TheSewanee News
MARCH 1978
LAND-USE
STUDY BEGINS
The University of the South has be-
gun a comprehensive land-use study
of its 10,000 acre domain, a study
that could lead to significant
changes in forest management,
housing practices, energy produc-
tion, and business development.
Almost no aspect of land use
at Sewanee will be untouched by
the study.
Charles O. Baird, chairman of
the forestry and geology depart-
ment, is coordinating the study, .
which was requested last fall by the
interim administration and the
Board of Regents.
Dr. Baird said the basic pur-
pose of the study is to gather in-
formation that will allow the re-
gents and the administration to
make more informed decisions in
the future about the management
of the domain.
An important aspect of the
study is that as many people as
possible will be involved. Twenty-
one technical advisory committees
are being formed from Sewanee
citizens and business people, facul-
ty, students, staff, and alumni.
These committees will be
gathering information on topics
as diverse as agriculture, historic
and scenic areas, wildlife manage-
ment, athletics and outdoor recrea-
tion, and cemeteries on the domain.
An advisory board will repre-
sent such agencies as the Tennessee
Department of Conservation, the
Tennessee State Planning Office,
and the Tennessee Valley Authority.
A TVA Townlife group is be-
ing asked to study Sewanee's busi-
ness area and make recommenda-
tions for long-range development.
Finally, behind these commit-
tees is a steering committee made
up of Arthur M. Schaefer, Univer-
sity provost, and the administrative
heads of each of the three Univer-
sity academic divisions.
The land-use study is being
built on work done between 1972
and 1976, during the administra-
tion of Dr. J. Jefferson Bennett.
However, the present study will
have a much broader scope than
those efforts that produced the
1,000-acre facilities siting plan.
The new study also is being
dovetailed into another study of
waste-water treatment and disposal
on the mountain where there are
no free-flowing streams year around.
Dr. Baird said the Environ-
mental Protection Agency is being
approached about the possibility of
using the waste water to irrigate
and fertilize forest plantations. The
timber grown could possibly be
used as a partial energy source for
heating and cooling University
buildings.
The land-use study also will be
concerned with timber production
and forest management in presently
heavily forested areas of the do-
main. The regents already have set
aside Thumping Dick Cove, an area
of virgin timber, as a protected area.
But Dr. Baird said the Univer-
sity has other areas of very valuable
timber and must be able to make
intelligent decisions about whether
to manage and sell the timber or
maintain those areas of the domain
for recreation or wildlife and biolo-
gical study.
One such critical area is about
500 acres in Hawkins Cove, below
Morgan's Steep where Bridal Veil
Falls is located.
Dr. Baird said the timber in
that area has been valued at more
than $100,000 but that sale of the
timber might be in conflict with
other land uses such as hiking and
scenic enjoyment.
Interest also has been express-
ed in recent years in the plans to
build an apartment complex for the
elderly. At least an initial purpose
would be to provide a suitable
housing alternative for widows who
are residing in large houses central
to the University campus.
Dr. Baird said he and the ad-
ministration want as much input
as possible, including concerns of
alumni and their possible interests
in camping or recreational areas.
A study report is expected to
be completed this summer.
Ayres Praises Campus Support
Acting Vice-Chancellor Robert M.
Ayres, speaking at opening con-
vocation in January, urged contin-
ued efforts to hold down costs at
Sewanee, noted plans to broaden
the athletic program, and thanked
the students, faculty, and staff for
suggestions given the interim ad-
ministration.
While reiterating his state-
ment of last fall that the University
is in a survival mode, Mr. Ayres said
there is hope for balancing the bud-
get even this fiscal year.
"Although the budget for this
year had already been adopted
when I arrived July 1 (and we were
budgeted to have a deficit of $110,
000), I think many of us felt that
to add a fifth year to a stream of
budget deficits would be most dis-
couraging to our long-term hopes
and dreams for Sewanee.
"An urgent request was made
to cut costs and to look again at
our absolute needs with an effort
to balance this budget now and to
plan for a balanced budget next
year as well," he said.
Mr. Ayres added that the re-
sponse from the faculty and staff
has been gratifying. He also said
that the effectiveness of Arthur M.
Schaefer, the interim provost, in
handling the budget process has en-
abled the vice-chancellor to spend
more time seeking financial support.
In a brief discussion of the
athletic department and coaching
changes, Mr. Ayres said plans are
being made to add a third woman
to the coaching staff.
Cap and Gown
Regents Approve
$12 Million Budget
The University Board of Regents
approved a $12.1 million balanced
budget for the next fiscal year
when it met February 23-24 in
Sewanee.
The budget will be presented
to the Board of Trustees April 20.
The total represents a $500,000
increase over the current year and
contains a contingency reserve of
$100,000, the first such reserve in
several years.
John W. Woods, the board
chairman, said the regents "have a
good feeling" about what is being
accomplished by the interim admin-
istration in a time of financial
concern.
"I think professional manage-
ment is showing results in an
academic environment," he said.
"Tough choices are being made."
Robert M. Ayres, the acting
vice-chancellor, who joined Mr.
Woods for a press conference after
the meeting, said the regents also
voted to give special attention to
the area of deferred giving. He said
a director of deferred giving will be
employed without increasing the
development department budget.
In addition he said : "We con-
tinue to want the best football pro-
gram possible, but desire to strength-
en other programs such as soccer,
track, and tennis."
He said such changes must
still be made within the constraints
of a very tight budget.
S MPOSIUM
H JORS CAMP
"Chemistry in American Life" is
the topic of a symposium to be pre-
sented April 7-8 in Sewanee by
chemistry department alumni in
honor of Dr. David B. Camp. Dr.
Camp retires at the end of this year
after teaching chemistry at Sewanee
for 24 years.
Organizer and moderator of
the sympoisum is Dr. Joel L. Price,
a 1963 alumnus who won a Rhodes
Scholarship and remained at Ox-
ford to earn a Ph.D. in neuroana-
tomy. He is now associate pro-
fessor of anatomy at Washington
University Medical School in St.
Louis.
The opening address will be
given by Dr. D. Stanley Tarbell,
Distinguished Professor of Chemis-
try at Vanderbilt University. Dr.
Tarbell taught at the University
of Rochester when Dr. Camp was
in graduate work there. The talk
will trace the history of graduate
organic chemistry training in the
United States and will include some
industrial applications originated in
this area of the country.
Among other speakers will be
Dr. William R. Nummy, C'47, and
Dr. George A. Brine, C'67. Dr.
Nummy is corporate director of
pharmaceutical research and de-
velopment for Dow Chemical Cor-
poration in Midland, Michigan. He
will speak on "Appropriate Tech-
nology for Developing Nations."
He discussed this topic in February
at the annual meeting of the Ameri-
can Association for the Advance-
ment of Science in Washington. Dr.
Nummy and Dr. Camp were gra-
duate school colleagues at the
University of Rochester.
Dr. Brine is research chemist
of the Chemistry and Life Science
Division of the Research Triangle
Institute in North Carolina. He will
talk about his work for the National
Institute on Drug Abuse.
Other alumni will present
talks on their careers in chemistry
and related fields. One of these
presentations will be on a day in
the life of a first-year medical
student as experienced by Michael
Kaplon, a 1977 alumnus attending
Vanderbilt medical school. William
S. Caldwell, C'76, will share "Re-
flections of a Second-year Graduate
Student." Bill is involved in enzyme
work at the University of Wisconsin.
Other speakers and their subjects
are: Dr. Samuel P. Marynick, C'67,
of Baylor University Medical
Center — neuro-endocrinology;
Dr. Peter Stacpoole, C'67, of Van-
derbilt School of Medicine— dia-
betic response to dichloroacetate
treatments; Dr. Richard West, C'55,
of Imperial Chemical Industries-
chemistry of pyrethroids.
The final event of the sympo-
sium will be a round-table discus-
ion of the place of liberal arts in
the education of the scientific and
technical worker. Presiding over
the panel discussion will be Dr.
Robert P. Glaze, C'55, vice-president
for research and graduate studies at
the University of Alabama at Bir-
mingham. Panelists will include Dr.
Jerry A. Snow, C'61, of Washington,
D.C., who is in private cardio-
vascular practice; Dr. James S.
Mayson, C'59, a physician in New-
port Beach, California; and Zachary
A. Coles, C'59, of Pfizer Chemicals
in Greensboro, North Carolina.
Dr. Edward Kirven is in
charge of the Sewanee arrange-
ments for the symposium. Dr.
Kirven, C'68, who earned his Ph.D.
at the University of Minnesota, is
now an assistant professor of chem-
istry in the college.
Dr. Camp has taught some 100
chemistry majors, and has taken
llllllllll I
Committee to Study Athletics
Robert M. Ayres, the acting vice-
chancellor, announced in January
the formation of a special commit-
tee to "make a study of athletics at
Sewanee and present an evaluation
to the Board of Regents."
The committee was formed
following a request from Walter
Bryant, University athletic director.
Coach Bryant said he asked for a
committee initially to study the
football program and to evaluate
the costs and the needs.
vigorous interest in the many pre-
med and engineering students in
addition to those in the chemistry
department. Of the chemistry ma-
jors about 90% have gone on to
Ph.D. and M.D. careers.
"I would hope for a reaffir-
mation of the football program,"
Coach Bryant said, "but it is the
most expensive sport in terms of
salaries, travel, and equipment. If
we are going to have a football pro-
gram, we are going to have to pay
for it."
Arthur M. Schaefer, Univer-
sity provost, will chair the com-
mittee. Other members include
Albert Roberts III, president of the
Associated Alumni; James Gentry,
an alumnus and member of the Uni-
versity Advisory Committee on
Athletics; Stephen Puckette, dean
of the College; Douglas Seiters,
dean of men; Mary Sue Cushman,
dean of women; Anita Goodstein
and the Rev. William A. Griffin,
faculty members; Amy St. John
and Tommy Williams, students, and
William U. Whipple, vice president
for development. Coach Bryant is
an ex officio member.
— Restful Surroundings
z Stimulating Discussions
z Separate Children's Program
Z Hiking
E Caving
E Canoeing
E Golf
E Tennis
z Swimming
z Horseback Riding
z Concerts
E CHARLES HARRISON
= HENRIETTA CROOM
= DALE RICHARDSON
E JOSEPH CUSHMAN
S ROBERT KEELE
E GERALD SMITH
= JANE FORT =
E $210 each - tuition, room, board E
E $130 each dependent =
E $85 tuition only Z
| JULY 3-15 |
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SEWANEE
SPINIER
SEMIHAR
Music Center
Attraction Plus
Another tuneful season of the Se-
wanee Summer Music Center will
begin June 24 and continue through
July 30, again under the direction
of Martha McCrory. Some 200
young musicians from all over this
country and beyond are expected
to attend.
The String Camp for younger
musicians ages 9-12, held at Sewa-
nee Academy last summer for the
first time, was so popular it is being
continued, with the dates being
June 25 through July 2. Dr. and
Mrs. James Marable are the direc-
tors.
Four illustrious guest conduc-
tors will lead the Center's three or-
chestras in learning and concerts.
Henri Temianka, conductor of the
California Chamber Orchestra and
former leader of the Paganini String
Quartet, will return, as will Ameri-
go Marino, conductor of the Bir-
mingham Symphony. Arthur Wino-
grad, conductor of the Hartford
Symphony and former cellist with
the Juilliard String Quartet, will be
one of the guests. Rounding out the
conducting staff will be Hugh Wolff,
young conductor from the Peabody
Conservatory.
The Center will climax with
its celebrated four-day festival, fea-
turing several different concerts
each day. Among the Specialties
looked forward to each year are
the student concerto program, the
outdoor chamber concerts, and the
finale with the three orchestras
combined.
This is the Center's 22nd year
in its present form. It has always
been concerned with encouraging
and developing young instrumen-
talists. Participants practice many
hours each day on classic orchestra
and chamber music, leavening the
work with outdoor recreation on
the volleyball court, swimming
beach, and hiking trails.
Instruction is by a faculty of
professional musicians drawn from
orchestras all over the United
States. Included in the 30-member
TheSewanee News
Latham Davis, Editor
John Bratton, A'47, C'51, Alumni Editor
Gale Link, Art Director
Published quarterly by the Office of
Information Services for the
UNIVERSITY OF THE SOUTH
including SCHOOL OF THEOLOGY,
COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES,
SEWANEE ACADEMY
Free distribution 24,000
Second-class postage paid at
Sewanee, Tennessee 37375
COVER: Ellis Misner, C'77, battles
white water in one of many Sewanee
Outing Club activities described on
page 12. (photo by Doug Cameron)
TOP VACATION ON THE MOUNTAIN
"It's the best way I know to keep
up with the 20th Century and have
fun too.'
That casual comment by an
alumnus points out the two fea-
tures of the Sewanee Summer Se-
minar— a vacation for the whole
family and informative and infor-
mal seminars with top lecturers on
the University faculty.
The Summer Seminar is open
to non-alumni, as well as alumni, in
a one-week package (July 9-15).
For all members of the family
there will be golf, tennis, swimming,
some planned hikes, and "tame"
cave exploration. The area holds a
variety of opportunities for side
trips.
One of the most popular of
the summer lecturers may be Charles
T. Harrison, a distinguished Univer-
sity professor of English for many
years and former dean of the Col-
lege. He's remembered by alumni
for his excellent lectures.
Dr. Harrison's topic is titled
"In Praise of C Major," not as un-
usual a subject for an English pro-
teaching staff are long-time Sewa-
nee Music Center instructors Mar-
jorie Tyre, formerly harpist with
the Philadelphia Orchestra; Patrick
McGuffey, principal trumpet of the
Nashville Symphony ; Earnest Harri-
son of LSU, nationally known as a
teacher of oboe; violist Henry Bar-
rett of the University of Alabama;
and Aaron and Mary Lou Krosnick
of Jacksonville, violin and piano
team returning after a summer's
leave of absence.
Concert violinist Kishiko Su-
zumi, who dazzled Sewanee au-
diences in last year's concerts, will
return this year after competing in
the Tchaikowsky Competition.
Pianist Julian Martin will also be a
visiting instructor, and many other
skilled performers and teachers will
enrich the staff of the Music Center.
Continuing the musical theme
on campus even after the Music
Center ends, the National School
Orchestra Association will hold its
1978 meeting in Sewanee August
1-7.
fessor as one might think, consider-
ing that Dr. Harrison also formerly
taught in the music department and
is an authority on Mozart. He is
currently a Brown Foundation Fel-
low in philosophy.
The other lecturers and their
topics include;
Henrietta B. Croom, assistant
professor of biology, "The Chimera
Raises its Ugly Head : the Contro-
versy over Recombinant DNA."
Dale Richardson, associate
professor of English, "Poetry in the
Post-Modern South."
Joseph D. Cushman, professor
of history, "Thoughts on Recon-
struction—Recent Historical Inter-
pretations."
Robert L. Keele, professor of
religion, "From Darwin to Dallas,"
neo-fundamentalism as it affects
recent school-book controversies
and contemporary currents in
American religion.
Jane B. Fort, assistant pro-
fessor of Spanish, "Latin America:
Who's in Charge Here?"
The cost, covering tuition,
room, and meals, is $210 for each
participant, $130 for dependents,
and $85 for tuition only.
Further information or appli-
cations may be obtained by writing
Dr. Edwin Stirling, Department of
English, University of the South,
Sewanee, Tennessee, 37375.
History Search
In his work on a history of the Uni-
versity's School of Theology, the
Rev. Donald S. Armentrout, asso-
ciate professor of ecclesiastical his-
tory, says he would like to have
help in locating copies of two
periodicals, which have been dis-
continued.
Dr. Armentrout explains: "I
have discovered that beginning in
about 1937, the Middler Class at
St. Luke's Hall published the St.
Luke's News. I have located Vol. II,
No. 6, and Vol. Ill, No. 1. If any-
body anywhere has copies, I would
deeply appreciate having them for
my work on the history, and I
New Faculty
Five new faculty members are on
campus this semester either in
permanent positions or as visiting
professors.
Rodney A. Shaw has replaced
Thomas D. Frasier, who resigned
from the fine arts department. Mr.
Shaw will be teaching art history
and sculpture.
He received a bachelor's de-
gree from Reed College, Portland,
Oregon, and a master's degree in
sculpture from the University of
Chicago. He has done work toward
his doctorate (ancient art and ar-
cheology) at Chicago.
Mr. Shaw has taught at Osh-
kosh State College in Wisconsin,
Inter-American University in Puerto
Rico, the University of Georgia,
and he and his wife, Anne, were res-
ident artists in the Artist-in-Schools
program in Georgia.
In addition to other awards,
he was a Ryerson fellow in arche-
ology at the University of Chicago.
Peter Bayley, a Brown Foun-
dation fellow, is a visiting professor
on leave from Collingwood College
in Durham, England.
He is teaching freshman Eng-
lish and a senior seminar on Shakes-
peare, Chaucer, and Spenser.
Before teaching at Durham,
Mr. Bayley was a fellow at Univer-
sity College, Oxford. At Oxford he
lectured several times for the Brit-
ish Studies at Oxford, in which Se-
wanee participates.
He has edited books on the
works of Victorian novelists and
has published critical works on Ed-
mund Spenser. He also helped pro-
duce two British Council "Record-
ed Seminars on English Literature."
Ernest W. Schmid, Jr. is teach-
ing the semester in the philosophy
department in place of Stephen F.
Brown, who is on leave. Dr. Schmid
is a research associate at Emory
University.
Aryeh Kidron is teaching the
semester for Eric Ellis, associate
professor of physics, who is recov-
ering from a heart attack. Dr. Kid-
ron is an associate research profes-
sor in physics at the University of
Alabama at Huntsville.
Arnold Mignery, who is re-
tired from the Forest Research Cen-
ter in Sewanee, is teaching the se-
mester in place of Charles O. Baird,
professor of forestry, who is engag-
ed in a land-use study for the Uni-
versity.
would see that they would either be
returned or placed in the archives.
"I am also trying to find copies
of the Bulletin of Theological Stu-
dies, which was edited by W. S.
Claiborne and published by the
DuBose School Library at Mont-
eagle, Tennessee. I would appreci-
ate assistance in locating copies."
PURE
SCIENCE -
Modern
Misnomer
Harry C. Yeatman once worked at a
U. S. fisheries station at Beaufort,
North Carolina. (The place is now
"extinct," as Dr. Yeatman puts it-
blown away in a hurricane).
He recalls that at this little
station, one of his colleagues, Dr.
Olga Hartmann, made the state-
ment to her director one day that
her work on taxonomy (classifi-
cation) of annelids was "pure
science" and had no practical value
to mankind.
"There is no such thing as
pure science," said Dr. Herbert
Prytherch, the station director.
"Let's wait and see."
The statement has stayed with
Dr. Yeatman for 40 years. It was
reinforced a year afterward, in fact,
when Dr. Hartmann was called
upon to identify some annelids
found burrowing into oyster shells
and weakening them.
The point is an important one,
says Dr. Yeatman. For one thing
there is no money available for
"pure science." Sometimes there
is not even money for obviously
valuable research.
Science has fallen on hard
times in some areas of society. It
is blamed for creating an atmos-
phere of inhumanity in the world
and for providing the tools of cata-
strophic war and industrial pollu-
tion.
The value of taxonomy of or-
ganisms, therefore, is not readily
understood by the public as a
whole.
Dr. Yeatman has spent much
of his independent energies while at
Sewanee in the study of small or-
ganisms, principally copepods.
These small animals inhabit every
ocean and virtually every fresh-
water stream and pond on the earth.
They are the main link in the
food chain of aquatic organisms—
between protozoa, detritus, and
algae (which they eat), and min-
nows, small fish and even large
water-straining fish and whales
(which eat the copepods).
In at least two major respects
the taxonomy of these small creaT
tures is important to humans. Since
many of them are sensitive to slight
changes in the water in which they
live, their presence or absence is
an indicator of good or polluted
water.
Second, some copepods are
also intermediate hosts of para-
sites that are harmful to humans
and large animals. Identification of
these copepods is the first step to-
ward stopping the parasites.
Dr. Yeatman has been involved
in both areas of study— ecology
and parasitology— and is one of
only eight or ten copepod experts in
the world. In fact, his knowledge is
even more exclusive than that, since
most scientists tend to concentrate
on either fresh or salt water species.
"I sometimes think of myself
as a general practitioner," he says,
"studying fresh, salt, and brackish
varieties."
The specialty has, therefore,
placed Dr. Yeatman in touch with
scientists around the globe, most of
whom who have sought his help
and involved him in significant
scientific investigation.
In 1964 a Professor Svasti
Daengsvang of Bangkok, Thailand
requested help from the Smith-
sonian Institution in Washington in
the identification of a copepod
crustacean he had determined was
the first intermediate host of a
roundworm larva (Gnathostoma
spinigerium).
The roundworm has for ages
been torturing pigs, cats, dogs, and
humans. Finally it was shown that
part of the life cycle of the round-
worm is spent inside the copepod,
which is eaten by fish, amphibia,
and snakes, which in turn are eaten
by predators, including man.
To break the life cycle and
thereby control the parasitic round-
worm, it was necessary first to iden-
tify the copepod involved.
The request for aid was relayed
to Dr. Yeatman, who has been a
copepod consultant for the Smith-
sonian for nearly 40 years. They
were identified, and Dr. Yeatman
has acquired a Thailand graduate
student (by correspondence), who
has been assigned to Dr. Yeatman
in copepod research.
In 1971 Lloyd Knutson, the
resident ecologist of Iran, and Dr.
G. Sahba, with the Institute of
Public Health Research in Tehran,
were working on the life cycle of
the guinea worm, Dracunculus
Dr. Harry Yeatman s knowledge of tiny creatures
called copepods has practical impact
around the world.
medinensis (meaning little dragon
of Medina).
This is believed to be the
Biblical "fiery serpent," which
bothered the Israelites beside the
Red Sea. The female becomes two
to four feet long and lives under
the skin of humans, producing a
severe burning sensation. A 1947
study estimated there were 48-
million guinea-worm infestations in
the world.
Its larvae are released from a
skin ulcer of infested humans into
well water and become parasites of
a particular species of copepod.
Other humans then become infested
by swallowing these copepods in
drinking water.
The Smithsonian put the Iran-
ian scientists in touch with Dr.
Yeatman. They sent him some cope-
pods from parts of Iran with a high
incidence of human infestation and
some from a region lacking the
parasite, the object being to deter-
mine if the copepod species were
the same and therefore creating a
danger of having the parasites
Dr. Yeatman notified the Iran-
ians that the copepods were the
same, and efforts were made to
keep infested persons away from
non-infested areas or, at least, away
from wells.
1W W
Jsi
*jBt
HBo£ -if* i
"*v .
Divers see sights like this in the waters of Grand Cayma
Dr. Sahba also requested the
identification of copepods acting
as intermediate hosts for larvae of
the broad fish tapeworm (Dibothri-
ocephalus latus) in Iran. The cope-
pods, which contain the parasite,
are eaten by fish, which are in tum
eaten by humans. Ten to 40-foot
tapeworms develop.
The copepod host proved to
be the same as that for the guinea
worm.
In following such work, it
might be easy to forget that cope-
pods are not themselves harmful to
humans. Certain species of cope-
pods, for instance, are alternate
hosts for some parasites that kill
the larvae of mosquitoes.
Dr. John Couch, professor
emeritus of the University of North
Carolina and a lifelong researcher
on fungi, wrote Dr. Yeatman, his
former student, in 1975 for help in
identifying and raising the copepod
host of the fungus Coelomomyces.
This fungus has a hyphal or
thread-like stage in Anopheles mos-
Continued on next page
quito larvae, and these produce
sporangia, thereby killing the larva
by consuming it from within.
Additional research has deter-
mined that the Anopheles is not
the only type of mosquito attacked
in its larva stage by Coelomomyces
fungi.
Dr. Yeatman has now identi-
fied possible host copepods for
Coelomomyces from Samoa, Fiji,
New Zealand, and Tonga (sent by
Dr. J. S. Pillai, University of Otago,
New Zealand), from Taiwan (sent
by Dr. J. C. Lien, Taiwan Malarial
Institute), from New England
(found in pitcher plants and sent by
Dr. Durland Fish, University of
Notre Dame), and from Nigeria
(sent by Dr. Sothorn Prasertphon,
the World Health Organization's
first staff field invertebrate patho-
logist).
' Such research into the bio-
controls of mosquitos is of in-
creasing significance to a world
becoming aware of the dangers
and limitations of chemical agents.
Three U. S. and Canadian
scientists noted in a 1974 report
to the National Academy of
Science: "Knowledge of the cope-
pod involvement has permitted us,
after a long period of erratic re-
sults,-to obtain consistently high
levels of mosquito mortality with
relatively few infected copepods."
The first requirement of iden-
tification of copepods is dissection.
It's not a simple task, considering
the animals may be no more than
a millimeter in length.
Dr. Yeatman recalled a televi-
sion film he saw some weeks ago
which showed surgeons removing a
small tumor from a person's brain.
A delicate procedure to be sure.
But Dr. Yeatman says he and a
colleague soon afterward agreed
that the operation looked simple in
contrast to the dissection of the
mouth and leg parts of copepods
under very high magnification, in
which the image is reversed.
For dissecting, Dr. Yeatman
uses extremely tiny insect pins
mounted in sticks.
He fished through his drawer
and pulled out a thread-like black
pin.
"Now, this isn't sharp enough,"
he said. "Under a microscope, it
would look like a baseball bat. I
sharpen them to very fine points."
He has trained in dissection
graduate students from Vanderbilt,
Tennessee Tech, Middle Tennessee
State and Johns Hopkins.
Knowledge of copepod classi-
fication, however, is a different
matter and worth a lifetime of
work in itself. Dr. Yeatman esti-
mates there are 10,000 species,
counting fresh and salt-water varie-
ties. Of these, perhaps two-thirds
have been classified and named.
Some of them are very strange,
Dr. Yeatman says. There are species
that are parasitic. Some others do
not eat when they become adults;
they simply reproduce and die.
In his years of collecting, Dr.
Yeatman has identified several new
subspecies and species, one of
which he named after his wife,
Jean. Such business not only re-
quires the careful search of ocean
waters but the patient search of
scientific records for even the men-
tion of a form that might otherwise
be unique.
Consistently accurate identi-
fication often requires knowledge
of both fresh and salt-water varie-
ties.
Familiar early in his career
with the fresh-water copepods in
North Carolina, Dr. Yeatman re-
calls that an ecology project in the
Neches River in Texas guided him
by necessity into marine forms.
On the bottom of parts of the
river were salt-water copepods, and
closer to the top were fresh-water
species.
The switch to marine forms
was challenging. There is greater
variety in marine forms, greater
specialization, more unidentified
species.
The ecology research in the
United States, with Duke Power
Company, Johns Hopkins, and a
variety of consultants, has dealt
largely with fresh water species.
It also has provided the paying
jobs.
Yet ecology studies have
brought him so much personal
satisfaction, Dr. Yeatman makes
occasional trips at his own ex-
pense. His most memorable have
been into the Caribbean, with
snorkel and fine-mesh plankton
nets, which he pulls by hand and
flipper over the coral.
In some areas the water is
pink with copepods, which are a
staple for the brilliant fish of the
coral reefs. But the best collections
are made at night, when some spe-
cies leave their hiding places. The
thousands of luminous bodies of
protozoa light up the net. They also
attach themselves to the collector,
making him a good target for pass-
ing sharks. So Dr. Yeatman's
daughter has served as look-out,
perched in the boat, watching for
approaching fins.
In such a fashion, he has visited
Bermuda, the Florida Keys, Jamai-
ca, Grand Bahama, Mexico (the
island of Cozumel) Grand Cayman,
and Barbados. The object of the
trips has not only involved ecology
but an interest in ocean currents
(past and present).
Dr. Yeatman once identified
a copepod previously collected only
as far west as Madagascar. He recalls
the story of an Australian scientist
who released some bottles in the
ocean, one of which was picked up
near Miami four years later.
Yet the migration of copepods
takes longer than bottles, many
generations of shore hopping. One
form, easily identified because of a
pair of cuticular lenses on its head,
was known only in the South
Pacific in the 1930s.
Later it was discovered off the
tip of South Africa, then in Brazil,
then in Puerto Rico, and now is
found throughout the West Indies.
It surely must have been a curious
journey for these tiny creatures,
for as Dr. Yeatman points out,
there is no dormant stage for the
marine copepod, which, for some
species, must find a calmer habitat
than the open sea to feed and breed.
Still more curious is the mi-
gration of brackish water (mixture
of salt and fresh-water) forms
through ocean currents.
To Barbados Dr. Yeatman re-
members flying throughout the
night, a BOAC flight that seemed
to never end, and being greeted by
a verdant tropical island (also rich
in copepods).
The flight involved a search
for the origin of Apocyclops
panamensis, a species not known
at the time to exist south of Pan-
ama.
If it had originated elsewhere
than on the east coast of Panama,
it almost certainly would have
had to follow the South Equatorial
Currents that cross the Atlantic
from Africa, strike Brazil, and flow
into the Caribbean.
The first night in Barbados,
"by dang," he says, Dr. Yeatman
collected Apocyclops panamensis in
his net.
Shortly afterward he learned
the species has been located in
Brazil, though not in Africa or the
Mediterranean.
The question then was how
this brackish-water animal, which
also can live in fresh water, traveled
through the ocean currents from
Brazil to Barbados and Panama.
First, it is known that fresh
water from rivers mixes rather slow-
ly with ocean waters, and in a con-
versation with Dr. Yeatman, the
director of the McGill University
station in Barbados suggested that
water from the Amazon may have
been the vehicle.
Tests have shown that these
fresh-water deposits, shaped like
huge bowls, exist 100 miles and,
perhaps, as far as 1,000 miles from
shore. Sailors tell stories of dipping
fresh water in buckets from seem-
ingly isolated ocean waters.
The obvious explanation is
that copepods were carried to sea
in these fresh-water "bowls" and
survived long enough to land in
Barbados (in the eddies of the west
shore) and Panama.
Another obvious question
might be, of course, what could
this bit of "neat" information mean
to anyone except as a curiosity in
"pure science"? It is a question
becoming almost too simple to
answer. Let's just wait and see. □
Retirement Taking Five Professors
H. Malcolm Owen
The interrelationship of academic
disciplines is as obvious to a biolo-
gist as anyone, as he extrapolates
material from chemistry or feeds it
to anthropology and political
science. With H. Malcolm Owen,
the relationship takes on an addi-
tional hue.
Dr. Owen has for several years
been introducing his biology stu-
dents to the University computer.
Computer programming for
biology is not only useful for cal-
culating and problem-solving but
is at its best in simulating ex-
periments. Yet Dr. Owen has
noticed another benefit. Expo-
sure to the computer has stimu-
lated some students to go into
computer work.
One coed (who was not the
best of biology students) became
so absorbed in work with the
computer that she was soon en-
rolled in computer science. She
also has recently prepared a pro-
gram of inventory control for the
Sewanee Golf and Tennis Club,
of which Dr. Owen is acting man-
ager.
"It is gratifying to know she
got the stimulus in biology to do
something she may be doing the
rest of her life," he said. "I am
amazed she wrote this program as
well as she did."
Dr. Owen has been a pioneer
in the use of the computer in bio-
logy. He has given papers on the
subject at Dartmouth and to the
North Carolina Department of Ed-
ucation. Programs he has written
have been distributed by Sewanee
to about 30 institutions from Cali-
fornia to Florida.
The computer is especially
useful in the study of population
genetics. Problems that take stu-
dents many hours to calculate with
slide rules or hand calculators can
be solved in a matter of minutes
with the computer.
A most interesting course to
Dr. Owen has been one in which
eight top students studied what
He has been chairman of the
biology department virtually since
his arrival at Sewanee in 1950, re-
linquishing the position in 1971 to
Dr. Harry Yeatman. For six years
he was also director of the Sewanee
Institute of Science and Math,
sponsored for 14 years by the Na-
tional Science Foundation to
strengthen the knowledge of secon-
dary teachers in math, biology, and
chemistry.
He also worked under a Na-
tional Science Foundation program
in India to upgrade biology study
in that country, and for six years
was an evaluator of proposed
Science Foundation grants. He has
lectured at preparatory schools in
Pennsylvania, Maryland, and Vir-
ginia on the problems of the popu-
lation explosion.
Always active in the commu-
nity, Dr. Owen has been secretary
of the Sewanee Community Council,
chairman of the Community Chest
Drive, and president of the Sewanee
Civic Association from 1960 to
1962. He was a University trustee
from 1960 to 1964.
Dr. Owen is listed in Who's
Who in America and recently has
been selected as a biographee in
Who's Who in the World.
His work as chairman of the
committee managing the Golf and
Tennis Club is particularly signifi-
cant to the University this year,
because it is helping to turn a
financial loss in that auxiliary
service into a gain.
The project is significant to
Dr. Owen in a personal way also.
He has agreed to accept the per-
manent management of the Golf
and Tennis Club after his retire-
ment June 30.
the world would be like in the
year 2100, using a program worked
out at MIT. The program uses avail-
able data from 1900 and 1970 and
then projects into the future.
The result?
"We can change the variables
to get a doomsday existence,"
said Dr. Owen. "It's anyone's guess,
but the problem gives students an
insight into what can happen."
Population growth (demogra-
phy) has been of interest to Dr.
Owen for many years.
"The population explosion is
the primary cause of most of the
world's problems," he said. "Not
recognizing what has to be pro-
duced for a population that is
doubling every 3 5 years is criminal. ' '
What we do not do by reason
and law to limit growth, will be
done catastrophically, he added.
Another field of interest for
Dr. Owen has been marine biology.
When he came to the University in
1950, he had just completed a
study of the effect of off-shore oil
drilling on the oyster and shrimp
industry, a project supported by a
consortium of oil companies in
Louisiana.
A graduate of Hampden-
Sydney in 1935, Professor Owen
taught at St. Christopher's School
in Richmond, Virginia, his home
town, before receiving graduate
degrees from the University of
Virginia.
It was during his years in
Richmond that he married Virginia
Gordon Hall, known to about 20
classes of Sewanee College students
for her speed-reading courses and to
Sewanee Academy students who
have passed through her English
classroom.
Dr. Owen worked in marine
biology research at the Virginia
Fisheries Laboratory of the College
of William and Mary from 1944 to
1946, moving on to an assistant
professor's position for a year at
the University of South Carolina.
Robert S. Lancaster
It would be difficult to explain
quickly what brings each of us to
where we are today. "Accident" is
probably the best word to sum it
up for most.
Robert S. Lancaster believes if
he were starting again, he would
head for the Northwest where life is
a bit newer and fresher.
That might have been good for
Robert Lancaster 47 years ago. No
telling what heights he would have
reached, but it would have been a
telling loss for Sewanee.
No matter. Dr. Lancaster did
come to Sewanee, and the event
was something of an accident.
Almost two years before (in
1929), he had received a degree
from Hampden-Sydney College and
had gotten a job teaching at Gulf
Coast Military Academy.
He was in his second year
there when he married Ernestine
Desporte, and since the school
was without any more married-
faculty quarters, Lancaster was con-
sidering his next move. He was con-
sidering that, in fact, in the lobby
of the Monteleone Hotel in New
Orleans when he happened to strike
up a conversation with Col. DuVal
Cravens, then superintendent of
Sewanee Military Academy, who
was in the lobby reading a news-
paper.
"When I told him my situa-
tion," says Dr. Lancaster, "Col.
Cravens introduced himself and
said' he was contemplating open-
ing seventh and eighth grades at
the Academy."
Subsequently Lancaster was
invited with his wife to Sewanee to
take over the junior department of
the Academy, which he had assum-
ed was well into development.
"When I arrived in September,
I learned there were no students,"
he recalled. "Well, we scoured
around and found 10 little boys,
mostly sons of professors. We had
one boarding student from Chatta-
nooga, I believe."
Well, if accident is the first
word to sum up a career, initiative
might be the next, for Dr. Lancaster
began an extraordinary journey
through the ranks, teaching English
and Latin in the Academy senior
department, studying law in Nash-
ville three nights a week, practicing
law in his native Virginia, returning
as SMA commandant (1941-43),
serving as an air combat intelli-
gence officer, and since 1946,
working variously as University
dean of men (1952-57), dean of the
College (1957-69), and acting direc-
tor of development (1965-66), all
the while teaching political science
in the College of Arts and Sciences.
LANCASTER (Continued)
In all he has served under
seven vice-chancellors.
Dr. Lancaster was one of the
last to receive a master's degree
from the College, a master's in
English in 1934. He received his
doctorate from the University of
Michigan after World War II.
He remembers Dr. Alexander
Guerry, the vice-chancellor from
1938 to 1948, for many great and
good accomplishments but espe-
cially for drawing him into the
College faculty after the war.
Bishop Frank A. Juhan, for-
mer chancellor, whom Dr. Lan-
caster replaced as director of
development in 1965 ("It was too
difficult to succeed a man like
Bishop Juhan."), was his "great
mentor and friend."
Dr. Lancaster led the suc-
cessful movement to create a
memorial to the Bishop— the
Bishop's Common. His most enjoy-
able enterprise, he says, was raising
the money for the restoration of
historic Rebel's Rest.
In addition to his teaching
duties, Dr. Lancaster is currently
serving (only a few weeks from
retirement) as chairman of the
University's Million Dollar Pro-
gram, which, he says, "is now the
life blood of the University."
Dr. Lancaster's office is on
the second floor of Walsh Hall. The
tall windows, with scallops at the
top, overlook Guerry Garth. It's a
rather drab court yard at this time
of the year when the winter sun is
never visible, except when it re-
flects off the south side of Con-
vocation Hall 30 yards away.
There are only a few items of
nostaligia to be seen. On the wall
hangs a photograph he took in Iraq,
during one of two Fulbright lec-
tureships. In the foreground of the
photograph, in front of some hunk-
ering bedouin, is a pile of at least
90 pheasant-like birds flanked by
two wild hogs and a wildcat. It was
the end of a hunting trip with an
Arab sheik, who was somewhat
dazzled by Dr. Lancaster's marks-
manship.
In another thin brown frame is
a certificate of thanks from the
Associated Alumni for the sacrifice
Dr. Lancaster made when he re-
turned home prematurely from
another overseas lecture tour to
help with the successful University
$10-million campaign in 1964.
On his desk, among the papers,
is a bowl of favorite pipes and a
mixture of political science books
that appear to have dropped down
from the book shelves that cover
most of two walls.
Also hanging on a wall is a
caricature of Dean Lancaster and
an Irish setter howling to the notes
of a guitar. It's an allusion to the
nickname, "Red" or "Red Dog,"
(and the dean's red hair) and, per-
haps, also to Dr. Lancaster's fond-
ness for dogs. (He has raised English
setters for years.)
But the guitar does not exact-
ly belong.
Former students recall the
dean entertaining in his home with
rousing ditties on the five-string
banjo. The banjo has been set aside
but in some years was almost as
famous as the nickname.
Dr. Lancaster remembers be-
ing called out as dean one night to
"quell the KAs."
Usually he would dress for
such business, and by the time he
arrived, all would be quiet. This
particular night, however, he simply
pulled on a dressing gown.
"As I was walking up to the
house, I heard someone inside yell,
'Get the hell out of here; here
comes Red Dog!' "
And when he got in the door,
no one was there.
"I pretended to be very angry,
but I was really very amused," he
said.
Perhaps changes in the Sewa-
nee student are reflected best in
changes in American society.
"There was a time when col-
leges and universities were for the
elite," he says. "There were a few
of the less fortunate, of course, but
that was the day of the Sewanee
gentleman."
He recalls Maj. Gen. William
R. Smith, who came to Sewanee
Academy in the 1930s from West
Point, where he had been superin-
tendent. It was under Gen. Smith,
incidentally, that the enrollment at
SMA grew from fewer than 100
students to about 280, and Dr.
Lancaster attributes much of that
to a plan whereby the Academy
professors were given a commission
for recruiting students. Some trav-
eled during the summer— Dr. Lan-
caster into Louisiana, Texas, and
Mississippi.
"Gen. Smith entertained
splendidly," said Dr. Lancaster.
"Sewanee was a very formal place
in those years."
This may have been a heritage
of the founding, he speculates, a
thought that manners might deter-
iorate in the wilderness of the pla-
teau unless some effort were made
to preserve them.
"At one time Sewanee had
gates that were closed at night,
principally to keep out pigs and
mules," he says, but then with a
touch of sarcasm, "also, perhaps,
they feared contamination from the
valley."
"Today colleges and univer-
sities exist for all mankind. Nearly
half of our students receive one
form of aid or another. There are
scholarships of all kinds. They were
fewer and meager in Guerry's day."
Dr. Lancaster also recalls there
was one dean and few administra-
tors.
"Dr. Guerry was his own
director of admissions, his own di-
rector of development, and his own
dean," he says.
But then Dr. Guerry wore
himself out and died prematurely,
he adds. Sewanee, just as American
society, was becoming complicated.
"This is a whole new age. Or-
ganizations like Sewanee must be
planned and contrived. The Univer-
sity could not survive otherwise."
Despite the changes, Dr. Lan-
caster's respect for the Sewanee
student has not wavered. He said
the finest students Sewanee has
ever had are in the University now.
"What will happen to them, I
don't know, but the quality is there.
The proof of the pudding is in the
eating of it.
"There is a liberal arts staple
by which we live," he says. "The
sciences have changed most, but
the ends for which they are taught
have not changed.
"The end of education is to
allow us to lead the good life, one
in which we are not constantly in-
volved in ourselves— to become at
home in the world, to lead a fuller,
richer life, freer in the sense we
have more choices."
Sewanee is richer in its poten-
tial because it has fewer one-man
departments, Dr. Lancaster noted.
At one time political science and
economics were even considered
one discipline.
"We arbitrarily break learn-
ing into separate morsels to make
it more digestible, but it is all of
one piece," he says, "if I were
sufficiently well learned, I am sure
I could show you the relation-
ship between political science and
physics."
David B. Camp
David B. Camp had been settling in-
to the chemistry department at the
University of South Dakota when
he was persuaded to come to Se-
wanee in 1954.
The person who did the per-
suading was Dean Charles Harrison,
who had been Dr. Camp's favorite
teacher at William & Mary. Dr.
Camp says the factor that influenced
his decision most was the "oppor-
tunity to work with small groups
of students on a more personal
level."
That type of teaching has been
given a characteristic Camp flavor.
His one-to-one, personal style of
teaching has been enjoyed and re-
membered by his students. It is
certainly enjoyed by Dr. Camp.
The success of the students
on national tests and in professional
schools attests to its effectiveness.
"A student standing at the
blackboard in his office simply can-
not coast or bluff when asked the
how and why questions in the
Camp-Socratic method," remarked
a colleague this winter.
One of Dr. Camp's valuable
contributions to the student ex-
perience has been the summer or-
ganic chemistry course, in which as
many as eight students are taught
the entire year's course by the tu-
torial method.
Dr. Camp says the class be-
comes less tutorial when his students
depart from the textbook and em-
bark on independent study.
While the summer course has
been viewed as an honors course,
the enrollment has not been limited
to students with honors grades.
Some students, who had previously
shown only average achievement in
science, have gained a real command
of a subject that in many schools is
considered the nemesis of the col-
lege sophomore.
Although standardized tests
are not regarded as the ultimate in
measuring the quality of a program,
' Continued on next page
Retirements
CAMP (Continued)
Dr. Camp is obviously proud of the
extremely good performances of
Sewanee students on the American
Society standardized tests. Post-
graduate performances also have
been outstanding.
Of 13 chemistry majors who
received their degrees last June,
eight have entered medical school,
another will enter medical school
next fall, two are pursuing engin-
eering degrees, and two are doing
graduate work in chemistry.
It must seem a long way to
have come for a department whose
non-major students were at one
time encouraged to go elsewhere,
during the summers, to complete
their chemistry requirements.
The advanced work in chemis-
try and the years at Sewanee are al-
so a contrast to the childhood of
Dr. Camp in rural Virginia.
Dr. Camp's father, who oper-
ated a water-powered gristmill in
Brunswick County, Virginia, died
when David was seven. As the years
passed, the young Camp became in-
creasingly responsible for the sup-
port of his younger brother and
sister, particularly when his mother
died a month after his graduation
from high school.
Dr. Camp did not enter college
(at William & Mary) until he was 28.
He admits to having been so naive
about college when he arrived at
William & Mary that when he saw
the fraternity houses, with the let-
ters over the doors, he thought
those were the places where Greek
was taught.
Not that the young Camp was
any dull farm boy. His was a coun-
try school for sure, but he was grad-
uated when he was 16 and was vale-
dictorian.
Later to prepare for college,
Dr. Camp remembers, he would
take the opportunity to study
books as his tobacco crop smoked
in the barns. He entered William
& Mary in January 1938 soon after
he had sold the season's tobacco
crop and was graduated in June
1941.
After completing his under-
graduate work in chemistry and
physics, Dr. Camp was a graduate
assistant at William & Mary for
a year and then taught at Old
Dominion College from 1942 to
1946.
He went directly for his
doctorate at the University of
Rochester, and after graduation
in 1949, taught at the University
of Idaho a year, at Oglethorpe
College in Atlanta for two years,
and at the University of South
Dakota for two years.
Finally, there are a couple of
notes about Dr. Camp without
which an incomplete story would
be more incomplete.
In 1967 he served on the joint
faculty-trustee-administration com-
mittee that recommended to the
trustees that women be admitted
Thaddeus C. Lockard, Jr.
Cap and Gown
He has made his home in Salzburg,
Vienna, Heidelberg, Milan, and
London. At Oxford he knew Tol-
kien, and he spent evenings with
Robert Frost in Adams House at
Harvard.
Thad Lockard, in fact, might
remind you of a character from a
novel by Hermann Hesse or Vladimir
Nabokov who wakes up every so of-
ten in the compartment of a speed-
ing European train or the living
room of a scholar friend and has to
think twice about where he is.
Except Professor Lockard's
eyes look outward on the world
and npt in. He is a man who ap-
proaches traveling the way some
people collect antique cars.
While a student at Oxford
University in 1939, he visited the
Shelley home in Sussex, which was
privately owned, by knocking at
the door one misty morning and
asking a servant whether he could
see the house. The owner invited
Mr. Lockard in and gave him a per-
sonal tour.
For a matching piece, Mr.
Lockard then tells of standing on
the Italian beach at San Terenzo
below another Shelley house, from
to the University on a regular basis.
He personally urged the committee
members to recommend the change,
but he is sure neither of the effect
of his argument nor of its necessity.
The committee vote was almost
unanimous.
Before this, Dr. Camp was
personally involved in the admis-
sion of the first black student
(Calvin Williams) to be enrolled at
Sewanee. Williams, a chemistry
major, transferred from Fisk for a
year.
When he retires at the end of
his academic year, Dr. Camp will
not become inactive, even from his
work in chemistry; of that Lis col-
leagues are sure. Some people need
no catalyst.
which the poet sailed, was caught in
a squall, and drowned.
Also a witness to history, Pro-
fessor Lockard can tell of the shock
and apprehension of London the
first night of World War II. Of evac-
uating the city on a blacked-out
train to catch an unescorted Brit-
ish ship for home, and of sleeping
in the first-class companionways,
with a life preserver as a pillow, to
avoid the ship's torpedo zone in
the cabins below.
He was in London again the
last day of the war to see the cele-
brations in Piccadilly and Kensing-
ton Gardens. He and the war, in
a sense, had come full circle.
Mr. Lockard (Thaddeus C.
Lockard, Jr.) was born in Meridian,
Mississippi. He and his family made
their home there and on the Gulf
Coast until he went to the Univer-
sity of Mississippi in 1930.
William Faulkner was living
in Oxford, Mississippi in those years,
but Mr. Lockard can only remem-
ber shaking the famous author's
hand once or twice.
A more lasting impression was
made by the rector of St. Pecer's
Church there in Oxford, the Rev!
Edward McCrady, Sewanee alum-
nus and father of the Edward Mc-
Crady who was to become vice-
chancellor of the University of the
South.
The elder Dr. McCrady "was a
real renaissance man," taught philo-
sophy, was a member of the British
Academy of Sciences, and was a
favorite among the literary students
like Lockard, who met him at the
Scribblers' Club.
Professor Lockard took a dou-
ble major in English and French,
working his way through college by
playing a saxophone and clarinet in
the University jazz band. After re-
ceiving his degree, he taught Eng-
lish and French classes at Ole Miss.
Awarded an exchange fellow-
ship, he went to Italy in 1935,
taking a 31-day trip aboard a
freighter, to study at the University
of Milan. To learn the language, he
went to films, plays, operas, and
even medical lectures. Then he
attended the very old University of
Pavia in 1936.
That year in traveled to the
Olympic Games in Munich and re-
members Hitler's sour reaction
when Jesse Owens won four gold
medals. That was the second of
three pre-war trips to Germany.
The first in 1931 left vivid
memories of human suffering from
the early depression. By 1936 the
change in the economy was start-
ling, he says, and a person could
understand why many respectable
Germans were caught in the Nation-
al Socialist trap.
Then three years later, with
Germany poised for war, he attend-
ed the Wagner Festival in Bayreuth,
to which Hitler also went and was
saluted (in the straight-arm Nazi
style) by the audience (Lockard
abstained.)
Though he returned to Ole
Miss after his studies in Italy, Mr.
Lockard was soon off to Harvard
on scholarship. He received a mas-
ter's degree the first year but would
remain with Harvard for four more
years.
They were the toughest of
years, especially for a student, per-
haps. He says when he asked the
university for a job so that he could
earn more money, he was told that
if he made straight A's, a job could
be found.
"I was combating people from
much more ambitious colleges," he
said, "but I worked like a dog, and
with some luck, I made it."
He was appointed a teaching
fellow in English and resident tutor
in Adams House and given a "regal"
apartment that had been offered to
Robert Frost, who was at that time
poet-in-residence at Adams House.
He and Frost would frequents
ly eat lunch and supper together
and delve into philosophy and reli-
gion. During one late-night discus-
sion, Frost, saying he had been in-
spired by their debates, wrote down
the poem, "To Time it never seems
that he is brave," which is printed
in most Frost anthologies.
At Adams House, Mr. Lockard
also knew Arthur Schlesinger, Jr.
and tutored Howard Nemerov.
He had completed the course
requirements for his doctorate and
was studying Shelley at Oxford,
England in 1939 when war broke
out and destroyed his plans. He
joined the Navy and never got back
to the dissertation.
During the war, Professor
Lockard was a member of a com-
munications team that was to work
with a French unit in the invasion
of Europe. The French participa-
tion never materialized. He did go
ashore three weeks after the Nor-
mandy Invasion, however, and be-
came a Naval civil affairs officer in
Brittany.
After the war, he was director
of a United Nations camp for dis-
placed persons at Salzburg and then
worked with war refugees in Vienna
for a year. He was awaiting another
assignment when he pulled up stakes
and on his own went back to Ox-
ford and entered St. Catherine's
Society (now St. Catherine's Col-
lege).
C. S. Lewis was his advisor,
and it was then he met T. S. Eliot,
Dorothy Sayers, and J. R. R. Tol-
kein, who let him borrow a first-
volume manucript of The Lord of
the Rings, which Professor Lock-
ard regretfully admits he wasn't
able to find time to read.
It was in those years he was
awarded a Fulbright Scholarship in
the first year it was offered (1949).
LOCKARD (Continued)
Soon afterward, Mr. Lockard
came to Sewanee. He had heard of
an opening in the German depart-
ment from his church rector, Dun-
can Hobart, in Meridian.
When he left for Harvard after
a year to resume work on his dis-
sertation, he says he immediately
regretted the move. He taught three
years at the University of Virginia,
then was a language supervisor of
the University of Maryland's over-
seas programs for the Army and Air
Force and made his home in Heidel-
berg. But when he had a chance to
return to Sewanee in 1958, he says
he jumped at it.
For five years he taught Ger-
man and French and then initiated
classes in Italian. He founded the
German and Italian language clubs
at Sewanee.
After completing a master's
degree in German at Vanderbilt,
Mr. Lockard was again about to
complete his Ph.D. degree — this
time in German— but the Univer-
sity asked him to begin offering the
Italian courses. Today two years of
Italian are regularly offered as a
part of the University curriculum.
At the start of retirement this
summer, Professor Lockard will be
off to Europe for several months to
see old friends and new places. He
says Vienna will probably be his
European headquarters, but home
will remain Sewanee and his house,
Wienerwald (Vienna Woods).
Joint Ministry
Program Renewed
Graduate students in the Doctor of
Ministry program this summer will
be able to choose among courses
and seminars in medical ethics,
working with alcoholics, spiritual
life, religious education, recent
events in the church, comparison of
the Gospels, and a ministry seminar.
Three short courses will be
offered at Vanderbilt from May 29
to June 17, and five courses at
Sewanee from June 21 to July 26.
Among the faculty will be the
Rev. Alan W. Jones of the General
Theological Seminary in New York
City, and the Rev. Randolph C.
Miller of Yale Divinity School. Mr.
Jones will teach the course on
spiritual direction, an intensive two-
week examination of the partici-
pants' questions and attitudes
about spiritual growth.
A nine-day workshop studying
the psychology and treatment of al-
coholism will be taught at Vander-
bilt by the Rev. Liston O. Mills of
Vanderbilt Divinity School. Stu-
dents will work with patients at the
Nashville Veterans Administration
Hospital under the direction of the
chaplain's staff.
The medical ethics course, also
at Vanderbilt, will focus on pastoral
and theological problems posed by
Stiles B. Lines
When the Rev. Stiles B. Lines re-
turned to teach at Sewanee in 1966,
he had spent 29 years in the parish
ministry. They had been years of
church controversy and social up-
heaval, but Dr. Lines had never
quailed in the face of controversy.
He was a strong, though per-
sonable and reconciling champion
of civil rights for blacks, and he
was always involved in extending
the church into such areas as psy-
chological counseling, assistance for
the elderly, and social concerns of
the community.
There was no reason to think
he would change when he moved to
Sewanee, and he hasn't.
Dr. Lines says his makeup
stems from his youth in Savannah,
Georgia, his consciousness of the
problems of the South, its race re-
lations and poverty.
The race issue was an especial-
ly pressing concern for him as a
student. As he began seminary train-
ing, his aim became almost from
advances in medicine. It will be
taught by the Rev. Howard L. Har-
rod of Vanderbilt.
At Sewanee, the Rev. J. How-
ard Rhys will teach "Ways of
Preaching the Passion Narrative," in
which students will compare the
styles of the four Gospels. Dr. Miller
of Yale will teach "Emerging Issues
in Religious Education" and the
Rev. Donald S. Armentrout will
lead a discussion on "The Church
in the United States since 1960."
The Very Rev. Urban T.
Holmes will lead the Ministry Semi-
nar in which students will examine
critical events in their ministries in
relation to the world, transcen-
dence, tradition, and the life of the
congregation. A seminar and pro-
jects in Christain social ethics will
be directed by the Rev. John M.
Gessell.
the start to enter the parish minis-
try in the South and to submerge
himself in its problems.
The overriding burden was
that "the greatest export of the
South was education. We would ed-
ucate people and then send them to
other parts of the country," he said.
Dr. Lines attended the Univer-
sity of the South, receiving a B.A.
Degree (optime merens) in 1935.
He entered the School of Theology
actually before receiving his degree.
In those years, he was deeply in-
volved in campus life. He was editor
of the Sewanee Purple in 1934-35.
In 1937 he received an S.T.B.
Degree from General Theological
Seminary in New York City, and
was named assistant minister at St.
Mark's Church, Shreveport, where
he stayed until 1941.
In a single day in 1941, he was
installed as rector of both Galilee
Church and Eastern Shore Chapel
at Virginia Beach, which today are
the two largest parishes in the Dio-
cese of Southern Virginia.
At the end of the war, Dr.
Lines went to Columbia University
and Union Seminary. Reinhold Nie-
buhr was his chief mentor. Com-
pleting his studies in religion and
society, he wrote his doctoral dis-
sertation on "The Work of the
Episcopal Church Among Slaves of
the 19th Century."
Dr. Lines met his wife, Marga-
ret (Peggy) van Buren, while he was
in charge of Bruton Parish, Will-
iamsburg, in 1946. Within a year
they were in Camden, South Caro-
lina where he became rector of
Grace Church.
"This was one of the most
beautiful and demanding periods
of my life," he said, "because this
was when the integration crisis
came along; there were dramatic
events, and it was a trying exper-
ience to be a minister in South
Carolina."
Dr. Lines was not a marcher or
crusader in the image of the demon-
strators of the late 1950s and '60s.
"The congregation knew
where I stood, but they accepted it
pretty well," he said. "I didn't have
to preach on the issue, I needed on-
ly to appear in the pulpit; that was
witness enough."
So well did he get along in
Camden that Dr. Lines says he ex-
pected to stay there the remainder
of his life. The memories are even
brighter for him and Mrs. Lines be-
cause of the birth of their three
daughters, but in 1961 he was
called to St. Paul's Church in Del-
ray Beach, Florida, where he was
rector for five years.
He was chairman of Christian
Social Relations for the large Dio-
cese of South Florida and was
active in organizations involved in a
variety of social problems — low-rent
retirement housing, social services,
counseling, and some crucial inter-
vention in interracial concerns.
11
It was a surprise to him when
he was asked to return to Sewanee
to join the School of Theology
faculty.
He was wanted at the Univer-
sity primarily for his parish exper-
ience, though he also held creden-
tials of formal education. There was
some irony in that, he says, because
the graduate work was only inci-
dental to his interest in the parish
ministry.
Dr. Lines became associate
professor of ecclesiastical history
and applied Christianity and senior
tutor. He was made full professor in
two years. He assisted with Ameri-
can church history, but particularly
Dr. Lines was to help orient seniors
to the realities and opportunities of
the parish ministry.
His most memorable role at
Sewanee has been his work with
small groups, particularly ministry
seminars.
Dr. Lines has been a major in-
fluence in getting seminarians off
the mountain, first by way of the
"plunges" to the slums of Chicago
and Mobile or the drug cultures of
New York City and Fort Lauder-
dale. Such trips have been replaced
by the highly developed field-work
program.
As a happenstance, he says,
Dr. Lines was asked to serve as in-
terim dean for the 1972-73 aca-
demic year, following the resigna-
tion of the Very Rev. George M.
Alexander, who is now bishop of
Upper South Carolina.
"Being interim dean was a
great experience I would not wish
on anyone," Dr. Lines said, with a
faint smile. "The support of an
unusually able and collegial faculty
was a saving factor. I was greatly
relieved when Terry Holmes was
called to be dean, and I am pleased
at the development of our program."
One factor that made the in-
terim period unique and trying was
that the school was being challeng-
ed over the effects of its curriculum.
A close colleague said of Dr.
Lines: "In the years I have been
working with him, I value most his
ability to penetrate to the heart of
any issue and state it so clearly that
anyone can see it and act. This
ability comes from his own Chris-
tian faith and commitment."
Thus his ministry and his ef-
forts for personal and social justice
will not likely end with his retire-
ment this summer.
Mandatory retirement is itself
a subject of his concern. Although
sympathetic with the present needs
of the University, and seeing some
positive values in his own retire-
ment, Dr. Lines says he is opposed
to mandatory retirement at an arbi-
trary age, which he considers "de-
humanizing and contradictory to
what the University says about its
commitment to the value of indi-
vidual persons, because it is dis-
crimination on the basis of age
alone."
As for himself, he intends to
continue to exercise his ministry
and hopes it will be in association
with the School of Theology, o
^^
OUTING CLUB
KEEPS US RUNNING
If there lias been one change in the
Sewanee student over the years, it
may have been in his (oh yes, and
her) style— a heavier shock of hair,
a puffy down coat instead of one of
those heavy wool ones, and moun-
tain boots that make the funny
tracks.
The advent of the Sewanee
Outing Club is of the same ilk. You
discuss it best to the notes of a
John Denver song about mountain
peaks, rushing rivers, and green val-
leys.
It has an air of the ecology
and fitness crazes combined, a mod-
ern phenomenon.
Doug Cameron, director of
special student programs and sur-
rogate club leader, fits his part well.
He even has a down coat and the
mountain boots to go with a beard.
Actually there has probably al-
ways been a bit of "outing club" at
Sewanee— hiking, climbing and
canoeing.
ganization, came during the late
1960s when students everywhere
were going more for participatory
sports (and not necessarily the take-
over of administrative offices).
At Sewanee several things
came together. Hugh Caldwell, pro-
fessor of philosophy, began the
Mount LeConte trips so long ago
(about 22 years) it was a tradition
before the Outing Club was men-
tioned. Then he began the canoe
team and the ski team. In fact, Dr.
Caldwell literally stamped the club
with its name (Sewanee Ski and
Outing Club) by mimeographing
membership cards to give students
special rates at commercial ski areas.
Gerald Smith, professor of
religion, led bicycle trips and start-
ed the bike shop, and Dean Steve
Puckette has been a promotor and
leader of mountain and river jaunts
for years.
Even so, the formation of the
club was student initiated. The stu-
dents sponsored outings, would
gather equipment to rent. They still
manage the bike shop and keep
everyone marveling how long the
club vehicle can keep making trips
without disintegrating. (The club
was partly boosted into existence
by Dr. Fred N. Mitchell, C'48, of
Charlotte, North Carolina, who do-
nated a 1963 station wagon, which
is still rolling).
Cameron has evidence that 95
percent of the University students,
some more than others, become in-
volved in Outing Club activities
while at Sewanee. A check of the
list of activities (28 excursions this
semester) might give you a reason.
The program had become so
large three or four years ago that
>.K l " j*'->s4>-
none of the faculty members, love
it as they did, could handle it alone.
Cameron had just developed
an outing program at St. Andrew's
when he was named director in
1976, replacing Don Rainey, who
was part-time director for two years.
Before that, incidentally, Cam-
eron and his family had spent three
years living in campgrounds from
coast to coast, gathering material
for a two-volume New York Times
Guide to Outdoors USA.
The aim is to make the Se-
wanee program as diverse as pos-
sible and include in it an element of
instruction.
The club, says Cameron, al-
lows students to get involved in
rock climbing, white water padd-
ling, caving, skiing, skating, and
back packing without having to
buy the equipment.
Jim Scott, a Sewanee Acad-
emy chemistry instructor and an
Alpine climber, teaches rock climb-
ing at the college and Academy,
and Cameron also teaches canoeing
to Academy students.
Once students are hooked,
they can hit the backwoods alone
(with a companion or eight or ten).
There is also serious competition
for the more skilled.
Last year a ski trip to Beech
Mountain attracted 160 students,
and Cameron says there might have
been twice as many but for a flu
epidemic. There has been some mis-
chievous speculation that one day
soon, the Dean will have to close
the College because of one of these
trips.
In January a holiday trip to
ski at Mount Snow, Vermont in-
volved 13 students and the Uni-
versity limousine (another vintage
vehicle).
Twenty-five students already
have signed up for the club trip to
the Grand Canyon, during spring
break— a 1,600-mile drive and six-
day hike for under $50 a student.
Skiers already have their sights
on Alto Road on the north side of
Sewanee mountain. But Dr. Cald-
well, who is always looking for ski-
team members, is serious about
another project, a cleared slope to-
ward Jump-Off and a snow-making
machine.
Doug Cameron, A'(
Top: Sewanee Day at Charlie's Bunion
in the Smokies
Center: Faculty and students enjoyed a
long bike ride through scenic Middle Ten-
nessee country last spring.
Bottom left: Sewanee, usually wet and
foggy in the winter, this year became an
outpost of the arctic and a paradise for
winter sports. Bambi Downs, Bobby
Jefts and Jonathan Ingram take the snow
in stride on campus.
Bottom right: A canoeist hauls out.
ON AND OFF
THE MOUNTAIN
Dorms Are Full
Enrollment in the College of Arts
and Sciences for the spring semes-
ter includes 973 full-time students
(566 men and 407 women) and 39
special students (28 women and 12
men) for a total of 1,012. Sewanee
Academy's enrollment increased by
26 students to 192. The School of
Theology has 74 students.
Chest Surpasses Goal
The Sewanee Community Chest
ended its campaign last November
with $36,041, $3,491 over the goal.
Star Wars Breaks Records
Star Wars, George Lucas's science
fiction film, may have broken at
tendance records in Sewanee by
packing in 1,322 viewers, not in-
cluding the dogs, for seven show-
ings at the Union Theatre.
Star Gazers Break Records
Frank Hart, associate professor of
physics and director of the Univer-
sity observatory, said the observa-
tory had an unusually large number
of visitors this past fall.
The number ranged as high as
35 for one night of observation.
Significant objects in the sky
this winter and spring include Jupi-
ter, with its moons, red spot, and
atmospheric zones, Mars, with its
polar caps, and Saturn, with its ring
system. We can also observe the
Great Nebula in Orion and the An-
dromeda Galaxy.
Music Commission Here
The Standing Commission on
Church Music of the Episcopal
Church met in Sewanee in January.
Acting on recommendations of
clergy and church musicians, the
commission has been concentrating
on the enrichment of the 1940
Hymnal.
Gourmet Drama
At the foot of the mountain in
Cowan in an old Methodist church
building, Tupper Saussy, C58,
and Agnes Wilcox have opened
the Apple Tree Dinner Theatre,
whose fame is spreading as far as
Nashville and Chattanooga. The
food and the plays (including
Marigolds and Butterflies Are Free)
receive like reviews— top notch.
Wicker Endorsement
Tom Wicker, associate editor of the
New York Times, lectured at Se-
wanee last December about the role
of the press in America. During a
reception after the lecture he said
he and most other editors don't
have much respect for journalism
schools. He said he prefers grad-
uates with a solid liberal arts back-
ground.
Carlos Nominated for Fulbright
J. Edward Carlos, chairman of the
University fine arts department, is
one of five American artists nomi-
nated for a Fulbright Fellowship
to teach in Ireland.
The nomination comes at the
end of a busy year for the Sewanee
artist.
Dr. Carlos has just completed
a one-man exhibition at the Univer-
sity of Maine. In January he was
showing at the Catholic University
of America in Washington, D. C.
and immediately prior to that at
Washburn Art Center, Gallaudet
College in Washington.
That is a slow pace compared
with about 12 months of 1976-77
when he had 28 exhibitions.
Lundin in Portuguese
The second edition of the book,
Personality : a Behavioral Analysis,
by Robert W. Lundin, professor of
psychology, has been published in
Portuguese by the University of Sao
Paulo. The title is Personaliddde :
una Analise do Comportamento.
Choir Makes Goodwill Tour
The 50-voice University Choir made
a concert tour during the Christmas
holidays, singing at churches in
Georgia, North and South Carolina,
Virginia, and Washington, D. C.
Each of the concerts was be-
gun with the service of Evensong
from the 1928 prayer book. The
choir was directed by Dr. Joseph M.
Running, university organist and
choirmaster and head of the music
department.
A note from Robert N. Huff-
man, rector of Trinity Church in
Portsmouth, Virginia said: "The
choir was superb, and the goodwill
they generated here cannot be
measured."
Rhett Mitchell and Key Coleman i
Masque production of Purgatory.
Purple Masque
The Purple Masque presented two
one-act plays February 16, 18, and
19 in conjunction with the 1978
conference in Sewanee of the
Southern Comparative Literature
Association.
The plays were Purgatory by
William Butler Yeats and Sotoba
Komachi by Yukio Mishima, both
of which were directed by Robert
Wilcox, instructor in speech and
theatre.
Bennett at Ole Miss
Dr. J. Jefferson Bennett, former
vice-chancellor and president at
Sewanee, has been named a dis-
tinguished visiting professor this
semester at the University of Missis-
sippi School of Law.
Tom Wicker at the Bishop's Common
Why does the winner of Kodak's top photography
scholarship choose to attend Sewanee, which only re-
cently added photography to its curriculum?
"I wanted a small coeducational school that had a
good academic program and also a photography
course," says Alice Sebrell, who entered Sewanee as a
freshman last fall. "That combination is hard to find,
especially in the South." She won a $1 ,000 scholar- '
ship in the Kodak Scholastic Photography Contest
for her portfolio of 12 prints, some of which are re-
produced here.
Alice is from Charlotte, North Carolina, and cre-
dits her photographic interest and ability to classes
she took at Charlotte's Myers Park High School under
Byron Baldwin.
She has found Sewanee's photography depart-
ment geared mostly to basics, and is doing indepen-
dent study at a more advanced level. She sees her
work going in the direction of exploring light and
form rather than her earlier involvement with the sub-
ject matter. Art professor Edward Carlos, who over-
sees her independent study, agrees. "She has an in-
tuitive, almost metaphysical, awareness of light and
an unusual perception of the camera as space," he
says.
Alice was pictured with her new view camera in
the January issue of Coed magazine in a four-page
spread of teen-age achievers.
COOK'S CHOICE
of Academy News
by Anne Cook
Ever want to chuck it all and go to Tahiti?
No need to escape if you are enrolled at the Sewanee Academy r. In-
terim Term is coming.
While the Interim, or Master-Students Term, is not a paradisiacal
idyll, students do have the opportunity to take a break from their semes-
ter coursework and try something new. From March 9 to 23 this year the
faculty is offering more variety than ever in the mini-courses from which a
student may select.
"This is not just recreation," says headmaster Rod Welles. "The M-S
Term is an experiential learning program designed to stretch students men-
tally and physically through learning experiences of their own choosing.
They are required to write reflective, critical journals and to perform ap-
propriately in their chosen area of endeavor. The unique aspect of M-S as
a learning experience is that it changes the usual relationship of student-
teacher-subject, focusing strongly on the student as learner."
Off Campus Trips
French instructor Michel Rousseau will take a group on a tour of
the London of Dickens and the Paris of Victor Hugo with side excursions
to the chateau country of the Loire Valley and Chartres Cathedral •
Roger Ross, Spanish instructor, is taking eleven students to Mexico
for nine days. They will participate in an inter-American workshop, geared
to the secondary school age, that focuses on learning from the culture.
The group plans to visit the floating gardens of Xochimilco, the Aztec
pyramids at Teotihuacan, and Oaxaca and Taxco.
Jim Scott, chemistry instructor, is spending the week in Keystone,
Colorado, where his group will study avalanche phenomena. You may be
sure that they will experiment with some skiing techniques— both cross
country and downhill.
Chicago's a wonderful town, if you know the territory— and John
Wendling, physics instructor, grew up there. He will be taking a group for
an eight-day cultural tour of the city with stops at Shedd Aquarium, Mu-
seum of Science and History, and to Jimmy Wong's Chinese restaurant,
which serves, according to John, the best Chinese food in the world.
On Campus Projects
For the majority of students who remain on campus there are some
fascinating choices.
A boy or girl can pick up the skills for a new hobby or game that
could give lasting pleasure. Music listening, chess, bridge, golf, tennis,
skeet, drownproofing, sailing and boxing are on the agenda.
Students will develop and enlarge their own photographs, take field
trips to Indian archeological sites, leam to quilt, type, make bread, and do
batik or silk screen.
A time machine will take the student from Ancient Egypt to Vic-
torian London. He can study the Civil War, World War II, or the life of a
Sewanee Military Academy cadet. In case the above is too verbal, there is
a course in non-verbal communication.
For living in today's world, three How-To courses will be offered.
Students may learn about investments and taxes, how to make simple
home repairs, and finally, the beginning steps in computer programming.
Tahiti? Well, what about taking our Fantasy in Literature course...
drawing by Kathryn I
Honors Seminar
Adds Challenge
Ten students are taking the honors
seminar on "Lifestyles" at Sewanee
Academy this semester. The life-
styles topic was chosen from several
that were submitted by the stu-
dents involved in the special honors
course.
"I want to write a really up-to-
date paper," commented Catharine
Arnold, student chairman of the
senior seminar. Her subject: sex
roles in Russia and the United
States. She will be doing research in
the periodical section of duPont
Library, reading the most recent
issues of magazines and newspapers,
in order to produce the kind of talk
she hopes to make.
Other members of the seminar
will do historical research for such
topics as urbanization of society (in
Brasilia and New York), material-
ism, changes in social structure,
religion, art, entertainment and in-
dividual freedom. Each assignment
will contrast and compare an aspect
of living from another culture with
the same aspect in the United
States.
In order to stimulate discus-
sion the leader of the week will pro-
vide a recommended reading list.
From that list each member is
asked to read at least 50 pages so as
to contribute something to the
general discussion that will follow
each presentation.
"It is a difficult topic that will
require considerable effort from the
students involved," said Max Cor-
nelius, dean of academics.
Meeting in the homes of fac-
ulty members who serve on the
Academy's curriculum committee,
the Monday evening sessions will
last approximately 90 minutes.
Guest speakers may be invited, and
in a college setting such as Sewanee,
the possibilities for that are endless.
Now in its second year, the
honors seminar is proving to be a
popular, though intellectually de-
manding, course for those seeking
an honors diploma.
Seniors in the lifestyles sem-
inar are Catharine Arnold, Sam
Bates, Debbie Clayton, Lois Ebey,
Mark Gillespy, Eban Goodstein,
Jeffrey Johnson, Anne Marsh,
Kathryn Ramseur and Carl Wenzel.
ACADEMY
SPORTS
Teams Watch
Weather Too
The battle with snow, ice, and cold
weather has been the big story with
the winter athletic program at Se-
wanee Academy, at least into Feb-
ruary. Almost daily there were calls
to check the snow conditions— in-
coming and out-going— to see if it
was possible to compete.
The undefeated soccer team,
thought by Coach Phil White to be
perhaps the best he has seen here,
spearheads the season. Featuring
All-Southern Archie Baker, Ramin
Majidi, Ted White, and Bayard
Leonard, Sewanee has rolled over
all opponents except Nashville
Hillsboro, a team that managed a
tie with the Tigers shortly after the
close of football season.
White's enthusiasm is conta-
gious, and the team and school feel
this just may be "the year."
With only one returning player
from last year's squad, the boys'
basketball team has faced tough
sledding so far. Coach Roger Ross
terms this a building year.
Yet he sees steady improve-
ment in his team and the laying of
groundwork for a brighter future.
Bill Carter is the senior re-
turnee, while Symmes Culbertson,
Bill Brandon, and Kevin Reeder are
lowerclassmen starting.
Daryol Van Hyning, Walt Ran-
dall, and Matt Molak vie for the
other starting berth.
The girls' team, coached by
Edie Long, faces much the same
problem along with alack of height.
But there is a notable amount of
hustle.
Catharine Arnold, Sonya Hale,
and Eleanor Gilchrist start on de-
fense, while Marie Ireland, Irene
Finney, and Toni McMichael handle
the offense.
Before breakfast Coaches Ed
England and Donna Wallace work
with some of their tennis prospects
on the indoor courts.
Other students have daily pro-
grams of physical training geared
toward physical conditioning and
skill development.
Ralph F. (Waldo) Waldron's
weight lifters curl and push each
day. Joanne Russell's dancers work
long hours on their techniques.
A dozen students have been
hard at work in Jim Scott's Emer-
gency Medical Corps training pro-
gram.
Despite Mother Nature, the
interscholastic and physical educa-
tion programs have continued, while
those at most nearby schools have
been at a standstill.
Kathryn Ramseur, A'7 8
Martin Knoll kicks . . . over the moon?
SOCCER SQUAD HITS A PEAK
Undefeated and ranked number one
in the state in regular season play,
Sewanee Academy's soccer team
went about as far as it could go
without winning all the honors this
winter.
In the state tournament at
Covenant College in Chattanooga
February 16-18, Sewanee whipped
Castle Heights Military Academy
5-2 and nipped Father Ryan 1-0.
On the third day against
Montgomery Bell Academy, Tiger
goalie Jamie Calo went out with a
rib fracture, and the Tigers went
into double overtime in a scoreless
tie with MBA.
The Nashville team scored the
only point of the game on a direct
kick.
In addition to the runners-up
trophy, the Tigers also received the
best sportsmanship award. It was
given by the president of the South-
eastern Interscholastic Soccer
Officials Association, Jimmy Smith,
"to the team that tried to win by
skill instead of by intimidation."
Morton Resigns
R. Dale Morton has resigned as coach
and athletic director at the Sewanee
Academy and has joined his brother
in the operation of Morton Moving
and Storage Co. in Jackson, Tennes-
see.
Robert H. Wood, head of the
math department, who was the ath-
letic director for 10 years prior to
1970, will be interim director for
the remainder of the academic year.
In addition to being football
and wrestling coach and athletic
director at the Academy for more
than two years, Coach Morton also
taught economics. He is an alumnus
of the College class of 1973.
TOP TEAM: Sewanee Academy's state season champions in soccer give a
jubilant "number one" sign after their victory over Father Ryan in the
tournament. Left to right, kneeling, are Gus Hansen, Chris Cook, Graham
Holmes, Martin Knoll, Eban Goodstein, Ramin Majidi, Ted White.
Standing are Wilkes Coffey, Allison Stratton, Artie Cockett, Kevin McKee,
Bayard Leonard, Charlie Hunt, Coach Phil White, Jamie Calo, Gordon
Gillespie, John Mulhall and Archie Baker. Hidden behind Baker is William
Cocke.
COLLEGE SPORTS
Majors' Retirement Draws Comments
EDITOR'S NOTE: On January 2, Coach Shirley Majors made an an-
nouncement that he would be stepping down, though reluctantly, as head
Sewanee football coach under the University's mandatory retirement rule.
Because of the wide respect for Coach Majors, the news traveled fast, and
inquiries followed very quickly. The column reprinted here, with the per-
mission of Ray Howe, appeared in the January 9 edition of the Chatta-
nooga Times. The Sewanee News will not be using much previously pub-
lished material, but the column is interesting for its perspective on the
University. The column appeared the same day as a Times editorial about
Coach Majors which quoted Robert M. Ayres, the acting vice-chancellor :
"The fine won-lost record on the field doesn't show what this man has
meant for our students, and our students are our first concern. The ex-
ample of Shirley Majors will be with us for a long time. "
by Ray Howe
Times Sports Editor
It was characteristic of the Univer-
sity of the South's low profile re-
garding athletics that the announce-
ment of the stepping down of
Coach Shirley Majors as head coach
of football after 21 years was cas-
ually mailed as a press release to
"The Sports Department" of papers
around the area. In most sports
departments it came in a stack of
mail from 25 or 30 other univer-
sities and colleges around the coun-
try which contain handouts aged
too long in transit to be worth
opening.
Then the announcement that
the likeable Horace Moore would
be promoted to head coach in June
was sort of an off-hand afterthought.
It is probable that any other
university would have arranged to
make the announcement at a press
conference, especially for such a
legendary coach and one held as
high in esteem, at which the out-
going and in-coming men would be
lauded by the proper administrative
authorities and made available for
questions and pictures by news-
paper and electronic reporters.
But, a long-time observer of
the Sewanee scene says, you have
to understand the scholastic atti-
tude in relationship to athletics at
the University of the South. Of
course, the healthy body is im-
portant to the healthy mind, but
the playing fields of Sewanee—
the intramural soccer field, the
Softball diamonds, the tennis courts
and golf course— and even the
white-water rivers in the South, the
mountain faces and the skiing areas
provide all the facilities needed for
the healthy bodies.
But in Sewanee the focus is
completely on the student, much
more on his mind than his muscle.
Yes, inter-scholastic sports are
beneficial and stimulating for some,
but are really not that necessary to
achieve the prime purpose of the
student enrolling in the first place.
Indeed, a sampling of the faculty
would probably show that several
would be in favor of dropping
football altogether, or at least do-
ing away with the time and effort
put into encouraging athletes to
come to the campus. It's doubt-
ful that the same would be true of
alumni, however, whence cometh
financial help.
Be that as it may, it is diffi-
cult to put a finger on the true
mood or goals of the university as
readers of a recent issue of Town
and Country concentrating on the
South found out. Its projection of
the Universityof the South as an
elitist academe was wide of the
mark and brought chuckles from
faculty and townspeople alike.
Coach Shirley Majors had
hoped that his 65th birthday might
pass unnoticed come May or that
an alternative to that improbability
would be a special dispensation for
a member of the athletic staff to go
beyond the mandatory retirement
age. So he was dismayed and upset
when the story got into print on
the morning of the homecoming
game that the 1977 season would
probably be his last. Here again the
information came inadvertently
from a casual conversation with an
administrative source. However, it
did alert homecoming alumni, es-
pecially those who had played on
athletic teams, to the dilemma con-
fronting the athletic department
and gave. them an opportunity to
express themselves in Majors' be-
half.
The University is to-be com-
mended for passing the torch to an
old Sewanee hand like Moore to
carry on Majors' work with the
young developing talents that show-
ed flashes of brilliance last season,
and should be urged to pause and
give greater recognition to the im-
pact Majors has had on the scholar-
athletes with whom he has come
into contact during his 21 years on
the campus.
Horace Moore
Moore Named
Head Coach
Horace Moore, a Sewanee grid
coach since 1955, was named in
January to replace Shirley Majors as
the new head coach of the Tigers.
Coach Majors, who will be 65
in May, is stepping down under the
requirements of the mandatory
University retirement rule. He will
be with the University until the end
of the fiscal year.
The selection of Coach Moore
was announced by Walter Bryant,
Sewanee athletic director. Coach
Bryant praised Coach Moore for his
cooperation in "seeking solutions
to problems and doing the work" in
the athletic department.
He said Coach Moore took
over the tennis team three years ago
when it was floundering, and that
he has willingly assisted with several
aspects of the intramural program,
while continuing to shoulder his
duties with the varsity teams.
Coach Moore serves as head
coach of the successful University
wrestling team and remains tennis
coach. He has been offensive coor-
dinator and interior-line coach un-
der Coach Majors. He is also pre-
sently serving on the NCAA Wrest-
ling Rules Committee.
A native of Gruetli in neigh-
boring Grundy County, he coached
the Grundy County High football
squad to a 30-16-4 record before
coming to Sewanee.
Coach Moore went to the
University of Tennessee on a foot-
ball scholarship in 1944 before
joining the Army. After World War
II, he was a lineman for Tennessee
Tech and was graduated in 1950.
He and his wife, Novella,
have five daughters.
High Scorers
The University basketball team has
a pair of freshmen guards who not
only play a pretty fair game of bas-
ketball but are ranked second and
fourth academically in their class.
Kevin Reed of Nashville at-
tained a 12.20 grade average out of
a possible 13, and Phil Burns of
Witchita, Kansas has a 11.69 grade
average.
Spring Sports
Previewed
A pair of senior pitchers, John
Riddell and Greg Robertson, are
leading the Tigers into the new
baseball season.
The supporting cast includes
Charlie Potts, a junior second
baseman, and John Hill, a sopho-
more third baseman and pitcher,
but much also depends on freshmen.
The best may be Mallory
Nimocks of Forrest City, Arkansas
and Benny Waterfield of Panama
City, Florida.
Sewanee opened March 13 at
Tennessee Temple. The conference
tournament begins May 11 in
Terre Haute, Indiana.
Felton Wright, in the distance races,
and Ted Miller, in the hurdles, will
lead Sewanee's track squad when
it opens the season April 19 at
Emory University in Atlanta.
Coach Dennis Meeks laments
the lack of depth, so welcomes a
talented newcomer in Rob Clem-
mer, a pole vaulter from El Cajon,
California.
Sophomore Tandy Lewis appears to
have the nod for the number-one
slot on the men's tennis team.
Last season's "number one" is
gone, and David Humphries, who
played second, is injured. The team
should still be strong. Coach Horace
Moore said freshman Phil Dunklin
of Pine Bluff, Arkansas is the best-
looking newcomer.
Lynn Jones of Birmingham leads a
strong women's tennis team, which
will compete in the large college
division of the state tournament
May 3.
Coach Pam Lampley said two
new players give the team depth—
Libby Black, a transfer from Tulane,
and Claudia Melton of Nashville.
Sewanee's synchronized swimming
team will open its four-meet
season April 15 at Agnes Scott
College. ' •
Coach Marian England has
only two seniors on the successful
ten-member squad.
Sewanee's golf team, third in the
conference last year, faces stiff
competition this spring, including
Vanderbilt, Tennessee Tech, and. . .
maybe even the Birmingham alumni
April 29.
COLLEGE SPORTS (Continued)
Coulson Studk
Nino Austin
Austin Honored
Nino Austin, a junior safety and
wide receiver for the Tigers' grid
squad, was named in December to
the 23-member Kodak College Divi-
sion III Coaches All-American
Team.
He was placed on the Kodak
defensive team, but Austin has also
been outstanding on offense where
this past season he set two school
pass-receiving records. He caught
38 passes for 619 yards (both rec-
ords) and five touchdowns in nine
games and has caught 86 passes in
three years at Sewanee.
Austin played at King High
School in Tampa before coming to
Sewanee.
Meeks, Carter
Leaving
Shortly after the announcement of
the retirement of Coach Shirley
Majors and the elevation of Coach
Horace Moore to head football
coach, it was announced that Coach
Clarence Carter and Coach Dennis
Meeks would be released at the end
of the fiscal year.
Coach Carter has been an assis-
tant football coach at Sewanee for
21 years. He also coaches baseball
and has assisted with basketball,
wrestling, and track.
Coach Meeks has been an
assistant football coach and re-
cruiter and is head cross-country
and track coach.
Walter D. Bryant, Jr., Uni-
versity athletic director, said job
descriptions for an entire varsity
coaching staff were prepared last
year in a new plan to broaden and
strengthen the athletic program.
Coach Bryant said that Coaches
Carter and Meeks, while doing fine
jobs in certain areas, do not meet
Sewanee's specific needs. New
coaches are being sought who will
each be qualified to coach at least
three sports.
LETTERS
Sewanee's Christian Influence
Rarely have I felt compelled to respond
to an editorial. Sewanee was and is
a special place for me. I was upset and
concerned when I read "Last Leaf on the
Tree" in the December Sewanee News
and must commit to writing my own
experience and feelings on church partici-
pation and support of Sewanee.
Is it true that donations from the
church only amount to 2% of Sewanee's
annual budget? What is it about Se-
wanee that deserves the support of
committed Christians?
Christianity as a lifestyle is new to
me. I came to Sewanee from an atheistic
background and argued with my class-
mates about a "man-created" God" that
I concluded from existential philosophy
classes and studies in behavioral psychol-
ogy. Both areas have great value but
few true "values" as I later learned.
In the Winter I would sit in class,
look out the window at the Gothic
wonder across the common and note a
wisp of smoke coming from a small
tubular smokestack (I have yet to figure
out where the smoke was actually gen-
erated). I conjectured humorously that
deep inside All Saints was a large caul-
dron where Christians were brewed or a
blacksmith's furnace where they were
hammered and shaped.
Church attendance was mandatory.
I usually went on Wednesdays when
announcements were made and a
secular speaker was presented. On Sun-
days I attended the early service to
avoid the sermons.
I graduated with my class in 1969
and was married at Sewanee in 1971.
It was a modest wedding at All Saints
where Waring McCrady played the organ
and someone wrote "Help Me" across
the soles of my shoes (which showed
clearly when we knelt at the altar).
You may wonder why an atheist wanted
a church wedding. I guess it seemed the
"proper" thing to do. My bride had been
baptized- as a child so the priest was
gracious enough to perform the ceremony.
I didn't have occasion to visit a
, church again (except for several weddings)
until it was time to have our two girls
baptized. This seemed the "proper"
thing to do and, once again, since my
wife had been baptized, the priest agreed
to perform the ceremony. This time
however, there was a catch. Father Wilson
stipulated that I had to attend church at
least four Sundays to learn more about
what we were getting into. After all, we
were agreeing to bring the children up in
the church (I felt most of that could be
handled by the children's Godmother).
My wife and I loved and respected their
Godmother, Katherine Napier. She died
several months later and left the
children's Christian education up to us.
The Sunday after she died my wife took
communion. Several months later I
took communion for the first time.
It may not seem "proper" to men-
tion this, since Sewanee makes such an
effort not to talk about the Christ part of
Christianity, but I asked the Lord into
my life several months later and was
baptized on my 30th birthday.
Now, I didn't discuss my non-
Christian background to climax with my
personal conversion story but to make a
few points about Sewanee. Christianity
has given me peace and a true ideal. I
love the Lord and he gives strength and
meaning to my life. Christianity for me is
much more than a set of doctrines or a
moral code and it is lived by the people
of Sewanee. I knew there was a certain
peace, an'understanding and fellowship at
Sewanee that I found nowhere else until
I started going to church again, almost
eight years later.
Sewanee is dedicated to what is right
and true and good. It extends a relation-
ship with God through the lives of the
professors and dedicated people who
reach out to teach just enough for a stu-
dent to begin to examine his life. Most
people can never go back to their college
days. Sewanee graduates can, in the
body of their church.
What a wonderful experience for a
student to have the freedom to learn
while surrounded by subtle inspiring
Christians. How much I must have missed
at Sewanee outside the church, but the
people, the ideals, the fellowship, the love
and the character of Sewanee left an
indelible impression. I didn't study about
Christianity; I lived among it and experi-
enced it. Once I had a taste, no matter
how confused I was, it's something I
wanted again. The ideals of youth are
recaptured in Christianity. These are the
ideals of Sewanee.
Thank you for reading this. I'm not
certain if I expressed what I had hoped
to say. Sewanee is a beautiful place and I
pray the church realizes the contribution
it makes. Every year there's a new
graduating class of unsuspecting Chris-
tians going forth to spread Sewanee's
ideals and "bear themselves with upright-
ness and integrity, to the glory of God,
to the honor of the State and to the good
name of the University."
—Donald L. McCammon
Longwood, Florida
Story Criticized
I have just read the fairy tale recounted
by Julian Adoue, concerning events
supposed to have occurred just prior to
the burning of Quintard Hall in 1919.
I contacted one official at the
University by telephone and he informed
me that nostalgia pieces are not edited.
When a self-styled eye witness re-writes
history— and some of us are still around—
you can be sure someone will be
disturbed.
Had you checked this bit of nos-
talgia you would have found :
1. Joe Dalton was never superinten-
dent of the Sewanee Military Academy.
2. He left Sewanee in 1916.
3. DuVal Garland Cravens was
superintendent from 1913, and it was he
who took the school to Palatka, Florida
and remained there until temporary
barracks were constructed and school
was resumed at Sewanee. '
4. There were no riots.
6. The school was never taken over
from the faculty by the cadets.
I feel that you owe Colonel Cravens
and his family a retraction and an ex-
planation.
When you have checked my state-
ment for accuracy, perhaps you will
include this effort to straighten things
out in your next Sewanee News,
—Mary Virginia Cravens Ravenel
Columbia, South Carolina
I'm writing in reference to an article
printed in the 1977 December edition
of the Sewanee News, The article con-
cerns itself with Sewanee Academy
during the fire.
To one who knows no better, this
article might be seen as humorous.
However, those who have any know-
ledge of the Academy see it as a mass of
untruths. To enlighten you to several
of these facts, Col. D. G. Cravens was
superintendent of the Academy at the
time of the fire. Mr. Dalton never held
that title. Also, there was no riot at the
Academy in which the students ousted
the faculty for five days.
For some absurd reason, I assumed
it was the duty and the responsibility
of the editor of any grade magazine to
print the facts rather than what is con-
sidered "hearsay."
Your inability to verify the above
mentioned story has in my opinion cast
a slur on the integrity of my grandfather,
Col. Cravens, and the Academy itself.
I expect your next edition to carry
a retraction or an apology.
—Fain Cravens Kirby-Smith
Columbia, South Carolina
I have read with interest on Page 21 of
the December Sewanee News a review
by Julien Adoue of the burning of
Quintard. I am sorry but I must take
quite some exception to his recollections.
The night the barracks burned I was
on guard duty on the first floor of Quin-
tard and took the final evening report to
Captain Fasick in a separate building.
On my return to Quintard I smelled
smoke out in front of the building and
hurriedly went to the fourth floor and
aroused Captain Bearden. We went on up
to the fifth floor trunk room and armory
and found the fire thoroughly started
at the head of the stairs.
Captain Bearden and I started
arousing all of the cadets and others
in the building and a total evacuation
was made. The cadets assembled in no
particular order across the street from the
front of the building.
I spent the night there with all of
the others huddled in blankets and
clothes we had managed to salvage ahead
of the flames. We were immediately
dismissed the next day to go home and
await orders, which came during the
holidays to report to Palatka.
I entered SMA in the Fall of 1918
and Superintendent Dalton had left
the Academy earlier than that, Colonel
Cravens was in charge all of the three
years I was there.
I am quite certain there was no
mutinous action prior to the tragic fire.
I feel sure that just some single dis-
gruntled cadet set the fire, but who it
was I have never been informed.
To my knowledge there was no
armory in the basement and no activity
at that time as to enlarging the armory
on the fifth floor.
Julien must have dreamed up the
matters of soup bowls bring thrown at
the faculty table, the armory being
seized, and the faculty being driven by
bayonets away from the building.
In my recollections no cadets sub-
stituted for faculty in classes and there
was no special order read that expelled
thirty-five cadets for treason and con-
fining the remainder to barracks for
a month.
It seems ridiculous to me to read
about a faculty officer with a loaded
and cocked pistol being present during
the confusion of evacuating the barracks.
When we returned to the Mountain
in the Fall of 1920, we were issued rifles,
bayonets and ammunition when we
were on the firing range.
I was a private in the semesters of
'18 and '19, a sergeant the second year
when the fire took place, and senior
captain my final year.
I have no reason to believe that
my memory has now failed to the extent
that would be necessary to take seriously
the report that Julien Adoue made to
the Sloans.
I hope the contents of this letter
may reach Julien before his story is
published by Random House.
—Fred B. Mewhinney
Louisville, Kentucky
EDITOR'S NOTE: It is unfortunate
that Mr. Adoue, A '20, C'25, and Edward
Sloan, Jr., A'46, are even partly blamed
for a story whose publishing was largely
the dastardly work of the Sewanee News
staff and its various collaborators. The
editor accepted the story as a humorous
and entertaining yarn and never supposed
our readers, much less historians, would
repeat it as history.
Surely there is no reason to question
the facts in the above letters. However,
it is somewhat painful to have to print
that there were no cadet riots. Teddy
Roosevelt, after all, would have been
proud.
The Sewanee News welcomes humor-
ous, tongue-in-cheek, and satirical stories
written with a Sewanee spirit. Such
stories should be easily distinguishable
from the very serious material
20
LEARNING TO
ROUGH IT
Two of Sewanee's most experi-
enced wilderness guides will conduct
three eight-day sessions of instruc-
tion in rock climbing, Whitewater
canoeing, emergency rescue and
wilderness navigation at Sewanee
Academy this summer. Jim Scott,
director of Sewanee Academy's
Outing Program, and Doug Cam-
eron, director of the Sewanee
Outing Club at the University of
the South, will be the instructors.
The sessions will be limited to
20 participants each. Rock climb-
ing will be on Sewanee's sandstone
cliffs that range from 15 feet to
100 feet high. Canoeing will be on
the Hiwassee River in eastern Ten-
nessee. Sessions will be from June
17 to 24; from June 25 to July 2;
and from July 16 to 23. Cost is
$200 per person which includes
dormitory room, all meals, instruc-
tion, technical equipment, and
transportation to instruction sites.
Participants should bring personal
items such as clothing, boots, sleep-
ing bag, day pack or small rucksack,
and a canteen or water bottle.
In case of bad weather the
groups will visit several wild caves
in the Sewanee area.
Jim Scott, trie director of
"Sewanee Wilderness Adventure,"
is a member of the American Al-
pine Club, Swiss Alpine Club, the
British Mountaineering Council,
and National Ski Patrol System,
and is a certified Tennessee Emer-
gency Medical Technician. He is a
chemistry instructor at Sewanee
Academy.
Doug Cameron is a 1965 grad-
uate of Sewanee Military Academy.
He has taught at St. Andrew's
School and developed the outing
program there. He is a member of
the Harvard Mountaineering Club,
is a Nantahala River Guide, and has
attended Outward Bound School in
North Carolina.
June *I7-a<»
June 25- July 2
July 16-23
AT SEWANEE ACADEMY
SUMMER SCHOOL: CHANGING THE PACE
The College Summer School will
run from June 18 to July 30 this
summer with 22 courses on topics
ranging from archeology to Spanish
literature. William Cocke will direct
the school and will also teach Eng-
lish literature and composition.
Science will be represented by
botany, computing, geology, astron-
omy and psychology. Literature
will be well represented, with class-
es examining that of the American
South, France, Germany, Spain,
Shakespeare, and the Bible. Draw-
ing, calculus, economics, European
and British history, politics, and
philosophy will complete the vari-
ety of fare scheduled.
Students in the summer school
enjoy the smaller, more informal
classes, the lower cost, and the rec-
reational advantages of Sewanee
in the summertime. Some are work-
ing hard to finish college in three
years. Others are fitting in "luxury"
courses they don't have time for in
their regular schedule. Others are
long-graduated but like to keep the
brain stimulated.
RIDING CAMP EXPANDED; GYMNASTICS ADDED
The Sewanee Summer Riding Camp
will be held again this year and will
include an adult course, two three-
week youth sessions and gymnastics
instruction.
The gymnastics actually will
be held as a separate camp for an
additional fee, but John Tansey,
director of the University stables,
said it should be of particular inter-
est to young riders.
The adult camp will be held
June 3 through 9. The first youth
camp will be held June 11 through
July 1, and the second July 9
through July 29.
Donna Bouley of Boston, a
nationally certified judge and di-
rector of a gymnastics school in
Wooster, will teach the gymnastics
in sessions scheduled to comple-
ment the riding sessions.
Tansey said the gymnastics
adds an important dimension to the
camp because of its close relation-
ship to the development of riding
skills.
He said riding students will
not be required to take gymnastics,
but he is encouraging it.
The riding classes will be
taught by Tansey and by Jean Raul-
ston, an instructor at the University
Stables. A visiting instructor is be-
ing selected.
The adult camp, which will
have an enrollment of not more
than 20, will cost $225. Each ses-
sion of the youth riding camp will
cost $495. Enrollment will be held
to 25 students. The cost of the
gymnastics will be $435 a session.
The charges will cover the cost
of room, board, tuition, and short
side trips. Other trips may be plan-
ned. The University will provide the
horses, but students may board
their own horses at the University
center for an additional $75 a ses-
sion.
The day-student rate will be
$165 for adults, and $335 for
youngsters. The gymnastics for day
students will be $275. The age limit
in the youth camp is 10 to 18 for
boarding students and 7 to 18 for
day students, although exceptions
may be made in some cases.
The camp program includes
stadium jumping, dressage, cross-
country jumping, showing, over-
night trail rides, individual instruc-
tion, horse care, and horse training.
Swimming, tennis, and movies
in the evenings are only a few of
the other activities available.
It should not go without no-
tice that the University's 10,000-
acre domain offers many miles of
well-maintained riding trails and
mountain bluff views.
ALUMNI AFFAIRS
Club Members
Boost Sewanee
"The best Sewanee Club meeting
ever held in Columbia" was the as-
sessment of Joe Lumpkin, C'71,
new president of the Dobbins Tro-
phy winning Central South Carolina
Club. He was speaking of the Jan-
uary 6 annual holiday party and he
had plenty to crow about in recall-
ing the 100 attendants, including
ten high school seniors scheduled to
enter the College next fall, along
with prospects, current students,
and their parents. Vice-Chancellor
Ayres spoke and Albert Gooch was
present also, looking there for ano-
ther Rhodes Scholar (Jeff McMahan,
C76, is from Camden and at just
such a function was recruited by
Albert. Much credit for the success
of this function goes to past presi-
dent Earl H. (Trace) Devanny, C'74,
and for planning and turn-out to
Jennifer Benitez, C'73.
Atlanta, recovering magnifi-
cently from a malaise of inertia, re-
organized by reviving the full array
of activities the rest of this year for
which the club once was preemi-
nent: a spring break beer party
bringing alumni, friends and current
students together; a city-wide
search of high schools with an At-
lanta gathering followed by a trip
to the Mountain with prospects; a
summer function and the fall an-
nual Founders' Day Dinner. Com-
ing out in foul weather on January
26 to the Chattahoochee Plantation
Club, some 70 Atlantans undertook
all this and heard an inspired talk
from Dr. Douglas Paschall. After-
ward, Jack Stephenson, C'49, was
elected president. Temporary chair-
man responsible for much of this
superb organization was Louis Rice,
C'50.
The Rev. D. Roderick Welles,
Academy headmaster, was the
speaker at the Houston Country
Club for the annual dinner there on
November 30. It was a big day for
the Academy whose alumni con-
tinue playing key roles in club acti-
vity—Payne Breazeale, A'62, math
teacher, accompanied the headmas-
ter to Houston where the new club
president, Joe Gardner, A'67, also
is national president of Sewanee
Academy alumni.
At the meeting on November
17 in the Botanical Gardens, Martin
Tilson, Jr., C'74, was elected Bir-
mingham club president. Martin is
also a trustee from the Diocese of
Alabama.
The Sewanee Alumni football team, which defeated the Washington
& Lee Alumni last December, includes from left, kneeling. Hunter
Brown, Johnny Walters, Bill Wright, Bruce Denson, Zack Hutto, and
David Nabors; second row, Claude Nielson, Mike Shannon, Don Pip-
pin, Frank Cunningham, Jack Stephenson, Allen Reddick, David
Donaldson, Pete Cavert, and Hugh Nabors, and third row, Ed Greene,
John Cravens, Mike Payne, Martin Tilson, Ed Varner, David Jefferson,
Bob Given, Bruce Dunbar, Holland West, Tony Cooper, and Eugene
Watson.
Memphis held a reorganiza-
tional gathering on January 20 at
the University Club with Dr. Gil-
bert Gilchrist speaking and George
Clarke, C'43, installed as president
and Paul Calame, C'62, named
president-elect.
First regular gathering of the
Sewanee Club of Baton Rouge on
January 11 at the home of Edwin
(C'51) and Mae Bowman saw Bob
Holloway, C'36, named first pres-
ident of the club. The enthusiastic
gathering of Academy, College and
St. Luke's alumni heard an opti-
mistic report on the state of the
University from Million Dollar Pro-
gram chairman, Dr. Robert Lan-
caster.
Slides for nostaligia and beer
for refreshment made for an en-
joyable and well-attended evening
at the River Bend Apartments club
house in Tampa where Tom Whita-
ker, C'75, succeeded Bobby New-
man, C'73, as president.
Council Meets
The Alumni Council will gather on
the Mountain April 28-29.
National officers, class leaders,
club presidents, and counselors
involved in student recruitment will
take part in workshops for each of
their respective areas of concern.
Alumni vice-presidents will preside.
Taking W & L
The Sewanee Alumni, led by Coach
Bobby (Bear Bryant) Given, over-
came inclement weather and the
Washington & Lee Alumni for a
28-9 football victory in Birming-
ham, reports Martin R. Tilson, Jr.,
C'74.
Sewanee has won both of the
years the event has been held.
The fruits of victory ; A keg of
beer donated by the losers.
Task Force
Eyes Goal
Responding to a special called
meeting for orientation and train-
ing in the Task Force program, class
agents will join alumni governors on
the Academy campus March 17-18.
The invitation came jointly
from the Rev. D. Roderick Welles,
the Academy headmaster, and Joe
Gardner, A'67, alumni president,
on behalf of the Board of Governors
of the Sewanee Academy Alumni
Association.
The purpose of the meeting is
to inspire and commit alumni
leadership to reach the goal of
$150,000, which the regents have
deemed necessary to balance the
Academy budget.
All begins Friday night, with a
board meeting followed by supper
and orientation. Two Saturday ses-
sions are scheduled in Task Force
leadership training.
Winter Slide Show
The public relations office has
recently assembled the first of
a new series of slide shows
about the University. The new
show is a winter tour of the
central campus in 62 color
slides— the stark beauty of the
snow in contrast to the
warmth of student and faculty
faces.
Interested persons may
order the show by writing:
Public Relations Office, Uni-
versity of the South, Sewanee,
Tennessee 37375.
For the present, the show
does not include sound, but a
written identification of the
slides will be included.
CLASS
NOTES
A slight change has been made in our
method of listing class notes.
Beginning with this issue, when we
have a news note about an alumnus who
has attended more than one University
division, we are placing the note under
the class of most advanced study.
If you attended both the Academy,
College, and School of Theology, you
would be listed under your seminary class
year.
This is being done under the some-
times-erroneous assumption that an alum-
nus has more interest in the later class
1920
NEWTON A. BROWN, C, is playing
golf twice a week, weather permitting,
and says he shoots his age (81) once in a
while. The family now includes nine great
grandchildren.
J. EDWARD DEUPREE, C, writes
that he occasionally hears from some
classmates but would like news from
others, He still resides in Memphis and
has four children, 13 grandchildren, and
four great-grandchildren.
1923
THE REV. EDWARD B. GUERRY,
2, was elected president last spring of the
Huguenot Society of South Carolina. He
s the author of A Twentieth Century
Drophet, a biography of his late father,
Bishop William Alexander Guerry.
CHARLES R. M1LEM, C, writes
that the blizzard of '77 in Ohio is some-
thing to remember.
1925
THE REV. JOHN B. MATTHEWS,
C'23, T, is staying fit during retirement
by playing two or three rounds of golf
a week at home in Lake Placid, Florida.
He was 83 January 16.
1926
COLEMAN A. HARWELL, C, says
he is spending much of his time writing,
and his wife, Ann, painting. He notes
with much pleasure that W. PORTER
(PETE) WARE, A'22, C) has bacome
class agent and encourages all alumni
exornati to return to the Mountain for
their annual reunions at Homecoming.
NICK B. WILLIAMS, C, H'73, is
gardening in the sand seaward from his
Laguna Beach, California home and
speaks of gray whales passing in mi-
gration from the arctic to the lagoons
of Baja.
1927
We saw reviews in the recent Pied-
mont Churchman and elsewhere of a new
book by CHARLES E. THOMAS, C, who
still resides in Greenville. The book is a
biographical tribute to the Rt. Rev. Albert
Sidney Thomas, the late ninth bishop of
South Carolina, who was a cousin of
Commander Thomas. The reviews highly
commend the biography, which is avail-
able from the author for $7.50 (200
Fairview Avenue, Alta Vista, Greenville,
South Carolina, 29601).
1929
STANYARNE BURROWS, JR., C,
has been awarded the annual Distinguished
Service Award by the Chattanooga Kiwa-
nis Club, which cited him for "many
years of devoted service to people and to
his community." Mr. Burrows is a mem-
ber of the Greater Chattanooga Area
Chamber of Commerce and is a board
member of Community Services of Great-
er Chattanooga and the American Red
We have word that EDWARD E.
COBBS, JR., C, has retired from his
Montgomery, Alabama law practice and
is now residing in Columbus, New Mexico.
THE REV. JAMES A. B. HAG-
GART, C, has retired from the ministry
and is now residing in Healdsburg, Cali-
1932
EDWARD B. CROSLAND, C, has
retired as senior vice-president of AT&T
and is now affiliated with the law firm of
Shaw, Pittman, Potts & Trowbridge in
Washington.
THE REV. WILLIAM P. RICH-
ARDSON, JR., C, writes from New Or-
leans that he has begun a new career -oil
painting. He had a one-man show in Jan-
uary and has sold a number of works. He
also served as chaplain on a Queen
Elizabeth II cruise through the Caribbean
in December. This spring— a trip to Eng-
land and Sweden.
1934
Someone passed on a note to us
about the continuing work of JOSEPH
E. HART, JR., C, for the Episcopal
Church Home for Children in York, South
Carolina. Continuing a family tradition,
he annually mails thousands of Christmas
Tree Club letters to friends of the home
throughout South Carolina.
1935
WALTER H. DRANE, C, has been
elected chairman of the board and chief
executive officer of Banks-Baldwin Law
Publishing Company of Cleveland, Ohio.
1940
KENNETH R. GREGG, C, a copy
editor for the Bridgeport (Connecticut)
Post, reports that he and Jeanne, his wife
of almost six years, are making their
home in Hamden (and are still on their
honeymoon). Good Luck, Ken! Jeanne,
by the way, heads the business depart-
ment at Plainville High School.
1941
THE REV. MARSHALL J. ELLIS,
C, has moved from the parish ministry to
prep-school teaching. He is now chaplain
of two Episcopal schools in Tacoma,
Washington, the Annie Wright School and
the Charles Wright Academy. He resides
in the country nearby at Gig Harbor,
Washington.
1943
WILLIAM O. BEACH, C, who is
serving a third term as county judge
(chief elected executive) of Montgomery
County, Tennessee, is president of the
National Association of Counties, the
national organization representing county
government and county officials through-
out the nation. He also is the first vice-
president and in line for the presidency
of the National Association of Regional
Councils, the national organization re-
presenting regional councils, planning
commissions, and sub-state development
districts of the nation. And if all that is
not enough, the judge in October was
named a member of the "New Coalition, "
an organization composed of four govern-
ors, three state legislators, three mayors,
and three county officials who meet sev-
eral times a year to discuss and attempt
to arrive at a consensus on important
;-il ional i
affecting state and local
nttho
5 tO
the President and Congress.
W. B. ROGERS BEASLEY, C, is
director of the Frontier Nursing Service
in Hyden, Kentucky, a 40-bed hospital
that provides a range of medical services
to that Kentucky mountain area. He
asks: "Any Sewanee grads want to join
in this program? ?
BERKELEY GRIMBALL, C, counts
himself "one of the chief tin-cup rattlers"
bur finds it "all very gratifying and ex-
citing" as headmaster of Porter-Gaud
School, Charleston, South Carolina. Two
years ago the school built a chapel and is
aiming now for a new fine arts center.
GRENVILLESEIBELSII, C, writes
that his second book about soaring, A
Gaggle of One, received the Joseph C.
Lincoln Award for the "best popular
writing about the sport of soaring pub-
lished in 1976." The award was presented
by the Harris Hill Soaring Association,
the nation's oldest soaring (gliding) club.
He and his wife also are lecturing this
winter about orchids, which they grow,
to groups in Boston, New York, Washing-
ton, Atlanta, Seattle and Montreal. Their
first grandchild was born January 5.
1945
THE REV. ARCHER TORREY, T,
is director of Jesus Abbey near Charlotte,
North Carolina on the Watershed Grange,
a spectacular 160-acre mountain flank
leased from the National Forest Service
for conversion to pasture. The abbey is a
community for laymen which teaches and
practices evangelism.
THE REV. DAVID J. WILLIAMS,
T, has left the position of rector of the
Church of St. Michael and All Angels
and is chaplain of Patterson School,
Lenoir, North Carolina.
1949
STUART H. SHERMAN, JR., A,
has been promoted to Major General
and director, Manpower and Organiza-
tion, with Air Force Headquarters in
Washington. He and his wife, Theresa,
recently moved to 86 Westover Avenue,
Boiling Air Force Base from Vandenberg
AFB.
1951
THE REV. WILLIAM CAPERS
ACOSTA, GST, retired December 31
after 37 years in the ministry, the last
12 of which he was rector of the Church
of the Nativity, Dothan, Alabama. He
and his wife visited Israel and England,
a tour made possible by a gift from the
parish congregation.
THE VERY REV. JAMES STIR-
LING, GST, was honored in December
with a colorful celebration of the
"Kirkin' O' the Tartans" at Trinity
Cathedral in Columbia, South Carolina.
The Scottish-born Rev. Dr. Stirling will
be retiring in June as cathedral dean. He
is the father of EDWIN M. STIRLING,
C'62, Sewanee associate professor of
English.
1953
JOHN CATER, C, is now a vice-
president of Rotan Mosle, Inc. in Houston,
selling stocks, bonds, municipal real es-
tate, and oil securities and annuities. He
also is enrolled in the College for Finan-
cial Planning preparing to be certified in
financial planning. John plays a lot of
golf with DICK DOSS, C'50, BILL
BRUCE, C'53, and BILL BOMAR, C'52.
CHARLES A. HOWELL III, C,
was presented January 19 a Certificate of
Merit by the Tennessee Arts Commission
for "his untiring efforts on behalf of his-
toric preservation" in Tennessee. The
certificate said Howell "has paved the
way for the restoration movement in the
City of Nashville and in the State of
Tennessee, and that in so doing he has
helped to save many of our state's archi-
tectural resources from destruction and
has ensured their existence for genera-
tions to come." He is a director of His-
toric Nashville, Inc. and the Association
for the Preservation of Tennessee Anti-
quities. As regional vice-president of
Preservation Action, Howell is respon-
sible for recruiting new members, de-
veloping legislative programs in seven
Southern states, conducting regional
meetings and developing a communica-
tion program between members in
several states and the members of Con-
gress and other legislative bodies. Howell
also is a faculty member of the O'More
School of Design, and, by the way, is
owner of Howell Construction Company.
BERTRAM WYATT-BROWN, A' 49,
C, is a fellow of the Davis Center for
Historical Studies at Princeton, where his
wife, Anne, has been a fellow in the
English department. Both are writing
books.
1954
W. HAROLD BIGHAM, C, resumed
private law practice December 1 as a
partner in the firm of Gullett, Steele, San-
ford & Robinson of Nashville after a ten-
ure as professor of law at Vanderbilt.
CLIFFORD Y. DAVIS, JR., C,
vice-president and a director of City
National Bank in Memphis, is the general
campaign chairman for LeMoyne-Owen
fund raising.
JAMES C. FENHAGEN, C*51, T,
is the author of Mutual Ministry, pub-
lished by Seabury Press, which was listed
recently by The New Review of Books
and Religion as one of several books most
in demand.
1955
COL. HAROLD A HORNBAR-
GER, C, is now deputy commander of
the 1961st Communications Group at
Clark Air Base, Phillippines as a member
of the Air Force Communications Service.
He recently received a second award of
the Meritorious Service Medal for the per-
formance of outstanding duty as chief of
the command acquisition division, staff
and plans, at Randolph Air Force Base,
Texas.
JAMES J. YODER, C, who is now a
University trustee, is practicing medicine
in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina.
Arthur Ben Chitty, C'35, president of the
Association of Episcopal Colleges, was one of 20
denominational educators who met President
Jimmy Carter in December "to reaffirm the
president's frequently expressed commitment to
church-related colleges." The president was
invited to keynote an international ecumenical
education congress in 1979. Dr. Chitty wrote
that President Carter's endorsement was genuine,
enthusiastic, and knowledgeable.
1956
WILLIAM A. KIRKLAND, H, was
recently presented the Rice Alumni Gold
Medal honoring him for 19 years of ser-
vice on the Rice University Board of
Trustees.
DR. H. NEWTON LOVVORN, JR.,
C, and his wife are the parents of a daugh-
ter, Cecelia Frances, born last August 17.
1957
GEORGE A. PIERCE, JR., A, has
a law practice in the Blackstone Building
on Bay Street in Jacksonville.
Thomas H. Ellis
1958
THOMAS H. ELLIS, C, has been
appointed assistant director for plans
and applications of the U.S. Forest Pro-
ducts Laboratory in Madison, Wisconsin.
KIRKMAN FINLAY, JR., C, has
entered the race for mayor of Columbia,
South Carolina. He has been a city coun-
cilman for almost four years.
1960
JAMES R. CARTER, JR., C, has
received the Ph.D. Degree in religion from
Emory University.
HOWARD W. HARRISON, JR., C,
is practicing law at the Education Law
Center, which is funded by the Ford
Foundation, since graduation from Villa-
nova Law School and passage of the
Pennsylvania bar exam.
J. BRICE RICHARDSON, C, is
now vice-president of Bagby Furniture
Company in Baltimore, and resides in
Lutherville, Maryland.
1961
DAVID C. PERRY, A'57, C, writes
that he will be moving to Jackson Hole,
Wyoming in May where he will be open-
ing a private law practice. He and his
wife, Joanie, are expecting a child this
month.
JERRY ALLISON SNOW, C, is a
diplomate of the American Board of
Cardiovascular Diseases. He is prac-
ticing medicine in Washington, D.C.
1962
PAUL CALAME, JR., C, was
recently promoted to first vice-president
of the National Bank of Commerce of
Memphis and was placed in charge of the
bank's branch division.
FRANK KINNETT, C, has been
named chief executive officer of The
London Agency, Inc., a managing gen-
eral insurance agency in Atlanta. Frank
also serves on the executive council of
the Atlanta area Boy Scouts of America.
THE REV. S. EMMETT LUCAS,
JR., C'56, T, was the subject of a recent
feature in the Greenville Piedmont titled
"Publishing Priest : Souls, Genealogy Are
His Business." The Rev. Mr. Lucas has a
publishing business, which prints mostly
early regional records and family histories.
He is rector of St. Michael's Church,
Easley, South Carolina.
THOMAS E. MYERS, JR., C, has
moved back to Charleston after 13 years
in New York.
"The Knife," a poem by RICHARD
W. TILLINGHAST, C, was published in
the September 3 issue of The New Re-
public.
1963
We received a note, barely too late
for December, announcing the birth of a
daughter, Varina Stanton, September 25
to JEFFREY BUNTIN, C, and Varina
Buntin in Nashville.
JOHN W. BUSS, C, is a bank officer
with American Express International
Banking Corporation. He and his wife,
Chiara, and their one child reside in Milan,
Italy.
DAVID F. COX, JR., C, is serving
a term as mayor of Hardyston Township,
New Jersey.
BERRYMAN W. EDWARDS, JR.,
C, recently founded a new company,
Village Courts, Inc., which will build ten-
nis courts in North and South Carolina,
Georgia, and Florida. The specialty is
fast-drying clay and cushion-surface hard
courts. Edwards also is president of
Greenery, Inc., a landscape contracting
and design firm. He and Ruthie are still
residing at Hilton Head with their two
sons, who are now age 10 and 12.
In July, JAMES T. ETTIEN, C,
will begin his duties as an assistant pro-
fessor of clinical surgery at the Medical
College of Georgia in Augusta.
CHARLES Q. GAGE, A, and his
wife, Karen, have a third child, Geoffrey
Maxwell, born last June 15.
At last word CHARLES S. L.
HOOVER, C, was making a temporary
home in London, England, on leave of
absence from the College of Charleston.
GEORGE E. LAFAYE IIL C, is a
partner in the law firm of McCants, Nel-
son, Green, Lafaye and Woods in Colum-
bia, South Carolina.
A recent note tells us WILLIAM W.
PHEIL, C, is president of the Towson
(Maryland) Jaycees.
WHEELER M. TILLMAN, C, is
serving a third term in the South Carolina
House of Representatives.
RICHARD D. WARREN, C, is
state's attorney for Wicomico County,
Maryland.
THOMAS WISE, C, is a partner
with Tofel & Clark, a sales representative
firm in New York City.
We have a note that RONALD R.
ZODIN, C, is still flying F-105s for the
Air Force Reserve and now holds the
rank of major. In addition to being vice
president of the Fort Worth Iron & Metal
Company, Ron is president of the Rotary
Club, president of the North Texas Metal
Processor Association, and is actively in-
volved in several other professional organ-
izations.
THE REV. RICHARD I. zum-
BRUNNEN, A'49, C59, T, rector of St.
George's Parisb, Perryman, Maryland, also
is an education specialist with the Army
at Aberdeen Proving Ground.
1964
THE REV, JOHN C. BARTON, JR.,
GST, is vicar of St. Alban's Church,
Stuttgart, Arkansas.
GEORGE ELLIS DESHON, JR.,
C, is now a urologist at Letterman Army
Medical Center, San Francisco.
LACY H. HUNT, C, has been pro-
moted to senior vice-president of Fidelity
Bank and Fidelocor, Inc. of Philadelphia.
His increasingly active role in the nation's
financial community over the past three
or four years includes the publishing of
a book, Dynamics of Forecasting Finan-
cial Cycles.
The Rev. Onell A. Soto
THE REV. ONELL A. SOTO, T, is
the new mission information officer at
the Episcopal Church Center in New
York City. Until recently he was the exec-
utive secretary of Province IX. He re-
mains editor of Rapidas, a Spanish-
language news service for the Anglican
Church, which he created. On the Church
Center staff he will be part of the Na-
tional and World Mission section.
THE REV. HOYT WINSLETT
GST, is the new rector of St. Paul's in
Greensboro, Alabama.
1965
WILLIAM D. GILCHRIST, JR., C,
has been promoted to senior vice-president
and city executive officer, Central Bank
of Alabama.
THERT. REV. EDWARD W1TKER
JONES, GST, has become bishop of the
Diocese of Indianapolis upon the recent
death of Bishop John P. Craine. Bishop
Jones was consecrated bishop coadjutor
in ceremonies last September.
GARY PRESTON, A, is an account
executive with Merrill Lynch in Atlanta.
He and his wife, Anne, make their home
in Marietta.
HARVEY M. TEMPLETON III,
A'60, C, has joined the legal department
at Bowaters Southern Paper Corporation.
He is residing in Cleveland; Tennessee.
A. SPENCER TOMB, C, an asso-
ciate professor of biology at Kansas State
University, says he had a great time intro-
duing RICHARD A. DOLBEER, C'67, a
research biologist, when he gave a seminar
at Kansas State recently. The visit includ-
ed duck hunting.
1966
AUSTIN E. CATTS, C, has estab-
lished his own law firm in Suite 1590
Tower Place, Atlanta.
ERIC JAMES WHITESELL, A'62,
C, has married Simone Nguyen Thi Hoa
of Can Tho, South Vietnam. The couple
were married December 10 in a civil
ceremony in San Diego, California. They
plan to have their marriage blessed in a
Roman Catholic ceremony as soon as
arrangements can be made.
1967
JOSEPH GARDNER, A, president
of the Sewanee Academy Alumni Asso-
ciation, has been promoted to administra-
tive assistant to the vice-president for
transportation and crude oil supply in the
Coastal States Gas Corp. of Houston.
BRUCE M. (MAC) GREENE, C, is
now an assistant professor of medicine at
the Johns Hopkins University School of
Medicine. He and his wife have three boys
1, 3, and 5 years old.
HARRY F. NOYES III, C, and his
wife, Heidi, have a daughter, Jennifer
Elizabeth, born November 9. Harry is a
civil service public affairs officer for the
300th Military Police Command (Army
Reserve) in Livonia, Michigan and reports
he is creating a public and internal infor-
mation program from scratch for a 1400-
member, five-state command. A fellow
employee is Reginald Barlament, who
was with the ROTC program at SMA in
the late 1960s.
The Wall Street Journal recently published
a humorous story about Richard Mitchell, C'53.
and his Underground Grammarian, which ridi-
cules poor writing and bad grammar at Glassboro
State College, New Jersey, where he teaches.
The Underground Grammarian has stung pro-
fessors and administrators alike with its sarcasm
to the delight of many others. ''The Grammarian
is unassailable," he was quoted as saying. "Bad
English has no defense."
Harvey M. Templeton III
1968
JOHN W. BALL, JR., C, has joined
the Charter Company in Jacksonville in
September after working for a CPA firm
in that city for a year.
DAVID K. BEECKEN, C, has been
elected an international banking officer
of the Harris Bank, Chicago. He is a mem-
ber of the international banking group's
section responsible for the Middle East
and Africa. David and his wife, Kathryn,
reside in Hinsdale, Illinois.
CRAIG V. BLEDSOE, C, received
a master's degree in safety engineering in
August from the University of Southern
California, and will be taking a Certified
Safety Professional exam in June. Craig is
qualified as an air transport pilot, with
Learjet rating, and has over 4,000 hours
of Hying time.
JONATHAN S. FLETCHER, C, is
administrative assistant to the vice-presi-
dent of Union Carbide Exploration
Corp., which is engaged in the explora-
tion and development of tungsten, ura-
nium, and other metallic mineral deposits.
He now resides in Grand Junction, Colo-
rado. He recently completed course work
for the Ph.D. in mineral economics at
Penn State.
WILLIAM D. HARRISON, C, is
practicing law with the firm of Hall,
Bloch, Garland, and Meyer in Macon,
Georgia. He was graduated from Mercer
University Law School last June.
ROBERT W. MULDOON, JR., C, is
working towards his Ph.D. in English at
Penn State University, following a master's
degree from Loyola College last May. He
is teaching freshman English as part of his
teaching assistantship but says most of
his time is spent on 20th Century Ameri-
can literature.
We have word that HERBERT LEE
OAKES, JR., C, has married Sheila Fearn
of Leicester, England in Kensington,
London. They are making their home in
London after a wedding trip to Portugal.
DANIEL W. RANDLE, C, is working
on a master's degree in architecture since
leaving graduate school at Princeton and
traveling extensively in North Africa and
Europe.
CHRISTOPHER H. ROSSBACH, C,
has been promoted to lieutenant com-
mander and is the officer in charge of the
Navy's Saudi Arabian Training Program in
Norfolk.
G. PRICE RUSS III, C, has left
chemical research at the University of
California and is teaching at the Univer-
sity of Hawaii,
We have word that GEORGE W.
SPECK, C, will soon join his hrother,
ARTHUR LEO SPECK, C'58, in medical
practice in Nacogdoches, Texas.
LAWRENCE S. (LARRY) STE-
VENS, C, is a public information spe-
cialist with the Georgia Council for the
Arts and Humanities.
WILLIAM CONNER TINDAL, C,
has been elected a delegate to the House
of Delegates of the South Carolina Bar
Association from the Sixth Judicial Cir-
STEPHEN T. WA1MEY, C, writes
that he and his wife, Harriet, have a
daughter, Victoria Joanne, who is a year
old this month. He is still with Donovan,
Leisure, Newton & Irvine of New York
City, in which MALCOLM FOOSHEE,
C18, is a partner. EDWARD E. NIE-
HOFF II, C'74, has recently joined the
firm.
H. PENNINGTON WHITESIDE,
JR., C, has moved to Birmingham where
he is associate and project coordinator for
the Division of Preventive Medicine, De-
partment of Public Health, The Medical
Center, University of Alabama.
ROBERT R. (DICK) ZSELTVAY,
C, and his wife, Mary, have moved to
Franklin, Tennessee, and Dick has ad-
vanced to president of Technical Labora-
tories in Santa Fe. They have two child-
ren now, Robert III and Catie, who is
five months.
1969
J. WALDRUP BROWN, JR., C,
has been promoted to vice-president of
the commercial loan department at Union
Planters National Bank in Memphis. He
and his wife, Dorothy (Cissy) now have
two children, Brooks, four years, and
John HI (Chip), 20 months.
JOHN BULL, JR., C, married
Florence D. Brown November 12 in
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.
THE REV. ROGERS S. HARRIS,
C'52, T'57, GST, will receive his Doctor
of Ministry degree in May from Virginia
Seminary.
JOHN TIMOTHY (TIM) MITCH,
C, and his wife, Muffy, have a daughter,
Mary Katherine, born December 28, in
Jackson, Mississippi.
C. WINSTON SHEEHAN, JR., C,
married Katherine S. Flannagan last
July 16 in Hopewell, Virginia.
JAMES R. WILLIAMS, C, is the
new product development manager for
the Chemical Division of Marken Cor-
poration in Keene, New Hampshire.
The new job marks a departure for Jim,
who has moved from the laboratory into
management.
1970
WALTER H. MERRILL, C, is cur-
rently at the National Institute of Health
in the Heart and Lung Institute, Bethesda,
Maryland, where he expects to complete
his fellowship in June. Then to Johns
Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore to com-
plete his residency in cardiac surgery. He
and his wife, MORGAN (VAN ZANDT),
C'73, had theirsecond daughter, Elizabeth
Gibson, born October 12.
ROBERT LEE SLATEN, C, was
recently named "Outstanding Young
Man of 1977" by the Chattanooga Jay-
cees. Bobby, who is virtually paralyzed
from the waist down, was recognized for
his work for programs for the disabled.
MIDDLETON R. L. (TONY)
TRAIN, C, married Angela Jennings of
Max Meadows, Virginia October 29. Tony
is employed by S. C. Loveland Company,
a marine transportation concern in Phila-
delphia.
1971
THE REV. JOHN MACREADIE
BARR HI, C, has become rector of
the Church of the Advent, Sumner,
Mit
>ippi.
C. H. (DOUG) DOUGLASS, C,
is teaching in the chemistry department
at Drake University. His wife, Anne, is
studying for a Ph.D. in atmospheric phy-
sics. They have two boys and a girl and
must be busy.
WILLIAM A. KIRKLAND II, SS'67,
C, is teaching at Garrison Forrest School,
Garrison, Maryland.
HOWARD LOTTI, A, is in graduate
school at Samford University, Birming-
ham, working toward a master's degree
in American history.
THE REV. ROBERTS. McGINNIS,
JR., GST, chairperson of the humanities
division, Dillard University, has been in
Israel this winter studying the thought of
Martin Buber, the Jewish philosopher-
theologian. The scholarship for the trip
was awarded by the New Orleans Consor-
tium for International Affairs' Faculty
Study Abroad Program. Dr. McGinnis
also will have an article, "The Christian
Scriptures," published this spring for
The Liberal Catholic Institute of Studies
MALCOLM C. MORAN, C, is
attending the Rhode Island School of
Design. He and his wife, Elissa, have
their second child, Morgan, born in
December.
THOMAS A. SMITH, C, will
his M.D. degree in June from
the University of Tennessee in Memphis.
Afterward he will serve a three-year
residency in Chattanooga. Tom and his
wife, Suzy, now have a son, Tommy, and
a daughter, Teddy.
WILLIAM BRADLEY (BRAD)
WEEKS, C, is now a partner in the Chat-
tanooga law firm of Wagner, Nelson and
Weeks.
1972
WILLIAM M. MOORE, C, who re-
ceived his Ph.D, at Vanderbilt last year,
has a post-doctoral fellowship at the Uni-
versity of Texas.
J. EARL MORGAN III, C, has been
promoted from executive vice-president
to president of First Federal Savings and
Loan Association of Dyersburg, Tenn-
If you read the magazine People,
you may have noticed in the December
25 issue a note about KYLE ROTE, JR.,
C, and his about-to-be-released book,
The Complete Book of Soccer.
1973
SUSAN S. AIKEN, C, married
Granville Semmes III on October 1 in
New Orleans. Susan is still assistant to
the director in the French Consulate and
is working in the public relations office.
LT(jg) F. GEORGE ATKISSON, C,
has departed on an extended deployment
in the Western Pacific on the guided mis-
sile cruiser U.S.S. England, which will
operate as a unit of the Seventh Fleet.
Port stops include the Philippines, Korea,
Taiwan, and Japan.
SALLEY BREEDEN, C, and
FRANK S. (SHROP) DUNAWAY, C'70,
are the parents of a second son, Charles
Garvin, born July 7.
BARBARA HARDEE CAMPBELL,
C, who resides now in Boone, North
Carolina, passed her CPA examination
last fall.
According to a classmate, ROBERT
E. CARR, JR., C, is now a CPA/SEC re-
porting analyst in Fort Worth, and his
wife, Karen, is a home economics teacher.
CLAYTON CLOUGH, C, is in a
Mariott Corporation training program in
Atlanta in pursuit of a career in hotel
management.
THE REV. CHARLES M. DAVIS,
T, is now the warden at the Georgia Con-
ference Center, Waverly, where his wife
also is a full-time worker. They moved to
Waverly from Harlem where he was vicar
at Trinity Church.
JOSEPH F. (JEFF) HARTZER, C,
has a new address in Jacksonville, Florida
but is still dean of boys and is teaching
(senior poetry and British literature) at
Bolles School. Last summer, Jeff back-
packed through Europe and Scandinavia.
TOMMY HODGES, C, is aiming for
a Ph.D. in biochemistry at the University
of North Carolina
THE REV. WILLIAM S. HOLCOMB
has accepted the call to Church of the
Holy Comforter in Gadsden, Alabama.
He was swept out to sea by swift ocean cur-
rents, and William E. Kachman, C'77, had to
tread water for 15 hours until he was picked up
by a fishing boat off the coast of Hawaii.
Stationed with the Army, Bill was surfing
last December off Chum's Reef and waiting for
a friend to bring him his board when he was
caught by the undertow.
He said afterward that a helicopter flew
over him just after dark and shone a spotlight
on him at least six times but failed to see him.
When pulled aboard the fishing boat, he
was quoted by UPI as saying: "Halleluiah! I
never saw anything so beautiful in my life!"
LT(jg) WILLIAM CLARENCE
JOHNSON, C, is an assistant supply offi-
cer in the Medical Service Corps at the
Naval Regional Medical Center in San
Diego.
LAURIE RICE MATARAZZO, C,
and her husband, Matty (Robert J.) had
their second daughter, Serena Rice, born
October 11.
MICHAEL MEARS, C, and wife
have recently moved from Seattle to
Reno, Nevada.
H. THOMAS MOTTL, C, has com-
pleted graduate studies at Colorado State
University and will be working for the
U. S. Geological Survey in New Mexico.
LOUIS W. RICE III, C, received his
degree last June from Mercer Law School,
was admitted to the Georgia Bar and is
now practicing with the Robert J. Reed
law firm in Gainesville.
ANN LOTTI RICHARDSON, A'69,
C, and husband, WILEY, C72, are resi-
ding in Birmingham where Wiley is with
Alabama Bank Corporation.
SUSAN ROGERS, C, is attending
Georgetown University Law School and is
still working on Capitol Hill.
THE REV. GEORGE B. SALLEY,
JR., GST, became the rector in February
of All Saints' Church, Cayce, South Caro-
lina.
THOMAS E. SETTLES, C, is com-
pleting his second year at Vanderbilt Law
School while his wife, Candy, is preparing
to open a dental practice in Franklin,
Tennessee.
PETER C. SHERMAN, C, has re-
cently opened a used automobile business
in Mobile, brokering cars on a high-volume
basis. The name? Pleezin' Pete's Cleeen
Used Cars, Inc.
SHARON LOUISE SMITH, C, is
teaching English at All Saints' School in
Vicksburg, Mississippi. She previously
received a master's degree from Peabody
College.
JOHN E. SPAINHOUR, C, and his
wife, ELISE (GIVHAN), C'74, are prac-
ticing law together in Shepherdsville,
Kentucky. Both received their law de-
grees from Vanderbilt.
JOHN R. STEWART, C, recently
moved with his wife, Nancy, from At-
lanta to Nashville where John is a civil
engineer with Hensley-Schmidt, Inc., a
consulting engineering firm.
WILLIAM A. SULLIVAN, C, a
graduate student at the University of
Minnesota in hospital and health-care
administration, reports he is looking
forward to moving into a position on the
West Coast next year.
JAMES W. TAYLOR, C, has com-
pleted a stint with the Air Force and is
now a graduate student in chemistry at
the University of Tennessee. He and his
wife, Teresa, have two daughters.
SUSAN SW AFFORD TAYLOR, C,
and husband, BOB (ROBERT T.), C'70,
now reside in Birmingham where they
moved after Bob's graduation from Oral
Roberts University with an MBA. Susan
is working part time as a nurse in an inter-
mediate care unit for coronary patients
at Alabama Medical Center and is caring
for three-year-old son, Michael. Bob is
an administrative assistant in the opera-
ting room of the Medical Center.
1974
Received word that SCOTT BAM-
MAN, C, passed his bar exams, then went
with the attorney general's office in
Montgomery, and now works for a Mont-
gomery brokerage firm.
In with a belated note on the mar-
riage of CLARINDA MEAD BISHOP, C,
and MARK A. ABDELNOUR, C'77, on
September 4 in All Saints' Chapel.
JANET FINCHER, C, sent us a
card mentioning she is an economic de-
velopment planner with the Texas gover-
nor's office. She is residing in Austin.
THOMAS M. HAYES III, C, was
admitted to the Louisiana bar in October
and is associated with the firm of Hayes,
Harkey, Smith, andCascio in Monroe.
CINDY BOATWRIGHT HEJNA, C,
is a feature editor for Vance Publications
in Chicago and is assigned to Modern
Salon magazine, a beauty and cosmetic
trade publication. "She is continuing her
education by taking courses in basket
weaving," reports husband DENNIS,
C'75.
SERENA COLVIN HUNTER, C,
has completed her master's degree work
in forest tree improvement at North
Carolina State University and has been
employed by NCSU's School of Forest
Resources to complete some research
studies. She sends word that husband
PARKIN, C'73, has been awarded a
fellowship by the Weyerhaeuser Com-
pany as he continues work on doctoral
degrees at NCSU in forestry and econo-
BECKY LOVE, C, married PHILIP
D. ELDER, C'73, last August 13.
WILLIAM E. McEAURIN, A'69, C„
is returning this month from Gambia in
West Africa after more than three years in
the Peace Corps. He will rendezvous with
his mother and his father, LESLIE Mc-
LAURIN, C'39, in Rabat, Morocco to
tour that country and then Spain and
Portugal. The family was in Rabat in
1957-58, during an Air Force assignment.
MALCOLM W. (BIMBO) MOSS, C,
is dean of students at Snead State Junior
College at Boaz, Alabama. He and Gloria
are making their home on campus with
their daughter, Layla, and they invite
Sewanee friends to stop in for a visit.
Received word that EDWARD E.
NIEHOFF II, C, has completed Harvard
Law School and is an associate in the firm
Donovan, Leisure, Newton & Irvine in
New York City.
JAMES G. PALMER, C, and his
wife, Debi, are both teaching school in
Huntsville, he at Randolph School. Their
son, Alan Scott, is now two years old.
ANNE CALDWELL PALMER
PARTAIN, SS, is teaching drama and
English in Birmingham, where she resides
with her husband, Mack.
GAYLORD T. WALKER, C, will be
receiving his medical degree this spring
from Washington University. His medical
studies also have taken him to Notting-
ham, England, and Dublin, Ireland.
1975
ROBERTA CARRUTH, C, is cur-
rently with the Daily Courier, Houma,
Louisiana, as news reporter and coordi-
nator of a special history edition being
released this month.
STEPHEN L. PALMER, C, is a
student at the University of Alabama at
Birmingham.
THE REV. JEFFREY H. WALKER,
C'72, T, is canon liturgist of Christ Church
Cathedral, Houston.
1976
WILLIAM S. CALDWELL, C, is in
his second year of graduate study in
chemistry at the University of Wisconsin.
Bill has overcome an illness that set his
studies back a pace.
Katherine A. Clemons
KATHERINE ANITA CLEMONS,
C, is now a flight attendant with Delta
Air Lines. She is assigned to the com-
pany's base in Boston.
DAVID A. DARROHN, C, has re-
ceived a master's degree in political
science from the University of Tennessee
and last month joined South Central Bell
in Knoxville as a management assistant
in customer service.
HENRY (HANK) DEAN, C, is assis-
tant manager for AVCO Finance Service
in Jacksonville.
THOMAS E. (TED) DOSS III, C,
reports he has five quarters of law school
to go at the University of Florida before
graduation.
ROBERT TAYLOR McPHERSON
II, C, is in his second semester of graduate
school at the University of North Caro-
lina, Chapel Hill. He is pursuing an M.A.T.
degree in English and is teaching some in
the Durham City Schools.
JOHN R. POPPER, C, is a student
in Dental School at the University of Ten-
nessee. John recently completed a year of
work as a research assistant in virology at
St. Jude Hospital in Memphis.
1977
ELLEN BARTUSCH, C, was mar-
ried January 7 in Memphis to JAMES
STEVADSON MASSEY, C'77.
FRANK BERRYMAN, C, is a stu-
dent in Vanderbilt Law School.
FRANK D. CUNNINGHAM, C,
sends word of the large group of Sewanee
alumni who are fellow students at Cum-
berland School of Law in Birmingham—
CHARLES NABIT, C'77; R. BROOKS
DAVIS, C'74; HELEN GREER MINIC
C'76; VERA MOOR, C'72' JOHNNY '
DAVIS, C'77; M. HOLLAND WEST,
C'75, and BARRE DUMAS, C'77
ELENA SUE DAVENPORT, C, is
an actuarial student in the group depart-
ment of Provident General Insurance
Company in Chattanooga.
VIRGINIA DECK, C, is working
as a mental health assistant at Peachford
Hospital in Atlanta.
JAMES HAROLD HILL, JR., C,
and LAURIE LOU SAXTON, C78,
were married January 7 in Tampa.
JANICE JAFFE, C, now employed
by a law firm in Washington, is interested
in seeing other young alumni in the area.
She is living in Arlington, Virginia.
MIKE KAPLON, C, and MARK
PARSONS, C, are fellow students in Van-
derbilt University Medical School.
DEBBIE LOPEZ, C, is attending
graduate school at Northwestern Univer-
sity.
GREG McNAIR, C, is employed at
National Life Insurance Company in
Chattanooga.
KIMBERLY S. MATTHEWS, C, is
nearing the completion of her research
internship with the U.S. -Soviet Relations
Program of the Carnegie Endowment for
International Peace in Washington. The
word from officials there is that she has
been "setting the place on fire," and that
"Sewanee stock has risen" as a result.
JOHN HENRY MENGE IV, C, and
Julia Morgan Radcliff were married De-
cember 3 in Mobile.
JEFF W. RUNGE, C, is in medical
school at the University of South Caro-
lina in Charleston.
SHARON LYNN SHARP, C, has
begun work toward a master's degree at
Vanderbilt University. She was graduated
cum laude from Middle Tennessee State
in December, with a major in geology.
Glad to see Sewanee starting a geology
department she says.
ELLEN CIMINO WILLIAMS, C,
writes that she and JUDSON WILLIAMS,
C'75, have a daughter, Natasha Camille,
born December 7. Judson is in wildlife
graduate school at Auburn University.
GRANT WILLIAMS, C, is a student
in the University of Alabama School of
Medicine in Birmingham.
26
DEATHS
FRED RAWLINGS BUTTS, M'06,
of Atlanta, Georgia, at one time a master
mechanic of the C B & 0 Railroad, De-
cember 16, 1977.
william Mckenzie Rey-
nolds, A'll, C'12, of Sumter, South
Carolina, attorney, and Sumter County
Master-in-Equity for 20 years, on Octo-
ber 7, 1977. He served in the Army
during both World War I and World War
II and retired as a reserve colonel. A
grandson, WILLIAM McKENZIE REY-
NOLDS III, A'72, attended the Sewanee
Academy.
HENRY C. BETHEA, A'14, C'17,
of Houston, Texas, certified public ac-
countant, December 23, 1977. His grand-
son, HENRY LAWRENCE BETHEA,
C'68, attended the University.
JULIEN K. MOORE, C'19, of
Waco, Texas, a certified life underwriter
with Southeastern Life Insurance, Sep-
tember 10, 1977. He served in France in
World War I with the Sewanee Ambu-
lance Unit.
EDGAR EARL BALDRIDGE,
A'23, of Ft. Worth, Texas, petroleum in-
dustry executive, September 23, 1977.
He was an honorary life-time director of
the American Petroleum Institute.
GEORGE C. CUNNINGHAM,
C'27, of Memphis, Tennessee, attorney,
December 4, 1977. He served in the Air
Force during World War II.
JOHN H. HINKLE, A'30, in Hous-
ton, Texas, on August 13, 1977. He
was president of Wright Chemical Corpo-
ration in Wilmington, North Carolina,
and served in the Army during World
War II.
LINUS NORMAN THORNTON,
C'30, of Dyer, Tennessee, former pre-
sident of Dyer Motor Company.
PIAMUS WALTER JONES, JR.,
C'33, of Albany, Georgia, attorney, on
September 1, 1977.
J. ALLAN HIGGS, A'32, of Bir-
mingham, Alabama, on November 21,
1977. He served with the Army during
World War II.
EMMETT RUSSELL ANDERTON
JR., C'34, of Winchester, Tennessee, Pre-
sident ofAnderton Distributing Company,
February 9, 1978. He served in the Army
during World War II.
KENNETH K. CLARK, C'34, of
Ft. Worth, Texas, a retired engineer tech-
nician, October 28, 1977.
WILLIAM WIGG HAZZARD, JR.,
A'34, C38, of Sewickley, Pennsylvania,
on July 21,'l977. He was president of
Kerchner Marshall Company. He served
with the Air Force during World War II.
A nephew, RUTLEDGE P. HAZZARD,
JR., C'77, attended the University.
THE REV. HENRY J. McGEHEE,
T'34, of Summit, Mississippi, on August
2, 1977. He served churches in Tennes-
see, Arizona and Mississippi.
LEWIS DANTZLER PRIDE, A'50,
of Nashville, Tennessee, an attorney with
Schulman, Pride and Leroy, and former
state reprsentative, on February 8, 1978.
JAMES HARDWICK RUTH, C'50,
of Montgomery, Alabama, where he was
a jeweler of Ruth and Sons Jewelers,
January 8, 1978.
JAMES E. PEEPLES, A'53, of
Tampa, Florida, on February 29, 1977.
E. WAYNE HANNAH, A'54, prom-
inent Chattanooga area radio and tele-
vision broadcaster, a native of Winchester,
Tennessee, January 31, 1978.
THE REV. WARREN H. SCOTT,
GST'63, of Atlanta, Georgia, in Novem-
ber, 1977. He retired from Atlanta
University, later served as spiritual direc-
tor of the Diocese of Atlanta and as
head of the Canterbury Center for
Spiritual Life.
WILLIAM EIDSON SMITH III,
C'72, of Knoxville, Tennessee, law stu-
dent at Memphis State, of cancer, Novem-
ber 9, 1977.
Col. Wolcott K. Dudley, retired
instructor at Sewanee Academy, January
18 at his home in Sewanee. Col. Dudley
came to Sewanee as superintendent of
buildings and lands after a varied and
distinguished 30-year career in Army
service, which began with his graduation
from West Point. He taught math at the
Academy from 1958 to 1970.
Florence B. McCrory, of Sewanee,
on January 26, 1978. She was formerly
a member of the staff at the University
development office, and later a volunteer
secretary for the Sewanee Summer Music
Center. She was the mother of Martha
McCrory, associate professor of music
and director of the Sewanee Summer
Music Center.
Louise McDonald, August 7, 1977
widow of John Maxwell Stowell
McDonald, former head of the depart-
ment of philosophy at the University of
the South.
Mrs. Calhoun Winton, Sr., a former
matron at Barton Hall, Sewanee, Novem-
ber 24, 1977 in Nashville.
mjwiflvw
SPRING CALENDAR
MARCH
1-20— Guerry Hall Gallery, Rodney Shaw
sculpture, Juris Ubans paint-
ings, drawings and photos
Bairnwick Gallery, art by Franz-
Joseph Wismer
2— Concert, Greenwood Consort
2-3— Alumni Career Counseling, law
3— Cinema Guild, "Persona"
6— Experimental Film Club, "Relativity,"
"Scorpio Rising"
Student Forum lecture, author
Caroline Bird
7— Women's Conference, speakers Osta
Underwood, Nashville attor-
ney, and Denise Tabet, Mad-
ison (Wis.) TV producer
9— Lecture, Kenneth Jones, University of
the South— "Poetic Examples
in Dante's De Vulgate Bio-
quentia"
9-11— Outside Inn, "Cabaret '78"
9-23— Academy Master-Students Term
11— Tudor Long Memorial Walk, Chatta-
nooga to Sewanee
12— Concert, Piedmont Chamber Orches-
13— Experimental Film Club, famous
documentaries
Lecture, Denis Donoghue, Uni-
versity of Dublin
16— Lecture, Derrick Pearsall, Univer-
sity of York-"Chaucer's
Wife of Bath: The Dialec-
tics of Sexual Sovereignty"
Lecture, Douglas Paschall, Univer-
sity of the South— "How Man
Makes Himself Immortal : The
Poet in Dante and Eliot"
17— Cinema Guild, "Kino Pravda," "In
the Year of the Pig"
19— University Choir and Sewanee Cho-
rale, Mozart's Requiem
20— Lecture, John Archibald Wheeler,
University of Texas at Aus-
tin-"The Black Hole in the
Universe"
21— Concert, pianist Alexander Toradze
22-April 5— Spring vacation, College and
School of Theology
23-April 3— Academy spring vacation
27-31-Guerry Hall Gallery, Robert Evans
sculpture
Bairnwick Gallery, Charles Brooks
political cartoons
APRIL
1-30— Guerry Hall Gallery, Robert Evans
sculpture
Bairnwick Gallery, Charles Brooks
political cartoons
6-7— Nuclear disarmament conference
7— Cinema Guild, "Hour of the Furnaces"
7-8— Symposium, "Chemistry in American
Life"
9— Lecture, Judith Shapiro, Bryn Mawr
College-"Indians and Mis-
sionaries—Three Cases from
Brazil"
10-ExperimentaI Film Club, "The Cabi-
net of Dr. Caligari"
12 — Lecture, Andrew Lytle
13-15— Sewanee Mediaeval Colloquium
17— Experimental Film Club, "The Last
Laugh"
18-19— Regents' meeting
19— Concert, Tashi chamber quartet
20-22— Trustees' meeting
21-Cinema Guild, "Metropolis"
21-22— Fiddlers' Convention
23-May 5— Fellows-in-Residence, School
of Theology
28-30— Alumni Council
MAY
1— Sewanee Chorale Spring Concert
Experimental Film Club, Sewanee
Amateur Film Celebration
5— Cinema Guild, "Spirit of the Beehive"
5-7— Purple Masque, "A Midsummer
Night's Dream"
8-28-Guerry Hall Gallery, work of senior
art majors
Bairnwick Gallery, prints by Richard
Duncan
19-21— Academy Board of Governors
21— Academy Commencement
28— College and School of Theology
Commencement
going up
University officials and fund-raising
volunteers have become cautiously
optimistic with a surge that has put
this year's Million Dollar Program
more than $200,000 ahead of the
pace of this time last year.
There is caution because Se-
wanee is still $350,000 short of its
$1,150,000 goal for the fiscal year
that ends June 30. Much work re-
mains before the goal can be passed.
There is caution for another
reason.
Robert S. Lancaster, national
chairman of the Million Dollar Pro-
gram-and Sewanee professor, in
announcing the figures, said opti-
mism is difficult in the light of the
University's financial position.
Lest we become too opti-
mistic, he said, it should be real-
ized that we are working against
a debt that is costing the University
more than $200,000 a year, and a
deficit of $110,000 was budgeted
for the current year.
Dr. Lancaster called attention
to the admonition of Robert M.
Ayres, the acting vice-chancellor,
that the University is in a "survival
mode."
It is possible, however, that if
the friends of Sewanee continue to
respond to its financial needs, the
succession of University deficits can
be brought to a halt in 1978.
Cost reductions are being made
throughout the University, but the
primary hope now lies with the
Million Dollar Program.
The greatest boost to the cur-
rent MDP drive came in December.
The tally of unrestricted giving as
of December 31 reached $727,265,
compared with $493,214 for the
same period last year. Total gifts,
including bequests and restricted
gifts, were $989,791.
Dr. Lancaster is following the
successful work of several past pro-
gram chairmen— Mr. Ayres, O.
Morse Kochtitzky, and George M.
Snellings, Jr. However, he said he
has been encouraged in his hopes
for still another successful fund-
raising effort by the enthusiasm of
Sewanee men and women he has
been visiting in frequent trips away
from the mountain. Dr. Lancaster
is a favorite speaker at Sewanee
Club meetings everywhere.
Mr. Ayres also has been travel-
ing extensively on behalf of the
University. Four "dinners with the
vice-chancellor" were held last fall
in Jacksonville, Chattanooga, San
Antonio, and New Orleans. Two
dinners at Birmingham and Atlanta
in March will be followed by din-
ners in Nashville (April 5) and
Louisville (May 1).
These dinners provide an op-
portunity for the vice-chancellor to
tell Sewanee's story to prospective
donors.
A direct mail campaign in the
fall, using letters from Mr. Ayres,
has had a significant impact. The
acting vice-chancellor, who is taking
a leave of absence from his position
in investment banking, was able to
write to alumni as an alumnus, and
to parents as a parent. He has the
experience of a former MDP chair-
man, and a former alumni president.
Attention also is being given
to the class anniversary gifts for the
classes of 1953 and 1928. An initial
effort in anniversary giving was
undertaken two years ago for the
College class of 1926 under the
leadership of Coleman A. (Colie)
Harwell. While class anniversary
gifts are common at many colleges
and universities, the project is new
at Sewanee.
Fifty and 25-year reunion gifts
for this year will be applicable if
made before July 1, 1979.
Donor Omitted
Paul T. Green of Columbia, South
Carolina was inadvertently omitted
from the list of 1976-77 donors to
the University which was published
in the September issue of the Se-
wanee News.
SUMMER 1978
Joint Doctor of Ministry Program Vanderbilt May 29-June 17, Sewanee June 21-July 26
Sewanee Summer Riding Camp and
Sewanee Summer Gymnastics Camp
Delta Kappa Gamma
Sewanee Wilderness Adventure
College Summer School
Sewanee Summer Music Center
SSMC String Camp
Sewanee Summer Seminar
National School Orchestra Association
June 3-9, June 11 -July 1, July 9-29
June 15-17
June 17-24, June 25-July 2, July 16-23
June 18-July 30
June 24- July 30
June 25-July 2
July 9-15
August 1-7
U)
CD
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C3
(D1
F
T^Sewanee News
77?e University of the South/Sewanee, Tennessee 37375
CONTENTS:
News 1
Features 4
On and Off the Mountain 13
Academy News 16
College Sports 18
Letters 19
Alumni Affairs 21
Class Notes 22
Deaths 26
Calendar 26
Fund-raising 27
TheSewanee News
Trustees
Elect Ayres
One hundred of the 135 trustees
of the University met in Sewanee
April 20-21 to elect a new perma-
nent vice-chancellor.
Eighteen bishops, other clergy,
and lay trustees joined the Rt. Rev.
John M. Allin, the chancellor, in
asking Vice-Chancellor Robert M.
Ayres, Jr. to accept the position on
a permanent basis. Mr. Ayres was
elected unanimously.
Prior to the vote, Bishop
Girault Jones, the former chancel-
lor, gave the report of the search
committee and explained the pro-
cess of narrowing down a field of
133 candidates.
Mr. Ayres had originally asked
not to be among those considered
for the permanent post but relented
and notified Bishop Jones and the
committee of his decision only
three weeks earlier.
Mr. Ayres was nominated by Dr.
Gilbert F. Gilchrist, faculty trustee,
who described to the trustees the
warm welcome Mr. Ayres had
received when he came to Sewanee
as acting viee-chancellor and the
sentiment for him that -grew
throughout the year.
When the vote was recorded,
Bishop Allin asked the Rt. Rev.
Willis R. Henton, bishop of North-
west Texas; the Rev. Lavan B.
Davis, of the Diocese of the Central
Gulf Coast, and Dr. Robert S.
Lancaster to accompany Mr. Ayres
from his office to Convocation Hall.
Rather than immediately ac-
cepting the position, Mr. Ayres
asked that he be allowed to enter
into a dialogue with the trustees.
He called attention to the great
liberal-arts and spiritual traditions
of the University. He also called
attention to the needs.
"We are looking for substantial
money to continue the work of
this place," he said.
"I see no way but for us to
launch a bold program, one that we
are not afraid of, one that we have
confidence in and believe in," he
said. "I am willing to give my life
to this institution. I will do as best
I can to move forward with God's
help."
In addition, he said: "I think
this is a rare opportunity in edu-
cation. This is a unique place, and
it may end up being the most
unique place, where we can find the
finest teaching of truth coupled
with a deep faith in the living God. "
A Rare Opportunity'
The following address was delivered
by Robert M. Ayres, Jr. on the
afternoon of April 21 to the Uni-
versity Board of Trustees immedi-
ately after his election as perma-
nent vice-chancellor and president.
After the address and after re-
sponses from three trustees, Mr.
Ayres thanked the board and ac-
cepted the office.
The committee has said that I
have been elected by this body.
Before I respond to that, I would
like the privilege of entering into a
dialogue with you briefly this after-
noon.
In the last two days, I have
thought, naturally, of what might
happen here this afternoon. I felt
that I had not really had an oppor-
tunity to share with you some feel-
ings and dreams I have for this
place and to perhaps take a few
moments to let you respond.
This is certainly one of the
most momentous occasions in my
life, and somehow I would like to
see if we are traveling this road
together as I share the hopes I
have for this place and our life here
together.
Continued on page 2
Leadership
and Service
Robert M. Ayres, Jr. will become
the University's 13th vice-chancellor
on July 1.
The selection of Mr. Ayres ob-
viously resulted not only from his
work as acting vice-chancellor but
from his long record of service to
the University, to his business, to
his Church, and to his fellow man.
Since replacing Dr. J. Jefferson
Bennett last July 1, Mr. Ayres has
been on a leave of absence as senior
vice-president of the Texas invest-
ment banking firm of Rotan Mosle,
Inc.
He is a member of the Univer-
sity class of 1949, is a past presi-
dent of the Associated Alumni, and
was twice chairman of the Board
of Regents. He is presently a trustee.
Mr. Ayres first took a one-year
leave of absence from his business
in 1975, following hurricane Fifi
in Honduras, to work as a volunteer
in the area of relief in that country
and to raise money for the Univer-
sity as chairman of the Million
Dollar Program.
He extended his leave at the
request of the presiding bishop to
coordinate Episcopal relief after the
Guatemalan earthquake. More
recently he has become a cabinet
member of the Executive Council
of the Episcopal Church.
A native of San Antonio, Mr.
Ayres was graduated from Texas
Military Institute, served in the
Navy during World War II, and
resigned as a lieutenant.
After receiving his degree from
the University of the South, he did
graduate work at Oxford University,
England. He received a master's
degree in 1952 from the Wharton
School of Finance and Commerce,
University of Pennsylvania.
In addition to serving on the
boards of several corporations, Mr.
Ayres has been an officer for
numerous professional and civic
organizations.
Mrs. Ayres, the former Patricia
Ann Shield, also is active in civic
and charitable work. Their son,
Robert Atlee, 20, is a student at the
University, and their daughter, Vera
Patricia, 17, has been attending
school in San Antonio.
Pr -Med
Record
The University has established a
notable record by having all ten
senior premedical students this
year accepted to medical schools
for next fall.
The only other two current
students seeking medical-school
admission next fall also have been
accepted. Both are 1977 graduates.
Charles W. Foreman, professor
of biology and acting chairman of
the premedical committee, said the
record is significant considering
that medical schools on the average
are admitting only 30 percent of
the students applying.
Sewanee graduates have been
doing progressively better in recent
years on medical school admissions
(14 of 19 applicants were admitted
last year), but this is the first time,
in recent history at least, that
Sewanee has hit the 100-percent
mark.
Some of the students were
admitted to more than one medical
school, and among those schools
accepting Sewanee students were
Vanderbilt, Washington University
in St. Louis, and Emory.
Since 1970 Sewanee graduates
have also been admitted to Johns
Hopkins, Tufts, Georgetown, Stan-
ford, Baylor, and Duke. Compe-
tition for medical-school admission
is particularly tough at private
schools. Of 6,095 applicants for
its medical school last fall, Van-
derbilt accepted only 83.
The Sewanee students— six biol-
ogy, five chemistry, and one
psychology major— scored an
average of 10.0 out of a possible
15.0 on the medical college admis-
sions test, well above the national
mean score of 8.0.
Dr. Foreman says the Univer-
sity has good students to work
with, and the students should be
given the credit.
nxSewanee News
Latham Davis, Editor
John Bratton, A'47, C'51, Alumni Editor
Gale Link, Art Director
JUNE 1978
Vol. 44, No. 2
Published quarterly by the Office of
Information Services for the
UNIVERSITY OF THE SOUTH
including SCHOOL OF THEOLOGY,
COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES,
SEWANEE ACADEMY
Free distribution 24,000
Second-class postage paid at
Sewanee, Tennessee 37375
The cover illustration is a sketch by
Edward Carlos, chairman of the fine arts
department, of Bobby Clark, C'81,
sitting at a computer terminal.
Carl Siegel and relative at Commencement
At the same time, he says that
the drop in demand for Ph.D.
science graduates is placing new
emphasis on the premedical studies.
Sewanee, he says, has an opportun-
ity through its record to attract
even more excellent students to
this program.
110th Sewanee
Commencement
Approximately 238 graduates, in-
cluding 25 from the School of
Theology, received degrees May 28
in commencement exercises in All
Saints' Chapel.
The Rev. C. FitzSimons Allison,
rector of Grace Church in New
York City, delivered the bacca-
laureate sermon.
In addition to being an alumnus
of the University, the Rev. Dr.
Allison is a former faculty member
of the School of Theology, has
held other teaching positions, and
has authored numerous books and
articles.
Honorary degree recipients
included Norio Ogata, president of
Rikkyo (St. Paul's) University in
Tokyo and professor in the univer-
sity's College of Law, which he
founded; Mary Elizabeth Tidball,
professor of physiology at George
Washington University Medical
Center;
The Rev. Lee A. Belford, pro-
fessor of religious education at
New York University and senior
editor of the Churchman maga-
zine; the Rev. Martin R. Tilson,
rector of St. Luke's Church in
Birmingham:
Robert B. Heilman, author,
critic, educator, and an advisory
editor for the Sewanee Review, and
the Rt. Rev. Charles Judson Child,
Jr., suffragan bishop of the Diocese
of Atlanta.
'A Rare Opportunity9
(Continued from page 1)
I think you heard me yesterday
speak of some of the needs at
Sewanee at this time. And looking
at what the founders had hoped
for this place and dreamt for, I
find similar feelings of my own.
They wanted this to be the
finest liberal arts college in the
country or as fine as could be
found. I think we're on the way to
that. I think we have one of the
best. But I think it can be better.
I know that this place was
founded with a deep commitment
to Christ and a belief in the author-
ity of the Scripture. And I believe
that. I believe also that we have a
real obligation here at Sewanee, as
it relates to the exposure of our
students to a Christian life.
I think we have an opportunity
to enhance and build upon— not
only with an understanding intellec-
tually of Christianity— a way to
help our students, who are willing
to understand, find a relationship
with the living Christ, and to know
Him, and through the magnificent
teaching of this institution and the
preparations of their lives to find
the gifts they have to share.
I think this is a rare oppor-
tunity in education. This is a
unique place and may end up being
the most unique place, where we
can find the finest teaching of truth
coupled with a deep faith in the
living God. And that's where I am.
This is a fine student body we
have here and continue to bring to
this campus. This University can be
the pinnacle and should be the
pinnacle of our Church.
It should be the beacon on the
mountain, shining out and saying to
our Church what we really believe
and telling about our Anglican
tradition and the Gospel of our
Lord. I believe when we are clear
about that, people will respond and
support this institution.
I am reminded of that small
band of six bishops 120 years ago
that on that platform that I have
just outlined and nothing more
raised more money in six months
than we raised in this institution
from an affluent 24 dioceses all of
last year.
That speaks to me. That speaks
to me and says we need to continue
down that path that is our tradition
and is the tradition of this insti-
tution.
We are looking at the need for
some substantial money to con-
tinue the work of this place. Our
faculty salaries are low. You heard
that. Pitifully low. The wages of
our employees are low. Our proper-
ties need improvements.
I see no way but for us to
launch a bold program, one that we
are not afraid of, one that we have
confidence in and can believe in.
And, my friends, it begins with us
who are in this room today.
I am willing to give my life to
this institution, as I see it now. I
will do as best I can to move for-
ward with God's help. I will need
commitments from you as well.
I cannot do it alone. I cannot do it
with a handful of people. But to-
gether we can do it.
This is truly an opportunity
equal to two or three other great
opportunities in time that this
University has had. The needs are
greater financially than we have
ever known.
We have never launched any-
thing of the size that we probably
will need this time. So it is going
to take this type of commitment to
accomplish what is ahead.
I have said it to the students
this year over and over, and I will
say it now again that if we are
doing things right on this mountain,
God will bless us. He has done it
before, and He will do it again.
There has always been a never-
ending succession of benefactors.
Balancing
the Budget
Budget questions, as was expected,
dominated much of the business of
the Board of Trustees' meeting in
April.
John W. Woods, chairman of
the Board of Regents, said the
possibility of balancing the budget
this current year is "problematic,
but progress has been made." Strin-
gent cost-saving measures have been
introduced throughout the campus.
The University began the year
budgeted with a $110,000 deficit;
therefore, gaining that much in
savings would be a major accom-
plishment.
The trustees were presented and
approved a 1978-79 budget that is
not only balanced but contains a
contingency reserve of $100,000.
In his report, however, Robert
M. Ayres, the vice-chancellor-elect,
was still emphasizing the import-
ance of the current year.
He said it is imperative that the
University surpass the $1,150,000
fund-raising goal this year. The
reason, he said, is that "to go out
on a capital funds campaign without
a balanced budget, without a rec-
ord of cost control, would be
disastrous."
Asked about auxiliary services
on the campus, Mr. Ayres said
Emerald-Hocigson Hospital contin-
ues to lose money, and the deficit
there may be greater than the
$50,000 that was considered the
limit only a few months before.
Nevertheless, he said, effective
cost control has begun under the
leadership of Kenneth R. Lacy,
the new administrator. Hope now
rests with a doctor recruiting effort.
Mr. Ayres also spoke of the
enrollment problems at the Acad-
emy and the discipline problems
that have resulted in the dismissal
of a number of students. But he
said the morale was higher than it
had been all year, and the able
leadership of the Rev. D. Roderick
Welles, the headmaster, is evident.
Mr. Ayres said full enrollment
at the Academy, which is antici-
pated next fall, would mean
$200,000 more in revenue than the
University has this year.
He noted that the University
continues to have full enrollment
in the college and seminary. The
enrollment of the Theological
Education by Extension program,
he told the trustees, has grown to
1,900.
The trustees passed at least
three resolutions of general interest.
One asks for a detailed study of
the University's priorities before
the commencement of a capital
funds campaign.
Another urges the administra-
tion and the regents to give "very
highest priority, consistent with a
balanced budget, to significantly
improved faculty and staff salaries."
A third resolution requests all
bishops of constituent dioceses
to request their clergies to seek an
increase from $1 to $2 per com-
municant for Sewanee in the Budget
contributions. Plans are under way
for a major capital funds campaign
that could begin as early as 1980.
Capital Funds
Campaign
Plans are under way for a major
capital funds campaign that could
begin as early as 1980.
The board of regents in April
authorized a feasibility study, and
the regents will be participating
more in the selection of a consult-
ant in the weeks ahead.
John W. Woods, board chair-
man, spoke to the trustees on
April 20 about the plans and
stressed the depth of commitment
that would be required.
William U. Whipple, vice-presi-
dent for development, said the
feasibility study will, among other
things, tell the administration if
the timing is right, if the drive will
conflict with other fund-raising
Squeezed
by Inflation
The Sewanee Chapter of the Ameri-
can Association of University Pro-
fessors prepared a report this
spring showing how faculty salaries
at the University have eroded almost
continuously since 1967.
The report asked that the
average compensation of the fac-
ulty be raised 10 percent for the
new fiscal year (the new budget
provides for average raises of 6 per-
cent for faculty and staff) and a
commitment to like increases in the
next three years.
It cites the consequences of the
long-term decline of average income,
stating that "the salary of most of
the current faculty is insufficient
to meet the cost of an acceptable
standard of living for university
faculty."
The 11-page report also quotes
from last year's report from the
association to the effect that real
compensation is 10 percent below
efforts, and if Sewanee has the right 'he '^1 generally prevailing at
kind of volunteer leadership. He
said the campaign will not be won
by a professional staff but by
volunteer leaders.
Mr. Whipple noted that Sewa-
Sewanee before 1972-73.
For the year beginning in Sep-
tember 1976, the average compen-
sation at Sewanee rose 4.7 percent,
the report states. Since the cost of
Students Nancy Bell and David Vineyard chat with trustees torn
Burroughs and Martin Tilson, Jr. '
nee raised more unrestricted monies llvlng lncreased nationally 6.0 per-
last year than Duke University, and f"1' real lncorae actually declined
much of that effort was due to 13 Percent-
volunteers. The situation has not been
much different for the current year,
according to the report, with Uni-
versity compensation of 6.6 per-
cent barely ahead of the inflation
rate of last fall's 6.4 percent.
Citing the slow decline of com-
pensation relative to the work force
in the rest of the nation, the report
goes on to state that in 1976-77
full-time faculty in the U.S. re-
ceived on the average increases of
salary two percentage points more
than Sewanee.
Rather than the University
improving its salary position rela-
tive to similar schools, as has been
planned, its position has become
more tenuous, says the report.
Faculty members experience a
bitter frustration insofar as they
perceive the declining status of
their profession.
"This frustration is all the
greater," says the report, "because
the Sewanee faculty has made great
strides forward in professional
qualifications. Whereas in 1966-67,
two-thirds of the faculty had
doctorates, in 1976-77, nine-tenths
had doctorates, a progress made
in spite of an increase in the num-
ber of faculty."
ON AND OFF
THE MOUNTAIN
Thumb and a Prayer
If getting there is half the fun,
the Sewanee group that made the
Grand Canyon trek during spring
break must have had a ball.
The University bus broke down
in Nashville and was finally aban-
doned. The limousine that took its
place broke down twice on the
trip. Four of the 15 in the group
ended up hitchhiking.
Two of the hitchhikers were
actually on their way back home
when they decided they weren't
going to be left out, turned around,
and beat the group to the canyon.
But that wasn't all the fun. Five
days of hiking and camping in the
hot canyon included a good share
of blisters, scorpions, and rattle-
snakes. Helicopters were sent to
find the stragglers.
Oberon (David London) and Puck (Catherine Davis) up to mischief
in Purple Masque production
Jazz Master
Stan Kenton and his progressive
jazz orchestra was the big attraction
at Convocation Hall spring semester.
Kenton, who took a leisurely
walk from piano to microphone to
announce most of the numbers,
demonstrated for the wall-to-wall
dancers and admirers that he is still
innovating after 40 years.
Pitching In
An estimated 650 students from
the College, Academy and School
of Theology filled more than 1,000
33-gallon plastic trash bags with
debris on Sewanee's beautification
day (during pitch-in week) in April.
Delta Tau Delta fraternity, which
restored an abandoned playground
at Willie Six Field, won first place
in a group competition and prize
money and a trophy provided by
the Sewanee Woman's Club.
Full Schedule
The University Concert Series
closed its 11-event season April 19
with a performance by Tashi, a
popular chamber music ensemble.
University students drew raves for
■ their Purple Masque performance
of A Midsummer Night's Dream
May 4-7 under the direction of
David Landon, associate professor
of French. Earlier, Sewanee Arts
presented Clare Booth Luce's 1936
comedy, The Women, under the
direction of Marilyn Walker, a
senior in the College.
Requiem in Chapel
One of the best received concerts
of the year was the performance of
Mozart's Requiem in All Saints'
Chapel. The University Choir, the
Sewanee Chorale, and four guest
soloists were accompanied by a 20-
piece orchestra, made up of com-
ponents of the Chattanooga sym-
phony, and a guest organist— all
under the direction of Joseph M.
Running, professor of music.
DuBose Memorial
A renovation of St. Augustine's
Chapel in All Saints' was dedicated
to the memory of William Porcher
DuBose in ceremonies April 30.
The work, executed by Waring
McCrady, was sponsored by the
Tau Delta Chapter and the chapter
alumni of Delta Kappa Epsilon
fraternity at the University. DuBose,
the first chaplain of the University,
also founded the Order of Gowns-
men and the department of the-
ology, which became the School
of Theology, and has since been
called "America's most eminent
Anglican theologian."
Otey Rector Sought
The Rev. Archie C. Stapleton has
resigned as rector of Sewanee's
Otey Memorial Church to become
headmaster of the Brent School in
Baguio, the Philippines. The Rev.
Mr. Stapleton has been interim
headmaster this year. Serving in
his absence has been the Rev.
John M. Gessell, professor of
Christian ethics in the School of
Theology, assisted by the Rev.
Ronald E. Greiser, who was ordain-
ed in services at Otey Church.
All Night Pickin'
The seventh annual Sewanee
Fiddlers' Convention attracted
more than a full house (when fans
left, others would rush in to take
their places) in Guerry Hall April
22. The show, featuring bluegrass
and country musicians, lasted till
2 a. m.
Passing the Baton
The Very Rev. Charles A. Higgins,
who has retired to Sewanee after 21
years as dean of Trinity Cathedral
in Little Rock, is the new director
of the University Band. He replaces
Robert Brodie, director for the past
three years, who has just been
graduated from the School of Theo-
logy. The baton was passed to Dean
Higgins at the end of a spring con-
cert April 23 in Guerry Garth.
Black Holes
The Bishop's Common lounge was
filled for the lecture of John A.
Wheeler, former director of the
Manhattan Project and now a
professor at the University of Texas.
Dr. Wheeler, brought to the campus
by the physics department and the
University Lectures Committee,
spoke on "The Black Hole and the
Universe. "
Author's Experience
Another lecture of interest was by
Sewanee's own Andrew Lytle, a
former member of the English
department and former editor of
the Sewanee Review. The Sewanee
author noted that history has
essentially reaffirmed the values
stated in I'll Take My Stand.
Oak Ridge Program
Four undergraduates spent the
spring semester doing research at
Oak Ridge, National Laboratory
under a program of the Southern
College University Union,
The students, their majors, and
laboratory assignments are: David
Lodge, biology, environmental
science division; Michael Sierchio,
mathematics, computer science
division; Jimmy Spears, chemistry,
chemistry division, and Lisa
Trimble, biology, environmental
science division.
The Delts mobilized a small army to dig Willie Six Field out from
under weeds and rust and win the trophy and prize money donated
by the Sewanee Woman's Club for best Help Day project.
Gale Link
Sorority members did a man-
size job clearing the view from
the Cross.
COMPUTERIZING
the Liberal Arts
By Latham Davis
Meeting a computer is almost an
emotional experience. To the
uninitiated, the machines carry a
sort of esoteric intelligence. They
have become connected with the
Freudian family of the "uncanny":
"If I say the wrong thing, will the
computer think I'm stupid?"
Such is the hangup of modern
man— or semi-modern man. For so
fast is the world changing, even
shaking the minds of scientists, that
we have the feeling at times of
losing touch with the world.
Breaking up such fallacies and
breaking down inhibitions is a lot
of what education is all about.
Therefore, it is probably not sur-
prising that Sewanee's Hewlett-
Packard 2000F is one of the most
popular "personalities" on campus.
(It helps that it also makes complex
calculations in the wink of an eye.)
After only four years of operation,
the University computer is being
used by most academic and admin-
istrative departments.
Clay Ross, an associate pro-
fessor of math, who came to Sewa-
nee in 1973 to promote academic
computing, once actively sought
out other faculty members to urge
their use of the computer. He no
longer needs to do that.
Marcia Clarkson, who teaches
computer science and is director of
data processing, has programmed
the computer to handle the majori-
ty of the University record keeping
for such things as payroll, financial
aid, Theological Education by
Extension, and the hospital.
Already the computer is ap-
proaching its "on-line" memory
capacity of 23 million words, a
reflection of the increased interest
of the faculty, students, and
administration in computing. The
computer also is becoming a bit
outdated, though it is still being
paid for.
Dr. Ross likes to display tiny
computers that can be bal-
anced on the end of a finger and
lost between the pages of their
operation manuals. These little
chips, as they are called, or bugs
(because if you turn one upside
down, it looks like a cockroach)
can be held in your hand even when
they are wired to a box of circuits
and lights through which they
communicate.
Lightweight computers such
as these can perform the same
functions, or more, as an old three-
ton monster (or white elephant)
that sits idly on the unfinished
third floor of duPont Library.
Sewanee's HP 2000F occupies
a few square feet of floor space
in a first-floor room of Carnegie
(old Science Hall). One of the few
moving parts is a memory disc
(really several discs stacked like
pancakes) that spins around at
3,000 revolutions a minute. That
disc magnetically records the 23
million words of permanent
memory.
A small arm, not unlike a
phonograph arm, jerks in and out,
reading and writing data in response
to commands from some of the
20 terminals scattered around the
campus.
Some of the terminals have
video screens, and others have
paper printouts like a teletype.
The computer can respond to
only one command at a time, but
it changes jobs so quickly that to a
student asking it questions in some
nearby building, the computer
seems attentive only to him. The
computer works in millions of
instructions a second. A terminal
works at 10 to 120 characters a
second and must also wait for the
faltering human hand to type out
the instructions.
Students most likely will come
in contact with the computer
through traditional classes— playing
macro-economic games in Eco-
nomics 101 or spinning out the
results of immense genetic prob-
lems in Biology 301. Every student
who takes general chemistry must
use the computer.
Neither is the computer work
limited to the sciences. Jacqueline
<>%'/>l '*-,,>..
Charles Fowler of Marietta, Georgia wires a computer experiment
to a "bread board" during a computer lab this spring.
Continued on next page
CCUDPUTflUZiniS
the Liberal Arts
Clay Ross, director of academic computing, compares two com-
puters, the smaller able to operate 100 times faster, with 10 to 20
times the memory capacity of the larger model (vintage 1970).
The smaller is also basically equivalent to the main University
computer, minus the circuitry.
Disappearing Computers
by Clay Ross
Computer technology is changing capability of all but today's largest
so rapidly that it is essentially
impossible to keep up with
advances and absolutely mind-
boggling to speculate on products
that will be available— even in a
couple of years.
Computers no longer fill
rooms. They fit into containers
little larger than the toaster on
your breakfast table. The toaster
is designed to produce heat. But
heat means electricity used and
money spent, and to a component
in a computer, heat means stress
and, as a result, aging.
So computers are being made
computers. Computers are already
in the homes of thousands of
enthusiasts. As prices fall into the
low hundreds, more will join them.
Young people from these homes
will soon be arriving in colleges with
remarkable computing backgrounds.
Announcements of improved
telephone service, safer and more
efficient cars, and homes that
manage energy with precise
efficiency appear weekly.
Except for the picture tube,
not even televisions use high-energy
components any more. They are
even beginning to contain corn-
smaller, which means less electricity puters. Imagine programming
to run them. It also means they can
run faster. It takes time for an
electrical signal to get from one
place to another; move the places
closer together and the signal trans-
mission time is reduced.
In today's computers, circuits
are designed so they can be made
in one piece with components
mere millionths of an inch apart.
This means more speed and less
heat. Less heat means lower operat-
ing cost and longer life.
Future computers the size of a
wristwatch will have the computing
k's worth of TV in advance and
having the television's computer
tum it on and off and select
channels for you.
As computers get faster and
have greater processing potential,
they are decreasing in cost. This
means that very mundane devices
will, in not many years, have
internal computers to make the
devices do your bidding better.
Computers are in sewing
machines, microwave ovens, and
watches now.
(Continued from page 5)
Schaefer, associate professor of
French, uses a program for evalu-
ating the structure of literature.
She has analyzed several medieval
poems and has written a paper,
with conclusions supported by
computer calculations.
Barclay Ward, an instructor
in political science, has been using
the computer to assemble and
analyze a variety of data about
the provinces of Poland. Marcia
Clarkson says she regularly has
computer science 101 students
who are majoring in English or
history or psychology.
More basic to the whole
concept of academic computing
at Sewanee is that the computer,
like the library, is free, available
to students (in the college, semi-
nary, or academy) with the pay-
ment of tuition and fees.
The terminals in the computer
"outpost" in Woods Laboratories
are available about 23 hours a day.
The room stays open all night.
A big attraction is the games,
ranging from such teasers as Hang-
man, still played on grammar-
school blackboards, to a Star Trek
game that displays an interstellar
battlefield and a dozen or so
variables, which the student must
juggle to the destruction of the
alien space ships— or his own.
Approximately 3,300 hours of
games are played each year on the-
University computer.
More than twice that many
hours are devoted to academic
computing projects.
Recently majors in English,
physics, chemistry, biology, forest-
ry, and comparative literature have
used the computer to support
findings in their honors papers.
The University has established
three principal computer
science classes. In the introductory
course (CS 101) about 50 students
a semester learn to program com-
puters and learn computer theory.
It is not a data processing course
about how to operate the computer;
students learn that almost inci-
dentally.
A second course (CS 256) is an
introduction to computer languages
and data structures. The point to
remember here is that there are
several computer languages, and
some can easily do operations that
are done with difficulty in other
languages.
The third course (CS 218) is an
introduction to digital logic and
micro-computer interfacing. The
point of this class is: "Computers
don't communicate very well on
their own," as Dr. Ross said with
subtle Rossian sarcasm.
Sewanee graduates have been
unusually successful when faced
with computer operations after
they leave the University. The
experts at graduate schools, says
Dr. Ross, "can't believe we cram
into two courses (101 and 256)
what other schools do in three or
four courses."
John Bordley, assistant pro-
fessor of chemistry, has been
borrowed from that department to
teach the 218 course this semester
to about nine students, who assem-
ble experiments (such as an organ
and an electric train) they have
wired to a small laboratory com-
puter. (Dr. Bordley spent his
sabbatical leave last year at Oak
Ridge, learning more about digital
logic and problems of microcom-
puter interfacing.)
Near the end of the semester,
a student begins a typical class day
by connecting wires between an
experiment and the laboratory
computer.
Once the computer is turned
on, the student begins a procedure
called "pounding the iron," feed-
ing information (or a code) into
the computer a few bits at a time
by manually flipping switches. A
bootstrap is the first 25 words or
so that allow the student to feed
in still more information until the
computer has enough memory to
read a more complicated program.
Obviously, programming an ex-
periment can be about as compli-
cated as a student wishes to make
it. However, starting with the
basics at least makes computers
seem a little more human. Uh,
less human?
It's late at night, and the rain
is blowing in sheets against
the lab windows. A student walks
in cradling a thermos of coffee
and a sack of doughnuts under his
wet coat.
He sits down in front of a
terminal and before opening the
thermos, plugs in the terminal and
turns it on. A little square cursor
appears in the top left comer.
With two fingers, the student
punches out HELLO on the key-
board and then a code for the
games. The computer responds by
telling the student the date and the
time and: 2000F IS AT YOUR
SERVICE.
The student types GROUP, and
the computer flashes the total list
of some 30 games across the screen.
With that the student punches out
the word GET and the name of a
game.
The computer may give the
rules of the game, but when the
student types the code word RUN,
the game begins and sometimes
continues for hours.
Behind the computer's seeming-
ly thoughtful responses is only a
selection of possibilities provided
by the programmer. Much depends
on the thought that went into the
program.
If the computer is given a reas-
onably large range of choices, it
begins to take on the appearance of
an intelligent being. Computer pro-
grams have been developed that
can now defeat chess masters.
The University has come so far
so fast with computer science that
plans are already being formulated
to seek a new, more advanced com-
puter in the next couple of years.
The hope is to get a computer with
an immense increase in problem-
solving and storage capability and
that will make several programming
languages readily available.
Computer scientists are fre-
quently heard cautioning
people not to imagine that compu-
ters can think on their own— can
have minds of their own, so to
speak. Some advanced research,
however, illustrated on a recent
public television program, tends to
show that computers can assemble
information and draw conclusions
from it much as a human brain does.
Nevertheless, the prevailing
opinion and the prevailing reality
are illustrated by a cartoon pinned
to the bulletin board in the Woods
Lab computer room. Two men are
sitting at a terminal in front of a
huge computer, and one says to
the other: ". . . and in l/10,000th
of a second, it can compound the
programmer's error 87,500 times."
Margaret Zelle of Hendersonville, Tennessee, left, and Janet
Goodman of Marietta, Georgia collaborate on a project to wire a
16-key board to communicate with a lab computer.
Social Influence of Computers
by tVlarcia Clarkson
Although computers themselves can
have no effect on society— they
do nothing alone— the use of
computers by the government, by
business, and in education has
certainly had an effect on our lives.
And although the use of computers
has made possible the exploration
of the moon, been instrumental in
many important scientific dis-
coveries, streamlined business pro-
cedures, from billing to typing, and
brought TV ping pong into our
homes, all the effects of computers
on society may not be beneficial.
Let's think about the effect of com-
puters in just two areas— unemploy-
ment and privacy.
What has been the effect of
computers on the labor force?
Certainly computers are performing
data manipulation and calculations
that 20 years ago were performed
by humans. Can the expansion of
the labor force generated by our
expanding computer society keep
up with the unemployment caused
by the computer?
Most people would agree that
the skills required in our computer
society are different from those
required 20 years ago.
Instead of bookkeepers, we
need people to interpret the com-
puter's calculations. Instead of
people to sort data, we need people
to amass the monumental amount
of data the computer can quickly
sort and tabulate.
The information explosion
caused by the computer has elim-
inated the need for routine jobs,
which the computer can handle,
and created higher-skilled jobs of
analyzing data.
The potential infringement on
our privacy through the use of
computers is most disturbing.
Information is available on
computers concerning our IQ, edu-
cational achievement, military
history, medical records, and if we
have credit cards or checking
accounts, our spending patterns.
Add to that information from law
enforcement agencies, psychological
testing centers, and motor vehicle
registration offices.
If a computer were to match
all that information, it would
be able to generate reports on
our activities, friends, and even
plans.
Do we have a right to know
who has information about us,
and what that information is?
Should we be able to challenge '
the information and prevent
people from passing that infor-
mation from one computer to
another?
In 30 years, the prolifera-
tion of computers has been astro-
nomical. By the year 2000, compu-
ters may be as inexpensive and
common as television sets are
today.
Now is the time for individuals
and governments to sit down and
analyze this information explosion,
see what effects it has had on
our society, and establish policies
to determine the use of computers
in the future.
STUDENT GOVERNMENT: A VOICE THAT SPEAKS
by Nancy Bell, C'78
Approximately two weeks after
completing this article, Nancy Bell
completed her student career at
Sewanee and received a bachelor's
degree in psychology. This fall she
will enter Tulane University in
pursuit of an M.B.A. degree. Nancy
is the daughter of James B. Bell,
C'51, and Susan Wright Bell of
Shreveport, Louisiana.
As he waited his turn at bat at
an intramural softball game, a
student commented to a visiting
alumnus, "We don't have a student
government here at Sewanee. Well,
the one we have is pretty messed
up."
As this year's speaker of the
Delegate Assembly, I doubt that I
was supposed to overhear that
comment. I'm glad I did, however,
because that statement alone illus-
trates numerous questions and
issues about student government
that need to be addressed.
I would like to stress one point
from the beginning— We do have
student government here at Sewanee.
Part of the apathy toward
student government stems from the
belief of some students that govern-
ment can and should perform
miracles.
As far as these few students are
concerned, unless student govern-
ment abolishes the dress code or
reverts the University to an all male
status, it has not really accomp-
lished anything.
My contention is that student
government has benefited each
student in various ways, ranging
from actual policy changes to the
varied benefits of personal involve-
ment in student government
activities.
The tangible gains have been
initiated mainly in committee work
of the Delegate Assembly and the
Order of Gownsmen. We have
looked into areas of student con-
cern, ranging from such broad
interests as the athletic program
and the financial support of auxil-
iary services to more specific areas,
such as student credit at the
Bishop's Common snack shop and
pub.
Student interest is also voiced
in the various University and
faculty committees, which have
student representation through stu-
dent government nomination.
Student government is, there-
fore, working on problems and
issues that are pertinent to the stu-
dent body as a whole. Students
who unfortunately maintain the
belief that the benefits end at this
point are those who regard student
government as does (or, hopefully,
did) my friend at the softball game.
There are those of us who have
taken an active role in student
government and who realize that
the benefits to be gained are often
of a personal nature.
I believe that part of the unique
function of a liberal arts school
is to provide outlets for personal
growth and experience in addition
to the classroom. My position in
Sewanee's government system pro-
vided the main such outlet for me.
The knowledge and experience
that I have gained could never be
duplicated in the classroom, and it
will be difficult to share it in
written form.
However, by relating selected
examples, I hope to pass along
some of the enthusiasm that par-
ticipating in student government
has provided for me.
I was elected speaker of the
Delegate Assembly in May of 1977
to serve during the academic year
1977-78.
It was a big step for me in terms
of the amount of responsibility I
was given. It was also a positive
change for the University because
it was the first time a woman stu-
dent had been elected to a major
student government office.
(Women students, by the way,
are making great strides in other
areas of responsibility on campus.
This year a woman was elected as
student trustee. Women also hold
the titles of chairman of the
discipline committee and head
proctor. )
When last year's speaker, Billy
DuBose, handed me the gavel in
the May DA meeting, I knew that I
was facing a challenge and a
learning experience.
This year has been challenging,
and I have learned a lot. I have
learned, for instance, the meaning
of words such as enthusiasm,
delegation, composure, leadership,
and chairperson (rather than
chairman).
Working with student govern-
ment has also afforded me the
opportunity to develop friendships
and working relationships with
various members of the faculty and
administration.
My friend at the softball game
was somewhat correct in his ob-
servation that student government
was "pretty messed up." This
spring we took steps to try to deal
with the problems that face most
campus governments— problems
with communication, definition
of power, and inconsistency in pro-
cedure.
As a member of the Order of
Gownsmen constitution revision
committee, I naturally was pleased
that the student body voted to
adopt a new constitution for student
government. The most rewarding
experiences, however, were par-
ticipating in the actual drafting of
the constitution and witnessing
the greatest amount of campus
enthusiasm I had seen in my four
years at Sewanee.
The proposed revision was the
joint effort of a long line of com- .
mittees. Many students had a hand
in formulating the new plans,
and many more took an active
part in the campaign either pro or
con.
(The voter turnout on that
Friday morning hit an all-time
record of 75 percent of the student
body. This figure alone is an
excellent indication of the amount
of interest generated by the pros- ■
pect of a change in student govern-
ment.)
Since the new constitution
allows a more well-defined distri-
bution of duties, there will be an
opportunity for an increased num-
ber of students to benefit as I have
from being actively involved in the
workings of campus government.
This year has also been bene-
ficial to me because of my work
with the Board of Regents and
Board of Trustees. The student
executive committee joins the
regents for a breakfast and informal
discussion period during each of
their visits on the Mountain.
This has been productive in
terms of communicating specific
areas of student concern to the
regents and in terms of understand-
ing the goals of the board.
If my friend could have seen
what I have seen, learned what
I have learned, he would realize
that indeed we do have a student
government here at Sewanee and
that it fulfills a very useful purpose.
EDITOR'S NOTE
The new constitution provides for a
unicameral system with all
legislative powers in a body called
the Student Assembly. The re-
vision, proposed by a committee
initiated by the Order of Gowns-
men, passed with a vote of 5S6 to
213.
The Order of Gownsmen will
retain its power to recommend
students to administrative and
faculty committees, which is one
of the most effective means of
voicing student opinion. The Order
of Gownsmen will also retain
certain advisory and investigative
powers.
Lee Taylor, a senior political
science major from Memphis, was
elected speaker of the Assembly.
Frank Grimball, a junior from
Charleston, is the new president of
the Order of Gownsmen.
Mary Pom Claiborne, an Academy junior from Knoxville, pauses on
the cliff side at Morgan 's Steep during a Jim Scott outing.
SUMMER CALENDAR
Joint Doctor of Ministry Program Vanderbilt May 29 June 17, Sewanee June 21-July 26
Sewanee Summer Riding Camp and
Sewanee Summer Gymnastics Camp June 3-9, June 1 1— July 1, July 9-29
Delta Kappa Gamma June 15-17
Sewanee Wilderness Adventure June 17-24, June 25— July 2, July 16-23
College Summer School June 18— July 30
Sewanee Summer Music Center June 24— July 30
SSMC String Camp June 25-July 2
Sewanee Academy Soccer Camp June 28— July 1 1
Sewanee Summer Seminar July 9-15
National School Orchestra Association August 1-7
Tennessee Environmental Education Association August 11-12
LETTERS
Many Thanks
We have had a gratifying response to our
request for back issues of the Cap and
Gown to fill out the library at Rebel's
Rest.
I would like to thank the following
donors: EmmetGribbin, Mrs, Elizabeth N.
Chitty, Wesley Mansfield, the Rt. Rev.
David S. Rose, Mrs. Jack Woodworth
Howerton, James W. Moody, Jr., Edgar
Charles Glenn, Jr., Patrick Gardiner,
Breckinridge W. Wing, William B. Fon-
taine, Col. John W. Russey, the Rev.
Derald W. Stump, and Mrs. L. Vaughan
Howard.
Chri
A Small Request
I am glad that somebody is defending the
Most High in these troubled times (Sewa-
nee's Christian Influence).
Last week I attended the church of
my choice— Protestant Episcopal (South).
As always they were belaboring love.
If it ain't love, it is miracles, and we
could use a lot more of both. Since love
and miracles only receive about 45
minutes of attention per week, Manassas,
Virginia is not heading for the millenium.
(For the other 167 hours, it is pretty
much dog eat dog.)
But this is not the worst of it. Within
a radius of 15 miles, there are at least
ten Episcopal clerics and lay folks belabor-
ing love, but they don't work together.
Indeed, several of the other clerics speak
in tongues as though there was not
enough confusion already.
While we worship or get bored in
air-conditioned splendor, one of the
lily <
nter. This cle
I'd like for a miracle and have the Very
Reverend and the Reverend (Plain) work
a cooperative miracle of love and get
her and hers out of the sultry Virginia
heat.
Otto Kirchner-Dean, C'39
Nokesville, Virginia
Issue Enjoyed
The latest Sewanee News seems to me
especially fine, particularly the photo-
graph, of the forest road (front page) and
of Professor Harrison, and the articles
on the retiring professors.
It is so interesting to have the stories
of the retiring professors told at generous
length and so well.
Jesse M. Phillips, C*47
Menlo Park, California
Saying Hello
I just received the Sewanee News. It has
been some time since I have heard from
anyone on the Mountain.
I remember my wife, Dorothy, and I
being up at Sewanee and also Monteagle.
I hope we can make another trip
sometime.
Thank you for mailing the Sewanee
News to us.
Eli Rayner Turley, A'26
Memphis, Tennessee
UPDATE ON
FACULTY ACTIVITIES
Thad N. Marsh, professor of English
and former University provost, has
accepted a position as vice-presi-
dent for planning, development,
and public relations for the Metho-
dist Hospital in the Texas Medical
Center in Houston.
Kenneth R. Gray, assistant pro-
fessor of economics, will be leaving
the University after summer school
to join the faculty at the University
of Kansas. Both Dr. Gray and his
wife are Kansas alumni, and mem-
bers of their family live in the area.
Dr. Gray said the move will be
like going home after ten years and
30 countries.
An autograph party for Arthur
J. Knoll, professor of history, was
held April 20 at St. Luke's Book-
store to recognize the publishing
of Dr. Knoll's book, Togo Under
Imperial German Rule, 1884-1914.
The new book has been nominated
for the Herskovits Award, which
is given annually to the author of a
distinguished work on Africa. In
addition, Dr. Knoll is one of 12
participants invited to attend a
National Endowment for the
Humanities Summer Seminar at the
University of Virginia from June 11
to August 6. The seminar is titled
"Other New Nations: The Ethnic
State in Modern History."
Marcus C. Hoyer, assistant pro-
fessor of geology, was instrumental
in acquiring the donation of more
than 200 items of fossils, minerals,
and rock specimens for the growing
collection in the forestry and geol-
ogy department. The donation was
made by the Illowa Gem and Min-
eral Society and the Fryxell
Geology Museum at Augustana
College, Illinois, an alma mater of
Dr. Hoyer.
Henry F. Arnold, associate pro-
fessor of English, was elected vice-
president for independent institu-
tions at the Tennessee Conference
of the American Association of
University Professors.
Edward B. King, associate pro-
fessor of history, will be spending
the summer in England, the first
two weeks at Cambridge in June
collating manuscripts for a critical
edition of Grosseteste's De cessa-
tione legalium. The next six weeks
will be spent at Oxford where
about 20 Sewanee students and
faculty members will be in attend-
ance. While there, Dr. King will be
doing more research.
Douglas D. Paschall, assistant
professor of English, will be a con-
sultant for eight weeks this summer
with the engineering and architec-
tural firm of Wiley & Wilson, Inc.
of Lynchburg, Virginia. Dr. Paschall
will be in charge of conducting a
pilot tutorial program in profession-
al writing.
Frank Hart, associate professor
of physics, is doing research on the
effect of electric fields on biological
systems. Dr. Hart is associated with
an interdisciplinary group, one of
the concerns of which is the effect
of high voltage transmission lines
on people living nearby. The group
was featured on the national
television show, 60 Minutes, last
fall. The calculations by Dr. Hart
have been used in expert testimony
before public service commissions
in New York, California, and Que-
bec. At Sewanee, he has an experi-
mental project with students in
which they study damage produced
in plants by electric fields.
Richard Duncan, assistant pro-
fessor of art, was a member of the
jury for the 1978 Hunter Art Scene
Exhibition, which hung in Hunter
Art Museum Regional Gallery in
Chattanooga earlier this spring. He
also joined Rosemary Paschall, art
instructor at the Academy, Mazie
McCrady, another popular Sewanee
artist, and some students in a
monotype print workshop at the
Hunter Museum sponsored by the
National Endowment and the
Tennessee Arts Council.
Mrs. Paschall also drew the art
for the cover of a new brochure
titled Tennessee's Historic Boarding
Schools (Sewanee Academy in-
cluded), published by the Tennes-
see Department of Economic and
Community Development. She also
has done the art work for a recently
completed University development
brochure.
Harold J. Goldberg, assistant
professor of history, is chairman-
elect of the Tennessee Consortium
for Asian Studies. He is currently
secretary-treasurer. This summer
Dr. Goldberg will be doing research
at the Hoover Institute at Stanford
University.
The more recent work of James
C. Davidheiser, associate professor
of German, includes three articles
and book reviews that have been
accepted for publication: "The
Role of Oaths in the Drama of the
Sturm und Drang," Leasing Year-
book IX; a book review of Ulrieh
Karthaus' Sturm und Drang und
Empfindsamkeit, Leasing Yearbook
X; "Interim Measures foi the Pro-
motion of Foreign Language Study:
Arthur Knoll
Flexible Programs and Informative
Publicity," ADFL Bulletin, which
was co-authored with Marion Wiley.
Dr. Davidheiser also read a paper
at the 31st annual Kentucky For-
eign Language Conference in April.
In addition to being priest-in-
charge of Otey Memorial Church in
Sewanee this year, the Rev. John M.
Gessell, professor of Christian
ethics, has been re-elected to a
three-year term on the National
Executive Committee of the Epis-
copal Peace Fellowship. Dr. Gessell
also has been working this academic
year with college and seminary
students in producing a 20-minute
weekly news commentary for radio
station WUTS at Sewanee.
The Rev. Donald S. Armentrout,
associate professor of ecclesiastical
history, has been serving as supply
pastor at St. Matthew Lutheran
Church in Rossville, Georgia and
also has met several guest speaking
engagements throughout the South.
His current major project is a
history of the School of Theology.
When that is completed, the Rev.
Dr. Armentrout will write a biog-
raphy of Bishop James Hervey Otey,
which has been commissioned by
the Diocese of Tennessee.
The Rev. Henry L. H. Myers,
associate professor of pastoral
theology, and a member of the
seminary faculty for 15 years, has
accepted a call to be rector of
Christ Church on Capitol Hill, the
oldest Episcopal church in Wash-
ington.
Before coming to Sewanee, he
was on the staff of the Episcopal
Executive Council in New York
and served parishes in the Diocese
of Tennessee.
The Rev. Dr. Myers assumed
his new duties June 1.
Henry Arnold, John Webb
THE BATTLE OF RABBIT RUN
(A RABBIT RONDO)
A thousand rabbits, released for the day's
hunt, turned on the Emperor's party and
put it to flight.
—Life of Napole
Have you heard of the Battle of Rabbit Run
When the rabbits attacked Napoleon?
It was back in the summer of 1805—
Scarcely a hare is now alive
Who hasn't heard of that famous fray
When a thousand rabbits refused to play
And rose up in wrath and won the day . . .
This is the way it came to pass:
They had taken them ou t in the meadow grass
To provide some sport and some innocent fun
For His Imperial Majesty Napoleon;
They had opened their cages, "Allez! Allez!"
Expecting to see them run away
From the little man with the great big gun
When a thousand rabbits refused to run
And turned and attacked Napoleon!
They went for that little son-of-a-gun!
All he could do was cut and run
Over the meadows and under the sun
Pursued by cuniculi by the ton
Shouting Conspuez Napoleon!
Shouting Down with Napoleon!
All they could do was flee in dismay.
The Imperial Party in disarray.
Jettisoning champagne and liver pate,
Crying Morbleu! and Assassines!
Running like humans to get away
From a thousand rabbits, who, every one,
Was a Chichagov or a Wellington!
From a thousand heroes, and every one
The Waterloo of Napoleon!
And thus it befell that they carried the day—
The historic Battle of Rabbit Run,
Cony and cottontail, white hare and gray,
They sipped champagne, and they nibbled pate'.
And they drank to the day that would surely come,
The day of the Rabbit Millennium
When Rabbits' Rights would outlaw guns,
And Hassenpfeffer, and Napoleons
The whimsical poetry on this page
(which also carries with it subtle
messages) was written by A. Scott
Bates, professor of French. Dr.
Bates, who has been on the College
faculty since 1954, has published
poetry since he was a student at
Carleton College. This material is
being reprinted from literary maga-
zines, but Dr. Bates and Jean Tallec,
who drew the illustrations, are
seeking a book publisher to aacept
a larger collection. Mrs. Tallec is
in charge of gift records in the
University development office.
THE FLY FLUSHED DOWN THE TOILET BOWL
That fly you flushed down the toilet bowl
Was alive as you or I:
You may debate about his soul.
But what a way to die!
You watched him struggle, watched him kick.
You watched him fight to live;
You might have beached him with a stick
Or strained him with a sieve.
You might have scooped him with a jug
Or proffered him a pole;
You might have cried, "Alas, poor bug!"
Before that toilet bowl.
But no: you chose to do your worst
And dropped him down the drain!
Take heed! Beware! Though he go first.
And you behind remain.
There'll come a time, without a stick,
Without a saving board,
Someone will watch you cry and kick
His hand upon the cord;
Someone will watch you gasp for air;
He 'II muse upon your soul
And yawn and turn to comb his hair—
And drop you down the hole!
(Reprinted from the Southern Poetry Review and
Poetry Southeast)
TEE Going Down Under
by the Rev. Charles Winters
Sewanee's program of theological
education by extension, "Edu-
cation for Ministry," is now operat-
ing in Australia under a licensing
arrangement with the General
Board of Religious Education of
the Church of England in Australia.
The Rev. Alan Baxter, then
director of the General Board of
Religious Education (GBRE) en-
countered the program in its earliest
stage while on a visit in Sewanee
three years ago. His successor, the
Rev. George Hearn, began nego-
tiations with the School of The-
ology's Extension Division last year,
and those negotiations climaxed
with a visit to Australia this March
to train personnel. Thirteen dio-
ceses of the Australian church plan
to start using the program immedi-
ately after Easter.
Dr. Charles Winters, director of
extension education, and Mrs.
Winters, and Ms. Flower Ross,
program coordinator, left for Aus-
tralia near the end of February
during a snow storm, arriving to
enjoy the sunshine of late summer
in the southern hemisphere. Two
weeks of strenuous work left little
time for sight-seeing, but resulted
in a cadre of 36 people trained to
carry on the seminar work that is
an essential part of the program.
The Australian church will
administer the program through
GBRE, using its own fee schedules
and training its own future seminar
group leaders. The University of
the South will receive an annual
licensing fee, and the name of the
University will be retained on all
printed materials.
Both the seminary and Austral-
ian church leaders hope that this
will mark the beginning of increased
ties between us. Next fall, the Rev.
Alan Baxter hopes to visit the
School of Theology again, this time
as a Fellow-in-residence. At least
two others, including the Rev.
George Hearn, would like to make
the journey to observe seminar
groups in the United States. Perhaps
Sewanee residents will soon have
the opportunity of making Austral-
ian friends in "a never-ending
succession."
The "Education for Ministry"
program is an attempt by the
School of Theology to bring high
quality theological education to the
laity of the church. "Lay ministry"
is the focus of much interest in
the church today, but little is being
done to provide the laity with the
theological education necessary for
its full development.
Persons who complete the four
years of "Education for Ministry"
will be equipped with a thorough
background in the biblical and
historical tradition of the church
and trained to use this background
in the practice of their everyday
lives of Christian witness, service,'
and ministry.
At the end of its second year
of full operation (a few pilot
seminar groups began a year earlier)
the program has enrolled 1,900
students throughout the United
States and in Canada and Nicaragua.
Interest has been expressed in Latin
America for a Spanish translation,
and inquiries have been received
from several overseas branches of
the Anglican Communion. A few
other denominations are looking at
the program, and it is hoped that
its ecumenical potential will be real-
ized before long. (Already there
are several students enrolled from
non- Anglican churches.)
Reaching halfway around the
world is a gratifying experience for
the School of Theology, but even
more gratifying is the realization
that Sewanee's service to the
church is being known in parts of
our own country not previously
considered our constituency. If
you would like "Education for
Ministry" in your own community,
write to the Director of Extension
Education for information.
Summer
Studies
The Joint Doctor of Ministry
Program has begun its fourth
summer program, with classes at
Vanderbilt University until June 17
and classes at Sewanee from June
21 to July 26.
The courses of study are design-
ed to provide persons actively en-
gaged in some form of professional
ministry the opportunity to de-
velop further the attitudes, skills,
and knowledge which are essential
to their ministry.
The D.Min. program, which by
design is ecumenical, stresses the
relationship between the practice of
ministry and biblical, historical,
and theological knowledge.
Conference
on Priesthood
The School of Theology is co-
sponsoring a conference June 17-23
at Kanuga, the Episcopal Church
Center, Hendersonville, North Caro-
lina.
John Liebler
Titled "The Priest in Commun-
ity: A Conference for Clergy and
Lay Persons," the conference is
dominated by faculty associated
with the University of the South.
They are the Very Rev. Urban
T. Holmes, dean of the School of
Theology; the Rev. Harry Pritchett,
Jr., director of field education at
Sewanee, and Flower Ross, coordi-
nator of Sewanee's Theological
Education by Extension.
John Westerhoff III, professor
of religious education at Duke
Divinity School, who often preach-
es and serves as a consultant at
Sewanee, also will lecture. The
Rev. Gene Ruyle of Atlanta, who is
a mentor for TEE, is also on the
staff.
Centennial
Planning
The School of Theology will be
celebrating its centennial during
the 1978-79 academic year.
The celebration will be divided
among several events, beginning
with St. Luke's Convocation and
the DuBose Lectures October 17-18.
Other gatherings and lectures
will be held in February and April,
and alumni and friends of the Uni-
versity are urged to make their
plans to attend.
The general centennial theme is:
"The Culture, the Tradition, and
Our Response to the Word of God. "
The guest speakers for the
DuBose Lectures will be the Rt.
Rev. Arthur Michael Ramsey, the
former archbishop of Canterbury,
the Rev. Charles P. Price, professor
of systematic theology at Virginia
Theological Seminary, and Dr.
Joshua S. L. Zake of Uganda.
The theme of the DuBose Lec-
tures will be: "The Anglican
Tradition and Its Relevance to the
Late 20th Century."
The Beattie Lectures will be
held February 20-21, and the
Arrington Lectures will be held
April 18-19.
As part of the centennial, the
Rev. Donald C. Armen trout, pro-
fessor of ecclesiastical history at
Sewanee, is writing a history of
the seminary.
tbe chosen pRopession
by Kathy Galligan
There is a preconceived image of
Episcopal priests. It is as perceptive
as the robes they wear as to what
they bring to the church as clergy-
men. In a recent survey of the
seminarians at the School of The-
ology, a wealth of fascinating
career experiences was discovered.
St. Luke's is unique (a familiar
word in reference to the Sewanee
campus). The seminarians are
usually family men and women,
at an average age of 31, who have
made the unusual decision in mid-
career to answer the call to life in
theology. For many, the desire
to be an Episcopal priest was
always a part of their lives; it was
the timing that was difficult. With
the decision once made, the up-
rooting of children and the re-
identification of roles in life and
society became a necessary con-
sideration.
Yet just as youth brings fresh-
ness and idealism, older students
offer experience and the under-
standing born of maturity. Within
the ranks of the seminarians are a
diverse range of talents and pro-
fessions. Though a specific few of
the careers seem contradictory to
the image of the priest, these in
particular will offer to him a com-
prehension of a specific kind of
human suffering.
Robert Brodie devoted his life
to law enforcement in an unusual
role in the U.S. Intelligence com-
munity. Now at thirty-one, he will
dedicate the. remainder of his life
to the priesthood. He commanded
a Criminal Intelligence Bureau in
a police department in Miami. As
a special agent with the state of
Florida, he investigated' narcotics-
related Mafia murders and bomb-
ings. The purpose of his assign-
ments in Latin American countries
was to establish his guidelines in
terrorist control. Bob devised anti-
kidnapping techniques that are
still in operation in many countries.
Yet he has chosen to become a
priest.
In his prior career, he has
grasped not only the frailties but
the strengths in human nature, and
from this realization has developed
an unusual regard for humanity. He
expresses concern in terms of
preventing the manifestation of
crime in young people.
As a member of the Sewanee
community Bob is recognized in his
role as musician, conducting the
University Band for three years,
and playing the tympani in musical
events. After he is ordained in June,
Bob will begin his career as a curate
at the largest parish in the diocese
of Southeast Florida, simultaneous-
ly seeking his doctorate of divinity.
Part of his objective will be inter-
acting with the Intelligence com-
munity with a guiding response to
the crime control of that area.
A man educated in religious
studies, Robert Keirsey serves as
Jeffrey Emtnett
Bob Brodie
student chaplain to the University.
His are memorable sermons at All
Saints', as he speaks directly with
humor and sensitivity to the church
assembly. His empathy for young
people began with the application
of his religion major to street min-
istry in southern California He
became an Episcopal monk, but
left the monastery after four years
to marry. He will be ordained later
this year, and will continue his
religious experiences as a priest.
A former runway fashion model,
and vice-president of her father's
corporation, Irene Hutchinson
came to the study of theology to
reach people whose access to
human warmth has been cut off.
Her field as prison chaplain to in-
mates of the woman's penitentiary
in Nashville will become her voca-
tion after she is ordained.
From evaluation of timberland
for best environmental control,
Gary Steber left a world of ana-
lytical computations for that of the
ministry. Here self-evaluation pro-
vides the fertile ground. A man
trained to fly jet fighters, followed
by involvement in missile tracking
and control, that Gary should
change his personal azimuth mid-
career was no surprise to him. Since
his 12th year, he sought the priest-
hood. Now the time is right.
Gary looks back on a career in
forestry consultation, sparked by a
term with the U. S. Forest Service as
part of the United Nations AID
program. This took him to Jamaica
to participate in the first "pure"
forestry foreign aid loan to another
country. Now he looks forward to
interpreting his vocation as a parish
priest in interaction with the know-
ledge of forestry.
Jeffrey Emmett is a man who
emanates a seriousness compound-
ed by the army fatigue jacket he
wears. While in the army he first
worked in the intelligence field
with top secret clearance. Yet his
identifying experiences were his
years in neuro-psychiatry in Ger-
many. His work with mental
patients left him with a concern
he will let flow into his priesthood.
He would like to do work as a
hospital chaplain, as well as a
parish priest.
Henry (Mac) McLeod applied
his law degree to his profession as
an insurance executive. He and his
wife, Mary Adelia, reared five
children. They both had a dream,
and together they are working as
seminarians to fulfill their goal.
Mac is a middler; Mary Adelia is
a junior. They hope to eventually
work in the same parish together
as ordained priests.
And then there's Al Jenkins.
A former paratrooper, Al taught
mountaineering, glacial survival
and mountain climbing in the army.
He was a member of the skydiving
team at Fort Bragg. Al has worked
with his hands as a restoration
carpenter. Further determination
led him into a career with the
Louisville and Nashville railroad
where he worked as brakeman and
conductor. His railroad career
financed his way to a college degree
in sociology. Al's field work at the
seminary is with the Sewanee
Youth Center. He is interested in
mission and evangelical work as a
priest.
The list goes on. Ladson
(Punchey) Mills was an aerial
observer in the Marine Corps.
Robert (Gus) Boone took a natural
step to the seminary from the
position of headmaster of an
Episcopal day school. Douglas
Tucker came to the seminary
from a career in the FBI. That
Scott Turner often brings his
guitar to student gatherings is a
reflection of his background as an
entertainer in the Southwest.
Diversity seems to be the key to
St. Luke's, and the clue to the
contributions that these seminar-
ians will make.
The Fruits
of Labor
Eban Goodstein, valedictorian, and
Catharine Arnold, salutatorian, led
55 of their classmates through
Academy commencement May 21
in All Saints' Chapel.
The commencement speaker
was John W. Harris, Jr., professor
of education at Middle Tennessee
State University.
The Friday before, Harry H.
Pritchett, Jr., director of field
education at the School of Theol-
ogy, delivered the baccalaureate
sermon.
The three-day commencement
program also included an alumni
board meeting, a parents' associa-
tion meeting, an awards ceremony,
receptions, and a dinner dance.
Frank Thomas, Virginia Owen, Phil White, Ed England
COOK'S CHOICE
of Academy News
by Anne Cook
English as a First Language
The English department is, perhaps, best appreciated by students
after graduation— during that grueling first semester of college. At
least many graduates return to tell us so.
The teaching of reading and writing remains the primary task of
Sewanee Academy's four English instructors, who have a combined
total of 65 years' teaching experience at the Academy. In trying to
accomplish their teaching goal, each employs highly individualistic
methods to do the job.
Department head Frank Thomas is a devoted Shakespearean
scholar. One of the most popular of the Academy's 26 semester
course offerings in English is his Shakespearean comedy. If you pass
by Frank's room, the recording of some play of Shakespeare's quite
often can be heard.
"It's Shakespeare and really good," one student told me. Capti-
vating classics!
Phil White can still leap on his desk in a single bound and astound
his class by rocking gently back and forth on his perch as he lectures.
Two of the favorite courses taught by Phil are Russian literature and
science fiction.
A recurring theme in the sci-fi course is the threat of visual
control to our society, which brings up the power of television over
our emotional lives.
Ed England loves to teach poetry because the results are so
obvious. When a student finishes Romantic lit. he knows the differ-
ence between an English and an Italian sonnet. Many students
progress to writing poetry of their own.
Testing director is Virginia G. Owen. She administers all tests:
the standard reading test, the PSAT, SAT and, for the first time this
year, the SCAT. There is also a vocational and personal preference
test that students may take if they wish.
V.G. also teaches basic reading skills, and her folklore course is a
popular offering. It includes Washington Irving, Uncle Remus and the
like.
The standard requirement for all high schools including the
Academy is four years of English, although many of our students
take more than eight semesters. All students are required to take
fundamentals of writing— an introductory course in expository
writing.
"He'll give you an F for a comma splice," groaned one student
about his instructor.
Another teacher uses Time magazine to show students different
examples of essays and grammar. (If you are wondering why Time,
they give the cheapest student rate.)
Another requirement for 9th and 10th graders is oral communi-
cation, taught by Frank Thomas. A student learns something about
public speaking by giving an after dinner speech, an oration, a
eulogy, etc.
Contract reading is an ungraded book report, and most teachers
require one per grading period. Reading and writing reinforce one
another.
The spring poetry contest, the Andrew Lytle medal for prose
and the Literary Magazine are all areas where student writing skills
are recognized and rewarded.
Now, back to the college freshman who is told at Duke or
Williams or MTSU to "write an essay." If he is a Sewanee Academy
graduate, he has been trained to do it.
Headmaster Reviews the Year
by the Rev. Roderick Welles
Much has been accomplished at the Academy this year due to the
combined efforts of our entire constituency, and I want to thank
publicly everyone who contributed.
Students have served on five task forces studying Academy life,
begun a constitutional convention to provide a new structure for
school government, and served on countless committees dedicated
to the improvement of Academy programs.
Faculty have consistently worked overtime to be involved with
task forces, academic evaluation committees, and weekend activity
teams.
Parents have contributed more than $750 in dues to their own
association, enabling the purchase of a much needed motion picture
projector, have contributed in excess of $26,000 in voluntary gifts,
and those who are residents on the mountain have assisted the
faculty-student weekend activity teams by opening a home each
weekend for students to visit.
Alumni have shown renewed commitment to the Academy and
have organized under the leadership of the Board of Governors into
task force teams in behalf of the Million Dollar Program. Also
individual alumni have expressed a desire to contribute to the capital
and program needs of the Academy.
Together, with other friends of Sewanee Academy, these indi-
viduals have contributed more than $90,000 toward the goal of
$150,000, which we still hope to reach by June 30.
Merit Finalists
Two Academy seniors were named
finalists in the National Merit
Scholarship program this year.
They are James Gordon Gillespie
of Jackson, Tennessee and Eban
S. Goodstein of Sewanee. As final-
ists, they are ranked in the top
fraction of a percent of the nation's
most academically talented young
people.
Both students were involved in
several extra-curricular activities,
including sports.
Gillespie is the son of Dr. and
Mrs. Guy T. Gillespie of Jackson.
Goodstein is the son of Drs. Marvin
and Anita Goodstein, both pro-
fessors in the College.
Eban Goodstein— valedictorian.
Merit finalist, soccer letterman
New Director
of Admissions
David L. Snyder, director of public
relations and assistant director of
admissions of Pine Ridge School in
Williston, Vermont, has been
named director of admissions at
Sewanee Academy beginning July 1.
Mr. Snyder succeeds Edward H.
Harrison, Jr., who has resigned to
attend Yale Divinity School in New
Haven, Connecticut this fall.
A 1972 graduate of Lock Haven
State College, Pennsylvania with a
B.S. degree in education, Mr. Sny-
der has done graduate work in
history at Edinboro State College in
Pennsylvania.
He is a member of Lambda Chi
Alpha fraternity and the Phi Kappa
Phi national honor society. He and
his wife, Susan, and two-year-old
son will arrive in Sewanee in mid-
June. -
Pickoff attemp t fails
Kathy Gallium
Sports Notes
Spring sports had their problems
with the weather, but all was not
cloudy in the results.
The baseball squad stopped
Bridgeport 12-5 for its only regular-
season victory but then jumped to
the quarterfinals of the district
tournament by beating Unionville
9-8. The district leaders then cut
the Tigers down -Hun tland 11-1
and Lynchburg 14-5.
In tennis, the Sewanee Acad-
emy girls finished with a 4-2 record
(three matches rained out). Catha-
rine Arnold went on to reach the
quarterfinals of the district tourna-
ment before being knocked out
by the fourth seed.
The boys' squad finished the
year with a 3-3 record, with Bayard
Leonard playing the number-one
position.
The golf team closed the season
at 7-10. Chris Cook was the con-
sistent low scorer.
At the athletic awards banquet
in March, Archie Baker was named
most valuable player on the soccer
team that finished as regular-
season state champion and lost
only to MBA 1-0 in the tournament
finals in overtime.
In basketball Catharine Arnold
and Symmes Culbertson were
named most valuable for their
respective teams.
COLLEGE SPORTS
Spirited
Swim Team
Team spirit was given the credit for
sparking six school records, 33
personal best times, and a surprising
second place for Sewanee in the
conference swimming and diving
championships at Wabash College
this year.
Scott Ferguson and Kent Gay
qualified for the NCAA Division III
championships. Scott swam a time
of 1:59.6 in the 200 butterfly, and
Kent qualified in the 100-yard
freestyle with a time of 48.7
seconds.
The two swimmers missed too
many turns and swam below their
averages in the nationals, leading
Coach Ted Bitondo to say: "I'm
convinced you need that team spirit.
We had it at the conference meet."
Sewanee was no better than
fourth on paper going into the con-
ference championships. Wabash fin-
ished on top, but Sewanee edged
Principia and soundly defeated
Centre, Washington University, and
DePauw.
Although a thin squad— 12
swimmers and divers competing
against 16 to 20 on other teams—
Sewanee had more leadership than
Coach Bitondo has seen in many
years. Ferguson, Mike Milligan,
and Larry Pixley, all juniors, were
re-elected co-captains for next
season.
The other members will also
return, and the coach says he hopes
to add four or five newcomers to
the roster.
The team will likely train in
Florida again next January as they
did this year. Team members and
Coach Bitondo paid their own
expenses last January to train in
Tampa.
Cash Reward
Harry Cash was named most valu-
able player in the College Athletic
Conference at the end of basketball
season in March.
Both he and his brother, Larry,
were named to the all-conference
team.
While the Tigers were compiling
an 8-12 record, Harry Cash was
Ted Milter, C'78, clears a hurdle on the way
to a successful track season.
averaging 20.7 points a game to
become Sewanee's third all-time
leading scorer. Larry is seventh on
the all-time scoring list, and both
players averaged in double figures
in rebounding.
Sewanee will return three start-
ers from this season's squad, but
Harry and Larry, both 1978 gradu-
ates, will not be among them.
Mat Standout
Despite a 5-6 record (only Coach
Horace Moore's second losing sea-
son), the Tigers' wrestling team
returns all of its top matmen, in-
cluding Lawson Glenn, who
qualified for the Division HI nation-
als at Wheaton College.
Coach Moore says sickness may
have kept other Sewanee wrestlers
out of national competition. Top
returnees will be Tom Jenkins,
Doug Williams, Peter Samaras, Bart
Trescott, Tom Putnam and Steve
Blount.
Sports
Summary
Women's Tennis
The women's tennis team finished
the year with a 10-6 record, taking
losses from much larger universities
(Alabama, Tennessee, Middle Ten-
nessee State) but winning against
other formidable opponents (Van-
derbilt, Emory, Austin Peay).
Sewanee was fifth in the large
college division state championships.
Lynn Jones placed third in the
singles, and Lynn and Heidi Harnish
took fifth in the doubles.
Men's Tennis
Phil Dunklin and Ed Colhoun won
the number-one doubles champ-
ionship and led Sewanee to a
second place at the College Athletic
Conference championships this
spring behind Principia.
Tandy Lewis and Sam Boldrick
tied for first in the number-two
doubles, and Lewis won the
number-three singles championship.
Sewanee, which also took sec-
ond in the tougher Tennessee
championships, finished the regular
season with a 14-7 record.
Golf
The Sewanee golf team took a
second to Southwestern in the
College Athletic Conference this
spring only after tournament offi-
cials had to break a 341 tie among
the top four golfers on each team.
Sewanee finished the regular
season with a 10-9-2 record, in-
cluding a victory over Vanderbilt.
Kevin Reed, a freshman from
Wichita, Kansas, was the team's
lowest scorer for the year.
Track
The Tigers had a 3-4 regular-season
record in track, defeating Southern
Tech, Southwestern, and Samford,
and finished with a sixth in the
Tennessee championships and fifth
in the conference.
A bright spot was Ted Miller,
who was unbeaten in the intermedi-
ate hurdles and was defeated only
once in a close race in the high
hurdles.
Baseball
The baseball squad closed its regu-
lar season with a 3-8 record, then
was dumped in the rain-plagued
conference tournament by Principia
and Southwestern.
Gymnastics
Sewanee's gymnastics team had a
1-4 record, as Kathy Herbert led an
inexperienced squad with consis-
tently high scores.
1978 Football Schedule
Sept. 16 Hampden-Sydney there
Sept. 23 Millsaps home
Oct. 7 Centre home
Oct. 14 Southwestern home
Oct. 21 Washington & Lee there
Oct. 28 Principia there
Nov. 4 Rose-Hulman home
Nov. 11 St. Leo College there
Nichols Studio, Newberry, S.C.
Yogi Anderson
Millington
Leaves
Don Millington, varsity basketball
coach for the past two years, has
resigned to enter private business.
Coach Millington will join
Patterson Equipment Company, a
manufacturer of conveyor systems,
in Terre Haute, Indiana, where he
played basketball for Indiana State
and coached at Rose-Hulman
Institute.
His two-year record at Sewanee
is 19-28. Walter Bryant, Sewanee
athletic director, said a replacement
will probably be selected this
Hosting TIAC
Sewanee was host once again this
spring to the Tennessee Intercol-
legiate Conference Golf Champion-
ships.
The Tigers placed fourth in the
ten-team college division, won by
Carson-Newman. Middle Tennessee
State won the seven-team univer-
sity division. The overall individual
champion was Terry May of East
Tennessee State who shot a 73-67—
140 for the 36 holes.
More than 100 golfers competed
April 14-15 in the tournament,
which has been held in Sewanee
each year since 1962.
Aubrey Wilson
New Varsity
Coaches
The University named three new
coaches in April to take over
programs in track, baseball, wres-
tling, and soccer.
Herbert W. (Yogi) Anderson,
C'72, who earned more letters at
Sewanee than anyone in the school's
history, will be head wrestling
coach and an assistant in football
and baseball.
Coaching track and soccer will
be Aubrey Wilson, former Fisk
University track Ail-American,
Olympian, and world record holder.
Coaching baseball and also
joining the football staff of Horace
Moore will be Sam Betz, assistant
football coach and football business
manager at Newberry College,
South Carolina. Each coach will
also work in the intramural pro-
gram.
They are replacing Coaches
Clarence Carter and Dennis Meeks,
whose dismissals were announced
following the announced retirement
of football Coach Shirley Majors
in January.
Coach Anderson, 27, lettered
four years in football, wrestling,
and baseball from 1968 to 1972.
He was also team captain in each
sport. He has been an English
teacher and coach, including head
wrestling coach, at Notre Dame
High School in Chattanooga since
his graduation from Sewanee.
Latham Davit
An all-conference performer in
both football and baseball, Coach
Anderson was a College Athletic
Conference wrestling champion in
1970 and 1972.
Coach Wilson, 23, a native of
Guyana, South America, and a
recent graduate of Fisk in Nash-
ville, represented Guyana in the
1976 Olympic Games in Montreal.
His accomplishments in NCAA
track at Fisk have earned him five
All-America honors. Last year he
tied the world record of 1:02.4 in
the 500-meter dash at the Mason-
Dixon Games in Louisville, Ken-
tucky.
In Guyana he was a member
of the national soccer team. He has
also coached soccer in Guyana
and more recently has taught and
coached at McGavock High School
in Nashville. At Fisk he was chair-
man of the Fellowship of Christian
Athletes.
Coach Betz, 28, holds a degree
in physical education and health
from the University of Akron,
where he was also a three-year
letterman at defensive tackle. He
has coached baseball and football
at the high-school level and was an
assistant football coach at George-
town College, Kentucky before
going to Newberry College last
year as an offensive line coach. He
was a physical education instructor
and intramural director at Newberry.
ALUMNI AFFAIRS
Yep it's an official Florida license plate. It belongs to the Rev.
Lav'an B. Davis, C'49, T'52, the rector of St. Christopher's Church,
Pensacola and a University trustee, who was in Sewanee for the
annual board meeting in April.
Academy Alumni Work Session
by Joe Gardner, A'67
President of Sewanee Academy AJumni
Alumni Governors and Class Agents
Weekend March 17-18 was stimu-
lating and productive.
Headmaster Rod Welles made a
presentation on the current prep
school scene and the common prob-
lems which they face. Writing re-
actions from the alumni on a black-
board, syntheses of concerns took
shape in the several ensuing hours
of discussion.
Two major reactions can each
be expressed in a single word:
Communication and commitment.
Communication amongst our
alumni will be improved from two
directions— regular newsletters from
the Academy about directions
which the school is taking, and
dissemination of information about
what is happening on the Mountain.
All of us, especially governors and
class agents, must participate in this
exchange so that we may be well
informed about the Academy and
one another as well.
Commitment was demonstrated
by governors and class _ agents
through their gift of time in coming
to this March working session, their
enthusiastic endorsement of
Operation: Task Force, and the
generous pledges which they made
to support the budget of the
Academy in this crucial year.
Setting an example always
leads others to do likewise. So if
you do not have a current pledge,
please uncap your pen and make
that pledge or write your check
today. We must close the gap
between the approximate $92,000
in hand in mid-May and the
$150,000 needed by June 30.
Class of 1953 Phonothon
Seeking a minimum $25,000 in
class appreciation gifts in celebra-
tion of their 25th anniversary,
the Class of 1953 was rung up
from the Mountain by member
phono thoners on Saturday, March
11. It was the idea of Dr. Robert
Mumby of Orlando whose plan
was referred to fellow Floridian
from Palmetto, class agent Bob
Boylston, to shore up the team.
The $25,000 goal seemed
entirely possible when one class
member led off with a $3,000
donation. A gift table was con-
structed to show just how much
would be needed at Century Club,
Quintard Society and the Vice-
Chancellor's and Trustees' Society
levels to meet the goal.
All donations received between
July 1, 1977 and June 30, 1979,
two Sewanee fiscal years, count
in the class appreciation gift.
Pledges and contributions in hand
at Homecoming will be presented
to the vice-chancellor during the
25th Anniversary celebration at
Homecoming.
Five callers kept WATS lines
and direct dial phones in the
Alumni Office busy nearly all day
Saturday. In addition to Boylston
and Mumby, John Austin Cater,
Jim Perkins and Homer (Bo)
Whitman did the talking.
Alumni Council at Sewanee
by Allen Wallace
Class Agent for 1964
Dogwood in full bloom looked
great! Saturday was party weekend
and study day— something for
everyone. Lacrosse was being
played on the intramural field
and soccer on McGee Field. The
old dairy is a sculpting house, and
the University now has horse
stables.
Friday evening we had a splen-
did banquet with the new vice-
chancellor speaking, his first audi-
ence since Bob Ayres was con-
firmed in office. Campus leaders,
both boys and girls, from the
Student Life Committee of the
trustees, reported their views on
girls, fraternities and music today
at Sewanee.
President Al Roberts of Tampa
conducted the meeting Saturday
morning in the Bishop's Common.
Bill Whipple, vice-president
for development of the University,
reported that the main problem
at present is finances. A strong
feeling exists that a solution is well
on its way. Efforts are being made
to involve the younger alumni
classes. Representatives of the
classes of '76 through '78 were
present.
The Alumni Council members
split up into special interest work-
shops. I attended the session for
class agents, chaired by John
Crawford, class agent for 1928.
From Portland, Maine, John elicit-
ed 67 per cent giving from his
class last year, the number one
spot. I look forward to our class
breaking that record. Sixty-one
people are in the class of 1928;
207 in the class of 1964.
Suggestions in our sessions
included: 1) a breakdown of class
members by state or Sewanee clubs,
2) increased use of telephone;
3) matching ideas to increase new
gifts, and 4) prompt thank you
notes.
Sperry Lee of Jacksonville,
Florida, vice-president for bequests
reported that the development
office is seeking a staff person for
deferred giving. Alumni were again
urged to include Sewanee in their
wills.
Vice-president for church
relations, Bill Trimble of Memphis,
reported that alumni, especially
Episcopalians, need to be more
aware, understanding, and support-
ive of the unique relationship of the
University to the owning dioceses.
Less than one-third of the parishes
and missions in the owning dioceses
had the University in their budgets
last year.
Ed Hine, vice-president for
admissions, encouraged alumni to
recommend good prospective stu-
dents to Al Gooch. He also urged
those of us who live near Sewanee
to bring high school students to
the Mountain for a visit.
Jack Stephenson, vice-president
for Sewanee Club activities, encour-
aged the presentation of Sewanee
Club awards for juniors in high
schools. He announced the forma-
tion of new clubs in Baton Rouge,
West Tennessee at Jackson, and
Northwest Georgia at Rome.
Vice-Chancellor Ayres reported
on the Sewanee Summer Seminar
to be held July 9-15. For informa-
tion notify Dr. Edwin Stirling,
Department of English, Sewanee,
Tennessee 37375.
After the meeting, I had a good
conversation with Bob Ayres. I
wish you all could meet him. He
is a very soft-spoken, intelligent
person. He says that the new hos-
pital is still the main problem in
the budget and that what is needed
to make the turn-around will be
the acquirement of several staff
physicians representing much
needed specialties. He has some
very interesting plans for the future
of Sewanee. If you ever have the
chance to meet Bob Ayres, take
the time to do it. I think you'll
agree that he is the right man for
Sewanee at this time of great
demands.
Other people at the meeting
included: Henry Lodge, class of
'72; Pete Stringer, class of '71;
Wallace Pinkley, class of '63; Leon-
ard Wood, class of '54; Jim Cate,
class of '47; Douglass McQueen,
class of '45; John Ezzell, class of
'31; Roger Way, class of '30; Reg-
inald Helvenston, class of '22; Les
McLaurin, class of '39; Tom Whita-
ker, class of '75; Robert Holloway,
class of '68; Martin Tilson, class of
'74; Joe McAllister, class of '56;
Bruce McMillan, class of '76; Tim
Toler, class of '71; Billy DuBose,
class of '77; Feild Gomila, class of
'61; Jack Wright, class of '54;
Henry Selby, class of '77; Lawson
Whitaker, class of '72; Carl Hen-
drickson, class of '56; Morgan Hall,
class of '39; Billy Joe Shelton, class
of '76; James Avent, class of '19;
and Brown Burch, class of '21.
Homecoming
Come one, come all to a glorious
fall Homecoming October 13-15!
Class leaders already are in com-
munication with alumni pushing
attendance especially for reunions.
John Crawford, 1928 class
agent, reports a record number of
alumni coming to celebrate their
50th anniversary. Bob Boylston has
sent a series of letters to his class of
1953 bringing everyone up to date
on just who is coming for their
25th anniversary and the plans for
the big celebration. Both observ-
ances include a generous class
appreciation gift which will be pre-
sented to Vice-Chancellor Ayres
during the weekend.
The class of 1943 has heard
from Sperry Lee about their 35th;
1964 from Allen Wallace about an
early celebration of their 15th;
1968 from Tom Rue about the
10th; and others undoubtedly dis-
patched since press time.
Sewanee Club Functions
Pat and Ken Timberlake's (C'58)
was the scene of the spring meeting
May 5 in Huntsville where John
Walters, C'75, was named presi-
dent of the Tennessee Valley Club
. . . both San Francisco on May 5
and Southern California May 7
were hosts of Sewanee guest
speaker, Dr. Jacqueline Schaefer,
professor of French and wife of
the provost. Dr. James Scheller,
C'62, was in charge at the first
function, a dinner, and Jim Helms,
C'49, made the arrangements for
wine and cheese in Arcadia . . .
Tampa Bay on April 26 honored
Dr. Gilbert Gilchrist, C'49, who
reciprocated with one of his now
famous talks on Sewanee happen-
ings. Tom Whitaker, C'75, is club
president . . . Bringing the vice-
chancellor over from the Atlanta
airport May1 11 to his beautiful
home at Rome, Sewanee Club
organizer Ed Hine, C'49, intro-
duced his classmate Bob Ayres to
the fledgling but already thriving
Sewanee Club of Northwest
Georgia— scrumptious food in a
lovely relaxed setting. The club
brought 17 students from the
Rome area to Sewanee on April 27
. . . Atlanta enjoyed a picnic at
the Sewanee-like home of Ellen
and Louis Rice, C'50, on May 13.
April 22 the club brought pro-
spective juniors to visit the Moun-
tain in cooperation with the ad-
missions office . . . Birmingham
was here that same weekend with
prospects . . . New Orleans turned
out on April 7 for Dr. Robert
Lancaster at the Lawn Tennis Club.
John Menge, C'76, cooperating
with club president Feild Gomila,
C'61, was in charge . . . Central
Mississippi came to St. Andrew's
Day School in Jackson on March
29 for wine and cheese and to
welcome current and prospective
students. David Morse, C'72, is new
club president . . . Jack Tonissen,
C'70, hosted Charlotte at his home
on May 12 and grateful Sewaneeans
elected him club president . . .
Coastal Carolina heard from Dr.
Lancaster at a beer and barbecue
for current and prospective stu-
dents in Hobcaw (Mount Pleasant)
near Charleston on March 30; Jack
Bryan, C'68, was in charge . . .
Woodhill Estate Club was the set-
ting for the spring function of
Central South Carolina on May 5
with Joe Lumpkin, C'71, president,
in charge. The event honored high
school seniors in the Columbia area
entering Sewanee in the fall . . .
Country music was the entertain-
ment and wine and cheese the
palate pleasers for Nashville at
Rachel and Joe McAllister's (C'56).
Allen Wallace, C'64, and Alex
Shipley, C'63, both played guitar
and sang "Cabin in Glory Land"
among other lieder with the Out-
bound Freight band ... Dr. Lan-
caster spoke March 9 at Dallas in
the lovely home of Dr. and Mrs.
Bryan Williams, parents of Philip,
C'78. Webb Wallace, C'63, club
president, was in charge . . . Wash-
ington on March 31 again had its
spring dinner at the Evans Farm
Inn in McLean, Virginia, hearing
from Dr. Gilchrist and electing
Jimmy Taylor, C'65, president.
Academy Homecoming/Parents
Weekend October 27-29
Alumni and parents weekend was
so successfully combined last year
that the Academy alumni board
of governors and administration
decided on a repeat this year
October 27-29— homecoming for
the alumni complete with class
reunions.
Saturday afternoon football
will feature the annual tilt with St.
Andrew's. Reunions and a full
schedule of activities will be forth-
coming soon from class leaders and
the alumni office.
How to Start a Sewanee Club
Getting off to a spectacular start
with careful planning and an
appealing format will contribute
measurably to the continuing suc-
cess of almost any outfit, certain-
ly a new Sewanee Club. Knoxville
attests to this.
November 25 was the day
before the Tennessee- Vandy game
in Knoxville. Seizing on this occa-
sion, which would bring the whole
Shirley Majors family together,
Knoxville decided to honor the
retiring coach with a party in the
lively if stately downtown City
Club. Yes, Johnny Majors was there
too. Attendance was excellent-
spirits were high.
Plans for the club were formu-
lated at a small supper meeting
August 4 with the future founding
fathers present: Arthur Seymour,
C'66, was to become president;
Dr. John Semmer, C'65, thought up
the idea for the organizational
meeting with the Majors family
present, Bill Simms, C'68, and
Chip Stanley, A'63, were there with
especially good ideas to involve
young alumni and Academy con-
stituents. John Bratton came down
from the Mountain with some
sample bylaws and a "how to"
kit on clubs.
Next on the agenda will be an
outing for current and prospec-
tive students just before the open-
ing of school in August.
Alumni Golfers Win in Birmingham
by William Warren Belser, Jr., C'50
The spring meeting of the Sewanee
Golfing Society was held on the
West Course of the Birmingham
Country Club on Saturday, May 6.
Twelve Nassau matches for the
Vicar's Baffy were played off
handicaps between the Sewanee
golf team and a team of Birming-
ham alumni, with the alumni
carrying the day 23 to 13.
During lunch the Sewanee
team had a chance to meet and get
to know their hosts and adversaries.
Some very old Sewanee golf stories
were told. Elbert Jemison reviewed
his many activities as a principal
officer of the U.S.G.A. Spirited
play under pleasant skies domi-
nated the afternoon, and by sun-
down the old chaps had come out
on top. Alumni captain Belser
has had to contribute his golf
ball which is to be attached to the
shaft of the Vicar's Baffy as a token
of his team's triumph.
Unfortunately the society does
not own a baffy. All we have been
able to come up with is a wooden
shafted pitcher (for those who
came in late a pitcher is a seven iron ).
A desperate plea is made for a
generous and kind donation of an
appropriate baffy for the trophy
case at the Juhan Gymnasium. (Oh!
A baffy— look it up; it's in the
dictionary.)
For the story behind the
Vicar's Baffy a word with Dr. Jo-
seph D. Cushman is suggested. En
passant it has to do with one of
the admonitions of St. Paul to the
Corinthians.
A meeting of the society is
planned for next spring at Sewanee.
Nashville Names Anna Durham
Anna Durham, C'73, vivacious
alumna who has provided leader-
ship for the Sewanee Club of Nash-
ville since entering business there
after graduation, became president
of the club this spring and in so
doing is the first woman presi-
dent of a Sewanee Club. Anna is
director of package banking for
First American National Bank
which includes the Young Nash-
villians Club.
Alumni Trustee Elections Held
Sewanee alumni trustee elections
always are too close to call and
this year's election was no excep-
tion as voting took place to select
one clerical and two lay trustees
among truly outstanding candidates.
Finally selected were the Rev.
James Johnson, T'58, rector of St.
George's, Nashville, whose services
as vice-president of St. Luke's
alumni, national vice-president of
the Associated Alumni for church
support, and as a valuable partici-
pant in MDP campaigns in Nash-
ville, are too lengthy to enumerate.
The same could be said of the two
lay runners, Caldwell Marks, C'42,
of Birmingham, a member of the
Chancellor's Society, and William F.
Rogers, C'49, who has been a
Sewanee leader in Atlanta and last
year's MDP chairman there.
Sewanee alumni of the college
and seminary are entitled to four
lay and two clerical trustees, cho-
sen by national ballot of contrib-
uting alumni. Next meeting of the
Board of Trustees will be April
26-27, 1979.
Lee Stanley Fountain, Jr., A'48,
was named to the Board of Trustees
to represent Sewanee Academy
alumni. He was chosen by national
ballot.
From San Antonio, Mr. Foun-
tain is owner of Fountain and
Associates which is engaged in all
phases of gas and oil exploration.
Alumni and varsity gather on the west course of Birmingham Country Club for
their spring meet. The alumni, standing from left, are Dr. H. Brooks Cotten,
Coach Walter Bryant, Dr. Bayard S. Tynes, Elbert S. Jemison, Jr., Flowers
Crawford, Jr., Dr. Sam M. Powell, William Warren Belser, Jr., and
William D. Tynes, Jr. The varsity, from left, includes Ken Schuppert,
Rob Binkley, Wade Turner, Wayne Davis, Kevin Fox, Taylor Flowers, Ben
Jackson, and Kevin- Reed. Ben Ivey Jackson is not seen with the alumni
because he was taking the photograph.
CLASS
NOTES
Alumni who attended more than one
University division are listed in the class
notes under the class year of most ad-
vanced study.
If you attended the Academy, Col-
lege, and School of Theology, you would
be listed under your seminary class year.
The Rev. Ogden R. Ludlow, C'43, vicar of
the Trinity Episcopal Church in Renovo,
Pennsylvania, has designed and patented a solar
energy collector that will track the sun across
the sfey so that its collector plates will collect
maximum solar energy for as long as possible.
The apparatus uses an array of diamond-shaped
collector plates which are housed in a glass-
covered frame, set in a universal mounting so
that it can be pointed in any direction. The
mount is motor driven and is connected to a
sun sensor and a position analyzer so the plates
are automatically pointed at the sun and thus
maintain maximum exposure.
1920
CHARLES HAMMOND, C, of Santa
Monica, California, with his partner won
the Senior Olympics tennis title in 1974
and '75 in the 70-year bracket. This year
they are entered in the 80-year bracket,
the Super Seniors. Charley also plans to
enter the track competition in shot put,
javelin, discus and high jump.
1928
Something new in the way of match-
ing gifts was brought to our attention
by JOHN R. CRAWFORD, C, who as a
member of Cheeselovers International
ordered gift packages for several relatives
and friends and thereby earned "a per-
centage donation to your favorite char-
ity," which he chipped in for Sewanee.
1929
JULIAN R. deOVIES, C, writes from
Mobile that he is "still retired, but in
good health and active" and plans to be
in Sewanee next year for his 50-year
class reunion.
FRANCIS C. NIXON, C, is a CPA,
retired from the firm of Smoak, Davis
& Nixon. He is also a retired Air Force
colonel.
1930
DR. CLIFTON U. BOONE, C,
retired from the practice of otolaryngology
in Aurora, Dlinois after 31 years.
1933
M. CARTER McFARLAND, C, after
a long career as a professor and a federal
official in HUD, is writing, lecturing, and
consulting in the field of housing and
urban affairs. His book, The Federal
Government and Urban Problems, was
published in March 1978 by Westview
Press, and he is writing another one.
JOHN W. MORTON, SR„ C, and
his wife, Nancy, were expecting two new
grandchildren early this year, as both son
Johnny and daughter Mary Beth were
expectant parents. The Mortons took a
month's trip last year visiting relatives
Arkansas and Colorado.
1934
ISAAC RHETT BALL, C, has retired
and bought a home in the country out-
side of Camden, South Carolina, "where
there is a collection of great people who
love horses, dogs, fishing and hunting.
Included in this group are a number of
Sewanee alumni. I still do enough manage-
ment consulting with my old associates
to stay active and out of trouble."
1935
DR. ARTHUR BEN CH1TTY, C, has
completed another book, Sewanee
Sampler, about the lighter side of Sewanee
history. It can be ordered from the Uni-
versity Press at $5 paperback or $6.50
hardback.
1936
G. BOWDOIN CRAIGHILL, JR., C,
was recently installed as a member of the
governing board (Cathedral Chapter) of
Washington Cathedral.
1937
DR. WALTER M. HART, C, writes
that daughter JANE (C'77) and MICHAEL
SUBLETT (C'74) presented him with a
granddaughter, Jane Garlington Sublett,
on September 30, 1977. Dr. Hart still
practices pediatrics in Florence, South
Carolina.
1938
JAMES G. MAJOR, A'34, C, has
moved back to Birmingham.
1940
WENDELL V. BROWN, C, writes
that he has completed 15 years on the
Chickasha, Oklahoma Board of Edu-
cation, and that his son, Steven, receives
an M.F.A. at Ohio University this year
and his daughter, Victoria, is an L.P.N.
student.
1941
ALAN C. HINSHELWOOD, C, writes
that he is still retired and doing a bit of
substitute teaching when necessary.
"There seems so much to do and no time
to do it in," he says.
1942
BEN CAMERON, C, is in North
Carolina at the Research Triangle Insti-
tute, where he is a senior associate in
the Center for Education Research and
Evaluation. He is directing a large-scale
national study of the ESEA Title I
Migrant program under contract with
the U.S. Office of Education.
The Houston Chronicle last Novem-
ber ran a half-page feature on the revival
of Palmer Church under its rector, THE
REV. CHARLES WYATT-BROWN, C'38,
T, and his assistant and successor, THE
REV. RICHARD ELWOOD, T'66. The
article, written by religion editor Louis
Moore, credits Frs. Wyatt-Brown and
Elwood with discovering and using the
talents of a Roman Catholic seminarian
and a former janitor who now heads the
Palmer Drug Abuse Program to revitalize
the church which many thought was
"dead" in 1966, located as it was in a
changing neighborhood.
STANHOPE E. ELMORE, JR., C,
has been elected president of the
Alabama Soft Drink Association. He is
manager for Coca-Cola of Houston
County. He is also a board member of
the Dothan First National Bank and of
Durr-Fillauer Medical, Inc., which is
based in Montgomery.
1944
"Seeing the Mountain and changes in
the campus was quite an experience,"
says FITZGERALD (JERRY) ATKIN-
SON, C, of homecoming last fall. Though
disappointed in the attendance of the
Class of '44, he says he has been guilty
of not attending in the past. But he adds:
"My wife and I are looking forward to
October 13."
W. HARRY LOGUE, C, lives in
Shelbyville, Tennessee and commutes to
Nashville where he is assistant coordinator
for local affairs in the governor's Office
of Urban and Federal Affairs.
GEORGE SCARBROUGH, C, fol-
lowing the publication last fall of his
New and Selected Poems, has a busy
schedule of readings and workshops in
April and May, including stops in New
York, Tennessee and Georgia. He will
teach the poetry division of the Cumber-
land Valley Writers' Conference at
Peabody College in Nashville August
6-12. George has been included in the
1977 edition of Who's Who in the South
and Southwest and the 1978 edition of
Contemporary Authors.
1945
THOMAS J. GRISCOM, JR., A, has
become senior vice-president responsible
for all broadcasting activities for WSM-TV
in Nashville. He joined the station in
1951, became sales manager in 1968,
and was promoted to vice-president and
general manager in 1968.
THE REV. DAVID J. WILLIAMS, T,
is the new chaplain of Patterson School
in Lenoir, North Carolina. He was rector
of St. Michael and All Angels' in
Anniston, Alabama for more than ten
years. He and his wife, Marguerite, reside
on the school campus.
1946
1946
PHIL M. McNAGNY, JR., C, became
a U.S. District Court judge in Indiana
in May 1976. He is a Fellow of the
American College of Trial Lawyers.
1947
THE REV. PAUL M. HAWKINS, JR.,
C, married Rosalie Robinson in 1974.
He is broker manager of Grossklag, Inc.
and a graduate of the Realtors Institute.
He lives in Geneva, Illinois, and is a non-
parochial priest doing supply work.
1948
MORTON LANGSTAFF, C, has
formed Langstaff Realty Company in
Alexandria, Virginia.
H. KELLY SEIBELS, C, writes that
his daughter Virginia, a sophomore, is
the third generation to attend Sewanee.
Kelly is with the investment securities
firm of Robinson-Humphrey in Birming-
ham.
ROBERT J. WARNER, JR., C,
writes that his law firm, Dearborn and
Ewing, moved into a new building in
Nashville last July. He and his wife, Ruth,
joined a Vanderbilt-sponsored trip to
France for two weeks in May.
Despite being the preseason pick to win the
NCAA basketball championship, Joe B. Hall,
C'51, and his Kentucky Wildcats won the
national championship anyway. A ten-page
feature in the April 24 issue of Sports Illustrated
made especially clear the coaching strategy that
shaped Kentucky's season.
Motivating and relieving the pressure on his
players and shuffling his lineup and game plans.
Hall made moves that would have made Adolph
Rupp envious.
1950
W. EUGENE DONNELLY, C, after
20 years in the banking field, recently
entered the practice of law with the firm
of McClure, Blessing and Donnelly. He
is admissions liaison officer for West
Point and was recently promoted to
colonel in the Army Reserves. He lives
in Bradenton, Florida.
SMITH HEMPSTONE, JR., C, has
recently returned from a month in Egypt
and Saudi Arabia, no doubt gathering
material for his twice-weekly column of
political commentary that now appears
in 88 papers. He was formerly an editor
of the Washington Star. Mr. Hempstone
writes that ANN BAILEY, C'77, just
completed a seven-month stint as his
editorial assistant.
WALTER SHANDS McKEITHEN,
JR., C, was recently elected chief of staff
at Bayfront Medical Center in St. Peters-
burg, Florida. He is also clinical assistant
professor in obstetrics-gynecology at the
University of South Florida College of
Medicine.
We have a note from LEONARD B.
MURPHY, C, still an associate professor
of history at San Antonio College, largest
junior college in Texas. He writes of
seeing DAVE (THE REV. DAVID)
WENDEL, C'51, now of Victoria, Texas.
THOMAS L. PRICE, A, is working
with the U.S. Forest Service in San
1951
TOMMY ARMSTRONG, A, is an
executive with Owens-Illinois Fiberglass
Company. He visited the Academy in
May.
THE VERY REV. ALLEN L. BART-
LETT writes that he is still dean of Christ
Church Cathedral in Louisville, Kentucky,
and is working on a Doctor of Ministry
degree at Virginia Theological Seminary.
His oldest son, Chris, is a freshman at
Kenyon College. Dean Bartlett says, "I
am basking in the reflected glory of my
classmate JOE HALL's success with his
basketball team at the University of
Kentucky."
J. R. (KNOX) BRUMBY, C'48, T,
writes from Tallahassee, Florida that he
has been restored to the active priest-
hood and will be a "worker priest,"
helping out as Bishop Cerveny needs
him. He is now owner of the Cypress
Motel in addition to being president of
Brumby and Associates, yacht brokers.
He writes, "I have a charter division in
my yacht business and invite fellow
Sewanneeans to come cruise 'the big
bend' with us in our Morgan Out Island
28 or 33 or another from our fleet." -
He also writes that a local Sewanee Club
is in the making, and that his step-
daughter, Jenny, will enter Sewanee in
the fall.
MAURICE K. HEARTFIELD, C, has
been installed as a member of the govern-
ing board (Cathedral Chapter) of
Washington Cathedral.
GORDON E. WARDEN, JR., C, is
director and head professional of the
Huntsville, Alabama Tennis Center, and
owner of Warden's Pro Shop.
1952
ALAN P. BELL, senior research
psychologist at the (Kinsey) Institute for
Sex Research since 1961, is spending a
year's sabbatical on Cape Cod with his
wife and three children. He has written
a book, Homosexualities: A Study of
Diversity Among Men and Women, to be
published by Simon and Schuster in
August. Another book, on the develop-
ment of sexual orientation, will appear
in 1979.
CLAYTON BRADDOCK, C,
although writing his Ph.D. dissertation
for Ohio State University, began work in
April as director of public affairs at
the University of Tennessee Center for
Health Sciences in Memphis.
JAIME BURRELL-SAHL, C, writes
that his daughter, Leslie, is finishing her
second degree in journalism and public
relations at Georgia Southern College.
A Twentieth Century Prophet by
THE REV. CANON EDWARD B
GUERRY, C'23, GST, received first
mention by BISHOP FURMAN C
STOUGH, C'51, T'55, in the January
issue of Southern Living in a section
called "What Southerners are Reading."
The book is a biography of the Rt. Rev.
William Alexander Guerry, bishop of
South Carolina and father of both Canon
Guerry and Sewanee's great vice-chancel-
lor of the same name. Canon Guerry was
given much credit in a Columbia news-
paper feature in February for finding the
location of the unmarked grave of General
William Moultrie, one of the state's best
known Kevolutionary War leaders. The
General's remains were to be reburied at
Fort Moultrie on Sullivan's Island.
THE REV. JOHN R. McGRORY,
JR., C, retired in October as an Air Force
chaplain, receiving a meritorious service
medal upon his retirement. Shortly
before retiring, he received an M.A. in
religious education from Creighton Uni-
versity, Omaha, Nebraska, and is now
serving as curate at Holy Spirit Parish, '
Missoula, Montana.
Official USAF photo
Chaplain John McGrory at
retirement
THE REV. ALBERT N. (AL)
MINOR, C, is working on an interdisci-
plinary Ph.D. at the University of Ten-
nessee, where he has been Episcopal
chaplain for 14 years and a campus
professional worker in higher education
for 20 years. His doctoral thesis is on the
closure of adolescence. He is listed in
Who's Who in American Religion and
the forthcoming issue of the Dictionary
of International Biography.
THE REV. CANON THOMAS H.
WHITCROFT, C
Quebec to bee
the Angli.
lity
for
ese of Montreal. He is
also a diocesan canon on the staff of
the RT. REV. REGINALD HOLLIS
GST'66. He still maintains his clinical
practice in psychiatric social work
as director of the diocesan counseling
Bullish Move on Wall Street
He is quoted in Time, Newsweek, Business Week, U.S. News & World
Report, the Wall Street Journal, and the New York Times, among
others.
He is Lacy H. Hunt, C'64, senior vice-president and economist of
The Fidelity Bank and its parent company, Fidelcor, Inc., in
Philadelphia.
Dr. Hunt's incisive economic forecasts and pointed comments on
economic and financial policy have also earned him invitations for
personal appearances, including a guest spot on Wall Street Week, the
nationally televised financial program.
He is author of Dynamics of Forecasting Financial Cycles, in
which he constructs a working econometric model of financial
markets with which to forecast cyclical U.S. economic trends.
His articles have also been widely published. One article, "Alter-
native Economic Models for the Yield on Long-Term Corporate
Bonds," won the Abramson Award of the National Association of
Business Economists as the best article published in 1973 in Business
Economics.
In addition, Dr. Hunt has testified before the House Subcommit-
tee on Domestic Monetary Policy.
The 35-year-old economist joined Fidelity and Fidelcor in the
fall of 1975. Before that he served as vice-president for monetary
economics of Chase Econometrics Associates, Inc., where he
developed its financial forecasting model and was co-developer of
its international econometric model. A native of Houston, Texas, he
has also served as senior economist of the Federal Reserve Bank of
Dallas.
He earned his bachelor's degree in economics at Sewanee, his
master's in finance at the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton
School, and his Ph.D. at Temple University.
While at Sewanee he studied under Robert A. Degen, Marvin E.
Goodstein, and James Thorogood. He and his wife have two children.
Research and Diplomacy
In the crowded field of biomedical research, Allen B. Clarkson, Jr.,
C'65, is beginning to make a significant contribution and sees
that major discoveries are only a few steps away for those in a
position to search for them.
Clarkson, in a sense, is involved in both research and diplomacy,
and perhaps the best kind of diplomacy in underdeveloped nations.
His work is concentrated in the prevention and eradication of
diseases, specifically parasites, prevalent in tropical Africa.
Now an assistant professor of parasitology at New York Uni-
versity Medical School, Clarkson retains an association with
Rockefeller University, the foremost institution in biomedical
research in the world. He held a postdoctoral fellowship there for
two years and was a research associate for one year.
At Rockefeller, Clarkson was involved in a breakthrough in the
blocking of the metabolism of microscopic parasites {Trypanosoma),
which cause sleeping sickness.
A paper about the breakthrough was published by Clarkson and
a colleague in Science, a magazine of the American Association for
the Advancement of Science.
Although the parasitic Trypanosoma can be eliminated from
the blood of its host with the injection of salicyl hydroxamic acid
and glycerol (which blocks the glucose catabolism of the parasite),
the parasite recurs.
Clarkson points out that somehow the parasite is able to survive
in some stage or hide in some organ of the body to reestablish the
symptoms. Before the cure is final, research must determine why
there is a remission or recurrence.
"It is very rare to be able to find a significant difference between
a pathogen (germ, parasite, etc.) and its host and then design agents
to directly exploit that difference. We have been fortunate to do
this," Clarkson explained. "We hope eventually to make a new and
effective drug from these beginnings."
Just as cures to diseases are seldom developed by a single scientist
"from the ground up," Clarkson says the control of sleeping sickness
is coming in small steps, with many scientists making contributions.
The solution is important to Africa. Even years before it kills
its victims, Trypanosoma debilitates. It does the same to cattle as to
humans. A chronically sick person or animal continues to consume
but does not produce , so there is a double loss to the limited economy.
Describing himself as almost at loose ends when he left Sewanee
in 1965, Clarkson worked in a tutorial program at Payne College,
helping to bring students up to college level work. Shortly afterward,
he accepted the offer of a fellowship to the Medical School of
Georgia graduate school, where he was at the top of his class, but
soon "found out why they had to solicit students."
A valuable result of the experience was that he married his
biochemistry lab partner, Sandi, who has since received her master's
degree and is well into her doctorate in mathematics education.
With a growing interest in biological research, Clarkson trans-
ferred to the University of Georgia, where he began to specialize
in cell physiology and parasitology.
He also taught for two years at Georgia, a stint that included
coordinating the freshman biology courses with 1,300 students a
quarter, 40 graduate teaching assistants, and three secretaries.
In 1974, actually before officially receiving his Ph.D., he
snatched up a postdoctoral position at Rockefeller University.
"Rockefeller was another world," Clarkson wrote in a recent
letter. "In many ways it reminded me of Sewanee— the strong sense
of tradition, of uniqueness, the sort of unspoken camaraderie, the
oft-repeated statement that a person working at Rockefeller was
able to be a better scientist than he really was, even the architecture
(not neo-gothic but at least anachronistic)."
This spring he was named a member of the Steering Committee
of the African Trypanosomiasis Chemotherapy Section of a World
Health Organization program.
To continue his research, Clarkson has received grants from the
Rockefeller Foundation and the World Health Organization.
"I could still fall on my face, but things look pretty good,"
he says.
1954
CLIFFORD Y. DAVIS, JR., C, has
assumed the full-time position of presi-
dent and chief operating officer of
Walk, Young & Wells, Inc., a marketing
management firm in Memphis. Although
a principal organizer of Walk, Young &
Wells, Mr. Davis has until recently been
an officer and member of the board of
directors of City National Bank of
Memphis. Among other activities, he
is chairman of the LeMoyne-Owen
College Fund Drive.
DAN DEARING, C, writes from
Tallahassee that his oldest son is in
college there, two sons are in the Marines,
and another son is at Sewanee Academy,
while his daughter Leslie will enter the
College at Sewanee this fall. His wife,
Betty, has gone back to college full
time. "Daughter Mallory too young for
Marines or Sewanee' (6th grade), so
keeping her home," he says. Dan still
is practicing law in Tallahassee.
THE REV. W. GILBERT DENT, C,
is assistant minister at the Old North'
Church (Christ Church) in Boston and
is a Procter Fellow for the spring 1978
term at Episcopal Divinity School. He
has established his own firm of con-
sultants in Cambridge, specializing in
development, educational program plan-
ning, and organization.
WILLIAM M. (BILL) HAGEMEYER,
C, after 17 years of bank advertising,
turned down the presidency of his
company and entered the real estate
business. In his first year he was a million-
dollar-plus producer, and now manages
both the Westport and Redding, Connecti-
cut offices of Richard Storm Realtors
DOUGLAS H. HAWKINS, C, is '
living in Denver where he is chairman of
the board and C.E.O. of two corporations
he founded in 1969, involved in housing
and real estate investments in the Rocky
Mountain region. He and his wife Sandra
have two sons, Mark, 16, and Brad, 11.
He is currently Rocky Mountain chair-
man of the Young Presidents Organi-
zation.
JAMES M. SEIDULE, C, is head-
master of George Walton Academy in
Monroe, Georgia.
WILLIAM H. SMITH, A'50, C, has
been named executive vice-president for
administration and a member of the
board of directors of the newly consoli-
dated Southeast Bank of Broward, one
of the largest banks in Florida. His
office is in Fort Lauderdale.
THE REV. ROBERT WILLIAM-
SON TURNER III, C'39, T, writes from
Port Charlotte, Florida, that he recently
enjoyed a visit from Nancy and OWSLEY
CHEEK, A'33, from Nashville.
1955
JIMMY L. BOSWELL, C, was
recently elected vice-president, engineer-
ing for Mosbacher Production Company,
Houston, Texas.
COUNT DARLING, C, has moved to
Birmingham, Michigan to manage that
office of Williamson, Merrill, Taylor &
Darling, marketing and management con-
sulting firm of which he is executive
vice-president.
LEE LANCE, C, is manager of Cook,
Treadwell and Harry of Texas, national
insurance brokers. He lives in Houston.
CLAIBOURNE W. PATTY, JR., C,
has been named executive director of the
Arkansas Institute of Continuing Edu-
cation, which was formed last year to
provide continuing education for lawyers.
He is also assistant dean of the law school
at the University of Arkansas at Little
Rock, dividing his time equally between
the two jobs.
THE REV. RICHARD N. WALK-
LEY, T, is an executive with Flowers
Industries, Inc. of Thomasville, Georgia,
a large bakery firm. He accepted the
position with the stipulation that he
would be a personnel counselor for the
company. "We're interested in the worker
as a person, not just someone who
punches a time clock," he said.
Kirkman Finlay, Jr., C'58, was elected
mayor of Columbia, South Carolina on April 4,
outpolling two rivals with 55 per cent of the
vote. Kirkman, a Columbia attorney and city
councilman, was praised by the outgoing mayor,
who is a candidate for secretary of state. Sorting
out the problems between county and city
governments will be the first priority, vowed the
mayor-elect.
1956
DR. JAMES E. BUTLER, C, prac-
tices orthopaedic surgery in Texas Medical
Center in Houston. He is clinical assist-
ant professor of orthopaedic surgery at
the University of Texas Medical School,
Baylor College of Medicine, and Shrine
Crippled Children's Unit. He is director of
adult hip service at Texas Medical School
and director of sports medicine at Rice
University athletic department. He is
married and has six children.
EDMUND B. (ED) DUGGAN, C,
continues as principal of Shasta High
School in Redding, California. His wife,
Nancy, who frequented Sewanee from
the University of Texas, takes care of
their children— Alison, head pom-pom at
Shasta High; Eddy, league 178 junior
varsity wrestling champion; and Randy,
who is enrolled in a special elementary
education program for mentally gifted
minors. Ed says he occasionally runs into
BOB PIERCE, C'57, who is a doctor in
Sacramento.
THE REV. BERT HATCH, T, is
the new editor of the Atlanta diocesan
publication, Diocese.
THE REV. ALFRED H. SMITH,
JR., C, continues as rector of St. Colum-
ba's Church in Camarillo, California,
where he has been since 1970, and plans
"to be here for another eight years,
God willing."
CARL B. STONEHAM, C, earlier
this year joined the United Equitable
Insurance Group as counsel and was
recently elected assistant secretary for
their group of insurance companies,
whose offices are in Skokie. Illinois.
LT. COL. HUGH P. WELLFORD,
C, is now stationed at Kelly Air Force
Base, Texas, where he is a maintenance
staff officer with the Air Force Logistics
Command. He and his wife, Sue, were
residing at Goldsboro, North Carolina.
PETER WRIGHT, C, is still labor
relations officer for the National Park
Service. He received his master's degree
in labor education in August 1976
from D.C. College in Washington. He is
listed in Who's Who of Commerce and
Industry and Who's Who in the South
and Southwest. He lives in Lorton, .
Virginia and is area secretary for the Old
Gaffer's Association, a sailing association
with headquarters in the United Kingdom.
1957
PATRICK ANDERSON, C, was one
of the Washington writers interviewed
by David MeCullbugh in a recent issue
of the Book of the Month Club News.
McCullough calls him "the archetypical
Washington writer," mentioning that he
was Carter's campaign speech writer and
Jeb Magruder's ghost writer as well as
a writer of books, both fiction and
non-fiction. Pat is quoted as saying,
"Now, I'm just writing novels." His
last book. The President's Mistress, was
a popular success and was CBS tele-
vision's Friday Night at the Movies on
January 10.
LEE GLENN, C, reminds us of the
good news that his daughter SUSAN
is a freshman at Sewanee.
WILLIAM A. KIMBROUGH, JR.,
C, was appointed U.S. Attorney for
the Southern District of Alabama by
President Carter on August 1, 1977.
THE REV. RAUL H. MATTEI,
C'47, T, is the new rector at St. Michael's,
Trenton, New Jersey, a historic land-
mark church founded in 1703. He has
started a bi-lingual program there.
A. BROOKS PARKER, C, has been
appointed Tennessee commissioner of
employment security. He was formerly
press secretary to Governor Blanton.
MAJ. HEYWARD B. ROBERTS,
JR., A'53, C, is an air freight officer at
McGuire Air Force Base, New Jersey.
His wife, Peggy, and their three children
J. ROBERT SHIRLEY, C, has been
appointed headmaster of Heathwood Hall
Episcopal School, effective July 1, 1978.
He was formerly assistant headmaster
of Summitt School in Winston-Salem,
North Carolina. He is married to the
former Thrace Baker and they have two
daughters.
1958
JERRY M. CROWE, C, was recently
promoted to area vice-president for the
Associates Financial Corporation of
North America and was placed in charge
of 11 offices for the Mid-South Division.
He and his wife, Jean, reside in Kingsport.
The oldest of three children, Jerry, Jr.,
is studying dentistry at the University of
Tennessee.
DAVID H. (DAVE) EVETT, C, is
still teaching at Cleveland State in Ohio,
along with LEONARD TRAWICK, C'55.
He writes, "Just back from sabbatical
in England, where I bumped into JOEL
PUGH (C'54, T'57) in the lobby of
the Royal Shakespeare Company in
Stratford."
LT. COL. H. FORREST PHILSON,
C, is presently serving as executive officer
(second in command) of the 12th Marines,
the artillery regiment supporting the
34th Marine Division, based on the island
of Okinawa, Japan. He hopes to return to
duty in Hawaii in August.
EDWARD H. WEST, C, has been
named executive vice-president of Ex-
change Bancorp Inc. in Tampa, one of
the largest banking groups in Southwest
Florida.
1959
BENJAMIN (BERNIE) DUNLAP, C,
writes that he has taken a leave of
absence from the University of South
Carolina to write and produce a television
series for the Public Broadcasting System.
The 14-program series, Cinematic Eye,
about the art of Him, will have its first
national run next fall. He says Clark
Santee, who directed the Leonard Bern-
stein series several years ago, is directing
the series.
MICHAEL S. INGRAM, C, has
been elected a University trustee from the
Diocese of Louisiana.
HARDIE B. KIMBROUGH, C, was
elected circuit judge of the first judicial
circuit of Alabama, effective January 1,
1977.
HENRY T. (TOM) KIRBY-SMITH,
A'55, C, has a poem titled "Harvey
Beaumont's Complaint" in the anthology,
Contemporary Poetry of North Carolina,
published in December.
JOHN McCRADY, A'55, C, is vice-
president and owner of Xitex Corpora-
tion, Dallas, manufacturer of Video
Terminal electronics for computer
terminals for the small computer and
hobby electronics market. His wife,
Martha, has a private practice in marriage,
family and general counseling in both
Fort Worth and Dallas.
THE REV. JOSEPH E. STURTE-
VANT, C'56, T, has resigned as rector
of St. Michael and All Angels', Columbia,
South Carolina, to accept an appoint-
ment as rector of St. Francis of Assisi,
Huger, and as a member of the diocesan
staff.
1960
WILLIAM R. BULLOCK, C, has a
third child, Martha Bohannon, born
October 25, 1976.
FRED G. JONES, C, has remarried,
to Mary Stearns of Syracuse, New York.
He is now serving as director of music
and organist-choirmaster of St. Paul's
Lutheran Church, Clearwater, Florida.
F. WILLIAM LICKFIELD, C, was
recently appointed vice-president for
sales by Overseas National Airways in
New York.
THE REV. GERARD S. MOSER,
C'60, was one of ten Americans to
greet President Carter on his visit to
Geneva, Switzerland last year. Formerly
a DuPont Company representative in
Geneva, the Rev. Mr. Moser is now rector
of Emmanuel Church, Geneva.
ROBERT T. OWEN, C, is branch
marketing manager for Honeywell
Information Systems, Inc., serving
Georgia and East Tennessee out of
Marietta. He and his wife, the former
Patricia Quinn, have three children-
April, 14, Eric, 12, and Amy, 7.
1961
RICHARD R. RANDOLPH III, C,
is vice-president of Norville, Randolph
& Allan, Inc., and president of the
Birmingham realty firm's homebuilding
and development subsidiaries. Since its
founding in 1952 the company has
grown from three salesmen to forty-
DR. JERRY SNOW, C, has entered
private practice in Washington after
serving at the Veterans Administration
Hospital as chief of hemodynamics.
His field now is cardiovascular disease.
Dr. Snow is pinch-hitting as Washington
Sewanee Club president for THE VERY
REV. JOEL PUGH, C'54, T'57, now
cathedral dean in Little Rock.
1962
CHARLES T. CULLEN, C, has taken
over as sole editor of The Papers of John
Marshall as of September, 1977. Volume
two was published in December and
volume three went to press in March.
The project, located at the College of
William and Mary, intends to publish
all of the famous chief justice's papers
in approximately 12 volumes.
Gerard Moser and President Carter
The Greening
of the
Debutante
Calendar of EvenU, Music, Books, Cinema, Art News
Resuscitating the Arts
David Jefferson, C'76, will this month complete the 12th issue of an
arts (arts and more) magazine, Bozart, which he not only founded
last year in Birmingham hut has edited in all the frontier meaning of
that word that includes writing, solicitation of material, sale of
advertising, layout, delivery, and gnashing of teeth.
Jefferson, in fact, has supplied everything but capital, unless you
count 12 months of salary.
He nursed the idea to fruition while working in a men's clothing
store, attending business classes at the University of Alabama, and
writing for an underground campus paper.
The publisher of a small youth magazine unexpectedly agreed to
publish Bozart, underwriting the cost and agreeing to give Jefferson
a commission on advertising. The advertising sales turned out to be a
heavy burden. ("Is this all you do all day?" someone once asked him.)
It is amazing enough that an arts magazine could survive any-
where for more than two or three issues. Bozart has even flourished,
in a sense, without any substantial backers. (A wealthy Birmingham
supporter died recently of cancer.)
The circulation is at 10,000, and the clean layout and lively
articles and reviews— from restaurants to symphonies and from society
to sports— have attracted attention (also a share of denigrating letters
from the more socially conservative).
Artists are a put-upon group, says Jefferson, and this has tended
to keep them behind Bozart.
Several Sewanee alumni have contributed work. But Jefferson
admits ruefully that he can expect people to work gratis for only
so long.
If new financial backing does not materialize from the interest
soon, Jefferson may move Bozart to Houston.
He speculates about Bozart dying. He can work for gratis only
so long himself.
DAVID C. LONG, C, lives in Dem-
opolis, Alabama where he works for
Gulf States Paper Corporation and is
senior warden and lay reader of Trinity
Church. He and his wife, Evelyn, have
three children, Phyllis, 17, Campbell, 11,
and Allen, 8.
THE REV. CHARLES H. SWINE-
HART, JR., C, is working as a seasonal
employee (January 16-June 30) in the
individual income tax division of the
Michigan department of treasury. He is
also an active supply priest in the diocese
of Michigan. His wife, Carol, continues
as full-time news editor for radio station
WRDD.
1963
BLANTON OWEN, A, is working
on his dissertation in ethnology (folklife)
at Indiana University. He is presently
working at the Blue Ridge Institute in
Ferrum, Virginia.
GRANT STOCKDALE, A, former
editor of Public Utilities Fortnightly, has
taken a new position in Washington, D.C.
1964
THE REV. PETER H. BECKWITH,
T, has moved to Worthington, Ohio,
where he is the new rector of St. John's
Episcopal Church.
ROBERT LEE COLEMAN III, C,
and his wife, Ruthie, have anew daughter,
Katie, born last June 14 and delivered
by DR. FRED F. DIEGMANN, C'65.
Bob is center coordinator for the Atmore,
Alabama office of the Southwest Ala-
bama Mental Health Center.
RICHARD C. (RICK) GOVAN, A,
a regional sales supervisor for Provident
Life and Accident Insurance Company
group department, has recently trans-
ferred from the Los Angeles office to
the Atlanta group office.
JOHN D. McDOWELL, JR., C, has
recently been named vice-president of
corporate development for First
Financial Corporation in Waco, Texas.
He and his wife, Linda, are expecting
their third child in September to join
Scott, 12, and Allison, 9.
JULIAN McPHILLIPS, JR., A, is
running for state attorney general in
Alabama.
ALFRED MILLER III, C, writes
from Jacksonville, Florida: "Ted (Alfred
IV) is 9, Nathan is 7, and we're expecting
another .... Mandy and I are getting
a lot out of School of Theology's exten-
sion course at our parish, St. Mark's."
THE REV. HOYT WINSLETT, GST,
is the new rector of St. Paul's Church
in Greensboro, Alabama.
1965
THE REV. PHILLIP C. CATO,
GST, received the Ph.D. degree from
Emory University in December. He is
associate rector of St. Peter's Church,
Morristown, New Jersey. In the Diocese
of Newark, he serves as chairman of
the Commission on Ministry.
JAMES G. DICKSON, C, is doing
wildlife research with the U.S. Forest
Service in Nacogdoches, Texas. He
received his Ph.D. from Louisiana State
University in 1974.
WILLIAM ALEXANDER C. FURT-
WANGLER, C, is administrative assist-
ant to the Charleston, South Carolina
county manager and a free-lance music,
dance and drama critic. He also writes a
bi-weekly classical record review column
for the Charleston News and Courier. He
is married and has a four-year-old daugh-
ter, Elizabeth. He was listed in the last
edition of Who's Who in Government
G. SIMMS McDOWELL, C, has been
elected worshipful master of Landmark
Lodge No. 76 AFM, Charleston. He also
is a new member of the vestry of Grace
Church.
THE REV. C. WALLIS OHL, JR.,
C, last year became the first full-time
resident priest at St. Michael's Church in
Norman, Oklahoma, a newly formed
mission. He writes, "Since coming to
Norman the church has grown by 50%
and has initiated a building program,
spurred on by a grant-gift of $200,000."
Also, at the October diocesan convention,
he was elected to the Standing Commit-
tee of the diocese and appointed
examiner in history for candidates for
Holy Orders.
DR. DAVID G. SHULMAN, C, has
entered private practice in ophthalmology
in San Antonio. Recently he completed
his internship and residency at Scott and
White Clinic in Temple, Texas.
HENRY SOAPER, A, is residing in
Fullerton, California, where he is with
L. W. King Engineering Company.
CLAUDE T. SULLIVAN, JR., C, is
now a partner in the law firm of Ford,
Harrison, Sullivan & Lowry in Atlanta.
WILLIAM H. THROWER, C, is now
working with the U.S. Patent Office in
Washington.
JAMES F. (JIM) WILSON, C, of
Chicago, writes that he has been with
Scribner and Company real estate for
1 1 years, is still active with Lawrence
Hall School for Boys, and is playing a
great deal of squash.
1966
CHARLES R. ALLEN, JR., C,
now practices law in Fincastle, Virginia
and is an assistant commonwealth
attorney for Botetourt County.
DR. EDWARD BARNWELL BLACK,
C, is an instructor in radiology at Harvard
Medical School and director of the
diagnostic ultrasound laboratory at the
Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston.
Dr. James D. Lazell, Jr., C*6l, is the wildlife
biologist for the Massachusetts Audubon Society
and director of the Society's biological research
station, Endicott Sanctuary. He is on the faculty
of Tufts University, where he teaches field
biology, and is an officer of Harvard University
and an associate of the Museum of Comparative
Zoology. He is on the joint scientific staff
with the National and Florida Audubon
Societies. In all these capacities he travels
extensively in the eastern U.S., in search of rare
and endangered species.
JACK E. GORDON, JR., C, lives in
Claremore, Oklahoma, where he opened
his own law firm, Gordon and Gordon,
in 1976. He has a daughter, Casey Lee,
age 4, and a son, Jacob, age 3.
WILLIAM B. JONES, C, is owner of
J-Tron Electronics in Springfield, Ten-
nessee, and father of two children, ages
11 and 7. His hobbies are ham radio,
radio controlled airplanes and gliders.
BRUCE R. MULKEY, C, writes
that he and SAMUEL H. WOODS III,
C'68, "are currently collaborating on
a book concerning saloon subcultures in
Hibbing, Minnesota, tentatively entitled
Tennessee Trash on Holiday. "
STEPHEN H. REYNOLDS, C, writes
from Tampa that he married Elizabeth
Wade Poucher of Jacksonville December
17.
THOMAS A. SMITH, A, a senior
at the University of Tennessee College of
Medicine, was recently awarded the
American Society of Clinical Pathologists'
Bausch and Lomb Medal for his research
in the problem of Sudden Infant Death
Syndrome.
RALPH MEADE WALKE, C, was
appointed public defender for the Dublin,
Georgia judicial circuit, which includes
four counties. He and his wife, Kim, are
expecting their first child in August.
JOSEPH C. WEBB, A'62, C, is vice-
president of C & S Bank in Atlanta,
working in corporate cash management,
and chairing .American Management
Association seminars in the field. He is
chairman of the Inman Park spring
festival which annually draws 20 to 30
thousand people to the inner-city restora-
tion neighborhood. He has also been
active in two successful local political
campaigns. He and his wife, Joyce, have
two daughters, ages 3 and 6.
PHILIP WILHEIT, C, lives in
Gainesville, Georgia, where he is vice-
president of Wilheit Packaging Materials
Company. He and his wife, Mary Hart,
have a six-year-old daughter, Eve Hart,
and a one-year-old son, Philip, Jr.
DR. WILLIAM WINGFIELD, JR.,
C, is married to the former Jo Jeffers
and they have a daughter, Elizabeth,
born November 3, 1977. He is assistant
professor of medicine and pharmacology
at the Medical University of South
Carolina.
1967
DANIEL ANDERSON, C, will be
married June 4 to Virginia Black. He is
manager of the ordinary systems depart-
ment in the western home office of
Prudential Insurance Company in Los
Angeles, and has received Chartered Life
Underwriter and Fellow Life Manage-
ment Institute designations.
THE REV. MARTIN J. CAMPBELL,
T, has moved from the Church of St.
Francis of Assisi in Lake Placid to become
rector of St. Francis' Church in Bushnell,
Florida.
PETERSON CAVERT, C, has been
elected to the board of directors of
First Alabama Bank of Tuscaloosa,
and has been promoted to senior vice-
President of First Mortgage Company,
where he has worked since 1967.
LON (DOC) GILBERT III, C, says
his new business, Corporate Leasing, Inc.,
•is doing fine though it is very small. He
writes, "Still buy and sell late model
sports cars and exotics. Have had lots of
snow here on Lookout Mountain. Bird
hunted all fall with JO COLMORE
(C'66)."
MICHAEL L. GILCHRIST, C, is now
a missile officer at Offutt Air Force
Base, Nebraska. He and his wife and year-
old s
side i
DR. BRUCE M. (MAC) GREENE,
C, is on the internal medicine faculty
at Johns Hopkins University School of
Medicine. He lives in Baltimore with his
wife, Theo, and three sons.
WILLIAM S. LYON-VAIDEN, C,
who teaches German at McDonough
School in McDonough, Maryland, is
leading his third group to German-speak-
ing Europe this summer for the "Experi-
ment in International Living." He also
has plans to visit a bell foundry in
Holland which is casting bells for the
school's new 48-bell carillon, due to be
installed in October and which Bill. will be
playing.
BRUCE RODARMOR, C, residing in
Belleville, Pennsylvania, is a sales repre-
sentative for Fuel Crisis, Inc., whose
products increase fuel efficiency and cut
emissions. He also plays in the Lyter-
Cleveland Band, performing some of his
MORGAN SOAPER, JR., A, is
residing in St. Louis and working for
McDonald Douglas in the computer
programming field. He does considerable
traveling for the firm.
TIMOTHY D. STROHL, C, is assist-
ant vice-president and operations officer
for Second National Bank in Lexington,
Kentucky.
CHRIS SWIFT, C, expects to receive
an M.A. in New Testament from the
Wheaton Graduate School in August,
1978. He married Arlene Figgins in 1971
and they have a son, Peter, age two, and a
daughter, Christina, age eight months.
DR. RICHARD B. TERRY, C, has
begun practice of general surgery in
Nashville.
AARON W. (RON) WELCH, JR.,
C, is in Memphis working for the bio-
chemical division of E.L DuPont, doing
research in agricultural chemicals in the
mid-South. He married Janet Privette
in 1969 and they have a son, Aaron HI,
born in May 1976. Ron received his M.S.
in plant pathology in 1969 from North
Carolina State University, was discharged
from the Navy in 1973, and got his Ph.D.
from North Carolina State in 1976.
JOHN R. SMITH, C, with his wife
and two sons has moved to San Antonio
from Nashville to be general counsel for
Associated Milk Producers.
DAN T. WORK, JR., C, is a CPA
with the Memphis firm of George B.
Jones and Company, doing audit and tax
work in 28 states for automobile dealer-
1968
CHRISTOPHER VANCE ARNOLD,
C, received his Ph.D. last year and
traveled for a while out West before
returning to North Carolina. He is living
in Chapel Hill and working for the court
system while building a private practice.
When NICHOLAS C. BABSON, C,
wrote us a note, he said he was looking
out the window of his North Chicago
home trying to see past the snow and
dreaming about the Caribbean. At the
grindstone, Nick is manager of marketing
and research and new product develop-
ment for Babson Brothers Company.
BEELER BRUSH, C, is director of
operations for Hillsborough Service, Inc.
of Tampa.
DR. FREDERICK A. ELMORE III,
C, is now practicing general surgery in
Fresno, California.
GENE HAWKINS, C, enjoyed the
extra snow this winter around the Ashe-
ville area by doing a lot oT skiing and
competing with a racing team. His
daughter, Ashley Brooke, had her first
birthday May 16.
DR. ROBERT ERNEST KIRK, C, is
constructing a new veterinary hospital
in South Pittsburg, Tennessee. He has
two children, Jennifer, age 3, and Robert
William, age 1.
TRACY LIGHTCAP, C, is teaching
political science at Oxford College of
Emory University and finishing his Ph.D.
in that subject at Emory. He is married
to the former Una Margaret Pointer.
WILLIAM WARD McCORMICK, A,
has joined the sales staff of McCormick's
Enterprises, marching and music special-
ists. Ward is also director of the Plain-
field, Illinois High School Jazz Band
and is percussion instructor and arranger
for the award-winning Monticello March-
ing Sages.
PARKER McRAE, C, is a second-
year resident in internal medicine at the
University of Colorado Medical Center,
but plans to return to the Southeast
for general practice.
JOHN T. NIES, C, who is still
operating J & J Landscape Contractors
in Hazelwood, Missouri, says his wife,
Mary, is expecting their second child in
July. They also hope to build a house
in the fall.
DAVID C. NORTON, C, of
Charleston, South Carolina, was appoint-
ed assistant solicitor for the 9th Judicial
Circuit in January. He and his wife Dee
expected their first child in May.
ALLEN J. B. ROBINSON, C, is
expecting his third child in June.
STEPHEN SCHENCK, C, is program
director for Beckman Mental Health
Center in Greenwood, South Carolina,
providing services for a seven-county
area. He is married to the former Donna
Goble of Prestonsburg, Kentucky, who
is a psychiatric nurse.
DR. CRAIG R. SMITH, C, has just
been named acting director of the
division of internal medicine at the Johns
Hopkins School of Medicine. He is
married and has two children, age 6 and 4.
GEORGE W. SPECK, C, and his
wife have moved to Nacogdoches, Texas
where he has begun the practice of
obstetrics and gynecology. They also
have twin boys, William and Charles,
born last July 8.
BRYAN L. STARR, C, and SARAH
R. (SALLY) LINES, A'70, C'74, have a
year-old son, Bryan, Jr. Bryan, Sr. is
still associated with the real estate firm
of DuBose-Jones in Atlanta. /
LEE WOOLMAN, C, is on sabbatical
this year, taking some courses for his
Ph.D. at the University of Minnesota
and caring for his daughter, Joanna, who
is two years old. He says "We get along
famously—reading, having lunch out,
sledding. Househusbanding is fun!"
1969
We have a note that ROBERT
STUART BALSLEY, C, has received his
medical degree from Bowman Gray
School, Winston-Salem, and is now
residing in Savannah.
WILLIAM H. BLOUNT, C, is living
in Denver, Colorado, and looking forward
to alumni activity there.
BOYD BOND, A, is in real estate and
investments in Little Rock. He is class
agent for this Academy class.
THE REV. RANDOLPH C.
CHARLES, C, has become assistant
rector of Grace Church in Charleston,
arriving there from Pawley's Island.
WILLIAM P. DIGGS III, C, lives
in Mission Viejo, California, where he
is sales manager for Sealand Services,
the country's first complete overseas
container vessel operators. His second
child, a girl, was born July 7 of last year.
THOMAS W. ELLIS, C, is in his third
year of practicing internal medicine in
Jackson, Tennessee, where he and his
wife, Donna, reside with their two sons,
Scott and Jonathan.
DAN F. GALLAHAN III, C, and his
wife have a second daughter, Nancy
Garrett, born December 7.
O MORGAN HALL, JR., C, has
been transferred from the Baltimore
headquarters of the First National Bank
of Maryland to the regional headquarters
in Annapolis, where he is regional loan
officer.
REID HENRY, A, is completing his
residency in obstetrics and gynecology
at the University of Arkansas Medical
School.
DAVID INGE, C, is still with the Air
Force but is now practicing radiology at
the Air Force Academy in Colorado.
EUGENE O. (GENE) JENKINS,
JR., C, was promoted to assistant vice-
president with First National Bank of
Commerce in New Orleans, effective
January 1, 1978.
THE REV. JOSEPH E. NOLL, JR.,
T, has moved from the Church of the
Nativity in Jacksonville, Florida to St.
Andrew's in Interlachen.
DR. JOHN M. (SHAUN) PACKARD,
C, is practicing pediatrics in Gunters-
ville, Alabama.
Peter W. Lemonds, C'76, won the collegiate
artist regional competition for string instru-
mentalists held this year in Louisiana and then
placed third in the national auditions held
April 3 in Chicago.
A second-year student in the LSU School
of Music, he already has played with three
symphony orchestras as soloist, most recently
under the direction of his father, William
Lemonds, former Sewanee choirmaster.
In that concert, Peter was soloist on Febru-
ary 17 with the Atlanta-Emory Orchestra
playing the Dvorak Cello Concerto in b minor
and received rave reviews.
Always known in Sewanee as a fierce com-
petitor, he was most visible to his fellow
students as an athlete— first string in basketball
for four years.
CAPT. CLAUDE GILBERT (GIL)
PETTYJOHN, C, is at Eglin Air Force
Base, serving as a T-39 pilot and chief of
the local air traffic control facility. He
and his wife have three sons and are
expecting a fourth child in June. They
will be transferred to Frankfort, Germany
in August. Gil received a master's degree
in public administration from Troy State
University in May.
THE REV. V. GENE ROBINSON,
C, and his wife Boo live at Sign of the
Dove Farm in New Hampshire, a retreat
center they founded three years ago.
They celebrated the birth of their first
child, a daughter, Jamee Isabella, on
October 17, 1977. Gene's ministry to
youth group advisors was recently fea-
tured in The Episcopalian. He is youth
ministry coordinator for Province I (New
England).
RONALD E. TOMLIN, C, is an
' archivist on the staff of the Mississippi
Department of Archives and History in
Jackson. Last August he received his
Master of Library Science degree from
the University of Mississippi.
1970
THE REV. JAMES G. BINGHAM, T,
is now director of communications for
the Appalachian Peoples Service Organiza-
tion centered in Blacksburg, Virginia.
DR. DONALD S. BOHANNON, C,
and his wife, the former Bettie Arnold,
announce the birth of a daughter, Isaac
Arnold Bohannon, on January 28,
1978. Dr. Bohannon is an anesthesiology
resident at Shands Teaching Hospital,
University of Florida College of Medicine,
at Gainesville.
JAMES THOMAS DANIEL, C,
writes that he is finishing course work
at California Polytechnic, Pomona, in
ornamental horticulture.
BRIAN DOWLING, C, is practicing
general law in Dothan, Alabama, after
graduating in 1976 from the University
of Alabama law school. He says, "Y'ali
JAMES EDWARD (JEF) PARRIOR,
C, was elected district judge of the 36th
Judicial Circuit in November, 1977.
He lives in Hillsboro, Alabama.
DAVID R. HILLIER, C. has joined
the law firm of Van Winkle, Buck, Wall,
Starnes, Hyde and Davis in Asheville,
North Carolina. He was previously assist-
ant general counsel for Fieldcrest Mills
in Eden, North Carolina.
DR. WILLIAM M. LIGHTFOOT, C,
will finish his surgery residency in
February, 1979, and plans to practice
in Mobile. He and his wife, Carol, have a
two-year-old son, Paul Malcolm.
W. ALEXANDER MOSELEY, C,
and his wife, Susan, have a daughter,
Anna Elizabeth, born August 18, 1977.
Alex is leaving the Air Force in May and
plans to practice law in Mobile, Alabama.
ROBERT B. MURFREE, C, has
twin sons, Rob and Jay, born July 27,
1977.
RAYMOND MURRAY, C, is teach-
ing in Houston and has planned a June
wedding.
ROBERT L. SLATEN, C, was
featured in Chattanooga newspaper
articles when he announced his candidacy
for circuit court clerk. Bob, who won
an SEC wrestling championship in his
freshman year at Sewanee, has been
confined to a wheelchair since an accident
in 1974. He drives his own van with a
special lift, and has worked on behalf of
the handicapped by organizing groups,
raising funds, and making speeches in
20 states. He was named Outstanding
Young Man of the Year for 1977 by the
Chattanooga Jaycees.
JAMES E. SMITH, C, is associated
with the law firm of Johnstone, Adams,
May, Howard and Hill in Mobile. He
previously spent three years in the Navy
as a judge advocate.
THE REV. STEPHEN B. (STEVE)
SNIDER, C, became rector of St. John's
Church in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, in March.
His second son, Stephen, was born last
October.
KIRK SNOUFFER, C, has been
practicing law in Chattanooga since
October 1975. After his graduation from
the University of Texas Law School, he
worked for a U.S. district judge in
Mobile, Alabama for two years. Kirk also
sent word of several of his classmates
which you will read under the proper
headings.
1971
THE REV. BILL E. BURKS, T, is
the new rector of St. Mary's Church
in Middlesboro, Kentucky.
We have word that EDWARD
BUSCHMTLLER, C, is operating his
own counseling-rehabilitation center in
St. Louis.
STEPHANIE and JOHN CANNON,
C, are living in Rochester, Minnesota
with their two children while John
completes the last year of his oral surgery
training. Classmate BRUCE BASS is also
at the Mayo Clinic doing a residency in
urology.
W. GARDINER CHAMPLIN, JR., C,
is now working in commercial mortgage
banking in Mesa, Arizona. He and his
wife, Jennifer, were expecting their first
child in April,
MICHAEL M. COOMBS, C, received
a civil engineering degree in March and
is an assistant engineer with the Arkansas
Power & Light Company in Little Rock.
CAROL REID DOUGHTY, C, has
been named chairman of the language
arts department of Orange Park Middle
School, Orange Park, Florida. She
recently returned from an Easter holiday
trip to England.
DR. JAMES K. ENSOR, C, is
practicing internal medicine in Memphis
and looking forward to publication of
some articles he has written. His wife,
Cheri, is working toward her master's in
guidance. They have a year-old son, Kelly.
GEORGE Y. GILPATRICK, C, was
recently promoted to vice-president of
marketing and elected to the board of
directors of Heuristic Systems in Windsor
Locks, Connecticut.
TODD M. ISON, C, has opened a law
office in Escondido, California, 30 miles
north of San Diego. He is making his ,
home in Cardiff-by-the-Sea.
FRANK JACKSON, C, is a medical
student at the Medical University of
South Carolina in Charleston, while wife
BABS (C'73) works in a research lab
at the university in cytogenetics. They
write that they heard the Sewanee choir
at the cathedral there "and they were
GREAT!"
ALEXANDER T. (SANDY) JOHN-
SON, C, is out of the Air Force and is
teaching mathematics at Central Catholic
High School in Denver. He received an
M.A. in curriculum and instruction from
the University of Northern Colorado in
June 1976 and married Gloria Callaway
in November 1976.
FRANK E. LANKFORD, JR., C,
married Connie Simpson on June 25 of
lastyear. He is practicing law in Tuskegee,
Alabama and lives in Auburn.
ROBERT W. NEWSOM III, C, lives
in Cary, North Carolina, just outside
Raleigh where he is an associate attorney
general in the state department of justice.
He and his wife, Alicev have two children,
with a third due in June. They attend
St. Michael's in Raleigh where Bob
teaches adult education classes in philos-
ophy. They are both members of the
Wake County Child Advocacy Steering
Committee, which Alice helped organize.
She is also lobbying for quality day care
facilities.
J. CLARK PLEXICO, C, has been
teaching in the American School in
Tehran, Iran.
DENNIS SENIFF, C, has been a
visiting assistant professor of Spanish this
year at Washington University, St. Louis.
His Ph.D. dissertation was accepted at
the University of Wisconsin last Decem-
ber. And last but definitely not least, he
and his wife, Celia, had their first child,
Andrew Hasler Seniff, born March 1.
DON E. SNOW, C, became associated
with the law firm of Bridges and Connell
in Thomaston, Georgia, in August, 1977.
He and his wife, Lilli Ann, have a son,
Jordan Trice Snow, bom in January 1977.
ERNEST H. (CHIP) STANLEY, C,
is married to the former Elsie Taylor
and they live in Columbia, South Carolina
where Chip works with Lawyers' Title
Search and Elsie is an interior decorator.
W. THOMAS SUTTLE, C, received
his master's degree in international
studies in 1976 from Johns Hopkins
University, School of Advanced Interna-
tional Studies in Washington, D.C. and
their Bologna Center in Italy. He is
presently doing congressional liaison and
program analysis for the Institute of
Electrical and Electronics Engineers.
W. BRADLEY WEEKS, C, is a
partner in the law firm of Wagner, Nelson
and Weeks in Chattanooga. He was
recently married to Ann Bradley.
1972
HERBERT W. (YOGI) ANDERSON,
C, is the University's new head wrestling
coach and assistant football and baseball
coach. (See the sports section for details.)
JOHN R. BENNETT III, C, and his
wife, Joyce, are starting a cattle ranch
and oil exploration business in east Texas,
while John continues, to work as an inde-
pendent petroleum landman. "We are
anxious to hear from old Sewanee
friends," he writes. They are living in
Karnack, Texas.
JAMES H. BOOKER, JR., C, is
working as a property and casualty insur-
ance agent with Reese-Huffman Company
in Rome, Georgia, and working with
other Rome alumni to form a Sewanee
Club. He writes that his wife, Terri, gave
birth to 9-pound, 4-ounce James III (C'99)
on September 29, 1977.
TIMOTHY CALLAHAN, C, has been
promoted to captain following comple-
tion of the Air Force Squadron Officers
School, and he is stationed near London,
England.
JAMES W. CAMERON III, C, and
MARGARET (RINGLAND, C'75) have
moved into a new house in Franklin,
Tennessee. Margaret is a research assistant
in pharmacology at Vanderbilt University
and Jim is a lawyer with theV firm of
Butler, Tune, and Entrekin in Nashville.
HARROLD H. (HAL) CARSON, C,
writes from Spartanburg that he is "eking
out an existence as a hard hat in South
Caroiina," and studying for his profession-
al engineer's license. He and Sara are also
building a house and hope to pursue a
hobby of raising various fruit trees.
HENRY DAVIS, C, is athletic di-
rector at Northwood Institute, a Dallas
junior college, where he coaches basket-
ball, soccer, golf, and tennis, and also
teaches psychology and five business
WILLIAM D. DAVIS, C, is in private
law practice in Birmingham. His wife
also is a practicing attorney.
DAVID E. FOX, C, was recently
promoted to assistant vice-president at
Home Federal Savings and Loan, Colum-
bus, Georgia. He and his wife, the former
Hazel Rust, have two sons, David, age
4, and Benjamin, age 1.
MARSHALL GARRETT, C, has just
received his M.D. degree from Creighton
Medical School and plans to begin an
internship next month in Long Beach,
California. Next year he hopes to start an
anesthesiology residency.
THURMAN (GIL) GILLESPY III, A,
received a B.S. in biology from Florida
State University in 1976 and is in his
second year at Jefferson Medical College,
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
J. EARL MORGAN III, C, is presi-
dent of First Federal Savings and Loan
Association of Dyersburg, Tennessee. He
is married and has two children.
BRENT OGILVIE, C, and his wife,
CVDNEY (CATES, C'73) announce the
birth of a son, Ian Brenton Ogilvie, Jr.,
on February 9, 1978.
CAPT. KEITH H. RIGGS, C, is a
copilot with the 91st Air Refueling
Squadron at McConnell Air Force Base,
Kansas.
JAMES W. SAVAGE, C, recently
received his M.B.A.from Harvard and is
with Columbia Pictures in New York Citv.
STEPHEN E. SWANSON, C, and his
wife, Jan, are making their home in
Charleston, where he is a forester in the
wood procurement department for West-
vaco Corporation and she is completing
her studies in dental hygiene at the
Medical University of South Carolina.
TYREE E. (TY) WILKINSON, C,
and his wife, Bonnie, have a son, Matthew
Edwin, bom January 17, 1978 in Mur-
(reesboro, Tennessee.
1973
Ending his residency in general sur-
gery at the University of Louisville,
WINSTON CAMERON, JR., C, is moving
to Atlanta this month to be in the ortho-
pedic program at Georgia Baptist Hospital.
JOHN R. M. DAY, A'69, C, is a
resident for the Tulane Surgical Service
at Charity Hospital, New Orleans.
SCOTT DEAVER, C, works for
Continental Trailways in the Dallas home
office, in advertising and promotion.
THE REV. GLEN L. DeLONG, T,
is the new warden of Camp McDowell
in Nauvoo, Alabama, going there from
St. Mary's-on-the-Highlands in Birming-
ham.
JOHN F. GILLESPY, A, received
a B.A. in economics from Duke Uni-
versity in 1977 and is now at Stetson
University working on a CPA,
JAMES H. (JAMIE) and MARTEE
(SELDEN) HEWITT, C, are parents
of a son, James, born December 12,
1977.
THE REV. WILLIAM S. HOL-
COMB, T, is now rector of Holy Com-
forter Church in Gadsden, Alabama.
EDWARD D. (BRU) IZARD, C, has
returned to Charleston where he is mort-
gage loan officer for Home Federal
Savings and Loan Association. On June
24 he will be married to Jane Craver
of Charleston. JOHN SPAINHOUR, C'73,
EUGENE WATSON, C'73, and HENRY
RAVENEL, C'71, will take part in the
JOHN A. JARRELL III, C, and
his wife, Teresa, had a son, John IV, born
January 7.
BARBARA REID, A'69, C, and
HENRY EDWARD BEDFORD III, A'69,
C, are the parents of a son, Henry
Edward IV, born last November 12.
THE REV. GEORGE B. SALLEY,
JR., T, is now rector of All Saints'
Church in Cayce, South Carolina. He
and his wife, Ann, had their first child,
Stephen Harlan, November 20.
JEFF STEWART, A'68, C, has
opened a law practice in Winchester,
Tennessee in partnership with Greg
O'Neal.
GLORIA JENNINGS WATER-
HOUSE, C, is working toward a Ph.D.
in clinical psychology at Vanderbilt Uni-
versity. Her husband, GEORGE (C'71), is
completing his second year of a surgical
residency at Vanderbilt.
FRANKLIN O. WICKS, JR., C,
and his wife, CHRISTINE (CROSS, C'76)
have a daughter, Emily Cynthia, born on
September 21. They are living in Ply-
mouth Meeting, Pennsylvania, and Lin is
a management trainee at the Wood Treat-
ing Corporation of Philadelphia.
1974
JOHN M. ALLIN, JR., C, has been
accepted into the clinical psychology
program at the University of Mississippi,
a four-year program leading to the Ph.D.
He has been taking undergraduate psy-
chology courses at Millsaps College in
preparation for graduate school. John and
his wife, Betty, will be moving to Oxford
this summer.
ROBIN DAHLSTROM AUSTIN, C,
writes that she and her husband, THE
REV. W. B. AUSTIN, C'71, have moved
from Simms, Bahamas to High Rock,
Grand Bahama where they both teach.
DAVID BATES, A, a math major
graduating from MIT this month, was
recently named to Phi Beta Kappa and to
Sigma Xi, scientific honorary society.
CHRIS BOEHM, C, recently moved
his family to Birmingham where he has
invested in the Cross Creek Park real
estate development.
MONTAGUE L. (COSMO) BOYD,
C, is now with Robinson Humphrey
Company in Atlanta as an investment
broker. He sends word of classmate
DAVID GRAY's new address in Green-
ville, South Carolina, and says CHAR-
LIE A. TUCKER, C'75, and B.A. ROCK-
WELL, C'76, are divorced.
MARGARET BURWELL, C, ac-
companied by JOHN LIBBY, C'76,
attended a reception given by President
and Mrs. Carter March 11 at the White
House. John was active in the 1976
Carter campaign in Florida, and the
reception was for campaign workers
from that state. He is now back at Sewa-
nee to finish his degree requirements.
CHRISTINE GRIFFIN CALDWELL,
C, and her husband, Bill, have a son,
Brian Griffin, born last December 8.
Chris continues her job working with
Mexican-American school children and
their families in the Collier County
Public Schools. Bill is assistant vice-
president of marketing for First National
Bank and Trust Company, Naples,
Florida.
RICHARD H. DUNAVANT, C, is
now practicing law with the firm of
Abernathy, Abernathy and Dunavant in
Pulaski, Tennessee. He finished Cumber-
land Law School in Birmingham last year.
MARY SHELLEY EAVES, C, was
married to Michel Franz Bertucci on May
13 in Santa Rosa Beach, Florida.
VHERN WESLEY ETHERTON, C,
lives in Birmingham, Alabama, where he
is a health sanitarian for the Jefferson
County Health Department. He is married
to the former Barbara Warr and they
have a daughter, Christi Renee.
ALBERT W. GILLESPY, A, will
graduate from the University of Florida
this spring and has been accepted at
Jefferson Medical College.
HENRY T. (HANK) HALL, A,
graduated from Evangel College in May
and is thinking about entering the
KATHERINE L. HARRISON, C, is
working for the Savannah Journal-
Record as a newswriter-reporter. She
says, "NATHANIEL LIPPITT (C74)
and I, along with many others, spend
Monday evenings being guided through
Dante's Inferno, Purgatorio and Paradiso
by a most capable Fr. William Ralston.
It's as wonderful as ever it was."
MIMI IVY, C, married Park Gibbs
Vestal, Jr. from Knoxville on March 18
in Memphis. They are living in Nashville.
LEE, C, and LEAH GUARISCO
McGRIFF, C'75, have a son, Lee IV, born
last August 3.
JOHN D., C, and CLAIRE HOD-
NETT PRICE, C'75, are moving this
month to Winston-Salem where John is
beginning his internship at North Carolina
Baptist Hospital. He has just received his
M.D. degree from the University of
Mississippi School of Medicine.
ELISE GIVHAN SPAINHOUR, C,
writes that she and husband JOHN, C'73,
are one of the very few husband-and-wife
law practices in their area. They practice
with the Thomas B. Givhan law offices
in Shepherdsville, Kentucky.. Elise has
also become involved in the public
defender program in Bullitt County.
THOMAS DEE WOODBERY, C, is
in Washington on the staff of Senator
Chiles, but writes that he is "anxious to
get back under the Florida sun."
1975
SUSAN LEIGH BAUGHN, C, re-
ceived her M.A. in English from the Uni-
versity of West Florida in Pensacola in
June of 1977. She is doing further
graduate work in English at the Univer-
sity of Tennessee at Knoxville and
working as a teaching assistant. She is
sharing an apartment with LOUISA
BEACH, C'75, who is working on her
master's in English.
J. MICHAEL BLANCHARD, C, is
now employed with Nashville Bank and
Trust Company.
ED and NAN (MARTIN, C'76)
BREWER, C, have a daughter, Katherine
Martin Brewer, born November 14, 1977.
PEYTON COOK, A, will be an
operations officer in the summer train-
ing of new cadets at the U.S. Air Force
Academy, Colorado. He will also par-
ticipate in Operation Third Lieutenant,
and learn about flying the A-10 in
Tucson, Arizona.
JOHN L. FERRY, C, joined the
research department of Procorsa, S. A.,
Mexican stock brokerage firm, immediate-
ly after graduation, and is currently its
International Manager. He is married
to the former Marianela de la Torre and
they have a son, Christian Lund, born
in April 1977. They live in Mexico City.
JOHN and MARLEA FOSTER, C,
have moved to a new home in Birming-
THOMAS J. (JEFF) GILL, C, was
ordained a deacon during services April 4
at St. John's Church in Savannah, Georgia.
Jeff is a recent graduate of the General
Theological Seminary.
ELLIOTT B. GORDON, C, has
returned to the states from Paris, and he
and his bride of one year, Isabelle Rocher
of Paris, are residing in Santa Rosa,
California.
GARY M. HARRIS, C, is director
of the Bristol (Tennessee) School of the
Performing Arts and artist in residence
with the Bristol Children's Theatre. He
writes that he hopes to hear from old
friends.
WILLIAM H. (BILL) JOHNSTON
III, C, is supervisor of respiratory therapy
at Good Samaritan Hospital in Tampa.
He and his wife, Brenda, are expecting a
child in October, by which time they
should be settled in their new house.
GREGORY J. KOURTZ, C, has
moved to Orlando where he is a market-
ing representative for the Burrows Cor-
poration. In March he received a master's
degree in business administration from
the University of West Florida in Pensa-
cola.
PATRICIA MCLAUGHLIN, C,
married Dr. Raymond Toher on March 4
in Charlotte, North Carolina. He is a
resident in internal medicine at Duke
University Medical Center and will be
going into private practice in Durham in
July. They met while Tricia was in
graduate school at Duke.
KATHERINE OGLESBY, C, married
Benjamin McCary on April 22 and moved
to Richmond, Virginia, where she is
manager of Partime, Inc., a temporary
employment service.
THEODORE H. (TED) OWEN, A,
has been elected president of his senior
class at Randolph Macon College, Ash-
land, Virginia.
STEPHEN A. ROWE, C, was gradu-
ated from the University of Alabama
School of Law in May and has begun
work as an associate for the law firm of
Lange, Simpson, Robinson and Somer-
ville in Birmingham.
BOWMAN TURLINGTON, A, has
been elected senior advisor at Sophie
Newcomb College where she will be
entering her senior year. She traveled
to Texas this spring and spoke for the
college.
MELISSA WEATHERLY, C, is a
teacher's assistant in the Middle School
at the Bancroft School in New Jersey,
working with adolescents classified as
emotionally disturbed or learning dis-
abled. She also has been chosen as an
alternate to four others selected to
study abroad in education under a Rotary
Scholarship.
JOHN T. WHITAKER II, C, is in the
first year M.B.A. program at Emory
University in Atlanta.
LESLIE HOFFMAN WILLIAMS, C,
is working for the U.S. Forest Service
out of Sheridan, Montana. She writes
that she spends the ofr season in down-
hill and cross-country skiing.
1976
We have word that SARAH BAILEY,
C, is a real estate agent with a firm in
San Antonio,
MARK BOST1CK, C, has received
his M.B.A. degree from Tulane Uni-
versity, He and his wife, LUCIE
BROYLES BOSTICK, C'76, are residing
in Winter Haven, Florida, where Mark
is employed by Commercial Carrier
Corporation.
THE REV. CARL BRIGHT, T, has
moved from the Church of the Ascension
in Montgomery to become rector of
Grace Church in Sheffield, Alabama.
RANDALL DUNN, C, has joined
United American Bank of Nashville.
CATHERINE C. (CATHY) ELLIS,
C, is enrolled in a two-year master's
program in city and regional planning
at Cornell University. She hopes to have
an internship in Atlanta this summer with
the Department of Human Services and
return to complete her degree by May
1979.
MICHAEL T. FLATT, C, married
Connie Ann Holt of Franklin, Tennessee
on December 31. Best man was PHILIP
HILL JONES, C'76. She is co-owner of
Connie's Ice Cream Shop in Carter's
Court, Franklin, and attended Stephens
College in Missouri.
WILLIAM GREGG, C, is in his
second year of the physiology Ph.D.
program at the University of Texas
Health Science Center at San Antonio.
His wife, Laura, is a junior at UT.
KATHIE ANN GUNTER, C, is in
her second year at Emory University and
is on the law review staff.
JAMES W. HARPER, C, returned in
March to reporting for the city desk at
the St. Petersburg Times after 15 months
features for the Times' Sunday Floridian
magazine and directing a folk mass group
at church.
DAVID F. HELD, C, a four-year
letterman for Sewanee in football and
wrestling, has been named assistant
football and wrestling coach at Notre
Dame High School in Chattanooga, suc-
ceeding YOGI ANDERSON, C'72 (see
College sports). David has been head
wrestling coach at Maryville College for
the past year.
PAT KINGTON JOHNSON, C, is
doing a diagnostic practicum in school
psychology in the Dickson County
(Tennessee) schools and working on her
M.A. in psychology at Austin Peay
State University.
PHILIP HILL JONES, C, married
Claudia Ramsey Clinton of Burnet,
Texas on July 3, 1977. They live in Waco
where Philip is enrolled in Baylor
Law School.
VIRGINIA D. KONTOS, C, and
THOMAS S. POTTS, JR. (C77) were
married May 6 in Waycross, Georgia.
Received word through a classmate
that THOMAS M. MARTIN, C, is
attending Cumberland Law School in
TAP MENARD, C, is living in Poca-
tello, Idaho, where he works as a reporter/
photographer for KIFI-TV.
ELIZABETH (BETSY) MILLS, C,
received her M.Ed, in special education
from Winthrop College in December,
with teacher certification in French and
learning disabilities.
GRAHAM S. NICHOLSON, C, is
working for Green Tree, an Atlanta lawn
maintenance firm, while also an employ'
of Rich's department store.
NANCY OHLER, C, is in Nashville,
finishing her M.A. in art history and
hoping to teach English in Japan in the
fall.
CHARLOTTE VIRGINIA SMITH,
C, married John Michael Dunn on
January 15 in Southern Pines, North
Carolina. They are living in Greensboro,
North Carolina, where Charlotte is a
corporate/tax paralegal for the law firm
of Smith, Moore, Smith, Schell and
Hunter.
LEE STOCKSLAGER, C, is a dental
student at Emory University. Lee worked
for a year toward a master's degree in
biomedical engineering at Case Western
Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio
after leaving Sewanee.
JAMES W. THOMTE, C, is in the
Navy, working to save money for his final
two years at Sewanee.
LISA TYRER, C, is working at
WPNF radio in Brevard, North Carolina,
commuting from her home in Asheville.
She also helps with office work and distri-
bution at the Arts Journal, a monthly
publication on art affairs and events in
western North Carolina.
We have a late report that MICHAEL
WALSH, C, was married in November to
Sherry Bush of Sherman, Texas. They
currently reside in Denton, Texas.
LAUREN WATTS, C, is working
in Birmingham and recently vacationed
in the Cayman Islands.
KAREN E. WINTERS, A, a sopho-
more psychology major, is currently
on the honors list of Upsala College.
MILTON WOOD, C, received his
Navy wings in December. He is temporarily
assigned to learn four-motor planes in
Jacksonville, then to Brunswick, Maine
for duty this summer.
HELEN T. ZEIGLER, C, is now a
law student at the University of South
Carolina. She also is working in the South
Carolina Senate.
1977
ork i
WAYNE ADAMS, C, begai
trainee with IBM's Data Processing Divi-
sion in June 1977 and was promoted to
assistant systems engineer in December.
He is based in Nashville.
KATHRYN K. BERNAL, C, is work-
ing for General Crude Oil Company in
Houston as a junior lease rental analyst in
their land department.
BRITT BRANTLEY, A, and
GEORGE MORGAN, A, are roommates
at Westminster College, Missouri. Both
will be candidates for next season's West-
minster basketball team.
BETSY C. COX, C, is in her first
year of law school at the University of
Georgia.
ANNA J. (MISSY) DOSWELL, C, is
working full time for Penguin Galleries
in Jacksonville, a new gallery handling
original art work.
CAROL A. ELLIOTT, C, writes that
she is "struggling in San Francisco, a prim
secretary by day and a wild Bohemian
artist by night, teaching English as a
second language to Chinese immigrants
and learning to stir-fry in a wok."
DAVID C. FUNK, C, and LESLIE H.
APGAR, C'78, were married on
December 31 in Bound Brook, New
Jersey. The bride's attendants included
JEANEE GARMY, C'81, and RUTH
ROHDE, C'78. LIZANNE COX, C'78,
and TONY WEBB, C'77, were also at the
wedding. After a honeymoon in the
Bahamas, Leslie and David are living in
Norman, Oklahoma, where David is a
student in petroleum engineering at the
University of Oklahoma and Leslie works
at Dillard's department store,
DEAN GILLESPIE, C, writes from
Placentia, California that he spent the
winter in Aspen, Colorado, "enjoying the
skiing and working as little as possible."
WHIT IRVIN, A, in his first year at
Texas A & M, and BUD BENNING,
Schreiner College freshman, paid a visit
to the Academy in April. Whit, a business
major, has hopes of beginning his own
Mexican-American business in El Paso/
Juarez next year.
TIMOTHY MICHAEL JONES, C, is
scheduled to receive his master's degree
in business administration this summer at
the University of South Carolina.
GEORGE M. LAIGLE, C, has begun
a career as a title examiner for Lawyers
Title Company in Houston. Vacation
plans include a Caribbean cruise to
the Panama Canal, Caracas, St. Thomas
and other islands.
ROBERT STUART Mac DONALD,
C, graduated magna cum laude from the
University of Florida and has been
working in the phosphate industry. In
March he entered the University of
Florida's Spessard Holland School of Law.
SCOTT W. MATHEWS, C, is a
senior in psychology at the University of
Texas and plans to get his bachelor's
degree next spring. He writes that DON
IRVIN, JR., C'79, also is a student there.
The new assistant forester at Se-
wanee, replacing JIM HILL, is MAX
MATTHEWS II, C.
MICHAEL L. McALLISTER, C, is an
administrative assistant with American
Founders Life Insurance Company in
Austin, Texas. He has also completed
more than haTf the training needed to
obtain his private pilot's license.
THE REV. JUDSON GARY MULL,
T, is the assistant rector of St. Anne's
Church in Northwest Atlanta. He was
ordained March 4 in Athens, Georgia.
MAIBETH J. PORTER, C, is in law
school at Vanderbilt University and will
have a summer clerkship with Cabaniss,
Johnston, Gardner, Dumas, and O'Neal
in Birmingham.
DEBORAH ROSS, C, and ROBERT
CLARK, C'76, have announced wedding
plans for June 3 in Birmingham. Deborah
is at Samford University working toward
a B.S. in nursing and an R.N. Robert is
in his final year at Wharton School of
Business and expects to receive his M.B.A.
in May.
KENNETH M. SCHUPPERT, JR., C,
has been teaching economics and algebra
at Sewanee Academy for the past year.
He plans to attend law school this fall.
BEATRICE S. (BEBE) VANN, C,
and DAVID M. WALTERS, C, have each
been named assistant directors of admis-
sions for the College. Bebe has been
director of public relations for Chippen-
ham Hospital in Richmond, Virginia, and
David has been working toward teacher
certification at the University of Alabama
while doing some part-time coaching
in Huntsville.
1979
KATHY LESSLIE, C, is at Columbia
University working on the second half
of a dual engineering degree. She expects
to get a B.S. in industrial engineering
from Columbia and a B.A. in math from
Sewanee in the spring of 1979.
DEATHS
EDWARD A. MARSHALL, L'10,
died February 17, 1978, in Phoenix,
Arizona. Mr. Marshall, who went to Ari-
zona in 1905, was the legal secretary for
the state's Constitutional Convention in
1911. He was a former member of the
Arizona Bar Association and president
of the Chamber of Commerce, and at
the time of his death was chairman of
the board of Marshall Mortgage.
ROBERT BAYARD MILLER, A'10,
of Waterproof, Louisiana, died December
1, 1977.
J. TALBERT THOMAS, JR., A'10,
C'14, KA, died March 8, 1977 in Green-
wood, Mississippi, where he had been
farming at Egypt Plantation near Cruger
since 1919. He was one of the founders
of the Staple Cotton Cooperative Asso-
ciation, the Delta Council, the Green-
wood Country Club and the Farmers
Supply Cooperative. During the 1930s,
40s and 60s he was influential in getting
funding and authorization for the Lower
Auxiliary Channel, which eliminated
or decreased flooding in over three
million acres of land in the central Missis-
sippi Delta. Among survivors is his
brother, WILMER JONES THOMAS,
C'17, of New Orleans.
WILLIAM McKENZIE REYNOLDS,
A'll, C'15, ATO, died on October 7,
1977 in Sumter, South Carolina. He
studied law at the University of South
Carolina and attended two terms at the
Inns of Court in London, England. He
practiced general law in Sumter, was
legal counsel for the Atlantic Coast
Line Railroad for more than 40 years,
and was Sumter County Master-in-Equity
for 20 years. Among survivors is his
grandson, 2nd Lt. WILLIAM McKENZIE
REYNOLDS III of Little Rock, Arkansas.
THOMAS HUNTINGDON BERRY,
A'12, of White Pine, Tennessee, died on
March 14, 1978.
LUDOLPH W. GUNTHER, A'13,
died in Riverside, California on April 2,
1978. He and his family were in the
cotton business in Memphis for many
years. He moved to California in 1942.
JOHN H. GRAYSON, A'20, of
Macon, Georgia, died January 13, 1978.
DR. ALVYN W. WHITE, A'21, of
Pensacola, Florida, died on February 9,
1978.
WILLIAM R. YOUNG, A'21, C'25,
of Mount Pleasant, Tennessee, died
April 2, 1978.
ERNEST L. MORROW, C'24, of
Dallas, Texas, died March 13, 1978.
HENRY F. BAMBERG, A'25, of
Bamberg, South Carolina, died on Janu-
ary 5, 1978.
THOMAS H. GODDARD, C'29, PDT,
died December 3, 1976 in Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania.
LYNN B. FREEMAN, C'81, attorney,
of Springfield, Tennessee, died on Jan-
uary 12, 1978. He was a member of the
Tennessee and Robertson County Bar
Associations and had been elected Circuit
Court Clerk for over 25 years.
THE REV. ALFRED ST. JOHN
MATTHEWS, C'31, T'34, rector of St.
John's Episcopal Church, Langley Parish,
in McLean, Virginia, died on March 10,
1978 at his home after an apparent stroke.
The Rev. Mr. Matthews was considered
the "dean" of the McLean Clergy Asso-
ciation, having come to St. John's in
McLean in 1943. He was a member of
the executive committee, the department
of missions and the standing committee
of the Diocese of Virginia.
CHARLES H. MARTIN, A'34, of
Tuscumbia, Alabama, died on October
12, 1975.
CHARLES B. TAUBER, C'37, KS,
died in a Chattanooga hospital March 3,
1978. He transferred from Sewanee to
Ohio State, where he received B.S. and
M.S. degrees in ceramic engineering, and
until shortly before his death had been
plant manager for American Lava Cor-
poration in Chattanooga. He served in the
Air Force during World War II and the
Korean conflict, attaining the rank of
Colonel and senior pilot. Among sur-
vivors is his brother, JOHN A. TAUBER,
JR., C'33.
THE VEN. LEONARD C. BAILEY,
T'38, died April 9 in Narrandera, N.S.W.,
Australia, where he was Archdeacon of
the Murray. He served in the South
Pacific during World War II as Chief
Warrant Officer with the Fifth Bomber
Command. After the war he settled in
Australia and was rector of Anglican
churches in Queensland and New South
Wales, and was Canon of St. Paul's
Cathedral in Hay, N.S.W. He had been
Archdeacon since 1968. Among survivors
is a nephew, LT. COL. JOHN F. BOR-
DERS (USMC), C'61, of Norfolk,
Virginia.
FAY HAZEN FARISS, JR., A'39,
of Savannah, Tennessee, died on July 12,
1977. He had worked for the U.S. Postal
Service for 16 years and was county
court clerk for several years. During
World War II he was stationed in England
and flew over 25 missions. He was de-
scribed as one of the most outstanding
amateur athletes Savannah ever produced,
having been a star athlete at Sewanee
Military Academy and at the University
of Tennessee, where he quarterbacked
one of the school's best football teams.
At one time he tried out for professional
baseball— his uncle was National Leaguer
Hank DeBerry— and was still active in golf.
A. DANNER FRAZER, A'39,
Mobile banker and civic leader, died on
October 13, 1977 after a long illness.
He was board chairman of American
National Bank of Mobile and a director
and vice-chairman of Alabama Bancor-
poration. He had served as an official
of banks in Maryland and Alabama and
for five years was treasurer of the TCI
Division of U.S. Steel Corporation. He
returned to Mobile in 1966 to become
president of American National Bank,
becoming chairman in 1974. He was a
flying hero during World War II, serving
in Europe. He received numerous decora-
tions including the Distinguished Flying
Cross and the Air Medal with six Oak
Leaf Clusters. An ardent hunter and
fisherman, he held numerous posts in
wildlife organizations.
DR. CHARLES M. SARRATT, H'48,
a leader of Vanderbilt University for
more than 60 years as professor of
mathematics, dean of students, vice-
chancellor and chancellor, died on March
24, 1978 in Nashville.
LEWIS D. PRIDE, A'50, Nashville
attorney and former Tennessee state
representative, died in Nashville on
February 8, 1978. He was a partner in
the firm of Schulman, Pride and LeRoy.
He was elected to the state House of
Representatives in 1963 and 1965 but
failed in a bid for the state Senate in
1966. He was a leader in the Red Cross
and the Nashville Symphony Association
and in many other civic and cultural
activities. Among survivors is his brother,
HARVEY PRIDE, C'51.
JAMES HARDWICK RUTH, C'50,
ATO, Montgomery, Alabama jeweler,
died January 15, 1978 at his home after
a sudden illness. He was the former ~
owner of Ruth and Sons Jewelers, which
merged with Bromberg & Co., for whom
he was store manager. Among survivors
is his son, JAMES H. RUTH, JR., A'71.
THE REV. D. ROBERT HUNT,
GST'62, of Clifton Forge, Virginia, died
September 25, 1977, of a heart attack.
THE KEV. GARDNER W. BRIDGES,
GST'54, died on November 1, 1977. He
had served churches in the dioceses of
Rochester, Erie, and Bethlehem, most
recently St. Andrew's Church in Alden,
Pennsylvania.
ROBERT K. HAMBY, C'54, of
Monteagle, Tennessee, died in Nashville
on February 24, 1978. He had served
in the Air Force as first lieutenant, and
was a teacher for the homebound in
Marion County.
GEORGE M. THOROGOOD, HA'62,
retired Cowan, Tennessee banker, died on
April 14, 1978. Mr. Thorogood was made
an honorary alumnus by the Associated
Alumni who said in part, "He has served
with great distinction his community
and his area ... has throughout his life
kept uppermost in his heart and mind
the welfare of the University of the
South."
CLAUDIA KERN, C'79, a Sewanee
Wilkins Scholar from New Orleans, died
January 29, 1978.
HONOR ROLL CHURCHES
Each year the University recognizes
the parish churches which have con-
tributed to the University a dollar
or more for each communicant.
For the calendar year 1977,
252 churches have been designa-
ted Honor Roll Parishes and have
received certificates of recognition.
The total is an increase of 17 over
the previous year.
The Rev. Clyde Ireland, Uni-
versity director of church relations,
also noted that five parishes outside
the 24 owning dioceses have been
added to the honor roll.
There are two church-related
programs for the annual investment
of Episcopalians in the University.
Sewanee-in-the-Budget is the pro-
gram of general support of the en-
tire University which encourages
parishes and dioceses to make an-
nual budget grants at the rate of
one dollar per communicant.
The Theological Education
Sunday Offering is a nationwide
annual offering from Episcopalians
specifically in support of the semi-
naries. Sewanee-in-the-Budget is the
major source of financial sup-
port for Sewanee from the Episco-
pal Church.
Dioceses which have contri-
buted a dollar amount above the
number of their communicants are
Alabama, Central Gulf Coast, and
Tennessee.
The Honor Roll Parishes are:
ALABAMA
Bessemer TRINITY
Birmingham ADVENT
GRACE
ST LUKE'S
ST. MARY'S-on-lhe-HIGH LANDS
Boligee ST. MARK'S
Decatur ST. JOHN'S
Fori Payne ST. PHILIP'S
Gadsden HOLY COMFORTER
Greensboro ST. PAUL'S
Huntsville ST. STEPHEN'S
ST. THOMAS'
Jasper ST. MARY'S
PhenixCity RESURRECTION
Sheffield GRACE
Tuscaloosa. CHRIST
ARKANSAS
Batesville ST. PAUL'S
Forrest City GOOD SHEPHERD
Fort Smith ST. JOHN'S
Jonesboro ST. MARK'S
Little Rock CHRIST
Marianna ST. ANDREW'S
Paragould ALL SAINTS'
ATLANTA
Columbus ST. THOMAS'
Dalton ST. MARK'S
Fort Valley ST. ANDREW'S
Gainesville GRACE
LaGrange ST. MARK'S
Monte2uma ST. MARY'S
Newnan ST. PAUL'S
Rome ST. PETER'S
CENTRAL FLORIDA
Merritt Island ST. LUKE'S
Orlando ST. MARY of the ANGELS
ST. MICHAELS
Vera Beach TRINITY
CENTRAL GULF COAST
Coden ST. MARY'Sby-the-SEA
Dothan NATIVITY
Mobile ALL SAINTS'
Monroeville . . . ST. JOHN'S
Cantonment ST. MONICA'S
Gull Breeze ST. FRANCIS of ASSISI
Pensacola CHRIST
ST. CHRISTOPHER'S
Porl St. Joe ST. JAMES'
Valparaiso ST. JUDE'S
DALLAS
Corsicana ST. JOHN'S
Dallas ALL SAINTS'
CHRIST
Kaufman MERCIFUL SAVIOUR
Lancaster ST. MARTIN'S
Pittsburg ST. WILLIAM LAUD
Sulphur Springs ST. PHILIP'S
EAST CAROLINA
Edenton ST. PAUL'S
Woodville GRACE
FLORIDA
Hibernia . ST. MARGARET'S
Jacksonville ALL SAINTS'
GOOD SHEPHERD
Live Oak ST. LUKE'S
Ponte Vedra Beach CHRIST
Quincy ST. PAUL'S
Starke ST. MARK'S
Welaka EMMANUEL
GEORGIA
Albany .ST. PAUL'S
Americus CALVARY
Blakely HOLY TRINITY
Garden City ALL SOULS'
Moultrie ST. JOHN'S
St. Simon's CHRIST
Savannah CHRIST
ST. MICHAEL'S
ST. PAUL'S
Thomasville ST. THOMAS'
Waynesboro ST. MICHAEL'S
KENTUCKY
Bowling Green CHRIST
Fulton TRINITY
Gilbertsville ST. PETER-of-the-LAKES
Harrods Creek . . ST. FRANCIS-in-the-FIELDS
Hopkinsville . . . GRACE
Louisv'ille. CHRIST CHURCH CATHEDRAL
ST. MARK'S
ST. MATTHEW'S
Madisonville ST. MARY'S
Mayfield ST. MARTIN'S-in-the-FIELDS
Murray ST. JOHN'S
Paducah GRACE
LEXINGTON
Fort Thomas ST. ANDREW'S
Harrodsburg ST. PHILIP'S
Lexington CHRIST
LOUISIANA
Abbeville ST. PAUL'S
Alexandria ST. JAMES'
Bastrop - CHRIST
Bogalusa ST. MATTHEW'S
Covington CHRIST
Hammond GRACE MEMORIAL
Houma ST. MATTHEW'S
Lake Providence GRACE
Mer Rouge ST. ANDREW'S
Mmden ST. JOHN'S
Monroe GRACE
ST. THOMAS'
New Iberia EPIPHANY
New Orleans ANNUNCIATION
ST. PAUL'S
Opelousas EPIPHANY
Plaquemine HOLY COMMUNION
Rayville ST. DAVID'S
Rosedale NATIVITY
Ruston REDEEMER
St. Joseph CHRIST
Shreveport ST. MARK'S
Tallulah TRINITY
Winnsboro ST. COLUMBA'S
MISSISSIPPI
Canton GRACE
Clarksdale ST. GEORGE'S
Cleveland CALVARY
Columbus ST. PAUL'S
Como HOLY INNOCENTS
Crystal Springs HOLY TRINITY
Greenwood NATIVITY
Gulfport ST. PETER'S-bv-the-SEA
Holly Springs CHRIST
Indianola ST. STEPHEN'S
Jackson ALL SAINTS'
ST. JAMES'
Laurel ST. JOHN'S
Meridian ST. PAUL'S
Michigan City CALVARY
Newton TRINITY
Raymond ST. MARK'S
Rolling Fork CHAPEL of the CROSS
Starkville RESURRECTION
Sumner ADVENT
Terry GOOD SHEPHERD
Tunica EPIPHANY
Tupelo ALL SAINTS'
Vicksburg HOLY TRINITY
Water Valley NATIVITY
Yazoo City TRINITY
MISSOURI
Sullivan ST. JOHN'S
NORTH CAROLINA
Davidson ST. ALBAN'S
Halifax ST. MARK'S
Rocky Mount GOOD SHEPHERD
Winston-Salem ST. PAUL'S
NORTHWEST TEXAS
Abilene HEAVENLY REST
Amarillo ST. PETER'S
Dalhart ST. JAMES'
Quanah TRINITY
Vernon GRACE
SOUTH CAROLINA
Blackville ST. ALBAN'S
Denmark ST. PHILIP'S
Pinopolis TRINITY
St. Stephen ST. STEPHEN'S
SOUTHEAST FLORIDA
Homestead ST. JOHN'S
Key Biscayne ST. CHRISTOPHER'S-
by-the-SEA
Marathon ST. COLUMBA'S
Miami RESURRECTION
Miami Springs ALL ANGELS'
Palm Beach BETHESDA-by-ttie-SEA
Palm Beach BETHESDAY-by-the-SEA
Stuart ST. MARY'S
SOUTHWEST FLORIDA '
Arcadia ST. EDMUND the MARTYR
Bradenton CHRIST
Englewood ST. DAVID'S
Naples TRINlTY-by-the-COVE
North Port Charlotte . . . .ST. NATHANIEL'S
Sarasota REDEEMER
ST. BENIFACE'S
TENNESSEE
Athens ST. PAUL'S
Battle Creek ST. JOHN the BAPTIST
Brighton RAVENSCROFT CHAPEL
Chattanooga GRACE
ST. MARTIN'S
ST. PAUL'S
ST. PETER'S
ST. THADDAEUS'
THANKFUL MEMORIAL
Cleveland ST. LUKE'S
Columbia ST. PETER'S
Covington ST. MATTHEW'S
Cowan ST. AGNES'
Dyersburg ST. MARY'S
Elizabethton ST. THOMAS'
Fayetteville . . . ST. MARY MAGDALENE
Germantown ST. GEORGE'S
Greeneville ST. JAMES'
Gruetli ST. BERNARD'S
Harriman ST. ANDREW'S
Jackson ST. LUKE'S
Johnson City ST. JOHN'S
Kingsport ST. TIMOTHY'S
Knoxville ASCENSION
ST. JAMES'
ST. JOHN'S
TYSON HOUSE
Lebanon EPIPHANY
Lookout Mountain GOOD SHEPHERD
Loudon-Lenoir City RESURRECTION
Manchester ST. BEDE'S
Maryville ST. ANDREW'S
Mason ST. PAUL'S
TRINITY
Memphis CALVARY
GRACE-ST. LUKE'S
HOLY COMMUNION
ST. ELIZABETH'S
ST. JAMES'
ST. JOHN'S
Murfreesboro ST. PAUL'S
Nashville ADVENT
CHRIST
ST. BARTHOLOMEW'S
ST. GEORGE'S
ST. MATTHIAS'
Newport THE ANNUNCIATION
Oak Ridge ST. STEPHEN'S
Old Hickory ST. JOHN'S
Pulaski MESSIAH
Rugby CHRIST
Sewanee OTEY MEMORIAL
Somerville ST. THOMAS'
South Pittsburg CHRIST
Spring Hill GRACE
Tracy City CHRIST
Winchester TRINITY
TEXAS
Houston ST. JOHN the DIVINE
UPPER SOUTH CAROLINA
Abbeville TRINITY
Aiken ST. THADDEUS'
Camden GRACE
Columbia ST. JOHN'S
Congaree ST. JOHN'S
Eastover ZION
Glenn Springs CALVARY
Graniteville ST. PAUL'S
Greenville CHRIST
ST. JAMES'
Greenwood RESURRECTION
Ridgeway ST. STEPHEN'S
Union NATIVITY
WEST TEXAS
San Antonio CHRIST
ST. MARK'S
Victoria ST. FRANCIS'
WESTERN NORTH CAROLINA
Asheville ST. GILES' CHAPEL
TRINITY
Cashiers GOOD SHEPHERD
Hayesville GOOD SHEPHERD
Highlands INCARNATION
Marion •. . . ST. JOHN'S
Morganton GRACE
Honor Roll Parishes outside the
owning dioceses:
CENTRAL PENNSYLVANIA
Camp Hill MT. CALVARY
COLORADO
Buena Vista GRACE
IOWA
Emmetsburg TRINITY
SOUTHERN VIRGINIA
Virginia Beach GOOD SAMARITAN
WASHINGTON. D.C.
Washington, D. C.
ANDREWS AFB
My Good
Fortune
to Be Here'
by Robert S. Lancaster
The following address by Dr.
Lancaster was delivered to the
trustees almost immediately after
the election of Robert M. Ayres as
permanent vice-chancellor. The
crossing of the paths of these two
men gives an unusual perspective
on leadership at the University
of the South. There was Mr. Ayres
who had emerged from several
levels of volunteer leadership to
become the chief executive officer
of the University. Dr. Lancaster,
on the other hand, has been a
servant of Sewanee in a variety of
offices as teacher and administrator
and is ending his official career
holding the highest volunteer office
that exists at Sewanee — chairman
of the Million Dollar Program.
There is nobody in this audi-
ence whose life has been as
intimately and officially tied with
this University over so long a1
period as has mine.
I knew great ones. When I came
to this mountain, Thomas F. Gailor
was chancellor. I remember the
early professors. Those whom I
knew then are gone— Major Gass,
who was my mentor; Dean Baker.
I have lived through strange
times. Sewanee was in the midst of
depression, and there came to us
a stalwart man, Alexander Guerry,
who hardened our spirits, who
brought us to the dawn of a new
day.
Then it was my good fortune
to be here with my great mentor
and my dear friend, Bishop Frank
Juhan, to whom we owe so much—
so much that is material and so
much that is spiritual in this Uni-
versity.
I have lived through terrible
and strange times— depression, war,
social revolution, urban decay,
crime. And out of my experience,
and I expect out of yours, and even
out of our young peoples' has
come a casting aside of disappoint-
ing ideologies, a learning to live
with many kinds of madness, but
above all, an enduring desire for
the lasting things. For truth, for
goodness, for virtue, for honor, for
Godliness.
I see this in my students. In
the last three years, I have taught
the finest students I have ever had
in my long time at Sewanee. They
are better, they are more concerned;
they are better trained. And it is
deeply gratifying to me.
I am a child of this mountain.
I came very young and callow, and
now I am in the frost of my age,
but all my life has been here, and
I have lived a happy life.
Whatever good there is in me
sometimes I think is the result of
my living at Sewanee. And what-
ever is a failure is of my own doing.
I love this place. I leave it in
June after these many years, and
I commit it to you.
You are the trustees. You hold
in trust, then, the future, the
prospect, the well-being of a great
Christianizing influence in this
country. And you hold it in trust
for the beneficiaries— for those who
are dead, whose portraits are about
us; for those who are living, and for
those who are yet unborn.
I must report to you I had the
opportunity— it was a great oppor-
tunity for me— in the last of my
service, to serve as chairman of the
Million Dollar Campaign.
Now I must say to you, I have
not done a great deal. Most of it
has been done by Robert Ayres and
by William Whipple.
But I have done what I could.
This enterprise every year provides
us with our life's blood— one-tenth
of our budget every year must be
raised through this Million Dollar
Campaign.
Right now I am happy to report
to you that we have raised
$935,000. We have $215,000 yet to
go toward the goal of $1,150,000.
But that goal— we must surpass it.
Much hangs on whether .we
surpass it or not— expectations of
the faculty, the possibility of a
balanced budget. All this requires
the most serious and earnest con-
cern on your part for the next two
months.
Here we are in this contest.
Among us, between us, from our
friends, from those whom we
know, we will meet this goal. I
never doubt that. But we must
surpass it, and for that I ask your
earnest cooperation. Help us. You
are working in the most worthy
cause.
New Office
Created
At its February meeting, the Board
of Regents voted to terminate the
office of director of church rela-
tions and create in its place an
office of director of deferred giving.
The Rev. Clyde Ireland has
been director of church relations
since the position was created
about two years ago.
William U. Whipple, vice-presi-
dent for development, said the
Rev. Mr. Ireland has shown himself
a tireless laborer and talented
ambassador for the University. He
said it is not a failure on the part
of the Rev. Mr. Ireland that makes
it necessary to phase out the office.
It was rather the belief of the
regents that the limited develop-
ment budget funds could be invest-
ed in a more productive area, he
said.
Mr. Whipple added that efforts
to increase church support will
not otherwise slacken. Other plans
in church relations are being made.
Those MDP
Dollars Needed
If you are a Sewanee alumnus, you
can determine with dependable
certainty whether you have made
a gift to the University this year.
Since July 1, the Associated Alum-
ni office has mailed to each
alumnus donor a decal which looks
like this:
seumnee
ALUMNI
More than 1,600 have been
distributed thus far.
As of mid-May, $980,000 had
been raised toward the Million
Dollar Program goal of $1,150,000.
This means that to reach the goal,
the University must receive dona-
tions equal to $4,000 a day until
the end of the fiscal year, June 30.
Much has been asked of Sewa-
nee alumni and friends in the past.
Many have responded. If others
who are able to give would join
their ranks, the task would be much
easier.
This is no ordinary year in
the history of Sewanee. Not only
have the trustees elected a new
vice-chancellor, but this new admin-
istration has begun developing a
bold program intended to strength-
en the University in many ways.
Because so much depends on
the financial footing of the Univer-
sity, emphasis is naturally on the
Million Dollar Program.
Alumni and friends can help
Sewanee in many non-financial
ways, for which the University is
most thankful, but if the University
fails financially, all else will fail.
Success would honor Sewanee
people everywhere.
Be Neat:
Strengthen
the Dollar
Sewanee announces a plan to help
you tidy up your affairs— not to
mention stabilizing the dollar— by
accepting those odd lots of stock
which may be cluttering up your
lockbox.
You may have a few shares of
stock which produce a respectable
dividend but which really is a
nuisance to receive because of the
small number of shares held. Be-
cause brokerage fees would con-
sume most of the proceeds, because
of the trouble it would take to
establish the cost base and the
resultant tax implications, you
postpone any action.
Meanwhile the quarterly checks
for $4.20 continue to arrive, as do
proxy forms. When the impressive
annual report comes you have a
guilty realization that its real cost
is probably more than your annual
dividend.
What to do?
You can give this stock to Se-
wanee, receiving tax -deductible gift
credit for its full market value, and
avoiding all capital gains tax on the
increase in value over your cost.
Further, you can enjoy the satisfac-
tion which comes from basic econ-
omy, neatness, and generosity.
Sewanee either sells the stock
or adds it to its holdings of the
stock. Corporate management elim-
inates the waste of maintaining a
marginal account, increases profits
by efficiency, and bolsters the
national economy. The value of the
dollar improves in the world market.
Sewanee has more money to
offset the ravages of inflation,
balances its budget, and faces the
future with optimism.
U)
ft
TheSewanee News
T/ie University of the South/Sewanee, Tennessee 37375
CONTENTS:
Vice-Chancellor Election 1
Computers 5
Student Government 8
Scott Bates' Poetry 1 1
Seminarians 13
New Coaches 17
Lancaster Speech 31
DEPARTMENTS:
On and Off the Mountain 4
Calendar 9
Letters 9
Faculty Activities 10
Theology News 12
Academy News 14
College Sports 16
Alumni Affairs 18
Class Notes 20
Deaths 29
Fund-Raising 30
TheSewanee News
SEPTEMBER 1978
Increasing
Our Blessings
At the close of the fiscal year on June 30, we
had much for which to be thankful. We raised
$1,436,000 in unrestricted funds, a record
amount which substantially exceeded our goal of
$1,150,000. (Another $722,000 in restricted
funds was received, bringing the fund-raising
total to $2,158,000.)
Gifts Bequests Total
1974-75 $ 704,049 $153,910 $ 857,959
1975-76 1,016,030 59,834 1,075,864
1976-77 1,199,217 39,000 1,238,217
1977-78 1,408,530 27,730 1,436,260
The budget was balanced for the first time
in five years. A devoted and able temporary
vice-chancellor was unanimously elected to be
our permanent vice-chancellor. Certain areas
of past concern, like the hospital and the
Academy, showed progress toward financial
stability.
For the first time in several years, it appears
to me that the University of the South is in a
position to renew her strength and move toward
a secure corporate life.
There are areas, however, that give me
concern as I retire from active participation in
the life of the University. Our endowment is
insufficient to sustain our needs. Inflation has
already eroded the purchasing power of the
income from our investments. The prospect of
continued and rising inflation threatens our
security. Our debt of nearly four million dollars
is a heavy burden upon an already strained and
taut budget. It drains us of funds that might
be used to strengthen our academic pursuits.
The salary scale for our faculties is low when
compared with faculty salaries in institutions
with which we compare ourselves.
Our alumni are considered to be among the
most loyal in the nation. Yet, when it comes
to annual giving to their alma mater, they rate
far behind other colleges and universities.
Scarcely more than one-fourth of our alumni
contribute in money to the life of the College,
which in so many ways provided them with
opportunity and prospects. The percentage
is substantially lower among alumni of the
School of Theology and the Academy. Some-
how, as a faculty and as an institution, we have
failed to instill into our students the kind of
loyalty that expresses itself in life-long concern
for education on this Mountain. Yet each
full-paying student contributes only half of what
it costs to educate him or her. Many of our
graduates have been provided for by the Univer-
sity, yet they are no more generous than those
who have paid our fees.
Our Trustees assume responsibility for
determining our basic policy. Yet I found it
shocking to discover that far too many trustees
do not make an annual gift to the University
whose present and future prospects they hold
in trust. This state of affairs I find especially
disturbing because when we ask for substantial
gifts from those who admire and respect us
they often enquire of the support we provide
from our own family.
I am happy to report that this year this
situation improved. If we are to enjoy a secure
life, if we are to look to the future with confi-
dence, we must do more to instill in those who
may love us a desire to contribute to and
participate in and to feel a responsibility for our
corporate life. Somehow, we must reach out to
our greater constituency and involve them in
our affairs to such an extent that they are
willingly and even joyously concerned for our
well-being.
I am concerned, too, at the decline of
support for Sewanee in some of the parishes of
the owning dioceses. Years ago we attempted
the goal of one dollar per communicant per
year. Such a goal does not now, nor did it then,
seem unreasonable. We have never achieved it.
Now it seems even further beyond our expec-
tations. It is necessary that we, a child of the
Church, bring to the attention of our people
the fact of our relationship. How to do this will
require imagination and energy, but it is not
beyond the ability of energetic and resourceful
leaders.
It worries me, too, that each year we must
raise so much money to balance our budget.
To expect to raise one-tenth of our necessary
funds from unrestricted gifts is basically
unhealthy. It places too heavy a burden upon
our development effort. It deflects our energy
from goals that are more worthy. It bears too
hard year-in, year-out upon our proven
benefactors.
Soon, we are to enter upon a great cam-
paign to rid us of debt and make our life strong-
er and more secure. Even now the planning for
this trial of strength is under way. In its success
lies our hope, our salvation. Let every alumnus,
every friend of Sewanee, every charitable soul
who values the unique human experience
generated on this Mountain with prayer and
thanksgiving for the past prepare for this great
enterprise, this ennobling opportunity.
Much of this edition of the Sewanee News is
taken up with an analysis of the results of this
year's development activities. Any analysis by
me would be redundant. It is my hope that all
of you who have so gallantly provided for us
this year have been properly thanked. I thank
you one and all. To have been chairman of the
Million Dollar Program for the year 1977-78 has
given me much satisfaction. I have come to
appreciate the splendid organizational ability
and rare devotion of William Whipple. I have
enjoyed the close friendship and encouragement
of Robert Ayres, a most promising administrator.
I have seen many of my old students and friends
for the first time in several years. I have been
refreshed with the warmth of old memories and
stirred by the recollection of past events. I have
enjoyed the success of a righteous endeavor in
this last year of official service to this Mountain,
this idea moving in history, that I love.
For your generous support, for your endur-
ing concern for Sewanee, for your gifts, I give
you hearty thanks.
Installation
Vice-Chancellor Robert M. Ayres,
Jr. and Dr. Arthur M. Schaefer,
the University provost, will be
installed in ceremonies at noon
October 17 in All Saints' Chapel.
The installation will be held
simultaneously with the celebra-
tion of Founders' Day. The Rt.
Rev. John M. Allin, the presiding
bishop and University chancellor,
will deliver the installation address.
In all other respects, the instal-
lation will be a modest occasion
as requested by Mr. Ayres.
The board of regents will be
in session October 16-18. The
board will recess on October 17
only for the convocation and
installation service and lunch.
Mr. Ayres was elected vice-
chancellor and president during
the meeting last April of the board
of trustees. He served a year as
acting vice-chancellor and presi-
dent after the resignation of Dr.
J. Jefferson Bennett. Dr. Schaefer,
a professor of economics, was
selected as interim provost by Mr.
Ayres.
nxHewanee News
Latham Davis, Editor
Kathy Galligan, Contributing Editor
Gale Link, Art Director
Published quarterly by the Office of
Information Services for the
UNIVERSITY OF THE SOUTH
including SCHOOL OF THEOLOGY,
COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES,
SEWANEE ACADEMY
'ree distribution 26,500
Second-class postage paid at
Dr. RobertS Lancaster Sewanee, Tennessee 37375
Centennial
Lectures
The University's School of Theology
will hold the first part of its cen-
tennial-year celebration on October
17-18 in Sewanee.
The DuBose Lectures on those
dates will be the first of three
symposia to be held in 1978-79
and will include an address by the
Rt. Rev. Arthur Michael Ramsey,
the 100th archbishop of Canterbury.
Other speakers for the DuBose
Lectures will be Dr. Charles P.
Price, professor of systematic the-
ology at Virginia Theological
Seminary, and Dr. Joshua S. L.
Zake, professor of social anthro-
pology at State Governors Univer-
sity.
The theme of the lectures will
be "Anglican Identity and Viability
for the late 20th Century." Dr.
Donald S. Armentrout, associate
professor of ecclesiastical history at
Sewanee, will speak at a concluding
banquet on "Personalities in the
History of the School of Theology."
The Very Rev. Urban T.
Holmes, dean of the seminary, said
everyone is invited to share with
the University in shaping the
direction of theological education.
"The symposia," he said, "will
help us reflect on our heritage and
our life in the larger church of God,
as we look toward the next 100
years and try to determine our
responsibilities to the church and
the world as a theological seminary,
and as we strive to send forth the
best qualified persons to fulfill
those roles. "
Adding to the significance
of the celebration will be the instal-
lation on October 17 of Robert M.
Ayres, Jr. as the 13th vice-chancellor
and president of the University. Mr.
Ayres is known to many Episco-
palians for his volunteer work in
world relief and with the national
church.
University Founders' Day and
St. Luke's Convocation at Sewanee
have been scheduled simultaneously
this year around these important
events.
The other two symposia
planned for this centennial year are
the Beattie Lectures February 20-21
on the theme of "Ecumenical
Relations," and the Arrington Lec-
tures April 18-19 on the theme of
"Jewish-Christian Relations."
New Faculty
Several new faculty members are
in the College this semester, to fill
either permanent positions or
temporary appointments.
Reinhard K. Zachau of Luebeck
Germany will join the German
department in place of Thaddeus C.
Lbckard, who has retired this year.
Dr. Zachau received his doctor-
ate this year from the University of
Pittsburg and did undergraduate
work at the University of Hamburg
and at Nottingham University in
England. He has previously taught
in Kiel, in north Germany.
Leslie Richardson of Sewanee is
teaching Italian in place of Mr.
Lockard. She holds a bachelor's
degree from Southwestern and a
master's degree from the University
of Virginia. She is the wife of Dale
Richardson, associate professor
of English.
Richard A. O'Connor, who
received his doctorate this year at
Cornell University, will be an
assistant professor of anthropology.
He is replacing Mary Jo Wheeler-
Smith.
He has worked in Cornell's
Southeast Asia Program and has
done field work in Thailand since
receiving his undergraduate degree
from William & Mary in 1968.
Jerry L. Ingles, who has been
the general manager of a wholesale
and retail firm in Venezuela since
1977, will replace Kenneth Gray
this year in the economics depart-
ment.
He holds M.A. and Ph.D. degrees
from Cornell, an A.B. degree from
the University of California at
Berkeley, and has taught at State
University of New York at Oneonta.
He was in the Peace Corps in Vene-
zuela from 1964 to 1966.
Robert G. Delcamp is the new
University organist and choirmaster
replacing Joseph Running for the
year. With previous teaching experi-
ence at Buena Vista College in
Storm Lake, Iowa and Westmar
College in Le Mars, Iowa, he is
currently working on his doctorate
at Northwestern University. He
holds a bachelor's degree from
College-Conservatory of Music,
University of Cincinnati.
John J. Piccard, a recent gradu-
ate in technical theatre at Florida
State University, has replaced John
Miller as technical director in the
drama department.
Piccard studied theatre in Lon-
don in 1972 and holds both his
bachelor's and master's degrees
from Florida State. He has also
done summer theatre work in
Massachusetts.
Andrew Lytle is teaching a
course, "Studies in Prose Fiction,"
as a Brown Foundation Fellow. Mr.
Lytle is a former editor of the
Sewanee Review and former mem-
ber of the English faculty.
Parker Lichtenstein, former
dean at Denison University in
Granville, Ohio, is a visiting pro-
fessor of psychology and a Brown
Foundation Fellow for the year.
He is teaching during the leaves of
Charles Peyser this fall and Robert
Lundin next spring.
Lome and Nona Fein berg, who
both have their doctorates from
the University of California at
Berkeley, have accepted a one-year
appointment to fill one position in
the English department and teach
on alternate days. He is teaching
American literature, and she is
teaching Renaissance literature.
They are replacing Thomas
Carlson, who is on leave this fall,
and Douglas Paschall, who will be
on leave in the spring.
Patricia Auspos, a recent Ph.D.
graduate from Columbia University,
is teaching British history this year.
She is replacing Charles Perry, who
is on a special leave to work at the
University of North Carolina under
a grant from the National Endow-
ment for the Humanities.
Dr. Auspos holds a bachelor's
degree from Barnard College and
has been a research assistant this
past year for author Alvin Toffler,
author of Future Shock.
William S. Bonds, who will
receive his doctorate this year at
the University of Pennsylvania, has
a two-year appointment to teach
classical languages.
Three new instructors are
teaching in the fine arts department:
Warren E. Jacobson, a 1971
Sewanee graduate, who received an
M.F.A. in 1975 from the Pratt
Institute, in Brooklyn. He has been
teaching photography at the Uni-
versity of Texas at Dallas.
William Kolok, who holds a
bachelor's degree from Berry
College and an M.F.A. from the
University of Georgia. He will
offer sculpture and printmaking.
Samuel H. Howell, Jr., who
holds a master's degree from Van-
derbilt University and a bachelor's
degree from New College in Sara-
sota, Florida. He also is currently
working on his doctorate at the
University of North Carolina.
Three recent resignations from
the faculty include Richard Duncan,
who has left the fine arts depart-
ment to become an assistant profes-
sor at Florida International Uni-
versity in Miami, Robert Cassidy,
who accepted a post as adjunct
assistant professor in the School of
Family Medicine at Rutgers Medical
School, and Claude Sutcliffe, who
accepted a position as associate
professor of political science at
Eckerd College in St. Petersburg,
Florida.
On and Off
the Mountain
Sixteen students in the College and
two members of the faculty par-
ticipated this past summer in the
British Studies at Oxford.
Brinley J. Rhys, professor of
English, and Edward B. King, associ-
ate professor of history, lectured
along with distinguished Oxford
professors during the six-weeks pro-
gram. The specific area of study
was Early and Medieval Britain.
The Tennessee Beta (Sewanee)
Chapter of Phi Delta Theta was pre-
sented an Improvement Citation
Award for overall improvement in
chapter operations, during the
national organization's biennial
convention this summer.
More than 150 persons took the
Sewanee Tour of Homes July 30,
which was sponsored by the Associ-
ation for the Preservation of Ten-
nessee Antiquities. The group made
about $1,100 from the tour. Chair-
person for the association is Mrs.
Edmund Kirby-Smith.
Thirty-seven students were enrolled
this summer in the Master of
Divinity program in the School of
Theology.
The Sewanee Cookbook has been
reprinted for the third time by the
Emerald-Hodgson Hospital Aux-
iliary and is available for $5.50 at
the Hospitality Shop in Sewanee.
Orders through the mail also are
accepted. The cookbook, first pub-
lished in 1926, is a collection of
recipes used for generations by
families associated with the
University.
Former Vice-Chancellor J. Jefferson
Bennett has been named visiting
distinguished scholar in residence
and associate director of the Center
for Public Law and Service in the
University of Alabama Law Center.
Summer
Seminar
The Rev. Henry Parsley, C'70, of Florence, South Carolina,
exemplifies the relaxing aspect of the Sewanee Summer Seminar.
Summer
Activities
The Sewanee Summer Music Center
closed out another successful
season with a bang by playing the
1812 Overture in the quadrangle to
the accompaniment of the big
carillon bells and real cannon on
the Walsh battlements.
It was the grand finale to a
lot of hard work and accomplish-
ment on the part of students and
faculty. The five weeks included
25 public performances and many
more hours of lessons, rehearsals,
and closed performances. The
string camp at Sewanee Academy
had about 40 pre-teen violinists
and other string instrumentalists
who presented their own per-
formance at the end of their week.
Music Center students were
exposed to the conducting styles
of Amerigo Marino, Arthur Wino-
grad, Henri Temianka, and Hugh
Wolff, who was not much older .
than the student instrumentalists.
The special Sewanee environ-
ment enabled one student pianist
to branch out into carillon lessons,
and provided canine accompani-
ment to some of the outdoor
practice sessions.
Northern students went home
with "y'all" added to their vo-
cabulary. And residents, summer
school students, and office workers
were enriched with background
music as the 200-plus young
musicians practiced in odd corners
of the campus.
Rivaling the Music Center for
audibility during one summer week
were about 200 cheerleaders from
area schools, meeting in Sewanee
to sharpen their skills.
Members of the Chattanooga
Boys' Choir, rehearsing at the
Academy during the same week,
encountered the cheerleaders at
Gailor meals and were reportedly
somewhat bemused.
Gailor also played host to
equestrian costumes and leotards
during three successful sessions of
the riding and gymnastics camps.
A ballet workshop, held here
by Chattanooga professional dancer
Fiona Fairrie, added to the mixture.
The College summer school
enrollment was down to about 80
students this summer. The Doctor
of Ministry program enrolled 38
students from Idaho to the West
Indies. And the Summer Seminar
flourished, with 35 participants and
ten of their children, about half
of whom attended the eclectic
discussions and lectures with their
parents.
The planned soccer camp at
Sewanee Academy didn't material-
ize. But the wilderness camp, with
rockclimbing by Jim Scott and
canoeing by Doug Cameron, was
held.
The state meeting of Delta
Kappa Gamma mustered some 300
teachers, and the National School
Orchestra Association followed the
music center with their own ses-
sions and concert. Brief visits were
made by senior members of St.
Philip's Cathedral in Atlanta and
a group of campers from Mississippi
who roughed it on the outskirts of
the domain under the leadership
of the Rev. Edward deBary. Closing
out the summer was a mid-August
conference of the Tennessee En-
vironmental Education Association,
whose members set up exhibits and
toured the wilderness areas around
Sewanee.
Hardly room for a dull moment!
The Sewanee Summer Seminar is
showing signs of becoming a Sewa-
nee institution.
With its combination of timely
academic lectures and informal
summertime recreation, the seminar
drew 42 participants (including
four older children, ages 17 to 21)
July 9-15.
They came from as far away as
San Antonio, Toronto, and Delray
Beach, Florida. Alumni represented
classes from 1936 to 1970.
Among those attending were
physicians, attorneys, clergymen,
teachers, a plumbing supplier, a
water control engineer, and a retired
Army officer.
They went to the Apple Tree
Dinner Theater and the movie,
spent an evening at Dr. Charles
Harrison's to listen to music, and
enjoyed a late-night "singalong."
The lecturers could be seen
leaving the Bishop's Common about
noon each day in animated conver-
sation with their "students" as
all headed for lunch at Gailor Hall.
Child care was a welcome relief
for young parents.
Some of the comments from
participants were:
"Well planned without being
excessively regimented."
"Highly challenging and pro-
vocative."
"Good faculty, good partici-
pants, good conversation, good
place to be."
"It is a great program. At all
cost, keep it going forward."
New Faculty
in Theology
The School of Theology has three
new staff and faculty members
this year, including the Rev. Craig B.
Anderson, who served temporarily
on the faculty last year in the
absence of the Rev. Henry Lee
Myers, who has since resigned.
Mr. Anderson is an instructor in
pastoral theology. He received his
M.Div. degree from Sewanee in
1975 several years after receiving
a bachelor's degree from Valparaiso
University in Indiana. He is a candi-
date for the Ph.D. at Vanderbilt
in theology and psychology.
In addition to being a chaplain
for the National Guard, he is priest
in charge of Christ Church in Alto.
The other members of the staff
are husband and wife— David P.
Killen and Patricia O'Connell Killen.
She is an instructor in contem-
porary society and the history of
religions.
A graduate of Gonzaga Uni-
versity in Spokane, Washington,
she has a master's degree from
Stanford, where she has also com-
pleted the majority of her work
toward a Ph.D.
Mr. Killen, a former market-
ing coordinator for William C.
Brown Company, publishers, is
manager of administration and
publications for Theological Educa-
tion by Extension.
He has a bachelor's degree from
Seattle, a master's degree in coun-
seling and guidance from Gonzaga
and a doctorate in religious studies
from Marquette University.
The Rev. Stiles Lines, who was
retired from teaching at the end of
the past semester, has assumed the
position of assistant University
chaplain. He has special responsi-
bility to seminarians and seminarian
spouses.
Church
Relations
The Rev. William N. McKeachie, on
leave from the Diocese of Toronto
and volunteering his services to the
University for the year 1978-79,
has assumed the position of acting
director of church relations.
He replaces the Rev. Clyde
Ireland, who has been named rector
of Calvary Church in Richmond,
Texas.
Canon McKeachie's primary
task is to be Sewanee's represen-
tative to the Church and the
Church's representative to Sewanee.
He works with the vice-president
for development to convey the
mission and needs of the University
to Episcopal clergy and laity
throughout the 24 owning dioceses.
Born in 1943, Canon Mc-
Keachie's early years were divided
between New York City and Lon-
don, England. He is a 1966 graduate
of the College and later taught
humanities and studied theology
in Toronto.
He has served as assistant chap-
lain at St. John's College, Oxford
and in 1973 became theological
consultant in the Anglican Church
of Canada, attached to the
Cathedral and Diocese of Toronto.
Since 1974, Canon McKeachie
has ministered as chaplain to the
University of Toronto. He has been
secretary of the Faith and Order
Commission of the Canadian
Council of Churches and a member
of the Anglican-Roman Catholic
Dialogue in Canada. In 1977-78, he
traveled as special associate of the
Fund for Theological Education.
Search for Beginnings
On the following pages are published four essays
about the School of Theology at Sewanee. The
occasion is the seminary's 100th anniversary.
These essays do not have an historical
emphasis except when an author is reflecting
on the origins of present conditions.
It would seem inappropriate, however, to
begin without some statement about when and
how theological education began at Sewanee.
Such a statement is especially appropriate since
the beginning is rather curious— curious because
it is obscure.
The Rev. Donald S. Armentrout, associate
professor of ecclesiastical history, says that
1878-79 was not always the clear choice for
the founding year of the School of Theology.
After all, the idea for a theological school
never seemed far from the mind of Bishop
Charles T. Quintard, who re-established the
University after the Civil War. In 1866 Bishop
Quintard helped plant a cross on the site select-
ed for the chapel of a diocesan training school.
Soon afterward he was involved in the Sewanee
Collegiate Institute in nearby Winchester which
was later moved to Sewanee.
By May 1868, the "Sewanee Training and
Divinity School" (it had several different names)
had nine students, Dr. Armentrout says.
The school "merged with the University of
the South," but several students continued to
study at Sewanee with a view to becoming
ordained ministers.
A department of theology is listed in the
1870-71 calendar (catalogue). And afterward in
University literature, references are made to
the "opening of the Theological Department
in 1877."
The only particular difference between 1877
and any other year seems to be that theological
students are listed separately from other
gownsmen in the calendar.
Especially curious is that in 1876 the Board
of Trustees elected David Greene Haskins of
Massachusetts a professor of ecclesiastical
history and commissioner. When Chancellor
William Mercer Green wrote Haskins, he also
offered him the position of dean of the theology
faculty. On July 30, 1877, the board accepted
Haskins' resignation as dean and professor.
To confuse things even more, the calendar
for 1881-82 begins its register of theology
students with 1877 "from the opening of St.
Luke's Hall."
The evidence certainly does not stop there.
The 50th anniversary was celebrated on June
11-12, 1927. An article in the Sewanee Purple
(May 18, 1927) does not mention an 1877 date
and notes the ambiguity by stating: "The
Theological School of the University of the
South was started several years before it was
actually organized and established."
It is generally recognized now that the
School of Theology had its formal beginning
in 1878.
On August 3, 1878, the trustees elected
the Rev. Telfair Hodgson dean of the Theologi-
cal Department.
Also in that year, the trustees, at the request
of the theology professors— George T. Wilmer
and William P. DuBose— separated the financial
support of the Theological Department from the
University and placed "the support of the
Theological Department upon the Church at
large."
Each of the ten owning dioceses was to
contribute at least $500 annually for a budget
of $5,000.
Then on March 25, 1879, the date of the
annunciation and the opening of the Lenten
term of the University, St. Luke's Memorial
Hall was formally opened.
The authors of the following essays include
three members of the School of Theology
faculty and an alumnus.
The Rev. George B. Salley, Jr., who
received his Master of Divinity degree from the
University in 1973, recently moved from Lex-
ington, South Carolina to become rector of All
Saints' Church in Cayce, South Carolina.
The Very Rev. Urban T. Holmes III, a
widely read author, has been dean of the School
of Theology since 1973. He is a priest in the
Diocese of Western North Carolina.
The Rev. John M. Gessell, professor of
Christian ethics, has been teaching at Sewanee
for 1 7 years and is editor of the St. Luke's
Journal of Theology. He is a priest in the
Diocese of Massachusetts.
The Rev. Charles L. Winters is director of
continuing education and the Theological Edu-
cation by Extension program and is Quintard
professor of dogmatic theology. He came to the
seminary in 1954 and is a priest in the Diocese
of Tennessee.
Facing Issues
of Today
by the Rev. Charles Winters
Seminaries seem to have an ambiguous relation-
ship to the church at large today. Oh the one
hand, the church has placed a high value on
thorough academic, professional, and spiritual
preparation of candidates for the ordained
ministry and has expected the seminaries to pro-
vide it. Yet there seems to be a current unrest, a
questioning of whether the seminaries are doing
the job.
This ambivalence has raised issues for sem-
inaries in at least three major areas— educational,
financial, and vocational.
The educational issues involve philosophies
of education and the methods by which students
learn . The financial issues arise out of increasingly
higher costs of seminary education and the
possibility of decreased enrollments. The voca-
tional issues, which underlie the other two,
involve the very reason for the existence of the
seminaries.
Educational Issues
One frequently heard complaint from clergy
is that most of what they learned in seminary
they have not used in their ministries. The
criticism implies that the academic material was
irrelevant to their later ministries.
Any seminary professor will hotly contest
the assertion that the Bible, the history of the
Christian Church, and the theological under-
standing of God and humankind are irrelevant
to ministry! But it is highly possible that these
matters were taught in such a way that their
relevance was not experienced.
There is a growing body of evidence that
people learn best when theory and practice are
closely related. The cry for relevance we heard
so much from college students in the sixties
was often misguided; knowledge can be its
own reward without the requirement that it be
immediately applicable.
But the students had an important point:
the more a course of study is seen to be impor-
tant for a person's own life, the more the
material in that course will be truly learned.
This presents a problem to educators.
Should academic subjects be required only as
a student's experience creates a felt need for
them? Some schools try to approximate this
ideal. Students design their own curricula,
determining for themselves what they need to
know.
In addition to the principle that learning
will be most effective in such circumstances,
there is the assumption that when the student
becomes familiar with one aspect of a given '
field, the rest of it will open up and its
importance be perceived.
If, for example, I elect to study Christian
ethics in order to be able to cope with a pressing
moral problem, I will soon see the need to learn
the theological basis for ethics; this, in turn,
will lead me to the biblical bases for theology.
Ideal as this seems, it does not always
happen. Some important matters can be missed,
simply because the particular path being fol-
lowed does not happen to lead to them. When
this results, the traditional view of education
seems safer.
In the traditional view, acquaintance with
the several theological fields has the power to
raise issues that would otherwise go unnoticed.
This view suggests that study will create interest
over a wider area of life (instead of relying on
existing interest to motivate study). But, as the
lament of many clergy testifies, this does not
always happen either. Material is "learned,"
but its relationship to life is missed.
The faculties in most seminaries have been
attempting to solve this problem for several
years. The faculty at Sewanee has been dealing
with it in part by creating small groups in which
students reflect on their experiences in their
field sites and in seminary community life.
The groups interpret these experiences in
the light of the material studied in academic
classes. In this process of theological reflection
on concrete experiences, life raises questions of
theology, and theology highlights issues in life.
Other seminaries are developing other pro-
cedures that differ in detail but have the same
purpose of integrating experience and know-
ledge. None has come up with the definitive
solution, and some experiments have failed.
But "sound learning" is "sound" only to the
degree that it affects life. If what is learned in
seminary is never used or interpreted in one's
ministry, something must be changed.
Financial Issues
Like all educational institutions, seminaries
are caught between rising costs and dispropor-
tionately rising income. Schools have tradition-
ally drawn income from endowments, gifts, and
tuition.
Endowment income has been discouraging
in recent years, and gifts— even when generous-
are unreliable sources when they exceed a
certain percentage of total income. Tuition fees
can only be raised so high before they cut off
the possibility of a student's enrolling. In the
absence of alternative sources of income, then,
it would appear that costs must be cut.
But, while some costs can no doubt be
reduced, it will always remain true that seminary
education is expensive. Large classes with fewer
teachers would be economically more favorable
but would render the educational goals impos-
sible to reach.
"Teaching" would be reduced to delivering
information, and the true education, which
comes out of wrestling with implications for
life and ministry, would be left to chance.
Faculty and students must meet face to face and
Kathy 9nlligan
speak freely and openly with one another; clergy
cannot be mass-produced.
Therefore, we must find alternative sources
of income. Fund raising campaigns to increase
endowment will help, but the amounts raised
must be large if the increase in income is to be
significant. It seems clear that the church, at
some point, must come to terms with its
responsibility for theological education and
commit itself to some means of supporting it.
Vocational Issues
We often use the word "vocation" for
individuals, but we seldom apply it to institu-
tions. There are, however, issues of "vocation"
facing the seminaries today. What is an institu-
tion such as a seminary to do with its resources?
How is it to fulfill its life? What is God calling
it to do?
In the past, the answer was obvious-
seminaries exist to train people for ordination.
They served some other purposes as well. Some,
through graduate level study, have prepared the
next generation of scholars, without whom the
church would be doomed to repeat the always
limited insights of the generation that last took
the time to study and reflect. And by their
very existence, the seminaries have enabled an
important segment of the present generation
of scholars— the faculties— to continue their own
study.
Today, however, the "clergy surplus" is
calling all this into question. At present there are
more ordained clergy than there are salaried
positions in the church.
This will probably be a temporary phenom-
enon. Already, the statistical charts show the
"bulge" of surplus clergy moving toward retire-
ment. In time, more newly -ordained people
will be needed in the lower age bracket. But
what will happen to the seminaries in the mean-
time?
For the past four years, in spite of the
"clergy surplus," record numbers of prospective
students have applied for admission to the
seminaries, but that trend seems to be tapering
off.
If some seminaries were forced to close, the
consequences to the church would be drastic.
Without adequate scholarship, the church's
response to the changing world will head down
either of two equally dangerous paths. It will
Continued on next page
Winters
(continued from page 5)
either become more reactionary, clinging to the
old landmarks in fear, for lack of direction, or it
will go superficially "modem" without informed
critical assessment of new directions.
The collegium of scholars in seminary
faculties provides the church not with a trinket
of academic respectability, but a balance-wheel
vital to its life.
It may well be that the Holy Spirit once
again, as so often in the past, is moving the
church in new directions by closing off easy
access to old ways. Perhaps He is asking whether
theological schools should accept the limitations
of their traditional vocations. The School of
Theology, for example, is currently expanding
and developing a program of extension educa-
tion, designed to bring the resources of the
seminary to lay people throughout the church.
Similarly, other seminaries are extending their
own emphases— more resources for continuing
education of the clergy, services to parishes in
adjacent areas, and support for educational
enterprises within the dioceses they serve. In the
future, some schools may discover specialized
vocations for themselves, as Berkeley Divinity
School did a few years ago when it associated
itself with Yale as the pastoral arm of the
Yale Divinity School.
It is thoroughly in keeping with the Biblical
tradition to respond to new vocations and move
in new directions. And new vocations can often
be occasions for creative solutions to educa-
tional and financial problems. The ferment
visible in theological education circles today is
a sign that our theological schools are alive and
well and living in prayerful expectation of
finding new paths.
A Graduate
Looks Back
by the Rev. George Salley
Dr. Henry Nelson Snyder, who was for many
years dean of Wofford College, where I was
once an undergraduate, is said to have written
some such words as: "An education is what you
have left after you have forgotten everything
you learned in college."
I expect most of us do eventually forget
much of the detailed information we acquire in
the course of "being educated," and I imagine
this is equally true of what we "learn" in the
seminary. Perhaps in a sense this is just as well,
not only because of the danger of pedantry, but
also because of the great value for the parish
priesthood of one's own perspective, one's
state of mind and soul, one's orientation of
consciousness.
What I am talking about comes under the
caption of spiritual formation rather than of
training for a certain job. Dr. Snyder, then,
may have been right.
I have forgotten more of the facts than I
am comfortable in admitting, but I have-not
"forgotten" this other thing, this indescrib-
able something, that remains when the detailed
knowledge is gone. Because that, like the other
something given in ordination, is imprinted
on my soul.
Having said that, I must also now add that,
even though I have forgotten much of the
"content, "it is also true that I remember quite
a lot of it. It is all well and good to speak of
indelible character and such, but, as in the case
of most abstractions, its validity (or at least
its existential value) depends on there being
adequate concretion of it.
If this does not happen, then it is true, as
H. L. Mencken wrote, that "theology is the
reduction of the unknowable into terms of the
not worth knowing." The absence of concretion
is why whoever says he loves God and hates his
brother is a liar.
Abstractions have to come down to earth
in order to make any real difference, the
ultimate model here being the Incarnation of
God the Son.
The point is that while Dr. Snyder was cer-
tainly right in one sense, I am sure he would
have agreed with me that an educated person
must also have some command of a lot of
information. I am suggesting that the seminary
must do something good to the brain as well as
to the soul.
First the soul. I believe I have an attitude of
openness and flexibility which, in my better
moments, enables me to function with a certain
amount of grace under pressure. This was given
to me at Sewanee along with other ingredients
for my spiritual formation.
Without this kind of orientation, the parish
priesthood in the contemporary situation would
be difficult indeed. It is difficult enough under
the best circumstances, without the added
burdens imposed by rigidity of attitude in a
most unpredictable world, where literally any-,
thing can (and often does) happen. Sometimes
it is best to bend, lest we crack.
Put another way, I remember someone a
year or two ahead of me at St. Luke's saying,
"If you can make it through the senior program,
you can make it through anything."
I am sure our faculty would prefer having
it put in other terms, but it is true that a
portable spirit of openness, flexibility of atti-
tude, and broadness of view were deliberately
encouraged in the School of Theology of my
day, and I think it is a precious contribution
to the present shape of my own soul.
Now the brain. Under the curriculum as it
was in 1970-73 we learned most of the things
a practicing clergyman should know. And, so,
I have functioned reasonably well at it these
five years, although without unusual distinction.
I know, for example, how to get around
in the Holy Bible (although I cannot quote
8,000 verses from memory like traveling evan-
gelist Jack van Impe), and I have serviceable
skill in biblical exegesis (and not, I hope,
eisegesis, which the Rev. Frs. Griffin, Igarashi
and Rhys were at such pains to discourage).
I have not forgotten the critical study of the
Scriptures (of which parish clergymen are so
frequently accused), but I try to teach what I
have learned honestly and gently.
I remember much of the Church history we
learned from Don Armen trout, and I now know
that it is important and relevant, because
modern folly is usually replication of ancient
folly, and it turns up right here in Cayce. (My
own evangelicalism comes, incidentally, not as
a legitimate inheritance of that tradition within
Anglicanism, but by way of Martin Luther and
Don Armentrout.)
I also remember a lot of the theology that
Charlie Winters so effectively taught as
aduocatus diaboli through the history of Chris-
tian doctrine. It is practical and useful, because
it attempts to reflect in faith on the Gospel in
terms that are comfortable to certain times and
places so that each may hear it in his own
language— not to reduce the unknowable to
other terms, but to approach His nearer presence
in order to be touched and changed. It is theo-
logical discipline that enables communicable
reflection on the Word.
I remember most about liturgies, because
it is one of the things I like best and one that I
work with most often. It also is important and
relevant, because the cumulative impact of the
experience of worship is the foundation of the
Christian life, and the more a person gets into
Christ Jesus, the more he can tell the difference
between good worship and bad.
Over the years I have learned that the sky
will not fall in if one differs with Marion
Hatchett on this point or that, and that his
Manual of Ceremonial does not have quite the
status of the Book of Mormon.
Still, though, Marion is generally right.
Liturgiology is not a "dismal science" like
economics. It is really at the heart of the Chris-
tian life, because it has to do with the gathered
community at worship before its Lord and
God— to offer as well as to receive.
All these things and more were taught at
St. Luke's, and I think they were taught well.
And I remember and use these things.
There is something else. But where does it
go? Is it a matter of the soul or of the brain?
I am speaking of the role of the pastor as one
who begins with his acceptance in love of people
in trouble for whom Jesus Christ has died and
risen.
I am not sure which caption it comes under,
but I learned it at Sewanee and try to do it in
my work. I also occasionally venture to give
advice. I was taught not to, but love seems
sometimes to require it.
May I mention some things I think might
have been improved? Homiletics automatically
comes to mind. It was not specifically taught
in the St. Luke's I knew, except for the "sermon
brief" experiment and one very short but
excellent elective by Don Armentrout at the
request of some students (as electives were
mostly done at that time).
I had the impression that preaching was
thought either unteachable or not worth teach-
ing. But in the Midlands of South Carolina it
is still the chief and most effective way the
Gospel can be proclaimed to more than one
person at a time. And, too, there is power
behind the pulpit, not as clearly known at other
times, that gives me the insight and the courage
to speak the small instance of the Word that has
been entrusted to me to proclaim.
Preaching can be taught, because I have
learned much that is of value from recent books
touching on the subject. I understand it is being
emphasized in the School of Theology today.
There is one other area I had some problems
with. A person is called a priest because he is a
specification, a particular instance, of the
priestly community of which he is a part.
In his vocation and ministry he, like the
priestly Christ and the priestly community,
represents God to the world and the world to
God.
He must, therefore, be intimately involved
in the things of both if he is to serve at the
interface between them. The problem is that the
seminary as I remember it seemed to see its
task as transmitting to the student both sorts of
things— those of God and those of the world.
We were frequently urged to be involved in
the world (as if we had a choice), and some of
us wondered where the seminary thought we
had come to the Mountain from, if not from the
world, and where we lived when not in class.
We were already very well acquainted with
what would form that side of our priestly
personality (that one of our two natures, so to
speak), although it might not have been the
portion of the world this or that faculty member
was interested in.
What we needed^ to do at Sewanee was to
get down to brass tacks on the things of God.
The whole of secular culture is schoolmaster of
the things of the world. The seminary must rje
schoolmaster of the other things.
Of course the School of Theology almost
entirely was exactly that, as I have already
outlined, so this criticism must be kept in per-
spective.
I am thankful to God for what He has done
both to my soul and to my brain at St. Luke's.
I am also thankful for so many others He has
blessed there over the past hundred years,
through whom He has blessed us all. It is a
heritage I am humbly delighted to claim as mine.
Goals for the
Near Future
by the Very Rev. Urban T. Holmes
There is no accredited seminary of the Episcopal
Church that has a more immediate relationship
with the Church at the level of work-a-day
ministry than the School of Theology. The
communication channels are direct, when used,
between the parish and diocese and the School
of Theology.
The clearly defined geographical basis of
support for the University, the manner in which
trustees and regents are elected, and the pre-
vailing tradition of interaction between dean and
faculty and the bishops, priests, and laity of the
Southeast all help. This immediate relationship
means that the guiding focus of the evolving
purpose of the seminary has always been on the
training of effective parish priests.
The character of our twenty-four "owning
dioceses," past and present, challenges any
tendency of the School to become representa-
tive of only one tradition within the Anglican
Communion.
Ideally, priests who are graduates of this
semihary should be able to serve anywhere in
the Episcopal Church. This is not a partisan
seminary, if we are true to our past and maintain
that balance within the faculty and student
body which I personally believe to be appro-
priate.
Once again, the effect of this refusal to be
deflected into bias confronts us with the real
issue with a singleness of man: to educate the
effective parish priest.
I expect disagreement as to what that
education should look like. I also hope for
rational discussion of our differences. But r
surely the parameters of such a discussion are
defined by our goals.
The touchstone for the goals of this
seminary is the service of the Church through
the formation of the parish priest that can best
ministerwithinandto the Church and the world.
This requires that the faculty model both
enthusiastic commitment to our Lord and his
Church and a critical reflection upon the life of
the Church.
Perhaps this is a way of saying we have to be
both Catholic and Protestant— in the sense of
affirming the Church as the mystical Body of
Christ; -and in maintaining what Paul Tillich .
described as theiconoclasm of the Protestant
principle.
The center of priestly effectiveness is. 'the
priest's ability to think theologically. Let lis
hope that the time has passed when we believe
that the appropriate model for priesthood is
psychotherapy or social service or imagine
that the seminaries think this.
Certainly the data of the social sciences
provide the correlative fields for pastoral, moral,
liturgical, and fundamental theology. But if the
School of Theology is to educate effective
priests they must be skilled in the discipline of
theological reflection.
Put more simply that means that they must
be able to discern, on the one hand, the meaning
of our contemporary experience and, on the
other hand, the meaning of the Christian tradi-
tion, and mutually illumine the meaning of both
in a manner that is meaningful, true, and can be
expressed in moral action.
I know that theology can appear to some to
be a very remote and dull endeavor. At the
same time in the 1976 report of the Krumm
Committee, when parish calling committees
were asked what skill they wanted most in a
rector, they replied overwhelmingly: the ability
to preach !
I think we are talking about the same thing.
Our times are clearly confused because we lack
meaning which can give us vision for the future.
The ability to be aware both of what is
happening to us and to speak to that out of the
Scriptures and the texts of the Christian past
is what preaching is all about and is what is
meant by theological reflection. The School of
Theology believes that its goal is to produce
such persons.
That same Krumm report noted that the
personal quality of the priest most desired
was someone who revealed spiritual depth.
Obviously this is open to many interpretations,
but it does encompass the place of the holy
mart or Woman.
Theol6gy requires a life of prayer. It calls
our attention to the "mystagogue,," one
capable of leading others into the mystery of •
God both by who he is and what he does.
Without doubt this requires that the sem-
inary educate its students in a pattern of
personal and liturgical prayer which can become
their own. It must be a pattern which is "trans-
ferable" to our times and the typical parish—
a very difficult and yet imperative interpre-
tation of the vast and varied history of Christian
spirituality.
Continued on next page
Holmes
(continued from page 7)
Authentic spirituality by nature is character-
ized by both terror and joy, by a desperate
loneliness supported by an unflagging faith, and
by a humility that abhors idolatry of all kinds
(i.e., literalism of any variety).
A person of prayer is often called upon to
offend, as did St. Paul on the Areopagus, those
who may well consider themselves most "relig-
ious." To develop spiritual depth requires a
self-awareness and honesty for which the School
of Theology is obligated to provide the means
and setting.
Priestly formation is not just a familiarity
with priestcraft— although it is that as well-
but the knowledge of that most important
instrument of God's grace at the priest's com-
mand: his person. The pains of emotional,
intellectual, and spiritual growth are an inevit-
able part of achieving that goal.
The world in which we live is in as great a
need as ever of a leadership that can provide
theological insight and spiritual guidance. Yet
we live at a time in which the Church is finding
it more and more difficult to support its
priests.
This has a number of implications for
the School of Theology and the task of train-
ing an effective priesthood.
One of them is that we need to train priests
to mobilize the laity. Another is that we must
find ways of developing a functioning non-
stipendiary priesthood, in which the primary
vocation and formation are to the priesthood
and, yet, in which there is the possibility of
self-support amid the fulfillment of pastoral
responsibilities.
Finally, we should educate our priests
in effective stewardship that the Church may
develop better resources for the support of
its ministry and mjssion, including a fulltime
priesthood.
Theological education as we know it today
developed alongside the devotion of the fulltime
priest, who looked to the Church for his entire
living. We are speaking of the last hundred and
seventy-five years.
The semi-stipendiary priest, who customarily
"moonlights," had a long, respected history
in the Church before that, beginning with St.
Paul; but there was no opportunity for "pro-
fessional training" beyond college. Therefore,
few models exist for extensive theological
education of non-stipendiary or semi-stipendiary
priests or of lay leadership.
It is of the utmost importance that this
seminary, building on the remarkable success
of the Theological Education by Extension
program, look to models of education which can
provide ways of training this new leadership.
This lay leadership must lose nothing in the
ability to think theologically or to embody a
spiritual depth. At the same time, it must be
able to function in a Church that is very
different from what we have known in our
recent past.
It is most fitting that I share these reflec-
tions upon the goals of the School of Theology
as we celebrate our centennial. This is no time
for nostalgia, but it is essential that we as a
seminary know who we have been and what
possibilities and promise this knowledge gives
us for the future.
As I look at our history and the witness to
prayer and scholarship, to social action and
civility, and to pastoral care and a love of beauty,
I have hope.
These seeming contradictions are character-
istic of some of our heroes: William Porcher
DuBose, Fleming James, Bayard Hale Jones,
George Myers and Francis Craighill Brown.
It is the paradoxical, ambiguous history of
this school that gives rise to my hope. When
things are too consistent and too neat, somehow
there is no room for God to work his surprises.
My hope is fed by the thought that these
heroes and others like them were men who had,
for our graduates, ambitions which were dimly
and sometimes mistakenly conceived and often
disappointed, but yet were born of a faith that
what we do here has vital importance for the
future of people's lives, because we educate
people who are the instruments of God's possi-
bilities for them.
I would much rather the School of Theology
be known and judged for its vision than for
the broken condition which this faculty, this
student body, and this community of Sewanee
shares with all humanity.
In the risking of our vision there is space
for God to work, and it's that space in which
I want you, the reader, and I, the Dean, to find
ourselves together in the service of the Christ.
Seminary Within
a University
by the Rev. John M. Gessell
It is doubtful that many members of the Episco-
pal Church think at once of Sewanee_ as a
vigorous climate in which to further the pur-
poses of the Church and its ministries through
theological education. And yet the School of
Theology has been doing just that, often in a
perplexed relationship to the rest of the Univer-
sity, for a hundred years.
The School of Theology has clear obliga-
tions, not merely to the University and its
owners, but to the entire Christian enterprise,
to meet the needs and challenges involved in
training for Christian ministries.
How well can we meet these challenges here
at Sewanee?
There are two issues, implied in this question,
that are of singular importance for theological
educators. The first is the problem of the
context in which theological education goes on.
The second is the issue of the personal, priestly,
and professional development of the student.
As to the first, theological education cannot
go on in a physical and intellectual vacuum. If
theology is the scientiae regina, the queen of
the sciences, it is not thereby making an imperial
claim but rather claiming the irreducible neces-
sity for an ongoing conversation with the
humane arts and sciences.
The subject of theology is our experience
as people in the light of God's self-disclosure and
of the unique human capacity for faith in this
God who so reveals Himself.
This claim for university context is not a
novel one. It stands in the central tradition of
Reformed Christianity.
In Calvin's Geneva the Ordinances called for
theological instruction, which, they recognized,
depended on "the ancillary disciplines, the
languages and humanities." Our knowledge of
God and knowledge of man, then, cannot
exist in a vacuum.
The School of Theology at Sewanee, joined
to a college of liberal arts and sciences in the
context of a university, enjoys in principle the
opportunity for the sort of intellectual challenge
and stimulation required for theological edu-
cation at its best.
There should be other advantages for the
advancement of theological education, flowing
from this relationship.
The central purposes of a university are to
teach, to support the creation of new knowledge,
and to disseminate that knowledge to a wider
community.
Additionally, a university board of govern-
ance is responsible to support these central
purposes by protecting academic freedom and
preventing exposure to financial disaster.
As to the second issue— development of the
student— as early as 1946 in a study of theologi-
cal education by Samuel Blizzard of Princeton,
it became evident that the mere handing along
of an intellectual tradition, the simple transfer
of knowledge from teacher to student, was no
longer adequate to the needs of the Church's
ministry or of the student's.
The objectives of theological education
could not be simply the memory storage bank,
nor even the students' capacity for critical
reflection.
Thus, nothing less than the entire existence
of the student was at stake. This required
theological faculties to take seriously the educa-
tion of the emotions and the development of
skills for the responsible practice of the ministry.
The late dean of Yale Divinity School,
Liston Pope, once said to me that until the mid- .
twentieth century there had been no funda-
mental revision of the theological curriculum
since that of the sixteenth century. We have
witnessed a profound change in theological
education since 1946.
The School of Theology has been, if not the
leader in judicious curricular change, at least in
the vanguard. Its faculty are committed to
spending long hours with students, and they are
committed to continuing critical evaluation of
the theological curriculum in light of demands
upon them for an educational program suited
to furthering the purposes of the Church and its
ministries.
The faculty have for years been involved in
advancing the entire enterprise of theological
education in the Episcopal Church and beyond
by giving and receiving insights through service
and consultation on the national level.
Our experience during the last quarter cen-
tury has taught us the elements of excellence in
theological education. We appear to enjoy the
context and the freedom required to accomplish
these things. The question is whether we can use
these lessons to move confidently into a future
of greater vigor and increased competence.
Before making predictions, let's look more
closely at the record, at least for the period of
my 17 years at Sewanee.
There have been some notable successes
in joint endeavors between the two faculties in
the University, such as interdisciplinary seminars
and University colloquia.
Wherever these have occurred the results,
I believe, have been to edify and to elevate all
who took part. But at the same time such
occasions have often brought down extravagant
criticism. Continuing reciprocity of a formal
nature is minimal.
On the whole, the experience is disappoint-
ing, especially when compared with the possi-
bilities. Whether this is due to ignorance,
prejudice, hostility, competitiveness, or envy
I am not prepared to say.
But the practical results have been less than
what one could have hoped for. The recom-
mendations for interdisciplinary enterprise of
the Southern Association's visiting team during
a self-study seem to have had little effect. In
any event, Sewanee appears at times to be insular
and isolated and in some cases lacking in suf-
ficient educational vigor to keep some of its
effective teachers.
Perhaps the greatest inhibition to excellence
in theological education is the most subtle
of all. The problem may lie in part in the
difficulty which we who live in Sewanee have in
identifying it.
Partly it is inherent in aspects of the
"Southern tradition," partly in the problems
endemic to a single company town. Some call
it "paternalism"; some "oppression. " Yet it is
still more complex than this— a matrix, a web,
a network of attitudes and influences, which
in the end create lassitude.
Social anthropologists speak of "neoteny,"
by which they refer to an observable state in
any community characterized by the under-
development of adult traits such as aggressive-
ness and autonomy.
Such neotenous behavior consists of actions
which diffuse aggression and which are sub-
missive in stress situations. Neotenous commun-
ities are marked by high levels of social con-
formity and the outward repression of strong
feelings and emotions.
The negative results are sociological depend-
ency and the acting out indirectly of repressed
Kathy Galligan
feelings and thoughts. Penalties are placed on
autonomous functioning. Dialogue and debate
tend to be discouraged.
Members of the theological faculty frequently
find themselves in conflict in such a community.
By personal faith and theological conviction
they are committed to seeking a healthy
autonomy, an inter-dependence in act and
attitude, and to the direct and responsible ex-
pression of feeling and belief. By professional
training they are committed to an active critical
role in the University.
The narrowing range of options open to a
neotenous community, or the failure to explore
wider ranges of possibility make people prison-
ers in their conceptual and perceptual fields.
The ultra-conservative and the inflexible
personality is limited to a small universe and to a
minimal potential. The failure to adapt and
change in response to new occasions impairs
his ability to make his contribution to the
whole community.
The "record" in recent years is not, there-
fore, wholy reassuring. Is there any reason to
believe that the intellectual and emotional
environment in which the School of Theology
seeks to further its task of theological education
will change?
The evidence may be that the abrasion is
chronic, that the direction in which theological
education in the United States is moving is
dissonant with Sewanee's ideal. Pressures, both
externally from the theological community at
large and internally from the faculty of theology,
have led to careful consideration of the possi-
bility of the removal of the University's School
of Theology to another center where the
advantages of Sewanee may be secured in a
context where its disadvantages may be
minimized.
Such a move, however, is probably not
advantageous at this time. In any event it would
seriously weaken the University. The future
requires the invigoration of Sewanee's educa-
tional environment to the advantage of both
faculties, together with a genuine commitment
to the continuing development of theological
education within the context of the liberal
arts and sciences.
>X^ >^- ^X-' ^^^ ""w^ '^^r 'w' "W^ *^k »^
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Col. Harold E. Sprague, Sr.
Rev. William S. Stoney
John C. Sutherland
Ward Leon Sutherland
Daniel D. Schwartz
John C. Stewart
Dr. O. N. Torian
Alexander & Lillian Taggart
Louise C. Taylor
James F. Thames
Mrs. W. A. Thomson
George M. Thorogood
Gary F. Thorpe
Dr. Bayly Turlington
Thomas K. VanZandt
Thomas C. Vaughan
George W. Wallace
Mrs. J. E. Wallace
Harry A. Wellford
Paul Wells
Rt. Rev. E. Hamilton West
Dr. Alvyn W. White
Mrs. A. Morton Williams
Edward J. Williams
Archie S. Wilson
George Raymond Winn
Mrs. George P. Winton
Mr. & Mrs. G. Cecil Woods
Dean Word
Rev. David W. Yates-
Peter D. Young
BEQUESTS
Emogene Chapman Atwater .... $ 3,956
Edith Mellick Belshaw 500
Wilmer M. Grayson 1,000
Ruth L. Gwinn 13
Mrs. Atlee Heber Hoff 7,875
Frank O. Hunter 6,600
Dr. Eugene M. Kayden 6,540
Mrs. John M. S. McDonald 40,296
Lily Belknap Moorman 285,938
Eugenia W. Partridge 317
Ella Reese Phillips 1,000
Lillian C. Reeder 100
William M. Reynolds 300
BISHOP QUINTARD SOCIETY
Individuals who have contributed $500-$999 to the
University of the South
Alfred T. Airth
Mr. & Mrs. J. J. Albrecht
Rt. Rev. & Mrs. George M.
Alexander
Dr. & Mrs. Laurence R. Alv
Mrs. Robert M. Ayres, Sr.
Mr. & Mrs. George H. Barker
Alfred Bartles
Francis M. Bass, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Robert Bruce Bass
Mrs. Arch D. Batjer
Mr. & Mrs. Robert E. Baulch, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. C. Houston Beaumont
Rev. & Mrs. Maurice M. Benitez
Dr. David M. Beyer
Mr. & Mrs. Bruce Blalack
Thomas A. Boardman
B. Boyd Bond
Mrs. Catharine E. Boswell
Mr. & Mrs. Charles W. Boswell
Miss Ethel Bowden
Rev. & Mrs. Thomas D. Bowers
Mr. & Mrs. Robert J. Boylston
Benjamin Brewster
E. Bruce Brooks
Moultrie B. Burns
Mr. & Mrs. E. Ragland Dobbins
Miss Mary Lois Dobbins
Mr. & Mrs. Harold E. Dodd, Jr.
M. D. Dryden
R. Andrew Duncan
James T. Dyke
Dr. Oscar M. Ehrenberg
Dr. Dean B. Ellithorpe
Mr. & Mrs. Roy T. Evans
Rev. W. Thomas Fitzgerald
Mr. & Mrs. James D. Folbre
Mr. & Mrs. Lee S. Fountain, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Frederick R. Freyer
James W. Gentry, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. E. Lawrence Gibson
Col. & Mrs. Edward D. Gillespie
Mr. & Mrs. William A. Goodson,
Jr.
Drs. Marvin & Anita Goodstein
Dr. Angus W. Graham, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Paul J. Greeley
Pat M. Greenwood
Balie L. Griffith
H
Mr. & Mrs. John P. Carmichael
Rev. John Paul Carter
Mr. & Mrs. James G. Cate, Jr.
John C. Cavett
Rev. & Mrs. Robert G. Certain
Eugene P. Chambers, Jr.
Rev. Edwin C. Coleman
Mr. & Mrs. Robert P. Cooke, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. G. Dudley Cowley
Mr. & Mrs. William M Cravens
John R. Crawford
Mr. & Mrs. Edward S. Croft, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas S. Darnall, Jr.
Joel T. Daves III
Rev. Lavan B. Davis
Dr. & Mrs. Robert A. Degen
Mr. & Mrs. William A. Hanger
Mr. & Mrs. Howard W. Harrison,
Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Gerald W. Hedgcock
Shirley M. Helm
Mr. & Mrs. Reginald H.
Helvenston
Mr. & Mrs. John L. Hendry III
James R. Hill
Joseph H. Hilsman III
Mr. & Mrs. Edward H. Hine
Daniel Lee Hooper
Mr. & Mrs. Reese H. Horton
Dr. & Mrs. William R. Hutchinson
IV
Dr. Peter S. Irving
Edwin M. Johnston
Summerfield K. Johnston, Sr.
Rt. Rev. & Mrs. Girault M. Jon
K
Dr. William C. Kalmbach, Jr.
Dr. Thomas S. Kandul, Jr.
Dr. Ferris F. Ketcham
Rev. & Mrs. Kenneth Kinnett
Frank E. Lankford
Mrs. E. E. R. Lodge
Mrs. Hinton F. Longir
M
Rev. & Mrs. William S. Mann
Mrs. Margaret B. Marshall (d)
Dr. George R. Mayfield, Jr.
Dr. & Mrs. Edward McCrady
David N. McCullough, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Burrell O. McGee
W. Floyd McGee, Jr.
Mrs. Hazel G. McKinley
Lt. Col. & Mrs. Leslie MaLaurii
David L. McQuiddy, Jr.
Mrs. Janice B. Mighton
Dr. Fred N. Mitchell
Clarence Day Oakley, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth M. Ogilv
Mr. & Mrs. Edmund Orgill
Julius F. Pabst
Rev. Robert Ray Parks
Mr. & Mrs. Windsor M. Price
Mrs. Leonard W. Pritchett
Rev. & Mrs. J. Howard W. Rhys
Mr. & Mrs. Lance Ringhaver
Mr. (d) & Mrs. Albert Roberts, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Albert Roberts III
Mr. & Mrs. William Scanlan
Dr. & Mrs. Arthur M. Schaefer
Dr. & Mrs. Fenton L. Scruggs
William W. Shaw
Mr. & Mrs. Richard E. Simmons,
Jr.
Mrs. Agnes W. Simpson
Hon. Bryan Simpson
Rt. Rev. Bennett J. Sims
Mrs. Cecil Sims
G. Archibald Sterling
Mr. & Mrs. Edwin L. Sterne
Rt. Rev. Furman C. Stough
Dr. & Mrs. Herbert S. Street
Mr. & Mrs. James O. Street
Warren W. Taylor
Rev. Humbert A. Thomas
Joseph M. Thomas II
Mr. & Mrs. W. Rufus Thompson,
Jr.
Rev. Martin R. Tilson
John W. Turner
William D. Tynes, Jr.
w
Mr. & Mrs. James P. Warner
William C. Weaver III
Mrs. Marshall A. Webb
Rev. & Mrs. D. Roderick Welles
Rev. & Mrs. Alfred H. Whisler, Jr.
Mrs. Arthur A. Williams
Dr. & Mrs. Nick B. Williams
Mr. & Mrs. Donald E. Wilson
Mrs. Dorothea R. Wolf
Mrs. J. Albert Woods
Gordon E. P. Wright
OPERATION: TASK FORCE FOR COLLEGE
Unrestricted Giving Only)
Fiscal Year 1977-78
No. in
No. of
Year
Name of Agent
Class
Donors
Dollars
1900
Tragitt, H. N.
2
_
$ -
1901
" "
0
_
_
1902
" "
0
_
_
1903
" "
0
_
_
1904
" "
3
_
_
1905
3
_
_
1906
4
__
_
1907
6
2
30
1908
" "
2
_
_
1909
1
_
_
1910
3
_
_
1911
" »
0
_
__
1912
" "
7
_
_
1913
0
_
_
1914
ii n
3
_
_
1915
ii ii
6
_
_
1916
" "
9
3
310
1917
10
1
600
1918
21
6
436
1919
13
6
1,365
1920
Joyner, Quintard
18
13
3,430
1921
Hargrave, Thomas E.
18
7
13,013
1922
Helvenston, Reginald
27
6
695
1923
Moore, Maurice
39
14
3,115
1924
Kendall, Ralph ,
36
5
370
1925
Shaw, William
34
6
1,870
1926
Ware, W. Porter
56
23
16,631
1927
Speer, Ralph
41
18
3,660
1928
Crawford, John
66
35
7,974
1929
Schoolfield, William
78
48
13,228
1930
Way, Roger
46
16
2,220
1931
Ezzell, John M.
79
20
4,720
1932
French, Julius
78
21
13,070
1933
Egleston, DuBose
66
16
1,405
1934
Hart, R. Morey
63
18
2,569
1935
Harrison, Edward
59
21
2,772
1936
Gibson, James D,
55
23
6,360
1937
Graydon, Augustus
67
15
3,227
1938
53
11
1,617
1939
McLaurin, Leslie
66
27
2,376
1940
Edwards, William M,
62
13
980
1941
Pattillo, Manning, Jr.
66
20
13,690
1942
Kochtitzky, O. Morse
76
21
23,800
1943
Lee, W. Sperry
102
23
3,837
1944
Wagner, Willard B., Jr.
76
5
425
1945
McQueen, Douglass, Jr
60
10
2,860
1946
61
8
626
1947
Cate, James G.
81
19
1,670
1948
Mitchell, Fred
72
16
2,840
1949
Guerry, John P.
153
40
22,880
1950
Doss, Richard B.
200
63
11,177
1951
Hopper, George W,
162
42
16,766
1952
Duncan, R. Andrew
146
39
37,795
1953
Boylston, Robert J,
136
49
11,405
1954
Wood, Leonard N.
184
34
6,617
1955
McPherson, Alexander
147
31
2,387
1956
Murray, Robert M,
167
37
20,936
1957
Damall, Thomas S.
161
30
4,178
1968
Black, Thomas
145
18
2,747
1959
Steber, Gary D.
166
26
6,818
1960
Harrison, Howard W.
163
34
12,930
1961
Burns, W. Thomas
186
30
5,740
1962
Turner, W. Landis
148
35
2,095
1963
Pinkley, Wallace R.
193
40
3,570
1964
Wallace, Allen
206
89
4,865
1965
Koger, James A.
223
44
5,758
1966
Peake, John Day, Jr.
210
38
2,266
1967
Cavert, Peterson
249
61
8,443
1968
Rue, Thomas S.
219
60
2,747
1969
Charles, Randolph C, J
. 262
60
3,791
1970
Ison, Eric
263
43
2,801
1971
Stringer, Warner
260
52
1,738
1972
Lodge, Henry W.
223
67
1,769
1973
Ford, Margaret
358
59
1,964
1974
Woodbery, Thomas D.
261
60
1,354
1975
Coleman, Robert T.
313
39
1,277
1976
Shelton, Billy Joe
346
74
1,461
1977
DuBose, William in
326
88
1,319
TOTALS
8,006
1,865 $
362,957
CENTURY CLUB
Individuals who have contributed $100-$499 to the
University of the South
Homer Boggs
Mr. 4 Mrs. William R. Boling
Hon. Richard W. Boiling
Albert A. Bonholzer
Rev. Robert H. Bonner
Miss Ezrene F. Bouchelle
Mr. 4 Mrs. Charles M. Boyd
Sterling M. Boyd
Mr. 4 Mrs. James P. Bradford
C. H. Bradley
Capt. James F. Brady
Mr. 4 Mrs. John A. Bragg
Dr. Lucien E. Brailsford
Miss Emma B. Brasseaux
Mr. & Mrs. James H. Bralton, Jr.
John Bratton, Jr.
John G. Bratton
Col. 4 Mrs. William D. Bratton
J. Richard Braugh
H. Payne Breazeale III
Mr. 4 Mrs. William A.
Breckenridge
Joseph A. Bricker
Dr. William F. Bridgers
Dr. George A. Brine
Thomas E. Britt
Mr. 4 Mrs. Maurice V. Brooks
Dr. & Mrs. Andrew M. Brown
Mrs. Arthur C. Brown
Clinton G. Brown, Jr.
H. Frederick Brown, Jr.
Rt. Rev. James B. Brown
William K. Bruce
Rev. James R. Brumby III
Bradley F. Bryant
W. Chauncy Bryant
Mr. 4 Mrs. Walter D. Bryant, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Richard A. Bryson, Jr.
Mrs. Thomas E. Bugbee
Robert E. Bulford
Dr. & Mrs. Harold 0. Bullock
Michael T. Bullock
Dr. 4 Mrs. William R. Bullock
Dr. & Mrs. James A. Burdette
Dr C. Benton Burns
Mr. & Mrs. Stanyarne Burrows,
Paul T. Abrams
John P. Adams
Mr. & Mrs. Stephen E. Adams
Rev. 4 Mrs. M. L. Agnew, Jr.
Dr. David Wyatt Aiken
Claud E. Aikman
Mr. 4 Mrs. William 0. Alden, Jr.
John Alexander, Jr.
Mr. 4 Mrs. H. Bennett Alford, Jr.
Mrs. Carnot R. Allen
David S. Allen
Dr. Harvey W. Allen
Mr. 4 Mrs. Carson L. Alley
Paul S. Amos
Halstead T. Anderson
R. Thad Andress II
Dr. & Mrs. Russell E. Andrews
Anonymous (1)
Mr. 4 Mrs. Philip P. Ardery
Conrad P. Armbrechtll
Miss Deborah K. Armstrong
Dr. W. Mark Armstrong
Alvan S. Arnall
Mr. 4 Mrs. G. Dewey Arnold
Mr. 4 Mrs. W. Klinton Arnold
Rev. William Asger
Dr. Henry A. Atkinson
Rev. 4 Mrs. Herschel R.
Mrs. David C. Audibert
Mr. 4 Mrs. James M. Avent
Francis B. Avery, Jr.
Mr. 4 Mrs. Donald M. Axleroad
Mrs. Atlee B. Ayres
Dr. R. Huston Babcock
Charles B. Bailey, Jr.
Rt. Rev. & Mrs. Seott F. Bailey
Dr. T. Dee Baker
Mr. 4 Mrs. Milton C. Baldridge
Peter A. Baldridge
Dr. 4 Mrs. William J. Ball
W. Moultrie Ball
D. Paul Banks, Jr.
Mr. 4 Mrs. Norris H. Barbre
Charles D. Baringer
Walter G. Barnes
William H. Barnes
Mr. 4 Mrs. H. Grady Barrett, Jr.
Rev. Harold E. Barrett
Charles H. Barron, Jr.
Rev. Robert F. Bartusch
Dr. 4 Mrs. A. Scott Bates
Hon. William O. Beach, Jr.
Rev. 4 Mrs. Olin G. Beall
Martin E. Bean
R. Crawford Bean
Mr. 4 Mrs. I. Croom Beatty IV
J. Guy Beatty
James G. Beavan
Mr. 4 Mrs. Bob Beckham
Rev. 4 Mrs. George C. Bedell
Dr. Cary A. Behle
Rev. Ernest F. Bel
Rev. Lee A. Belford
C. Ray Bell
John E. Bell
Dr. 4 Mrs. Reed Bell
W. Warren Belser, Jr.
Dr. 4 Mrs. Harvey W. Bender
Dr. 4 Mrs. Karl B. Benkwith
Edwin L. Bennett
C. Edward Berry
Rev. 4 Mrs. Cyril Best
W. Harold Bigham
Dr. & Mrs. F. Tremaine Billings
Jr.
Dr. 4 Mrs. Charles M. Binnicker
Jr.
Mr. 4 Mrs. John P. Binnington
Dr. E. Barnwell Black
George B. Black
Mr. 4 Mrs. Thomas M. Black
Rev. 4 Mrs. Ross H. Blackstock
Mr. & Mrs. Newell Blair
Robert M. Blakely
Dr. 4 Mrs. Wyatt H. Blake III
Mr. 4 Mrs. Robert H. Burton
Lewis C. Burwell, Jr.
Rev. Canon & Mrs. Fred J. Bush
John W. Buss
Rev. James S. Butler
Thomas A. Caldwell, Jr.
Mr. 4 Mrs. Eugene E. Callaway
Dr. Ben F. Cameron, Jr.
Mr. 4 Mrs. Douglas W. Cameron
Dr. 4 Mrs. David B. Camp
Harry W. Camp
Thomas A. Camp 4 Ms. Karen A.
Pitts
Mrs. Laura Fenner Campbell
Tom C. Campbell
John D. Canale, Jr.
John D. Canale III
Rev. J. Daryl Canfill
Albert E. Carpenter, Jr.
Mr. 4 Mrs. W. Plack Carr, Jr.
Mr. 4 Mrs. Jesse L. Carroll, Jr.
Louis L. Carruthers
Rev. Thomas H. Carson, Jr.
Charles C. Cauttrell, Jr.
Rev. Walter W. Cawthorne
Rt. Rev. Frank S. Cerveny
Dr. 4 Mrs. David A. Chadwick
Pierre R. Chalaron
Mr. 4 Mrs. Roland J. Champagne
Mr. 4 Mrs. William G. Champlin
Jr.
George L. Chapel
Horn. & Mrs. Chester C. Chattin
J. D. Picksley Cheek
Rev. Canon C. Judson Child, Jr.
Mr. 4 Mrs. Stuart R. Childs
Dr. 4 Mrs. John Chipman
Mr. 4 Mrs. O. Beirne Chisolm
Mr. & Mrs. Arthur B. Chitty, Jr.
George W. Chumbley
Rt. Rev. Roger H. Cilley
Thomas A. Claiborne
TOP CLASSES IN OPERATION
By Percentage
TASK FORCE
ACADEMY:
Class
Agent
%
Dollars
1911
1916
1925
1915
1917
1922
W. Porter Ware
DuVal Cravens
W. Porter Ware
40
38
35
33
33
33
$ 310
1,050
1,937
1,030
2,573
1,585
(38 classes showed percentage increases ove
previous year and 40 classes showed dollar
rthe
ncreases.)
COLLEGE:
Class
Agent
%
Dollars
1920
1928
1929
1917
1927
Quintard Joyner
John Crawford
William Schoolfield
The Rev. H. N. Tragitt
Ralph Speer
72
63
59
46
44
$ 3,430
7,974
13,228
1,365
3,650
(19 classes showed percentage increa
year and 34 classes showed dollar inc
r previous
)
Mr. 4 Mrs. James C. Clapp
Mr. 4 Mrs. James P. Clark
Mr. 4 Mrs. Ross B. Clark II
George G. Clarke
Dr. Henri deS. Clarke
Rev. 4 Mrs. Kenneth E. Clarke
Dr. 4 Mrs. William E. Clarkson
Dr. 4 Mrs. Wade M. Cline
Dr. John M. Coats IV
Mr. 4 Mrs. Clarence E. Cobbs
Mrs. John H. Cobbs
Mr. 4 Mrs. Nicholas H. Cobbs, Ji
Dr. 4 Mrs. William G. Cobey
Milton C. Coburn
Steven K. Cochran
Emory Cocke
Mrs. Arthur C. Cockett
Carl H. Cofer, Jr.
Rev. Cuthbert W. Colbourne
Mr. 4 Mrs. Bayard M. Cole
John S. Collier
Dr. 4 Mrs. A. C. Collins
Very Rev. David B. Collins
Leighton H. Collins
Mrs. Rupert M. Colmore, Jr.
Mr. 4 Mrs. Ledlie W. Conger, Jr.
Dr. David C. Conner
Charles D. Conway
Lt. Col. 4 Mrs. Peyton E. Cook
Rev. Richard R. Cook
William H. Coon, Jr.
George P. Cooper
Miss Lorayne H. Corcoran
James F. Corn, Jr.
Henry C. Cortes, Jr.
Dr. H. Brooks Cotten
Mr. & Mrs. Robert E. Couch
Barring Coughlin
Mrs. Francis J. Craig
Mr. 4 Mrs. Donald R. Crane, Jr.
Mr. 4 Mrs. DuVal G. Cravens, Ji
Mr. 4 Mrs. J. Fain Cravens
Mr. & Mrs. Rutherford R.
Cravens II
Mr. 4 Mrs. Walter J. Crawford
Randolph U. Crenshaw
Mr. 4 Mrs. John B. Crockford,
Sr.
Edward B. Crosland
Jackson Cross
Rev. John W. Cruse.
Mr. 4 Mrs. Spencer L. Cullen
Dr. 4 Mrs. Richard K. Cureton
Rev. 4 Mrs. George Curt
Dr. 4 Mrs. Joseph D. Cushman
Mr. 4 Mrs. Richard L. Dabney
Herbert Talbot D'Alemberte
Rev. 4 Mrs. David R. Damon
Rev. Hal S. Daniell, Jr.
Count Darling III
Edward H. Darrach, Jr.
Fred K. Darragh, Jr.
Mr. 4 Mrs. William R. Davidson
Mr. 4 Mrs. Latham W. Davis
Mr. 4 Mrs. Maclin P. Davis, Jr.
Daniel S. Dearing
Mr. 4 Mrs. Edmond T. deBary
Geralrf=L. DeBlois
Mr. 4 Mrs. Bertram C. Dedman
Mr. 4 Mrs. Lloyd J. Deenik
J. Stovall de Graffenried
Michael J. DeMarko
George S. Dempster
CDR Everett J. Dennis
Bruce S. Denson
Joseph B. deRoulhac
Mr. 4 Mrs. Frederick D. DeVall III
Col. Earl H. Devanny, Jr. (d)
Mr. 4 Mrs. Robert V. Dewey
Rev. Canon James P. DeWolfe, Jr.
Dr. 4 Mrs. Phillip W. DeWolfe
Brooke S. Dickson
Rt. Rev. & Mrs. R. Earl Dicus
Dr. Fred F. Diegmann
Dr. 4 Mrs. J. Homer Dimon III
Dr. Richard B. Donaldson
Mr. 4 Mrs. William T. Donoho,
Jr.
Th
E. Doss III
Mrs. Walter B. Dossett
J. Andrew Douglas
Dr. 4 Mrs. John S. Douglas, Jr.
Mr. 4 Mrs. W. R. Dowlen
Cole Downing
David S. DuBose
D. St. Pierre DuBose
Mrs. Wolcott K. Dudley
Edmund B. Duggan
Dr. 4 Mrs. E. D. Dumas
Mr. 4 Mrs. Bruce C. Dunbar
Mr. 4 Mrs. Prescott N. Dunbar
Daniel D. Duncan III
Rt. Rev. James L. Duncan
John H. Duncan
Dr. Ensor R. Dunsford, Jr.
Joe W. Earnest
Mr. & Mrs. Redmond R. Eason
Jr.
Benjamin C. Eastwood
Mr. 4 Mrs. Everett Eaves, Jr.
Mr. 4 Mrs. John L. Ebaugh, Jr.
Mr. 4 Mrs. John C. Eby
Mrs. Florence A. Edwards
B. Purnell Eggleston
Dr. DuBose Egleston
Dr. 4 Mrs. Roy O. Elam
Rt. Rev. 4 Mrs. Hunley A.
Elebash
Mrs. Douglas F. Elliott
George B. Elliott
Dr. 4 Mrs. Eric H. Ellis
Mr. 4 Mrs. John E. M. Ellis
Stanhope E. Elmore, Jr.
William B. Elmore
Mr. 4 Mrs. Paul E. Engsberg
A. L. Entwistle
Fred W. Erschell, Jr.
Louis S. Estes
Dr. 4 Mrs. James T. Ettien
Robert F. Evans
Mr. 4 Mrs. Gordon O. Ewin
Mr. 4 Mrs. John M. Ezzell
Rev. 4 Mrs. Frank F. Fagan III
Clayton H. Farnham
Roger V. Farquhar (d)
Mr. 4 Mrs. Darwin S. Fenner
James H. Fenner
H. Rugeley Ferguson
Joseph E. Ferguson, Jr.
Mr. 4 Mrs. Ralph N. Ferguson
Mrs. Evalyn S. Fields
Dr. 4 Mrs. Andrew G. Finlay, Jr.
Hon. Kirkman G. Finlay, Jr.
Mr. 4 Mrs. Robert E. Finley
Mrs. P. H. Fitzgerald
Frederick A. Fletcher
Mr. 4 Mrs. Charles V. Flowers
Maj. 4 Mrs. Thomas W. Floyd
Rev. James Harold Flye
Dr. 4 Mrs. Thomas B. Flynn
Mr. 4 Mrs. Harry D. Foard
Mr. 4 Mrs. Louis R. Fockele
Rt. Rev. 4 Mrs. William H.
Folwell
Dr. 4 Mrs. Charles W. Foreman
Dudley C. Fort
Robert W. Fort
Mr. 4 Mrs. Halcott P. Foss
John R. Foster
Mr. 4 Mrs. Robert B. Foster, Jr.
J. Russell Frank
Mr. 4 Mrs. Felder J. Frederick III
Judson Freeman
Mr. 4 Mrs. Sollace M. Freeman
Frederick R. Freyer, Jr.
Mr. 4 Mrs. G. Archer Frierson II
Robert L. Gaines
Kent Gamble
Hugh E. Gardenier III
Mr. 4 Mrs. Andrew W. Gardner
Rev. Thomas G. Garner, Jr.
Charles P. Garrison
Dr. 4 Mrs. Thomas A. Gaskin III
John Gass
Ian F. Gaston
Rt. Rev. W. Fred Gates, Jr.
Mr. 4 Mrs. James W. Gentry
Mr. 4 Mrs. Norman L. George, Jr.
Lt. Col. 4 Mrs. W. A. Gericke
Rev. John M. Gessell
Mr. 4 Mrs. James D. Gibson
Dr. & Mrs. Walter Bruce Gibson
Dr. 4 Mrs. Gilbert F. Gilchrist
William M. Given, Jr.
Hon. 4 Mrs. Edward L. Gladney,
Jr.
Mr. 4 Mrs. Charles S. Glass
Mr. 4 Mrs. Franklin E. Glass, Jr.
Robert Lee Glenn III
Dr. 4 Mrs. William W. L. Glenn
Harold L. Glover
Rev. 4 Mrs. Mortimer W. Glover
M. Feild Gomila
Romualdo Gonzalez
Dr. Charles E. Goodman, Jr.
Mr. 4 Mrs. Thomas McB.
Goodrum
Rev. 4 Mrs. Mercer Goodson
Mr. 4 Mrs. Elmer C. Goodwin,
Jr.
Mrs. George M. Goodwin
Mr. 4 Mrs. Richard M. Goodwin
Jack E. Gordon, Jr.
Rt. Rev. Harold C. Gosnell
Henry V. Graham
Dr. Courtland P. Gray
Illustrations for the list of donors
are from this year's Sewanee Summer
Music Center.
David W. Gray
Rt. Rev. Sc Mrs. Duncan M.
Gray, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. J. Dawson F. Gray
Rev. Duff Green
Dr. Sc Mrs. Paul A. Green, Jr.
R. Duff Green
Lt. Col. Sc Mrs. Stephen D.
Green
Dr. & Mrs. Thomas H. Greer, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Russell C. Gregg
Rev. Edward Meeks Gregory .
Rev. & Mrs. William A. Griffin
Mr. & Mrs. William B. Griffin, Jr.
Mr. Sc Mrs. Donald W. Griffis
James W. Grisard
T. Beverly Grizzard
Dr. William B. Guenther
Philip H. Gwynn
J. Conway Hail
Mr. & Mrs. Stacy A. Haines, Jr.
Winfield B. Hale, Jr.
Rev. George J. Hall
Jerome G. Hall
Dr. & Mrs. John D. Hall
Mr. & Mrs. O. Morgan Hall
Dr. Thomas B. Hall
Mr. & Mrs. Charles D. Ham
Van Eugene G. Ham
Mr. & Mrs. William J. Hamilton,
Jr.
Mr. Sc Mrs. George Hoover
Hamler
Burton B. Hanbury, Jr.
Rev. & Mrs. Harry W. Hansen
Mr. & Mrs. Shelby T. Harbison
Rev. Durrie B. Hardin
Quintin T. Hardtner, Jr.
Col. Robert P. Hare III
Mr. Sc Mrs. Thomas E. Hargrave
James W. Hargrove
Dr. Sc Mrs. R. Michael Harnett
Rev. Walter Harrelson
Mrs. Eugene O. Harris, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Burwell C. Harrison
Dr. & Mrs. Charles T. Harrison
Rev. Edward H. Harrison
Mr. & Mrs. Howard W. Harrison
Mrs. John W. Harrison
Joseph E. Hart, Jr.
Richard M. Hart, Jr.
William B. Harvard, Jr.
William B. Harwell
Dr. William B. Harwell, Jr.
Edwin I. Hatch
Dr. Edwin I. Hatch, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Caldwell L. Haynes,
Jr.
Rt. Rev. E. Paul Haynes
Brian J. Hays
Robert B. Hays, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. John T. Hazel, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Holman Head
Mr. & Mrs. Edward W. Heath
Harold H. Helm
John L. Helm
Smith Hempstone, Jr.
Rev. & Mrs. William D. Henderson
Rev. G. Kenneth G. Henry
Dr. G. Selden Henry
Rt. Rev. Sc Mrs. Willis R. Henton
Rev. W. Fred Herlong
Mr. & Mrs. Harold F. Herring
Dr. & Mrs. Lloyd R. Hershberger
Dr. W. Andrew Hibbert, Jr.
Mrs. James E. Hiers
Rev. & Mrs. Charles A. Higgins
Rev. John W. Hildebrand
Claude M. Hill
Mr. & Mrs. James W. Hill III
Lewis H. Hill III
Henning Hilliard
David R Hillier
Mr. & Mrs. Harvey H. Hillin
Mrs. Benjamin D. Hodges
Mr. Sc Mrs. Billy Hodges
Mr. & Mrs. John C. Hodgkins
Dr. & Mrs. James D. Hodnett
Dr. Sc Mrs. Helmut Hoelzer
Mr. & Mrs. C. Stokely Holland
Robert A. Holloway
Dr. & Mrs. Wayne J. Holman, Jr.
Dr. Wayne J. Holman III
Mrs. A. William Holmberg
Mr. & Mrs. Burnham B. Holmes
Dr. & Mrs. Francis H. Holmes
Miss Sidney Holmes
Very Rev. & Mrs. Urban T.
Holmes
Col. Sc Mrs. William M. Hood
Mr. & Mrs. Elbert Hooper
George W. Hopper
Rev. & Mrs. Jack F. G. Hopper
Col. & Mrs. Harold A. Hornbarger
Mr. & Mrs. Reagan Houston III
Mr. Sc Mrs. Harry C. Howard
Mr. & Mrs. Charles A. Howell III
Mr. & Mrs. Pembroke S. Huckins
Stanton E. Huey, Jr.
C. Joseph Hughes
Dr. Sc Mrs. Herschel Hughes
Stewart P. Hull
Mr. Sc Mrs. Bruce 0. Hunt
Charles W. Hunt
Dr. Warren H. Hunt III
Dr. & Mrs. William B. Hunt
Robert J. Hurst
Robert C. Hynson
Mr. & Mrs. J. Addison Ingle
Harold E. Jackson
Dr. Harold P. Jackson
Lt. Col. & Mrs. John E. Jarrell
Mr. & Mrs. Carl G. Jockusch
David C. Johnson
Mr. & Mrs. Fletcher G. Johnson
Mr. & Mrs. John T. Johnson
Mr. & Mrs. Mark T. Johnson
Mr. & Mrs. Maurice D. S. Johnson
Richard M. Johnson
Mr. & Mrs. John A. Johnston
Rt. Rev. & Mrs. Everett H. Jones
George W. Jones III
Grier P. Jones
Dr. & Mrs. J. Ackland Jones
Dr. & Mrs. Milnor Jones
Rev. & Mrs. Monte Jones
Vernon M. Jones
Rt. Rev. William A. Jones
Dr. R. O. Joplin
Dr. John C. Jowett
Mr. & Mrs. Quintard Joyner
R. Critchell Judd
Rev. & Mrs. A. DuBose Juhan
K
Mr. & Mrs. Robert M. Kauffman
Mr. & Mrs. Frank Hugh Kean, Jr.
Richard D. Keller
C. Richard Kellermann
Mr. & Mrs. Francis Kellermann
Rev. Joseph L. Kellermann
William E. Kelley
Lt. Gen. & Mrs. William E. Kepne
Dr. Sc Mrs. C. Briel Keppler
Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth H. Kerr
Mr. & Mrs. Marion M. Kerr
Chap. (Capt.) Charles L. Keyser
Rev. Sc Mrs. Charles E. Kiblinger
Oscar M. Kilby
Mr. & Mrs. Charles Kildgore
Mr. & Mrs. George A. Kimball, Jr.
Dr. Edward B. King
Mr. Sc Mrs. James A. King, Jr.
Samuel C. King, Jr.
John G. Kirby
Mr. Sc Mrs. Reynold M.
Kirby-Smith, Jr.
Will P. Kirkman
Miss Florida Kissling
Mr. & Mrs. Lowry F. Kline
Capt. Sc Mrs. Wendell F. Kline
Mr. & Mrs. Ralph W. Kneisly
Harwood Koppel
Mr. Sc Mrs. James P. Kranz, Jr.
Dr. Bruce M. Kuehnle
Stanley P. Lachman
Kenneth R. Lacy
Mr. & Mrs. Ralph Laine
J. Payton Lamb
Very Rev. & Mrs. Richard T.
Lambert
Dr. William A. Lambeth, Jr.
Dr. Sc Mrs. Robert S. Lancaster
Mr. & Mrs. Duncan M. Long
Mr. Sc Mrs. S. LaRose
Erwin D. Latimer III
Rev. John A. Lawrence
Mr. & Mrs. Beverly R. Laws
G. W. Leach, Jr.
Robert Leach, Jr.
Thomas A. Lear
Mr. & Mrs. L. Valentine Lee, Jr.
Lewis Swift Lee
Scott J. Lee
W. Sperry Lee
Miss Katherine Lesslie
Dr. Robert H. Lewis
Mr. & Mrs. Tandy G. Lewis
Rev. & Mrs. Stiles B. Lines
Dr. & Mrs. David A. Lockhart
Mr. & Mrs. Henry W. Lodge
Dr. & Mrs. Samuel Logan
Palmer R. Long
Alexander P. Looney
Douglass R. Lore
Prof. & Mrs. Philip J. Lorenz
Dr. & Mrs. James Lowe
Mrs. John Marvin Luke (d)
Mrs. William V. Luker
Dr. & Mrs. Hope Henry Lumpkin,
Jr.
Harris G. Lyman
Dr. Sc Mrs. Howell J. Lynch
Mr. Sc Mrs. George L. Lyon, Jr.
Rev. Arthur L. Lyon-Vaiden
Mrs. Evelyn K. Lyon-Vaiden
M
Mr. & Mrs. Jerry L. Mabry
Marion S. MacDowell
Kenneth A. MacGowan, Jr.
Fleet F. Magee
Miss Susan A. Magette
Mr. & Mrs. Shirley Majors
Rev. & Mrs. Frank B. Mangum
Mr. & Mrs. Duncan Y. Manley
V. Wesley Mansfield III
Dr. John H. Marchand, Jr.
Mrs. Norval Marr
Dr. & Mrs. Frank B. Marsh
Mr. & Mrs. Thad N. Marsh
Mr. & Mrs. M. Lee Marston
Dr. & Mrs, Benjamin F. Martin
Rev. Sc Mrs. Franklin Martin
Harvey S. Martin
Mrs. Roger A. Martin
Mr. & Mrs. J. Stevadson Massey
Mrs. Young M. Massey
Mrs. Henry P. Matherne
C.Michael Matkin
Dr. Sc Mrs. Robert M. Maurer
Owen F. McAden
Joseph P. McAllister
W. Duncan McArthur, Jr.
Joe David McBee
Ralph H. McBride
Mr. Sc Mrs. Clarence McCall
Mr. ■& Mrs. Guy W. McCarty, Jr.
Dr. Mark R. McCaughan
r Paul S. McConnell
Mrs. J. Brian McCormick
Hunter McDonald, Jr.
Mrs. William McDonald, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs, James M. McDuff
Lt. Col. & Mrs. J. Russell McElroy,
Jr.
James L. C. McFaddin, Jr.
Miss Maury McGee
Ralph W. McGee
W. Farris McGee
Dr. H. Coleman McGinnis
F. K. McGowan
Mr. & Mrs. Earl M. McGowin
Mr. & Mrs. Lee McGriff III
Ch. (Maj.) John R. McGrory, Jr.
Rev. William N. McKeachie
Thomas M. McKeithen
Dr. W. Shands McKeithen, Jr.
William P. McKenzie
Dr. Sc Mrs. Robert M. McKey
James T. McKinstry
David F. McNeeley
Douglass McQueen, Jr.
Col. Sc Mrs. Eugene B. Mechling.Jr.
Samuel W. Meek, Jr.
Joe S. Mellon
Robert S. Mellon
Mr. Sc Mrs. George R. Mende
Mr. Sc Mrs. Albert Menefee, Jr.
Dr. & Mrs. Andrew Meulenberg, Jr.
Rev. Fred L. Meyer
Dr. Francis G. Middleton
Mr. & Mrs. Arnold L. Mignery
Alfred Miller III
Dr. George John Miller
David P. Milling
Hendree B. Milward
John V. Miner
Lucian W. Minor
Rev. & Mrs. Donald G. Mitchell, Jr.
George P. Mitchell
Mr. Sc Mrs. I. S. Mitchell III
Mr. & Mrs. James B. Montague
James W. Moody, Jr.
Theodric E. Moor, Jr.
A. Brown Moore
Arnold C. Moore
Dr. & Mrs. Maurice A. Moore'
Mrs. Robert A. Moore
Rev. Robert J. Moore
Rev. W. Joe Moore
Mr. Sc Mrs. William W. Moore
Lynn C. Morehouse
Joseph P. Morgan
Ms. Mary H. Morgan
Mr. Sc Mrs. William C. Morrell
Mrs. Frederick M. Morris
Hon. & Mrs. Martin E. Morris
Dr. Sc Mrs. William H. Morse
Mr. & Mrs. James E. Mulkin
Rev. J. Gary Mull
Mr. & Mrs. Charles G. Mullen, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Robert B. Murfree
Daniel B. Murray
Rt. Rev. George M. Murray
Mr. & Mrs. Robert M. Murray, Jr.
Edward E. Murrey, Jr.
Dr. W. Harwell Murrey
deRosset Myers
Rev. Henry L. H. Myers
Tedfred E Myers III
N
Edward C. Nash
William B. Nauts
Hon. James N. Neff
Mr. Sc Mrs. Arthur W. Nelson, Jr.
Miss Elspia Nelson
Paul N. Neville
Miss Margaret E. Newhall
Mr. Sc Mrs. Hubert A. Nicholson
Mr. & Mrs. John H. Nicholson
Francis C. Nixon
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas P. Noe, Jr.
Hayes A. Noel, Jr.
Mr. Sc Mrs. Charles E. Norton
Dr. & Mrs. David M. Nowell
Dr. & Mrs. William R. Nummy, Sr.
Mrs. James C. Oates
Glynn Odom
L. W. Oehmig
Mrs. L. W. Oehmig
Rev. Sc Mrs. Dwight E. Ogier, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Henry Oliver
Rev. John Shunsaku Ono
Dr. George E. Orr
Mr. & Mrs. Park H. Owen, Jr.
Dr. Sc Mrs. Hubert B. Owens
Joseph A. Owens II
Dr. & Mrs. James M. Packer
Mr. Sc Mrs. J. Allen Pahmeyer
Mr. & Mrs. Sidney L. Paine
William T. Parish, Jr.
Frank H. Parke
Mr. Sc Mrs. J. D. Parker
Samuel E. Parr, Jr.
Ben H. Parrish
Mr. & Mrs. Douglas D. Paschall
James E. Patching, Jr.
James E. Patching III
C. Louis Patten
Rev. & Mrs. William T. Patten
Dr. Sc Mrs. Manning M. Pattillo, Jr.
Lt. Col. (M.D.) 4 Mrs. John P.
Patton
Mr. & Mrs. William O. Patton, Jr.
Dr. John G. Paty, Jr.
Mrs. Francis C. Payne
John W. Payne III
William G. Pecau
Frank D. Peebles, Jr.
Mr. Sc Mrs. John G. Penson
Rev. & Mrs. Henry K. Perrin
Mrs. Howard K. Perrin
Mr. & Mrs. David C. Perry
Mr. & Mrs. James Y. Perry
Robert O. Persons, Jr.
Stanley D. Petter
Mr. Sc Mrs. James R. Pettey
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas P. Peyton III
Mr. Sc Mrs. P. Henry Phelan, Jr.
Donald T. W. Phelps
William M. Phillips
Joseph N. Pierce
Mrs. Raymond C. Pierce
Dr, Sc Mrs. Robert B. Pierce
Mr. Sc Mrs. L. B. Pinkerton
Dr. Rex Pinson, Jr.
Robert H. Pitner
Dr. & Mrs. Roland T. Pixley
Charles A. Poelnitz, Jr.
Rev. Thomas R. Polk
Mrs. Russell Stokes Ponder
George M. Pope
Thomas H. Pope, Jr.
W. Haigh Porter
Edgar L. Powell
Mr. Sc Mrs. Fitzhugh K. Powell
Dr. & Mrs. Sam M. Powell, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Richard L. Powers
Mr. Sc Mrs. James B. Pratt
Mrs. Julius A. Pratt
Frederick F. Preaus
Dr. & Mrs. Thomas H. Price
Lewis D. Pride (d)
Dr. Sc Mrs. William M. Priestley
Mr. Sc Mrs. P. Lee Prout
John W. Prunty
Mrs. Charles McD. Puckette
Dr. S. Elliott Puckette, Jr.
Dr. & Mrs. Stephen E. Puckette
Mr. Sc Mrs. Robert Pugh
Century C • (continued)
Q
Mr & Mrs.
Ill
R
Dr. & Mrs. Bayard S. Tynes
Mr. & Mrs. David C. Tyrrell
Brace A. Racheter
Jesse D. Rag.-.ri
James B. Ragland
Wynne Ragland
Mr. & Mrs. Hcinrich J. Ramm
Mr. & Mrs. Allan R. Ramsay
James R. Rash, Jr.
Rev. Robert E. Ratelie
Joseph M. Rector III
Mr. & Mrs. Edward D. Reeves
Mr. & Mrs. Carl F. Reitl
Rev. & Mrs. Roddcy Reid, Jr.
Stephen H. Reynolds
Dr. Edmund Rhe'li/Jr. '
Mr. & Mrs. Robert P. Rhoads
Mr. & Mrs. Shirley P. Rhoton
Mr. & Mrs. Robert L. Rice
Mr. & Mrs. Rutleclge St. John Rii
Mr. & Mrs. Charles W. Richards
. Henry B. Richardson,
. & Mr;
J. Bri
Rich;.
Miss Elizabeth J. Ricketts
Mr. & Mrs. Arthur J. Riggs
Mr. & Mrs. George P. Riley
Mr. & Mrs, A. Blevins Rittenberry
Edward G. Roberts, Jr.
James K. Roberts
Mr. & Mrs. Robert Roberts, Jr.
William E. Roberts
Morgan M. Robertson
Rev. & Mrs. V. Gene Robinson
Franklin E. Robson
William F. Roeder, Jr.
Rt. Rev. & Mrs. David S. Rose
Thomas A. Rose, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Norman L. Rosenthal
Charles Alan Ross
Mr. & Mrs. Charles R. Ross
Mr. & Mrs. John W. Ross, Sr.
Paul D. Ross
Maj. & Mrs. Jack A. Royster, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Rollins S. Rubsamen
Peter M. Rudolph
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas S. Rue
William H. Rue, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. P. A. Rushton
Dr. Howard H. Russell, Jr.
Col. & Mrs. John W. Russey
Mr. & Mrs. Bryan M. Rust
Mr. & Mrs. Robert N. Rust III
Thomas L. Rust
Whitson Sadler
Tassey R. Salas
Rev. & Mrs. Edward L. Salmon.Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Charles M. Sample
Mr. & Mrs. Bruce A. Samson
Capt. Edward K. Sanders
James O. Sanders III
Rt. Rev. William E. Sanders
Royal K. Sanford
Lt. Col. & Mrs. William G. Sanford
Mr. & Mrs. F. Tupper Saussy
Mr. & Mrs. G. Flint Sawtelle
Claude M. Scarborough, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. William E. Scheu, Jr.
Mrs. Lorraine B. Schlatter
Alfred C. Schmutzer, Jr.
D. Dudley Schwartz, Jr.
Mrs. Daniel D. Schwartz
James M. Scott
Mrs. William F. Seith
Hon. Armistead I. Selden, Jr.
Dr. & Mrs. John R. Semmer
Mr. & Mrs. V. Pierre Serodino, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Arthur G. Seymour, Jr.
R. P. Shapard, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Vernon Sharp
Mrs. Wiley H. Sharp, Jr.
Dr. & Mrs. William J. Shasteen
Col. Joe H. Sheaxd
Dr. & Mrs. Edwin C. Shepherd
Mr. & Mrs. Alex B. Shipley, Jr.
Rt. Rev. Lemuel B. Shirley
Miss Beatrice E. Shober
Mr. & Mrs. William R. Shuffield
Edgar O. Silver
Mr. & Mrs. Preston M. Simpson
Mrs. Richard H. Simpson
Mrs. James E. Sinclair
J. Noland Singletary
James J. Sirmans
Mr. & Mrs. William H. Skinner
Mr. & Mrs. Robert Sloan
Dr. & Mrs. Carter Smith
Dr. & Mrs. Clyde Smith
Rev. & Mrs. Colton M. Smith III
Dr. & Mrs. Henley J. Smith, Jr.
Dr. & Mrs. Henry W. Smith, Jr.
Dr. Josiah H. Smith
Mr. & Mrs. Lindsay C. Smith
Mrs. Mapheus Smith
Rauland P. Smith
William H. Smith
Rev. William L. Smith, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Orland C. Smitherman
Frederick J. Smythe
H. Lamed Snider
Mr. & Mrs. William K. Snouffer,
Jr.
Dr. Jerry A. Snow
Rev. Charles D. Snowden
Charles D. Snowden, Jr.
J. Morgan Soaper
John C. Solomon
Dr. & Mrs. Arthur L. Speck
Mr. & Mrs. Ralph J. Speer, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Russell L. Speights
Mr. & Mrs. John W. Spence
Mr. & Mrs. J. Boyd Spencer
Mrs. Ruth King Stanford
Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Stansel
Alan B. Steber
Edward M. Steelman, Jr.
Jack W. Steinmeyer
Mr. & Mrs. Jack L. Stephenson
Edgar A. Stewart
Rev. & Mrs. J. Rufus Stewart
Mrs. Marshall B. Stewart
Lt. Col. & Mrs. William C.
Stewart
Dr. William C. Stiefel, Jr.
Very Rev. & Mrs. James Stirling
Mr. & Mrs. Mercer L. Stockell
T. Price Stone
Carl B. Stoneham
Laurence O. Stoney
Mr. & Mrs. Bobby B. Stovall
James R. Stow
Frank G. Strachan
Mr. & Mrs. Fred S. Stradley .
Rev. Roy T. Strainge, Jr.
Rev. & Mrs. Warner A. Stringer,
Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Warner A. Stringer III
Dr. & Mrs. Fletcher S. Stuart
Mrs. R. L. Stuart
Rev. David I. Suellau
Mr. & Mrs. Richard H. Suman
Gerald H. Summers
Luther Swift, Jr.
Joe B. Sylvan
Mr. & Mrs. Paul A. Tate
Paul T. Tate, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. R. Scott Taylor
Mr. & Mrs. Alfred H. Tebault
William E. Terry, Jr.
David C. B. Thames
Thomas A. Thibaut
Mr. & Mrs. Frank Thomas, Jr.
Robert W. Thomas
John C. Thompson
Lawrence F. Thompson
Martin R. Tilson, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. R. Randall Timmons
Mr. & Mrs. Joe S. Tobias, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Ronald E. Tomlin
Allen R. Tomlinson III
Charles E. Tomlinson
Rev. Horatio N. Tragitt, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. William D. Trahan
Rev. William B. Trimble, Jr.
Everett Tucker, Jr.
Joe H. Tucker, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas J. Tucker
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas M. Tucker
Ms. Paulina M. Tull
Mrs. Robert B. Tunstall
Rev. Robert W. Turner III
Webb W. Turner
Rev. Canon William S. Turner
Miss Elizabeth K. Tyndall
XT
Mrs. J. V. Uln
Mrs. Thomas C. Vaugha
Mr. & Mrs. Richard C. \
Ms. Mabel Voyle
w
Mr. & Mrs. Charles W. Wagner
George J. Wagner, Jr.
Karl B. Wagner
Mr. & Mrs. Francis B. Wakefield
III
Ralph F. Waldron, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Frank M. Walker I
Mr. & Mrs. Julian W. Walker, Jr.
Stephen E. Walker
Mr. & Mrs. John N. Wall, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. George W. Wallace
James E. Wallace
Mrs. M. Hamilton Wallace
W. Joseph Wallace, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Webb L. Wallace
Mrs. Ellen W. Wallingford
Mr. & Mrs. J. Rufus Wallingford
Dr. Norman S. Walsh
Mr. & Mrs. Joseph M. Walters
Charles R. Walton
Mr. & Mrs. Samuel B. Walton, Jr.
Howell Ward
Mrs. John C. Ward
Rev. & Mrs. Thomas R. Ward, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. W. Porter Ware
William J. Warfel
Dr. Thomas R. Waring, Jr.
Port
■ Wa
, Jr.
Mrs. Robert J. Warner
Robert J. Warner, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Roger M. Warner
Dr. William S. Warren
Allen H. Watkins
Morgan Watkins, Jr.
Dr. Ben E. Watson
Mr. & Mrs. Edward W. Watson
James F. Watts, Jr.
Dr. & Mrs, Roger A. Way
Capt. Walter T. Weathers, Jr.
Morton M. Webb, Jr.
Rt. Rev. William G. Weinhauer
Dr. Richard B. Welch
Rev. & Mrs. Philip P. Werlein
Mr. & Mrs. Arthur L. West
Mr. & Mrs. Edward H. West IV
Mr. & Mrs. H. Hugh B. Whaley
Mr. & Mrs. Russell H. Wheeler, Jr.
Kyle Wheelus, Jr.
James W. Whitaker
Dr. L. Spires Whitaker
Philip B. Whitaker, Jr.
Thomas P. Whitaker, Jr.
Dr. & Mrs. Frederick R. Whitesell
Mr. & Mrs. Richard B. Wilkens, Jr.
Richard B. Wilkens HI
Mr. & Mrs. G. Steven Wilkerson
Edward J. Williams (d)
Mrs. Edward J. Williams
Mr. & Mrs. Henry P. Williams
Mr. & Mrs. John T. Williams
Michael C. S. Williams
Mr. & Mrs. Pat Williams
Silas Williams, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. W. Lamar Williams
Mr. & Mrs. B. F. Williamson
Mr. & Mrs. Howard Emory Wilson
Mose Wilson
Mr. & Mrs. Waldo Wilson
Mrs. Harry H. Winfield
Dr. & Mrs. Breckenridge W. Wing
Mr. & Mrs. John N. Winterbotham
Rev. & Mrs. Charles L. Winters, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. John M. Winters
Miss Ethel M. Winton
Mrs. John A. Witherspoon
John A. Witherspoon, Jr.
George T. Wood
Mr. & Mrs. Robert H. Wood
Robert R. Wood III
John W. A. Woody, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Robert Worthington
Derril H. Wright
Dr. & Mrs. Bertram Wyatt-Brown
H. Powell Yates
Dr. & Mrs. Harry C. Yeatman
Mr. & Mrs. John H. Yochem
Mrs. Peter D. Young
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas R. Young
Mr. & Mrs. Ronald R
(d) = deceased
OPERATION: TASK FORCE FOR ACADEMY
(Unrestricted Giving Only)
Fiscal Year 1977-78
Year
1900
1901
1902
1903
1904
1905
1906
1907
1908
1909
1910
1911
1912
1913
1914
1915
1916
1917
1918
1919
1920
1921
1922
1923
1924
1925
1926
1927
1928
1929
1930
1931
1932
1933
1934
1935
1936
1937
1938
1939
1944
1945
1946
1947
1948
1949
1950
1951
1952
1953
1954
1955
1956
1957
1958
1959
1960
1961
1962
1963
1964
1965
1966
1967
1968
1969
1970
1971
1972
1973
1974
1975
1976
1977
1978
Name of Agent
W. Porter Ware
No. in No. of
Class Donors
DuVal Cravens
Louie M. Phillips
J. Fain Cravens
Rutherford H. Crav
John W. Spence
Allen W. Spearman
Charles H. Randall
George F. Wheelock
Robertson McDonald
Richard Livermore
Morton Langstaff
Edward M. Overton
W. Farris McGee
Robert P. Hare IV
Stewart P. Walker
John Adams
Thomas Grizzard
The Rev. Fred Gough
Louis Walker
Albert Carpenter, Jr.
O. H. Eaton, Jr.
Payne Breazeale III
John R. Alexander
Monte Skidmore
Brooke S. Dickson
Rusty Morris
Joseph E. Gardner
Robert T. Douglass
B. Boyd Bond
John Gay
B. Humphreys McGee
John F. Gillespy
Tedfred Myers III
1,030
1,050
2,573
50
1,550
1,810
1,500
1,585
925
414
1,937
1,110
600
165
0
587
450
715
0
625
1,435
525
125
425
400
1,190
1,225
50
725
1,415
1,424
1,435
31,385
2,280
360
335
565
210
135
100
370
800
315
145
1,110
1,182
1,160
735
200
621
427
155
700
359
606
105
10
120
CORPORATIONS, FOUNDATIONS AND GROUPS
Since only individual donors belong to the gift societies
(Chancellor's Society, Vice-Chancellor's and Trustees* tCM
Society, Quintard Society, Century Club), this list includes
corporate contributors of any amount. Many have
matched gifts from individuals.
Aetna Life & Casualty Company
Ahsahata Press
American National Bank & Trust
Company
American Telephone &
Telegraph Company
American United Life Insurance
Company
Aminoil USA, Inc.
AMOCO Foundation, Inc.
Arthur Anderson & Co. Found' n
Armstrong Cork Company
ARO Employee Charities Trust
Associated Parishes, Inc.
Association of Episcopal Colleges
Austin Peay State University
B & G Supply Store
The Benwood Foundation, Inc.
Bethlehem Steel Corporation
Sarah Campbell Blaffer Found'n
Blount Foundation, Inc.
Bowater Southern Paper
Corporation
Bryson Construction Co., Inc.
Burlington Industries Foundation
Leo Burnett Company, Inc.
Carnation Company Found'n
Central Data Processing Service
Champion International Found'n
Chattanooga Boys' Choir
Cheeselovers, International
Chevron U.S.A. Inc.
Chicago Title and Trust Company
Chinese Information Service
Chubb & Son, Inc.
Citibank
The Citizens and Southern Fund
Coca-Cola Company
Columbia Gas Transmission
Corporation v
Combustion Engineering, Inc.
The Community Council— Univ.
of the South (8)
Connecticut General Insurance
Company
Connecticut Mutual Life
Container Corporation of
America Foundation
C.T.H. Publications
Cumberland Presbyterian Church
Jack Daniels Distillery
Decherd Presbyterian Church
Delta Air Lines Foundation
Development Office Staff
Digital Equipment Corporation
Dow Chemical Company
Dun & Bradstreet Foundation,
Jessie Ball duPont Religious,
Charitable and Educational
Fund
Earth Resources Company
Emerald-Hodgson Hospital
Auxiliary
Equitable Life Assorance Society
of the United States
Exxon Education Foundation
Exxon USA Foundation
Farmers National Bank
Firestone Tire & Rubber
Company
First & Merchants National Bank
First National Foundation, Inc.
Ford Motor Company Fund
Franklin County Bank
Franklin County Publishing Co.
Charles A. Frueauff Found'n, Inc.
Frank E. Gannett Newspaper
Foundation, Inc.
General Dynamics
General Electric Foundation
General Shale Products
Corporation
Charles M. and Mary D. Grant
Foundation
Gulf Oil Foundation of Delaware
H
J. J. Haines & Co., Inc.
Hamico, Inc.
Hebrew Evangelization Society,
Inc.
H. G. Hill Company
Household Finance Corporation
ICI Americas Incorporated
INA Foundation
INCO, Ltd.
Institute for Scientific
Information
Institute for the Study of
Human Knowledge .
International Business Machine
Corporation
International Paper Company
Foundation
Irving One Wall Street
Foundation, Inc.
Jefferson-Pilot Corporation
Johns-Manville Fund, Inc.
Johnson & Higgins of Georgia,
Johnson & Higgins of Texas, Inc.
Eugenie & Joseph Jones Family
Foundation
Pacesetters
Pelham Valley Ruritan Club
Pennzoil Company
Pfizer Incorporated
Pittsburgh Plate Glass Found'n
Price Waterhouse Foundation
Provident Life & Accident
Insurance Company
C. B. Ragland Company
Richardson's Plumbing- Air
Conditioning, Inc.
Roberts Charitable Trust
Saga Food Service, Inc.
St. Andrew's School
St. Luke's Journal
St. Peter's Hospital Found'n, Inc.
Salomon Brothers Found'n, Inc.
Joseph E. Seagram & Sons Inc.
Sears-Roebuck Foundation
Sewanee Crafts Fair
Sewanee P. T. A.
Sewanee Woman's Club
Sigma Phi Gamma International
Sorority
South Carolina National Bank
Southern Natural Gas Company
Southern New England
Telephone
Squibb Corporation
Stone & Webster, Inc.
Strickland Paper Company, Inc.
Suderman & Young Towing
Company, Inc.
Algernon Sydney Sullivan
Foundation
Teagle Foundation, Inc.
Tennessee Independent College.'
Fund:
TICF (continued)
A.G.T. Furniture
Distributors, Inc.
ANCO Corp. (Appalachian
National Life Insurance
Company)
Abemathy -Thomas
Engineering Company
Acme Boot Company, Inc.
(Northwest Industries
Foundation, Inc.)
Airco, Inc. (ICFA)
Albert Pick, Jr. Fund
Allied Chemical Found'n
Allied Mills, Inc.
Alcoa Foundation
American Air Filter Co. Inc.
American Brands, Inc.
(ICFA)
American Enka Company
(Akzona Foundation)
American Greetings Corp.
American Telephone &
Telegraph Company
Arthur Andersen & Co.
Arthur N. Morris Found'n
Inc.
Athens Paper Box Company
Austin Company, Inc.
Avco Aerostructures Division
Bailey, Mr. Hope, Jr.
Baird-Ward Printing Co. Inc.
Bank of Commerce
(Morristown)
Bank of Knox vi lie
Beecham Laboratories
R. Jr.
Beels Banking Company
Belz Enterprises
Bemis Company, Inc.
Bendix Corporation
Automotive Aftermarket
Benwood Foundation
Berkline Corp. (Popkin
Fund)
Billboard Publications, Inc.
Borden Foundation, Inc.
(ICFA)
Bowater Southern Paper Corp
Braid Electric Company
Brock Candy Company
Brown Stove Works, Inc.
TICF (continued)
Burlington Industries
Foundation
CBI Nuclear Company
Cain-Sloan Company
Carrier Corporation
Foundation, Inc.
Central Soya Company, Inc.
Chapman Chemical Company
Chattanooga Federal
Savings & Loan Assn.
Chattem Drug & Chemical
Co. (Hamico, Inc.)
Choctaw, Inc.
Chuck Hutton Chevrolet Co.
Cities Service Foundation
Citizens Bank (Carthage)
Citizens Bank (Elizabeth ton )
City Bank & Trust Co.
(McMinnville)
City & County Bank of
Knox County
Cleo Wrap Corporation
Cleveland National Bank
Coca-Cola Bottling Works of
Jackson, Inc.
Coca-Cola Company
Coca-Cola Bottling Co.
(Memphis)
Colonial Pipeline Company
Columbia Herald Co., Inc.
Combustion Engineering,
Commerce Union Bank of
Memphis
Commercial & Industrial
Bank (Memphis)
Connecticut Mutual Life
Insurance Co. (ICFA)
Consolidated Aluminum
Corporation
Container Corporation of
America
Continental Corporation
Foundation
Conwood Foundation
D. M. Steward Mfg. Co.
Daniel Foundation
Dart Industries, Inc.
Davis, Mr. Charles B.
Davis-Newman, Inc.
Dealers Warehouse Corp.
SCHOOL OF THEOLOGY GIVING BY DIOCESE
1977-78
James S. Kemper Foundation
No. of
No. of
Dollars
Kidder Peabody Foundation
Korean Information Office
Diocese
Alum
Donors
%
Unrestricted
Restricted
L
Alabama
58
11
19
$ 1,440
$ -
Arkansas
27
3
11
60
15
Lancaster Associates
Atlanta
65
17
26
1,564
5,197
Marjorie P. Lee Chapel Fund
Liberty Corporation Foundation
Central Florida
28
4
14
85
112
Lodge Manufacturing Company
Central Gulf Coast
28
6
21
685
Dallas
41
4
10
180
—
M
East Carolina
22
4
18
280
—
Florida
39
9
24
555
1,006
Marathon Oil Foundation, Inc.
Martin Marietta Corporation
Georgia
35
3
9
115
100
-
Maritz, Inc.
Kentucky
16
2
13
Massachusetts Mutual Life
Lexington
8
—
—
—
Insurance Co.
Louisiana
58
9
16
580
—
McGill-Queen's University Press
Medusa Corporation
Merck Company Foundation
Mississippi
Missouri
57
10
16
28
900
109
Metropolitan Life Insurance Co.
North Carolina
40
3
8
175
Minor Foundation, Inc.
Northwest Texas
11
3
27
150
Mobil Foundation, Inc.
South Carolina
34
4
12
690
—
William Moennig & Son, Ltd.
Southeast Florida
34
2
6
35
—
Monsanto Fund
Southwest Florida
44
8
18
742
2,083
N
Tennessee
104
37
36
2,014
1,289
Texas
44
7
16
755
1,249
N.C.R. Foundation
Upper South Carolina
39
5
13
695
20
National Aeronautics and Space
West Texas
24
3
13
75
1,188
Administration
Northwest Georgia Mental Health
Western North Carolina
19
2
11
160
~
Center
o
Olin Corporation Charitable
Total
884
162
19
$12,026
$12,268
Outside Owning Dioceses
432
52
12
$ 4,746
$ 678
Trust
Owens-Illinois, Inc.
Grand Total
1,316
214
16
$16,770
$12,946
Corporations and Foundations (continued)
TICF (continued) TICF (continued)
DeFriece, Mr. & Mrs. Frank
W., Jr.
DeLuxe Check Printers
Foundation
DeSoto Hardwood Flooring
Company
DeZurik
• Yan
Dover Corp. /Elevator Div.
Dover Corp. /Ernest Holmes
Division
Dresser Industries, Inc.
(Jeffrey Chain Operations
Ducktown Banking Co.
E.B. Copeland & Co.
E.T. Lowe Publishing Co. Inc
Eaton Corpi
nds Brolhe
jn Ele
■Penc
>mpany
Edn
Empii
Evans Products Company
F.W. Woolworth Cdmpanj
Farrell Construction Co, In
Federal Compress &
Warehouse Company
Federal Express Corp.
Fidelity Federal Savings &
Loan Assn. (Nashville)
Firestone Tire & Rubb
i Bank
Co.
II,.)
. National
nk of
(Knox*
First Ame
Bank
First Citiz
Cleveland
First-Citizens National Bank
(Dyers burg)
First Farmers & Merchants
National Bank
First Federal Savings &
Loan Assn. (Chattanooga)
First Federal Savings & Loan
Assn. (Johnson City)
First Federal Savings & Loan
Assn. (Sevierville)
First National Bank of
Clarksville
First National Bank or
Jackson
First National Bank
(Shelbyville)
First National Bank
(Tullahoma)
First Peoples Bank (Jefferson
City)
First State Bank (Brownsville)
First State Bank
(Maynardville)
First Tennessee Bank
(Johnson City)
First Tennessee Bank, N.A.
(Memphis)
First Trust & Savings Bank
(Clarksville)
Fischer-Evans, Inc.
Fischer Lime & Cement
Company, Inc.
Flenniken Financial Services,
Ford Motor Company Fund
Franklin Clearing House
Bank of College Grove
Harpeth National Bank
Liberty Bank
Williamson County Bank
Franklin Products, Inc.
Frazier, Mr. & Mrs. William K.
Gainey Foundation
Galbraith Laboratories, Inc.
Gallatin Aluminum Products
Company, Inc.
Gary Company, Inc.
Gates Banking & Trust Co.
General Foods Fund, Inc.
General Metal Products Co.
General Mills Foundation
General Motors Corporation
General Oils, Inc.
General Shale Products, Inc.
General Telephone of the
Southeast
George Warren Brown
Foundation
Gilman Paint & Varnish Co.
Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co.
Grace Foundation, Inc.
Graybar Electric Co. Inc.
(ICFA)
Great Dane Trailers
Tennessee, Inc.
Greene County Bank
Guardsmark, Inc.
H. G. Hill Stores, Inc.
H. T. Hackney Company
Hale Brothers, Inc.
Hamilton Bank (Johnson
City)
Hand Foundation, Inc.
Hardwick Stove Co., Inc.
Harris Manufacturing Co.
Harsco Corporation
Holiday Inns, Inc,
Holmberg, Mr. & Mrs.
A. William
Holston Manufacturing Co.
(Chipman-Union, Inc.)
Home Federal Savings &
Loan Assn. (Knoxville)
Ho
■Unii
Hospital Corporation of
America
Houghton Mifflin Company
(ICFA)'
Howren Oil Company
ICFA
Ingram Corporation
International Business
Machines Corp.
International Harvester Co.
International Telephone &
Telegraph Corp.
Interstate Brands Corp.
(Dolly Madison Found'n)
Ira A. Watson Company
J. C. Penney Company, Inc.
J. E. Lutz & Company
JFG Coffee Company
J. M. Smucker Company
J. P. Stevens & Co., Inc.
Jack Daniels Distillery
Jackson Sun, Inc.
Jamison Bedding Co., Inc.
Jefferson County Bank
Jim Reed Chevrolet Co.
John Hancock Mutual Life
Insurance Co. (ICFA)
Johns-Manville Products
Corporation
Johnson City Spring &
Bedding Company
Johnson-Hilliard, Inc.
Johnston Coca-Cola Bottling
Company
Joseph T. Ryerson & Son,
Inc. (Inland Steel-Ryerson
Foundation, Inc.)
K mart Corporation
Kennametal Foundation
Kimberly-Clark Corporation
King, Edward William
(Family)
Kingsport Electric Company,
Inc.
Kingsport Federal Savings &
Loan Assn.
Kingsport Power Company
Kingsport Press, Inc.
Kingsport Publishing Corp.
Kinkead Industries, Inc.
Knoxville News-Sentinel
Koehring Company
Koppers Company Found'n
Kraft, Inc.
Krystal Company
Lancaster, Mr. W. Hanes, Jr.
Laser Systems & Electronics,
Inc.
Leader Federal Savings &
Levi Strauss Foundation
Liberty Mutual Insurance
Companies (ICFA)
Life & Casualty Insurance Co.
Lincoln American Life
Insurance Company
3M Company
Magnavox Co. of Tennessee
Malone, Mr. George A.
Malone & Hyde, Inc.
Marquette Company
Mason & Dixon
Massengill-DeFriece
Foundation, Inc.
Mayer Myers Paper Co.
McCowat-Mercer Press, I
McKee Baking Company
McQuiddy Printing Co.
TICF (continued)
Melrose Foundatio
Memorial Welfare Found'n,
Inc.
Merchants & Planters Bank
(Newport)
Merck Company Found'n
Metler's Crane & Erection
Service, Inc.
Middle Tennessee Bank
Miller's, Inc.
Mississippi Valley Structural
Steel
Mitchell-Powers Hardware
Company, Inc.
Monsanto Industrial
Chemicals Company
Montgomery Ward Found'n
Morrison Molded Fiber
Glass Company
Mountain Empire Bank
Murray Ohio Mfg. Co.
NCR Corp. (Systemedia
Plant)
NLT Corp. (National Life &
Accident Insurance Co.)
Nabisco, Inc.
Nashville Clearing House
Association
Commerce Union Bank
First Tenn* Bank, N.A.
Nashville City Bank
Third National Bank
United American Bank
Nashville Gas Company
Nation Hosiery Mills, Inc.
National Bank of Newport
National Butane Gas Co. Inc.
New York Life Insurance Co.
Newport Federal Savings &
Loan Assn.
North American Royalties,
Northern Bank of Te:
Oakwood Markets, Inc.
Olan Mills, Inc.
Olin Corporation
O'Neal Steel, Inc.
Oscar Mayer & Company
On
i-Illii
PPG Industries Found'n
Park Foundation, Inc.
Park National Bank
Parks-Belk Co. (Clarksville)
Parks-Belk Co. (Johnson
City)
Pet, Inc. Dairy Division
Peterbilt Motors Company
Pidgeon-Thomas Iron Co.
Pilot Oil Corporation
Pinkerton's, Inc. (ICFA)
Pioneer National Title
Insurance
Pizza Hut, Inc. (ICFA)
Plantation Pipe Line Co.
Planters Bank (Maury City)
Power Equipment Company
Procter & Gamble Fund
Provident Life & Accident
Insurance Co.
Prudential Insurance Co. of
America (ICFA)
TICF (continued)
RBI Enterprises
R. J. Reynolds Industries,
Inc.
R. L. Moore Foundation
R. R. Donnelley & Sons Co.
Raytheon Company
Ready-Mix Concrete Co.
Red Kap Industries (Blue
Bell Found'n)
Rentenbach Engineering Co.
Republic Steel Corporation
Robertshaw Controls Co.
Robinson, Mr.&Mrs. James B.
Rockwell International
Rogers Mfg. Co., Inc.
Rohm & Haas Tennessee, Inc.
Ross-Meehan Foundries
Rudy's Farm Company
S. B. Newman Printing Co.
S & H Foundation, Inc.
St. Joe Paper Company
Salant Corporation
Schering-Plough Found'n,
Selox, Inc.
Shulman Family Found'n
Singer Company Found'n
Skyland International Corp.
Smith-Higgins Co., Inc.
South Central Bell
Southern Central Company
Southern Leather Co., Inc.
Southern Railway Company
Southwestern Company
Spencer Wright Industries,
Sperry Univac (Sperry Rand
Corp. )
Standard-Coosa-Thatcher Co.
Standard Motor Parts (ICFA)
Stanley Tools Division
Steiner-Liff Industries
Sterchi Brothers Stores, Inc.
Sterling Drug, Inc. (ICFA)
Stewart Lumber Co., Inc.
Stokely-Van Camp, Inc.
Stowers Machinery Corp.
Strong-Robinette Bag Co.,
Sunbeam Corporation
T. U. Parks Construction Co.
TRW Foundation
Tenneco, Inc.
Tennessee Eastman Co;
Tennessee Farmers Mutual
Insurance Company
Tennessee Metal Culvert Co.
Tennessee Mill & Mine
Supply Company
Tennessee Tanning Co., Inc.
Texas Gas Transmission Corp.
Thomas, Mr. Kent
Thompson & Green
Machinery Co., Inc.
Toevs, Mr. W. F. .
Tom's Foods, Ltd.
Townsend, Mr. Rodman
Tri-State Armature &
Electrical Works, Inc. .
Katny Galhgan
TICF (continued)
Triangle Pacific Cabinet
Corp.
Tuftco Corporation (Card
Foundation)
UPS Foundation
USECO Products
Union-Peoples Bank
United American Bank
(Johnson City)
United American Bank
(Knoxville)
United American Bank of
Memphis
United Cities Gas Company
United Inns, Inc.
Valley Fidelity Bank &
Trust Company
Volunteer State Life
Insurance Company
(Monumental Corp.)
Vulcan Iron Works, Inc.
Vulcan Materials Company
W. L. Hailey & .Co., Inc.
Wall Tube & Metal Products
Company
Wallace Hardware Co., Inc.
Watson Foundation, Inc.
Wayne-Gossard Corp.
Werthan Foundation
Western Electric Co., Inc.
White Rose Rental Laundry
White Stores, Inc.
William L. Bonnell Co., Inc.
Williams Optical Laboratory,
Inc.
Texas Eastern Transmission Corp.
Thorndike, Doran, Paine &
Lewis, Inc.
TIME, Incorporated
Traders National Bank
u
Union Camp Corporation
United States Court of Appeais
United Technologies
United Presbyterian Church of
the U.S.A.
United Virginia Bankshares
Les Presses de 1'Universite du
Quebec
University of Missouri-Columbia
University of North Carolina
University of the South
University of Toronto Press
w
Watson Funeral Home
Lettie Pate Whitehead Found'n,
V. R. Williams & Company
Winston Leaf Tobacco Company
John M. Wolff Foundation
OTHER INDIVIDUAL DONORS
All who have contributed $1 to $99 to the University
of the South
a, y%
Rev. & Mrs. Richard T. Abbot
Mark A. Abdelnour
Rev. William R. Abstein II
Rev. & Mrs. Stephen W.
Mr. & Mrs. Fred Acree, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Paul H. Adair
Miss Claire E. Adams
Rev. James F. Adams
Mr. & Mrs. Jerry B. Adams
Mrs. Mary Doris Adams
William B. Adams
Mr. & Mrs. Charles R. Adcock
Dr. & Mrs. Kenneth P. Adler
John D. Agricola
Daniel B. Ahlport
David W. Aiken, Jr.
Miss Amy Jean Aikman
Robert E. Aikman
Dr. Bernard H. Ailts
Dr. Victor F. Albright
Mrs. Carroll Storrs Alden
Mrs. Craig Alderman
Rev. Stephen G. Alexander
Mr. & Mrs. W. Paul Alexander
C. Richard Alfred
Charles R. Allen, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Duvall Allen
Dr. & Mrs. E. Stewert Allen
Ms. Eileen R. Allen
Miss Elizabeth Allen
James P. Allen
John B. Allen
Cecil Alligood
Mr. & Mrs. John M. Allin, Jr.
Dr. & Mrs. Fred Allison, Jr.
Mrs. Rebecca M. Allison
William P. Allison
Rev. & Mrs. J. Hodge Alves
Rev. & Mrs. James T. Alves
Miss Bernice E. Anderson
D. Patrick Anderson
James R. Anderson
Mr. & Mrs. Joseph R. E. Anderson
Gale Link
Mr. & Mrs. David E. Babbit
Rev. & Mrs. Harry L. Babbit
W. Alan Babin
Nicholas C. Babson
Mr. & Mrs. Charles W.
Baggenstoss
Herman E. Baggenstoss
Mr. & Mrs. Robert H. Bagley
Mr. & Mrs. S. Scott Bagley
Gilbert S. Bahn
Mrs. R. L. Bailes
Mr. & Mrs. A. B. Bailey
Miss Mary B. Bailey
Maj. & Mrs. Otto C. Bailey
Mrs. Ruth G. Bailey
Rev. & Mrs. Harry B. Bainbridge
III
Dr. & Mrs. Charles 0. Baird
Mr. & Mrs. Archie E. Baker
Mr. & Mrs. Robert Baker
Rev. Leon C. Balch
Mr. & Mrs. John G. Baldwin
Mrs. Martha L. Baldwin.
Mr. & Mrs. Robert C. Balfour III
Mr. & Mrs. Edward R. Ball
Rev. John C. Ball
John W. Ball, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. James B. Banks, Jr.
Rev. John E. Banks, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. J. C. Barfield
Dr. George L. Barker
Mr. & Mrs. David G. Barnes, Jr.
Rev. & Mrs. James M. Barnett
Rev. & Mrs. Lyle S. Barnett
Miss Penelope Barnett
Stephen L. Barnett
Rev. & Mrs. R. James Barnhardt
Robert K. Barnhart
Rev. & Mrs. John M. Barr III
Mr. & Mrs. William M. Barret
Lt. Col. Kenneth L. Barrett, Jr.
Mrs. W. Carey Barrett
Rev. & Mrs. William P. Barrett
Mr. & Mrs. William R. Barron, Jr.
Vernon Milton Anderson
Mr. & Mrs. Paul N. Andress
D. 0. Andrews, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Maximillian
Angerholzer, Jr.
Anonymous (3)
Mr. & Mrs. Arch Aplin, Jr.
Mrs. M. L. Argo
Dr. & Mrs. Donald S. Armentrout
Rev. Moss W. Armistead
Frank H. Amall II
Mr. & Mrs. Joseph H. Arnall
C. Vance Arnold
Mrs. Henry F. Arnold
Dr. & Mrs. Henry F. Arnold, Jr.
Rev. & Mrs. John W. Arrington III
Rev. Leigh ton P. Arsnault
Mr. & Mrs. James B. Askew
Rev. & Mrs. Robert D. Askren
Alex Atkinson
Col. & Mrs. W. C. Atkinson
Rev. & Mrs. E. Rugby Auer
Miss Helen Marie Averett
Rev. Ray H. Averett, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Thorold Avery
Harward M. Barry, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. William E. Barry
Mr. & Mrs. Frank L.
Bartholomew, Jr.
Very Rev. Allen L. Bartlett, Jr.
Rev. & Mrs. Roy C. Bascom
Arthur Bass
Dr. R. Bruce Bass, Jr.
William Kerr Bassett II
Miss Mildred E. Bateman
Miss Barbara J. Bates
Claude L. Batkins
Ms. Dorothy L. Bayme
R. H. Bayme
Mr. & Mrs. Robert S. M.
Beach am
Dr. & Mrs. Terrell Bean
Mr. & Mrs. John E. Bear
Mr. & Mrs. Peter T. Beardsley
Mr. & Mrs. James W. Beasley
Mrs. Troy Beatty, Jr.
Pierre G. T. Beauregard III
Mr. & Mrs. Herman D. Becker
Ms. Mary Louise Beckman
Rev. & Mrs. Peter Beckwith
Albert F. G. Bedinger
Rev. Robert A. Beeland III
Mr. & Mrs. Walter R. Belford
Rev. & Mrs. Hugh O. Bell
Mr. & Mrs. J. Edward Bell, Jr.
Ms. Mildred H. Bellows
Edmund McA. Benchoff
Cleveland K. Benedict
Miss Jennifer K. Benitez
Mr. & Mrs. John A. Benjamin
Dr. & Mrs. Sanders M. Benkwith
Mrs. Betty Ross Bennett
Mrs. Clyde Bennett
Dr. & Mrs. George P. Bennett
Rev. Jack M. Bennett
John R. Bennett
Miss Rebecca Ann Bennett
Samuel H. Bennett
Mr. & Mrs. W. Scott Bennett III
Dr. Willard H. Bennett
Edwin E. Benoist, Jr.
Miss Nancy Benton
Mr. & Mrs. David E. Berenguer, Jr.
H. Bradford Berg
Henry B. Berg
Alan A. Bergeron
Miss Antonina M. Bergher
Ms. Virginia H. Berghofer
Dr. & Mrs. Edmund Berkeley
Dr. & Mrs. Arthur N. Berry
Frank Berryman
Mr. & Mrs. E. Upton Bertaut
Mr. & Mrs. Roger Best
Mr. & Mrs. William Bethea III
Ted B. Bevan
Mr. & Mrs. Julian L. Bibb III
Peyton D. Bibb, Jr.
Dr. Charles A. Bickerstaff
Alan P. Biddle
Mr. & Mrs. Ted R. Bill, Jr.
John H. Billings
Robert A. Binford
Dr. T. R. Birdwell
Dr. & Mrs. George W. Bishop, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Donald L. Bivens
Mr. & Mrs. E. H. Bixler, Jr.
Dr. A. Melton Black
Mr. & Mrs. Nelms Black
Mrs. Ralph P. Black
Robert R. Black
Peter W. Blair
Mr. & Mrs. John L. Blanks
Mrs. Alyce F. Blanton
Capt. Craig V. Bledsoe
Rev. & Mrs. Lee S. Block
William H. Blount, Jr.
Dr. & Mrs. George P. Blundell
Mr. & Mrs. Christopher M.
Boehm
Henry G. Boesch
Mr. & Mrs. Leslie E. Bogan, Jr.
Miss Alice Bogart
Mr. & Mrs. Albert R.
Boguszewski
Mrs. A. W. Bollin, Jr.
John R. Bondurant
Rev. & Mrs. Samuel A. Boney
Lt. Col. & Mrs. John F. Borders
Dr. Carl E. Bosshardt
H. Stuart Bostick
R. Mark Bostick
Mr. St Mrs. Charles M. Boteler, Jr.
& Family
Mr. & Mrs. Jerome T. Bouldin
Mr. & Mrs. Robert I. Bowen
Mrs. Robert M. Bowers
Sam G. Bowling
A. Shapleigh Boyd III
Mr. & Mrs. Lester S. Boyd
Mr. & Mrs, Montague L. Boyd
Col. & Mrs. R. Piatt Boyd, Jr.
Rev. & Mrs. Robert J. Boyd, Jr.
Rev. & Mrs. Alex W. Boyer
Albert Boyle, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. John A. Boyle
Miss Anne Marie Bradford
James A. Bradford
Robert H. Bradford
Douglass M. Bradham, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Dan G. Bradley
Lt. Col. & Mrs. James W.
Bradner III
Thomas H. Bragg
Mr. & Mrs. David H. Brain
Miss Anne E. Brakebill
Mr. & Mrs. W. W. Bralley
Mrs. Martin J. Bram
William F. Brame
Mr. & Mrs. E. A. Branson
Mr. & Mrs. Dy C. Bratina
Mrs. Theodore D. Bratton
Ringland K. Bray
John N. Breazeale
Mr. & Mrs. Robert Brentano
Mr. & Mrs. Edward C. Brewer III
Dr. Lawrence F. Brewster
Rev. & Mrs. Millard H. Breyfogle
Dr. Dick D. Briggs, Jr.
John L. Briggs
Col. & Mrs. Albert S. Britt, Jr.
Mrs. Ruth L. Britt
Dr. & Mrs. James M. Brittain
Mr. & Mrs. Joseph A. Brittain, Jr.
Vance L, Broemel
Mr. & Mrs. David K. Brooks, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Edward H. Brooks
Robert T. Brotherton
William F. Brough
Miss Agatha Brown
Mrs. Bobbie S. Brown
Brockton B. Brown
Mr. & Mrs. Donald S. Brown II
Mr. & Mrs. Frank T. Brown
CDR George E. Brown, Jr.
Hugh C. Brown
Mr. & Mrs. Joseph K. Brown
Kemper W. Brown
Ms. Lisa Y. Brown
Newton A. Brown
Mr. & Mrs. Norborne A. Brown,
Jr.
Roy C. Brown, Jr.
Dr. & Mrs. Stephen F. Brown
Mr. & Mrs. W. Edwin Brown
Mrs. Louise I. A. Browne
G. Barrett Broyles, Jr.
John H. Bruce
Mr. & Mrs. Jeffrey S. Bruner
Charles B. Brush
John P. Bryan, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Carl W. Bryde
Mr. & Mrs. Randall D. Bryson
Mr. & Mrs. Richard A. Bryson, Jr.
Miss V. Anne Bryson
Dr. John C. Buchanan, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Ross W. Buck
Mrs. Stratton Buck
F. Reid Buckley, Sr.
Mr. & Mrs. James L. Budd
Mr. & Mrs. Norman J. Budd
Charles E. Buff
Rev. (Lt. Col.) & Mrs. William R.
Buice
Mr. & Mrs. Dana Bullard
Rev. A. Stanley Bullock, Jr.
Dr. Frederick H. Bunting
Rev. Robert L. Burchell
Mr. & Mrs. Henry S. Burden
Miss Corinne Burg
Mr. & Mrs. Robert W. Burke
Mr. & Mrs. Steven C. Burke
William J. Burnette
Eric G. Burns
James T. Burns
Moultrie B. Burns, Jr.
Rev. & Mrs. Paul Dodd Burns
Rev. Samuel M. Burns
Mr. & Mrs. Jaime Burrell-Sahl
Rt. Rev. & Mrs. G. F. Burrill
James T. Burrill
Dr. & Mrs. Franklin G.
Burroughs, Jr.
Thomas L. Burroughs
Donald H. Burton
Mr. & Mrs. E. Dudley Burwell
Mr. & Mrs. Robert P. Bush, Jr.
James J. Bushnell, Jr.
Miss Verna B. Byrd
Lt. (jg) & Mrs. Patrick L. Byrne
J. Norton Cabell
Col. & Mrs. Lochlin W. Caffey
Paul A. Calame, Jr.
Dr. Hugh H. Caldwell
Mrs. Jackson T. Caldwell
Mr. & Mrs. George R. Calhoun
Mr. & Mrs. William S. Call
Daniel R. Callahan II
Capt. Timothy P. Callahan
Rev. James G. Callaway, Jr.
Dr. Caroline H. Callison
Mrs. Benjamin R. Cameron
Dr. & Mrs. Don R. Cameron
O. Winston Cameron
0. Winston Cameron, Jr.
John M. Camp III
Mr. & Mrs. T. Edward Camp
Mr. & Mrs. Albert G. Campbell
Dammen G. Campbell
T. C. Campbell
Mr. 64 Mrs. Wilburn W. Campbell
Mr. & Mrs. William R. Campbell
Mrs. Daniel Canaday
17
James W. Cannon
Rev. & Mrs. Chan Canon
Rev. & Mrs. Samuel 0. Capers
James R. Carden
William Cardwell
Mr. & Mrs. Dale L. Carlberg, Jr.
R. Taylor Carlisle
Miss Mary Lou Carnal
Mr. & Mrs. Tomolo J. Carninale
Rev. & Mrs. Wood B. Carper, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Emmett C. Carrick
Mr. & Mrs. Henry G. Carrison III
Harrold H. Carson
Mr. & Mrs. Robert J. Carson, Jr.
Frank J. Carter
James R. Carter, Jr.
Mrs. S. Beverly Cary
Mr. & Mrs. Michael H:Cass
Robert H. Cass
Rev. & Mrs. Robert Cassidy
Mr. & Mrs. John Parks Castleberry
Miss Nannie S. Castleberry
John A. Cater, Jr.
Edward C. Cates, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Martin Cates
Rev. & Mrs. Sam M. Catlin
Mr. & Mrs. R. B. Caughman
Mrs. Abbie R. Caverly
Mr. & Mrs, Patrick Cesarano
Charles C. Chaffee, Jr.
Rev. Hiram S. Chamberlain III
Mrs. Ruth Chamberlain
Rev..Stanford H. Chambers
Mrs. Walter B. Chandler
Mr. & Mrs. Burt Ward Chapman
Dr. Buford S. Chappell
Rev. & Mrs. Randolph C. Charles,
Jr.
Rev. & Mrs. Winston B. Charles
Mrs. Frederick P. Cheape
Jesse B. Cheatham, Jr,
Robert A. Chenoweth
Mr. & Mrs. Pulimootil P. Cherian
Edgar G. Cherry
Robert T. Cherry
Mr. & Mrs. Godfrey Cheshire, Jr.
Dr. & Mrs. Jack Chesney
Mr. & Mrs. Charles E. Cheston
Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Ben Chitty III
Miss Em Turner Chitty
Mr. Nathan H. B. Chitty
Mr. & Mrs. C. Lynch Christian, Jr.
John C. Christian
Miss Cindy A. Church
Mr, & Mrs. Richard Cilley
Mrs. Elizabeth H. Clark
G. Charles Clark
Mrs. Harry E. Clark
Harvey W. Clark
Robert C. Clark
D. L. Clarke
Mr. & Mrs. Roger G. Clarke
Mr. & Mrs. Frank E. Clay
Dr. & Mrs. James W. Clayton
Mr. & Mrs. John H. Cleghorn
John J. Clemens, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Jesse F. Cleveland
Yerger H. Clifton
David C. Clough, Jr.
Albert L. Clute
Chaplain & Mrs. George M.
Coaker
Rev. E. Boyd Coarsey, Jr.
Mrs. E. Osborne Coates
Jimmie 0. Cobb, Jr.
Mrs. Louis B. Cobb
Ms. Ruth Moore Cobb
Rev. Samuel T. Cobb
Dr. C. Glenn Cobbs
Dr. & Mrs. William T. Cocke III
Rev. & Mrs. John A. Coil
Mr. & Mrs. John W. Colby, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. W. B. Colby, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Frederick M. Cole
Rev. & Mrs. James M. Coleman
Mr. & Mrs. Robert L. Coleman III
Robert T. Coleman III
William C. Coleman, Jr.
Rev. E. Dudley Colhoun, Jr.
Mrs. Cecilia Collett
Benjamin Raye Collier
Mr. & Mrs. Trezevant Collier
Dr. Charles D. Collins
Mrs. Donald L. Collins
Mr. & Mrs. Townsend S. Collins,
Jr.
Dr. & Mrs. William H. Colmer, Jr.
Jesse H. 0. Colton
Rev. & Mrs. J. Fletcher Comer,
18
Donors of $1 to $99 (continued)
Mr. & Mrs. Alexander F. Comfort
Dr. 4 Mrs. John G. Coniglio
Rev. Edward W. Conklin
Mr. 4 Mrs. Charles A. Conley
Edwin Lee Conner
Mrs. Kathleen Richards Conner
Dr. 4 Mrs. F. O. Conrad
John B. Coogler
David D. Cook
Robert T. Cook, Jr.
Rev. James C. Cooke, Jr.
Mr. 4 Mrs. Edwin S. Coombs, Jr.
Michael H. Coombs
Mr. 4 Mrs. Arthur W. Cooper
Miss Catherine B. Cooper
Miss Elizabeth W. Cooper
G. Laurence Cooper, Jr.
Rev. R. Randolph Cooper
Talbert Cooper, Jr.
Dr. 4 Mrs. W. G. Cooper, Jr.
William P. Cooper
Mrs. Robert F. G. Copeland
Mrs. Everette P. Coppedge
William H. Coppedge
Mr. 4 Mrs. Keith T. Corbett
Miss Emily W. Corcoran
John E. Corder
David P. Cordis
Mr. 4 Mrs. George E. Core
Mr. 4 Mrs. Abe Corenswet
Rev. 4 Mrs, Richard S. Corry
Mr. 4 Mrs. Howard D. Coulson
Mr. 4 Mrs. Harold T. Council
Mrs. Robert E. Cowart, Jr.
William H. P. Cowger
Miss Betsy C. Cox
Dr. 4 Mrs. George E. Cox
Mrs. Harry P. Cox, Jr.
Blythe Bond Cragon, Jr.
Rev. Miller H. Cragon, Jr.
Mrs. A. C. Craig
G. Bowdoin Craighill, Jr.
Mr. 4 Mrs. John O. Crandell
Stuart B. Cranford
Miss Rebecca Ann Cranwell
Mr. 4 Mrs. R. L. Craven
Mr. 4 Mrs. James H. Cravens
Edward J. Crawford III
James M. Crawford, Jr.
Miss Mary R. Crawford
Mr. 4 Mrs. Stanley E. Crawford
Capt. 4 Mrs. John F. Crego
Mr. & Mrs. William Cress
Dr. James G. Creveling, Jr.
Mrs. David G. Critchlow
Andrew D. Crichton
Mr. 4 Mrs. Robert M. Cricklon,
Jr.
Dr. William G. Crook
Drs. Frederick H. & Henrietta B."
Croom
Ms. Eugenia S. Cross
Dr. & Mrs. James T. Cross
Mr. & Mrs. Victor Cross
Rev. 4 Mrs. Wilford O. Cross
Mr. 4 Mrs. Arthur W. Crouch
Mr. 4 Mrs. Michael S. Crowe
W. Houston Crozier, Jr.
Rev. John Q. Crumbly
Mrs. Carol Cubberley
Dr. 4 Mrs. Charles T. Cullen
Douglass Culp
Dr. G. Richard Culp
Mr. 4 Mrs. Warren L. Culpepper
Mr. 4 Mrs. Carl C. Cundiff
William B. Cuningham
Rev. Carleton S. Cunningham
Frank D.Cunningham
Mrs. Joseph S. Cunningham
Arthur P. Currier
Mr. 4 Mrs. Michael K. Curtis
Mrs. Janice D. Darnall
Dr. 4 Mrs. Carl W. Davenport
Joel T. Daves IV
Dr. 4 Mrs. Reginald F. Daves
Mr. 4 Mrs. Charles T. Davidson
Mr. 4 Mrs. John S. Davidson
Dr. 4 Mrs. Philip G. Davidson, Jr.
Mr. 4 Mrs. Alan B. Davis
Mr. 4 Mrs. Charles T. Davis
Hueling Davis, Jr.
James A. Davis, Jr.
John R. Davis
Mr. 4 Mrs. Latham S. Davis
Malloy Davis
Ronald L. Davis, Jr.
Ronald L. Davis III
Col. Walter R. Davis (Ret. )
Mr. & Mrs. William B. Davis
Mr. 4 Mrs. G. Richard Day
Dr. John R. H. Day
Dr. Mildred Day
Robert C. Day, Jr.
Mr. 4 Mrs. Lynn Deakins
Carolis U Deal
James Dean III
CDR 4 Mrs. Thomas C. Deans
Rev. Edward O. deBary
Miss Virginia Deck
Mr. 4 Mrs. Robert F. Decosimo
David C. DeLaney
Miss Jamie F. DeLaney
Mr. Michael C. DeLaney
Joe DeLozier 111
Mr. 4 Mrs. T. H. DeMoss, Jr.
Joseph M. Dempf
Gilbert B. Dempster
Miss Frances E. Dennis
Mr. 4 Mrs. William E. Dennis
Guerry Denson
Frederick B. Dent, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Armand J. deRosset
Col. William G. deRosset
Mr. 4 Mrs. James E. Deupree
Mr. 4 Mrs. R. Woodruff Deutsch
Mr. 4 Mrs. Frederick D. DeVall,
Jimason J. Daggett
William H. Daggett
Rev. 4 Mrs. Francis D. Daley
Mr. 4 Mrs. Julian S. Daley
Mr. 4 Mrs. Thomas P. Daly
Mr. 4 Mrs. R. Douglas Dalton
Frank J. Dana, Jr.
Peck Daniel
Dr. Robert W. Daniel
Mr. 4 Mrs. William F. Daniell
Ms. Ann Dantzler
Samuel G. Dargan
Mr. 4 Mrs. James Dark
Jr.
Earl H. Devanny III
Rev. 4 Mrs. David G. DeVore III
Mrs. Henry W. Dew
Richard Dew
Mr. & Mrs. Ward DeWitt, Jr.
Mr. 4 Mrs. T. Sorrells DeWoody
III
Dr. William B. Dickens
Mr. & Mrs. Alvin H. Dickerson
Mr. 4 Mrs. James S. Dickerson
Charles N. Dickson, Jr.
Harry B. Dierkes
Dr. Robert G. Dillard
Mr. 4 Mrs. Robert L. Dilworth
William P. Dilworth III
Rt. Rev. William A. Dimmick
Brig. Gen. 4 Mrs. Charles E.
Dissinger
Rev. Charles J. Dobbins
Mr. & Mrs. Howard McC. Dobson
Mr. 4 Mrs. Daniel Dodge
Maj. 4 Mrs. Ben M. Donaldson
Ben P. Donnell
Mr. 4 Mrs. C. Eugene Donnelly
Mr. 4 Mrs. William A. Dortch, Jr.
Miss Anna J. Doswell
Don A. Douglas
John P. Douglas, Jr.
Rev. Philip C. Douglas
Mr. 4 Mrs. Richard Douglas III
Rev. 4 Mrs. Charles H. Douglass
Mr. 4 Mrs. Charles H. Douglass,
Jr.
Mr. 4 Mrs. Robert W. Douville
Mr. 4 Mrs. J. Francis Downing, Jr.
George F. Doyle, Jr.
Mr. 4 Mrs. James M. Doyle, Jr.
Mr. 4 Mrs. R. Geise Dozier
Mr. 4 Mrs. Edward M. Drohan, Jr.
Mr. 4 Mrs. W. Haskell DuBose
William P. DuBose III
William C. Duckworth, Jr.
Ms. Ruth L. Dudley
Mrs. Thomas E. Dudney
Mr. 4 Mrs. Herbert C. Duffy
Mr. & Mrs. Fowler Dugger, Jr.
Mr. 4 Mrs. Bruce C. Dunbar, Jr.
Mr. 4 Mrs. Donal S. Dunbar
Edgar H. Duncan
Mr. 4 Mrs. Charles L. DuPont
Don K. DuPree
Chauncy W. Durden, Jr.
Hugh Durden
Walter T. Durham
Mrs. William D. Duryea
Mr. 4 Mrs. Lafayette A. Duvall
Ms. Jacquelyn S. Dwelle
Micheal D. Dyas
Mr. 4 Mrs. Carl E. Dykes
Mr. 4 Mrs. Philip P. Dyson
Capt. 4 Mrs. Patrick D. Eagan
Miss Sara-Anne Eames
Mr. 4 Mrs. Philip C. Earhart
Rev. & Mrs. Fordyce E. Eastbum
William S. Ebert
Dr. 4 Mrs. Sherwood F. Ebey
Dr. Dean F. Echols
W. Henry Eddy, Jr.
Col. 4 Mrs. Gilbert G. Edson
Mr. 4 Mrs. Barry M. Edwards
Mr. 4 Mrs. Bingham D. Edwards
Mr. 4 Mrs. Harry T. Edwards, Jr.
William H. Edwards
Dr. 4 Mrs. Thomas B. Eison
Mr. 4 Mrs. George O. Eldred
Michael C. Eldred
Mrs. D. A. Elliott
Rev. Canon David A. Elliott III
William H. Elliott-Street
Mr. 4 Mrs. Charles E. Ellis
Mr. 4 Mrs. Leroy J. Ellis III
Rev. Marshall J. Ellis
Mr. 4 Mrs. Paul T. Ellis
Dr. 4 Mrs. Thomas W. Ellis
Mr. 4 Mrs. William Ellis
Rev. 4 Mrs. D. Edward
Emenheiser
Mr. 4 Mrs. Charles B. Emerson
Robert W. Emerson
Mr. 4 Mrs. Edward V. England
David S. Engle
Rev. 4 Mrs. W. Thomas Engram
William R. Ennis, Jr.
Dr. 4 Mrs. James Kelly Ensor, Jr.
Parker F. Enwright
Ronald J. Enzweiler
Norman D. Ervin
Samuel W. Esslinger, Jr.
Rev. George C. Estes, Jr.
Miss Edna Evans
Rev. Robert L. Evans
Rev. Douglas P. Evett
Stuart Evett
Mrs. Andrew Ewing
Mr. 4 Mrs. George A. Ewing
Dr. 4 Mrs. John A. Ewing
Mr. 4 Mrs. Robert L. Ewing
John C. Eyster
James B. Ezzell
Frank J. Failla, Jr.
John J. Fallon
Mr. 4 Mrs. John C. Faquin
Mrs. Doris E. Farenkopf
Dr. W. Spencer Fast
Miss Joanna E. Faucett
Dr. & Mrs. W. Page Faulk
Mr. 4 Mrs. G. Thomas Fawcett
Samuel L. Featherstone
C. Ross Feazer
Rev. 4 Mrs. James C. Fenhagen
Edward S. Ferebee
H. T. Ferguson
Mr. 4 Mrs. Hill Ferguson III
Thomas C. Ferguson
Rev. 4 Mrs. Eversley S. Ferris
Mr. 4 Mrs. Mead B. Ferris, Jr.
Francis E. Field
Mr. & Mrs. Ray K. Fields
Douglas Karl Fifner
Miss Janet Fincher
E. Reed Finlay, Jr.
Rev. 4 Mrs. Louis C. Fischer III
Henry B. Fishburne, Jr.
Mrs. T. W. Fisher, Jr.
William H. Fisher
Mr. 4 Mrs. Frederick Fiske
Mr. 4 Mrs. DuRoss Fitzpatrick
Dr. 4 Mrs. James M. FitzSimons,
Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Michael C. Flachmann
Michael S. Flannes
Mr. 4 Mrs. Eugene H. Fleming III
William S. Fleming
Rev. John Fletcher
Jonathan S. Fletcher
Mr. 4 Mrs. Robley J. Fletcher
Rev. Charles K. Floyd
Sgt. William O. Fly
Mark Fockele
Mr. 4 Mrs. Barry J. Folsom
Mr. & Mrs. Robert B. Folsom, Jr.
Miss Katherine B. Fordyce
Dr. & Mrs. Dudley C. Fort, Jr.
J. Claude Fort
Rev. Frank V. D. Fortune
Mr. 4 Mrs. Bernard A. Foster III
Dr. Sanders Fowler, Jr.
Miss Catherine M. Fox
Mr. & Mrs. David E. Fox
Dr. J. W. C. Fox
Dr. William R. Fox
Mr. & Mrs. Ben B. Frame
Clark W. Francis
Larman Francis, Jr.
Mr. 4 Mrs. Roy F. Francis
Mr. 4 Mrs. Jay E. Frank
Mr. 4 Mrs. Ernest B. Franklin, Jr.
John R. Franklin
Mr. & Mrs. Larry Franklin
Steve A. Fransioli III
Dr. David Fran tz
Thomas D. Frasier
Jackson Lee Fray
Jackson L. Fray III
Miss Mary Frazer
Rev. Charles E. Frederick
Charles W. Freeman
Capt. 4 Mrs. Frank A. Freeman
John K. Freeman, Jr.
Mr. 4 Mrs. Judson Freeman, Jr.
Pickens N. Freeman, Jr.
Rev. 4 Mrs. Sollace M. Freeman,
Jr.
Col. Wilson Freeman
Mr. 4 Mrs. Arden S. Freer
Mr. 4 Mrs. Julius G. French
Mr. 4 Mrs. Robert A. Freyer
Robert A. Friedrich
Mr. 4 Mrs. Thomas P. Frith III
LCDR William T. Fuller
Dr. Charles M. Fullerton
Mrs. John Fulmer
Mr. 4 Mrs. W. G. Fyler
Mrs. Lougenia Fillis Gabard
Rev. H. Dewey Gable
Mrs. E. L. Gage
Mr. 4 Mrs. Wallace H. Gage
J. Grant Gaither, Jr.
Mr. 4 Mrs. David Galaher, Jr.
Mr. 4 Mrs. Joseph G. Gamble
Mr. B. W. Gandrud ,
Mr. 4 Mrs. John P. Gapchynski
Dr. 4 Mrs. Joseph E. Gardner
Mr. & Mrs. Robert W. Gardner, Jr.
C. J. Garland, Jr.
Peter J. Garland
Dr. William J. Garland
Mr. 4 Mrs. Billy Garner
R. Alexa Garner
Miss Patricia M. Garren
Mrs. Frank Garrison
Mr. 4 Mrs. Currin R. Gass
Mrs. Henry M. Gass
Mr. 4 Mrs. Kenneth R. Gass
Nathan Gass
Raymond M. Gass
Dr. William Day Gates II
James R. Gavin, Jr.
John F. Gay
Rev. W. Gedge Gayle, Jr.
Bradford M. Gearinger
Mr. 4 Mrs. James J. Gee
Peter E. Gee
Bernard F. George
Mr. 4 Mrs. Charles George, Jr.
Mrs. Inez G. George
Dr. Carl E. Georgi
Rev. Robert E. Giannini
Mr. 4 Mrs. Ben W. Gibson, Jr.
Miss Martha T. Gibson '
Mr. 4 Mrs. Charles O. Gignilliat
Mr. 4 Mrs. Lon B. Gilbert III
Miss Philippa G. Gilchrist
Raymond B. Gill III
Rev. Thomas J. Gill
Dean Gillespie
Mr. 4 Mrs. Lynn Gillespie
Mr. 4 Mrs. Robert F. Gillespie, Jr.
Rev. 4 Mrs. Richard W. Gillett
A. Franklin Gilliam
Frederick K. Gilliam, Jr.
John F. Gipson
Mr. & Mrs. Robert M. Given
Karl D. Gladden
Miss Jeanne B. Glenn
Miss Martha R. Glueck
Mrs. Charles P. Goggi
Mr. 4 Mrs. Albert S. Gooch, Jr.
Mr. 4 Mrs. Anthony C. Gooch
Mr. 4 Mrs. Ward Goodman
Roger S. Goodrich
Mrs. Elliot M. Goodstein
Mr. 4 Mrs. William M. Goodwin
III
William H. Gordon
Mr. 4 Mrs. James W. Gore
Mr. 4 Mrs. Cecil H. Gossett
Rev. H. Fred Gough
Richard C. Govan, Jr.
Mr. 4 Mrs. Harry L. Graham
Mr. 4 Mrs. Edwin R. Cranberry
J. Neely Grant, Jr.
James H. Grater
Mrs. E. C. Gratiot
Miss Mama Graves
Mrs. Albert Z. Gray
Mr. & Mrs. Cecil E. Gray
Mr. 4 Mrs, Kenneth R. Gray
Rev. 4 Mrs. Melvin K. Gray
Mr. & Mrs. William C. Gray II
Mrs. Ash ton L. Graybiel
Tompkins Graydon
Mr. 4 Mrs. Thomas G. Greaves, Jr.
Mr. 4 Mrs. Albert Green
Mr. 4 Mrs. Charles E. Green
Mr. 4 Mrs. Columbus E. Green
Mrs. Harold L. Green
Mr. 4 Mrs. James Green
Mr. 4 Mrs. Jimmie Green
Mr. 4 Mrs. Judson C. Green
Paul T. Green
Mr. & Mrs. Paul T. Green
Dr. Robert H. Green
Dr. 4 Mrs. Bruce N. Greene
J. Elmo Greene
Hon. Robert K. Greene
Dr. S. Ira Greene
Rev. Eric S. Greenwood
Dr. 4 Mrs. Clifton E. Greer, Jr.
Mr. 4 Mrs. John W. Greeter
Richard F. Grefe
Kenneth H. Gregg
Rev. 4 Mrs. Ronald E. Greiser
Dr. 4 Mrs. Thomas N. E. Greville
Rev. J. Chester Grey III
Rev. 4 Mrs. R. Emmet Gribbin
Mrs. Robert E. Gribbin
Robert E. Gribbin III
Miss Louise M. Gridley
Mr. 4 Mrs. Charles B. Griffin, Jr.
Mr. 4 Mrs. George C. Griffin
Mr. 4 Mrs. William H. Grimball,
Jr.
Joseph W. Grimes
Rev. H. Anton Griswold
Mr. 4 Mrs. James F. Griswold, Jr.
Rev. 4 Mrs. John A. Griswold
Thomas N. Grizzaid
Mr. 4 Mrs. Edward L. Groos
Mr. 4 Mrs. Robert E. Gross
Mr. 4 Mrs. Victor R. Gross
William H. Grover III
Rev. Walter H. Grunge
Mr. 4 Mrs. F. E. Guerard, Jr.
Rev. Canon 4 Mrs. Edward B.
Guerry
Rev. & Mrs. Moultrie Guerry
S. Caywood Gunby
Rev. Ray A. Gumm
Mr. 4 Mrs. George Gustin
David V. Guthrie
James B. Gutsell
Mr. 4 Mrs. H. S. Meade Gwinn
Rev. 4 Mrs. Robert L. Haden, Jr.
Mr. 4 Mrs. William R. Haegele
Mr. 4 Mrs. Walter Haeussermann
Capt. Robert A. Haggart
Dr. 4 Mrs. Carl W. Hagler
Mr. 4 Mrs. John B. Hagler, Jr.
Thomas E. Haile
Mr. 4 Mrs. Fred C. Hale
Miss Betty D. Hall
Mr. 4 Mrs. Dennis M. Hall
Mrs. J. Croswell Hall
Rev. 4 Mrs. Robert S. Hall
Mrs. Robert L. Hall
Miss Susan R. Hall
Mrs. Sara D. Ham
Mr. 4 Mrs. John R. Hamil
Mr. 4 Mrs. Charles E. Hamilton
Mr. & Mrs. Charles E. Hamilton,
Jr.
Dr. George W. Hamilton, Jr.
Ms. Helen H. Hamilton
Rev. & Mrs. Jones S. Hamilton
William A. Hamilton III
LCDR & Mrs. William B.
Hamilton II
Earl Hammer
Miss Alma S. Hammond
Charles Hammond
James W. Hammond
Mr. & Mrs. John W. Haney
Mr. & Mrs. John Hankins
Mr. & Mrs. James F. Hannifin
Dr. & Mrs. E. Brown Hannum
E. Randolph Hansen, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. James B. Hardee
Mr. & Mrs. James B. Hardee, Jr.
Robert Harding
James A. Hardison, Jr.
Mrs. C. Edson Hardy
Reginald H. Hargrove II
Mr. & Mrs. William G. Harkins
Mr. & Mrs. Harold S. Harnly
James W. Harper
Gary M. Harris
Rev. & Mrs. George H. Harris
Henry M. Harris
Miss Joan P. Harris
Rev. & Mrs. Rogers S. Harris
Mr. & Mrs. Tyndall P. Harris, Jr.
B. Powell Harrison, Jr.
Billy D. Harrison
Mr. & Mrs. Clarence E. Harrison
Mr. & Mrs. Edward H. Harrison,
Jr.
Rev. & Mrs. Hendree Harrison
Dr. T. Randolph Harrison, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. W. Robert Harrison
Mr. & Mrs. Z. Daniel Harrison
Dr. & Mrs. Francis X. Hart
Mr. & Mrs. George C. Hart
Mr. & Mrs. George H. Hart, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. T. J. Hartford, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Robert L. Hartge
Wayne C. Hartley
Patrick C. Hartney
Mr. & Mrs. Deith M. Hartsfield
Bruce F. E. Harvey
Dr. & Mrs. C. Mallory Harwell
Mr. & Mrs. Jess A. Harwell III
Mr. & Mrs. James E. Harwood, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Preston H. Haskell, Jr.
Mrs. Nagel Haskin
Charles E. Hatch, Jr.
Billy G. Hatchett
Rev. & Mrs. Marion J. Hatchett
Rev. Harold K. Haugan
Mrs. R. C. Hauser
Rev. Roscoe C. Hauser, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Glen H. Hawkins
Jack H. Hawkins, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Marshall Hawkins
Miss Nellie S. Hawkins
Rev. & Mrs. Paul H. Hawkins, Jr.
Claude J. Hayden III
Rev. Richard E. Hayes
Thomas M. Hayes III
Mr. & Mrs. Caldwell L. Haynes
W. Greer Haynes
Dr. & Mrs. Thomas P. Haynie
Rev. Waties R. Haynsworth
Mrs. Joseph H. Hays
Edward R. Hayward, Jr.
Miss Eulalie Hazard
Oliver R. Head, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Robert B. Headley
Dr. & Mrs. Alexander Heard
Maurice K. Heartfield, Jr.
Samuel L. Heck
Mr. & Mrs. Dennis R. Hejna
Mr. & Mrs. J. H. Hellmuth
Mr. & Mrs. H. LeRoy Henderson
Mrs. John L. Henderson
Jess B. Hendricks III
Mr. & Mrs. Carl C. Hendrickson,
Jr.
Mickey R. Henley
Parker D. Henley
Mr. & Mrs. Robert P. Henley
Roy C. Henley
Walter E. Henley II
Dr. & Mrs. Standish Henning
Mrs. Robert Henrey
Rev. & Mrs. Charles L. Henry
Matthew G. Henry, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Rudolph A. Hepper .
Thomas L. Herbert IV
David L. Hermann
Mr. & Mrs. Donald J. Hermann
Louis A. Hermes
Robert S. Herren
O. Hester
Rev. Arch M. Hewitt, Jr.
Mrs. Batson L. Hewitt
Bateon L. Hewitt, Jr.
Dr. James Hey, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Frank Heyward
Mr. & Mrs. Gary K. Hicks
Mrs. Richard G. Hicks
Philip Hicky II
Preston G. Hicky
Stephen T. Higgins
Rev. & Mrs. Rayford B. High, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Charles A. Hight
Charles B. Hill
Miss D. Edna Hill
Mrs. Ruby Hill
Mr. & Mrs. Fred B. Hillman, Jr.
Rev. James M. Hindle
Mr. & Mrs. W. Boyd Hinton, Jr.
George Hoback
Paul R. Hock, Jr.
Mrs. John Hodges
Mrs. Henry Bell Hodgkins
Rev. & Mrs. Lewis Hodgkins
Mrs. A. W. Hodgkiss '
Mr. & Mrs. George W. Hodgson
Mrs. John K. Hodnette
Mrs. L. P. Hodnette
Mr. & Mrs. Robert D. Hodson
Miss Barbara C. Hoelzer
Mr. & Mrs. L. A. Hoening
Mr. & Mrs. Peter F. Hoffman
Ms. Leslie Ann Hoffman-Williams
Mr. & Mrs. George Hoffmeister
Mr. & Mrs. R. Holt Hogan
Mrs. Bradley B. Hogue
Mr. & Mrs. Stephen F. Hogwood
Mrs. J. D. Holder
Timothy S. Holder
Mr. & Mrs. John F. Holec
C. G. Holland
Dr. Warren F. Holland, Jr.
Mrs. Evelyn M. Holliday
Mr. & Mrs. James M. Holloway
Mrs. Lewis J. Holloway
Rev. Dr. & Mrs. Edgar Hollowell,
Jr.
Ms. Carol Adelaide Holt
Mr. & Mrs. George A. Holt
Mr. & Mrs. Samuel Homich
Mr. & Mrs. J. Kimpton Honey
Mr. & Mrs. William C. Honey
Dr. & Mrs. Robert T. Hooke
Dr. & Mrs. Azalla J. Hoole IV
Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth N. Hoorn
Mr. & Mrs. Clarence W. Hoosier
Mr. & Mrs. Fred L. Hoover, Jr.
John W. Hooyer
J. Julian Hope, Jr.
Rev. Montague H. Hope
Mr. & Mrs. Edwin W. Hornberger
Mrs. Lloyd Hornbostel
Mrs. Edwin C. Home
John G. Horner
Mr. & Mrs. B. K. Hornsby
Mrs. Joseph W. Horrox
Mr. & Mrs. Christopher J. Horsch
Mr. & Mrs. George I. Horton
John A. Horton
Mrs. Carter Hough, Jr.
Carl McKinley Howard
Miss Jettie O. Howard
Mr. & Mrs. L. Vaughan Howard
Mr. & Mrs. W. Alexander Howard
Rev. F. Newton Howden
Mr. & Mrs. Raymond R. Howe, Jr.
Ms. Joan M. Howell
Mrs. Vera A. Howerter
Mrs. Jack W. Howerton
G. Wesley Hubbell
Mrs. John Y. Huber III
Rev. & Mrs. H. Hunter Huckabay
Pembroke S. Huckins
Howard H. Huggins III
Mr. & Mrs. Lowell H. Hughen
Mr. & Mrs. F. Francis Hughes
Mr. & Mrs. Fred O. Hughes
Nat Ryan Hughes
Mr. & Mrs. Norman C. Hughes
Roy Allen Hughes
Harry C. Hughey, Jr.
Rev. & Mrs. E. Irwin Hulbert, Jr.
Stewart J. Hull
Bruce O. Hunt, Jr.
Dr. & Mrs. Lacy H. Hunt II
Robert C. Hunt
C. Andrew Hunter
H. Miller Hunter, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. T. Parkin C. Hunter
Rev. & Mrs. Preston B. Huntley,
Jr.
Ms. Lucille R. Hutchens
Mrs. Samuel C. Hutcheson
Henry C. Hutson
Rev. & Mrs. Peter H. Igarashi
Don George Ikard, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. William L. Ikard
Rev. Coleman Inge
Dr. & Mrs. David U. Inge
Dr. & Mrs. George B. Inge II
Mrs. James E. Ingle
John P. Ingle III
Mr. & Mrs. Erman Ingram
Rev. & Mrs. Clyde L. Ireland
Mr. & Mrs. D. H. Irvin
Rev. & Mrs. D. Holmes Irving
Rev. & Mrs. Harland M. Irwin, ,
Mr. & Mrs. George W. Irwin
Ms. Lisa M. Isay "
Rev. & Mrs. Luther O. Ison
Miss Margaret C. Ivy
Miss Ruth Daly Ivy
B. Ivey Jackson
Mr. & Mrs. Frank R. Jackson
Maj. & Mrs. Grover E. Jackson
Harold O. Jackson
Mrs. Joseph Jackson
Mr. & Mrs. Robert G. Jackson
Tucker W. Jackson
Mr. & Mrs. James S. Jaffe
Dr. John E. Jagar
D. L. Jahncke
Mrs. Beverly C. James
Charles F. James III
Mr. & Mrs. Robert C. James
Terrell James
Jay D. Jamieson
Mrs. Henry D. Jamison, Jr.
Rev. John L. Janeway IV
Rev. & Mrs, Wade B. Janeway
Lt. Harry M. Jarred, Jr.
Dr. & Mrs. John A. Jarrell, Jr.
Dr. & Mrs. Jack R. Jarvis
Dr. Reynolds G. Jarvis
Mrs. Brewer Jean
Mr. & Mrs. Cecil D. Jenkins, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Howard M. Jennings
Norman Jetmundsen, Jr.
Ms. Elizabeth D. Jett
Mrs. Alan J. Johnson
Buddy Johnson
Mr. & Mrs. Donald M. Johnson
George Dean Johnson, Jr.
Henry B. Johnson, Jr.
Malcolm C. Johnson III
Mr. & Mrs. Marvin Johnson
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Johnson
Mrs. W. P. Johnson
Capt. R. Harvey Johnston III
Mr. & Mrs. Bruce O. Jolly
Mr. & Mrs. Albert W. Jones
Mrs. Bayard H. Jones
Rt. Rev. Edward W. Jones
Franklin C. Jones III
Mrs. George O. Jones
Rev. & Mrs. Hugh B. Jones, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. James I. Jones
Dr. Kenneth R. Wilson Jones
Philip H. Jones
Richard A. Jones
T. Ray Jones
W. Erwin Jones
Mr. & Mrs. W. J. Jones
Hon. & Mrs. Warren L. Jones
Mrs. Zenda Jones
William S. Jordan
Mr. & Mrs. Charles S. Joseph
Dr. & Mrs. Paul H. Joslin
Mr. & Mrs. William Judson
Mr. & Mrs. Harry R. Jurgens
Mr. & Mrs. Nathan Kaminski
Mr. & Mrs. Nathan Kaminski, Jr.
Dr. & Mrs. Robert L. Keele, Jr.
Rev. & Mrs. Thomas C. Kehayes
Mr. & Mrs. Clarence C. Keiser, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. J. Parke Keith
Dr. & Mrs. Timothy Keith-Lucas
Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Keller
Mrs. Gertrude Kelly
Mr. & Mrs. Henry Kelly
Rev. & Mrs. Ralph J. Kendall
Mr. & Mrs. John W. Kendig
Mr. & Mrs. Howard N. Kennedy
Walter W. Kennedy, Jr.
19
Mr. & Mrs. Jack Kent
Mr. & Mrs. C. H. Keplinger
Miss Mary Anne Kernan
Mr. & Mrs. Christopher G. C.
Kershaw
Mr. & Mrs. William K. Kershner
R. Lyle Key, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. C. Lovett Keyser
Dr. Joseph A. Kicklighter
Mr. & Mrs. William N. Kiermaier
Mr. & Mrs. Leftwich D. .
Kimbr.
J«h
James King
R. Baker King
Sherman L. King
Mr. & Mrs. W. Voris King
Rev. James W. Kinsey
Rev. Norman F. Kinzie
Rev. & Mrs. R. Pattee Kirby
Col. & Mrs. Edmund Kirby-Smith
Capt, Edmund Kirby-Smith
Dr. Elizabeth W. Kirby-Smith
Dr. & Mrs, John S. Kirby-Smith
William Kirby-Smith
Mr. & Mrs. Christopher P. Kirchen
Rev. & Mrs. Richard Kirchhoffer,
Jr. ,
Dr. & Mrs. Robert E. Kirk
Very Rev. & Mrs. Terrell T. Kirk
Mr. & Mrs. Samuel N. Kirkland
Mrs. William F. Kirsch
Mr. & Mrs. Jerry D. Kizer, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Harvey J. Kline
John C. Klock
Dr. & Mrs. William J. Klopstock
Marcial A. Knapp
Mr. Si Mrs. Royden R. Knapp
Dr. Waldo E. Knickerbocker
Mrs. F. Jenkins Knight
Dr. Sl Mrs. Robert D. Knight
Dr. & Mrs. Arthur J. Knoll
R. C. Knox
Rodney M. Kochtitzky
Ms. Margaret Kohli
Ms. Martha L. Kopald
Richard H. L. Kopper
Rev. & Mrs. George J. Kuhnert
Mr. & Mrs. Frederick B. Kunz
George LaBudde
Mr. & Mrs. Bruce H. LaCombe
Mr. & Mrs. Delbert Ladd
Harris H. Ladd
Mr. & Mrs. George E. Lafaye III
John B. Lagarde
Mr. & Mrs. T. A. Lamar, Jr.
Mrs. Roland D. Lamb
Tom K. Lamb
Rev. Peter W. Lambert, OGS
Mrs. Paul Lambertus
Carter Tate Lambeth
Mr. & Mrs. Thad B. Lampton, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. John K. Lancaster
Lee W. Lance, Jr.
Edward L. Landers
Paul J. Landry
Harry H. Langenberg
Mr. & Mrs. John S. Langford, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Morton Langstaff
John T. Lanier, Jr.
Mrs. L. Gordon LaPointe
Kent Larason
Frank E. Larisey
Rev. Patrick C. Larkin
Mr. & Mrs. Charles J. Larson
Erwin D. Latimer IV
Dr. B. Gresh Lattimore, Jr.
Mrs. Thomas E. Lavender
Mrs. Robert Lawson
Mr. & Mrs. William D. Lawson, Jr.
Overton Lea
Mrs. Lewis S. Leach
Mr. & Mrs. Nolan C. Leake
Allen L. Lear
Mr. & Mrs. Ramsey B. Leathers
Mr. & Mrs. Raymond S. Leathers
Mr. & Mrs. Richard W. Leche, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Samuel B. Ledbetter
Dr. Anthony J. Lee
Mr. & Mrs. Clendon H. Lee
Clendon H. Lee, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. H. W. Lee
Mr. & Mrs. Ronald M. Lee
W. H. Holman Lee
Dr. & Mrs. Edward J. Lefeber, Jr.
Mrs. W. Groom Leftwich
Richard S. LeGardeur
Col. & Mrs. Beverly M. Leigh; Jr.
20
Donors of $1 to $99 (continued)
Mr. & Mrs. Raymond V. Leighty
Richard D. Leland
James V. LeLaurin
Peter Lemonds
Kevin L. Lenahan
Rev. Luis Leon
Dr. & Mrs. Russell J. Leonard
Rev. & Mrs. Cotesworth P. Lewis
Rev.& Mrs. Robert E. Libbey
Mr. & Mrs. Clay O. Lichtenstein
Tracy L. R. Lightcap
Franklin T. Liles, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. R. Stewart Lillard
Rev. & Mrs. James M. Lilly
Mrs. Richard M. Lilly
Mr. & Mrs. Norman Lindgren
J. David Lindholm
Blucher B. Lines
Miss Margaret V. B. Lines
Mr. & Mrs. Cord H. Link, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas G. Linthicum
Mr. & Mrs. Ed Lipscomb
Robert J. Lipscomb
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas P. Lipscomb
Mr. & Mrs. Charles A. Little III
Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth E. Little
Rev. & Mrs. Littleton
Mr. & Mrs. Edwin P. Lochridge
Thaddeus C. Lockard, Jr.
John Richard Lodge, Jr.
Mrs. Burl G. Logan
Mr. & Mrs. John K. Logan
Mr. & Mrs. Charles J. Long
David T. Lonnquest
Miss Debbie Lopez
Mr. &. Mrs. Charles R. Lord.
Rev. Dr. J. Raymond Lord
Emerson H. Lotzia
Frederick R. Louis
Robert W. Love
Wheless Love
Dr. N. Newton Lovvorn, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. William F. Low, Jr.
Jeffery C. Lowe
Mr. & Mrs. Robert L. Lowenthal
Robert L. Lowenthal, Jr.
Mrs. Anne M. Lowry
Mr. & Mrs. R. B. Lowry
Gen. & Mrs. Sumter L. Lowry
Michael R. Lumpkin
Dr. & Mrs. David W. Lumpkins
Mrs. Samuel D. Lunt
Mr. & Mrs. John T. Lupton
Mr. & Mrs. Arthur J. Lynch
J. Carleton Lynch
Capt. & Mrs. William R. Lyon, Jr.
William S. Lyon-Vaiden
Andrew Lytle
III
Rev. Hampton Mabry, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth A.
MacCowan
Dr. Donald P. Macleod
Miss Monimia R. MacRae
Dr. Thomas V. Magruder, Jr.
Mrs. Hugh 1. Mainord
Dr. & Mrs. Robert A. Mainzer
Rev, Harold Mallock, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Arthur E. Mallory III
Mr. & Mrs. E. Wallace Malone
Rev. & Mrs. J. Leon Malone
Frank V. Maner, Jr.
Hart T. Mankin
Ens. & Mrs. Ronald R. Manley, Jr.
Robert Mann
Mr. & Mrs. Jerry Mansfield
Jules D. Mappus
Rev. Thomas H. Markley
Mr. & Mrs. Dempsey H. Marks
Robert C. Marks
Rt. Rev. C. Gresham Marmion
Mr. & Mrs. James F. Marquis III
Mrs. Edward A. Marshall
Mr. & Mrs. James E. Marshall
Mrs. H. Lee Marston
Mr. & Mrs. Carter W. Martin
Maj. Gen. & Mrs. Clarence A.
Martin
Miss Elizabeth C. Martin
James S. Martin
Louis F. Martin
Michael D. Martin
Paul W. Martin, Jr.
Mrs. Rives Martin
Mr. & Mrs. William K. Martin
Mrs. Elizabeth C. Mask
David W. Mason
Thomas D. Stewart Mason
Glenn H. Massey, Jr.
Rev. & Mrs. John L. Matlock
Rev. John B. Matthews
Miss Kimberly S. Matthews
Max Matthews II
; Mr. & Mrs. Maximilian W.
Matthews
George A. Matthison, Jr.
William E. Mattison, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Henry V. Mauldin
Thomas R. Mauldin, Jr.
Ms. Mary H. Maupin
Miss Michelle Anne Mauthe
Mr. & Mrs. Lester N. May
Dr. Linda C. Mayes
Mr. & Mrs. T. L. Mayes
Mr. & Mrs. Ellis O. Mayfield, Jr.
James A. Mayfield
W. Douglas Maynard
Mrs. Howard Mays
Mr. & Mrs. Robert A. Mays
Robert L. Mays, Jr.
Dr. Earle F. Mazyck
Robert A. McAllen
Michael L. McAllister
Mr. & Mrs. Claude E. McAuley
Buford H. McBee
Mr. & Mrs. Henry W. McBee
Mr. & Mrs. Howard McBee
Sammy R. McBee
Walter S. McBroom, Jr.
Mrs. Sam V. McCall
Donald L. McCammon
Miss Carolyn G. McCann
Michael S. McCarroll
Mrs. Harvey P. McCarty
Rev. & Mrs. W. Barnum C.
McCarty
John M. McCary
Dr. J. Howard McClain
Miss Elizabeth McClatchey
Mrs. Berniece McClure
Miss Marian McClure
Mr. & Mrs. John McCoy
Mrs. Thomas McCoy
Mr. & Mrs. John McCrady
Miss Martha McCrory
Miss Melissa W. McCullough
Mr. & Mrs. Samuel C. McCutchen
Dr. & Mrs, J. Stuart McDaniel
Mr. & Mrs. Angus W. McDonald
G. Simms McDowell III
RADM & Mrs. Lewis R.
McDowell (Ret)
William L. McElveen
Dr. & Mrs. H. B. McEuen, Jr.
Eugene H. B. McFaddin
Gustave J. McFarland
T/Sgt. & Mrs. Michael V. McGee
Thomas L. McGehee
Dr. & Mrs. William C. McGehee
Mr. & Mrs. Donald R. McGinnis
Mr. & Mrs. Walter L. McGoldrick
Dr. & Mrs. Joseph B. McGrory
Mr. & Mrs. James H. Mcintosh, Jr.
Rev. Moultrie H. Mcintosh
Rev. & Mrs. Charles E. Mclntyre
III
Mrs. J. Maury Mclntyre, Jr.
William S. Mclntyre
E. Roderick Mclver HI
Howell A. McKay
Rev. & Mrs. Hugh C. McKee, Jr.
Rev. & Mrs. John McKee III
Randolph L. McKee
Miss Patricia H. McLaughlin
Mr. & Mrs. Robert T. McLaughlin
William E. McLaurin
Miss Elizabeth Singeltary McLean
Mr. & Mrs. Henry M. McLeod III
Mr. & Mrs. Jefferson A. McMahan
Mrs. Jefferson D. McMahan III
Mr. & Mrs. Marshall E. McMahon
Dr. & Mrs. Campbell W. McMillan
LCDR & Mrs. Marvin E. McMullen
Mr. & Mrs. Edward T. McNabb
Mr. & Mrs. Phil M. McNagny, Jr.
Hanson McNamara
Mr. & Mrs. Marc T. McNamee
Dr. & Mrs.Charles H. McNutt
Mr. & Mrs. Edwin M. McPherson
Jr.
J. Alex McPherson III
Mr. 4 Mrs. Paul N. McQuiddy
t>r. R. Parker McRae, Jr.
Franklin J. McVeigh
Mr. & Mrs. John W. McWhirter, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Walker E. Meacham
M. B. Medlock
Mr. & Mrs. Lamar Meeks
Miss Nancy Mefford
Mr. & Mrs. Olin T. Mefford, Jr.
Olin T. Mefford III
Rev. Benjamin A. Meginniss
Dr. & Mrs. William P. Meleney
John D. Mellon
John T. Menard
John H. Menge
Ralph R. Menge
Raymond C. Mensing, Jr.
Dr. & Mrs. Walter H. Merrill
Paul H. Merriman
Dr. Katharine K. Merritt
Mr. & Mrs. Robert H. Meystre
Mrs. William N. Middleton
Mr. & Mrs. Joe Midulla, Jr.
Alfred Miller
Dr. & Mrs. Andrew H. Miller
Mrs. Andrew J. Miller
Mr. & Mrs. Avery Miller
Mr. & Mrs. James R. Miller
Mrs. Mary belle Miller
Thomas P. Miller
Mr. & Mrs. N. A. Miller, Jr.
Watts L. Miller
Carl D. Mills
Miss Elizabeth L. Mills
Mr. & Mrs. John B. Milward
Mr. & Mrs. Charles W. Minch
Rev. Henry H. R. Minich
Miss Debra Minton
Ellis Misner
Mr. & Mrs. John T. Mitch
Mrs. George J. Mitchell
Mrs. Richard N. Mitchell
Mr. & Mrs. Joe D. Mobley, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. John H. Mobley II
Mr. & Mrs. Riley F. Mogford
Mr. & Mrs. Michael H. Moisio
Mrs. Tinsley Moncure
Fred H. Montgomery
Mrs. J. S. Montgomery, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Richard S. Moody
Mr. & Mrs. Bill Moon
Mr. & Mrs. Jimmy D. Mooney
Mr. & Mrs. Paul E. Mooney
Mrs. Preston Mooney
B. Allston Moore
Edward R. Moore
Glover Moore
Mr. & Mrs. James R. Moore
Mrs. Julien K. Moore
Mrs. Marlin C. Moore
Mrs. Mary McNamara Moore
Peter N. Moore
Thomas R. Moore
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas R. Moorer
Ralph M. Morales
Malcolm C. Moran
Mr. & Mrs. Adlia Morgan
Mr. & Mrs. George E. Morgan III
Joseph P. Morgan
Mr. & Mrs. Julian Earl Morgan III
Mrs. W. O. Morris
Miss Janice D. Morrison
Mrs. Paul E. Morrison
Miss Ruth Mo
Mr. & Mrs. David S. Morse
Mr. & Mrs. R. Clay Mort
Mr. & Mrs. A. O. Morton
Rev. & Mrs. C. Brinkley Morton
Dr. F. Rand Morton
Miss Judith G. Morton
Miss Mary V. Morton
Mrs. William J. Morton, Jr.
Capt. & Mrs. William A. Moseley
Dr. E. Moser
Capt. & Mrs. Gary Moser
Rev. Gerard S. Moser
Marvin U. Mounts, Jr.
Rev. Maurice M. Moxley
Mr. & Mrs. James R. Muir
Dr. Harry C. Mullikin
Dr. & Mrs. Julius H. Mullins, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Lloyd C. Mumaw
Frank W. Mumby IV
Mrs. Joseph R. Murphy
Mr. & Mrs. Leonard B. Murphy
Dr. & Mrs. Robert C. Murphy
Ms. Marjorie B. Murray
Douglass E. Myers, Jr.
E. Lucas Myers
Miss Ina May Myers
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas E. Myers, Jr.
n
Ms. Charlotte E. Nabers
Mrs. Lucille Nabors
Alfred M. Naff
Dr. Walter E. Nance
Billy B. Napier
Edward C. Nash, Jr.
Dr. Eric W. Naylor
Mr. & Mrs. Richard E. Neal
Dr. & Mrs. Wallace W. Neblett
Ellis E. Neder, Jr.
Mrs. Richard W. Neff, Sr.
Mrs. W. Butler Neide
Rev. Benjamin H. Nelson, Jr.
Rev. & Mrs. Carl E. Nelson
LCDR Gerald A. Nelson
Waldemar S. Nelson
Mrs. Robert H. Nesbit
Miss Donna A. Neunlist
Ms. Elizabeth B. Neville
Robert C. Newman
Mr. & Mrs. Erie Newton
Matthew Kerr Newton
Joel E. Nicholas
Mr. & Mrs. Alfred B. Nimocks, Jr.
Albert W. Nisley
Lois L. Nivison
Mr. & Mrs. Allen Nixon
Rev. & Mrs. Alexander C. D. Noe
W. Davis Northcutt IV
Rev. Frederick B. Northup
Mr. & Mrs. David C. Norton
J. W. Norwell
Forrest D. Nowlin, Jr.
Harry F. Noyes III
Mr. & Mrs. Richard W.
Oberdorfer
Mr. & Mrs. Jack N. Odell
Rev. & Mrs. H. King Oehmig
Mr. & Mrs. William Marshall Ohl
W. R. Okie
Most Rev. Festo H. Olang
Mr. & Mrs. Chadwick D. Oliver
Henry Oliver, Jr.
Miss Lane Oliver
Very Rev. Robert G. Oliver
Mr. & Mrs. S. K. Oliver, Jr.
H. B. Olson
Miss Jean E. Olson
Miss May E. Olson
Mr. & Mrs. Frederic J.
Oppenheimer
Mrs. Christi A. Ormsby
Mr. & Mrs. Alfred K. Orr, Jr.
Joseph L. Orr
Mr. & Mrs. Sydney C. Orr, Jr.
Dr. & Mrs. Granger C. Osborne
Rev. & Mrs. Edward P. Ostertag
Dr. & Mrs. James W. Overstreet
III
Edward H. Overton
Fred G. Owen III
Mr. & Mrs. H. Malcolm Owen III
Joseph L. Pace
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas G. Pack
Dr. & Mrs. John M. Packard, Jr.
Carlisle S. Page, Jr.
Christopher B. Paine
George Carter Paine
Mr. & Mrs. Marx J. Pales
Mr. & Mrs. James K. Parish
Mr. & Mrs. Truman G. Palmer
Mrs. W. W. Palmer
Dr. Dabney G. Park, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Brooks Parker, Jr.
David P. Parker
Frank C. Parker
Dr. George W. Parker III
Capt. Joseph F. Parker
Knowles Parker
Hon. Robert J. Parkes
Michael A. Parman
Jeffery W. Parr
Rev. & Mrs. Henry N. Parsley
George C. Parson
Mr. & Mrs. Frederick W. Parsons
G. Z. Patten
Mr. & Mrs. Arthur S. Patterson
Mr. & Mrs. C. H. Patterson
Rev. & Mrs. W. Brown Patterson,
Jr.
George A. Patton
Mr. & Mrs. John W. Patton
M. A. Nevin Patton, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. M. A. Nevin Patton III
Mrs. Robbie M. Patton
Mrs. Paul M. Paul
Mr. & Mrs. Clyde H. Payne
Donors of $1 to $99 (continued)
Mr. & Mrs. Herschel Payne
Mr. & Mrs. Madison P. Payne
Dr. & Mrs. Virgil L. Payne
John D. Peake, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Cranston B. Pearce
Mr. & Mrs. Robert W. Pearce
Robert W. Pearigen
Ms. Anne H. Pearson
John D. Peebles
Mr. & Mrs. Stuart A. Peebles
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas H. Peebles III
Mr. & Mrs. Richard R. Peglar
Alexander H. Pegues, Jr..
Felix C. Pelzer
Mr. & Mrs. J. Michael Pemberton
Mr. & Mrs. Willis E. Penfield
Willis E. Penfield, Jr.
Miss Susan D. Pennell
Ms. Rovtena N. Pennock
C. Steven Pensinger
Mrs. Gordon Perisho
Capt. & Mrs. Albert H. Perkins
Edward H. Perkins
Mr. & Mrs. John W. Perkins
Dr. Neil G. Perkinson
Mr. & Mrs. Charles R. Perry
Rt. Rev. Charles B-. Persell, Jr.
Rev. F. Stanford Persons III
Arch Peteet, Jr.
George B. Peters, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. James H. Peters
Jon Qvistgaard Petersen
Mr. & Mrs. William W. Pheil
Judson H. Phelps
Herbert A. Philips
Dr. & Mrs. Benjamin Phillips, Jr.
Jesse H. Phillips
Mr. & Mrs. R. Q. Phillips
Donald A. Pickering, Jr.
Samuel R. Pickering, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. William H. Pickering
John LoweirPicton
Philip Pidgeon IV
Dr. E. Harris Pierce
Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth Pierce
Rev. William E. Pilcher III
Rev. & Mrs. L. Noland Pipes, Jr.
Mrs. Clyde A. Pippen
Mr. & Mrs. Zelma Pirtle
Dr. & Mrs. James A. Pittman, Jr.
Ms. Bettye P. Pittmann
Arthur W. Piatt
Rev. George S. Plattenburg
Michael H. Poe
Lt. & Mrs. Albert S. Polk III
Charles A. Pollard
Mr. & Mrs. John B. Pope
Thomas H. Pope III
Mr. &-Mrs. Walter S. Pope, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. John N. Popham IV
John R. Popper
Benjamin W. Porter
Mr. & Mrs. Craig Porter, Jr.
Miss Eva Mai Porter
G. Rogers Porter
Mrs. H. Boone Porter
Mr. & Mrs. Lee Porter
Miss Maibeth Porter
Mr. & Mrs. Gerbrand Poster III
Mr.-& Mrs. Alexander L.
Postlethwaite, Jr.
Sandford Pottinger
Mr. & Mrs. Herbert J. Potts
Mr. & Mrs. Robert E. Potts
Edwin A. Pound, Jr.
Maj. & Mrs. George H. Powell IV
Col. & Mrs. Joseph H. Powell
Mr. & Mrs. Richard H. Powell
Miss Isabella J. Prather
Mr. & Mrs. Fred T. Preaus
Mr. & Mrs. H. Gary Preston
Mr. & Mrs. Hubert M. Preston
David L. Preuss
Rev. & Mrs. George H. Price
Dr. James S. Price
Mr. & Mrs. Joseph L. Price
Leonard W. Price III
Mr. & Mrs. Peter P. Price
Mr. & Mrs. Roy H. Price
Mr. & Mrs. Gerald A. Prieskorn
Mr. & Mrs. William G. Priest
Scott L. Probasco III
John Pruitt
Nelson H. Puett
Very Rev. &. Mrs. Joel W. Pugh II
James C. Putman
Dr. & Mrs. Merritt J. Quade
Rev. & Mrs. George H.
Quarterman, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. William E. Quarterman
Thomas W. N. Quattlebaum
Mr. & Mrs. Gilbert K. Queitzsch
Lt. James 0. Quimby HI
Mrs. John H. Quincey
Mr. & Mrs. Roy P. Qu'iram
R. Stanley Quisenberry
Dr. Thomas D. Raaen
Mr. & Mrs. J. A. Rabbe
Robert A. Ragland, Jr.
John M. Raine
Dr. Oney C. Raines, Jr.
Miss Virginia L. Raines
Lupton V. Rainwater
Rev. William H. Ralston, Jr.
John W. Ramsay
Dr. & Mrs. George S. Ramseur
Mrs. Janet L. Ramsey
Daniel Curtiss Rand, Jr.
Daniel W. Randle
Mr. & Mrs. Augusta M. Raney, Jr.
Mrs. John B. Ransom, Jr.
John B. Ransom III
Dr. Monroe J. Rathbone, Jr.
Gordon S. Rather
Mrs. Kathryn C. Raulston
Miss Marion Rawson
Mrs. Annie Ray
Dr. & Mrs. Edward H. Ray, Jr.
Mrs. Michael Ray
Mrs. Helen H. Raymond
Mr. & Mrs. Kenton B. Rea
Mr. & Mrs. William D. Reams
Will Rebentisch
Allen H. Reddick
Rev. & Mrs. Richard D. Reece
Rt. Rev. David B. Reed
Mrs. Tabitha J. Reeves
Lea A. Reiber
Mr. & Mrs. T. James Reichardt
Miss Mildred E. Reid
Dr. & Mrs. John V. Reishman
Dr. & Mrs. Francis N. Rembert
Mr. & Mrs. Paul W. Reyburn
Rev. & Mrs. George Reynolds
Mr. & Mrs. George L. Reynolds
Herbert L. Reynolds III
Mr. & Mrs. James E. Reynolds, Jr.
William H. Reynolds HI
Horace L. Rhorer, Jr.
Dr. & Mrs. Brinley Rhys
Dr. Guy V. Rice
Louis W. Rice III
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas B. Rice
Maurel N. Richard
Mrs. Edna P. Richards
Beale H. Richardson IV
Miss Caroline G. Richardson
Dr. & Mrs. Dale E. Richardson
Glenn C. Richardson
Rt. Rev. J. Milton Richardson
Rev. William T. Richter
Joseph E. Ricketts
Mrs. Judith A. Rickner
Mr. & Mrs. John G. Riddick, Jr.
Dr. Frank G. Rieger III
Willard P. Rietzel
Mrs. Carol K. Riley
Rudolph A. Ritayik
SMSgt. & Mrs. Jerry R. Ritchie
Mr. & Mrs. Ward H. Ritchie
Mr. & Mrs. E. Petri Robbins
Frank M. Robbins, Jr.
Miss Elizabeth Ann Roberts
Maj. & Mrs. Hay ward B. Roberts,
Jr.
John S. Roberts, Jr.
Leonard H. Roberts
Dr. Purcell Roberts
Stephen H. Roberts
Mrs. Hamilton M. Robertson
Mr. & Mrs. Heard Robertson
Dr. Henry C. Robertson, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. John T. Robertson
Allen J. B. Robinson
Mr. & Mrs. Arthur J. Robinson,
Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Arthur M. Robinson
Miss Deborah Ann Robinson
Mrs. Donald E. Robinson
Neal Robinson
F. Daniel Rock, Jr.
William R. Rockwood-
Capt. & Mrs. Christian A. Rodatz
William J. Rodgers
Rupert O. Roett, Jr.
Ms. Ellen Rogers
Rev. Gladstone Rogers
Miss Lorana G. Rogers
N. Pendleton Rogers
Mrs. Stella M. Rogers
Mr. & Mrs. Albert P. Rollins
Mr. & Mrs. James E. Rollins, Jr.
Dr. Charles B. Romaine, Jr.
Alexis L. Romanoff
Edward C. Rood
Mr. & Mrs. J. N. Roper, Jr.
R. R. Rosborough
Mr. & Mrs. Ralph M. Roscher
Mrs. Catharine T. Ross
Dr. & Mrs. Clay C. Ross
Col. & Mrs. Franz H. Ross (Ret.)
Miss Jean Ross
Willis C. Royall
Mrs. Ernest B. Rubsamen
Ralph H. Ruch
Stanley P. Ruddiman
Mr. & Mrs. William B. Rudner
Philip J. Rugg, Jr.
Jeffery W. Runge
Dr. Joseph M. Running
Holton C. Rush
Noel Rush II
Mr. & Mrs. G. Price Russ, Jr.
C. Bradley Russell
Mrs. Thompson Russell
Dr. & Mrs. Wilson Russell
F. Robert Russo, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs, Allen F. Rust
Miss Anna Wells Rutledge
Lt. Gary N. Sadler
Ms. C. Louise Salley
Paul B. Salter, Jr.
Oliver H. P. Sample
Clinton L. Sanders
Ms. Elizabeth Sanders
Mr. & Mrs. John Sanders
Edgar L. Sanford
Rev. Robert L. Saul
Mr. & Mrs. William R. Saussy
Mrs. Robert P. Sayle
Mrs. Robert M. Sayre
Mr. & Mrs. L. P. Scantlin, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Davis Scarborough'
Mr. & Mrs. Glenn Schaefer
Rev. & Mrs. William P. Scheel
Dr. & Mrs. James P. Scheller
Rev. & Mrs. Charles F. Schilling
Rev. Dr. & Mrs. Joseph N.
Schley, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Norbert E. Schmidt
Mr. & Mrs. Loren E. Schnack
Dr. Robert J. Schneider
Mr. & Mrs. W. C. Schnier
Mr. & Mrs. Clarence S. Schnitker
Mr. & Mrs. Howard A. Schoech
Dr. & Mrs. George D. Schuessler
Mrs. Emily Butler Schultz
Mrs. Mary Louise Schumacher
Kenneth H. Schuppert
Mrs. Alfons F. Schwenk
Mr. & Mrs. Craig R. Scott
Ms. Elizabeth J. Scott
Mr. & Mrs. James H. Scott
Mr. & Mrs. John E. Scott, Jr.
John G. Scott
Mr. & Mrs. John G. Scott
Robert D. Scott
2Lt. Stanley S. Scott II
Steven P. Scoville
Rev. Elbert L. Scranton
Edward P. Seagram
Ms. Sheila L. Seaman
Dr. & Mrs. Harvey B. Searcy
Mr. & Mrs. Howard J. Sears
Mr. & Mrs. Robert B. Sears
Dr. Peter J. Sehlinger, Jr.
E. Grenville Seibels II
H. Kelly Seibels
Mr. & Mrs. James W. Seidule
Donald R. Seifert
Paul B. Seifert
Dr. & Mrs. J. Douglas Seiters
Henry G. Selby
Miss Deborah Selph
Mr. & Mrs. S. E. Sentell, Jr.
Mrs. Mark M. Serrem
Very Rev. & Mrs. Charles M.
Seymour, Jr.
Miss Theresa D. Shackleford
Phil & Cynthia Shackleton
Rev. & Mrs. Harold R. Shaffer
Michael S. Shannon
Mr. & Mrs. Winifred B. Shannon
Donald G. Shannonhouse
Mr. & Mrs. Donald S. Shapleigh,
Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Alfred D. Sharp, Jr.
Mrs. Luther F. Sharp
Thomas S. Sharp
Chaplain (Lt. Col.) William B.
Sharp
Miss Ada Sharpe
William W. Shaver III
Mrs. William J. Shaw
Rev. & Mrs. Benjamin H.
Shawhan, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Roy Shedd
Mr. & Mrs. C. Winston Sheehan,
Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Frederick R. Shellman
Billy Joe Shelton
Dr. James E. Shelton
Miss Mary V. Shelton
Mrs. William A. Shepherd, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Glenn H. Sheraden
Miss Donna G. Sherrard
Miss Debra Susan Sherrill
H. Gerald Shields
Herbert T. Shippen
Rev. & Mrs. Harry W. Shipps
Miss Mariela C. Shirley
Mr. & Mrs. John B. Shober, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. John N. Shockley, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Earl Shores
Rev. Edwin R. Short
Ruben C. Short
Mrs. W. G. Shottafer
Mr. & Mrs. Donald C. Shoup
Very Rev. James M. Sigler
Mr. & Mrs. John E. Sim
Dr. Jack W. Si
Miss Martha T. Si
Richard E. Simmons III
Robert M. Simms
Mr. & Mrs. William A. Simms
Mr. & Mrs. Morris Simon
Mr. & Mrs. Sedgwick L. Simons
Miss Susan C. Simpson
Capt. & Mrs. M. Calvert Sims
Richard M. Sims
Mr. & Mrs. Walter H. Singleton
Mrs. Benjamin R. Sleeper
Mr. & Mrs. John S. Slye
Dr. & Mrs. Glendon W. Smalley
Mr. & Mrs. J. Polk Smartt
Mr. & Mrs. Robert W. Smartt
Mr. & Mrs. Homer L. Smiles
Austin W. Smith
David L. Smith
Mr. & Mrs. Everett H. Smith
Miss Fran Smith
Mrs. Frances Smith
Rev. & Mrs. Garnett R. Smith
Mr. & Mrs. Glenn E. Smith
Mrs. Grace I. Smith
Dr. J. Edward Smith
Mr. & Mrs. James E. Smith
James T. Smith
Mr. & Mrs. Joel A. Smith III
Ms. Lenore 0. Smith
Miss Rebecca R. Smith
Rev. & Mrs. Robert B. Smith
S. Porcher Smith
Mr. & Mrs. Simon Smith
Stephen H. Smith
Mr. & Mrs. W. Jack Smith
Miss Pamela Smotherman
W. Randolph Smythe
Timothy B. Sneathen
J. Brian Snider
Mr. & Mrs. James B. Snider
Joseph Snow
Brinkiey S. Snowden
Thomas D. Snowden
M. Allan Snyder
Mr. & Mrs. J. Morgan Soaper, Jr.
Rev. & Mrs. Ben L. Somerville
Dr. James Robert Sory
Rev. C. Edward South
Mrs. Olga Sovinsky
Dr. Albert P. Spaar
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas D. Spaccarelli
Mrs. Frances L. Spain
Rev. & Mrs. George H. Sparks, Jr.
Ms. Ruth G. Sparks
Alan W. Spearman, Jr.
Dr. & Mrs. George W. Speck
Michael S. Speer
David Speights
Doyle P. Spell
Joseph W. Speigel
Mr. & Mrs. Harold T. Spoden
M. Clark Spoden
Richard R. Spore, Jr.
W. Duvall Spruill
Rev. & Mrs. William A. Spruill, Jr.
Miss Anne G. Stacker
Dr. Peter W. Stacpoole
Mrs. Martha P. Stallings
Robert E. Stanford
E. Howard Stanley, Jr.
Gene A. Stanley, Jr.
Walker Stansell, Jr.
Victor P. Stanton
Mr. & Mrs. Bryan L. Starr
Mrs. Marietta C. Staten
Wilson W. Stearly
Mrs. Theodore L. Stebbins
Rev. Frederick Stecker IV
James A. Steeves
R. Dana Steigerwald
Rev. Robert H. Steilberg
John W. Stenhouse
Mr. & Mrs. John L. Stephens
Talbot P. Stephens
Dr. John R. Stephenson
Mr & Mrs. William E. Stetson
Sidney G. Stevens
Mr. & Mrs. W. J. Stevens
Mrs. Doris E. Stevenson
Robert T. Stevenson
Maj. & Mrs. Edmund B. Stewart
Mr. & Mrs. Harry B. Stewart
James E. Stewart, Jr.
Jeffery F. Stewart
Mr. & Mrs. John D. Stewart
John P. Stewart, Jr.
T. Lawrence Stewart
John H. Stibbs
Frederick G. Stickney V
Carl Stirling
Dr. & Mrs. Edwin M. Stirling
Rev. Canon J. Douglas Stirling
William L. Stirling
William A. Stoll
Mr. & Mrs. Douglas C. Stone
Miss Nora Frances Stone
Thomas D. Stone, Jr.
Dr. Seabury D. Stoneburner, Jr.
Randell C. Stoney
Rev. & Mrs. Raymond W. Storie
Mrs. Clara R. Stover
Mr. St Mrs. Harry R. Stowe
Samuel B. Strang, Jr.
Rev. E. Bruton Strange
Mr. & Mrs. John R. Street, Jr.
Ms. Barbara H. Stuart
Miss Barbara L. Stuart
Dr. St Mrs. John J. Stuart
William A. C. Stuart
Mr. & Mrs. Sidney J. Stubbs
Miss Susan E. Stults
William T. Stumb
Ms. Louise S. Sturgis
Mrs. Jane Hart Sublett
mors of $1 to $99 (continued)
nam A. Sullivan
.'rof. Lewis A. H. Sumberg
& Mrs. Bobby Summers
Charles Summers
Rdith L. Susong
. „ Mrs. Claud R. Sutcliffe
Mr. & Mrs. John G. Sutherland
lr. & Mrs, Leon Sutherland
ilrs. Jack R. Swain
Mr. & Mrs. Allan Swasey
Mr. & Mrs. Victor D. Swift
{lev. & Mrs. Charles H. Swinehart
Jr.
C. W. Swinford
Mr. & Mrs. Maltby Sykes
Mrs. Katherine S. Sznycer
Britlon D. Tabor
Mr. & Mrs. Thoburn Taggart, Jr.
Mrs. Roger Y. Tallec
Rev, Bascom D. Talley III
Dr. J.uncs N. Tanner
Mrs. Scott L. Tarplee
Mr. & Mrs. Albert C. Tale, Jr.
Mr. H Mrs, Allen Tate
Mr, H Mrs. Frank Tate
Jesse H. Tate, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas 0. Tate
Mr. & Mrs. Edwin H. Taylor
George H. Taylor III
Mrs. Helen T. Taylor
Dr. & Mrs. James G. Tailor
John D. Taylor
Mr. & Mrs. John R. Taylor
Mr. & Mrs. Peter H. Taylor
Rev. Richard L. Taylor
Mr. & Mrs. Robert T. Taylor-
Miss Shirley L. Taylor
Walter F. Teckemeyer
Rt. Rev. Gray Temple '
Harvey M. Templeton HI
Mr. & Mrs. Freeland R. Terrill
Ray G. Terry
Dr. Richard R. Terry
Alfred H. Thatcher
Mrs. Richard C. Thatcher
Charles L. Thibaut
Ernest Thicmonge, Jr.
Mrs. Rudolph J. Thiesen
Claude B. Thomas
Mr. & Mrs. John D. Thomas
Mr. & Mrs. Lee M. Thomas
Rev. & Mrs. Louis O'Vander
Thomas
Mr. & Mrs. Robert W. Thomas, Jr
Royce P. Thomas
Windsor P. Thomas, Jr.
Dr. Michael V. R. Tho
Mr. & Mrs. Eugene M. Tho
Albin C. Thompson, Jr.
Mrs. Charles C. Thompson
Dennis P. Thompson
Rev. & Mrs. Fred A. Thompson
Mrs. J. Lewis Thompson, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Jack Thompson
Dr. & Mrs. Oscar H. Thompson,
Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. R. H. Thompson
Ms. Rosalind Thompson
James W. Thomte
Mr. & Mrs. Francis Thorpe
William H. Thrower-
Mr. & Mrs. A. K. Thurmond
J. Haskell Tidman, Jr.
William C. Tilson
Corby & Mary Tilton
Mr. & Mrs. H. Kenan Timberlake,
Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. William C. Tindal
Dr. John L. Tison, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Joe S. Tobias, Sr.
Mrs. Mark M. Tolley
Mark M. Tolley, Jr.
Dr. A. Spencer Tomb
Mr. & Mrs. Billy Tomes
Mr. & Mrs. Ernest E. Tomes
Mr. & Mrs. Marion G. Tomlin
John W. Tonissen, Jr.
A. Richard Toothaker
Rev. & Mrs. R. Archer Torrey
Daniel J. Toulon III
Rev. & Mrs. Robert A.Tourigney
Miss Sally S. Townsend
Mr. & Mrs. Joseph H. Towson
W. D. Trabue III
Harold E. Trask, Jr.
Brooks Travis
Mr. & Mrs. Ralph Travis
Miss Marye Trezevant
Mr. & Mrs. Robert L. Trimbach
Rev. W. Bradley Trimble
Mrs. William P. Trolinger, Jr.
Rt. Rev. Andrew Yu-Yue Tsu
Mr. & Mrs. Edward E. Tucker
Miss Elizabeth S. Tucker
Mr. & Mrs. Felix H. Tucker
Mr. & Mrs. Joseph H. Tucker III
Miss Martha Louisa Tucker
Mrs. Mary Reid Tucker
Dr. & Mrs. Albert J. Tully
Mr. & Mrs. William H. Tunncll, Jr.
Vernon S. Tupper, Jr.
Mrs. Albert Turesky
Dr. Bayly Turlington (d)
Mrs. Bayly Turlington
Mr. & Mrs. Richard W. Turlington
Mr. & Mrs. Baker J. Turner, Jr.
Charles H. Turner III
Rev. Claude S. Turner, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. George J. Turner
Mr. & Mrs. R. Harris Turner
Rev. & Mrs. Russell W. Turner
William Landis Turner
William R. Turner, Jr.
William S. Turner III
Miss Elizabeth J. Turpit
Mr. & Mrs. Harold Turrentine
Gorden R. Tyler
Miss Alison Jane Tyrer
u
Mr. & Mrs. Paul K. Uhrig
Mrs. Howard F. Ulton
Rev. Arthur H. Underwoo
Miss Grace Unzicker
Douglas R. Urquhart
Mr. & Mrs. Henry Van Balen
Mr. & Mrs. F. Karl VanDevender
Rev. Herbert J. Vandort
Harris W. van Hillo
Rev. Tim E. Vann
Mrs. Harriet S. Vardell
Mr. & Mrs. Bayne J. Vaughan
Mr. & Mrs. Douglas L. Vaughan,
Jr.
Mrs. Robert Vaughan
James B. Vaught, Jr.
Michael B. Veal
Mr. & Mrs. Karl Volkmar
Mr. & Mrs. William R. Von Tress
Mr. & Mrs. David A. Voflrhees
w
Rev. & Mrs. William S. Wade
Mr. & Mrs. Paul Waggoner-
Miss Dolores E. Wagner
Dr. George N. Wagnon
Stephen T. Waimey
Rev. Francis B. Wakefield, Jr.
Frank M. Walker, Jr.
George Walker
Mr. & Mrs. George D. Walker
Rev. Joseph R. Walker
Mr. & Mrs. Paul R. Walker, Jr.
Mrs. W. E. Walker-
Allen M. Wallace
Dr. & Mrs. Rodger T. Wallace
Mr. & Mrs. Michael G. Wallens
Dr. & Mrs. Albert C. Walling II
Mr. & Mrs. Hugh B. Wallis
Jesse P. Walt
Mrs. W. G. Walter
John A. Walters
Mrs. O. E. Wangeman
Mr. & Mrs. J. W. Ware, Jr.
Capt. & Mrs. William L. Ware
W. Miles Warfield
Mrs. George W. Warren
Col. & Mrs. John L. Warren
Ch. (Maj.) James M. Warrington
Capt. John C. Wasson
Dr. & Mrs. George Waterhouse, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. James Waterhouse
Mr. & Mrs. Francis G. Watkins
Maj. & Mrs. John F. Watkins III
Mr. & Mrs. Warner S. Watkins, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Tom G. Watson
Dr. & Mrs. Charles H. Watt, Jr.
Charles H. Watt III
Miss Elizabeth V. Watt
Dr. Vance Watt
Mrs. Charles W. Watts
Roger A. Way, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Warren W. Way
Mr. & Mrs. John Waymouth III
Mr. & Mrs. L. Samuel Waymouth
Keith W. Weaver
Mr. & Mrs. William C. Weaver, Jr.
H. Waring Webb
Dr. & Mrs. John M. Webb
Mr. & Mrs. Joseph C. Webb
Mr. & Mrs. E. Bruce Wedge
W. Bradley Weeks
Ms. Josephine A. Weibling
Mr. & Mrs. Carl Weigel
Mrs. Hilda Weir
Mr. & Mrs. S. P. Welborn, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Aaron W. Welch, Jr.
Robert E. Welch, Jr.
Rev. Herbert H. Weld
Lt. Col. & Mrs. Hugh P. Wellford
Mr. & Mrs. Warner M. Wells III
J. Parham Werlein
Arthur A. West
Mrs. E. Hamilton West
Mr. & Mrs. Olin West, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Richard L. West
Thomas M. West IV
Mrs. William Whalen
Edward P. Whatley, Jr.
Eldridge A. Wheeler
Mrs. Raymond Wheeler
Capt. William B. Wheeler
Mr. & Mrs. William H. Wheeler, Jr.
Ms. Mary Jo Wheeler-Smith
Edwin M. White
Mr. & Mrs. F. Phillip White, Jr.
Gilmer White, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Jack P. White
Mr. & Mrs. Stephen P. White III
Mrs. Theresa S. White
J. Randolph Whitehead
Donald K. Whiteman
Claud R. Whitener III
Mrs. Sophie E. Whitener
H. Pennington Whiteside, Jr.
Thomas A. Whiteside
Mr. & Mrs. Ellis R. White-Spunner
Wythe L. Whiting III
Mark L. Whitney
R. Bradford Whitney
Burton W. Wiand
Hugh B. Wicks
Ms. Annie M. Wilbourn
Mr. & Mrs. Robert H. Wilcox
Mr. & Mrs. Charles A. Wiley
Mr. & Mrs. J. Brantley Wiley, Jr.
James B. Wiley
Mr. & Mrs. Philip A. Wilheit
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas T. Wilheit, Jr.
Dr. William H. C. Wilhoit
Mrs. Clyde W. Wilkinson
Mrs. Francis A. Wilkinson
Mr. & Mrs. Tyree E. Wilkinson
Mrs. B. W. Williams
Mr. & Mrs. Edward T. Williams
Mrs. Emily V. Sheller Williams
Rev. Hedley J. Williams
Mr. & Mrs. J. Homer Williams
Mr. & Mrs. J. Ross Williams
James K. Williams
Miss Jan Williams
Col. John F. Williams
Rev. Larry C. Williams
Mr. & Mrs. Lawrence T. Williams
Dr. Leslie J. Williams
Dr. Melvin R. Williams
Mr. & Mrs. Paul Williams
Dr. & Mrs. Robert E. Williams
Dr. & Mrs. T. Glyne Williams
Thomas W. Williams
Mr. & Mrs. Thurman H. Williams,
Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Wallace Williams
Benton D. Williamson
Rev. J. Philson Williamson
James E. Willis
James P. Willis
Mr. & Mrs. Larry H. Willmore
Miss Caroline Duval Wills
Miss Shelley A. Wilmoth
Mrs. Archie S. Wilson
Mr. & Mrs. C. Ryall Wilson
Lt. Col. & Mrs. Francis H. Wilson,
Jr.
James F. Wilson
Mrs. Kathleen A. Wilson
Lawrence A. Wilson
Rev. & Mrs. Michael H. Wilson
Ms. Michele B. Wilson
Ven. Richard W. Wilson
Miss S. Alexandra Wilson
Capt. Shelburne D. Wilson, Jr.
Rev. William J. Wilson
Miss Deborah A. Wiltsee
Mr. & Mrs. Herbert L. Wiltsee
Charles L. Wimberly
Dr. William Wingfield, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Joseph W. Winkelman
Mr. & Mrs. Peter M. Winfield
Mr. & Mrs. Herbert E. Winn
Mrs. Edna M. Winnes
Mr. & Mrs. Hoyt Winslett
Richard C. Winslow
Charles A. Winters
Mr. & Mrs. John M. Winters .
Mrs. Frances Wischmann
Miss Dorothy T. Wise
J. C. Wise
Mrs. Jesse Wise
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas R. Wise II
Mr. & Mrs. David G. Wiseman, Jr.
Harry K. Witt
Rev. Fred C. Wolf, Jr.
Mrs. Theodore R. Wolf
Doak J. Wolfe
Bernard M. Wolff
Mr. & Mrs. Jess Y. Womack II
Mr. & Mrs. Leonard N. Wood
Rt. Rev. & Mrs. Milton L. Wood
Dr. Robert H. Wood, Jr.
Thomas D. Woodbery III
F. A. Woodbury
Mr. & Mrs. Robert H. Woodrow,
Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. B. W. Woodruff
Mr. & Mrs. George E. Woods
Mrs. Howard Woodside
Dr. & Mrs. J. Austin Woody
Mr. & Mrs. Alfred Wooleyhan
Mr. & Mrs. Emmons H. Woolwine,
Jr.
Miss Christine B. Wooten
Mr. & Mrs. Hughie Wooten
Mr. & Mrs. Arthur J. Worrall
Rev. John C. Worrell
Wendell F. Wren
Gordon T. P. Wright
J. Howard Wright
John H. Wright, Jr.
Mr. & Mrs. Marvin H. Wright
Rt. Rev. Thomas H. Wright
Rev. Charles F. Wulf
Mr. & Mrs. Hunter Wyatt-Brown
Mr. & Mrs. Philip L. Wyche, Jr.
Dr. Cyril T. Yancey
Ms. Mary M. Yancey
Herbert A. Yarbrough HI
Mr. & Mrs. C. McCord Yates
Mr. Charles R. Yates
Mrs. Maye H. Yerger
Francis H. Yerkes
Ven. Fred G. Yerkes
Mr. &Mrs. JoeD. Yokley.
Miss Lucille D. Young
Mr. & Mrs. Sidney H. Young
Mr. & Mrs. Thomas S. Young
Rev. Cornelius A. Zabriskie
William B. Zachry
Dr. Richard W. Ziegler
Mr. & Mrs. Adrian Zimmerm
Mr. & Mrs. Richard Zimmern
CHURCH SUPPORT REPORT
gifts from Owning Dioceses
headquarters has also given
ALABAMA (D)
ALEXANDER CITY - St. James'
ALPINE - Trinity
ANNISTON - Grace
AUBURN - St. Dunstan's of Canterbury,
Holy Trinity
BESSEMER - Trinity
BIRMINGHAM - Advent, All Saints',
Ascension, Grace, St. Andrew's, St.
Luke's, St. Mark's, St. Mary son the-
Highlands, St. Michael's, St. Stephen's
CHILDERSBURG - St. Mary's
DECATUR - St. John's
DEMOPOLIS - Trinity
EUTAW - St. Stephen's
FLORENCE - St. Bartholomew's, Trinity
FORT PAYNE - St. Philip's
GADSDEN - Holy Comforter
GREENSBORO - St. Paul's
HUNTSV1LLE - Nativity, St. Stephen's,
St. Thomas'
JASPER - St. Mary's
MONTGOMERY - Ascension, Holy
Comforter
OPELIKA - Emmanuel
PELL CITY - St. Simon Peter
PHENIX CITY - Resurrection
PRATTVILLE - St. Mark's
SYLACAUGA - St. Andrew's
TALLADEGA - St. Peter's
TUSCALOOSA - Christ
ARKANSAS (D)
BATESVILLE - St. Paul's
CONWAY - St. Peter's
EL DORADO - St. Mary's
FAYETTEVILLE - St. Paul's
FORREST CITY - Good Shepherd
FORT SMITH - St. Bartholomew's, St.
John's
HOT SPRINGS - St. Luke's
JONESBORO - St. Mark's
LITTLE ROCK - Christ, St. Mark's,
Trinity Cathedral
MARIANNA - St. Andrew's
NEWPORT - St. Paul's
PARAGOULD - All Saints'
ATLANTA
ATHENS - St. Gregory the Great
ATLANTA - All Saints', Holy Innocents,
St. Anne's, St. Bede's, St. Luke's,
St. Martin 's-in-the-Fields, St. Philip's
Cathedral
COLUMBUS - St. Thomas'
DALTON - St. Mark's
FORT VALLEY - St. Andrew's
GAINESVILLE - Grace
LAWRENCEVILLE - St. Edward's
MACON - Christ, St. Francis', St. Paul's
MARIETTA - St. James'
MILLEDGEVILLE - St. Stephen's
MONTEZUMA - St, Mary's
NEWNAN - St. Paul's
PERRY - St. Christopher's
ROME - St. Peter's
SMYRNA - St. Jude's
WARNER ROBINS - All Saints'
CENTRAL FLORIDA (D)
BARTOW - Holy Trinity
COURTENAY - St. Luke's
DAYTONA BEACH - Holy Trinity-by-the-
Sea
DELAND - St. Barnabas'
LEESBURG - St. James'
MELBOURNE - Holy Trinity
MULBERRY - St. Luke the Evangelist
ORLANDO - St. Luke's Cathedral, St
Mary of the Angels, St. Michael's
VERO BEACH - Trinity
CENTRAL GULF COAST (D)
(Alabama)
CODEN - St. Mary's-by-the-Sea
FAERHOPE - St. James'
MOBILE - All Saints', St. Paul's, Trinity
MONROE VILLE - St. John's
(Florida)
APALACHICOLA - Trinity
CANTONMENT - St. Monica's
FORT WALTON BEACH -St, Simon V
on-the- Sound
GULF BREEZE - St. Francis of Assisi
■ PENSACOLA -.Christ, St. Christopher's
PORT ST. JOE - St. James'
VALPARAISO - St. Jude's
DALLAS (D)
CORSICANA - St. John's
DALLAS - All Saints', Christ, Good
Shepherd, Incarnation, St. Christo-
pher's, St. Paul', St. Thomas the
FORT WORTH - All Saints', St, Andrew's
KAUFMAN - Our Merciful Saviour
LANCASTER - St. Martin's
TERRELL - Good Shepherd
TEXARKANA - St. Mary's
EAST CAROLINA (D)
EDENTON - Si. Paul's
FAYETTEVILLE - Holy Trinity
GOLDSBORO - St. Francis'
GREENVILLE - St. Paul's
HERTFORD - Holy Trinity
KINSTON - St, Mary's
NAG'S HEAD - St. Andrew's
WASHINGTON • St Peter's
WILLIAMSTON - Advent
WILMINGTON - St James'
WOODVILLE - Grace
FLORIDA (D)
KER N AN DIN A BEACH - St Peter's
GAINESVILLE - Holy Trinity
H1BERNIA - St Margaret's
JACKSONVILLE - All Saints', Good
Shepherd, Nativity, St. Andrew's, St
John's Cathedral, St Mark's
KEYSTONE HEIGHTS - St Anne's
LIVE OAK - St. Luke's
MANDARIN - Our Saviour
MELROSE - Trinity
ORANGE PARK - Grace
PONTE VEDRA BEACH - Christ
QUINCY - St. Paul's
STARKE - St Mark's
TALLAHASSEE - Advent, St. John's
WELAKA - Emmanuel
GEORGIA
ALBANY • St. Paul's
AMERICUS - Calvary
AUGUSTA - Christ, Good Shepherd, St.
Alban's, St. Augustine's, St. Paul's
BRUNSWICK - St Mark's
COCHRAN • Trinity
CORDELE - Christ
FREDERICA - Christ
GARDEN CITY - All Souls'
HARLEM - Trinity
JEKYLL ISLAND - St. Richard's
JESUP • St Paul's
MOULTRIE - St. John's
SAVANNAH - Christ Holy Apostles, St.
Michael's, St Thomas'
SAVANNAH BEACH - All Saints'
THOMASVILLE - St Thomas'
VALDOSTA - Christ
WAYCROSS - Grace
KENTUCKY (D)
BOWLING GREEN - Christ
FULTON - Trinity
GILBERTSVILLE - St. Peter-of-the- Lakes
HARRODS CREEK - St. Francis in-the-
Fields
HOPKINSVILLE - Grace
LOUISVILLE - Christ Church Cathedral,
St. Mark's
MADISONVILLE - St. Mary's
MAYFIELD - St. Martin's-in-the-Fields
MURRAY - St. John's
PADUCAH - Grace
LEXINGTON (D)
COVINGTON - Trinity
DANVILLE - Trinity
FORT THOMAS - St. Andrew's
HARRODSBURG - St. Philip's
LEXINGTON - Christ
PARIS - St. Peter's
LOUISIANA (D)
ABBEVILLE - St. Paul's
ALEXANDRA - St. James', St. Timothy's
BASTROP - Christ
BATON ROUGE - St. James', Trinity
BAYOU DU LARGE - St. Andrew's
BOGALUSA - St. Matthew's
COVINGTON - Christ
HOUMA - St. Matthew's
1NNIS - St. Stephen's
KENNER - St. John's
LAFAYETTE - Ascension, St. Barnabas'
LAKE CHARLES - Good Shepherd, St.
Michael & All Angels
LAKE PROVIDENCE - Grace
MANSFIELD - Christ Memorial
MER ROUGE - St. Andrew's
METAIRIE - St. Augustine's, St. Martin's
MINDEN - St. John's
MONROE - Grace, St. Alban's, St.
Thomas'
NAPOLEONVILLE - Christ
NEW IBERIA - Epiphany
NEW ORLEANS • Annunciation, Christ
Church Cathedral, St. Andrew's, St.
Paul's, St. Philip's, Trinity
NEW ROADS - St. Paul's-Holy Trinity
OPELOUSAS - Epiphany
PINEVILLE - St. Michael's
PLAQUEMINE - Holy Communion
RAYVILLE - St. David's
ROSEDALE • Nativity
RUSTON - Redeemer
ST. JOSEPH - Christ
SHREVEPORT - Holy Cross, St. Mark's,
St. Matthias', St. Paul's
TALLULAH - Trinity
WEST MONROE - St. Patrick's
WINNSBORO - St. Columba's
MISSISSIPPI
BAY ST. LOUIS - Christ
BILOXI • Redeemer
CANTON - Grace
CLARKSDALE - St. George's
COLUMBIA ■ St Stephen's
COLUMBUS - St. Paul's
COMO - Holy Innocents
CRYSTAL SPRINGS - Holy Trinity
ENTERPRISE • St. Mary's
GREENVILLE - St. James'
GREENWOOD • Nativity
GULFPORT - St. Peter's-by-the-Sea
HATTIESBURG • Trinity
1ND1ANOLA - St. Stephen's
JACKSON - St. Andrew's Cathedral, St.
James', St. Philip's
LAUREL - St. John's
MERIDIAN - St. Paul's
MICHIGAN CITY - Calvary
NATCHEZ - Trinity
NEWTON • Trinity
OCEAN SPRINGS - St. John's
OXFORD - St. Peter's
ROLLING FORK - Chapel of the Cross
STARKVILLE - Resurrection
SUMNER - Advent
TUNICA - Epiphany
TUPELO - All Saints'
VICKSBURG • Holy Trinity
YAZOO CITY - Trinity
MISSOURI (D)
ROLLA - Christ
SULLIVAN - St. John's
UNIVERSITY CITY - Holy Communion
NORTH CAROLINA
CHAPEL HILL - Chapel of the Cross
CHARLOTTE - Christ, St. Martin's
GREENSBORO - Holy Trinity
HALIFAX - St. Mark's
HIGH POINT - St. Mary's
MONROE - St. Paul's
MOUNT AIRY • Trinity
OXFORD - St. Stephen's
RALEIGH - Christ, Good Shepherd, St.
Michael's
ROANOKE RAPIDS - All Saints'
ROCKY MOUNT - Good Shepherd
SCOTLAND NECK - Trinity
WADESBORO - Calvary
WILSON - St. Timothy's
WINSTON-SALEM - St. Paul's
NORTHWEST TEXAS (D)
ABILENE - Heavenly Rest
AMARILLO - St. Peter's
BORGER - St. Peter's
COLEMAN - St. Mark's
DALHART - St. James'
PLAINVfEW - St. Mark's
QUANAH - Trinity
SAN ANGELO - Good Shepherd
SOUTH CAROLINA (D)
ADAMS RUN - Christ-St Paul's
BEAUFORT - St. Helena's
CHARLESTON - Cathedral of St. Luke &
St. Paul, Grace, Holy Trinity, St
Michael's, St. Philip's
Continued on next page
24
Church Support (continued)
DENMARK • St. Philip's Chapel
EDISTO ISLAND - Trinity
FLORENCE - All Saints', St. John's
GEORGETOWN • Prince George (Winyah)
HILTON HEAD - St. Luke's
JOHN'S ISLAND • St. John's
MOUNT PLEASANT • Christ
PINOPOLIS ■ Trinity
SUMMERTON ■ St. Matthias'
SUMTER • Holy Comforter, Protestant
Chaplain's Fund
SOUTHEAST FLORIDA (D)
CORAL GABLES - St. Philip's, Chapel of
the Venerable Bede
CORAL SPRINGS - St. Mary Magdalene
DELRAY BEACH - St. Paul's
FORT LAUDERDALE • All Saints',
Intercession
HOLLYWOOD • St. John's
HOMESTEAD ■ St. John's
KEY BISCAYNE - St. Christopher's-by-
the Sea
LAKE WORTH - Holy Redeemer, St.
Andrew's
MARATHON • St. Columba's
MIAMI ■ Resurrection, St. Simon's
MIAMI SPRINGS - All Angels'
PALM BEACH ■ Bethesda-by-the-Sea
PALM BEACH GARDENS ■ St. Mark's
POMPANO BEACH - SI. Martin-in-the-
Fields
STUART • St. Mary's
TEQUESTA • Good Shepherd
WEST PALM BEACH - Holy Trinity
SOUTHWEST FLORIDA (D)
ARCADIA - St. Edmund the Martyr
BRADENTON - Christ
CLEARWATER - Good Samaritan, St.
John's
DADE CITY -St. Mary's
DUNEDIN - Good Shepherd
ENGLEWOOD - St. David's
FORT MYERS ■ St. Hilary's, St. Luke's
INDIAN ROCKS BEACH -Calvary
LARGO - St. Durjstan's
NAPLES - Trinity-by-the-Cove
PALMETTO - St. Mary's
PORT CHARLOTTE - St. James'
ST. PETERSBURG - St. Matthew's, St.
Peter's Cathedral
SANIBEL ISLAND - St. Michael & All
SARASOTA - Redeemer, St. Boniface's
TAMPA - St. Christopher's, St. Mary's
VENICE -St. Mark's
TENNESSEE (D)
ATHENS -St. Paul's
BATTLE CREEK - St. John the Baptist
BRENTWOOD - Advent
BRIGHTON - Ravenscroft Chapel
CHATTANOOGA - Grace, St. Martin of
Tours, St. Paul's, St. Peter's, St.
Thaddaeus', Thankful Memorial
CLARKSVILLE - Trinity
CLEVELAND - St. Luke's
COLLIERVILLE - St. Andrew's
COLUMBIA - St. Peter's
COOKEVILLE - St. Michael's
COPPERHILL - St. Mark's
COVINGTON - St. Matthew's
COWAN - St. Agnes'
DYERSBURG - St. Mary's
ELIZABETHTON - St. Thomas'
FAYETTEVILLE - St. Mary Magdalene
GALLATIN - Our Saviour
GATLINBURG -Trinity
GERMANTOWN - St. George's
GREENEVILLE- St. James'
GRUETLI - St. Bernard's
HARRIMAN - St. Andrew's
HENDERSONVILLE - St. Joseph of
Arimathea
JACKSON -St. Luke's
JOHNSON CITY - St. John's
KINGSPORT - St. Christopher's, St.
Timothy's
KNOXVILLE - Ascension, Good
Shepherd, St. James', St. John's,
Tyson House
LA GRANGE - lmmanuel
LEBANON - Epiphany
LOOKOUT MTN. - Good Shepherd
LOUDON-LENOIR CITY - Resurrection
MANCHESTER - St. Bede's
MARYVILLE - St. Andrew's
MASON - St, Paul's, Trinity
McMINNVILLE - St. Matthew's
MEMPHIS - Calvary, Good Shepherd,
Grace-St. Luke's, Holy Communion,
St. Elisabeth's, St. James', St. John's,
St. Mary's Cathedral
MILLINGTON - St. Anne's
MONTEAGLE - Holy Comforter
MORRISTOWN - All Saints'
MURFREESBORO - St. Paul's
NASHVILLE - Christ, St. Andrew's, St.
Ann's, St. Bartholomew's, St. David's,
St. George's, St. Matthias'
NEWPORT - Annunciation
NORRIS - St. Francis'
OAK RIDGE - St. Stephen's
OLD HICKORY - St. John's
PARIS -Grace
PULASKI -Messiah
RUGBY - Christ
SEWANEE - Otey Memorial
SHELBYVILLE - Redeemer
SHERWOOD - Epiphany
SIGNAL MTN. - St. Timothy's
SOMERVILLE ■ St. Thomas'
SOUTH PITTSBJJRG - Christ
SPRING HILL - Grace
TRACY CITY - Christ
TULLAHOMA - St. Barnabas'
WINCHESTER - Trinity
TEXAS (D)
ANGLETON - Holy Comforter
AUSTIN - Good Shepherd
BEAUMONT. St. Mark's
HOUSTON - Palmer Memorial, St.
Alban's, St. John the Divine, St.
Stephen's
RICHMOND - Calvary
SEALY - St. John's
TYLER - Christ
WACO -St. Paul's
UPPER SOUTH CAROLINA (D)
ABBEVILLE - Trinity
AIKEN - St. Thaddeus'
CAMDEN - Grace
CAYCE - All Saints'
COLUMBIA - Good Shepherd, St. John'
St. Mary's, St. Timothy's, Trinity
Cathedral
CONGAREE - St. John's
EASTOVER - Zion
GLENN SPRINGS - Calvary
GRANITE VILLE - St. Paul's
GREENVILLE - Christ, St. James'
GREENWOOD - Resurrection
LANCASTER - Christ
RIDGEWAY - St. Stephen's
ROCK HILL - Our Saviour
SPARTANBURG - Advent, St.
Christopher's
TRENTON - Church of the Ridge
UNION -Nativity
YORK - Good Shepherd
WEST TEXAS (D)
BEEVILLE - St. Philip's
BOERNE - St. Helena's
BRADY - St. Paul's
BROWNSVILLE - Advent
CORPUS CHRISTI - Good Shepherd
EAGLE PASS - Redeemer
KERRVILLE - St. Peter's
KINGSVILLE - Epiphany
SAN ANTONIO - Christ, St. Andrew's,
St. David's, St. George's, St. Mark's,
St. Stephen's, Santa Fe
SONORA -St. John's
VICTORIA - St. Francis'
WESTERN
NORTH CAROLINA (D)
ASHEVILLE - All Souls', St. Giles'
Chapel, Trinity
BAT CAVE - Transfiguration
CASHIERS - Good Shepherd
FLAT ROCK - St. John-in-the-Wilderness
GASTONIA - St. Mark's
HAYESVILLE - Good Shepherd
HICKORY - Ascension
HIGHLANDS - Incarnation
MARION - St. John's
MORGANTON - Grace
WILKESBORO - St. Paul's
CHURCH SUPPORT SUMMARY
1977-78 ' .
.No. of
"?
Diocese
Comm.
SITB
TESO
Other
Total
Alabama
16,922
$ 23,634
$ 2,914
$ 594
$ 27,142
Arkansas
12,520
6,961
971
100
8,032
Atlanta
28,315
7,798
2,689
—
10,487
Central Florida
25,910
3,560
632
250
4,442
Central Uulf Coast
9,431
16,583
561
5,050
22,194
Dallas
34,949
10,706
105
—
12,811
East Carolina
12,506
2,524
422
100
3,046
Florida
18,596
8,471
1,714
200
10,385
Georgia
12,075
6,883
1,019
—
7,902
Kentucky
9,822
4,412
574
—
4,986
Lexington
6,744
4,340
60
182
4,582
Louisiana
29,651
12,703
1,189
1,100
14,995
Mississippi
14,950
7,983
451
—
8,434
Missouri
13,552
1,025
200
—
1,225
North Carolina
30,366
6,634
1,103
—
7,737
Northwest Texas
8,381
1,980
105
- 43
2,128
South Carolina
18,465
2,995
899
25
3,919
Southeast Florida
31,827
8,940
359
—
9,299
Southwest Florida
28,193
11,686
1,622
1,589
14,897
Tennessee
31,897
32,384
2,056
3,464
38,460
Texas
61,249
12,042
687
_
12,729
Upper South Carolina
18,952
8,676
1,560
530
10,766
West Texas
22,717
6,700
504
_
7,204
Western North Carolina
9,467
1,914
905
20
2,839
507,457
$211,525
$23,869
$15,247.
$250,641
Outside Owning Dioceses
143
4,573
541
5,257
$211,668
$28,442
$15,788
$255,898
gifts from
Outside Owning Dioceses
ALUMNI AFFAIRS
ARIZONA
SUN CITY - St. Christopher's
CENTRAL NEW YORK
FAYETTEVILLE - Trinity
JOHNSON CITY - All Saints'
CENTRAL PENNSYLVANIA
CHAMBERSBURG - Holy Trinity
RENOVO - Trinity
BUENA VISTA - Grace
MONUMENT - St. Matthii
SALIDA - Ascension
HAWAII
HONOLULU - St. George's
INDIANAPOLIS
CRAWFORDSVILLE - St. John's
IOWA
CEDAR FALLS • St. Luke's
DES MOINES ■ St. Paul's
KANSAS
LAWRENCE - Trinity
LEAVENWORTH - St. Paul's
OVERLAND PARK - St. Thomas the
Apostle
WICHITA - St. Christopher's
LONG ISLAND
FLORAL PARK - St. Elizabeth's
HEMPSTEAD , Cathedral of the
Incarnation
LOS ANGELES
PALOS VERDES ESTATES - St. Francis'
SANTA MONICA - St. Augustine's
MARYLAND
NEW YORK CITY - Epiphany
PEARL RIVER -St. Stephen's
NEWARK
CLIFTON - St. Peter
Kathy Galligan
NORTHERN INDIANA
FORT WAYNE - Trinity
OKLAHOMA
BARTLESVILLE - St. Luke's
PENNSYLVANIA
PHILADELPHIA - Holy Trinity, St.
Luke's
QUINCY
QUINCY ■ St. John's
SOUTH DAKOTA
MARTIN - St. Katharine's
MISSION - Trinity
SOUTHERN OHIO
WORTHINGTON - St. John's
SOUTHERN VIRGINIA
CAPE CHARLES - Emmanuel
CREWE - Gibson Memorial
NORFOLK - St. Paul's
ONANCOCK - Holy Trinity
VIRGINIA BEACH - Good Samaritan
WILLIAMSBURG - Bruton Parish
YORKTOWN • Grace, York-Hampton
Parish
SOUTHWESTERN VIRGINIA
EASTVILLE - Hungar's Parish
FOLLY MILLS - Good Shepherd
LEXINGTON - Robert E. Lee Memorial
ROANOKE - St. John's
SPOKANE
POMEROY - St. Peter's
UTAH
VERNAt,,- St. Paul's
VIRGINIA
' ALEXANDRIA - St. James'
FREDERICKSBURG - Trinity
McLEAN - St. John's
RICHMOND - St. Peter's
WASHINGTON
WASHINGTON - CI
St. Paul's
WEST VIRGINIA
BLUEFIELD - Christ
WESTERN MASSACHUSETTS
WHALOM - All Saints' Chapel
College
Homecoming
The expectation of fall colors
played no small part in the sched-
uling of College homecoming
October 13-15.
It will be difficult to beat the
colors of 1977, but Sewanee will
do its best.
Significant will be the reunions,
especially the gatherings of the
Class of '28, whose chairman is
John Crawford, and the Class of
'53, whose chairman is Bob Boyls-
ton.
The reunions will, for the most
part, be held Saturday evening
after the football game with South-
western.
Don't forget the alumni meet-
ing at 10 a.m. Saturday.
Academy
Homecoming
A full schedule will greet alumni for
Academy homecoming October
27-29.
Again this year, parents' week-
end will be held during homecom-
ing. The Rev. D. Roderick Welles,
the headmaster, said: "We enjoy
getting the alumni and parents
together for a little dialogue."
A reception at 3-5 P.M. Friday
at Sewanee Inn will start the fes-
tivities.
All alumni are encouraged to
■ attend the Alumni Association
meeting at 10:30 A.M. Saturday in
i Hamilton Hall. Parents will also be
invited to hear a report oh the
Academy and the plans for the
future.
Sewanee Clubs
The Sewanee Club of Middle
Tennessee (excluding Nashville)
was organized August 12 at the
Sportsman's Club in Murfreesboro
where about 40 persons gathered
from nine surrounding towns and
cities. Robert B. Murfree, C'70,
was elected president; Daniel F.
Callahan III, C'69, vice-president,
and Tyree E. Wilkinson, C'72,
secretary -treasurer. The club plans a
homecoming meeting at Sewanee
and about three meetings a year
thereafter.
Vice-Chancellor Robert M.
Ayres, Jr. was the special guest at
the annual picnic of the Nashville
Club on August 24. The picnic was
held at the home of F. Clay Bailey,
Jr., C'50, and his wife.
The Tennessee Valley Club
attracted an enthusiastic group to a
barbecue supper August 18 at the
home of Dr. Wyatt Blake III, C'50,
and his wife in Sheffield, Alabama.
Dean Stephen E. Puckette
spoke at a Jacksonville party July 8
at Neptune Beach. It was a casual
affair planned by David Sutton,
C'66, and Richard M. Hart, Jr.,
C'65.
Central South Carolina held its
annual summer barbecue August 18
at the White Pond Club near Elgin.
Guests included entering College
freshmen and their parents.
The Central Florida Club held
its annual meeting and picnic
August 13 at the home of Dr.
Robert C. Mumby, C'53, the club
president. Dr. Robert S. (Red)
Lancaster was the featured speaker.
Students and their parents were
also invited.
Dr. Arthur M. Schaefer, Univer-
sity provost, was guest speaker at
a July 19 dinner of the San Francis-
co Bay Area Club. The dinner was
held at Borel's Restaurant in San
Mateo.
Birmingham had a summer fling
August 19. at the lake house of
George Elliott, C'51— skiing, swim-
ming, volleyball, and plenty of
chicken. •> ■
' Tampa Bay Area held its annual
meeting August 9 in the board
room of the Second National Bank
of Tampa. We'll have to catch up
on the new officers later.
LETTERS
I have supported Sewanee as best I
could since graduation. I wish that I
could have taken fuller advantage
of all it had to offer while 1 was
attending.
One area that has been improv-
ing since I left is the spiritual side
of University life. The article in the
last Sewanee News on the election
of Robert Ayres and his address
following especially inspired me.
The intellectual pursuits have
no real meaning or significance
apart from Jesus Christ and the
Cross. Together they can be bonded
into a firm foundation of living
stones. May a loud AMEN roll
through the hallowed halls of All
Saints' Chapel, and let the curtain
of our past indifference and ig-
norance be rent to reveal the true
meaning of higher education.
As the new prayer book con-
cludes the Eucharist:
"Let us go forth into the world
Rejoicing in the power of the
Spirit!"
Because that statement de-
scribes action as well as power, 1
offer my services and a check as a
sign of my approval and support for
the fresh breeze of Ood's spirit
upon the University through the
commitment to be committed to
the living Christ. May God continue
to multiply according to his riches.
Robert T. Taylor, C'70
Birmingham, Alabama
CLASS
NOTES
Alumni who attended more than one
University division are listed in the class
notes under the class year of most ad-
vanced study.
If you attended the Academy, Col-
lege, and School of Theology, you would
be listed under your seminary class year.
The Very Rev. James C. Fenhagen, C*5J, is the
new dean of General Theological Seminary in
New York City.
For the past five years. Dean Fenhagen has
served as director of church and ministry
programs at the Hartford Connecticut Seminary
Foundation where he pioneered in development
of special programs using lay talent.
He also has served as education director
for the Diocese of Washington, and has been
rector of St. Johns Parish in Georgetown and
St. Michael and All Angels^ Church in Columbia,
South Carolina. He is the author of three books
on the ministry.
CLARENCE SCHNITKER, A, has
retired from the Treasury Department
and is living in Nashville.
1929
DR. ONEY C. RAINES, JR., A'25, C,
writes he has retired from his medical
practice. He has been unable to speak
since a laryngectomy for cancer. "Can't
talk, but still look," he, says. One son,
Oney III, is practicing medicine in Gulf-
port, Mississippi, and the second, David,
and his wife are expecting a child.
1936
JAMES H. MacCONNELL, C,
although retired from the Overseas
Department of the Episcopal Church,
continues full time as Canon of All Saints'
Cathedral, St. Thomas, Virgin Islands.
His wife teaches on the island. The note
we have says he has one son in engineer-
ing at Cornell, another beginning college
this fall in Louisiana, and a daughter
(with two children) entering law school.
We have word through JAMES D.
GIBSON, C, and his class news letter
that HERBERT E. SMITH, C, is "an
experienced loafer" since his retirement
from the steel business in 1974. Smith
had a five-year-old artificial heart valve
replaced last year, still resides in Birming-
ham, and does some traveling.
Our understanding is that SIDNEY H.
(PINKIE) YOUNG, C, has just retired
after many years as an attorney with the
California Department of Health at
Sacramento. He is apparently fully recov-
ered from a cancer operation last year
and plans to settle in Oceanside (near San
Diego) "and just play tennis."
1938
THE REV. JAMES E. SAVOY, C,
the retired rector or Grace Church in St.
Francisville, Louisiana, recently returned
from a tour of Eastern Canada, during
which he was knighted in the Order of
the Grand Cross of Constantine the Great
at the investiture at the Royal Canadian
Military Institute in Toronto. Traveling
with Mr. Savoy and receiving the same,'
honor was DR. JAMES A. HAMILTON,
C36, of Nashville and his wife, who was
made a Dame in the Order.
1940
SYDNEY C. ORR, A, has moved
from Oregon to the Cleveland, Ohio area,
where he has established a new company
distributing electric motors and controls.
The business, O-H Electro-Mechanical, is
located in Warrensville Heights. Syd
resides in Lakewood, Ohio.
1945
THE REV. E. RUGBY AUER, T, is
the new executive director of Trinity
Counselling Service in Princeton. He is
also vicar of All Saints' Chapel in Bay
Head, New Jersey and is director of
pastoral development for the diocese. His
wife, Dorothy, is completing her doctor-
ate at Rutgers University. Their residence
is in Yardley, Pennsylvania.
1946
EDWARD D. (NED) SLOAN, A,
recently ended a term as chairman of the
Erskine College Board of Trustees.
1950
HARRY L. HUGHEY, C, recently
sent this note: "In addition to triple
by-pass heart surgery in Mar. '74, I got
diabetes in July '75 and cancer, with
surgery, of the colon in Feb. '78. Other-
wise everything is okay."
1952
THE REV. GEORGE Y. BALLEN-
TINE, JR., C, is now assisting at St.
Mark's Church in Venice, Florida. He,
his wife, Emma Jean, and their two
young sons moved from Virginia last
spring.
THE REV. CANON EDWARD B.
GUERRY, C'23, GST, is president of
the Huguenot Society of South Carolina.
1953
WILLIAM K_ BRUCE, C, has a son,
Bill, who is a freshman at Sewanee.
DON M. mVTN, C, is the new
personnel director of the University of
Texas at El Paso. Irvin also is chairman of
the El Paso Chapter of the Texas Asso-
ciation of Business.
ROBESON S. MOISE, C, is now a
training analyst for Saudi Arabian Air-
lines in Kansas City.
A recent note from DR. A. MICHAEL
PARDUE, C, mentions that he is breeding,
raising, and showing Peruvian paso horses.
He has been practicing plastic and re-
constructive surgery in Thousand Oaks,
California since 1968.
! THE REV. STEPHEN P. PRESSEY,
C, is rector of the Church of St. Simon of
Cyrene, Cincinnati, Ohio.
1954
THE REV. W. GILBERT DENT, C,
is the assistant minister for The Old North
Church (Christ Church), Boston, Massa-
chusetts. He is residing in Cambridge.
1955
TALBOT (SANDY) D'ALEMBERTE,
C, a Miami attorney, is chairman of the
state's Constitution Re vision Commission.
Floridians will vote on the constitutional
ch an ires in November.
1956
Mildred Inge, daughter of COLE-
MAN INGE, T, is a freshman this fall
in the College. We understand she was
also accepted by Dartmouth, Duke,
Virginia, and Alabama. She is a Wilkins
Scholar.
1957
J. ROBERT SHIRLEY, C, is the
new headmaster of Heath wood Hall
Episcopal School in Columbia, South
Carolina. He received his master's degree
in 1970 from Wake Forest after a stmt
with the Marines and a career in banking
and teaching.
1958
ROBERT H. BLISS, A, joined in the
formation of a law partnership. Bliss &
Hughes, earlier this year in Dallas.
DR. THOMAS B. EISON, A, is junior
warden at St. James' Church in Greenville,
South Carolina.
We have a note that THOMAS H.
MONTGOMERY, C, is now residing in
Vista, California.
1961
We received word that DAVID C.
PERRY, C, has moved from Reno,
Nevada to Jackson, Wyoming, where he
is practicing law.
DR. ROBERT J. SCHNEIDER, C,
is the acting dean this term at Berea
College, Berea, Kentucky.
ALFRED M. WADDELL, C, has
reassumed the post of chief executive
officer and has been elected president of
Gable Industries, Inc., a national dis-
tributor of plumbing, heating, building
materials, and industrial supplies. He has
served as Gable's chairman since 1974.
Waddell and his wife and three children
reside in Bryn Mawr, near Philadelphia.
19B3 , •
A note from ROBERT A. FREYER,
A'59, C, a Miami attorney, says he, his
wife, Suzanne, and their three children
are still residing in Coral Gables.
1964
WILLIAM G. McDANIEL, A, has
opened his own law office on Peach tree
Street in Atlanta after five years of
practicing law with a larger firm. Bill
was graduated from Emory University in
1968, served with the Army in Vietnam
for two years, and received a law degree
from the University of Georgia in 1973.
THE REV. L. NOLAND PIPES, JR.,
T, is assistant headmaster and administra-
tive assistant at All Saints1 School in
Vicksburg, Mississippi, where he has been
for five years. He and his wife have two
daughters.
MAJ. JOSEPH F. TRIMBLE, C, has
been attending the General Staff and
Command College, Ft Leavenworth,
Kansas.
1965
THE REV. WILLIAM ROBERT
ABSTEIN, T, rector of St. Jude's Church
in Smyrna, Georgia, received his Doctor
of Ministry degree at commencement
exercises at Sewanee in May. Dr. Abstein
is a member of the Standing Committee
of the Diocese of Atlanta. He was recent-
ly appointed to the Alumni Council of
the School of Theology.
DR. ALEXANDER H. LUMPKIN, C,
was married June 3 to Janice Park
Sargeant in Tallahassee.
HARVEY M. TEMPLETON HI,
A'60, C, was married June 17 to Rebecca
Lynn Miller in ceremonies at St. Augus-
tine's Chapel, Vanderbilt University,
Nashville.
Before publication of this issue,
A. SPENCER TOMB, C, associate pro-
fessor of biology at Kansas State, will
begin an expedition to the Altai Moun-
tains of the U.S.S.R., to spend most of
his time collecting plants. Tomb writes
that he was running three to seven miles
a day to get ready. He and his wife,
Barbara, and their three sons (including
twins) reside in Denholm, Kansas.
1967
THE REV. J. CHARLES
PEDERSEN, GST, is the new rector of
St. Matthew's Church in Newton, Kansas.
In the June issue of the Sewanee
News, we had John R. Smith becoming
general counsel of Associated Milk
Producers, Inc. in San Antonio when it
should have been JOHN R. WHITE, C.
Sorry, John.
1968 j
STANYARNE BURROWS in, C,
who has a master's degree in social work
from theU&iversity of Tennessee, Knox
ville, is completing an internship with the
Metropolitan Council in Chattanooga. As
a specialist in administration and planning,
he has been reviewing plans for increased
recreational facilities for Chattanooga
EDWIN L. CONNER, C, a Ph.D.
candidate in English at Vanderbilt
University, was on campus in the spring
when he read a paper, "Chaucer and
Dante on Lore and Nobility," at the
Sewanee Mediaeval Colloquium.
EDWARD V. HECK, C, was awarded
his doctorate in May from Johns Hopkins
University.
1969
C. BRUCE BAIRD, A, an Army
captain, is stationed with his wife,
SANDRA (SANDERLIN), C'76, in Mainz,
Germany, where he is a dentist.
A late note about the marriage of
WILLIAM T. CLARKE, C, and Jean
Elizabeth Alderman last November in
Raleigh, North Carolina. They are making
their home in Greenville, South Carolina.
A bit late finding out that DAVID C.
DELANEY, C, and his wife, Elaine, had
their second son, Drew, last year.
CAPT. CLAUDE G. PETTYJOHN,
C, is an air traffic control operations
officer at Eglin Air Force Base, Florida.
JOHN A. WILLIAMSON, C, was
married to Karen Shirley Jensen last
October in Falls Church, Virginia.
1970
REGINALD H. (REG) BEDELL, C,
demonstrated that his interest in running
may have risen by placing sixth in the
"Nation's Highest Marathon" at Lake
Tahoe in June with a time of 2 hours,
58:09. He also flew to Hawaii to compete
in the fifth annual Honolulu Marathon.
REAGAN HOUSTON IV, C, has
been promoted to assistant vice-president
of Alamo National Bank, San Antonio
and serves as the bank's real estate loan
officer. His son, Barclay, is now three
years old.
THE REV. W. PEGRAM JOHNSON
III, GST, was awarded the degree of
Doctor of Philosophy by Emory Univer-
sity, Atlanta, in June. In July he became
headmaster of the Canterbury School
in Accokeek, Maryland and resides with
his wife and son in Alexandria, Virginia.
1HE REV. STEPHEN B. SNIDER,
C, is the new rector of St. John's Church
in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. He and his wife
had their second son, Stephen, last
October.
1971
MEAD B. FERRIS, JR., C, and his
wife, Margaret, had a baby, Margaret
Austin, February 8.
ERNEST H. STANLEY, JR., C, is
manager of Lawyer's Title Insurance
Corp. for South Carolina, and he and his
wife, the former Elsie Taylor, are making
their home in Columbia.
1972
CHARLES W. KNOWLTON, JR.,
C, is now assistant vice-president of the
Charleston office of the First National
Bank of South Carolina.
J. EARL MORGAN III, C, president
of the First Federal Savings & Loan
Association of Dyersburg, Tennessee, was
recently elected vice-chairman of the
Association's board of Directors.
THE REV. ERNEST M. ROWELL,
T, is the new rector of St. Patrick's
Church in Albany, Georgia, moving from
the Church of the Annunciation in
Vidalia, where he was vicar.
THE REV. LARRY C. WILLIAMS,
C, is curate at St. Luke's Episcopal
Church in Mobile under THE REV.
COLEMAN INGE, T'56.
1973
LT. (j.g.) FRED G. ATKISSON, C,
is an officer aboard the guided missile
cruiser USS England, home port San
Joseph W. Winkelman, C'64, is teaching as a
visiting artist at Oxford University, England,
which is creating a new bachelor's degree in
fine arts for printers, printmakers, and sculptors.
His duties include giving tutorials in practical
work to advanced students.
Viinkelman's work is on display in the
Royal Academy of Art's annual exhibition in
London and several other galleries. His work
may be seen in New York at Original Print
Collectors' Group Ltd. and in Boston at the
English Gallery and the Ainsworth Gallery.
THE REV. GLEN L. DeLONG. T.
who we noted in June had become
warden of Camp McDowell in Nauvoo,
Alabama, has been named the camp's
executive director. McDowell is the camp
and conference center for the Diocese of
Alabama.
C. ROSS FEEZER, C, who recently
received an MBA degree from Tulane,
is a financial analyst with the Datapoint
Corp.
PAMELA USRY FRANKLIN, C,
reports that she and her husband, Larry,
are residing in Decatur, Georgia with
their three sons, ranging in age from one
to six years.
LT. (j.g.) WILLIAM C. JOHNSON,
C, is stationed with the Navy Medical
Service Corps at the Naval Regional
Medical Center in San Diego, California.
He completed his master's degree in
health care administration in 1976 at
Trinity University in San Antonio and is
married to the former LINDA REED,
A'70, C'74.
EDWARD D. IZARD, C, was married
on June 24 to Jane Honour Craver in
ceremonies at the First Presbyterian
Church in Charleston, South Carolina.
BYRON H. LENGSFIELD III, C,
received his doctorate in physical chem-
istry last June from VPI and is currently
working under a research grant for
NASA at Hampton, Virginia. On Sep-
tember 10, he and his wife, Karen,
celebrated their first wedding anniversary.
Two classmates have scored big at
the Bread Loaf School of English at
Middlebury College, Middlebury, Ver-
mont. LANALEE L. (CISSY) LEWIS,
C, has been named the 1978 Lillian
Becker Scholar, and DON KECK
DUPREE, C, has been named the 1978
John M. Kirk, Jr. Memorial Scholar.
WILLIAM N. TINSLEY, C, his wife
and two sons have moved back to
Cleveland, Tennessee.
1974
LISA Y. BROWN, C, was married
last May 20 to Peter Alan Davenport at
Keble College, Oxford. She is retaining
the surname Brown.
JAMES E. STEWART, JR., C, was
married in June to Anne Strong of Bay
Minette, Alabama. Currently he is sales
and product manager of Vulcan Signs &
Stampings in Foley.
ANNE CAMP, A, a June graduate
at Sarah Lawrence College, is on an
archeological dig in Poggio Reale, Sicily,
a project sponsored by the University
of Missouri and the Italian government.
B. BOND CRAGON, C, has been
named manager of the St. Bernard and
New Orleans East councils of the
Chamber, New Orleans and the River
Region.
PATRICK B. FENLON, C, recently
began an internship in Greenville, South
Carolina, following his graduation in
June from the Medical College of Georgia,
He and his wife, Denise, are about to
celebrate their first wedding anniversary.
SARAH GOODSTEIN, A, was gradu-
ated in June from Oberlin College, with
a major in creative writing. We have a
note she hopes to pursue graduate work
in creative writing or join a volunteer
work program in Israel.
NANCY NICHOLSON, A, married
WILLIAM FORRESTER, A'73, in a June
ceremony in All Saints' Chapel. Forrester
is a 1978 graduate of the U.S. Military
Academy at West Point.
1975
LT. (j.g.) TOM W. DOHERTY, C,
is now a Navy pilot, flying the Skyhawk,
a fighter-bomber. He is stationed at the
Naval Air Station, Miramar, California.
JAMES W. GORE, C, was married
May 20 to Sandra Lee King.
EDWARD H. HARRISON, JR., C,
and his wife, Teresa, are now residing
i i r- New Haven, Connecticut, where Ed
is a student in the Yale Divinity School.
OLIN T. MEFFORD III, C, was
married to Donna Anderson on August
5, in Centralia, Illinois.
J. BRIAN SNIDER, C, has been
promoted to assistant branch manager
of the Mountain Brook Branch of the
First National Bank of Birmingham.
JAMES S. STEPHENS, A, is a
junior chemistry major at Guilford
College where he is regularly named to
the dean's list.
MARGARET STEWART, C, writes
that she is beginning her second year of
teaching at Avondale Elementary School
in Birmingham. During the summer she
was program director for the Girl Scouts'
Inner City Program there.
GEORGE M. TAYLOR III, C,
received a law degree last May from
Vanderbilt University and is now a law
clerk to Chief Judge Frank H. McFadden,
U.S. District Court for the Northern
District of Alabama in Birmingham.
TROY TINKER, A, who is a student
at the University of Central Arkansas,
was married to Margaret Ann Gunderman
on May 13 in Conway, Arkansas. He is
also the recent winner of a national
speech contest on the subject of the
"Oral Interpretation of Literature."
1976
HOLLIE BLACKBURN, A, was
married to William (Barney) Ward in a
May 20 ceremony in All Saints' Chapel
the day before her brother, SCOTT, was
graduated from the Academy.
EDWARD, C'75, and NANCY
BREWER, C, have a new home on Cheek
Road in Nashville and an almost new
baby daughter, Katherine Martin, born
last November 14.
JEANNA E. FAUCETT, C, is com-
pleting her master's degree in criminology,
specializing in statistics and research
methodology, at the University of Mary-
land. She also holds a research position
with the American Institutes for Research
in Washington.
PETER W. LEMONDS, C, received
the master's degree in music in May from
LSU and was a cello instructor this past
summer for the Sewanee Summer Music
Center.
JEFFERSON A. (JEFF) McMAHAN.
C, Sewanee's 18th Rhodes Scholar, is
continuing in the doctorate program in
philosophy at Corpus Christi College,
Oxford University.
DAVID CARTWRIGHT PARKER,
C, has recently become assistant business
manager with the YMCA of the Greater
Louisville-New Downtown Center.
EMILY BUTLER SCHULTZ, C, is
beginning a Ph.D. program this fall
at North Carolina State University,
having completed master's degree work
in forest genetics. Emily and her husband,
Tor, who were married last December
31 in Nashville, are both graduate stu-
dents in the School of Forest Resources
at North Carolina State. They reside
in Raleigh.
We have a note that STEPHEN H.
SMITH, C, is beginning his second year
in the University of Tennessee Medical
School in Memphis.
1977
JULIE BAIRD, C, A'73, has been
in Boston this summer studying at the
well-known Katharine Gibbs School for
secretarial training.
ROBERT L., C, and FRAN DIL-
WORTH, C, have their home in Beersheba
Springs, where Bob is principal of the
elementary school and Fran is a kinder-
garten teacher.
DEAN GILLESPIE, C, is residing
in Greybill, Wyoming where he has been
working for the Forest Service.
George W. McDaniel, C'66, has added a new
twist to the study of history by digging out the
story of a sharecroppers' cabin that for more
than 80 years stood near Mitchellville,
Maryland.
The house was purchased by the Smith-
sonian Museum of History and Technology,
which asked McDaniel to find authentic
furnishings.
He did even more. Ultimately, he found 11
families who had occupied the house between
1896 and 1967. The evolving story gives a
unique insight into America's past.
Carl Stirling, M'07, of Sulphur Springs, Texas holds an Alumni
Exornati key, which was presented to him by the Rev. Charles
L. Henry, left, C'49, T'52, vicar of St. Philip's Church in
Sulphur Springs. About 25 long-time friends of Mr. Stirling
(none under 70) were present to enjoy the occasion with him.
Mr. Stirling owned and operated a drug store on the Sulphur
Springs Square for 53 years before retiring 1 7 years ago.
THE REV. J. CALVIN GOODLETT,
T, is the new assistant to the rector of
the Church of the Advent in Tallahassee,
Florida.
JEFFREY LOWE, C, was married
August 19 in Nashville to Ann Louise
Galloway, a 1976 graduate of Agnes
Scott College in Atlanta. Jeff has begun
his second year of a three-year master of
divinity program at Southern Baptist
Theological Seminary in Louisville, Ken-
tucky. This past summer, he was youth
minister for the Tabernacle Baptist
Church in Macon, Georgia.
REBECCA (BECKY) BRAGG
McNAMEE, C, and her husband, Marc,
celebrated their first wedding anniversary
last month. Thev are making their home
in Knoxville.
FRED G. OWEN III, C, is in Bir-
mingham, working as a consultant for
Vulcan Materials Company on a project
in Saudi Arabia.
A note from ELIZABETH ANN
(BETH) ROBERTS, C, says she has
moved from Boston to New Orleans
where she is with Delta Air Lines and is
sharing a cottage with ELIZABETH
WATT, C, and JOY DILLINGHAM, C.
Elizabeth is in graduate school at Tulane.
JEAN ROSS, A, and SARAH JONES,
A, worked at the Beavers Guest Ranch
in Winter Park, Colorado this past
summer, taking time off to go rafting
down the Colorado River and enjoy the
snow-capped mountain scenery.
FRANCIS ROBERT (ROBBIE)
RUSSO, C, has entered Thunderbird
Campus at Glendale, Arizona to study
international business relations. He joins
WILLIAM A. (BILL) CLINKSCALES, C,
who is in his second year, working
toward the MBA degree.
REBECCA R. SMITH, C, is working
in the land title and abstract business
with her father in Florence, Alabama.
WALTER TECKEMEYER, C, is a
civil engineer for C & I Girdler, Inc. in
Louisville, Kentucky.
AVIS J. BRANNON WILLIAMS, C,
and her husband Larry, have a baby girl.
They are residing in Sewanee, where
Larry teaches biology at the Academy.
1978
WAYNE GLENN, C, has been
assigned to Chad, Central Africa (north-
west of Kenya) in the Peace Corps'
reforestation program. He is expected
to be there about two years.
THE REV. CARL CECIL HEN-
DRICKSON, JR., C'56, T, is deacon-in-
charge of St. Paul's Church in Willis
West Virginia.
KATHLEEN M. (KATHY) JACKS,
C, andjiGEORGE T. (TIM) WOLFF, JR.,
C, were married. May 29 in All Saints'
Chapel.
KATHRYN LU KOHN, C, and
MARK STEPHEN MORRIS, C, were
married early this month in Wilton,
Connecticut at Zion's Hill United Metho-
dist Church, where Kathryn's father,
the Rev. Carl F. W. Kohn, is pastor.
W. D. NORTHCUTT IV, C, is a stu
dent in the School of Architecture at
Texas A & M.
DEATHS
JOHN R. SHELDON, M'04, a farmer,
December 23, 1976 in Prophetstown,
W. LAURENCE ROBINSON, A'05,
retired toolmaker, May 6, 1978 in
Chattanooga.
MAXEY D. DAGGETT, A'05, retired
owner of Daggett's Drug Store, January 8,
1977 in Marianna, Arkansas.
HENRY CHARLES CHEVES, JR.,
A'07, C'll, April 9, 1978 In Charleston,
South Carolina. Co-founder and past
president of Charleston Constructors Inc.,
he was an engineer, surveyor and con-
tractor.
COL. GEORGE R. F. CORNISH,
C'09, USA (retired). May 13, 1977 in
Charleston, South Carolina. He served
as an Army officer in World Wars I and II.
THOMAS W. DUNCAN, A'20,
retired executive, March 30, 1976 in
Missoula, Montana.
THOMAS G. LINTHICUM, SR
C'23, T'26, May 8, 1978 in Atlanta. He
was retired from Continental Insurance
Company. He served on the board of
trustees for the University of the South
1959-1962. He was among the founders
of the Sewanee Club of Atlanta, and
served as its president. He was a member
Of Phi Gamma Delta.
GEORGE SHOOK, C'24, retired
executive with Twin Seam Mining Com-
pany, April 27, 1978 in Tuscaloosa,
Alabama.
THOMAS ADAMS YOUNG., C'28,
May 12, 1978 in Mayfield, Kentucky.
He was former plant manager for Curlee
Clothing Company. He was a member
of Tennessee Beta Chapter of Phi Delta
Theta. He served in World War II as a
naval officer.
BENJAMIN SPRINGER, A'28, C'32,
T'32, May 28, 1978 in Hitchcock, Texas.
He was a printing executive, owner of
Galveston Piano Company, and was
president and board chairman of Bankers
Savings and Loan Association.
GEORGE W. WALLACE, C'28,
May 4, 1978 in Hixson, Tennessee. He
was founder of Wallace Tile Company,
and served 15 years on the Alumni
Council of the University of the South.
He served in World War II as a naval
officer on two battleships, the USS Idaho
and the USS Maryland.
Jui
MILTON G. MARABLE, C'29,
e 2, 1978 in Cowan, Tennessee.
THOMAS O. McDAVID, C'29,
December 12, 1976 in Baltimore. A
native of Birmingham, he was a retired
Commercial Credit Company executive.
He served in World War II in the Air
Force in the Pacific, attaining the rank
HENRY D. RUSSELL, A'30, C'34,
an electrical engineer, May 28, 1978 in
Pittsburg, Kansas.
CARITA CORSE, H'32, May 23,
1978 in Jacksonville, Florida. She was a
prominent historian, honored for her
achievements in history and literature.
THE RT. REV. OLIVER J. HART,
H'35, May 4, 1978 in Orange, New
Jersey. He served as leader of the Diocese
of Pennsylvania for 20 years, and was
associated with The Episcopalian in
Philadelphia. He served as a captain in
the Army Chaplain's Corps.
MYRLIN McCULLAR, C40, June
10, 1978 in New Orleans. An architect,
he received the 1974 Award for the Out-
standing Commercial Design for the St.
Louis Hotel. He served in the Air Force
in the Pacific during World War II.
WALTER VERNON MOORE, JR.,
A'45, January 10, 1976 in Oakland,
Mississippi.
H. Y. MULLIKIN, Sp'45, May 2,
1978 in Lafayette, Indiana. He was a
former distinguished professor of physics
and astronomy at Georgetown College
in Georgetown, Kentucky.
WILLIAM BALDWIN MOORE, C'50,
May 31, 1978 in Maryville, Tennessee.
A member of Phi Gamma Delta, he was
a senior experimental engineer for the
Aluminum Company of America in
RICHARD A. SMITH, C'52, January
30, 1978 in Rockville Centre, Long
Island, New York.
THE REV. HUME W. REEVES,
T'52, May 11, 1978 in Navasota, Texas.
He was priest-in-charge of the Mission
in Kaufman and Seagoville, and remem-
bered for his work in Dallas. He used his
skill as an architectural engineer to
develop Camp Crucis, and to improye
the physical facilities at the School of
Theology while at Sewanee. He organized,
in Granbury, Texas, the only Episcopal
church in Hood County.
MICHAEL LAWRENCE STONE,
C'67, August 28, 1977, of leukemia,
in New York City.
JACK STELL McDANIEL, C'77,
May 25, 1978, in an auto accident in
Hot Springs, Arkansas. While at Sewanee
he studied forestry.
STANLEY STUART SCOTT II,
C'77, in an auto accident July 9, 1978
while stationed at Fort Benning, Georgia.
ACADEMY NEWS
New Faculty
at Academy
Five new faculty members have
joined the staff at the Academy this
fall, and five others on the faculty
have been elevated into new
positions.
Ed England, an English instruc-
tor, has been promoted from
associate dean of students to dean
of students in place of Peyton
Cook, who teaches English and is
the new athletic director.
Donna Wallace, an instructor in
physical education, is the new
associate dean of students. Phil
White, an instructor in English, has
been named director of student
activities, and Joanne Russell has
added the job of coordinator of
guidance services to her responsi-
bilities as librarian.
Payne Breazeale, who teaches
math, has' taken a new job as
liaison person between the Academy
and the alumni office.
Among the new teachers is
Frank E. Larisey, a 1978 graduate
of the College, who is teaching
biology. Larisey taught last year
at St. Andrew's School near Sewa-
nee. He has replaced Larry Williams,
who has left teaching to enter
graduate school.
Mitchell Long, an English and
economics teacher, comes to Se-
wanee from Pulaski Junior High
School where he taught for five
years and was a student council
advisor and language arts chairman
for Giles County.
After attending Trinity Uni-
versity in San Antonio and South-
west Texas State University, he
received a bachelor's degree in
1973 from Athens College in
Athens, Texas.
He is replacing Kenneth Schup-
pert, who has entered Cumberland
Law School.
John Henry Looney, an alumnus
of both the Academy and the
College, is teaching math and
biology this year and assisting with
the outing program. In part he has
replaced Eleanor Stemshorn, who is
teaching this year at St. Andrew's
School in Jackson, Mississippi.
Looney brings to the Academy
experience in several aspects of
wilderness and outing activities.
While a student in the College, he
was director of the Mountain
Rescue Team, was an emergency
medical technician, and was an
engineer with the Sewanee Fire
Department.
Danna E. Shepherd, a 1978
graduate in Spanish from the
College, is teaching Academy
Spanish.
James H. Lampley, who is
completing doctoral work at Middle
Tennessee State University, is a
parttime physical education instruc-
tor and works in curriculum devel-
opment. He received a bachelor's
degree in 1973 from MTSU and a
master's degree in 1974 from the
University of Tennessee.
Football Ended
A final decision was made in August
to discontinue the Sewanee Acad-
emy's football program this year.
The major reasons for the • •
decision were the continuing prob-
lems of fielding a competitive high
school team, the increasing costs,
and the concern for the physical
well-being of the students.
The Rev. D. Roderick Welles,
the headmaster, said it was a diffi-
cult decision. But he said he believes
the change will strengthen the total
athletic program.
"We feel, for example, that a
fall soccer program will serve the
Academy's interests very well, given
our past successes in that sport,"
he said.
He explained that the Academy
is equipped to accommodate about
200 students, half of them men.
This means that at least one out of
every three young men must play
football to field a safe, competitive
team.
Only 17 eligible students had
expressed a desire to play football
this fall, and with a squad so small
in number, the chance of injury is
increased beyond responsible risk,
he said.
The Academy had one victory
last season playing in the State A
Division, which consists of high
schools that have up to 500 students.
Mr. Welles also noted that it is
virtually impossible to recruit
players under the rules of the Ten-
nessee Secondary School Athletic
Association. Under one TSSAA
rule, a player is rendered ineligible
for at least one year if he transfers
from a public or private school
anywhere in the country to a
private school in Tennessee.
Following a national trend,
most Academy students enter after
the freshman year and many for
only their junior and senior years.
Finally it was pointed out that
football alone costs more than all
the other athletic programs at the
Academy combined.
Despite the problems with
football, Mr. Welles said the Acad-
emy can field competitive teams
for both men and women in sports
that do not require such large
numbers and special size and skills.
"We want to build on the
Academy's strengths," he said,
"rather than perpetuate a weakness
that has been imposed upon us by
circumstances we cannot control."
He also said that if conditions
become more favorable in the
future, the Academy would con-
sider starting a football program
again.
Academy sophomore Byron Chitty unloads his things at the
start of the school year, helped by his father, Charles M. Chitty,
Jr., and by proctor Mimi Stout.
College Bound Seniors
Class of '78, Sewanee Academy
Francisco Arguello University of Tennessee, Knoxville
Catharine Arnold Wesleyan University, Conn., Hedden Scholarship
Libby Baird University of the South
Archie Baker The Citadel
Marti Barber MaryviUe College
Sam Bates Carleton College
Bill Carter University of Tennessee, Knoxville
Debbie Chadwick Emory University
Keith Clay Motlow State
Deborah Clayton Oberlin College
William Cocke Washington and Lee, Robert E. Lee Scholarship
Art Cockett University of Tennessee, Knoxville
Chris Cook Duke University
Erin Dick Colorado Institute of Art
Lois Ebey Gustavus Adolphus College
Richard Fender Boston University
David Fite Maryville College
Rachel Foreman Kenyon College, Presidential Scholar
Eleanor Gilchrist Kenyon College
Gordon Gillespie Southwestern at Memphis, National Merit Finalist
Mark Gillespy '. . . . Davidson (or University of Florida)
Eban Goodstein Williams College, National Merit Finalist
Brad Hall Bethel CoUege
Gustaf Hansen Columbia College, New York
James Hargrove ., University of Texas
Beth Helm . , Maryville College
Charles Hunt University of the South
Andy Hunter University of Montevallo
Jeffrey Johnson Tennessee Tech
Chris Kelly University of Tennessee, Knoxville
Martin Knoll , University of the South
Bayard Leonard University of the South
Ramin Majidi Oregon State University at Corvallis
Anne Marsh Rice University
John Merkle University of Florida
Peter Newell Clemson University
Kathryn Ramseur Kenyon College
Cynthia Shehee Valdosta State College
Peter Speck University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa
Cayce Stock '. University of Arkansas
Allison Stratton .' The Citadel
Harry Thomas Syracuse University
Jerry Street Centre College
Henry Ingram University of N. C, Asheville
Cami Wadley, Dyersburg Community College
Gerald Walston University of Tennessee, Knoxville
Robert Wenzel Tennessee Tech
Ted White Randolph Macon
Tim Williams University of Arkansas
Charla Wood Converse College
Leslie Wood Arizona State University, Tempe
Players and Coach Recount the Score
1MJ
A look at Shirley Majors'
21 years at Sewanee
Coach Majors and 1 958 team
• / did not like him when I played for him,
but today there is not a man I love more than
Shirley Majors.
• To me, coming out of a small community,
he seemed impersonal, as if his only objective
was to win. As I reflect on it now, I realize
what he was saying, and I'm sorry I didn't
understand earlier.
• / think he understood people better than
anyone I ever saw.
• You didn 't hear a lot of rah rah out of h im,
but when he was proud of you and said some-
thing, it would make your whole day.
• He wasn 't afraid to admit he had made
a mistake.
• / think one of his most impressive character-
istics was his ability to motivate players with
their widely varying personalities and degrees of
talen t.
• He utilized a balance of encouragement
and intimidation to bring out the best.
• Surely everyone who ever played for Coach
Majors got mad at him.
• / figured if Coach Majors had confidence
in me, I should have enough confidence in
myself to get through law school.
• He had a saying: The way you practice is
the way you play.
• No one is indispensable, but everyone has
his worth; that's what he taught.
• He took care of his coaching early , before
the game.
*He demanded thatyou reach your potential.
• I appreciate what he did for me, not in
athletics but in my life.
• At the end of a hard day of practice, he
would use two terms— one pure hell and the
other pure pleasure. 'Riverside' meant to take'
the scrimmage up the field again. The other was
'sweet water.' He would say, 'Go get your
sweet water, boys.' There were days when I
thought I would die before I heard that.
•He was one of the prime movers in my life,
in a lot of our lives, and his influence went far
beyond athletics.
•Never accept second best. This is what
Shirley Majors taught. If we played our best, the
score would take care of itself.
• To put it in a few words, Shirley Majors
had a more positive effect on my life in its
developing stages than any other man except
my father.
Then those former players would occasionally
say, almost apologizing to him in advance, that
Coach Majors may not know they feel that way.
Coach Majors, for his part, would admit he
didn't always know what would happen, what
the effect of his words would be, what the
answer was.
Never try to bluff
"Honesty, that's the important thing. Be
honest with others, and be honest with yourself.
Never try to bluff a player if you don't know
the answer. They're smart; they know."
Since 1957 there grew a kind of bond
between these men that only those who were
there could properly express, or fail to express
but still understand.
"I had known about Sewanee for many
years before I started work— what a fine insti-
tution it was. There were outstanding people
here, people who were a help to me.
"There was Dr. Bruton, the provost. In fact
he was part of everything. Dr. McCrady, the
vice-chancellor, Dean Lancaster, and Bishop
Juhan, who made a great contribution to our
program. Dr. Rennie Kirby-Smith, who would
come to practice and bring his chair.
"One day he said to me: 'Coach, I like the
way you're doing things; you bring them off
lathered.'
"Bishop Juhan helped get us play«rs from
Florida, because he was retired bishop of Florida.
We had quality players. It's hard to call names,
because I would leave out somebody.
"They had just come off two wins in three
seasons the year I came, and the players were
hungry. There was a lot of enthusiasm among
the student body. ,
They will work as long as you're
doing something yourself
"I was never much for the X's andiO's. I was
interested in technique and execution. And the
players wanted to be shown on the field. They
will work as long as you're doing something
yourself.
"In 1958 we went undefeated, and there
were only 30 players on the squad. But they had
confidence. They had a positive attitude.
"People would ask me about 11:00 Saturday
morning if the team was ready. I never knew.
"But in 37 years of coaching, my teams have
played with confidence. I can never recall a
team taking the field when I didn't think we
had a chance to win.
"I'm a great believer that if a team is
taught not to lose, it will win most of the time.
That 1958 team felt like it could make a first
down any time it wanted to.
"One time we were backed up by Hampden-
Sydney, with a fourth down and a yard to go.
I thought we should kick at the time, and I
gave the signal to kick.
"Andy Finlay motioned to the sideline that
they wanted to go for it. Well, knowing their
ability and respect for one another, I gave them
the nod. Finlay didn't make one; he made four
yards, and they went on to score a touchdown.
"When I came to Sewanee, I left a 47-game
winning streak. The job had been open for some
weeks, but I didn't apply. The family and I
were getting along fine.
"Then an alumnus called me one day and
asked if I would be interested. About two days
later another alumnus called. I considered it
for about two months, but my interview with
Dr. Bruton lasted only a few minutes. I had
known him. He was a man who impressed me
very much. The thought that he wanted me
pleased me.
"The year we had an undefeated season
(1958, the first in 50 years), the students were
wanting a holiday, if we won our last game.
Dr. Bruton came to my office to ask if it would
affect the team if a holiday was planned.
"I told him the players were mature men,
that they knew what they had to do. But I
appreciated him coming to my office to ask me
about that.
"The Washington University game here in
1963, when we went undefeated, was one of
the finest games I have ever seen. After the
game, the students crossed the fence. At one
time, we even had to ask for quiet so the players
could hear the signals.
"It has been most rewarding and gratifying.
I cannot express in words my feelings about the
fine young men who have passed my way and
gone on to great things.
They made me mad too
"I knew I made them mad sometimes. But
they made me mad too. I knew they wanted to
win. They didn't want to lose. And I know they
didn't lose any games because they weren't
in shape. I maybe lost some games for them, but
they didn't lose any.
"I'm not a Saturday coach. Good technique
and positive attitude; that's where a coach can
help. My policy was never to take the game
away from the players. I tried not to give a lot
of instructions and be yelling. I wanted to let
them prepare themselves mentally.
"If all did the job on the practice field, we
were all right. I was straightforward with them,
and they were straightforward with me.
"Some boys came out just to see what it
was like. They would drop out. But those who
were going someplace— they were the ones who
won. The older players helped the younger
ones leam to practice and win.
"Our.policies on recruiting and admissions
were very healthy— sometimes a little too
healthy. The year before last, they turned down
one boy because they said they didn't like the
way he talked.
"Other schools on our schedule have been
doing some things to assist their players finan-
cially. I was aware that we had a disadvantage,
but I thought we could work a little harder to
win, and we did.
"We won the conference championship year
before last. You'll have to check this, but I
believe Sewanee has won the title more than
anyone else.
"The students make our institution. They
are our number one product. Whenever I can,
I put them first.
"Each individual is important. Some respond
differently from others; so I tried to help them
individually. Every player was important
whether he was a starter or a substitute.
"We once had a player who didn't have great
ability, and we were going to have trouble
getting him on the bus for a trip. I was trying to
explain it to him. He must have seen I was
having a hard time and said: 'Coach, you don't
need to be concerned about it, because I have
received so much from the football program.'
Well, after that, I couldn't leave him behind.
If you quit one thing, it makes it
easier to quit again
"If there were boys who didn't want to
stay on the team, then they made the decision
themselves. There have been some good players
who have thought about quitting. The thought
enters the mind, but you don't have to entertain
it. I think if you quit one thing, it makes it
easier to quit again.
"I tried to put people in the positions
where they could contribute the most to the
team. I also coached on the weaker points. The
strong points will improve because the player
likes to work on them.
"You attack an opponent's weak places.
But you don't run from the strengths. You run
at the strengths enough to keep them honest.
"Some of the greatest rewards from coaching
are the friendships with parents of the players.
It is also wonderful to have a surprise visit from
a former player to introduce his wife, show a
new baby, or bring news of his endeavors.
"I have enjoyed my work at Sewanee and
the quality of men I was working with. If I
said I won't miss coaching, I would be lying.
I will always love young people.
"There were days I would get up at 2:00
in the morning so I could be ready for them.
They were smart; you couldn't fool them. But
we had a lot of fun together. "
COLLEGE SPORTS
Basketball
Rebuilding
Sewanee is nearing the start of
1978-79 basketball drills under new
Coach Jerry O. Waters, who has
left behind a startlingly good record
of high school coaching in South
Carolina.
As head basketball coach and
athletic director at Middleton High
in Middleton, Waters guided teams
to three state championships and
two runner-up titles in eight years.
His won-lost record at Middleton is
195-21 and includes a state 4-A
record of 54 consecutive victories.
Already he possesses a character-
istic often associated with Sewanee
faculty and coaches— a propensity
toward a close relationship with his
players.
"It has been true of my teams
in the past," Coach Waters said. "If
we live together, eat together, and
even fight together sometimes, we
will be stronger. "
His reasons for accepting the
job at Sewanee were both the
opportunity and the challenge.
"It was a difficult decision to
leave a program that had become so
successful. But I felt I owed myself
the opportunity to see what I could
do in college coaching," he said.
In addition to a head coaching
position, Sewanee offered the chal-
lenge of building a program.
On the job only since July,
Coach Waters has not let the late
start keep him from recruiting.
Among his first official acts was to
notify college coaches he knew who
might know of players who could
play for Sewanee and still meet the
academic requirements.
He may have found at least one
player who can step in for the
graduated Harry and Larry Cash,
and he is encouraged by what he
has heard about the personal qual-
ity of the returning players.
On the court, Coach Waters said,
he will emphasize defense to
smooth out the ups and downs of
the offense. He said he will be
paying more attention to the ways
his players respond to difficult
situations than he will to their game
statistics.
Commenting on the close rela-
tionship he likes his players to
have— virtually the relationship of a
family— he said: "When a game is
close, the character of that family
will be tested. Fortunately I have
had players in the past who had
character."
A native of Glennville, Georgia,
Coach Waters was a five-sport
letterman for four years in high
school. He was graduated from
Belmont College in Nashville, receiv-
ing a bachelor's degree in health
and physical education and a mas-
ter's degree in guidance.
Coach Waters became an assis-
tant basketball coach at St.
Andrew's High School in South
Carolina in 1967 and was named
the head coach the following year.
He was named head coach of neigh-
boring Middleton High when it
opened in 1970.
In ten seasons he built a record
of 226-36 and was the winningest
coach in South Carolina.
Coach Waters and his wife, Beth,
have two sons.
Tennis Coach
Richard R. (Dickie) Anderson, a
tennis professional who has pre-
viously given lessons in Sewanee, is
the new men's and women's varsity
tennis coach.
He will also teach tennis in the
physical educational program of the
College and will be assistant field
hockey coach.
The current men's singles cham-
pion of the Sewanee Open Tennis
Tournament and ranked 15th in
Tennessee, Anderson has been a
teaching professional at the
McMinnville, Tennessee Country
Club and the City of McMinnville.
He is a 1973 graduate of Ten-
nessee Tech University and has since
worked as an assistant tennis pro-
fessional for the Knoxville Racquet
Club.
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TheSewanee News
\ / The University of the South /Sewanee, Tennessee 37375
4 Theology Centennial
10 List of Donors
30 Shirley Majors
DEPARTMENTS
2 On and Off the Mountain
25 Alumni Affairs
26 Class Notes
28 Deaths
29 Academy News
31 Sports
TheSewanee News
DECEMBER 1978
Gathering for Founders' Day Convocation and the installa-
tionare, from left, the Rt. Rev. John M. Allin, the chancellor;
Vice-Chancellor Robert M. Ayres, Jr., and the Rt. Rev.
Arthur Michael Ramsey, retired archbishop of Canterbury.
Installation Day Was a Sewanee Day
The weather might have been
arranged by Bishop Polk. It was a
Sewanee day. Shadows of the fall
leaves played across the sand-
stone buildings and walkways. The
sun warmed the quadrangle.
Breslin Tower's clock struck
twelve and the big bell of Shapard
Tower beckoned. Gowned faculty
members began to gather along
the cloisters of Walsh-Ellett Hall.
The regents' meeting was
breaking up inside, and inquisi-
tive faces appeared in doorways
and at windows.
In clusters of black faculty
gowns were occasional crimson,
blue, and yellow academic hoods.
There were blue gowns, like that of
Dean Stephen Puckette, or the
burgundy of the provost, Arthur
Schaefer. At the head of the form-
ing line, Herbert Wentz, the marshal,
in mortarboard, tapped a program
against the palm of his hand.
The choir and acolytes in white
and black crossed the quadrangle
from chapel offices to the walk of
University Avenue, while Saga work-
ers began spreading food along
tables set end to end and covered
with white cloths and yellow mums.
A party of dogs crossed the
street to see what was going on.
Amateur photographers and journal-
ists watched the gathering proces-
sion through their camera lenses.
In the sally port of Walsh, the
men of the day came out to be
photographed. There was the Rt.
Rev. John M. Allin, University
chancellor and presiding bishop, the
Rt. Rev. Arthur Michael Ramsey,
the retired 100th archbishop of
Canterbury, and Vice-Chancellor
Robert M. Ayres, the new vice-
chancellor and president. It was
installation day at Sewanee,
October 17.
Even in its relative modesty,
this installation was thoroughly
Sewanee, much the family affair
envisioned by Vice-Chancellor
Ayres. In attendance were many
School of Theology alumni, arrived
early for the start of St. Luke's
Convocation and the DuBose Lec-
tures. Some College alumni had
stayed after the end of homecoming
weekend.
Fifteen hundred people filled
the deeply shadowed and sunlit
All Saints' Chapel to hear Bishop
Allin deliver the installation address
and call attention to Mr. Ayres'
commitment to the University and
the Church.
"Robert Ayres, both as son and
servant of this University, demon-
strates his love for this place and
for the people and purpose of this
University," he said. "He demon-
strates loving concern for the
people serving and served by this
University.
"Like worthy predecessors, he
believes, loves, and offers his life
in service to the Lord Christ Jesus,
the Lord of the Mission and Lord
of the Church.
"There is evidence and testi-
mony among us," Bishop Allin
continued, "that Robert Ayres
believes Jesus Christ to be the
ultimate source of true unity within
a Christian university and Christian
community.
"He believes the Psalmist:
'Except the Lord build the house,
they labor in vain that build it;
except the Lord keep the city, the
watchman waketh but in vain.'
"And, 'Behold, how good and
joyful a thing it is for brethren to
dwell together in unity.' "
After speaking about the re-
quirements of faith and repent-
ance, Bishop Allin said:
"It well bears repeating that
there is evidence the 13th vice-
chancellor is so offering himself
in love and service to enable all
who serve and are served here to
make their best offering too.
"Dear members and friends of
this community, to fulfill the pur-
pose and potential of this commun-
ity, some new patterns of participa-
tion and higher and more exacting
standards of performance and be-
havior are required of us.
"Join with me, all of you, in
prayerful dedication and commit-
ment to claim the opportunities
now opening to this University and
in concert move to excellence of
offerings with thanksgiving.
"Good and dear friend, Robert,
may you and Pat know here how
(Continued on next page)
NEWS
Installation, Sewanee Day
Kathy GaWgan
Above right: The Rt. Rev.
John M. Allin conducts the in-
stallation of Vice-Chancellor
Robert M. Ayres, Jr., who
stands beside the Rt. Rev.
Scott Field Bailey, bishop of
the diocese of West Texas,
at right. -
Above left: Vice-Chancellor
Ayres and Bishop Bailey.
Left: Thomas S. Tisdale, left,
C'61, a member of the Board
of Regents, and the Rev. Edwin
C. Coleman, T'53, a member
of the Board of Trustees,
on installation day.
Kathy Galligan
(Continued from page 1)
good and joyful it is to dwell
together with this community in
unity."
The presenting bishop for the
service was the Rt. Rev. Scott
Field Bailey, bishop of the Diocese
of West Texas. The reader was the
vice-chancellor's daughter, Vera
Patricia.
At the end of the installation,
a Doctor of Divinity degree was
conferred on Bishop Ramsey, who
was to deliver the first of the
DuBose Lectures that evening in
Guerry Hall.
The citation, read by the Very
Rev. Urban T. Holmes, dean of the
School of Theology, said in part:
"Bishop Ramsey is a distinguished
teacher, scholar, pastor, and states-
man, whose leadership of the
Church over the last few decades,
both within our communion and in
the wider Christian fellowship,
marks him as one of the truly great
churchmen of our times. His
commanding and kindly presence
has moved some to comment that,
if God does not look like Bishop
Ramsey, he should."
For those attending the installa-
tion, there was lunch on the quad-
rangle. Family met family. More
photographs recorded the color and
faces, the vice-chancellor and his
family and his larger family. Con-
versations eventually turned to
more immediate matters. Students
slipped away to afternoon labs. It
was a Sewanee afternoon.
Dean Puckette
Stepping Down
Stephen E. Puckette, dean of the
College of Arts and Sciences for
more than nine years, has announced
he will leave the dean's office at
the end of the spring semester.
He said that when he was elect-
ed dean, his expressed intentions
were to serve for no more than ten
years. He also said he has accom-
plished much of what he had in-
tended to accomplish as dean, and
he wants to return to full-time
teaching.
Dean Puckette, a 1952 graduate
of the College, has been teaching in
the math department sincel964.
Eight faculty members and
three students have been named to
the advisory committee on the
selection of a new dean.
Douglas Seiters, College dean of
men and committee chairman, said
the committee will be gathering a
consensus about the qualifications,
background, and skills that will be
needed by the new dean. He stressed
that the committee is not a search
committee per se, but that it has
been asked to submit names of
possible candidates to the vice-
chancellor, who in turn will make
his nomination to the Board of
Regents.
Dr. Seiters also said alumni are
asked to communicate their ideas
about the qualifications and quali-
ties of the person they feel should
be considered for this position.
He said he would be happy to
accept the names of suggested
candidates.
The other faculty members on
the committee include Frank Hart,
Henrietta Croom, William Clarkson,
Eric Naylor, Tom Watson, and
Sherwood Ebey. Student members
are Minna Dennis, Geoffrey Slagle,
and Jim Barfield.
TtieSbwanee News
Latham Davis, Editor
Kathy Galligan, Contributing Editor
Gale Link, Art Director
DECEMBER 1978
VOL. 44, No. 4
Published quarterly by the Office of
Information Services for the
UNIVERSITY OF THE SOUTH
including SCHOOL OF THEOLOGY,
COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES,
SEWANEE ACADEMY
Free distribution 26,500
Second-class postage paid at
Sewanee, Tennessee 37375
FRONT COVER: Paul Robinson,
one of 13 students profiled in
this issue, stands in an archway
below Walsh-Ellett Hall.
NEWS
Mrs. J. Maynard Wilzin, right, discusses the Wilzin library
collection with librarian Tom Watson and Vice-Chancellor
Robert M. Ay res, Jr.
Wilzin Books
The Joel Maynard Wilzin collection
of limited edition books was dedi-
cated at duPont Library during the
University's homecoming weekend.
The collection, given by Mrs.
Wilzin of Baton Rouge, Louisiana
in memory of her late husband, is
one of the very few complete sets
from the publications of the Lim-
ited Edition Club, which has
published 15 books annually from
the world standard classics since
1929.
Only 1500 copies of each
edition were printed, and they rep-
resent the finest printing, binding,
and other book arts. Illustrations
. are by some of the world's greatest
artists.
The collection of 650 volumes
is valued at almost $30,000.
Mrs. Wilzin is the sister of
Harold Eustis, C'37.
Lytle Joining
Seminar '79
Andrew Lytle, former editor of the
Sewanee Review and Brown Foun-
dation lecturer at Sewanee this
fall, will be on the faculty of the
Sewanee Summer Seminar '79.
The week of lectures, discus-
sions, and recreation has been
scheduled for July 8-14, providing
one of the most unusual and stimu-
lating vacations anywhere. Each
year the participants include both
alumni and non-alumni, who come
to the Mountain to enjoy the at-
mosphere as well as traditional and
recent ideas in various academic
areas.
The presence of Mr. Lytle and
other distinguished members of
the University faculty promises
to make this one of the most varied
and interesting seminars ever, said
Edwin M. Stirling, associate pro-
fessor of English and director of the
annual summer program.
Other members of the seminar
faculty will be Barclay Ward,
instructor in political science; Wil-
liam M. Priestley, associate profes-
sor of mathematics; John V. Reish-
man, associate professor of English,
and Francis X. Hart, associate pro-
fessor of physics.
Dr. Stirling also said he is
hoping to add to the faculty
Thomas Brumbaugh, a Brown Foun-
dation Fellow from the fine arts
department of Vanderbilt. Dr.
Brumbaugh will be teaching during
the regular summer school session.
The lecture topics and other
aspects of the program will be de-
scribed in some detail in a brochure
that will be mailed in January to all
members of the Associated Alumni
and various Sewanee friends.
Dr. Stirling said that generally
the same format of morning lec-
tures and afternoon mini-lectures
used last summer will be used next
July. Several outings for the par-
ticipants and their families will be
organized. The Sewanee Summer
Music Center will also be in session,
with programs annually enjoyed by
participants. Day care and baby-
sitting services will be provided at
no extra charge.
The cost will be $210 for
tuition, room, and meals; $130 for
room and meals only, and $85 for
tuition only.
Interested persons may register
by sending a $50 deposit to Dr.
Stirling in care of the University of
the South. Eighty percent of the
deposit is refundable before June 10.
Summer Term
Has New Look
To stimulate interest in the College
summer school next summer, several
innovations are being made, includ-
ing an emphasis on the nineteenth
century in as many courses as possi-
ble and the addition of a seminar
on nineteenth century studies.
The plans were initiated by
John V. Reishman, associate pro-
fessor of English, who will be direc-
tor of the summer school in the
absence of William T. Cocke, who
will be participating in the British
Studies at Oxford.
To lend more intimacy to the
program, Dr. Reishman said the
women's dormitory will be Hoff-
man Hall rather than Benedict,
where it was last summer, and the
men's dorm will be Tuckaway
instead of McCrady Hall. Hoffman
and Tuckaway are recently reno-
vated, are smaller, and have more
spacious rooms.
He said weekly afternoon teas
for faculty and students will be
held in the dorm common rooms.
Several advanced courses-
Romantic poetry, nineteenth cen-
tury European painting, nineteenth
century Russian history, music of
the Romantic period, and political
theory— will focus on various aspects
of nineteenth century culture.
The seminar will be led by Dale
Richardson, professor of English,
who will be joined at intervals by
other members of the faculty.
:
Andrew Lytle
The course on nineteenth cen-
tury European painting (from
David to Cezanne) will be taught
by Thomas Brumbaugh, a Brown
Foundation Fellow from the fine
arts department at Vanderbilt Uni-
versity.
Summer school students can
also avail themselves of the rich and
varied program of concerts of the
Sewanee Summer Music Center.
Dr. Reishman said there are
several reasons why summer school
might be attractive for students—
the small classes with faculty who
teach only one course, the pleasant
weather, the chance to enrich tech-
nical or professional training with
courses in the humanities, the
chance to complete degree require-
ments sooner, and the chance for
freshmen to sample college courses
before the regular term begins.
Dr. Reishman said the summer
school would also allow students in
other colleges and universities to
have a taste of Sewanee life.
In addition to those mentioned,
course offerings include biology
101, classical studies 210, economics
101, English 101, beginning draw-
ing, French 301, history 102,
mathematics 101, philosophy 101,
astronomy (physics 250), political
science 101, psychology 101, and
religion 111.
Oxford Studies
The British Studies at Oxford Pro-
gram will be renewed for the tenth
consecutive year next summer
when Sewanee students have the
opportunity to study for five weeks
(July 8 to August 14) at Oxford
University.
The theme of next summer's
program will be "Britain in the
Renaissance." Lectures will be
given by some of Oxford's most
distinguished teachers on the arts,
history, literature, and thought of
Great Britain of that period.
Leading the Sewanee group and
giving seminars will be William T.
Cocke, professor of English; Joseph
D. Cushman, professor of history,
and Douglas C. Paschall, assistant
professor of English.
Students will reside and dine in
the seventeenth century buildings
of University College. The cost of
room, board and tuition is $1,745.
Six hours credit are offered at both
the undergraduate and graduate
levels.
Application may be made to
one of the Sewanee professors who
will lead the group. The program is
sponsored by the Southern College
University Union of which Sewanee
is a member.
NEWS
Alumni Start
Symposium
Seven College alumni were back on
campus this fall for the first of
what is planned as the annual Busi-
ness Careers Symposium at Sewanee.
What those alumni had to say
was sweet music to the ears of Se-
wanee students. The basic message
was that corporations and business-
es are more and more seeking col-
lege graduates with solid liberal arts
backgrounds.
The purpose of the symposium
was to orient students, especially
seniors, to the task of looking for
jobs after graduation.
"1 remember I was at a complete
loss when I graduated," said John H.
Nichols, Jr., C'59, whose idea it was
to hold the symposium.
Nichols, who at the time of the
symposium was senior vice-president
and management director for Leo
Burnett, USA Advertising, persuad-
ed six fellow alumni to return for
the two-day gathering. (He has since
started his own firm.)
An important point Nichols and
the others stressed with students
was that the kind of education they
are getting is in many ways more
valuable than specialized business
training.
"Liberal arts graduates have just
as much opportunity at the entry
level in business as business gradu-
ates," said John K. Honey, C'59,
chairman of the board of TCI Cor-
poration.
"Other than in specialized areas,
liberal arts gives a background as
valuable as anything else," he said.
The sentiment was echoed by
C. Steve Pensinger, C'60, a sales
executive for Random House in
New York City, who added:
"What business people recognize
is that the liberal arts education
offers a broader base to communi-
cate from. The company is going to
train the graduate anyway, and the
liberal arts graduate isn't compart-
mentalized."
More than 100 students met
with the alumni individually and in
groups and were given advice on
graduate school, interviews, resume
writing, and job searching.
Much of the planning was done
by a student committee assisted by
the career services office.
Mr. Pensinger, the only alumnus
not a member of the class of 1959,
will organize a group of his class-
mates for next year's symposium.
Other alumni participating this fall
were William Wilson Moore, manag-
ing director of Merrill Lynch,
White, Weld in New York City;
Bruce A. Samson, executive vice-
president and treasurer of Pierce,
Wulbem, Murphy Corporation in
Tampa, Florida; John M. Warren,
vice-president of Gulfco and Capital
Management Company in Jackson-
ville, Florida, and John McCrady,
the owner of Electronics Systems
Consultants in Dallas.
Dorothea Wolf, career services
associate, reminds alumni and other
Sewanee friends that the student
extern program is continuing, and
their assistance is appreciated.
Through the extern program,
business and professional persons
are asked to invite students into
their offices for one or more days
of observation by the students.
Further information may be
obtained by writing to Mrs. Wolf in
care of the University of the South.
German House
The University's first German house
was opened this year in the Emory
Building, the old Emerald-Hodgson
Hospital administration building.
Ten students and a resident
director occupy the house, where
only German is spoken. The house
has a common room and small
kitchen in addition to five single
and three double rooms.
James C. Davidheiser, associate
professor of German, said the de-
partment is stressing the spoken
language more than ever before
and the German house is an import-
ant extension of that emphasis.
German students also eat lunch
together twice a week in Gailor Hall.
The German House director is
Thorolf Karb, who is attending
Sewanee this year under an exchange
program of the Federation of Ger-
man-American Clubs. Thorolf is a
student from the University of
Mainz.
The German house is the third
language house at Sewanee. The
Spanish house is in the basement
of the old hospital, and the French
house is in the old nurses' house.
Postgraduate
Statistics
The number of College graduates
entering postgraduate programs this
year dropped off noticeably from a
high of 90 students last year to 41
this year, but the numbers probably
indicate a change in aspirations and
national economic conditions, not a
change in the quality of students.
That's the assessment of Mrs.
Dorothea Wolf, career services ad-
visor. She noted that students are
more often postponing their deci-
sions about graduate school to make
sure of what their career goals are.
The increasing cost of education
and financial pressures on students
are forcing still others to postpone
postgraduate work.
Mrs. Wolf also pointed out that
1976 and 1977 classes had unusually
high numbers of students going on
to graduate schools— 86 and 90
respectively.
The record remains impressive.
Of the 1978 graduates of the
College, three have received scholar-
ships (two to Tulane, one to Van-
derbilt), three have received assis-
tantships (Northwestern, Cornell,
and Tennessee), and six have re-
ceived fellowships (Columbia, Tu-
lane Law School, Tulane MBA pro-
gram, Kansas, Duke, and Washing-
ton University).
As has been noted previously,
llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
Corinne Burg in Charge
of duPont's Rare Books
all 12 premedical students seeking
medical school admissions this year
were enrolled.
Eighteen former students are in
engineering schools under the 3-2
program, completing two years of
engineering work after three years
at Sewanee to receive both liberal
arts and engineering degrees.
Seven are at Columbia, six at
Georgia Tech, two at Washington
University, two at Rensselaer, and
one at Vanderbilt.
iimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiii
With the appointment of Corinne
Burg to a full-time position as head
of special collections, the duPont
Library rare books collection is
expected to take on added promi-
nence in the University library.
Plans are for the archives, which
currently shares the second floor
space with rare books, to move up
to the third floor (now called the
attic) when it is finished, and the
present room on the second floor
to be taken over by the rare books
collection.
Miss Burg, who has been at
Sewanee and the library for 35
years, has worked mainly in catalog-
ing, with some stints in circulation
and reference. She was appointed
head of special collections, with
special responsibility for rare books,
in August. Her first job is to finish ■
cataloging the rare book collection.
It will be arranged in the Dewey
decimal system like the main
library, and listed on the OCLC
computer which has member libra-
ries in several states. Eventually
she plans to have many cross-
reference files to enable finding
a rare book by its author, donor,
date, or press.
At present there are several
collections in her domain that have
not been catalogued or appraised,
and in one such she points out at
random a first-edition Dickens in
the original paperback pamphlets,
and a hand-size Book of Hours
bound in brocade. Asked if she will
start at shelf one and work her way
through, or work on the more eye-
catching volumes first, she says,
"It's difficult to know where to
start in a mixed collection like
this one. The Wilzin collection was
easy, with books of all the same
type. We also have a collection of
books and pamphlets from the
Ward Ritchie Press in Los Angeles,
given by Franklin Gilliam (C'46),
who runs a bookstore in San Fran- -
Cisco."
All books printed before 1600
are considered incunabula, says
Miss Burg, and the University has a
good many of them. She displays
one printed in 1476, in remarkably
good condition for its age. It hasn't
been appraised either. Librarian
Tom Watson estimates that there
are about 8,000 books in the rare
book collection, with, "at a conserv-
ative estimate," a value of two to
three million dollars.
The library staff is still in the
process of moving potentially valu-
able books to the rare book room
from the stacks, and there are still
many stored in the attic. Some of
the more valuable are in the vault,
like the $6,000 Audubon folio.
With the separation from archives,
which will keep all books relating
to Sewanee and the University,
there may be more space to display
such treasures from time to time.
Another interesting category of
books contains this bookplate:
"Presented by the University of
Cambridge to the library of the
University of the Southern States
of America, 26 March 1868." These
are the original volumes given by
Cambridge to start Sewanee's
library. Miss Burg says there is no
list of what was given then, she just
runs across them in the general
library from time to time. She has
also started a stack of volume twos
waiting for volume ones to turn up,
and so forth.
Another kind of problem is
represented by a German book of
hand-colored bird pictures with a
card inside saying its value is $750.
The owner wanted to give it to
the library ; then while it was being
appraised they got word that he
had died. Miss Burg doesn't know
whether the library will get the
book or not; it is sitting on a
shelf pending its final disposition.
The petite organizer of all this
biblio-miscellany came to Sewanee
fresh from Peabody's library school
and has been here ever since. Born
in Wisconsin, she grew up in Missis-
sippi with an excellent southern
accent ("My relatives in Wisconsin
say I talk funny"), then moved to
Knoxville in her teens. She lives
with four cats and several house
plants, and her only complaint is
that of the barefoot shoemaker-
after all the work is done, she
doesn't have much time to read!
—Gale Link
On and Off the Mountain
Cultural Cream
Two highlights of the Concert
Series this fall were the perform-
ance of Eugene O'Neill's Long
Day's Journey into Night by the
Academy Theatre of Atlanta and
the concert of the Gewandhaus
Orchestra of Leipzig.
Candlelight and Concert
About 80 concert-goers attended a
candlelight dinner November 15
at the Sewanee Inn before the
Concert Series performance of the
Gewandhaus Orchestra.
Invitations 'to the dinner and
concert were mailed to 750 alumni
who live within a reasonable driving
distance.
Those involved in the concert
series hope more alumni will take
advantage of the dinner-concert
combination at a performance this
spring.
More Doctors
Two physicians have recently
moved to Sewanee and joined the
staff of Emerald-Hodgson Hospital.
Dr. Robert K. Barton is a re-
tired Navy doctor and until this
summer was an associate professor
at Michigan State University Col-
lege of Medicine and director of
obstetrics and gynecology for a
group of hospitals in Saginaw,
Michigan.
Dr. Wendell B. Thrower, a
thoracic surgeon, moved from the
Veterans Administration Hospital
in Fayetteville, Arkansas. He will
have an office in Monteagle.
New Personnel Director
Richard Hall, second vice-president
and personnel officer for Manufac-
turers National Bank in Detroit,
is the new director of personnel for
the University.
A native of Rochester, New
York, Mr. Hall received a bachelor's
degree from Cornell University and
did graduate work at Syracuse
University. He has had 12 years'
experience in banking and was
previously employed in industry.
Lawyer Returns
Tom Burroughs, C'72, was the
guest speaker of the Pre-Law Club
October 16. He talked about his
experiences in the study and prac-
tice of law. Tom studied two years
at Keble College, Oxford Univer-
sity before entering Harvard Law
School. He is practicing law in St.
Louis and is a trustee from the
Diocese of Missouri.
New Research Center
DuPont Library has established a
Center for Public Policy in cooper-
ation with the American Enterprise
Institute. Tom Watson, University
librarian, said the center will make
available to faculty and students
important research material of
particular value in economics and
political science and American
Studies. The American Enterprise
Institute is a publicly supported,
non-partisan research and educa-
tional organization located in Wash-
ington, D. C.
Women Regroup
The Women's House moved to
larger quarters this summer, en-
abling an expanded program of
social and recreational opportuni-
ties for University women. The new
house is the former residence of
Thad N. Marsh, former provost and
professor of English, and is located
behind the Bishop's Common.
Mountain Goat
A new edition of the Mountain
Goat has been published this fall.
This collection of student poetry,
short stories, and essays may be
obtained by sending an "appropri-
ate donation" to Anderson Doug-
lass, the editor, through the Univer-
sity Post Office.
Sewanee Will Host Planners
Distinguished university faculty
from the U.S. and abroad will be
in Sewanee April 4-8 for a planning
conference under the auspices of
the Institute of European Studies.
About 35 participants will be
planning the curriculum of a Com-
parative Literature Year Abroad, a
program under which students will
be able to do research for one
semester in one country and a sec-
ond semester in another country.
France, Germany, and Spain are the
European countries participating.
Jacqueline Schaefer, University
professor of French and a member
of the conference workshop faculty,
said the support given to the pro-
gram by the National Endowment
for the Humanities resulted from
the demonstration of "genuine
international cooperation."
Tennessee Williams Sold Out
The Purple Masque presented a per-
formance of Tennessee Williams'
Cat on a Hot Tin Roof last month.
The heavy demand for tickets
caused the drama group to add an
extra performance to a previously
scheduled four. Leading roles were
played by Rosalind Jewett (Mar-
garet), and Steve Raulston (Brick),
both students, Mrs. Mary Rose Gil-
christ (Big Mama), and Thomas
Spaccarrelli, assistant professor of
Spanish (Big Daddy). Robert Wil-
cox, instructor in speech and
theatre, was the director.
Student Trustee
David Brewster (Bruce) Dobie, a
junior economics major from
Lafayette, Louisiana, was elected
a University trustee by the student
body this fall. He was unopposed
for the two-year term.
"r-'m
TIGHT SQUEEZE-A driver training program
for firemen and EMT's was held this fall on an
obstacle course set up on Alabama Avenue
between Woods Lab and the library. Dr. Gerald
Smith demonstrates one of the obstacles-
driving between cans set up with two inches to
spare on each side.
Hospital Dedication
Among the many activities of
Homecoming weekend was the
dedication of the new Emerald-
Hodgson Hospital building and its
memorial plaques and donor lists.
After a dedication service conduct-
ed by University Chaplain Charles
Kiblinger, those present enjoyed
a reception in the light-filled
dining room.
Plaques honoring benefactors
of the hospital in its old building
have also been placed in the new
building.
Musical Highlights
Next summer will again be enliven-
ed by orchestra concerts as the
twenty-third season of the Sewanee
Summer Music Center will be held
June 23-July 29. Most of last year's
faculty are returning, and Director
Martha McCrory promises some
old and some new guest conductors.
The SSMC will also again host the
String Camp at Sewanee Academy
for younger musicians, June 24-
July 1, and the Chattanooga Boys'
Choir practice session later in the
summer.
The summer's musical feast will
be enriched by a ballet school
directed by Jean Spear of the Flor-
ida Ballet Arts School, Sarasota.
Closing performances are planned
for just after the SSMC Festival.
Spotlighted Music
Check your December issue of
Southern Living, which has men-
tion of Sewanee 's Festival of
Lessons and Carols in a feature
article on Christmas across the
South, along with color photos
taken by the magazine's photogra-
pher at last year's service.
Professor from France
Regis Mienney, professor of French
at the University of Nantes, France,
will be teaching in the College
during the second semester in place
of Scott Bates, who will be on leave.
Dr. Mienney, a specialist in
19th and 20th century literature,
is on the staff of the Nantes Center
of the Institute of European Stud-
ies and is coming to Sewanee under
the sponsorship of the institute.
Jacqueline Schaefer, professor
of French at Sewanee, said she
understands through communica-
tions with the Nantes center that
this may be the first step toward a
program for exchanging professors.
Odd Jobs
The University Choir is attempting
to raise enough money to travel to
England next July. Students are
doing a wide variety of jobs to get
the funds.
STUDENTS
A Lesson in Achievement
The question, "What are Sewanec students tike these days?"
is often asked by alumni and other friends of the Oniuersity.
The student profiles which follow may not totally answer
that question, but we hope you have as much fun reading
them as we had preparing them.
The intention was to present as much of a cross-section
of the student body as practicable and to give an honest
picture of each student.
However successful we may have been at these things
cannot malic less obvious the fact that many very interesting
students were missed. —Ed,
Bill Gilmer and lady friend take on the woodpile.
Bill Gilmer: Academics is Part
of the Greater Whole
Getting a proper balance between
the books and extracurricular activi-
ties is a continuing battle for every
student every semester— every day
even.
Bill Gilmer may not have the
problem solved, but he has definite
ideas about it.
"Some people take academics
too seriously, or whether they do
or not, they bitch about it too
much," he said.
So with a kind of wild man's
determination, William Newman
Gilmer, Jr. has thrown himself at all
sorts of challenges around campus,
including the Grendel of all campus
projects, editingthe Sewanee Purple.
He is not what you would call
the traditional Sewanee type. His
wolf-man beard and striped overalls
or running pants are a familiar
sight around campus, and when he
appears in a necktie, you have the
feeling it might shrivel up and fall
off before your eyes.
But Bill already has tucked
away a Rotary Foundation Scholar-
ship to the University of Munster
in Germany, a job offer from the
Wall Street Journal for after gradua-
tion, and is making application for
a Rhodes Scholarship.
Although his parents now reside
in Patterson, New York, Bill has
spent most of his life in Chesterfield
County, Virginia, south of Rich-
mond.
He was graduated from St.
Christopher's, an Episcopal prep
school, and while most of his class
was planning to go to the Univer-
sity of Virginia, Bill took a tip from
the school's placement officer and
visited Sewanee.
"I fell in love with the place, as
people usually do," he said.
Always an outdoors fanatic, Bill
settled in quickly. He lives in a log
cabin on North Carolina Avenue
that he rents from Robert Daniel.
A favorite pastime is cooking and
throwing dinner parties for friends.
Bill began and will end his
college career with a professional
interest in journalism, but he switch-
ed to a major in religion after
starting in English and biology.
"I decided it didn't make any
difference with liberal arts," he
said. "I believe a person should
major in whatever he's interested
in. Religion is a good department."
Bill said he could even see
himself getting a doctorate and
teaching religion someday.
His interest in religion springs
from his own Christian faith. But
he said the academic analytical
approach of the religion classes
"doesn't take the Christian faith
for granted. "
"What I find refreshing is that
it looks at religion very critically,"
he said. "I think a lot of people
would be better off if they could
sit in on a few religion classes at
Sewanee."
A good high school athlete (he
still runs regularly to stay in shape),
Bill wrestled with the varsity his
first two years at Sewanee but
dropped off the team to devote
more time to the student newspaper.
He has moved methodically
from reporter to news editor to
managing editor and now to editor.
He also serves on the publications
board, has served for two years on
the commencement committee
(was head bartender), ran a WUTS
radio show, and was briefly involved
with the Emergency Medical
Service.
He has brought changes to the
Purple organization— gross decentral-
ization, as he puts it— and with it,
he believes, some improvements.
A single, hard-working editor
makes a more efficient paper, he
said, but the Gilmer style has in
many respects given the paper to
more students. He frequently does
not know what stories are coming
until the paper is put together.
Bill finished his freshman year
with a 4.0 grade-point average.
Now he says he doesn't have time
to polish for the A's, but it has not
affected greatly how much he
learns.
"Academics is part of the
greater whole," he said. "Being a
student is to be involved in the
total life of the campus."
Joe Davis:
Classicist
Joe Davis, a senior English major,
provides a contrast to many of
Sewanee 's more visible campus
leaders.
The purpose of college is to
develop the mind, not talents, he
said. Development of the mind
will provide time to use and de-
velop talents later.
"I don't think people go to
college to participate in student
government but to read," he said.
It is very much a classical
approach, well suited, apparently,
for this handsome collegiate-
looking Nashvillian whose newly-
grown beard gives him something of
a literary appearance.
Known among the faculty as an
excellent student who "asks intelli-
gent questions," Joe will often turn
to faculty members for philosophi-
cal conversation he does not often
find among fellow students.
But he doesn't necessarily shy
away from a good night out.
Joe is a member of Phi Delta
Theta fraternity. He played on the
varsity tennis team as a freshman
and on the soccer team for two
years, regularly running three miles
a day before practice.
He certainly is not a recluse,
but concentrating on the books
(sometimes getting a 3.75 average a
semester) can seem like a lonely
life.
"Our business is private," he
said, betraying a certain amount
of relish.
He has dated one particular
girl, finding that "it's great to have
someone to laugh with," to "avoid
depressions that come from the
isolation of studying."
His own literary aspirations
are confined to a journal and the
regular critical English papers.
Creative writing should accompany
a "burning idea," he said.
Joe is heading for law school,
after a family tradition, but is
not yet sure what direction his
career might take after that.
"I want to be in a position to
put things in order," he said,
reminding himself that helping
people put things together in an
orderly fashion is part of prac-
ticing law.
The study of English fits his
goals because good English repre-
sents clear thought.
"Some people don't like the
study of English," he said, "because
they think a knowledge of litera- '
ture depends on some mysterious
source they don't have access to,
when the true sources of learning
are the words themselves. "
Ernie Siebold:
Catalyst in
Woods Lab
Ernie Siebold spends almost as
much time in Woods Lab as the
white rats. Only don't go looking
for a weasel-eyed hermit, because
Ernie Siebold is nothing like what
you would expect.
She is neat even when dressed
in overalls or with that long, light
brown hair falling down her back.
She is seemingly always cheerful,
straightforward, and unassuming.
And she has done things to the
chemistry department that many
have thought a woman would
never do.
"If all our students were as
mature as Ernie, the faculty would
probably go crazy — the demands
would be too great," said one of
those faculty members.
"If she doesn't think you're
moving fast enough in class, she's
liable to tell you," said another.
Ernie— Earlene C. Siebold— is a
many-faceted student of science,
not simply chemistry, which is her
major.
She has made independent
studies, set up labs or been a lab
assistant in chemistry, biology,
psychology and computer science,
and she participated in the Oak
Ridge program as a sophomore, a
full year earlier than most students.
Ernie has a carrel in the radio-
isotopes room of Woods Lab. There
in the quiet moments between labs
and lessons, she will practice her
guitar. She plays for the Saturday
Roman Catholic mass in St. Luke's
Chapel.
She was a member of the old
Delegate Assembly and is a leader
of Sewanee's winning field hockey
team, a mainstay in the Emergency
Medical Service, and enjoys rappel-
ling, which she has done at the
260-foot drop of Fall Creek Falls.
Yet although those who know
her say she "can have a good time,"
they suspect she has a private side
they do not know.
Few seem to know it was
Sewanee that gave Ernie her nick-
name.
While a high school student in
South Wales, near Buffalo, New
York, she came to the S5I (Sewa-
nee Summer Secondary School
Student Institute).
During a reception for the
students, she said, Dr. James
Lowe's son inadvertently intro-
duced her as Ernie rather than
Earlene. It was one of those slips
she hoped would be forgotten.
But to her surprise when she
entered the College a year later
(largely because of the experience
that summer), everyone remember-
ed her as Ernie.
"I kept saying, 'I'm going to
have to explain to people my name
isn't Ernie,' " she said, but never
did. And today Ernie is not Earlene
to anyone.
Last year, soon after her return
from Oak Ridge, Ernie made the
decision she would enter medical
school after graduation next spring.
It was a late decision compared to
Ernie Siebold in the radioisotopes roo
the early decisions of most pre-med
students and represented the
mature, characteristically Ernie
Siebold approach, said a faculty
member.
"I cannot imagine knowing you
want to be a doctor from the time
you're in high school," Ernie said.
She is seeking admission to
medical schools at Vanderbilt, Cor-
nell, Columbia, Tulane, and Virginia.
There is a lot of background
to her medical school decision-
being a nurse's aide at Emerald-
Hodgson Hospital, working with
the county ambulance service,
being an EMT.
"I like chemistry, and if I do
not end up going to medical school,
I could go on with chemistry,"
she said.
Research would be the next
most natural channel to follow.
She said the Oak Ridge experience
(in the analytical chemistry division)
gave her an insight into the experi-
mental way of looking at things.
"When doing research, you
must have a problem in mind, and
you must interest others in your
research," she said.
Even a simple list cannot run
down all of Ernie's activities. She
has been a gownsman since her
sophomore year, is a Wilkins Schol-
ar, and won the Louis George Hoff
Memorial Scholarship for attain-
ment in chemistry. The stipend
allowed her to work a summer in
the chemistry department— one of
several projects she has been in-
volved in.
Being a representative in student
government has not been the only
occasion for interest in student
problems, including women-student
problems.
Her dorm room is in old Hodg-
son Hall, where she is an assistant
proctor. Hodgson lies outside the
bounds of the central campus off
the road toward Morgan's Steep.
"The walk can give you time to
think and gather or ungather your
thoughts," she said.
Kathy Galligan
Temple Brown:
Arts Manager
When Temple Brown transferred to
Sewanee from Tulane two years
ago, he began helping with projects
of Sewanee Arts, the student-run
arts organization. He didn't realize
that by the end of that spring
semester all the leadership would be
leaving and he would be saddled
with keeping Sewanee Arts alive.
For Tim Brown, however, it
was not a matter of keeping the
organization alive. Last year he
helped spearhead a merger and re-
organization of the Jazz Society,
the Outside Inn, the Stage Society,
and Sewanee Arts into one organ-
ization called Sewanee Arts, of
which Tim is general manager.
Each part of the organization
still sponsors events on campus but
with the added backing of the other
divisions.
The Stage Society this semester
co-sponsored the production of
Long Day's Journey into Night,
assisted by a grant from the South-
em Federation of the Arts.
Another major event will be a
performance April 24 by the Preser-
vation Hall Jazz Band, co-sponsored
by the Jazz Society. The Outside
Inn sponsored the Southern Grass
Roots ,Music Tour, and Sewanee
Arts last year ran the Sewanee
Fiddlers' Convention and organized
a performance of The Women.
Tim is a native of New Orleans,
where he was an outstanding high
school athlete (a state quarter-mile
champion in track) and taught
sailing. When he was graduated
from St. Martin's School, he
entered the University of Colorado.
At Colorado, he recalls, his
dormitory alone had more students
than all of Sewanee. He disliked
the size of the university and be-
came discouraged that he wasn't
challenged academically. He left
after three semesters.
Back in New Orleans, he
worked for a company doing restor-
ation work and became a part-time
student at Tulane, which was also
a disappointment.
"Actually I was only half
serious about going back to school,"
he said. But he knew about Sewa-
nee and applied for admission.
Tim is an ex-officio Student
Assembly representative on the
Concert Series committee. He is a
gownsman and a member of the
recreation council and works at
Shenanigans, a favorite off-campus
eating place.
He becomes critical of students
who "sit around in fraternity
houses" and such without contribu-
ting to the larger life of the Uni-
versity.
He will receive his bachelor's
degree in philosophy next spring
but has no firm post-graduation
plans. Likely something that needs
to be done will find him.
David Lodge at Morgan's Steep.
David Lodge: On Becoming
Sentimental About Sewanee
David Lodge is a third-generation
Sewanee man, following in the
footsteps of a grandfather, father,
and two brothers. So he knew a
great deal about the mountain
before he came as a student.
"I never thought I would be
a sentimental Sewanee alumnus,
but I see I am going to be," David
said. "In fact I once said I would
never come to Sewanee."
He said he saw how Sewanee
tended to breed a kind of snobbish-
ness. But he could find nowhere
else he would rather go "in terms
of good Southeastern schools."
David's father, the Rev. John
R. Lodge, Sr., A'44, C'49,
T'52, is secretary-treasurer of
Lodge Manufacturing Com-
pany, a cast-iron foundry in
South Pittsburg. But he is also
the priest for St. Barnabas'
Church in Tryon, Georgia.
The family resides on Lookout
Mountain.
Currently a senior biology
major, David is applying for a
Rhodes Scholarship but is making
alternative plans that extend well
beyond graduation to eventual ad-
vanced study in marine biology
and zoology.
That interest can be traced to
eight months of study and research
at Oak Ridge National Laboratory
in the spring and summer of his
junior year.
For four months he worked in
the terrestrial ecology section of
the environmental sciences division
at Oak Ridge, studying the effects
of acid precipitation on bean plants.
While there he became interested
in another project— the study of
methods of using waste to feed
fish for human consumption.
Of the Oak Ridge opportunity,
he said: "I found out that I would
like to devote my life, or this part
of my life, to research. And my
interest in aquatic biology was
reaffirmed."
In lieu of the Rhodes Scholar-
ship, David plans to take a year off
from studies to work at Oak Ridge.
Then, with money earned at Oak
Ridge, he plans to travel in Europe
before entering graduate school the
following fall.
David is the current chairman
of the student activities fee com-
mittee, which by spring will be
evaluating and funding student pro-
grams for next year. Evaluating the
22 student-run organizations and
allocating to them $71,000 in
student activity-fee monies makes
this committee in many respects
the most important on campus.
David was elected to the com-
mittee from the Student Assembly,
though he is also a member of the
Order of Gownsmen, which also
elects members.
The real work of the committee
will not begin until next spring,
but David is becoming familiar with
the looming issues. One such issue
is that Sewanee Outing Club cur-
rently has about 80-percent student
participation and is outgrowing the
committee and activity-fee support.
It fell to David and his commit-
tee to inform the regents, during
. their fall meeting, that the Outing
Club is sorely in need of vehicles,
which the committee cannot
purchase.
David is also a member of the
Order of Gownsmen discipline
committee but supported-the new
Student Assembly bylaw eliminating
the gownsman membership require-
ment for discipline committee
membership.
He said he is also in favor of
eliminating the gownsman require-
ment for student trustee.
"There was only one candidate
for student trustee this year," he
said, "and I hope that was only
because some of the students
interested were not gownsmen."
He thinks social life is oriented
too much around alcohol and
fraternities, "although fraternities
help the social situation."
"From what I know of other
colleges and universities, Sewanee
is much less stifling and elitist, and
social life is much more open,"
he said.
David is an elected Wilkins
Scholar, is a member of Phi Beta
Kappa and Omicron Delta Kappa.
He is also a member of Blue Key
and Sigma Nu fraternity. And he
is a proctor. For more than two
years, he was swimming team
manager.
"If there is any regret," he said
about his course at Sewanee, "it's
that I haven't taken full advantage
of other things • Sewanee has to
offer— other than academics."
An interest in art "fell by the
wayside. " But David said he has
begun to "loosen up" and take time
for hiking, caving and bike riding.
No one should be bored at Sewanee,
he said.
Mildred Inge:
Mobile Frosh
One of Sewanee 's several Merit
Scholarship freshmen this year is
Mildred Inge,- an articulate and
attractive product of Mobile,
Alabama, where her father is
rector of St. Luke's Church.
The influence of an alumnus
father, the Rev. Coleman Inge,
T'56, was not the controlling
factor that brought Mildred to
Sewanee, however.
She had offers from Duke,
Dartmouth, Virginia, and Alabama,
but says she chose Sewanee, waiting
almost to the last moment, be-
cause it seemed to offer something
different. The "Old English" atmo-
sphere and the academic gowns did
not go unnoticed.
Mildred plans to major some-
where in humanities — English, for-
eign languages, or political science.
A decision on a career is, of course,
even more tenuous, but she is aim-
ing for graduate school and perhaps
a career in the foreign service,
journalism, or law.
Mildred was graduated last
spring from Julius T. Wright, a girls'
school in Mobile. She plays the
piano and for two years made the
highest scores possible in the Ala-
bama Music Teachers' Association
District Festival.
She received the Award for
Excellence from her school's Eng-
lish department last year and with
the prize money purchased a col-
lection of Medieval literature. She is
also an avid Tolkein fan.
Breaking into college life takes
time, but Mildred is already on the
staff of the Sewanee Purple and
works on the All Saints' Chapel
Altar Guild.
She hasn't been initiated to
the favorite Sewanee sports. She
"first mates" on her father's
sloop, which they have entered
in competition on Mobile Bay.
There are plenty of slopes but no
sloops at Sewanee.
Jim Hill:
Greek to Art
"I had a brief frolic," said Jim Hill
of his first semester at Sewanee.
"I spent all my time on the golf
course."
That first semester was in 1969,
and Jim has since been around the
Horn. His odyssey continues as a
student.
Jim declared himself a Greek
major when he returned, biding
his time for law school. But he said
he had an epiphany last fall that he
had been nurturing his parents'
aspirations. What he really wanted
to be was an artist.
His advisor in fine arts said he
did not know why Jim had switch-
ed majors, "because his academic
training had been informative rath-
er than formative," and he was
still bound up with those controls.
This fall, however, Jim pro-
duced a work of art which that
same teacher called one of the
most powerful works that has
been produced in the department
in a long time.
"Jim is a complex person,"
he said. "His hidden nature is
poetic."
After leaving Sewanee in 1969,
Jim worked in politics for a while,
married, and spent three years in
Scotland in Navy communications
intelligence.
He and his wife, Ruth, attended
high school together in Albany,
Georgia, but they met later when
Jim was working in Washington.
"I was somewhat disappointed
when I came back, and Sewanee
hadn't changed very much," he
said. "I felt as if I had been through
a time warp."
Jim is a gownsman, but he has
not been involved in student
politics, "partly because I guess
I'm pretty selfish with my time,"
he said.
Although a member of the
Black Ribbon Society and the
Highlanders, he says he is not
heavily into social life on the
campus. Still, his influence with
other students is felt on a personal
level, which he enjoys.
The vagaries of a decision about
a career have not left him.
"I am presently working on
about 35 contingencies," he said.
Sue DeWalt:
One Big
Contribution
This year's editor of the Cap and
Gown plans a spoof issue on the
Canterbury Tales, with more copy
than we've seen in recent years.
If anyone can pull it off, it's
Suzanne DeWalt, who stepped in
last year when the Cap and Gown
editor resigned ten days before
the first deadline and, with Edward
Wilson, co-edited a minor miracle.
"We were up late drinking
cokes and eating chocolate chip
cookies and putting it all together,"
she said.
Sue realizes that a lot of
yearbook copy, especially when it's
an attempt at humor, can be "soph-
omorish." But she has plans for
plenty of critiquing and re-writing,
if necessary.
A junior political science major,
Sue is wavering between law school
and graduate school but adds she
may "junk it" and pursue neither.
Politics should not be discounted
in any case.
Sue is an organizer, apparently
almost by second nature. Last year
she was instrumental in getting
women 's basketball and track added
to the intramural program. (She
loves intramural sports, especially
football.)
With Emily Fuhrer, she is
organizing a debate for the College
Democrats on the Equal Rights
Amendment. (The major obstacle
is that they can't seem to find
anyone to speak against the ERA.)
Sue is also a co-founder of the
Dubliners, the first women's drink-
ing club— loosely formed, she
emphasized, with no initiation.
Such a club, she said, which is
neither small nor formal, adds a
new dimension to the social life
of women at Sewanee.
Sue was elected a Wilkins
Scholar last year and this fall
received the Woods Leadership
Award.
"I thought the award would
go to Frank Grimball," she said.
"When I heard I would get it, I
thought it was a mistake."
Her interest in publications
goes back at least to her freshman
year when she began as a reporter
for the Sewanee Purple. She still
does some writing for the Purple.
She is also a timer for the
varsity swim team and has served
on committees for the Order of
Gownsmen.
Sue spent much of her child-
hood in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania,
although hometown is now Hills-
dale, Michigan, where she graduated
from high school.
When she was considering col-
lege, Sue said her grandmother
probably had in mind for Sue one
of the "seven little sisters" and one
day showed Sue a Town and Coun-
try article about the Ivy League
schools.
"At the end, after I was thor-
oughly nauseated, there was a
section about Ivy League alterna-
tives," she said. "Sewanee jumped
out at me."
Sue said Sewanee has turned
out to be more than she expected.
"I expected it to be challenging
academically, and I certainly have
been challenged," she said. "I could
be challenged a little less."
But the friendships she has
made have meant much to her too.
Being a Yankee, as she said, and
leaving close friends to come to the
University of the South was not
the easy course.
Speaking of the faculty, Sue
said there seems to be "a concen-
trated effort to push you to be the
best student you can be. There is
a lot of pressure, but it has forced
me to do some things I wouldn't
have done otherwise."
So Sue doesn't even expect the
1979 Cap and Gown to be her
"big contribution to Sewanee"
before she leaves.
"I don't know what it might
be," she said. "Hopefully not
notorious."
Sue DeWalt lays out Cap and Gown
Kathy Galligan
Madge
Nimocks:
Pub Clubber
Just as Sewanee has a dog for
every person (according to the local
joke), it probably also has a club
for every person.
That did not stop Madge
Nimocks and a couple of friends
who have been concerned that they
have not had enough opportunity
to discuss intellectual subjects.
Their new club, which has the
ring of Boswell and Johnson, is
called the Pub Club, because the
Tiger Bay Pub is where they will
meet and bring their friends and
presumably discuss intellectual
subjects.
Madge (christened Margaret
Ann) is a conversationalist-com-
plains she needs practice in argu-
ment—and leads a free-wheeling
social life consistent with the
heterogeneous side of Sewanee she
loves.
"You can make Sewanee what
you want," she said. "A lot of
people are shy and have trouble
going out socially. I don't have that
problem."
Tying herself down to one
organization or one person would
probably violate those principles.
"I never date; don't like the
idea of dating. I go out with groups
of friends," she said. "It's part of
the liberal education."
A singularly good friend is Beth
Candler, a roommate of three years.
Madge is a senior history major
but said she could be happy in any
of several fields. An independent
project this year on the educator
G. Stanley Hall combines history
and psychology as well as education.
In addition to her work on
several campus committees in past
years, she has been chairman of
the orientation committee this
year and is one of two students on
the admissions and scholarships
committee.
"That has been one of the most
rewarding experiences," she said,
"working with faculty and deans
and getting an insight into the
workings of admissions."
In addition to being a gowns-
man, she is a member of Omicron
Delta Kappa. She is one of the
staff of the Cap and Gown year-
book, is a member of the Pink
Ribbon Society, and plays intra-
nu,ra! snort-S.
Tutoring a third-grade girl at
the Monteagle School last year may
have given Madge the impetus to
seek a career in education "where
a lot needs to be done."
First she will join a friend and
look for a job in Washington, D.C.
and then travel to Europe, she
said.
"I hope next year I will have
more time to think about what
I want to do with the rest of my
life."
Paul Robinson in the lab.
Paul Robinson: Girls Here
Are Over Your Head
You will get the gamut of opinion
about Paul Robinson around the
Sewanee campus.
"Many people like him; others
dislike him very much," was the
comment of a faculty member.
— Paul would seem to be more
complex, then, than his fresh-faced,
schoolboy air would lead you to
believe.
Although he has reached con-
siderable peaks at Sewanee, he
blows hot and cold, the misses
made more conspicuous by the
successes, perhaps.
Paul himself has blown hot and
cold on Sewanee.
"I hated Sewanee my freshman '
year," he said, but neglected to
mention he had almost transferred
to the University of North Carolina
because he was not getting enough
contact with the faculty. Whether
an accurate complaint or not, it was
soon forgotten.
He mentioned two faculty mem-
u&rs who have influenced him
profoundly.
"Concern for the students here
is phenomenal," he volunteered.
"I have had some teachers I didn't
think were good, but if you show
you are interested, they will go out
of their way to help you."
He called the new vice-chancel-
lor "a brave man" for expressing
his Christian ideas so openly.
"He is not only a Christian, but
he shows it and is not ashamed to
say it," Paul said.
Paul came to Sewanee from
Baylor School in Chattanooga.
He is a senior pre-medical student
and psychology major and has been
given a top recommendation by
the pre-med committee. It is sig-
nificant that he has obtained an
interview with Stanford Medical
School representatives. Vanderbilt
is another top choice.
Why psychology? He said he
could be studying biological sciences
the rest of his life and believes
that psychology will give him a
grasp of human nature, which he
will need in the practice of medicine.
A Wilkins Scholar and gowns-
man, Paul was named the Woods
Leadership Award winner his junior
year. He is president of Omicron
Delta Kappa and a member of Phi
Beta Kappa. He is also active in the
Community of the Cross of Nails
and is a chapel lay reader.
Paul wrestled with the varsity
his freshman year, but athletic
involvement is now confined main-
ly to cross-country intramurals
(He tries to keep a schedule of 20
miles a week), or water skiing and
scuba diving when he can get off
the Mountain.
In addition to applying to
medical schools, Paul has submitted
a Rhodes Scholarship application,
which may have no more meaning,
he said, than to force him to think
about what he has done at Sewanee.
His 3.85 grade-point average is
a result of hard work, he said, not
of being smarter than anyone else.
Of his extracurricular activities
this year, perhaps the most consum-
ing is his chairmanship of the Honor
Council.
"I have spent a lot of time
thinking about the honor code,
what we have and where we are
going," he said. "We are especially
looking at a graduated penalty
code."
The council has written letters
to several other schools, among
them Virginia, Davidson, and
William and Mary, about the gradu-
ated code.
"Some students say we already
have a graduated code, since those
found guilty of honor code viola-
tions already have opportunities
to come back to school.
"But whatever we do, we have
to move slowly," he said. "In trying
•to improve the honor code, we
don't want to ruin it."
He said Sewanee provides a
refreshing difference from colleges
and universities without an honor
code.
"The attitude in class is dif-
ferent, and I don't know whether
I could leave my dorm room un-
locked somewhere else," he said,
adding that a good code is import-
ant for the integrity of the degrees
and the reputation of the University.
Socially, Paul said he is outside
the mainstream, meaning he keeps
his options open. His last steady
girl friend went to Emory, and that
was eons ago.
He said Sewanee's women stu-
dents are in a special category to
themselves. Coeds at larger state uni-
versities are certainly . . . "gorgeous"
enough but seem to have some
difficulty communicating.
"Girls here can not only stay
with you, they are over your head,"
he said.
Nevertheless, he perceives a
danger in Sewanee becoming too
"khaki," with upper middle class,
prep school students dominating.
He doesn't like people getting into
a mold.
Jack Hitt:
Big Houses
Jack Hitt is one of Sewanee's angry
young men. He says what is on his
mind— in a genial way— and some-
times almost tongue-in-cheek. Be-
cause in so many words this casual
sandy-haired senior says he's a
student first, activist last.
Also he is at Sewanee, and he
is from Charleston, South Caro-
lina. Is that relevant?
"Some days I wake up and love
this place, and other days I hate it,"
he said.
"No, I like Sewanee. My main
complaint is about the bureaucracy.
There were rats in my room, and
seven times I complained about it
before anything was done.
"This is a nice place,' he added.
"Gailor is not all that ba Every-
one is friendly."
With a tone of wry sarcasm,
Jack alludes to the almosi planned
homogeneity— "the perfc t stereo-
type, male and female, of southern
gentility "—of the campus.
"There are more Negroes work-
ing in Gailor than are in the entire
student body," he said, "and that
includes the faculty."
Until this year, Jack worked
at the Learning Disabilities Center,
teaching youngsters five to thirteen
years old math and English on a
one-to-one basis. The building was
taken over by the University, and
Jack is angry about that, more or
less.
"I like this school," he said. "I
leave the administration problems
to someone else. They're here to
take care of all that."
So Jack hasnt become involved
in student government. He said he
hasnt really gotten involved in
much of anything.
"I never joined a fraternity," he
said, being informative. "Or played
a sport, except to chase girls on
weekends, and I didn't get a letter
for that either."
Jack combined an interest in
literature and languages to major in
comparative literature. He is presi-
dent—"generalissimo"— of the Span-
ish House, which is in the basement
of the old hospital building. He is a
member of the Spanish Honor
Society and is a gownsman.
He tutors Latin, which he loves,
and is collating some of the papers
of the late Dr. Bayly Turlington.
"I have never written for the
Purple," Jack said.
But his grandfather and father
were newspaper editors. His brother
is city editor of the Columbia
(South Carolina) Record.
He may give in to the journalistic
heritage and put his Spanish to use
on a paper in Buenos Aires, Argen-
tina.
"If someone pays my way to
Europe, I will go. I am working on
that possibility," Jack said. "No,
I will probably be going to California.
I will get a job and learn to pay
bills. I will get experience in living,
and then I'm going to be rich. I
like creature comforts— maids and
big houses.
"If you want me to be opinion-
ated, come down to the pub about
eleven o'clock."
He can talk at length about
student problems, many of which
the Student Assembly persistently
attacks. The machinery to effect
change is in the hands of the stu-
dents, according to Lee.
"We provide input to common
sense solutions to day-to-day
problems," he says of the Assembly.
"There are some deficiencies
in the social system caused in part
by dependence on the fraternity-
sorority system," he said. "But we
found that most of the students
transferring away were the society
people. You would expect the free
spirits to be unhappy."
Lee's major in political science
belies his interest in literature. This
Lee Taylor in a contemplative pose.
Lee Taylor: Wrecking
Social Life and Grade Average
The College of Arts and Sciences
experienced a kind of cross-fertiliza-
tion of its democratic institutions
this year when Lee Taylor, former
managing editor of the student
newspaper, took over as speaker of
the Student Assembly.
Lee probably has not thought
of himself as some sort of spore or
sperm, but he would be amused.
His often sarcastic good humor is
well known on campus, and he can
use it to turn aside the wrath of
constituents and subscribers alike.
In the past three years, Lee
has covered some of Sewanee's
most important stories for the
Purple, that sometimes incisive,
sometimes inaccurate student voice.
But Lee is more often than not
spoken of with respect by his elder
critics. His experience is not wasted
in the Student Assembly.
Lee spent the first 12 years of
his life in Indianola, Mississippi
before his family moved to Memphis.
A flair for journalism won him a
Memphis Press-Scimitar scholarship
to the Blair Summer School for
Journalism in Blairstown, New
Jersey his senior year in high school.
His intentions have always been
to pursue a career in journalism
either through a good journalism
school or a good liberal arts college.
On a suggestion from a high school
counselor, he visited Sewanee. He
liked what he saw.
One could almost say Lee
liked too much of what he saw and
has delved into a long list of things
in three and a half years.
On being managing editor of
the Purple, he says: "It wrecks your
social life, not to mention your
grade-point average."
On being editor, he says: "I
have been close enough to it to
see what it takes in responsibility
and grief.".
As a freshman, Lee spent most
of his spare time with WUTS, the
student radio station, becoming by
spring co-news director, then news
director the following fall.
Although he was tackling some
big campus stories for the Purple
through his sophomore year, by his
junior year he was assistant mana-
ger of WUTS and in charge of
"Mountain Productions." He says
he "was too strung out," but,
nevertheless, became managing edi-
tor of the Purple last spring.
He is or has been production
manager of the Mountain Goat,
21 student literary enterprise; mem-
ber of the Recreation Council;
member of the Sewanee Technical
Terrain Team; emergency medical
technician; commencement worker
for two years; orientation worker
this year, tuba player in the Univer-
sity Band; member of Omicron
Delta Kappa; and member of Blue
Key.
"I want to be on the canoe
team but can never make the time,"
he said.
As head proctor, he was given
his choice of rooms in Tuckaway
Hall and chose a semi-L-shaped
place where his bed fits neatly
in a cubbyhole under the window.
11
semester he has been enrolled in
Andrew Lytle's course in prose
fiction.
"I have learned as much about
writing as I have learned the pre-
vious three years," he said.
Later he said: "Sewanee pro-
vides as much opportunity as you
want to take. We couldn't special-
ize in nuclear physics, but that's
not what we're here for.
"Sewanee is sort of passive.
You have to go to it. It won't come
to you," he said.
"Granted, some knowledge will
rub off, but the opportunity to go
beyond that is sometimes unap-
preciated."
Cathy Davis: Drama Talent
Until she came to Sewanee, Cather-
ine Davis had never acted in a
theatre production. She is now one
of several talented drama students
at the University and is headed
for graduate work in theatre.
She played the role of Puck in
last spring's Purple Masque pro-
duction of A Midsummer Night's
Dream. This fall she had a lead in
Vanities, a production of the
Appletree Dinner Theatre.
Those parts were not accidents.
But the first one, back in her
freshman year, resulted when a
friend asked her to try out for the
student production of The Shewing
Up of Blanco Posnet, a one-act
English western.
"I played the local woman of
ill repute," she said.
Catherine, a senior in fine arts,
came to Sewanee to major in
English, influenced in part by the
reputation of the English faculty.
She has a developing interest in
film and helped organize last year's
short film festival, an idea that
sprang from summer work with the
South Carolina Arts Commission.
To improve her skills in move-
ment and voice, she has studied
ballet for four years and some mod-
ern dance, and she is taking voice
lessons.
Catherine is a Wilkins Scholar
and a member of the Order of
Gownsmen. She is currently chair-
man of the fine arts department
student government. She is involved
in planning next April's Women's
Conference on women's athletics,
and she is one of two students on
the fine arts department rehiring
committee.
Although athletically oriented,
Catherine has not found the time
for competitive sports. She is a
water safety instructor, and back
home in Columbia, South Carolina,
she crewed for sailboat races. Run-
ning and bike riding keep her in
shape in Sewanee.
Catherine Davis in a contemplative pose.
BOOKS
A Doctor of Souls, by Marian Niven.
University Press, Sewanee, and Seabury
Press, New York, 1977. $10.95.
A Doctor of Souls is the poignant tale
of Maria, a Roman plebeian, and Taion,
High Priest of the Egyptian God Ptah,
whose love builds a bridge transcending
all barriers.
It is against the background of the
Roman Republic about to be broken
by civil war, of Greece disillusioned in
her deities and seeking the God of Philoso-
phy, of Egypt living under its Macedonian-
Greek conquerors while still maintaining
a cloudy idea of justice pleasing to its
own Gods, that hero and heroine con-
front one another.
In the Miro District, by Peter Taylor.
Alfred A. Knopf, New York, 1977. $7.95.
Peter Taylor, former resident of Sewanee
and long-time contributor to the Sewa-
nee Review, has written what his publish-
er calls "a major collection from a master
storyteller" and author Robert Penn
Warren calls "a book of distinction and
originality."
Relationships between friends, lovers,
parents and children, and husbands and
wives are examined in the eight stories
which range from the visit of a "country
cousin" with her Nashville relatives to
the showdown between a father and son.
Warren, in his review, goes on to say,
"It is a volume of great variety (and
sometimes of a radically new technique),
with effects ranging from shock to
psychological subtlety."
The Priest in Community: Exploring the
Roots of Ministry, by Urban T. Holmes
III. Seabury Press, New York, 1978.
$9.95.
Dean Holmes' latest book is dedicated;
"For the people of God who are the
School of Theology, Sewanee, Tennessee:
the students, staff and faculty and
particularly their families."
Criticizing the trend among many
in the ministry to see themselves primarily
as professionals or clinicians, Dean
Holmes argues for a fundamental re-
imagination of the priest as "mystagogue,"
the one called to link his community
to the "numinous world" and guide
them within its mysterious geography.
Togo Under Imperial Germany, by
Arthur J. Knoll. Hoover Institution
Press of Stanford University, Stanford,
California, 1978. $8.95.
Dr. Knoll is professor of history at
the University of the South and this
book reflects his special interests in
Africa and Germany.
The Quest for the Informed Priest:
A History of the School of Theology,
by Donald S. Armentrout. Kingsport
Press, 1979. Pre-Publication, $10.00
from the School of Theology, Sewanee.
As part of the celebration of the School
of Theology's centennial year. Dr.
Armentrout has written this complete
history of the seminary. The book traces
the part played by theological education
in the founding of the University of the
South, and develops the evolution of the
School of Theology in relation to the
Episcopal Church and the broader relig-
ious life of the South and the nation.
Emphasis is on deans and faculty
members like William Porcher DuBose
who shaped the school, as well as on
curricular changes made to meet the
demands of a changing world and minis-
try. Events such as the "integration
crisis" of 1951-53, the founding and
growth of the graduate summer school
program, and the relation of the seminary
to the college and to Otey Church are all
discussed. In addition there are appendices
on faculty bibliographies, awards, and
officers of the seminary, and pictures of
all the deans.
The fifth annual issue of Mountain
Summer is just out, with more contribu-
tors from outside Sewanee than any
issue in the past. The literary magazine,
published by Don Dupree, C'73, includes
articles and poetry by Sewanee professors
Edward Carlos and Scott Bates and
students Anderson Douglass, C'79, and
George Williams, C'78. Also included is
Stephen Dunning, who recently read
poetry at Sewanee and is well known for
his anthologies, Reflections on a Gift
of Watermelon Pickle and Some Haystacks
Don't Even Have Any Needle.
Sewanee Sampler, by Arthur Ben Chitty,
C'35. University Press of Sewanee, 1978.
$7.50 hardback, $5.95 paperback.
How many times has the legend been
piously rehearsed that Morgan's Steep
owes its name to the refusal of a Con-
federate general to surrender his dispatch-
es to the Yankees, preferring instead to
ride his horse over the bluff? No doubt
the piety of this apocrypha will survive
unabated, but not because the Historio-
grapher of the University has been
derelict in his duty. On the contrary,
Mr. Chitty 's reconstruction of the true
history of Morgan's Steep is but one
example of the winsome mixture of
anecdote and research which character-
izes this splendid addition to Sewaneeana.
Sewanee Sampler has already, almost
before its circulation, established itself
as a classic. In my travels I encounter
. questions about it wherever I go. Nor
does it disappoint when held before the
eyes. Its substance is equally scintillating
and weighty, its appearance elegant.
To say that is to praise both the author,
who knows how to tell a tale with elan
and with integrity, and to praise the
University printer, an insufficiently ap-
preciated master craftsman who in this
book as in others has more than justified
the virtues of letterpress tradition.
From "Dragonish Clouds" to
"Addendum et Erratum," Mr. Chitty's
wit does not fail him. Sometimes indeed
it gets the better of him: he almost
claims that Shakespeare found his inspira-
tion for Antony and Cleopatra in Gardiner
Tucker's ode to Sewanee! But most of
all, A.B.C. has proved again (as so often
before) how devoted he is to the history
of this place and this people. Nothing,
neither virtue nor vice, is suppressed—
unless for pastoral, compassionate
reasons.
There will surely soon appear a
Sewanee Sampler II, for what is here told
irresistibly arouses other tales, further
told the story of historian Arnold Toyn-
bee's unwitting compliment to Mr.
Chitty on the occasion of Toynbee's
Sewanee visit of 1966. Then too there is
my account of how Tennessee Williams
received a Sewanee blessing instead of a
Sewanee degree.
Please pass along your own stories
to Mr. Chitty so that the Historiographer
of the University of the South can
continue to regale us with fact, fantasy,
and felicity.
William N. McKeachie, C'66
The success of Sewanee Sampler has
spurred the Sewanee branch of the
Association for the Preservation of
Tennessee Antiquities, in anticipation
of updating and republishing Purple
Sewanee, to request readers of the
Sewanee News to send in their favorite
Sewanee stories and memories. Mrs.
James M. Avent of Sewanee is collecting
them on behalf of the Association, and
until a new edition of, or sequel to,
Purple Sewanee is feasible, the collec-
tion will be housed in the University
Archives.
Under the Sun at Sewanee, by Doug/as
Cameron and J. Waring McCrady.
University Press of Sewanee, $4.50
paperback.
Doug Cameron (A'65), director of the
Sewanee Outing Club, has updated and
revised Waring McCrady's magnum opus
on what to do outdoors on the Mountain.
The second edition of Under the Sun
contains the efforts of many Sewanee
faculty. George Ramseur revised the
sections on wildflowers and poisonous
plants, Scott Bates updated his sections
on bird watching and bird feeding, and
Harry Yeatman did a substantial rewrite
of the snake article. Scot Oliver, A'73,
wrote a section on bicycling and Tommy
Kirby-Smith's (C'59) geological tour
and Ted Reynolds' (C'65) tree sections
remain intact. Waring (C'59) wrote a
walking tour of Sewanee complete with
one of his exquisite maps, and many
of his hikes and picnics are there with
updated directions. Edward McCrady's
1933 map of the domain, the most
complete available for place names, is
included, and Ben Cameron, C'42, read
proof. Norm Feaster, C'66, played the
role that Bruce Rodarmor, C'67, did in.
the first edition, that of general helper,
goad, and random contributor. Doug
has added more hikes, picnics, and
excursions, including the Savage Gulf
wilderness area, and a new series of
pictures he has taken.
A Biographical Tribute to the Rt. Rev.
Albert Sidney Thomas, by Charles
Edward Thomas, C'28. $7.50 from the
author.
Not often can we hail in the columns
of the Sewanee News the publication
of a biography of one Sewanee alumnus
by another. Such a book, just out, is
A Biographical Tribute. Charlie Thomas
was once director of admissions at
Sewanee and, after serving as commander
in the Navy and commissioner of build-
ings and lands, is one of the University's
most prolific writers.
Before his death, the Bishop wrote
a Historical Account of the Protestant
Episcopal Church in South Carolina,
1820-1957, a splendid and definitive
book, but for obvious reasons he left
out much of interest about himself, its
ninth bishop. This omission has been
rectified.
Bishop Thomas, who in his later
years said he owed more to Sewanee's
Dean William Porcher DuBose than to
any other theologian, is one of three
American bishops who was born in,
lived in, and spent his whole ministry
in one state and diocese. He is remember-
ed as scholar, historian, wise pastor, and
compassionate friend to generations of
South Carolinians. Bishop Thomas, who
died at the age of 94, was a direct
descendant of the Rev. Samuel Thomas,
the first missionary to South Carolina
from the "SPG"— the Society for the
Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign
Parts— who arrived in 1702. Bishop
Thomas was ordained by a chancellor
of the University, the Rt. Rev. Ellison
Capers, and when he retired in 1944
after sixteen years as bishop he was
succeeded by Thomas N. Carruthers,
'22, also a chancellor of the University.
"■ Author Charles E. Thomas was
fortunate in having at his disposal the
complete file of the Bishop's papers.
His study of his kinsman will not have
to be done again.
Arthur Ben Chitty, C'35
A Biographical Tribute may be ordered
from Charles E. Thomas, 200 Fairview
Avenue, Alta Vista, Greenville, South
Carolina 29601.
Arthur Chitty autographs a copy of Sewanee
Sampler for Maria, Webb at party in St. Luke's
Bookstore.
Reactions
to Change
The decision to discontinue the
football program at the Academy
this fall was met with a variety of
responses from alumni across the
country.
The great majority of those
responses were solicited in writing
even before the final decision went
into effect, for as the headmaster
said: "This decision was not lightly
considered."
The nature of the responses
was largely favorable. The Rev.
D. Roderick Welles, the head-
master, said he has received only
one response expressing clear dis-
approval.
Virtually everyone said he
understood the decision even if
there was some disappointment
that it had to be made.
One such alumnus wrote: "I
wish that football could have '
stayed at the Academy, but I want
you to know that I support your
decision 100 percent."
"When I was at the Academy, it
seemed as if everyone played foot-
ball," another alumnus wrote. "... I
played, and I enjoyed it. But I
think I would have been quite as
happy playing some other game,
swimming or playing tennis."
Quite a different response was
received from another alumnus,
who wrote: "It is not my concern
as to what happens to Sewanee
Military Academy."
He said he had been opposed
to the demilitarization of the
Academy, in 1968 because the
military life and training had been
a lifetime asset for all who experi-
enced it, and that this nation can
remain independent only by being
strong both morally and physically.
"The little town of Sewanee,
as with all such communities,"
he wrote, "is quite prone to be
inbred and ingrown, and I feel this
is one more step in that direction."
Other letters were explicit in
their approval:
"Don't apologize to me for
discontinuing football," one alum-
nus wrote. "I never liked the damn
sport anyway. I'll even send you a
cheek."
Another letter expressed deeper
emotion: "For many years I have
held a silence toward Sewanee. The
bitterness of my internal anger at
my treatment during my years at
Sewanee Military Academy caused
me to dismiss Sewanee from my
thoughts. . . . The ill will harbored
by me toward the Academy has
mellowed with the years. I long for
the beauty of the Mountain."
In asking for more information
about the Academy since his gradu-
ation 20 years ago, he wrote: "Do
you offer any new classes for the
Betsy Vineyard and Coach Phil White
talk soccer strategy.
students, such as art? I didn't start
my career in art until after my
return from Vietnam in 1969.
"My first painting came about
in the hospital during my rehabilita-
tion. Ever since, I have been deeply
in love with painting. The affair has
begun to mellow into a deep
marriage of spirit and technical
facility.
"Some years ago, I was told the
military sector of the Academy had
been dropped. I felt compelled to
write at the time, but I did not.
Now, I can say, 'good;' the military
wasn't good for us. . . .
"Regarding the football team,
I'm glad it's gone. Sewanee was
never a great football power any-
way. Now maybe soccer, tennis,
field hockey, archery, track and
field, and other good team sports
can be used to tone students'
bodies while an increased concen-
tration in scholastics can occur.
"Although I have held aloof
from Sewanee for personal reasons,
I thank its teachers for a fine
education."
Sports
Summary
Soccer
It has been a rebuilding year for
the Academy's soccer team, but
you couldn't prove it with the 15-2
record.
One loss was to Huntsville
which the Tigers avenged with a
1-0 victory in its own tournament
to end the season.
Considering that the other
loss to Grissom High School was
early in the season, Coach Phil
White thinks his squad could have
avenged that setback too.
Grissom, by the way, won the
three-state Dixie Conference cham-
pionship, while the Academy failed
to qualify because of the late
switch to fall soccer.
The Tigers will return six of 11
starters to next year's squad, but
Coach White said some quality
players will be lost. The seniors are
Symmes Culbertson, Bill Martin,
John Mulhall, Carlos Deyavorsky,
and Betsy Vineyard.
Tom Cocke is one good
"striker" who returns, but Coach
White said the team will need two
or three more next year.
Cross-Country
The Academy cross-country team,
under Coach Payne Breazeale, ex-
perienced one of its best seasons
ever this fall, breezing past most of
the opposition to a 9-1 record.
The boys' squad defeated St.
Andrew's, Webb, Columbia, and
Friendship Christian Academy,
while the girls lost only to a strong
Hickman team.
Volleyball
The girls' volleyball team finished
its season under Coach Donna
Wallace with a 12-15 record.
The schedule included matches
against many very large high
schools, including Chattanooga
Kirkman, the defending state cham-
pion, and East Ridge, and Notre
Dame. The record was excellent
against local competition.
Right Wing
Surprise
A big reason for the success of
Sewanee Academy's soccer team
this fall, in a rebuilding year, is the
Tigers' right winger, who not only
has speed and all the feinting and
dribbling skills that mark the best
players but crosses the ball excep-
tionally well from the corners.
What makes this particularly
unusual is that Sewanee Academy's
right winger is a girl.
Her name is Betsy Vineyard,
who turned out for practice in
August and promptly made a place
for herself. She is possibly the only
girl in Tennessee playing varsity
soccer at the high school level.
Academy Coach Phil White is
still marveling at his good fortune.
"With so many new players
this year, it was tough to pick the
ones with sufficient skills," he said.
"But after a week of practice, there
was no doubt in my mind Betsy
would start."
When it comes to crossing-
taking the ball into the comer and
kicking it high in front of the goal
for a teammate to head or kick for
a score— nobody on the team is as
good as Betsy, said Coach White.
And she can cross equally well with
either foot.
Seldom can she be stopped by
an opponent when she cuts from
her wing position toward the goal.
"Once she goes through an
opponent," White said, "no one
plays her any differently from any-
one else."
Betsy's hometown is Austin,
Texas, where she began playing
soccer for St. Stephen's Episcopal
School. She made the all-confer-
ence squad there for two years
until coming to the Academy last
season.
Just the same, playing on a
team made up exclusively of boys
was another matter, and she did not
immediately try out for the team.
"At first I was a little scared,"
said the pert sandy-haired Academy
senior. "But now I like it."
Her teammates don't seem to
mind either. She has grinned
through her share of kidding.
"But it doesn't make any differ-
ence when we're on the field,"
Betsy said.
Her interest in soccer springs
from an interest in almost all sports.
She also plays field hockey, basket-
ball, and tennis.
Betsy is not only a fine athlete
but has practically a 4.0 grade-point
average.
Her brothers, John and David,
are seniors in the College at Sewa-
nee, but she hasn't yet made up her
mind about college for herself. If
it includes soccer, don't get in her
way.
THEOLOGY
Anglicanism
and Tradition
"I expect we will be stretched
spiritually and intellectually in the
next day," said the Rt. Rev. Arthur
Michael Ramsey at the start of the
first of the DuBose Lectures
October 17-18.
For most of those attending,
Bishop Ramsey, the retired arch-
bishop of Canterbury, was almost
certainly correct.
St. Luke's Convocation and the
DuBose Lectures drew together the
theological and ideological thought
of the old and new, the home
country, America, and Africa, in
the Anglican tradition.
Bishop Ramsey's lecture before
a large Guerry Hall crowd on the
night of October 17 was followed
the next day by the lectures of Dr.
S. J. Luyimbazi Zake, former
minister of education and attorney
general in Uganda and currently
professor of social anthropology at
State Governors University, and the
Rev. Dr. Charles P. Price, professor
of systematic theology at Virginia
Theological Seminary.
The Very Rev. Urban T.
Holmes, dean of the School of
Theology, introduced Bishop
Ramsey for the opening
DuBose Lecture. The following
is part of that introduction:
"Bishop Ramsey embodies
the best in the Anglican tradi-
tion, to which we are giving
our attention in this series of
lectures. He is a man of deep
scholarship, which informs a
great pastoral concern and a
love of our Lord. He is at ease
with the powerful and the sim-
ple, with the famous and the
unknown, whereas he shares a
moving and profound faith in
God revealed in Christ and a
commitment to our Anglican
tradition. He is particularly
distinguished for his ecumen-
ical witness and for the love of
humanity. . . .
"It is a great privilege that
as this seminary begins to cele-
brate its 100th anniversary of
service to the Episcopal Church,
we initiate our reflection upon
the theme of this centennial—
the culture, the tradition, and
our response to the word of
God — by welcoming as our
inaugural speaker the Rt. Rev.
Arthur Michael Ramsey. "
At the start of his lecture,
Bishop Ramsey noted Sewanee's
important place in the Anglican
tradition and acknowledged his
own personal debt to the writings
of "the great scholar," William
Porcher DuBose.
DuBose taught, Bishop Ramsey
said, "that the life of Jesus is the
Kathy Galligan
Archbishop Ramsey contemplates a question during DuBose
Lecture panel discussion.
perfect act of humanity in God and
is incredible except for being the
perfect act of God in and through
humanity."
"We should be looking for the
divine side by side with the
humanity," Bishop Ramsey said.
Dr. Zake spoke of the ways
Christianity has spread in Africa.
While he was not able to present
reliable figures of the actual number
of Christians in Africa, he said the
denominational roots are well
founded on the African continent.
He said a strong reason for that
conclusion is the continuing stub-
bom struggle over "the reception
and retention of Christian teaching. "
"On June 26 last year," Dr.
Zake said, "the Episcopal Church
of Uganda celebrated its centenary
according to plan even though their
spiritual leader, Archbishop Lu-
wuma, had been murdered earlier
on February 16 and four of the
House of Bishops had been forced
to flee the country.
"The Christians were not intim-
idated, and by all accounts, the
church services are now fuller than
before," he said.
"We also learn that among the
various ethnic groups, there is now
more than ever before, among
Christians, a greater sense of belong-
ing together, which we hope will
endure."
Dr. Price spoke of the history
of the rise of Anglicanism and
growth of the Anglican tradition in
England. But he quickly turned
to a discussion of Anglican tradition
from the American, liberal, Evan-
gelical point of view.
Of the salient features which
give Anglicanism some unity and
cohesion, Dr. Price listed six, the
first of which is "an extraordinarily
comprehensive tradition."
The others include the Anglican
authority of love, the Anglican
liturgy, the political character, in
which freedom and toleration are
the striking features, and the in-
ductive and pragmatic feature of
the theological tradition.
The weaknesses of Anglicanism,
he said, are its conservatism, the
"proud and stiff-necked" nature of
its people who are not easily given
to repentance, and the burden of
being English or Anglo-American.
Beattie Lecfures
The second of three symposia being
held this year for the celebration
of the centennial year of the School
of Theology will be the Samuel
Marshall Beattie Lectures scheduled
for February 20-21.
The opening lecture at 8:15
p.m. February 20 will be delivered
by the Rev. James A. Forbes, asso-
ciate professor of worship and
homiletics at Union Theological
Seminary in New York City.
Lecturing the following morn-
ing will be Dr. J. Robert Nelson,
professor of theology and the for-
mer dean of the School of Theology
of Boston University, and the Most
Rev. Raymond W. Lessard, Roman
Catholic bishop of Savannah.
The theme of the Beattie Lec-
tures is "The Culture, the Tradition,
and Our Response to the Word of
God." They will examine how far
ecumenical relations have pro-
gressed and where they might pro-
ceed in the future.
■? Lit *
41
n
*%i 1 ™ dt
'»
i.
«!'
Latham Davis
The first meeting of the seminary Alumni Council included, from
left, front, the Rev. W. Robert Abstein, the Rev. Leo Frade, the
Rev. Jeffrey H. Walker, the Rev. William B. Trimble, the Rev.
George W. Poulos, and the Rev. Richard O. Bridgford, and stand-
ing, the Rev. Edwin C. Coleman, the Rev. John D. Bolton, the
Rev. Robert E. Ratelle, the Very Rev. Urban T. Holmes, the Rev.
William S. Brettmann, and the Rev. Charles McKimmon, Jr. Not
pictured are the Rev. Barnum C. McCarty, the Rev. W. Gedge
Gayle, and the Rev. James R. Horton. (See story on page 16.)
J
SPORTS
Is Paul Minor trying to kick Coach Horace Moore?
Is it a new dance step ? No. The topic was a victory
over Southwestern.
Conference Co-Champions
The dark days of September turned
to brighter October afternoons and
brilliant November Saturdays for
Sewanee's football team this fall
until the Tigers had finally won
four of their last five games and a
share of the College Athletic Con-
ference Championship.
The first victory, and perhaps
the sweetest of the season, came
against co-champion Southwestern.
It was homecoming.
It was also the first game that
Sewanee's running tandem of Billy
Morris and Ricky Harper began to
shine. In later games, the one-two
punch would pile up more yardage,
but would not be more influential
in a victory.
This was a game when the Tiger
defense came into its own, sacking
Southwestern's highly touted
quarterback for a minus 72 yards.
The following week, the Tigers
suffered a heart-breaking 14-13 loss
at Washington and Lee. But Se-
wanee then swept to victories over
Principia. Rose-Hulman, and St.
Leo College. Earlier losses were to
Hampden-Sydney, Millsaps, and
Centre.
The Tigers lose five seniors
from this year's team— Kelley Swift,
Steve Puckette, Jack Hazel, David
Evans, and Nino Austin. Austin was
injured much of the season but
played even when hurt to decoy
Pass defenders.
In Sewanee's key 21-14 victory
over Rose-Hulman, Austin returned
to form with a 35-yard touchdown-
pass reception. He intercepted a
pass to stop one drive by Rose-
Hulman and made four individual
tackles to stop another in the
fourth quarter. _
It was in the Rose-Hulman
game that Billy Morris gained 143
yards in a school record number of
37 carries.
Canoe Champs
Seventh Time
This year for the first time, Sewa-
nee's canoe team went to the
Southeastern Intercollegiate Wild-
water Championships unsure of
victory.
In the first place, Sewanee had
a couple of neophyte coaches,
Doug Cameron and Dean Stephen
Puckette, with Hugh Caldwell on
sabbatical leave.
Second, parents' weekend in
October kept several members of
the team in Sewanee. And third,
William and Mary, coached by an
Olympic paddler, has been getting
stronger every year.
Nevertheless, Sewanee came
away with its seventh victory in as
many years, outscoring William and
Mary 251 to 217 on the windy
Catawba River near Morganton,
North Carolina. The next closest
competitors of the 11 teams were
South Carolina, 127, and Appa-
lachian State, 109.
"The freshman class amazed
us," said Doug Cameron, whose
16-member team included only a
handful of veterans.
Hugh Caldwell captured the
C-l class for men on a two-and-a-
half mile course. He was closely
followed by Frank Marchman, who
then teamed with Caldwell for a
second-place finish in the C-2
competition.
Cathy Potts and James Ben-
field took a first place in the
mixed-team C-2 competition. Ben-
field and Jack Hobson won the
C-2 team event, and Potts and
Marchman claimed the quarter-
mile competition for mixed pairs.
Sports
Summary
Cross-Country
Sewanee's cross-country team was
conspicuous for a new enthusiasm
this year under Coach John
McPherson, and the enthusiasm
showed November 4 when the
Tigers came in a strong second
in the conference championships.
Principia proved too powerful,
as its runners took the first three
places on Sewanee's rolling golf
course.
on his varsity harriers.
The final standings were Prin-
cipia 16, Sewanee 54, Rose-Hulman
85, Centre 93, and Southwestern
109.
Felton Wright had been the
team leader all year, boosting the
Tigers to an undefeated record
against Division III competition.
Sewanee had finished third to
Carson-Newman and King College
in the Tennessee Intercollegiate
Championships, defeating David
Lipscomb College (a scholarship
school) in the process.
But in the CAC meet, sopho-
more Matt Ligon raced ahead over
the final mile to take a fourth
place in 25:47. Wright was fifth.
Soccer
The varsity soccer team finished its
season with a 3-13 record and a
fifth place in the CAC.
One of the bright spots was a
2-1 victory over Southwestern in
the conference championships.
Southwestern went on to win the
title.
Coach Aubrey Wilson found
himself faced with a large rebuild-
ing job his first year and pressed
several freshmen into action
throughout the season.
Field Hockey
The Sewanee field hockey team had
a much better season than its
6-4-2 record indicates.
Until the tournaments, the
squad was undefeated and had a
victory over arch-rival Vanderbilt.
Then the gals went after big game
at Clemson, South Carolina in a
tournament where the competition
is post-collegiate.
Sewanee lost to the Durham
Club and South Carolina in rough
but well-played matches. The team
then lost two tournament matches
to the University of North Carolina
and Clemson.
Sewanee seniors who are depart-
ing are Ernie Siebold, who scored
29 goals in four seasons; Sarah
Jackson, whom Coach Kevin Green
credited with a "large number of
saves" in three years, and two
first-year players, Ann Trice and
Lisa Lipsey.
Volleyball
The College volleyball team might
remember its entire season by a
startling victory over UT-Chatta-
nooga in the first round of the state
championships.
The clearly favored Chattanoo-
ga squad lost its only match of the
tournament, in fact its only games,
to Sewanee and went on to win the
state title.
Sewanee defended two match
points before taking the victory but
was seventh in the tournament and
had a 10-21 record for the year.
Luann Ray, who made the state
all-tournament team, and Steffany
Ellis, who served six consecutive
points in the crucial final best-of-
three games with Chattanooga, were
Sewanee co-captains.
ID
ALUMNI AFFAIRS
Margaret Flowers is escorted along the football stands by Scott
Ferguson after she was named homecoming queen at halftime of
the Sewanee-Southwestern game.
College Homecoming
This year's College homecoming
October 13-15 was called by some
the best ever and one reason may
have been that a record number of
more than 500 alumni journeyed
to the Mountain to re-encounter
old friends and fond memories.
Housing had been reserved
weeks in advance despite the con-
struction of a new motel in Mont-
eagle.
The fall colors were good,
though perhaps not as brilliant as
the previous year, and the camarad-
erie was excellent.
A dinner-dance at Cravens Hall
Friday night was a prelude to
Saturday activities. And this year
the band, this time the University
band, showed up.
Not all the alumni attended
the Associated Alumni meeting in
Blackman Auditorium the next
morning, but the approximately
100 who were on hand and intro-
duced themselves were entertained
and instructed by two hours of
short talks and awards presentations.
Seventeen members of the
Class of 1928, led by John Craw-
ford of Portland, Maine, were
presented their alumni exornati
keys by Association President
Albert Ruusrts C'50
The Sewanee Club of Atlanta
was presented the Dobbins Trophy
for its selection as the outstanding
club of the year.
Vice-Chancellor Robert M.
Ayres, C'49, gave a brief talk
about the University, and he intro-
duced Douglas Seiters, C65,
College dean of men, who spoke
about student life.
Class appreciation gifts were
presented to the vice-chancellor by
the Classes of 1928 and 1953.
Henry O. Weaver of Houston pre-
sented a check for $24,644 on
behalf of the Class of 1928, and
Robert J. Boylston of Palmetto,
Florida presented a check for
$16,270 on behalf of the Class of
1953.
Other reports were given by
Edward W. Hine, C'49, vice-presi-
dent for admissions, W. Sperry Lee,
C'43, vice-president for bequests;
the Rev. William B. Trimble, Jr.,
C'62, vice-president for church rela-
tions; Louis W. Rice, C'50, vice-
president for regions, and John
Crawford, vice-president for classes.
While the Associated Alumni
met, spouses were given a bus tour
of the campus by Mrs. Elizabeth N.
Chitty. A buffet lunch was served
in the Bishop's Common.
The support of the alumni may
have been the key factor in the
turnaround of the football season
that started that afternoon when
the Tigers soundly defeated South-
western 28-13. It was Southwestern 's
only conference loss.
At halftime of the game, Mar-
garet Flowers, a senior from
Hopkinsville, Kentucky, was named
homecoming queen.
Class reunions were held that
evening. The Class of 1953 had a
party in the Bishop's Common,
and the Class of 1928 had a dinner
party at the Holiday Inn in Mont-
eagle which was attended by 66
persons.
Class of 1928 members in
attendance were John Crawford,
Ellis Arnall, Frank Daley, Hueling
Davis, Alex Garner, Cecil Gossett,
Prentice Gray, Pat Greenwood, Jim
Hammond, George Hodgson, Girault
Jones, Ward Ritchie, Henry Weaver,
James Wood, Robert Wood, Lewis'
Burwell, and William Sharp.
Council Meets
More than 150 alumni arrived on
the Mountain for St. Luke's Convo-
cation and the DuBose Lectures
October 17-18.
A major attraction was the lec-
ture the first evening by the Rt.
Vice-Chancellor and Mrs. Ayres enjoy homecoming
sunshine and football.
Rev. Arthur Michael Ramsey, for-
mer archbishop of Canterbury, but
the next moming, 100 alumni
attended the alumni breakfast and
annual meeting at the Sewanee
Inn. The Rev. Robert E. Ratelle,
T'47, association president,
presided.
Then more than 250 persons
attended a buffet supper that night
at Cravens Hall and heard the Rev.
Donald S. Armentrout give a talk
about personalities of the School
of Theology.
Also of special significance that
week was the initial meeting Octo-
ber 19 of the newly formed Alumni
Council.
The council consists of 14
alumni who meet as a group twice
a year. The Very Rev. Urban T.
Holmes, dean of the seminary,
said the council answers a long-
existing need "for a body that is
more comprehensive than a presi-
dent and vice-president of the
Alumni Association but not too
unwieldy to provide a context
for dialogue between the seminary
and its constituency."
Dean Holmes said the forma-
tion of the council and the work
at the initial meeting together are
among the three or four most
significant things that have happen-
ed to him since his appointment
as dean.
Some of the accomplishments
at the first meeting were:
Establishment of a committee
to evaluate, from the viewpoint
of the graduates, the performance
of the faculty and dean over the
past five years, a committee headed
by the Rev. W. Gedge Gayle, T'63,
rector of St. Martin's Church in
Metairie, Louisiana.
Clarification of the Theological
Education Sunday Offering by
obtaining the assurance of the
administration that the offering will
be restricted to the School of
Theology.
Discussion of the continuing
education program, with the ap-
proval of three seminars for the
next nine months.
Clarification of the function
of the St. Luke's Journal of The-
ology to share theological opinion,
with the assurance of the editor,
the Rev. John M. Gessell, that
future editorials will carry the
statement that they are the opin-
ions oi the authors and not neces-
sarily of the School of Theology
or the University as a whole.
The council also urged the
publication of a special St. Luke's
Journal issue on homosexuality in
which "all points of view are
represented. "
Dean Holmes said he believes
the council came to see itself as a
support group for alumni and
faculty, with the specific intention
to make its seminary the very best
seminary it can be.
Seeking
Commitment
An underlying theme of the Acad-
emy homecoming October 27-28
was to stimulate the kind of new
spirit and loyalty among alumni
that has become the order of the
day among the students.
"I ask you to feel what is going
on here and develop some ideas
about it and go back and tell your,
classmates what is going on," said
the Rev. D. Roderick Welles, the
Academy headmaster, at the
morning alumni meeting.
"This is an educational com-
munity, a Christian community, a
community concerned with the
growth and development of 180
young people, and we know that
and live that."
Mr. Welles described Sewanee
and the Academy as a "total life
experience" that deserves support.
"So much of our success de-
pends on people understanding
what it is we are trying to accomp-
lish," he said, describing the Acad-
emy further as a unique community
and an important effort in edu-
cation.
There was a relatively small
number of alumni at homecoming,
indicating a lack of interest, but
there were exceptions to that
feeling.
The Rev. H. Frederick Gough,
Jr., A'58, of Clinton, North Caro-
lina and vice-president of the
Academy Board of Governors, said
he would not have traveled so far
for a homecoming or reunion at a
public high school.
H. Payne Breazeale, A'62, a
member of the Academy faculty,
urged his fellow alumni to make a
commitment.
"Simply coming here and
sitting in this room is a commit-
ment," he said. "Sending me a joke
is a commitment, because I don't
have any to tell."
Mr. Breazeale, who is volunteer
chairman of the Academy task
force campaign, said the Academy
needs dollars as well as kind words,
but it certainly cannot do without
the kind words.
Vice-Chancellor Robert M.
Ayres also spoke, at one point
alluding to earlier considerations to -
close the Academy but assuring
those present that the administra-
tion fully supports the Academy
and is pleased with the rejuvenation
under the new headmaster.
Later on Saturday morning,
alumni joined parents to hear a
student-faculty presentation about
the proposed new Academy con-
stitution.
Following a buffet lunch in
Cravens Hall, alumni and parents
heard a talk by Sheldon Morris,
a parent from Jacksonville, Florida,
about what Sewanee Academy had
done for his son. Boyd Bond, A'69,
spoke about why the Academy
deserves the support of its alumni.
Dr. Robert S. Lancaster, C'34, professor and former
dean, and Jim Bruda, C'66, chat during a recent
Sewanee Club party in Orlando.
Philip Eschbach, C'l
That afternoon, the Academy
soccer team rolled to an 8-0
victory over Randolph School.
Commenting on the change from
football to soccer, one alumnus
said: "Well, I would certainly
rather see one heck of a good
soccer game than a poor football
game."
. Anne McGee, a senior from
Leland, Mississippi and the daugh-
ter of Burrell McGee, C'56, was
named homecoming queen.
More than 380 students, par-
ents, and alumni gathered for a
dinner and dance that evening in
Cravens Hall.
Sewanee
Clubs
Florida alumni, parents, and the
Tigers football squad joined for the
largest alumni event of the year
November 11, during and after
the game in which the Tigers
thumped St. Leo College 30-24.
"I have never seen anything
to equal what happened down
there," said Walter Bryant, Sewa-
nee athletic director.
There were more Sewanee fans
than St. Leo fans. Sewanee people
filled the bleachers on the visitors'
side of the field. Then latecomers
went to the other side and took
over the St. Leo stands.
An estimated 700 to 800 Se-
wanee supporters were on hand for
the game, in which the Tigers held
a 30-17 lead until the final minutes.
After the game most of the
Sewanee fans strolled over to Lake
Jovita about 300 yards away for a
picnic-reception sponsored by the
Tampa Bay Area Club. Eric M.
Newman, C'70, was chairman of
the event.
The St. Leo game was sched-
uled with the specific intent of
letting the 18 Florida players on
the Sewanee team play close to
their homes and to bring together
Florida alumni. The plans worked
to perfection.
Alumni from across New Eng-
land gathered for a special "Sewanee
evening in Boston" on October 12
at the Museum of Science.
Jacqueline Schaefer, professor
of French, was on hand to talk
about the Mountain. The event was
planned by W. Gilbert Dent III,
C'54.
Vice-Chancellor Robert M.
Ayres, Jr. was the speaker at the
Founders' Day banquet of the
Birmingham Club held at the
Highland Racquet Club on Octo-
ber 25.
Approximately 110 alumni,
spouses, friends, and parents attend-
ed. After the talk by Mr. Ayres,
the club's nominations committee,
chaired by Ivey Jackson, C'52,
presented Robert M. Given, C'72,
who was elected club president
without opposition.
It was remarked that Birming-
ham has several active alumni
serving the University. John W.
Woods, C'54, is chairman of the
Board of Regents; Bishop Furman
C. Stough, C'51, is also a regent,
and Richard E. Simmons, Jr.,
C'50, C. Caldwell Marks, C'42, and
Martin R. Tilson, Jr., C'74, are all
members of the Board of Trustees.
The Chicago Club held a
reception December 9, hosted by
Christopher K. Hehmeyer, C'77.
Alumni were encouraged to bring
prospective students and their
parents.
William T. Cocke, professor of
English, regaled alumni of the
Greater New Orleans Club with
Sewanee stories, especially stories
about Abbo, at their meeting
November 17. William N. McKeachie,
C'66, volunteer director of church
relations, also spoke to the gather-
ing, which was at the home of
Dudley and M. Feild Gomila, C'61.
Among those in attendance
were Dr. Courtland P. Gray, Jr.,
C'28, and his wife, who had driven
down to New Orleans from their
home in Monroe. Dr. Courtland was
wearing the exomati key he had
received at homecoming.
The new officers elected at the
meeting are John H. Menge, C'76,
president; the Rev. W. Gedge Gayle,
Jr., T'63, vice-president, and J. H.
Stibbs, Jr., C'73, secretary-treasurer.
The Northwest Georgia Club
held a fall gathering November 21
at the home of Marion and Charlie
C. Shaw, C'49, in Rome. Walter
Bryant was one of the guests from
Sewanee.
Vice-Chancellor Ayres was also
guest speaker at the Founders'
Day dinner of the Atlanta Club
October 24 at the Ansley Golf
Club.
Jack L. Stephenson, C'49, was
elected president. The other offi-
cers are Montague L. Boyd, C'74,
vice-president; J. Edgar Moser III,
C'72, secretary, and Fred R. Freyer,
Jr., C'61, treasurer.
Dennis Hall, C'69, was host
for the dinner.
The Tallahassee Club held an
evening with the vice-chancellor
December 2 at the Tallahassee
Woman's Club. Mr. Ayres spoke
following a reception and dinner.
An organizational meeting of
the Middle Georgia Club was held
September 28 at the home in
Macon of Donald M. Johnson, C'48,
and his wife.
William D. Harrison, C'68, said
26 alumni and spouses were on
hand, and others wanted to take
part but were unable to attend.
Although the gathering had
been scheduled to end about 9 p.m.,
very few of those attending left
before 11 o'clock, prompting
Ginger Potts, C'76, to say that
when Sewanee people get together,
age differences make no difference.
Officers were not elected at the
meeting, but Bill said another
gathering is being planned for late •
winter or early spring. DuRoss
Fitzpatrick, C'57, has offered to
have a party at his home.
Latham Davis
Jack L. Stephenson, right, C'49, president of the Sewanee Club
of Atlanta, accepts the Dobbins Trophy on behalf of his club
from Louis W. Rice, Jr., C'50, during the Associated Alumni
meeting on October 14.
Atlanta Wins Dobbins Trophy
The Dobbins Trophy for the out-
standing Sewanee Club went this
year to Atlanta, which was cited for
the organization of several signifi-
cant projects through a committee
system.
The club was especially active
in arranging trips to Sewanee for
prospective students, welcoming
new alumni to the Atlanta area,
and recognizing outstanding high
school juniors with medallion
awards.
Although the club is made up
mostly of College alumni, efforts
were made to bring into active
participation alumni of the Acad-
emy and School of Theology.
Greater support by all alumni and
parents was sought.
Much of the credit for organiz-
ing and utilizing his executive
committee for these projects went
to Jack L. Stephenson, C'49, presi-
dent of the club.
Beginning next year, the Dob-
bins Award will be a $500 scholar-
ship presented to a student in the
name of the most outstanding Se-
wanee Club.
The suggestion was made by
E. Ragland Dobbins, A'31, C'35,
the originator of the award, and'
was approved by the officers of
the Associated Alumni.
* c
Have You Remembered
Your End-of-Year
Gift to Sewanee?
CLASS NOTES
Alumni who attended more than one
University division are listed in the class
notes under the class year of most ad-
vanced study.
If you attended the Academy, Col-
lege, and School of Theology, you would
be listed under your seminary class year.
1928
Former Georgia governor ELLIS
ARNALL, C'28, was one of four out-
standing members of the Georgia Bar
honored by Columbia Southern School
of Law in. Atlanta by having their por-
traits placed in the Law School audito-
rium. The other three were former
governor Carl Sanders, present governor
George Busbee, and Atlanta mayor
Maynard Jackson.
LEWIS CARTER BURWELL, JR., C,
and his brother, CLAYTON LEE BUR-
WELL, C'32, are both listed in the
current edition of Marquis' Who's Who
in America.
J. DERWARD PARKER, C, lives
in Elm City, North Carolina on the
family plantation with his wife, Hodges.
His daughter recently married in Wilson,
North Carolina with THE REV. PHILIP
WHITEHEAD, C'57, officiating.
1935
ARTHUR BEN CHITTY, C, has
retired as president of the Association of
Episcopal Colleges, but plans to keep
active with special jobs for individual '
Episcopal colleges and as consultant to
the new president. His new book, Sewa-
nee Sampler, is out, and he has another
one "waiting in the wings," to be ready
next year.
1938
J. GANT GAITHER, JR., C, attend-
ed the wedding of Princess Caroline of
Monaco while in Europe on business
this summer.
VORIS KING, C, of Lake Charles,
Louisiana, was elected Imperial Captain
of the Guard of the Shrine of North
America at the 104th Imperial Council
Session in Detroit in July. He is the first
man from Louisiana ever to be elected
to the Imperial line, and if Shrine tra-
dition is followed, he will succeed to the
office, of Imperial Potentate, or head
of the Shrine, in 1987. He is president
and general manager of Kelly Weber
and Co., Inc., and Lake Charles Grain
and Grocery Co., Inc. He serves on
several business and community boards
and has received awards for civic
leadership from the Chamber of Com-
merce, Salvation Army, the Boy Scouts
of America, and the National Conference
of Christians and Jews. He was one of
16 receiving the Religious Heritage of
America award in 1975.
1939
A portrait of THE RT. REV.
GEORGE M. ALEXANDER, C'38, T,
GST'57, H'73, bishop of Upper South
Carolina, has been unveiled and will hang
in Diocesan House in Columbia. The
portrait was painted by New York artist
E. Raymond Kinstler, who has also
painted President and Mrs. Gerald Ford,
among others. Archdeacon William A.
Beckham noted that portraits of Episcopal
bishops are traditionally painted after
retirement or death, and thanked the
artist selection committee for the portrait
celebrating Bishop Alexander's ministry.
Among members of the committee was
THE REV. JOHN W. ARRINGTON III
A'43, T'59.
OTTO KIRCHNER-DEAN, C, has
begun publishing a beguiling little paper
which he calls the NBC News tor short-
standing for Nokesville-Bristow-Catlett
News. It is sort of a Foxfire of local
history, personalities and happenings
around Nokesville, Virginia, where Otto
operates an antiques and rare books shop
called Orientalia/Americana/Judaica.
THE RT. REV. DAVID ROSE, T,
C'36, H'59, retired bishop of Southern
Virginia, was among American participants
in the "re-hallowing" of the royal chapel
of 700-year-old Leeds Castle in Maidstone,
England. The service restored the chapel
as an Anglican place of worship.
1942
CATCHINGS B. SMITH, A, has been
elected a vice-president of Merrill Lynch,
Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc. He remains
in Jackson, Mississippi, where he has been
with the firm since 1950.
1943
THE REV. JOHN LEE WOMACK, T,
has become rector of St. Simon's Church
in Conyers, Georgia. He was formerly at
Church of the Good Shepherd in Coving-
1945
THE REV. HAROLD O. MARTIN,
JR., T, has become rector of St. George's
Church in Bossier City, Louisiana. He was
formerly at St. John's in Pascagoula,
Mississippi.
1947
JESSE M. PHILLIPS, C, lives in
Menlo Park, California, where he contin-
ues as a free-lance editor of book manu-
scripts. Most recent client is the Hoover
Institution of Stanford University, whose
Yearbook on International Communist
Affairs for 1978 is the 12th in a sequence
he has prepared for publication since its
inception. On the side, he is pushing the
spaying and neutering of cats and dogs
through low-cost clinics.
Dr. Robert C. Wilson, AJ'08, first dean of the
University of Georgia's School of Pharmacy,
celebrated his 100th birthday in October, and
upon the occasion, the University of Georgia
named its new pharmacy building in his honor.
To do that the university's board of regents
waived its policy against naming a building in
honor of a living person.
Known as the father of modern pharmacy
in Georgia, Dr. Wilson was largely responsible
for the establishment of educational require-
ments for pharmacy licensure and for continu-
ous upgrading of admissions and graduation
standards at the School of Pharmacy.
BRANNON HUDDLESTON, C,
recently resigned as vice-president and
trust officer of First American National
Bank of Nashville, after 29'A years of
service. He is now president of Nashville
Plywood Company.
1949
G. DEWEY ARNOLD, C, is a director
of Wolf Trap Foundation, which operates
America's first national park for the per-
forming arts, located in Vienna, Virginia.
WILLIAM F. BRAME, C, writes that
he has three sons in college this year,
all -of them interested in wildlife and the
outdoors. He lives in Kinston, North
Carolina, and has another son in Kinston
High School.
THE REV. CANON G. STACKLEY
HURST, T, has retired from the active
ministry and will continue to reside in
St. Petersburg, Florida.
1950
THE REV. WILLIAM BREESE WAT-
SON, C, has moved to Salem, Oregon,
where he is associate rector at St. Paul's
Church.
1951
GEORGE A. DOTSON, C, has been
named Chattanooga city court clerk. He
previously worked with the City Housing
Corporation and the Chamberlain
Company.
1952
JIM BEAVAN, C, is still ranching in
Mexico. He lives in Eagle Pass, Texas with
his wife, Julia, and their children Rachel,
13, and Trevor, 11.
1953
JOHN A. CATER, JR., C, is now
vice-president of Frost Johnson, Read &
Smith, Inc., investments.
ALBERT LESLIE (LES) CLUTE, C,
writes that he has been divorced since
1974, has two children, Deanne, 12, and
David, 11. He has worked as a technical
writer for General Electric for ten years
and still plays a little tennis.
KENNETH H. KERR, C, has been
appointed vice-president and general
manager of First Financial Service Cor-
poration of Raleigh, North Carolina. It is
a subsidiary of First Federal Savings and
Loan Association, engaged in land de-
velopment, consumer financing and
GILMER WHITE, JR., C, has been
named manager of group trust marketing
for Liberty Life Insurance Company in
Greenville, South Carolina.
HOMER W. WHITMAN, JR., C,
writes that his son, Burke, graduated
from Dartmouth College in June and is
attending the University of Georgia Law
School.
1955
THE REV. WALTER D. EDWARDS,
JR., T, is rector of All Saints' Church in
Charlotte, North Carolina. He was former-
ly chaplain at Shaw Air Force Base,
South Carolina.
1957
KENNETH L. (SKIP) BARRETT,
JR., C, in April became assistant deputy
commander for operations for the 68th
Bomb Wing at Seymour Johnson Air
Force Base. In his new job he is qualify-
ing to fly the B-5 2 while also maintaining
currency in the KC-135. His son,
Kenneth III, received two Congressional
nominations to the Air Force Academy
but elected to attend Duke University.
PARIS EUGENE SMITH, C, has
returned to Texas after 12 years in
Europe. He will be active in family real
estate property development and has
formed his own company, Palmway Part-
ners, Inc., in Brazoria, Texas.
THE REV. PHILIP WHITEHEAD, C,
has left St. Catherine's School in Rich-
mond and is rector of St. Michael's
Church in Columbia, South Carolina.
1959
SAMUEL CARLETON, C, and his
family are living in London for a year
while Sam teaches in American Heritage's
Independent Liberal Arts Colleges Abroad
program this semester. In the spring he
will be enjoying a sabbatical from Pacific
Lutheran University.
THE REV. THOMAS A. POWELL,
T, is assistant at St. Andrew's Church in
Fort Worth, Texas. He was formerly
rector of Trinity Church in Atmore,
Alabama.
1960
THE REV. W. GILBERT DENT,
C'54, T, is now the interim rector of St.
Mary 's Church, Dorchester, Massachusetts.
He continues as assistant vicar of the
Old North Church, Boston. In addition
he has a private consulting firm special-
izing in development, education, and
organization, and accepts clients nation-
ally. He recently published a Catalogue
of Stewardship Resources which includes
listings on materials from most major
denominations and 25 Episcopal dioceses.
It can be obtained by sending $2.00 and a
stamped, self-addressed envelope to him
at 99 Brattle Street, Cambridge, Massa-
chusetts 02138.
J. DEXTER EDGE, JR., A, in August
became associated with the Atlanta law
firm of Henkel and Lamon.
Henry Waltt Photography
The Rev, W. Thomas Fitzgerald
THE REV. W. THOMAS FITZGER-
ALD, T, formerly rector of the Church
of the Redeemer in Sarasota, Florida,
has become rector of Christ Church-
Frederica in St. Simons Island, Georgia.
The church dates back to 1736, with the
present building consecrated in 1886.
"Father Tom" has served as Dean of the
Sarasota Deanery, chaplain for Daughters
of the King, and trustee for Sewanee. He
and his wife, Martha, have eight children.
THE REV. BENJAMIN H. SHAW-
HAN, T, has moved from Calvary Church
in Richmond, Texas to be chaplain at
St. Luke's Hospital, Houston.
1961
DANA STEVENS OLIVER, A, has
moved to Arlington, Texas and is working
for Miller Brewery at Fort Worth as
employment manager.
THE REV. GRADY W. RICHARD-
SON, JR., C, has moved to St. Mary's-
on-the-Highlands in Birmingham, Ala-
bama. He was formerly at St. James' in
Alexander City.
CDR. ROBERT L. THOMAS, C, is
attending the Naval War College in
Newport, Rhode Island. The ten-month,
graduate level course prepares students
for assignment to the highest level com-
mand and management positions.
THOMAS S.TISDALE, JR., C, was
recently elected chairman of the board
of the Porter-Gaud School in Charleston,
South Carolina. He also serves on Se-
wanee's board of regents.
1962
THE REV. CHARLES K. HORN,
C'52, GST, has moved to Grace Church
in Birmingham, Alabama from St. Al ban's,
also in Birmingham.
FRANK KINNETT, C, is president
of the London Agency, Inc., in Atlanta,
which is one of the largest special risk
insurance brokerage firms in the country.
DR. EDWARD LEFEBER, C, has a
daughter, Karin, bom October 12, 1976.
He has been elected a Fellow, American
College of Physicians.
DR. PHILIP T. SPIETH, C, is associ-
ate professor of genetics at the University
of California at Berkeley and specializes
in population genetics. He lives in El
Cerrito, California with his wife of'15
years, the former Mia Raaphorst of the
Netherlands, two Korean daughters,
Kimberley (age 12) and Kelley (age 10),
and two "home-made" daughters,
Kristina, 9, and Kara Mia, 6. He writes,
"My memories of Sewanee are strong and
happy. Although I am professionally
committed to a great, large, public uni-
versity, I have a fond place in my heart
for the small, liberal arts university that
Sewanee epitomizes."
1963
DR. DAVID M. BEYER, C, has been
elected president of the Fort Worth unit
of the American Cancer Society for
1978-79. He is also on the medical advis-
ory committee for the Fort Worth/
Tarrant County Epilepsy Association and
recently rotated off the board of the
Easter Seal Center. He continues in his
medical practice and is associate professor
of surgery at the Texas College of Osteo-
pathic Medicine.
DR. JAMES ETTIEN, C, is assistant
professor of surgery at the Medical Col-
lege of Georgia in Augusta, and is
interested in forming a Sewanee Club in
the area.
DWIGHT HADLEY OGLESBY, C,
is senior attorney for Pillsbury Company
in Minneapolis.
WARREN D. SMITH, JR., C, is
regional director for Massachusetts Mutual
Life Insurance Company, real estate
development division, for the Southwest.
He lives in Dallas, Texas with his wife
and three children, Warren III, Brooks
Rogers, and Leigh Collins.
THE REV. DERALD W. STUMP,
GST, has received the doctorate in
human development and family studies
from Pennsylvania State University,
where he is Episcopal chaplain.
THE REV. CHARLES A. SUMNERS,
JR., C, has moved to St. Bartholomew's
Church in New York City from St. Luke's
in Atlanta.
MAJ. DANIEL F. TATUM, JR., C,
received the Air Force's Meritorious
Service Medal at Rhein-Main Air Force
Base in Germany where he is now a
supply services officer. Major Tatum
received the award for outstanding duty
performance as chief of the cadet food
services division at the U.S. Air Force
Academy in Colorado.
1964
WILLIAM G. McDANIEL, A, has
formed a law partnership, McDaniel,
Seigler and Finlayson, in Atlanta.
Carson Graves:
Sewanee Man with a Camera
(Photographer's note: Though in truth it was not a moment of espionage, I first met
Carson Graves on the stroke of midnight on a subway in New York City.
For the ways of photographers, this meeting was not unusual. Returning from
a gallery opening in Soho, this most expedient way required us to return to our
hotels en masse.
There was an unfamiliar face in the crowd. But not for long. In the isolation of
the North, to encounter another Southerner who at least speaks your language
and binding experience.
In this case, it was the beginning of a special friendship.)
His students listen quietly, entranced by his Southern drawl. Already,
almost instinctively, they know that he is capable. They will learn from
Carson Graves, the photographer/teacher seated before them.
One can always learn from the gentleness of this man. A breadth of
information is hidden beneath the languorous frame as he reaches out
lazily to point out one of the prints being critiqued. Yet once the
knowledge hits the surface it is a sharp technical analysis, presenting to
his students the specific answers necessary to a strong foundation in
photography.
John Carson Graves, a graduate of Sewanee, class of '70, is a recognized
artist in the revival of old photographic processes. He has concentrated
his energy in photo-gravure and printmaking.
The caliber of his technical shrewdness goes back to his own academic
foundation at Sewanee.
• Carson values his liberal arts education. Particularly in the light of
being a teacher and an artist. Of the University, he says, "Sewanee, as an
institution, is correct in offering itself as a non-specialized learning
experience. However, I cannot make that statement without warning
against the tendency to accept the liberal arts as an end unto itself. It is "
only a touchstone from which to build a bridge to a much more highly
specialized world."
While at Sewanee, Carson majored in history, and speaks highly of
his adviser and friend Dr. Anita Goodstein. Yet self-expression artistically
was already a part of his outlook as he began his photographic career
in a Basic Photography course under Ed Carlos.
From Sewanee, Carson returned to North Carolina, and the University
at Chapel Hill where he began graduate school in history. Yet an
interesting thing, bom of necessity, came about. Carson took camera in
hand as a means of self support for the lean years of graduate school.
Work in the university's public relations department led to a project
of documenting the restoration of the North Carolina state capital, and
a career in photography.
A far different tack was to come for this native Carolinian. He was
to go to Athens, Ohio. There at Ohio University he would eventually win
a graduate degree of fine arts in photography.
Kathy GaUigan
Carson Graves, with co-instructor Sharon Fox, critiques a
student's work at the Maine Photographic Workshops.
While pursuing his M.F.A. in photography and print making, Carson
became deeply involved in photo-gravure, a process of reproducing
photographs in etching medium.
His approach to the reviving of old processes led to the development
of his own process for making color photo-gravures that has been
published in Arnold Gassen's Handbook for Color Photographs ... a
widely used, standard photo text.
His outstanding work in the non-silver aspects of photography led
Carson to a one-year appointment to start a non-silver program at Arizona
State University.
Among Carson's achievements during his time in Arizona was his
organization and direction of a six-segment TV program on photography
over the Tempe, Arizona public TV. Exhibitions of his work continued in
Arizona, and in April of 1976 his photographs were part of a joint exhibi-
tion in Guerry Hall at Sewanee.
Carson continued his teaching career at several community art schools,
ever mindful of the development of his own artistic direction.
Carson is now in Rockport, Maine, on the staff of the prestigious
Maine Photographic Workshops. There he is involved in the three-month
resident program when serious photographers concentrate exclusively on
the development of their art.
Carson finds MPW "unique as a learning source." He goes on to say,
"Because of the self-motivation of the students, I am often pushed to
keep one step ahead. The workshop provides a sheltered environment in
which students leave everything behind to concentrate day and night
on learning photography."
Carson, and the students at Maine Photo Workshops, are now
furiously preparing for an exhibition of the fall's work to be seen at
the International Center of Photography in New York City.
—Kathy Galligan
Sewanee has recently had two of its alumni
named presidents of banks. They are Cecil K.
Colon, Jr., C*5J, and Nathaniel I. Ball III, C'63.
Mr, Colon, who until recent years was an
executive with the Boston Company in New
Orleans, was named president of that city's '
First City Bank.
Mr. Ball, who has been in the banking
business in Charleston, South Carolina for many
years, was named the first president of the new
Liberty National Bank, which is being organized
to open in a few weeks.
MAJ. GEORGE M. POWELL IV,
C, and his wife, Deborah, are living in
Arizona where George is stationed at
David-Monthan Air Force Base. He is
a flight commander with a unit of the
Tactical Air Command.
1965
PERCIVAL R. BAILEY, C.received
an M.A. from Rutgers University last May
and is teaching at Columbia Preparatory
School in New York City.
THE REV. JOHN R. BENTLEY, JR.,
C, is rector of St. Peter's Church in
Brenham, Texas. He was formerly at
St. Martin's in Houston.
WILLIAM CHARLES (CHUCK)
BUSCHARDT III, A, of Bellaire, Texas,
is president of America '76 Hose Com-
pany, a club composed of people who
collect old fire engines and such. Chuck
is a fire department paramedic in the
Houston area.
ALLEN E. HAINGE, C, lives in
Reston, Virginia, where he is regional
training director for Century 21 Real
Estate Corporation. He directs a three-
person department and is responsible
for all agent training for about 200
real estate firms in Virginia, Maryland,
Delaware, and the District of Columbia.
He has also authored several real estate
publications and articles.
G. Steven Wilkerson
G. STEVEN WILKERSON, C, has
been named vice-president for devel-
opment at Boston University. In his
previous job with the University of
Florida he quintupled that institution's
annual fund-raising income. He began
fund-raising in 1966 with the Association
°f Episcopal Colleges, then held fund-
raising posts with Lincoln Center for the
Performing Arts, Emory University and
Georgia Tech. From 1968 to 1971 he
served in Vietnam as an officer in Army
htelligence. He and his wife, the former
Margaret Harris of Montgomery, Alabama,
have two daughters, ages six and eight.
John Lynch
1967
WILBURN (BILL) CAMPBELL, C,
has moved to Columbia, South Carolina
from Myrtle Beach. He and his wife have
a two-year-old daughter and at last
report were expecting another child in
September. Bill is in retailing, involved
with three Shops of John Simmons, two
Hallmark Card shops, and four import
stores called Curious Cargo.
JOSEPH EGGLESTON GARDNER,
JR., A, was married to Rebecca Braswell
on September 30 in Corpus Christi,
THE REV. JAMES H. PRESTON, T,
is staff chaplain at St. Luke's Hospital
in Houston.
' DR. JAMES MANLY STALL-
WORTH, JR., C, married Margaret
Maroney on May 7, 1977 in Tryon,
North Carolina. He is working at Roper
and St. Francis Hospital in Charleston,
South Carolina as an anesthesiologist.
1968
ALAN BLAKE DAVIS, C, was
married on September 25, 1976 to
Martha Harsh. They have moved to
Sarasota, Florida where Alan works for
the Palmer Ranch.
BURTON B. H ANBURY, JR., C,
has been appointed deputy city attorney
for the city of Alexandria, Virginia. He
has served as an assistant city attorney
for the past four years.
MARTIN VONNEGUT, A, is living
in Oceanside, California, and working
in the systems analyst department of
Burroughs Corporation.
1969
DR. TODD GEORGI, C, has joined
the faculty of Doane College in Crete,
Nebraska as assistant professor of biology.
He earned M.S. and Ph.D. degrees from
the University of Nebraska. He writes
that after a year in Kansas City he is look-
ing forward to living in a smaller, more
rural setting.
JOHN LYNCH, C, has been named
director of broadcasting for the Memphis
City Schools. He will be coordinating
the activities of WQOX-FM and the cable
television studios owned by the Memphis
city schools. While at Sewanee John
worked for WZYX radio in Cowan and
WCDT radio in Winchester. He received
his master's degree in radio-tv-film from
Memphis State University in 1973,
worked as a news reporter for WMC radio
and TV in Memphis, and joined the
Memphis school system in 1975 as an
instructor of broadcasting. He was pro-
moted to the position of program director
of WQOX-FM in January 1977. '
THE REV. GORDON H. MOREY, T,
GST, moved to Madison, Wisconsin in
June to be associate rector of Grace
Church.
DAVID LEE OAKLEY, C, has
moved to Chicago, where he is sales
manager for Helena Rubenstein cosmetics.
DR. GRANGER O. OSBORNE, C,
has joined DR. STEPHEN SANDFORD
ESTES, C'67, in an obstetrics and gyne-
cology practice in Charleston, South
Carolina.
1970
BRICE W. ALEXANDER, C, was
married in January, 1978 to Lorraine
Edmondson in Buffalo Gap, South Dako-
ta, and now lives in Gillette, Wyoming.
CAPT. WILLIAM, C, and MOLLY
(HULL) BENNETT, C'72, have a new
daughter, Alexandra Gloria. Alexa was
christened in Denver June 18 by her
grandfather, THE REV. W. SCOTT BEN-
NETT, C'55, T'57, rector of St. John's
Church in Moultrie, Georgia. Godparents
were ALEXANDER T. (SANDY) JOHN-
SON, C'71, and his wife Gloria, and
ELLEN HULL, C'81. Bill writes that
Sandy is teaching math at Cherry Creek
High School in Denver, and accompanies
the Bennetts hiking, bicycling, and cross-
country skiing.
CAPT. WILLIAM M. CUNNING-
HAM, JR., C, has left the Marine Corps
after four years as a Judge Advocate, and
has joined the law firm of Sintz, Pike,
Campbell and Duke in Mobile, Alabama.
He and his wife, Kathy, have two daugh-
ters, the latest, Anne, born September 8.
DR. ROBERT P. GREEN, JR., C,
is a visiting assistant professor of educa-
tion at Clemson University this year.
After receiving his doctorate in education
from the University of Virginia in August,
1977, he served for a year as social
studies department chairman at Western
Albemarle High School in Charlottesville,
Virginia.
CAPT. SAMUEL LOGAN, C, who
joined the Marine Corps in 1971, has
completed their aviation safety command
course. The four-week course was con-
ducted at the Naval Postgraduate School
in Monterey, California, and is designed
to train senior officers in aircraft accident
investigation and prevention.
RAYMOND B. MURRAY, C, mar-
ried Laura Beth Melten of New Jersey
and Houston on June 3, 1978. He is
teaching in Warrenton, Virginia.
JOSEPH A. VELLA, JR., C, and
Judith Hope Rentiers of Beaufort,
South Carolina were married on Septem-
ber 9. The groom is employed by Home
Security Life Insurance Company in
Charleston.
1971
CLARINDA BISHOP ABDELNOUR,
C, received an M.S. in biology from
Tennessee Technological University in
August, 1978.
WARNER BALLARD, C, is now
living in New York City where he works
for the Madison Avenue advertising firm
of Doyle Dane Bernbach.
TOM D. BROYLES, C, is the new
owner of the Butter Nut Baking Com-
pany in Palestine, Texas, which bakes
and ships fruit cakes to all 50 states and
many foreign countries.
DR. GLENN MILLER DAVIS, C,
was married on October 21 to Maryann
Morgan Errichetti in Charleston, South
Carolina.
JOHN BRONOUGH HENRY II, C,
received a J.D. degree in May from
Columbia University Law School, which
he attended after graduation from
Harvard and three years on the staff of
the U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Com-
mittee. He writes that he will be associ-
ated with the Wall Street firm of Cad-
walader, Wickersham and Taft "after an
extended trip around the world," and
that he is still single.
WARREN JACOBSON, C, this fall
was awarded "Best in Show" for a
photograph, winning over 400 other
entries in a multi-media show represent-
ing approximately 200 artists. The
competition was for "Art About Town"
in Dallas, Texas. Warren received an
M.F.A. in printing from Pratt Institute
in New York City and is now back
teaching art at Sewanee.
ROBERT M. (GREG) JONES, JR.,
C, graduated from McGeorge Law School
in June and has moved to Atascadero,
California to open his own law office.
1972
LEWIS SAMUEL AGNEW, C, is an
assistant branch manager and loan officer
for the Valley National Bank of Arizona
in Tempe. He is married to the former
PATRICIA ANNE MOODY, C'75, and
they have a keeshond/elkhound named
Phoebe. He writes, "We enjoy visitors
from Sewanee, so y'all come!"
1/LT. THOMAS E. ARCHER, C, is
on duty with the Marine Corps at Camp
Pendleton, California.
THE REV. JEFFREY A. BATKIN,
T, has become assistant rector of the
Church of Our Saviour in Rock Hill,
South Carolina, and Episcopal chaplain
at Winthrop College.
MICHAEL D. BEWERS, C, is a
senior at Louisiana State University
Law School. He was awarded the "Class
of '50" Scholarship and is also on the
Law Review.
Kyle Rote, Jr., Cf72, who has played with the
Dallas Tornadoes during his entire professional
soccer career, has signed a three-year contract
with the Houston Hurricanes. It was reported
that the transaction cost the Houston club
$500,000.
Donald E. Weber, C'79, is enrolled at Washing-
ton University s School of Engineering and
Applied Sciences under a Harold P. Brown
Fellowship.
Donald, a physics major at Sewanee, was
participating in the 3-2 liberal arts engineering
program. The Brown Fellowship consists of a
$500 stipend and full-tuition scholarship for
two years of study.
DR. CHARLES A. BICKERSTAFF,
JR., C, is in his final year of residency
in internal medicine at the new University
of South Carolina School of Medicine
in Columbia.
D. STALEY COLVERT, C, entered
dental school at the University of Ten-
nessee in September, 1977. He was
elected class president and was selected
for Who's Who in Colleges and Universi-
ties for 1977-78.
DAVID E. FOX, C, was recently
promoted to assistant vice-president of
Home Federal Savings and Loan, Colum-
bus, Georgia. He is married to HAZEL
RUST, C'75, and they have two sons,
David, Jr., age 4, and Benjamin, age 1.
N. PENDLETON (PENN) ROGERS,
C, recently finished work on his LL.M.
in taxation at New York University
School of Law and has accepted a posi-
tion as tax counsel for the U.S. branches
of Credit Lyonnais, a French bank. His
wife, Vicki, has assumed new duties at
American Airlines, where she is now
senior analyst of passenger pricing devel-
opment.
THE REV. CALVIN O. SCHOFIELD,
GST, was elected president of the
Standing Committee of the Diocese of
Southeast Florida at a meeting of the
committee following the diocesan con-
vention. He is rector of St. Andrew's
Church, Miami.
GUERRY R. THORNTON, JR., C,
is an associate with the law firm of
Hendrix and Shea in Savannah, Georgia.
He has been elected secretary of the
younger lawyers' section of the local
Bar for the 1978-79 year.
1973
THE REV. JOHN W. CRUSE, C'67,
T, has taken a position as chaplain
and assistant to the Anglican bishop in
Jerusalem, effective September 1, and
has resigned as a University trustee.
LT. WILLIAM H. FORRESTER, JR.,
A, and NANCY SUE NICHOLSON,
A 74, were married in All Saints' Chapel
in Sewanee on June 17. THE REV.
HARRY BAINBRIDGE, C'61, T'67,
chaplain of Sewanee Academy, and THE
REV. JORDAN PECK, A'47, performed
the ceremony. JULIE BAIRD, A'73,
C77, and BLAKE PECK, A'73, were
among attendants at the wedding. The
Forresters are living at Fort Benning,
Georgia.
DR. CHARLES THOMAS HODGES,
C, is living in Newark, Delaware and
working for DuPont. He received his
Ph.D, in biochemistry from the Univer-
sity of North Carolina.
LT. WILLIAM C. JOHNSON, C,
assistant chief of the supply service of
the Naval Regional Medical Center in
San Diego, California, has been admitted
to nomineeship in the American College
of Hospital Administrators. He received
an M.S. in health care administration
from Trinity University in San Antonio,
and is married to the former LINDA
REED, A'70, C'74.
DOUGLAS ARMSTRONG MAHAN,
C, is owner of the Bicycle Gallery in
Spartanburg, South Carolina and North-
east sales representative for United Trade
Representatives in Florence, South
Carolina.
R. RICKI MOHR, C, is completing
doctoral requirements in theoretical
chemistry at the University of Wyoming
and Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory.
The study is under the auspices of an
Associated Western Universities/Depart-
ment of Energy Research Fellowship. He
expects to graduate next May.
FRANK MUMBY, C, is in Jackson-
ville working for the Florida Federal
Savings and Loan Association. He writes
that his sister PAMELA, C'76, has gone
to the Philippines to teach English at
Brent School and will be there two years.
THE REV. JASPER PENNINGTON,
T, recently hosted a large gathering at
St. Bernard's Seminary library where he
is librarian and director of the Sheen
Archives. The occasion was the unveiling
of a portrait of Bishop Fulton J. Sheen,
painted by Stanley Gordon of Rochester.
The Rev. Mr. Pennington has charge of
an archives consisting of original radio
and television tapes, books and manu-
scripts, news clippings, photographs,
correspondence and memorabila which
reflect the world-wide life and ministry of
the Archbishop. He is in process of
organizing and cataloging the material,
with first priority going to copying the
tapes, both for preservation and for
making them available for public use.
CAPT. L. KIMBERLY REVER, C,
was recently selected as aide-de-camp to
Major General Freddie L. Poston, com-
mander of the 13th Air Force, at Clark
Air Base in the Philippines.
MELISSA W. ROGERS, C, was
married to Dr. Louis L. Young in August,
1976, and they have a son, Win, born
December 26, 1977. They live in Athens,
Georgia, where Dr. Young is a research
scientist for the U.S. Department of
Agriculture and Melissa is making a career
as homemaker and mother.
JOHN A. WEATHERLY, C, has
begun his first year at Yale Divinity
School, working toward an M.Div. as a
postulant from the diocese of New
1974
CHARLES BAILEY EMERSON, C,
was married to Lesley Anne Shaw of
Bedford, England, on December 23, 1976.
THE REV. MICHAEL W. JONES, C,
graduated from Nashotah House Epis- .
copal Seminary on May 25, was ordained
deacon on June 4, and is now curate at
Holy Trinity Church in West Palm Beach.
Michael is married to the former SUSAN
DOUGLAS, C'75.
JOSEPH B. MANSFIELD, C, is
still in Mount Pleasant, South Carolina,
working for Robert F. Knoth and Com-
pany, consulting foresters. He has two
children— Peter, age 5, and Jo-Lee, age \xh.
HELEN FUNK McSWAIN, C, writes
that she is in a Ph.D. program in anatomy
at Emory University and her husband,
LAURIN, C'73, is an attorney working
with ARTHUR TRANAKOS, C'56. They
have bought a house in the Morningside
area of Atlanta.
PAMELA V. MILLER, C, is working
in Santa Fe as coordinator of word
processing for the law firm of Mont-
gomery, Andrews and Hannahs, where
she has been for the last two years.
We just received word that ARTHUR
S. PATTERSON, C, and CAROLE RO-
CHELLE JACKSON, C'76, are married.
They are living in Memphis.
DR. JOHN D. PRICE, C, has been
awarded a house officer appointment
in internal medicine at North Carolina
Baptist Hospital in Winston-Salem. He
received his M.D. degree from the" Univer-
sity of Mississippi School of Medicine
in Jackson, where he was vice-president
of his senior class. He is married to the
former EMILY CLAIR HODNETT, C'75.
LT. GARY N. SADLER, C, has
received a regular commission in the Air
Force. He previously held a reserve
commission as an ROTC graduate. He is
assigned at Luke Air Force Base, Arizona,
as a pilot with a unit of the Aerospace
Defense Command.
LT. LEE WILLIAM STEWART, JR.,
C, is stationed at the Marine Corps
Air Station in El Toro, California. "I
hope that any Sewanee alumni residing
in this area will look me up," he says.
1975
DONN H. BEIGHLEY, C, is finishing
his post-graduate studies at Texas Tech
and moving on to graduate studies in
ELIZABETH ROSS BENNETT, C, is
attending the University of California
at Santa Barbara, working toward a doc-
torate in clinical psychology.
1/LT. EDWARD O. GOEHE, JR., C,
is with the U.S. Air Force in Taipei,
Taiwan where he is a military advisor to
the Chinese Air Force on airborne warn-
ing and control systems. He was
previously stationed for a year at
Mangilsan Korea, "a mountaintop remote
site on the Yellow Sea." He married a
Korean, HyeYong, on November 4, 1977.
While in the Orient he has traveled to
Okinawa and the Philippines, and plans
to visit Hong Kong and Bangkok. He is
enrolled in a master's program in systems
analysis from the University of Southern
California and expects to complete the
program by 1980 when he leaves Taipei.
SUSAN GRIFFIN, C, is now MRS.
ROBERT PHILLIPS, having married a
Duke classmate, graduated from Duke
Law School, moved to Los Angeles, and
passed the California bar exam. She
writes that she is looking for a job and
enjoying seeing some Sewanee alumni like
RICK PARKS and LIZ TURPIT, both
C'75.
GARY M. HARRIS, C, is academic
and technical director at Theatre Bristol
in the Sullins Humanities Center in
Bristol, Virginia.
THE REV. BRYAN A. HOBBS,
T, has moved from Key West to the
Church of the Holy Sacrament, Holly-
wood, Florida.
THE REV. PAUL O. MARTIN, T,
married Christine Melloy on November
25 in Wellingborough, Northamptonshire,
England. Christine is a nurse, and Paul is
entering his fourth year of ministry in
England and his third as curate at St.
Philip's Church in London.
JOHN M. McCARY, C, has moved
from Atlanta to Birmingham, Alabama
where he is working at Stringfellow
Lumber Company in the brokerage
division.
MARY GREER THOMISON, C,
married Mark William Hoover of Camp
Hill, Pennsylvania, on June 17. The
couple are making their home in Roanoke.
M. HOLLAND WEST, C, is attending
the Fordham University School of Law
where he is a member of the Law Review
and is clerking for the Wall Street firm
of Cadwalader, Wickersham and Taft.
His wife, Deborah, is a trust and estates
paralegal with a large New York law firm
and attends post-graduate design classes
at the Parsons School of Design.
1976
KEMPER WILLIAMS BROWN, C,
and ELIZABETH McCLATCHEY, C'78,
were married November 4 in Atlanta.
MARSHALL CASSEDY, JR., C, is
an option stock analyst in New York City
with Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner &
Smith, Inc.
THOMAS P. DIXON, A, is attending
Georgia Tech.
STEPHEN T. HIGGINS, C, has
moved from Cambridge, Massachusetts
to Gulfport, Mississippi, where he is with
the Gulf Regional Planning Commission.
H. MILLER HUNTER, JR., C, was
married on August 26 to Carol Richard-
son of Memphis, Tennessee, sister of
Sewanee English professor Dale Richard-
son. The Hunters are living in Gunters-
ville, Alabama where Miller is working
in the family business.
RAYMOND and JENNIFER
LEATHERS, C, are living in Birmingham,
Alabama where Raymond is attending
Cumberland School of Law and, at last
report, Jennifer was job-hunting.
ROBERT W. PEARIGEN, C, is doing
graduate work in political sicence at Duke
University after teaching 12th grade
English in Memphis for a year.
PETER SQUIRE, C, has been made
regional credit manager for Castner Knott
and Mercantile Department Stores. His
territory covers northern Alabama, east-
ern Mississippi, and southern Tennessee,
and he is living in Florence, Alabama.
DEBORAH WILTSEE, C, is enrolled
in a master's program in French at the
University of North Carolina at Greens-
boro. She is looking forward to teaching
English next year in a high school in
France.
1977
DAVID H. CLOSE, C, is teaching at
North Cross School in Roanoke, Virginia.
CHARLES J. (CHUCK) DePAOLO
III, C, married Sally Ruth Schweppe of
Shelby, North Carolina on September 2,
1978. He is attending graduate school
at Georgia Tech and she is working as a
tennis instructor at Peach tree Hills Tennis
Club.
ENS. TIMOTHY M. GRAHAM, C,
has reported for duty with Training
Squadron 19 at the Naval Air Station in
Meridian, Mississippi. He joined the
Navy in 1975.
SUSAN REBECCA HALL, C, is in
her second year at the Monterey Institute
of Foreign Studies in California. She
hopes to graduate in 1979 with an M.A.
in intercultural communications with a
certificate In translation and interpretation.
TIMOTHY S. HOLDER, C, is study-
ing law at Cumberland School of Law of
Samford University. After graduation
from Sewanee he was on the staff of
the Tennessee Public Service Commission
for a year and was active in the Senatorial
campaign of Jane Eskind. A native of
Elizabethton, Tennessee, Tim has served
as president of the Carter County Young
Democrats and vice-chairman of the
Carter County Democratic party.
JULIAN GRICE HUNT, JR., C,
married Helen Keeter Horton of Green-
ville, South Carolina on September 16.
THE REV. THOMAS H. CARSON,
T*54, officiated at the ceremony. The
Hunts live in Chattanooga, where Julian
is advanced underwriting assistant with
Provident Life and Accident Insurance
Company.
ENS. RONALD R. MANLEY, JR.,
C, is in flight training at the Naval Air
Statior) in Pensacola, Florida. He writes
that his wife, Ola, is expecting a child
about the first of March, 1979.
THE REV. H. VANCE MANN III,
T, has moved from St. Augustine's,
Metairie, Louisiana, to St. Mark's, Shreve-
port, where he is assistant rector.
ELLIS MISNER, C, is working for
Mad River Canoes in Vermont this fall,
after working as an instructor and guide
this summer at the Nantahala Outdoor
Center in North Carolina. He plans to
open an outdoor store in Hamilton,
Montana next April.
A. CHASE MORGAN, C, is a
marketing representative with IBM Data
Processing Division in Jacksonville,
Florida. She writes that she is "living on
the St. John's River where the sailing is
good and the land is beautiful!"
THE REV. H. KING OEHMIG, T,
has moved from St. John's Church,
Knoxville, Tennessee, to St. Anne's in
Millington.
EDWARD M. PEEBLES, JR., C,
is head of the Nora Navra Branch of
the New Orleans Public Library, and in
his spare time is continuing his work in
sculpture.
FRANCIS ROBERT RUSSO, JR.,
C, is studying for the Master of Inter-
national Management degree at the Amer-
ican Graduate School of International
Management at Glendale, Arizona.
PAMELA SMOTHERMAN, C, is
living in Nashville where she is working
at S & H Computer Leasing and also
working on an M.B.A. at the University
of Tennessee at Nashville.
NORA FRANCES STONE, C, is in
law school at the University of Mississippi.
THE REV. CHARLES M. (CHUCK)
WATTS, T, is curate of St. James' Parish,
Jackson, Mississippi. He was ordained a
deacon in June after serving a year as lay
assistant to the chaplain at Sewanee.
1978
JOHN BENET, C, is enrolled in the
three-year program of the College of
Medicine of the University of South
Florida.
THE REV. W. ALLEN BRECKEN-
RIDGE, T, is deacon-in-charge of St.
Matthew's Mission in Kosciusko, and
St. Francis of Assisi Mission in Philadel-
phia, Mississippi.
THE REV. ROBERT E. BRODIE,
T, is now curate of St. Philip's Church in
Coral Gables, Florida. Bob established th>
first police chaplaincy program in Miami,
and as a result became a recognized
voioe against the move to bring casino
gambling to Miami.
JENNIFER KOCH, C, is working as
a claims adjuster trainee for GAB Busi-
ness Services in Clarksville, Tennessee.
NANCY LONGNECKER, C, is work-
ing on an M.S. in agronomy at Cornell
University.
ANNE MARSH, A, is attending
Austin College in Sherman, Texas.
DANIEL B. (DANNY) MYERS, C,
is working toward a Master of Music
degree at the University of Kansas.
HENRY BETHEA POWELL, C, is
attending Washington and Lee University,
majoring in chemistry and biology and
planning to attend medical school. He
left Sewanee to start his own small
import-export business in Florence, South
Carolina. He is a member of the Young
Republicans Club at W & L, and this past
January was invited to the inauguration
of Virginia's incoming governor, Ted
Dalton, and to the Governor's Ball.
ROLAND GREGORY ROBERTSON,
C, married Marsha Lee Nolen on August 6,
1978 in Corpus Christi, Texas. Gregg
writes: "No less than 13 Sewanee gentle-
men traveled up to 1500-2000 miles to
attend the wedding. They came from
Virginia, South Carolina, Georgia, Ohio,
and Tennessee in what was for many
their first trip to Texas. Parties were held
in good Sewanee style from Friday
until the wedding Sunday afternoon and
of course afterwards. As Marsha and I
boarded our plane Sunday night after
the wedding, they were all singing the
Alma Mater (very loudly of course)
while dressed in tails, much to the
pleasure of 50 or so spectators at the
airport."
ELIZABETH KELLY SHRINER, C,
has moved to Durham, North Carolina
from Tallahassee.
STEPHEN VINSON, C, is a first-year
medical student at the University of
South Carolina at Charleston.
DONALD E. WEBER, C, received
one of two Harold P. Brown Scholarships
at Washington University, St. Louis,
where he has entered the School of
Engineering and Applied Science in the
second half of a three-two engineering
plan. He is majoring in electrical engineer
ing and hopes eventually to receive his
Ph.D.
DEATHS
RICHARD H. ALLEN, SR., A'04,
C'08, September 7, 1978 in Memphis,
Tennessee. A retired cotton merchant, he
had served in World War I.
DONALD MacDONALD EWING,
A'12, September 2, 1978 in Shreveport,
Louisiana. Mr. Ewing was a veteran
journalist and associate editor emeritus
of the Shreveport Times. He was founder
of the recreation program for youth in
Shreveport, and was a recipient of
numerous awards. He served in World
Wars I and II in the Air Force.
THE REV. LAWRENCE W. FAU-
CETTE, C'12, T'15, April 18, 1978, in
San Diego. Rhodes Scholar, author,
and missionary, Mr. Faucette invented
the "graduated alphabet" resulting in
research work in Africa on an assignment
from the Carnegie Foundation. A profes-
sor of linguistics, he commanded French,
German, Chinese and other tongues,
spending much time in Shanghai, Japan,
and Turkey. During World War II, he
enlisted in the "Artist Rifles," the regi-
ment of Rhodes Scholars, later trans-
ferring to the Royal Flying Corps.
RUSSELL GANT, A'16, June 18,
1978 in Burlington, North Carolina. Mr.
Gant was president of Russell Gant
Company, Inc.
HAROLD E. BETTLE, C'20, Octo-
ber 12, 1978 in Tenafly, New Jersey.
A retired regional group executive of
General Motors, he had worked in GM's
overseas operation in Melbourne,
Australia. He served in World War I in
Sewanee 's Amublance Corps.
W. DuBOSE STUCKEY, C'26,
August 21, 1978 in Greenwood, South
Carolina. He was a retired administrator
who for eight years was assistant at
Greenwood Museum. Civically active,
he was awarded the Silver Beaver award
of Scouting in 1958.
JAMES H. HUMPHREYS, A'29,
in summer, 1978. He was founder and
retired executive of the Humico Com-
pany, a shortening manufacturing
company. He served in World War II
in the U.S. Navy.
OTIS F. JEFFRIES, C'32, August 29,
1978 in Murphy, North Carolina. He was
a retired Tennessee Valley Authority
supervisor and was a member of Sigma
Nu fraternity.
Z. DANIEL HARRISON, C'37, Octo-
ber 12, 1978 in Ponte Vedra, Florida. He
was an official with the U.S. Public
Health Service, a retired captain with the
U.S. Navy and a veteran of World War II.
CLIFTON R. HOOD, A'40, C'44,
October 26, 1978, at Bruins Plantation,
Hughes, Arkansas. He served in World
War II as an officer with the U.S. Marine
Corps.
LCDR MARVIN E. McMULLEN,
USN (ret.), N'44, in Charleston, South
Carolina. He served in World War II
and the Korean conflict, and was recently
with the Charleston County Health
Department.
DR. CHARLES M. SARRATT, H'48,
October 11, 1978 in Nashville, Tennessee.
He was dean of alumni and vice-chan-
cellor emeritus of Vanderbilt University.
JAMES N. ALLISON, JR., A'49,
August 31, 1978 in Midland, Texas. Mr.
Allison was president and publisher
of the Midland Reporter-Telegram and
the Plainview Daily Herald. He was
in the U.S. Air Force, 1953-55, and was
a first lieutenant in the Air Force Reserve.
THE REV. CHARLES W. HUBON,
GST'51, May 19, 1978 in Westhampton
Beach, New York. Before his retirement
he served several churches in Connecticut
and New York.
THOMAS E. SHOEMATE, A'56,
August 4, 1978, of cancer, in Atlanta.
Mr. Shoemate was a language arts con-
sultant for the Marietta school system
and had just edited a new literature text-
book for high school seniors. He was
the son of Mrs. Clara Orlin, former owner
of Clara's Castle at Sewanee and onetime
manager of the Sewanee Inn.
THE REV. JONAS WHITE, C'52,
T'56, October 26, 1978 in Peewee Valley,
Kentucky, where he was rector of St.
James' Church. "Missioner from Colombia
to Germany," he was missioner for
Nicaragua, Honduras, etc. as the only
clergyman in the area. He was appointed
first archdeacon of the north coast of
Honduras, and was rector of St. Christo-
pher's Church in Frankfort, Germany.
THE RT. REV. JAMES P. CLEM-
ENTS, H'57, June 6, 1977 in Houston,
Texas. He served as a chaplain in the
U.S. Navy 1943-49, and became suffragan
bishop of Texas in 1956. He was editor
of the Church Chronicle, Sunday sup-
plement of the Houston Chronicle. In
1974 he began service with Grace Church
in Houston.
JAMES J. SLADE, C'60, September
11, 1978 in Redlands, California, of a
heart attack. Dr. Slade, an assistant
professor at the University of Redlands,
had lived and traveled extensively in
Mexico and Central America, including
volunteer work in the Peace Corps in
Colombia. He was noted for his scholarly
publications on Latin America.
THE REV. LEROY M. CARTER,
T'64, July, 1 978 in Collierville, Tennessee,
where he was rector of St. Andrew's
Church. Earlier, he was vicar of Trinity
Church in Gatlinburg.
HENRY F. BEAUMONT, A'63,
C'67, September 15, 1978 in Sewanee,
Tennessee of an apparent heart attack.
He was vice-president of Anderson Jeep
in Chattanooga.
THE REV. CHARLES A. BLEDSOE,
T'61, July 24, 1978 in Bristol, Virginia.
A minister, educator, and community
leader, he was rector of Emmanuel
Church until 1977. He was president of
Sullins Academy and a member of the
board of directors of Bristol Memorial
Hospital and the Greater Bristol Area
Chamber of Commerce. He was recently
selected for inclusion in Who's Who in
Religion.
Mrs. William S. Farish, widow of
W. S. Farish, late benefactor of the
University, in October, 1978 in
Houston, Texas.
Gladys Comforter Wakefield, July
22, 1978. She was the wife of THE REV.
FRANCIS WAKEFIELD, C23, T'26,
retired rector of All Saints' Church,
Mobile, Alabama.
It was inadvertently reported in the
September issue of the Sewanee News
that JACK S. McDANIEL, C'77, was
killed in an auto accident in Hot Springs,
Arkansas. He was instead killed in an
accident on Brakefield Road on the
domain.
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