Delt.i lota Soci.il Fraternitv - 3,4, PresnU-iit β€” 4, Social Chairman β€” 3 Woodham. David Hulton 954 llaimck Drive, N W Atlanta, CA ,30327 Yates. William Clerson 2070 O.iktoii Clen Driv. lelili.i 221S(1 Yonko. Lance Thompson .532 Eh abctb Lake Hampton, A 23li09 York. Timothv Liam 59 W arxvick Boad, Bockx Centre, NY 1 157(1 IMedgr NLister and Socud Chainn.m Zeta Beta laii β€” 2 3,4 Zahn. Richard William. Jr. 2035 Sunset Point, irgiiiia Bc.kIi, a 254.54 Football β€” 12, Mock Convention β€” 2, B.iscImH β€” 1,2,3,4, C.ipt.nn β€” 4, Senior Miiiibcr Dog House Zola. William Francis 73 Pokonoket Ave , Sudburv, MA 0177(1 299 Our Final Comments . . . to those deserving thanks As you finish looking through your 1986 Cahjx, we hope you have enjoyed seeing what we beUeve to be a thorougli representation of hfe in Big Lex, as well as the world that surrounded us this past year. There are many people who deserve credit and thanks for making your 86 Calyx a reality. To name a few, the Commerce School staff (picture helow) really saved our lives (not to mention your book) the week after graduation when the power was cut off in the University Center, by providing us a room and access to it, so that we could finish the book. We 11 never forget tlie all-nighters in room 121, and calling on Security Guard Steve Tomlinson (and his flashlight) so we could rummage through a dark building and office during the evenings. Our photographers, Patrick Hinley (WPH), Da id Sprunt (DWS), Cotton Puryear (CP), Steve Sadler (SS), Matt Horndge (MH), Perry Hayes (PSH). and Scott Farrell (SJF ), deserve lots of credit and thanks. Others who helped in completing the Calyx, and also making our last week in Lexington an enjoyable and successful one are; Dean Atwood, Ms. Zeigler, Ms. Mohler, Carol Calkins, Carolyne Mayo, David Sprunt, Mike Allen, Charlie Garrison, Mark Mandel, McClain Stradtner, Dean John, Dean Huntley, Dean Murphy, Katie Goodman, the Admissions Staff, Frank Parsons, Professor Dean, Pat Larew, Dr. Turner, Mrs. Atkins, Mrs. Lowery, John Nusbaum, and Professor McCaughrin. We are also grateful to the many contributors from our staff, patrons, and benefactors, and hope they will continue their generous support of the Calyx. Best of luck to this year ' s graduates in all their future endeavors, and best wishes to our er own class of 87 for a successful senior vear. Dennis M. Francis Charles C Nusbaum, jr. Editors in Chief 300


Suggestions in the Washington and Lee University - Calyx Yearbook (Lexington, VA) collection:

Washington and Lee University - Calyx Yearbook (Lexington, VA) online collection, 1983 Edition, Page 1

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Washington and Lee University - Calyx Yearbook (Lexington, VA) online collection, 1984 Edition, Page 1

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Washington and Lee University - Calyx Yearbook (Lexington, VA) online collection, 1985 Edition, Page 1

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Washington and Lee University - Calyx Yearbook (Lexington, VA) online collection, 1987 Edition, Page 1

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Washington and Lee University - Calyx Yearbook (Lexington, VA) online collection, 1988 Edition, Page 1

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Washington and Lee University - Calyx Yearbook (Lexington, VA) online collection, 1989 Edition, Page 1

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